Philippe
AH veteran
- Joined
- Mar 14, 2014
- Messages
- 182
- Reaction score
- 359
- Location
- Libreville -GABON-
- Media
- 48
- Hunted
- Upper Volta , Gabon , France , RSA
Chinese people in Africa ...
I'm afraid you're right, if the Chinese don't make it, the antis will give us the rest.There goes another area lost to the Chinese bastards! I truly fear we are the last generation to hunt Africa.
“In many parts of Africa, including Zimbabwe, Chinese mining investors have exhibited a history of bad safety, health, environmental, labor, and human rights standards,” ZELA said in a statement.Several cases of Chinese miners refusing to pay salaries or provide their workers with protective clothing, especially during the [coronavirus] pandemic, are currently being investigated by ZELA [the Zimbabwe Environmental Law Association], according to its deputy director Shamiso Mutisi.
Zimbabwe: President Personally Approves Chinese Coal Mining in National Park:
Zimbabwe: President Approves Chinese Coal Mining in National Park
Zimbabwe socialist strongman President Emmerson Mnangagwa approved coal mining by Chinese companies in the country's Hwange National Park.www.breitbart.com
Zimbabwe’s socialist strongman President Emmerson Mnangagwa apparently personally approved coal mining by Chinese companies in the country’s Hwange National Park, New Zimbabwe revealed Thursday.
Mnangagwa has maintained the close ties that his socialist state developed with the Communist Party of China (CCP) under predecessor Robert Mugabe, participating in China’s Belt and Road debt trap scheme and granting Chinese companies extensive access to Zimbabwe’s vast resources. China is Zimbabwe’s largest foreign investor; the country received $58 million in Chinese investment grants last year.
Chinese mining, in particular, has triggered outrage among Zimbabwean citizens as Chinese businessmen have faced allegations of racist abuse against locals.
Mnangagwa announced a significant expansion of Zimbabwe’s mining industry in August at an event co-sponsored with China, despite a recent harrowing incident in which a Chinese boss shot native workers for asking for the salaries they had been promised.
“We equally look forward to the creation of both direct and indirect jobs as well as empowerment opportunities for associated value chains,” Xinhua quoted the strongman as saying.
In June, the manager of a Chinese-run mine, Zhang Xuelin, reportedly shot two workers, Kennedy Tachiona and Wendy Chikwaira, after Tachoina asked for his salary, which Zhang had refused to pay. Zhang was caught on video shooting Tachiona five times and then shooting at other workers watching in horror, injuring Chikwaira. At the time, CNN detailed other incidents of Chinese worker abuse in the country:
“In many parts of Africa, including Zimbabwe, Chinese mining investors have exhibited a history of bad safety, health, environmental, labor, and human rights standards,” ZELA said in a statement.
China is a signatory to the United Nations Paris Agreement, which aims to reduce global greenhouse gas emissions. The responsibilities of the parties involved end at their borders, however, meaning Chinese coal development abroad would not count towards its greenhouse gas emissions despite the direct relationship between fossil fuels and greenhouse gas emissions.
Oh, F#CK!! Thanks for the history, so its' days are truly numbered!!
FWIW I stayed at Nehimba and can recommend the place (before it too goes!!). Superb facilities (all done reminiscent of 1920's decor). Elephants known to drink the water from your shower rose while you're showering, and also to drink from the pool while you're swimming (they get very thirsty!!). In the evenings there's the need for an armed escort from chalet to dining area, because the lion, elephant and leopard walk through the place. Then, finally drifting off to sleep listening to the sound of distant elephant and lion. Hunter's bliss!!
No. Did you?
Oh hell yes that's the American Tax (Slaves) payers only reason for existence ....Solve all the worlds problems...We're 30 Trillion $$$ in Debt...We've Sanctioned Zimbabwe in every way possible...Is there anything the US can do
No, not at all. Quite the opposite, really. (Hence the "thumbs down" aka "dislike" emoji).@ChrisPy and @typilotguy just wondering ...so you agree with the mining as didn't like my post?....why would you want to see hwange destroyed?
Good news indeed