businesses like this bar, open for the past 25 years. because of the power cut, the electricity, you can see now, it s dark. are you going to survive, your business? i don t think so, i don t think so. next door, a cash transfer company is on the ropes too. it must be frustrating. it is, very much frustrating. do you see an end sight? do you see an end in sight? i don t. this is our new life now. why such chaos? the answers lie out here in coal country. almost all south africa s electricity is generated by burning coal, but the industry is being plundered, billions of pounds lost to criminal cartels. mines like this one looted. even at night you hear gunshots, gunshots. even they are fighting among themselves for this coal. the different gangs? yes. what s extraordinary is quite how brazen it is. it s happening every day out
our congress that s been stealing elections for a very long time. our country s been undered a mir alt law since 1871. what should the sentence be for members of congress? execution. it s what our constitution demands. traitors are executed. that s what should happen to each and every person who hijacked the voice of we the people. is that something you see actually happening? yes. a spokesperson for the trump campaign did not immediately respond to our request for comments, neither did a spokesperson for former vice president mike pence. but former republican congressman liz cheney did respond this way, quote, trump is embracing a january 6th defendant who called for the execution of members of congress. to elected republicans who have endorsed him, you are endorsing his conduct on january 6th and every day since. the only thing necessary for the
is relatively poor per capita, it has got natural resources and a lot of these have been plundered. gold is being illicitly slipped out of the country and there is a lot of corruption going on. there are outside forces interested in sudan. russia wants to have a naval base on the red sea. the united states is very keen that sudan does not go back to its tearaways, which it did in the 1990s. up until 1996 it was the base where 0sama bin laden and the base where 0sama bin laden and the al-qaeda group before they moved to afghanistan were based. egypt has a vested interest in sudan being stable. they are allies against ethiopia. whatever happens in sudan will inevitably spill out, or risk spilling out, into neighbouring countries. that is why the african union and the arab league are trying really hard right now to try and dampen down this fire and find a compromise to stop the violence.
who work in difficult conditions in often dangerous circumstances. they are reviewing their operations. at least one airline, we are told, qatar airways, has suspended its flies into khartoum airport, has suspended its flights into khartoum airport, which is hardly surprising. if you look at the pictures and satellite maps you can see smoke billowing around the capital khartoum, including close to the airport. it will settle down eventually, but there is a risk that the country which, remember it s already fragmented from being this huge country, sudan, that stretched all the way down from the egyptian border in the north to the ugandan border in the south, it is already split in two to create south sudan, one of the newest countries in the world. there is now a risk that what is left of sudan could further disintegrate. there are big powers at play here. although sudan is relatively poor per capita, it has got natural resources and a lot of these have been plundered. gold is being ill