Anonymous ID: 868a63 Dec. 30, 2024, 11:41 a.m. No.22257747   🗄️.is 🔗kun

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When Georgia invited South African farmers to revive its agriculture sector

July 10, 2021

5 Min Read

Christian Mamo

Christian Mamo

Christian Mamo

 

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Georgia’s experiment with wooing foreign investors to boost its agricultural industry has had mixed results. However, it has led to an unlikely community settling in the country.

 

A decade ago, Georgia was looking for creative ways to revive its flagging agriculture sector.

 

Showing remarkable imagination, the Georgian government identified a community 5,000 miles away that could help them: the South African Boers.

 

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Boer, meaning farmer in Dutch and Afrikaans, refers to South Africans of Dutch origin. Their agricultural pedigree is unquestioned, and around 40,000 Boers continue to own the majority of South Africa’s farming land.

 

However, since the end of apartheid in 1994, large numbers have emigrated, primarily to the United Kingdom, the Netherlands and Australia.

 

The fact that South Africans of European origin continue to possess the bulk of the country’s most fertile land has led to conflict with indigenous Africans.

 

This sometimes turns into violence. According to statistics from the South African government, there are roughly 60 murders of Boer farmers each year, just one example of South Africa’s overarching problem with violent crime.

 

Boers have also been concerned about their land being appropriated by the South African government in the name of reducing the inequality caused by apartheid.

 

In recent years, these fears have been heightened since the emergence of Julius Malema, a young, firebrand politician with inflammatory opinions about the European-origin farming community.

 

As such, it was easy for the Georgian government to present their country as a viable destination for Boers looking to relocate.

 

Georgia has a strongly pro-business environment, regularly scoring high on the World Bank’s Ease of Doing Business index. Crime rates are low, particularly compared to those in South Africa.

 

https://emerging-europe.com/culture-travel-sport/when-georgia-invited-south-african-farmers-to-revive-its-agriculture-sector/

 

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_dnNOFCDSF8

Afrikaner Farmers Migrating to Georgia - YouTube

 

Sep 15, 2011 … … South African farmers, say they have had enough of violence and racial tension in South Africa and are planning to move out. VOA's James …

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https://jam-news.net/boers-newfound-home-in-rural-georgia/

South Africans setting up in rural Georgia: reasons, challenges and …

 

Mar 2, 2018 … White farmers in South Africa are about to have their lands confiscated. The country's new president, Cyril Ramaphosa who was sworn in on 15 …

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https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-12599987

Georgia's call for South African farmers - BBC News

 

Mar 1, 2011 … Georgia's call for South African farmers … To revive its agricultural industry, the Georgian government is inviting groups of white

 

New Georgian president sworn in; predecessor says he is not legitimate leader

By Gleb Stolyarov and Felix Light

December 29, 20249:12 AM PSTUpdated a day ago

 

TBILISI, Dec 29 (Reuters) - Mikheil Kavelashvili, a hardline critic of the West, was sworn in as president of Georgia on Sunday amid a political crisis after the government froze European Union application talks in a move that sparked major protests.

Outgoing President Salome Zourabichvili, a pro-EU opponent of the ruling party, said in a defiant speech to supporters outside the presidential palace that she was leaving the residence, but that Kavelashvili had no legitimacy as president, which is a mostly ceremonial position.

 

She said: "I will come out of here and be with you."

"I am taking legitimacy with me, I am taking the flag with me, I am taking your trust with me," she added, before walking out of the palace to mingle with her supporters.

Zourabichvili says that Kavelashvili was not duly picked, as the lawmakers who chose him were elected in an October parliamentary election that she says was marked by fraud. Georgia's opposition parties support her.

 

https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/new-georgian-president-sworn-predecessor-says-he-is-not-legitimate-leader-2024-12-29/

Anonymous ID: 868a63 Dec. 30, 2024, 11:51 a.m. No.22257800   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7818 >>7889

 

The CDC researcher who mysteriously vanished in February has been found dead

April 5, 2018

 

Police say missing CDC doctor was passed over for promotion

 

Police investigating the Feb. 12 disappearance of CDC employee Timothy Cunningham revealed Feb. 27 he had recently been passed up for a promotion. (Video: Reuters)

 

 

By Lindsey Bever

and

Alex Horton

 

A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention researcher has been found dead, seven weeks after he left the agency's headquarters in Atlanta and mysteriously vanished without a trace.

 

Officials said a body was recovered Tuesday from the bank of the Chattahoochee River in Atlanta and that they have positively identified the deceased person as 35-year-old Timothy Cunningham.

You are what you read. Reveal your 2024 reader type with Newsprint.

 

Authorities said that there was no indication that there had been foul play, however, the circumstances surrounding Cunningham's death are still largely a mystery.

 

Authorities said during a news conference Thursday that it appears Cunningham drowned, but they have not yet determined whether his drowning was accidental or intentional.

 

“Barring some new information coming forward,” Atlanta police Maj. Michael O'Connor told reporters, “we may never be able to tell you how he got into the river.”

 

Cunningham's work at the CDC fueled speculation and conspiracy theories about his disappearance, including one dubious story on a website that said Cunningham disappeared amid warnings that his patients were dying from botched flu vaccines.

 

continued:

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/to-your-health/wp/2018/04/05/timothy-cunningham-the-cdc-researcher-who-mysteriously-vanished-in-february-has-been-found-dead/