Southern African Confederacy

The Southern African Confederacy (Southern Africa or SAC) is a confederation located primarily within the generally-accepted region of Southern Africa. It takes up the entirety of the former nations of South Africa, Lesotho, Swaziland, Namibia, Botswana, Zimbabwe and Angola. The SAC was formed on 30 July 2012 by means of a region-wide purge arranged primarily by the Democratic Alliance, the opposition party in South Africa. The planning of said purge has been reported to have started in early 1986. The capital of the SAC is located within the Capital District of Gauteng. The SAC, being a new and somewhat uncommon type of nation, currently is still political divided by the aforementioned nations, thus each country, for the time being, has been able to keep their leaders. A democratic election is to take place in August 2012. What currently binds the SAC as one organization, is their unified military - one of the most rapid expanding armed services in the world.

Prelude (1986-2012)
Eight years before South Africa's first democratic election, the old South African "Apartheid regime" government was becoming more weary of the Hurian Federation. Besides protests and chaos at home, the South African government concluded that a plan had to be made to halt the Hurians and create a counterbalance in Africa. Although South Africa at that time, and in recent years remained the strongest force in Africa second to Egypt and Huria, the government at the time suspected that Huria would only become stronger and more radical.

Formation
The first public signs of the Southern African Confederacy were reported to be "like something out of an action movie." The hours-old Southern African Armed Forces deployed into Central Africa to assist the pro-Vanev forces. Around 50,000 troops were initially deployed, with the more coming.