The South African president, who attended a massive
World War II victory parade in Moscow, stayed on for talks Sunday with
his counterpart Vladimir Putin. It was their fourth official meeting in
just 10 months.
One South African newspaper has described the Zuma-Putin relationship as a “bromance,” noting that they also hold regular phone discussions.
The pair apparently have much to discuss. But what, exactly?
Many in South Africa have been wondering this since
Zuma paid a mysterious visit to Moscow in August. While ostensibly a
trade visit, Zuma brought along his minister of state security, not the
trade minister, and his six-day trip included time to “rest.”
Three weeks later, South Africa signed a highly
controversial nuclear power agreement with a Russian state firm. South
Africa denied that it had officially agreed to buy Russian nuclear
technology, which could cost up to $100 billion, but South African media
have reported that it’s a done deal. Critics say the deal could
bankrupt the country.
Zuma and Putin often meet on the sidelines of events
for the BRICS group of emerging economies, which also includes Brazil,
India and China, and has become a strong geopolitical bloc with an
unofficial policy of counterbalancing Western power.
Neither South Africa nor the other BRICS countries
have criticized Russia for its invasion and occupation of Crimea, for
example, nor have they backed Western sanctions on Russia.

Goooooo, BRICS! Leaders of Russia, India, Brazil, China and South Africa get cozy for a photo in 2014.
AFP/Getty Images
During the apartheid years, when much of the West
froze out South Africa with sanctions, Moscow provided asylum and
military training to members of the African National Congress. Now, with
South Africa a democracy and the ANC in government, the country’s spies
receive specialized training in authoritarian Russia.
Before leaving Moscow this time, Zuma gave an
interview to Russian state media in which he sharply criticized Western
countries in Africa, stating that “their intention has never been to
make the former colonial countries develop.”
“They still regard us as the Third World, as a kind
of people, who must be related to as the former subject,” he is quoted
as saying.
In contrast, Zuma praised China for doing business in a way that will leave African countries “empowered.”
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