The Scramble for Africa: Greed, Empire, and Borders — Fexingo History
In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the lasting legacy of the Berlin Conference of 1884-85. They focus on how the straight-line borders drawn by European diplomats—without any knowledge of African geography, ethnic groups, or trade routes—created boundaries that persist today. The conversation examines specific examples: the border between Nigeria and Cameroon that splits the Bakassi Peninsula; the Caprivi Strip, a panhandle that gives Namibia access to the Zambezi but was a colonial bargaining chip; and the Angolan-Congolese border that separated the Kongo Kingdom. They discuss the legal doctrine of uti possidetis, which postcolonial African states adopted to avoid endless wars, freezing colonial borders in place. The episode also touches on the work of the African Union Border Programme, which has resolved some disputes but left others simmering. This is not a rehash of the conference itself but a deep dive into the consequences of that drawing-room cartography. #BerlinConference #ScrambleForAfrica #ColonialBorders #UtiPossidetis #CapriviStrip #BakassiPeninsula #KongoKingdom #AfricanUnion #BorderDisputes #Nigeria #Cameroon #Namibia #Angola #DRC #Zambezi #History #FexingoHistory #ColonialLegacy Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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