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The Southern African Pleasure Periphery, 1966–83
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 November 2008
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Both Lesotho and Swaziland possess a well-developed rhetoric advocating disengagement from South Africa, exemplified most recently in their joint commitment to the Southern African Development Co-ordination Conference. Nevertheless, both countries remain firmly fastened to their dominant neighbour and committed to development strategies which tend to perpetuate such ties. The implications of continued social and economic domination by South Africa have not been lost on analysts of these two small, nominally independent Southern African states.
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References
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page 685 note 3 Ibid.
page 685 note 4 Lesotho National Tourist Office Brochure, ‘Lesotho's Magic Mountain Kingdom’, n.d.
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page 688 note 2 Government of Swaziland, Third National Development Plan, and Government of Lesotho, Third National Development Plan.
page 688 note 3 The figures for all modern wage-earners include the small numbers employed in the formal production of handicrafts.
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page 693 note 1 Another dimension of this alliance concerns the funds raised by the Homeland Governments as part of their capital commitments to casino developments. In the case of Bophuthatswana, over R 15 million was obtained by a direct loan from Pretoria.
page 693 note 2 See Wellings and Crush, loc. cit., for further discussion of the corporate structure of the hotel industry in Southern Africa.
page 693 note 3 The Constant stream of North American and British entertainers to Sun City, many of whom appear to have little conception of the implication of their visits, also confers an important cultural legitimacy on their own society in the eyes of white South Africans.
page 694 note 1 Sunday Times, 19 December 1982, reported that the two corporations were actively considering a merger of their casino interests to mitigate ‘wasteful competition’.
page 694 note 2 The final collapse of a casino in Venda built by an Afrikaans entrepreneur, led him to sue the leaders of that Homeland for R5 million, since they bad agreed that the income from Pretoria would be used as security in the event of failure. According to the Sunday Times, 27 April 1983, the South African Government is now in the ludicrous position of having to direct a proportion of its R 100 million aid to Venda to bail out independent-minded Venda slum-lords.
page 694 note 3 See ‘Satan's Breeding Place’, in Ibid. 13 September 1981, on the proposed Thaba Nchu casino.
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page 695 note 1 For example, Southern Sun is constructing a R100 million hotel and conference complex in Johannesburg. There are also plans afoot to buy into the North American casino industry.
page 696 note 1 Adapted from Wellings and Crush, loc. cit. p. 219.
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