Explanation:
1 - Puppetry, being used by his former jailers and racists to push white interests and selling out his own people.
2 - Lack of vision. He was not a reformer. He failed to reform South Africa, the country’s cultural values, education system and so on.
3 - He failed to address the crime situation and endemic violence in the society.
4 - He failed to improve and expand the education system to everybody.
5 - He was not practical. He thought every crisis could be solved by talking peace, while the enemy is busy invading, raping and butchering civilians. Case in point, the DRC war. He opposed intervention in the war as 25,000 Ugandan and 6000 Rwandan soldiers advanced towards the capital. This is the kind of leader who would allow terrorists and invaders to cause mayhem, instead of countering the insurgency with military force.
6 - He was not much of a Pan Africanist. He took his orders from his western handlers. He was told what to say and do.
7 - He threw the struggle of black people under the bus, in favour of international celebrity status. Being feted by celebraties was more important to him than reforming his country.
8 - Results of Mandela's legacy can be seen today. A highly uneducated, destructive and violent population. Mass school dropouts. Highest crime rates in the world. Millions of people living in slums.
The only Europeans that were allowed to trade with the Japanese following the expulsion of all christians were the Dutch.
During the Sakoku, the isolationist foreign policy of the Tokugawa shogunate, the only contact with european influence allowed was with the Dutch who had a factory at Dejima in Nagasaki, and through the Dutch East India Company who was allowed to operate in Nagasaki.
c. Introduction of the camel as a draft animal.
The camel make trans-Saharan trade possible due to its tenacity in adverse conditions. As a result, traders were able to move their items without facing much difficulties had they not had them
After the battle, the Spanish did not try to gain any English-owned colonies.
The company towns reinforced it by having special wages for people of different ethnicity or by racially profiling and segregating those that they didn't want to be equal with Caucasian workers. This caused an even bigger drift between people and distrust to arise.