1 / 62

Post-World War II Africa

Post-World War II Africa. Modern-Day Rwanda, South Africa, & Somalia. Post-WWII Africa. The Colonial Legacy Economics New African nations still depended on Europe Government & Education Europeans did not educate Africans in governance Limited education opportunities

shaunaw
Télécharger la présentation

Post-World War II Africa

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Post-World War II Africa Modern-Day Rwanda, South Africa, & Somalia

  2. Post-WWII Africa • The Colonial Legacy • Economics • New African nations still depended on Europe • Government & Education • Europeans did not educate Africans in governance • Limited education opportunities • Many nations fell to authoritarian governments • Health Care • Many remote areas have little access to modern healthcare • National Borders • Borders were drawn by European colonial powers

  3. Post-WWII Africa • Impact of World War II • Nationalism • Many returning soldiers did want accept being 2nd class citizens • Aversion to Fighting • Most European countries were not willing to fight to keep colonies

  4. Case Study I:The Rwandan Genocide

  5. What is Genocide? • Any act committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial or religious group • Killing members of the group • Imposing measures intended to prevent births within a group

  6. Rwanda Genocide • The Rwandan genocide was the systematic massacre of an estimated 800,000 people • Mostly Tutsi tribe members • Also includes moderate Hutus members • The massacre lasted approximately 100 days from April to mid-July, 1994

  7. Map of Rwanda

  8. Rwanda-History • 3 tribes of people that inhabit Rwanda • Twa, the original inhabitants • Hutus, migrated in 1000s • Tutsi, migrated in the 1300s

  9. Rwanda-History (Continued) • The Tutsis tribe of people gained a large dominance over the Hutus • By the late 1800s, Rwanda was totally controlled by the Tutsis • Government was controlled by a Tutsi King • Population was: • 75% Hutu • 20% Tutsi • 5% Twa

  10. European Contact • First Contact • British explorer Hanning Speke (1858) • Imperialism • Rwanda becomes part of German East Africa (1890) • Rwanda continues self-rule • Tutsis still control the country • World War I Effects • 1916 - Belgian forces occupy Rwanda (1916)

  11. Rwanda 1933 • Under Belgian Rule • Tutsis continue to control the country • Introduction to the Eugenics Movement • Tutsis were considered to have Caucasian ancestry (through lighter skin, larger skulls) and therefore were ‘superior’ to Hutus

  12. Rwanda 1933 (continued) • Eugenics Movement Effects • Creation of group classification on ID card • ID cards now stated if the individual was Twa, Hutu or Tutsi • Introduced a rigid racial concept of group identity • Belief of superior racial status • For Tutsis • Some exploited their power • For Hutus • Created resentment

  13. The ID Cards

  14. Civil Strife in the 1950s & 1960s • Hutus Look to Gain Power • Hutu Political Parties are formed • Call for a change in government (1957) • Civil War (1959) • Thousands of Tutsis including the King are forced into exile in Uganda • Hutus Gain Power • Rwanda proclaimed a republic (1961) • Hutu Gregoire Kayibanda named president (1962) • Many Tutsis leave the country

  15. Rwanda 1990-1993 • Invasion from Uganda by the Rwandan Patriotic Front (1990) • Mainly Tutsi refugees • Effects of the Invasion • New multi-party constitution (1991) • Power sharing agreement (1993) • Signals the end of civil war • UN sent to monitor the agreement

  16. Rwanda 1994 • In April 1994, the presidents of Rwanda and Burundi were killed in a suspicious plane crash • Civil war erupted on a massive scale • RPF launches a major offensive • Extremist Hutu militia and elements of the Rwandan military begin the systematic massacre of Tutsis

  17. Rwandan Statistics • Genocide lasts approx. 100 days • An estimated 800,000 people were killed • Total population of Rwanda was about 7 million • Many Tutsi women were systematically raped by HIV+ Hutu men • No outside government did anything to stop the genocide

  18. Post-Genocide Rwanda • Political Landscape • A new flag and national anthem are unveiled to try to promote national unity and reconciliation (2001) • RPF wins an absolute majority in government elections (2003) • Paul Kagame becomes first president • EU observers say poll was marred by irregularities and fraud. • RPF winslarge majority again in 2008 • President Kagame wins new term in elections (2010) • Presidential candidate against Kagame • Victoire Ingabire Umuhoza is arrested in 2010 • Bernard Ntaganda is sentenced for four years in jail in 2011

  19. Genocide Trials vs. Prisoner Release • Capturing Perpetrators • Hundreds have been arrested and tried for war crimes, terrorism, crimes against humanity, etc. • Includes priests, army officers, government officials • President Kagame has been accused • Overcrowding of Prisons • 36,000 prisoners released in 2005 • 8,000 released in 2007 • Most confessed to involvement in the genocide • Third phase of releases since 2003 • 60,000 suspects have been freed since 2003

  20. The Rwandan Economy • Economic Partners • Major exports to Belgium, Germany & China • Investment and trade agreement with Belgium • The government has promoted economic development • Shows signs of development • The major exports are coffee and tea • Coffee makes up more than 50% of the total export

  21. Case Study II: South Africa

  22. Geography of South Africa

  23. Important Cities of South Africa

  24. Provinces of South Africa

  25. History of South AfricaPre-European Contact • Remains exist from about three million years ago • Contains some of the oldest archaeological sites in the world • The earliest ironworks are believed to date from around 1050 • Humans have inhabited for more than 100,000 years. • The two major historic groups were the Xhosa and Zulu

  26. History of South AfricaEarly contact with Europeans • 1487 • Portuguese explorer Bartolomeu Dias • First European in southern Africa. • He named the cape “Cape of Storms” • King John II renamed it “Cape of Good Hope”

  27. History of South AfricaEarly contact with Europeans • 1652 • Jan van Riebeeck • Represented the Dutch East India Company • Founded the Cape Colony • Would become Cape Town

  28. History of South Africa (cont) • Early Role of Cape Town • Colonists use slaves from Indonesia, Madagascar, and India • Discovery of resources • Diamonds and gold • Encouraged economic growth and immigration • Started the Anglo-Boer War • Boers and the British fought for control

  29. History of South AfricaBritish Control • Cape Town became a British colony in 1806 • European settlement expanded during the 1820s • Early 1800s • Shaka Zulu founds and expands the Zulu empire, creates a formidable fighting force

  30. The Great Trek • 1835-1840 • Boers leave Cape Colony • Establish the Orange Free State and the Transvaal • This intensified the struggle to control economic resources • Competition between natives, Boers, and British

  31. The Boer Wars • The Boer fought the British throughout the late 1800s • Boers used guerrilla warfare tactics • The British ultimately won • Formation of Union of South Africa (1910) • Dominion of the British Empire

  32. British Rule of South Africa • The Natives' Land Act of 1913 severely restricted the ownership of land by blacks • Statute of Westminster (1931) • Effectively granted independence

  33. Apartheid becomes Law • Election of 1948 • The National Party was elected to power • The legislature passed legally institutionalized segregation, later known as apartheid • System of segregation • The white minority controlled the vastly larger black majority • Classified all peoples into three races • White, Colored, Black • Developed rights and limitations for each • i.e. residential restrictions

  34. Anti-Apartheid Movement • ANC responds to apartheid • Led by Nelson Mandela • Uses tactics such as civil disobedience and sabotage • 1964 - ANC leader Nelson Mandela sentenced to life imprisonment

  35. Views of Apartheid • Opposition to Apartheid • Within the country • Colored and Blacks • The African National Congress (ANC) • Outside the country • International sanctions • Boycotts of doing business with South Africa • Excluded from 1960 Olympic Games • Government still continued apartheid • Harshly oppressed resistance movements • Violence became widespread

  36. South Africa in the 1970s • Military Spending Increased • Began nuclear weapon development • Social Unrest Continued • Hundreds were killed in various protests

  37. South Africa in the 1980s • Military Spending • Produced six nuclear weapons • Social Unrest Eases • President FW de Klerk meets Mandela (1989) • Public facilities desegregated • Many ANC activists freed

  38. South Africa in the 1990s • End of Apartheid • Ban on political organizations (including ANC) was lifted • Released Nelson Mandela from prison after twenty-seven years • Repealed apartheid legislation • Destroyed its nuclear arsenal

  39. Free Elections • First universal elections in 1994 • ANC won by an overwhelming majority • Mandela elected President • ANC has been in power ever since

  40. Attacking Apartheid • Truth and Reconciliation Commission (1996) • Led by Archbishop Desmond Tutu • Brands apartheid a crime against humanity • Also finds the ANC accountable for human rights abuses

  41. Modern South Africa • Major Developments against AIDS • 2001 • South Africa wins court battle to import generic AIDS drugs • Gov’t must give AIDS drugs to pregnant women to prevent transmission to their babies • 2002 • Gov’t must provide anti-AIDs drug at all public hospitals • 2003 • Government approves program to provide anti-AIDS medicine via public health system. • Drug-distribution centers and preventative programs

  42. Modern South Africa • Economic Conditions since Apartheid • Economy had steady growth • However unemployment has grown • Recession in 2009 first time since mid 1990s

  43. Modern South Africa • Social Conditions since Apartheid • S. Africa becomes the fifth in the world to allow same-sex unions (2006) • President Mbeki urges to bring corrupt officials to justice (2007) • Wave of violence directed at foreigners (2008) • Poor living conditions lead to violent protests (2009) • South Africa hosts the World Cup tournament (2010)

  44. Case Study III:Somalia

  45. Where is Somalia?

  46. History of Somalia • Imperialist Age of 1800s • Egypt, France, England & Italy all claim parts of Somalia • Late 1800s • Protectorate of Italy • Post-World War II • Protectorate of Great Britain • 1960 • Achieved independence • 1970s • Military dictatorship • Under Mohamed Siad Barre

  47. Somalia under Barre • Declares Somalia a socialist state in 1970 • Joins the Arab League in 1974 • Invades Ethiopia in 1977 • Ousted in 1991

  48. Somali Civil War – 1991 • Somali Civil War • Strategic importance was diminished due to end of the Cold War • Disrupted agriculture, food & water distribution • Based on clan allegiances and competition for resources

  49. Somali Civil War – 1991 • More Results • Famine – approx. 300,000 dead • UN authorized a limited peacekeeping operation • Completely disregarded by the warring factions

More Related