What exactly will replace it, if anything, is much, much less clear…” Reuters News Agency Columnist, Peter Apps. THE most dramatic news this time around was the vote by British people to exit from the European Union, henceforth christened by the global media as ‘Brexit vote’. For us here watching the news on television in the intervening period, what prompted the referendum to be taken on whether or not Britain should stay as member of the 28-member post Second World War European unity body was far from clear. I guess not many of us here were interested in this development given the fact that Britain belongs to the club of what Mwalimu Nyerere once described as “wakubwa” – in a collective sense meaning the powerful wealthy North - as opposed to us who belonged to the impoverished South; in the economic sense. But Britain matters. It is a former colonial power of this country and indeed the whole major states of East Africa today. Britain is, from a cultural perspective, influential because English language is one of the leading global languages that links up people across the planet. So what happens in Britain is interesting to Europeans as much as to Africans. Following the opinion of the British national, a columnist quoted at the launch of the perspective, reading his article further, the journalist says that within the UK government no one “planned for the outcome of Brexit vote”. “The results show the country savagely, bitterly divided. Essentially voters in...
Any lesson for East Africans on Britain’s exit from EU?
Posted on: July 4, 2016
Posted on: July 4, 2016