Protestors Dump Sewage at Airport Ahead of Obama's South Africa Visit

 BREITBART.COM3 Hours Ago

Protestors Dump Sewage at Airport Ahead of Obama's South Africa Visit

by Breitbart News26 Jun 2013, 1:59 PM PDTpost a comment

Local news sources report that the Congress of South African Trade Unions (Cosatu), which is technically a governing partner with the ANC, plans to "disrupt" Obama's visit to the country by staging demonstrations involving thousands of protestors. Cosatu specifically objects to Obama's foreign policy, which it describes as imperialist and militaristic. Local Muslim groups are joining the protest, too, with the local Muslim Lawyers Association calling on the government to arrest President Obama on his arrival for war crimes.

Several left-wing academics are vowing to boycott Obama's a ceremony at the University of Johannesburg in which Obama is to receive an honorary doctorate. The centrist Democratic Alliance, meanwhile, has come under fire for attempting to bestow an award on the President and First Lady Michelle Obama. 

Obama's visit has also affected growing debates around the country's ailing former president, Nelson Mandela, who is said to be on life support. Mandela's relatives are engaged in a very public round of infighting over where he should be buried when he dies. There is some speculation that Mandela is being kept on life support until Obama's visit, though the two are not scheduled to meet. NBC, citing one of Mandela's daughters, reported Tuesday that Mandela had opened his eyes and smiled when being told of Obama's imminent arrival in the country, but that report was not confirmed by other sources.


Protestors Dump Sewage at Airport Ahead of Obama's South Africa Visit
http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Peace/2013/06/26/Protestors-Dump-Sewage-at-Airport-Ahead-of-Obama-s-South-Africa-Visit
John Hames

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

FOLLOW THE MONEY - Billionaire tied to Epstein scandal funneled large donations to Ramaswamy & Democrats

Readworthy: This month’s best biographies & memoirs

Inside J&Js bankruptcy plan to end talc lawsuits