They'll cheer a film about a vigilante cleaning up the people at the bottom. So I made the same film and aimed it at the top, the ones who start the wars, empty the countries, and ship the fallout to your doorstep. One small edit. Suddenly it's 'forbidden'. Tells you everything.
How the family of a Nigerian from Katagum, Bauchi State, spent more than 100 years in Saudi Arabia, eventually became Saudi citizens, and gained the full rights and opportunities that come with citizenship.
Estas no son imágenes de Hiroshima del siglo pasado, es el sur del Líbano, donde el ejército genocida de "Israel" está haciendo desaparecer pueblos enteros, llenándolos de explosivos y volándolos por los aires.
No hay escándalo mediático en la prensa, "Israel" puede destruir pueblos enteros y ni siquiera lo hacen noticia.
🚨 BREAKING 🇰🇼
In defense of the US, the Kuwaiti Army fired an air defense missile to intercept an Iranian one, preventing it from hitting the US base.
However, the missile malfunctioned, turned around, and struck its own launch site.
Argentina, one of the most racist country in the world. How did Argentina erase their black population? Wars and disease. Did you know of the World War II ended? They invited thousands of Nazis to come and lived..
Ghana passed a law that banned foreigners from trading in its local gold market & granted exclusive gold mining authority to its Ghana Gold Board to handle illegal mining. Guinea cancelled over 50 mining permits for gold in order to gain more control over its mining and prevent illegal mining.
In Nigeria, they send terrorists to push the locals away, steal the resources and then allocate trillions to fight an “insecurity” they created.
The 20th century produced a generation of African leaders who challenged colonialism, apartheid, economic dependency, and foreign influence in their countries. Many paid a heavy price for their political beliefs and activism.
Among the figures are Patrice Lumumba of the Congo, Thomas Sankara of Burkina Faso, Steve Biko of South Africa, Amílcar Cabral of Guinea-Bissau and Cape Verde, Samora Machel of Mozambique, and Muammar Gaddafi of Libya. Although their political ideologies, goals, and methods differed, each became a symbol of resistance and self-determination for many people across Africa and the Global South.
Patrice Lumumba became the first Prime Minister of the independent Congo in 1960 and advocated for genuine political and economic sovereignty. Thomas Sankara introduced ambitious reforms aimed at reducing poverty, increasing literacy, and promoting women's rights in Burkina Faso. Steve Biko played a major role in South Africa's Black Consciousness Movement, encouraging Black South Africans to reject the psychological effects of apartheid. Amílcar Cabral helped lead the struggle against Portuguese colonial rule, while Samora Machel became Mozambique's first president after independence. Muammar Gaddafi remains one of the most debated figures in modern African history, praised by some for his pan-African vision and criticized by others for his authoritarian rule.
Another day, another massacre of northern lives with zero outrage on the media. A regular day in Northern Nigeria under Tinubu meanwhile the top voices in the North have been turned to political slaves by the very people who have failed to secure these innocent lives. Sayaya community in Matazu, Katsina State.