Africa. Ghana University of Ghana Department of Economics inter-faculty Graduate School of International Cooperation Studies 2016.
Africa. Algeria · Guinea · Senegal
Africa. Benin, Botswana, Burundi, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Congo, Cote d’lvoire, Djibouti, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Kenya, Lesotho, Liberia, Libya, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Mauritius, Niger, Nigeria, Rwanda, Senegal, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, Xxxxxxx, Xxxxxxxxx, Xxxxxxxx, Xxxx, Xxxxxx, Xxxxxxx Xxxxxx, Xxxxxx.
Africa. Africa shall include the entire continent of Africa and all islands appurtenant thereto. Schedule 2.1
Africa. That this is so is demonstrated by the limited extent to which European colonialists were actually able to physically penetrate the African continent. The legitimacy of territorial claims asserted and recognised at the Berlin Conference would be readily accepted, regardless of how deep the colonial presence was able to grow beyond the usual coastal instillations. Any fresh act of taking possession on any portion of the African coast would have to be notified by the power taking possession, or assuming a protectorate, to the other signatory powers. Furthermore, as observed by Xxxxxxx,88 whereas the balance-of-power framework in Europe had the genuine potential to provoke overt hostilities, the overseas expansion of Euro- pean colonialists was largely guided by the anticipation and accommodation of competing states’ needs. The result of this is the uneasy stability that accompanied the international affairs of the period, generally. Greater clarity on the exercise of effective control and the manifestation of sovereign activities would need to be jurisprudentially developed as the implications of colonial actions made their way into burgeoning legal systems. Similarly, all colonising states would keep close watch on the activities of other, competing colonising states. Introducing the concepts of effective control and sovereign activities (effectivités) The question of whether Africa was terra nullius prior to colonisation is not entirely un- controversial, despite widespread evidence of transactions reflecting transfer of territory from colonised to coloniser, even if the ‘transfers’ could be viewed only in the most nominal sense possible. Most significant is the 1975 Western Sahara case before the ICJ,89 as the subject of terra nullius arises directly. The main question brought to the Court was this: “Was Western Sahara at
Africa. To use the Trademark in the Territory in association with the Tuatara Vehicles or accessories to the Tuatara Vehicles;
Africa. It would be wrong to pass over the early Latin Fathers—Xxxxxxxxxx, Xxxxxxx, Xxxxxxxxx, Xxxxxxxxx—without mentioning that defenders of the comma, from the sixteenth century to the present day, claim that the form of Scripture familiar to all these Fathers contained the comma. However, this assertion is based on a failure to make two basic distinctions. First is the failure to distinguish between two issues: 1) Did the particular Father in question believe in the Trinity? 2) Did the biblical text with which this Father was familiar contain the comma? To give an affirmative answer to the first question does not mean that we must give the same answer to the second. But even to say that the earliest Fathers believed in the Trinity requires qualification: each one of these Fathers believed in the Trinity as it was understood and formulated in his own time. The fact that Xxxxxx’s understanding of the Trinity could be considered acceptable during his lifetime and subsequently judged as heretical is sufficient evidence of the fact that the doctrine of the Trinity was still in a process of flux and development. Second is the failure to distinguish between two further issues: 1) Did the biblical text with which the Father in question was familiar contain the comma?
Africa. A. CAPITAL LEASES SECURED BY ASSETS SUBJECT TO, AND LISTED IN, SUCH LEASES
1. SOUTH AFRICA
(a) Capital Lease between GOODYEAR SOUTH AFRICA LIMITED and the lessor named therein, relating to the premises identified therein.
Africa. Africa shall include the entire continent of Africa and all islands appurtenant thereto.
Africa. Africa, as a continent, has hugely attractive markets with increasing GDPs, a growing middle class and expanding economic opportunities. Africa is also growing in importance in the context of the global beer industry. It is expected that the African continent will represent approximately 8.1% of global beer industry by volumes by 2025, up from approximately 6.5% in 2014, with beer volumes in Africa being expected to grow at nearly three times the rate of global beer volumes between 2014 and 2025. AB InBev does not currently have any significant operations in Africa and the continent will play a vital role in the future of the Combined Group, building upon the strong history and success of SABMiller in the region dating back to the 19th century. As a result, AB InBev intends: • to seek a secondary (inward) listing of AB InBev’s ordinary shares on the JSE, as soon as reasonably practicable after the date of this Announcement. AB InBev intends to engage with relevant stakeholders in preparing for and implementing the secondary (inward) listing; • it is also intended that, upon or shortly after Completion, the New Ordinary Shares of Newco will be listed on the JSE, through a secondary (inward) listing, which would replace the proposed secondary listing of AB InBev on the JSE; • to have a local board in South Africa that would be critical to the future success of the Combined Group; and • for Johannesburg to continue to be the regional headquarters for the Combined Group on the African continent. In addition, AB InBev recognises that SABMiller has long supported the progress of South African society and is deeply engaged with local stakeholders. AB InBev is supportive of the South African government’s economic transformation objectives and is committed to continuing XXXXxxxxx’s contribution to meaningful black economic empowerment. AB InBev recognises and supports the Zenzele Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment scheme established by SABMiller in 2010 and the scheme’s objective of providing long-term economic benefits to a broad range of previously disadvantaged South Africans. AB InBev and XXXXxxxxx have agreed to work together as a priority to develop an appropriate proposal in relation to the scheme regarding the ongoing investment by its various groups of participants in SABMiller's South African subsidiary, South African Breweries, after Completion. This proposal will be communicated to the relevant parties in due course.