Goodreads helps you follow your favorite authors. Be the first to learn about new releases!
Start by following Karl Maier.
Showing 1-21 of 21
“In Rwanda, one person's God is another person's Satan
-Thérèse Nyirabayovu”
― Into the House of the Ancestors: Inside the New Africa
-Thérèse Nyirabayovu”
― Into the House of the Ancestors: Inside the New Africa
“Wadigimbi has told me on several occasions that journalists are a waste of time, which is certainly an arguable point of view, but surely not one that the director of the foreign press centre should hold.”
― Angola: Promises and Lies
― Angola: Promises and Lies
“By all accounts the Angolan people, the great majority of them poor, illiterate and living in isolated villages or urban slums, carry out their civic responsibilities with great dignity and patience. The two voting days in Angola are another confirmation that anyone who mouths the cliché that Africans are not ready for democracy is simply ignorant of the facts. African politicians, however, are a different matter.”
― Angola: Promises and Lies
― Angola: Promises and Lies
“They have suffered and risked death for their country while their commanding officers are becoming rich. ‘Look at that lieutenant, how fat he is. How come the officers are all fat? None of us are fat, because we have no food.”
― Angola: Promises and Lies
― Angola: Promises and Lies
“The month before I had found a cockroach in a bowl of onion soup and, when I complained, the waiter dutifully removed it and returned with another bowl from the same pot. Sheepishly, I explained that I no longer had an appetite for onion soup. A few days later, when I told the hotel manager how disappointed I was to find that onion soup was no longer on the menu, he said, ‘Oh, we ran out of cockroaches.”
― Angola: Promises and Lies
― Angola: Promises and Lies
“In just a few months, he vows, Cabinda will be free of Angolan rule and the huge sums of money earned from the oil exports will be used to uplift the enclave’s 150,000 people. ‘Without doubt, we are going to win this war, even if it takes twenty years.”
― Angola: Promises and Lies
― Angola: Promises and Lies
“There are ample signs that the two sides are simply using the lull in the fighting to re-arm and re-equip their forces to have another go at a war neither can ever win.”
― Angola: Promises and Lies
― Angola: Promises and Lies
“In 2005 Transparency International, the Berlin-based corruption watchdog, ranked Angola as one of the ten most corrupt countries in the world.”
― Angola: Promises and Lies
― Angola: Promises and Lies
“The saddest part of it was that most of the troops fighting with the Portuguese were black Angolans. It has always been like that. Angolans killing Angolans.”
― Angola: Promises and Lies
― Angola: Promises and Lies
“His beard is flecked with grey now, but even at 57 he still has a cherubic face that breaks easily into a broad, youthful smile. Only his eyes betray immense pain. Dignity is the word that comes to mind when one meets him.”
― Angola: Promises and Lies
― Angola: Promises and Lies
“Her age was one of the reasons she always got away with it. In Africa elderly people still command respect.”
― Angola: Promises and Lies
― Angola: Promises and Lies
“The good thing about what’s happened in Huambo is that the problems have forced these people to work for the first time. The city people are lazy, and finally they are being made to work,’ he says. I wonder how Elizabeth Casilva, whose family is on the brink of starvation, would feel about such a statement. She could not possibly work any harder, and yet only a feeding centre kept her son Erickson from dying.”
― Angola: Promises and Lies
― Angola: Promises and Lies
“What Europeans and Americans fail to understand, he says, is that Africa is really not ready for democracy. ‘The democratic culture is just not there,’ he says. It is an incredible claim for a leader of a white minority government which has jailed Nelson Mandela, the nation’s true leader, for a quarter of a century. South Africa will lead the way in Africa, perhaps the world, he maintains. Just look at the country’s success in international sport. When I remind him that South Africa’s national football side has just been pummelled by the Nigerian team, he shakes his head and says, ‘I was really crying for the boys.”
― Angola: Promises and Lies
― Angola: Promises and Lies
“One wiry little man sees from the form that I am living in South Africa and begins to question me about the situation in the run-up to the country’s first all-race elections. ‘Mandela will never win there, will he? Our”
― Angola: Promises and Lies
― Angola: Promises and Lies
“There were 675 people in his village, he says, but one-tenth of them have perished in the past three months. ‘It began in November and the children were the first to begin dying.’ We are eating some leaves, but the people don’t have the strength to look for food any more.”
― Angola: Promises and Lies
― Angola: Promises and Lies
“Angola’s vast reserves of oil and diamonds should make it one of Africa’s richest countries, but the politicians—Deofina calls them the donos, or owners—spend everything either on the war or themselves.”
― Angola: Promises and Lies
― Angola: Promises and Lies
“The 140 children at the Cuando mission represent a tiny fraction of the hundreds of thousands of Angolan kids who have no one to look after them. Most wander aimlessly around the countryside or live by their wits on the streets of Luanda and other major cities, begging for money, washing or even just watching cars. In what should be one of Africa’s richest countries, guarding vehicles has become a major form of employment.”
― Angola: Promises and Lies
― Angola: Promises and Lies
“You can return to Luanda, but all the cameras must remain behind.’ Not surprisingly, the three television crews, including a Brazilian team which had come straight from the airport, debate the issue strenuously, but theirs is a lost cause. Surely they can leave their film behind and take the cameras, we protest, but the commander has said that everything is to remain behind. Orders from headquarters. A crowd of soldiers raise their weapons to stress the point. Rambo is going ballistic, shouting that the camera is his personal property and it cost many thousands of dollars. He is not helping his case. UNITA soldiers rarely disobey orders, and telling them how much his camera is worth does not seem the best of strategies.”
― Angola: Promises and Lies
― Angola: Promises and Lies
“The years of speeches about democracy and freedom were just words directed at an audience of mainly conservative Americans who had become enamoured with Africa’s best known ‘freedom fighter’. His commitment to democratic principles was no more real than the Maoist rhetoric Savimbi spouted in the pre-independence days when China was his biggest backer. It all comes down to this: ‘If I don’t win, I won’t accept the result.”
― Angola: Promises and Lies
― Angola: Promises and Lies
“Only God can intervene, Deofina believes, to save a people condemned to damnation by their leaders. She is a deeply religious woman, a member of the Seventh Day Adventist Church, and she is hoping God will do away with the politicians and self-appointed messiahs—the donos - who have dragged the country, her family, to ruin. ‘The problem is that the donos never die.”
― Angola: Promises and Lies
― Angola: Promises and Lies
“A young American woman I meet has been a UN observer in Kuito for more than a month. She speaks no Portuguese and gladly admits she knows nothing about Angolan history. She is surveying the scene, admiring the tough-looking UNITA soldiers, and suddenly announces, ‘I like UNITA’s style. They’re strict, but they’re cool too.’ I wonder where the United Nations finds such people for so important an assignment.”
― Angola: Promises and Lies
― Angola: Promises and Lies




