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Dictatorland
The Men Who Stole Africa
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Narrado por:
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Hamilton McLeod
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De:
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Paul Kenyon
A Financial Times Book of the Year
'Jaw-dropping' Daily Express
'Grimly fascinating' Financial Times
'Humane, timely, accessible and well-researched' Irish Times
The dictator who grew so rich on his country's cocoa crop that he built a 35-storey-high basilica in the jungles of the Ivory Coast. The austere, incorruptible leader who has shut Eritrea off from the world in a permanent state of war and conscripted every adult into the armed forces. In Equatorial Guinea, the paranoid despot who thought Hitler was the saviour of Africa and waged a relentless campaign of terror against his own people. The Libyan army officer who authored a new work of political philosophy, The Green Book, and lived in a tent with a harem of female soldiers, running his country like a mafia family business.
And behind these almost incredible stories of fantastic violence and excess lie the dark secrets of Western greed and complicity, the insatiable taste for chocolate, oil, diamonds and gold that has encouraged dictators to rule with an iron hand, siphoning off their share of the action into mansions in Paris and banks in Zurich and keeping their people in dire poverty.©2018 Paul Kenyon (P)2023 Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
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Reseñas de la crítica
The stories it tells of dictators such as Robert Mugabe and Muammer Gaddafi are grimly fascinating and leave the reader to ponder why so many of Africa's liberation heroes turned into villains
A humane, timely, accessible and well-researched book that shines a light on urgent African issues [...] that, when we consider the state of our own societies, can no longer be dismissed as merely somewhere else's problem
Paul Kenyon is a brilliant writer who's been there and tells a story of unparalleled greed and western complicity in vivid detail (Michael Buerk)
It is [the] minute observations that make Mr Kenyon's book so hard to put down
Mr Kenyon narrates a jaw-dropping tale of greed, corruption and brutality
Well written and sensibly structured... Some of the most revealing passages are based on interviews with retired expatriate executives and diplomats who were witness to the excesses of the early post-colonial years'
Kenyon's stories of corruption and excess are truly compelling, while his analysis of the West's motivations is astute and illuminating
A heart-breaking and stomach-churning history but also an utterly absorbing one... Kenyon blends in gripping, authenticating first-hand testimonies from those who were behind the carnage and corruption... This book shines a vital light on how Africa was robbed "in broad daylight"'
Highly readable... A chapter on the rise of Félix Houphouët-Boigny is especially vivid'
A familiar story, but still shocking
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