

Right through Africa
Season 1
Bram Vermeulen travels through South Africa, Zimbabwe, Zambia and Angola exploring change. He travels by train, moped and Rolls Royce and rediscovers the southern tip of the continent.
Where to Watch Right through Africa • Season 1
9 Episodes
- The promised land
E2The promised landA battle is raging in South Africa over who has more right to the land: the black South African who got there first, or the white man who brought European progress. Gone are the days when this painful debate was avoided for the sake of racial reconciliation. Bram Vermeulen travels to the farmlands of South Africa, where old relationships are under high tension under the pressure of a new generation. - Back in Harare
E3Back in HarareZimbabwe is etched in our memories as the country of economic chaos. But disorder is not undesirable for everyone. Bram Vermeulen visits an elite that became immensely rich thanks to the crisis. He travels through the country in a Rolls Royce and sees the crisis through the eyes of the plundering class. Does Zimbabwe work? - The lost paradise
E8The lost paradiseAngola is one of the fastest growing economies in the world. So much money is made in this former Portuguese colony that Portuguese are fleeing the crisis in their own country en masse to seek fortune in Angola. Also the so-called 'retornados' - the Portuguese who fled the country in haste in 1974 and now find a radically different country. - The hole of Mongu
E9The hole of MonguIn Zambia, many years of Dutch development aid have yielded precious little, Bram Vermeulen discovers. Are the Chinese doing better now, under the motto 'trade, not aid'? Mongu, an area in the far west of Zambia, was called the thirteenth province of our country. From the 1970s onwards, it was teeming with Dutch development workers who wanted to bring civilization to this wet, flat area. For example, by dredging a canal, a job worth tens of millions of euros. That would make shipping possible and thus boost the entire economy. Bram Vermeulen looks at what happened with former development worker René Lourens. Not much, as it soon becomes apparent. Aid has dried up and instead of an embassy with 45 people, the Netherlands only has a small consulate with three employees in Zambia. In Mongu, people regret the end of Dutch aid.




