German ambassador Peschke envied for isiZulu fluency

German Ambassador to South Africa Andreas Peschke has become the envy of the diplomatic corps for his fluent isiZulu speeches. In a recent interview in Cape Town, he discussed bilateral relations, trade, and investment challenges. He highlighted Germany's role as South Africa's second-largest trading partner.

German Ambassador Andreas Peschke began studying isiZulu as a young African studies student in Germany, inspired by South Africa's transition and Nelson Mandela. He arrived in September 2021 and practised isiZulu extensively to become fluent. He also started Sepedi lessons due to its use in Pretoria and picked up Afrikaans from Afrikaner classmates. Learning local languages, he said, “is a great way to value the diversity of South Africa, to reach out to people and to open a conversation.” He drew from Mandela’s maxim: “if you speak a language a person understands, you reach their mind. If you try to speak his or her language, you reach their heart.” People appreciate the effort as a sign of respect. Trade reached more than R294-billion last year, behind China's R642-billion; the EU accounts for about 40%. Over 600 German companies operate in South Africa, providing more than 100,000 direct jobs and double indirectly. Recent investments include BMW’s R4.2-billion Rosslyn expansion in 2023 and BASF’s Durban facility upgrade. Challenges include infrastructure, skilled labour shortages, bureaucracy, and B-BBEE. Peschke noted that B-BBEE implementation can be bureaucratic: “everybody understands the necessity of transformation, but maybe some of the implementation... is slowing down investment.” He suggested valuing job creation more highly or offering grace periods for new investors. Germany has invested over R50-billion in the Just Energy Transition Partnership. Recent agreements cover foot-and-mouth disease with ministers Alois Rainer and John Steenhuisen. A new joint naval Exercise Good Hope is planned. Relations are on a good trajectory, with South Africa as Germany's top African trading partner.

Relaterade artiklar

Diplomatic tension: South African official reprimands US Ambassador Bozell III over 'Kill the Boer' hate speech remarks amid flags and court imagery.
Bild genererad av AI

South Africa reprimands US ambassador for calling 'Kill the Boer' chant hate speech despite court ruling

Rapporterad av AI Bild genererad av AI

South Africa's government issued a formal diplomatic reprimand to US Ambassador Leo Brent Bozell III on March 11, 2026, after he publicly dismissed a Constitutional Court ruling during a speech the previous day, insisting the anti-apartheid-era 'Kill the Boer' chant constituted hate speech. Bozell later expressed regrets and affirmed US respect for South Africa's judiciary amid strained bilateral relations.

A year after its ambassador was expelled from Washington, South Africa has appointed Thabo Thage as deputy ambassador to the US, effectively acting as chargé d’affaires. President Cyril Ramaphosa is using an unorthodox approach with special envoy Alistair Ruiters handling negotiations. This avoids risks of rejection by the Trump administration.

Rapporterad av AI

Egypt's Deputy Prime Minister for Economic Affairs, Hussein Eissa, held two separate meetings at the government headquarters in the New Administrative Capital with the ambassadors of Germany and India to discuss strengthening economic and development cooperation. The discussion with the German ambassador focused on the long-standing partnership in sectors such as energy and water, while the meeting with the Indian ambassador highlighted historical ties and investment opportunities following Egypt's accession to BRICS.

Japan’s Foreign Minister Toshimitsu Motegi is scheduled to visit South Africa on 4 May as part of an Africa tour. The trip aims to strengthen ties amid global instability and secure critical minerals supply chains. Japan’s ambassador Fumio Shimizu highlighted recent high-level exchanges between Tokyo and Pretoria.

Rapporterad av AI

South Africa has noted Ghana's call for an African Union debate on alleged xenophobic attacks at the upcoming mid-year summit in Cairo, while condemning recent incidents and stressing diplomatic engagement.

The anti-foreigner group March and March held demonstrations in Tshwane and Johannesburg on Tuesday and Wednesday, demanding action against illegal immigrants ahead of local government elections. Leader Jacinta Ngobese-Zuma called for stricter immigration controls, while ActionSA's Herman Mashaba voiced support. Gauteng Premier Panyaza Lesufi received a memorandum and was given seven days to respond.

Denna webbplats använder cookies

Vi använder cookies för analys för att förbättra vår webbplats. Läs vår integritetspolicy för mer information.
Avböj