"The United States is committed to PEACE... We expect a complete Ceasefire on all fronts, including Lebanon, Hezbollah, and Israel." - President Donald J. Trump 🇺🇸
Today, U.S. forces lifted the blockade on all maritime traffic entering and exiting Iranian ports and coastal areas, in accordance with the President's direction. American forces are not impeding the transit of vessels to or from Iranian ports. All U.S. military blockade enforcement efforts have ceased. Our great Naval Ships will remain in the general area to make sure that all aspects of the agreement are adhered to, obeyed and in full force and effect.
Kipindi cha themanini, wana 'Sikinde ngoma ya ukae' almaarufu- DDC Milimani Park Orchestra walikuwa magwiji kwenya muziki wa densi. Tungo zao zilizuzua. Kibao hiki kilitesa- Mtoto akililia wembe. 🎵🔥 Sauti ya Ninga Cosmas Tobias Chidumule alibwaga shairi la aina yake..
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Despite being the owner and protagonist of Festival Des Grand Maquisards, Verckys fronted Ntesa Dalienst alongside Lokombe Ntal and the band's success was enormous and proved an innovative addition among Verckys' ensembles in his Veve stable.
Donald Trump started a war in the Middle East without considering foreseeable risks. The Memorandum of Understanding with Iran leaves the repercussions of that miscalculation unaddressed.
https://t.co/gk9BaQBasH
The preliminary U.S.-Iran deal, which was read to reporters by a U.S. official on Wednesday, appears to create a process for opening the Strait of Hormuz in the short run. It also lays out a 60-day timetable to address many issues that remain, including the details for constraining Iran’s nuclear ambitions, as well as the scope of sanctions relief and financial support for Iran.
"Needless to say, there are a lot of details to be negotiated and, if the past is prologue, good reasons to be skeptical that a comprehensive peace, even if reached, will hold," writes CFR President @MikeFroman. "Nonetheless, this could be seen as breaking a deadlock that has threatened the global economy, even if it puts on the table issues we may later come to regret."
Burundi is a cautionary tale for Kenya's regions like Meru. Like Burundi, Meru is incredibly fertile and blessed with famously industrious farmers, yet it risks falling into the same trap.
By focusing solely on growing and shipping raw crops out of the county, Meru remains trapped in volatile income cycles dictated by shifting global market prices. True wealth will remain unlocked until the region transitions toward agro-processing. Meru needs to attract and establish factories to package and brand its tea, process macadamia oil, and manufacture cosmetics from local herbs. The revenue generated from these factories could then be reinvested into education, tech, and service industries.
Hard work and fertile soil are excellent foundations, but true wealth requires leverage, and that only comes through industrialisation, value addition, and economic diversification.
'..atakununulia gari..sasa unajuta/ usilie dada/ sisi tulijua nyuma hiyo ni chambo tu/ sio kwako peke/..' Siku hizi Cosmas ni Mchungaji. Enyi magwiji, pakueni kitu hiki kikali- https://t.co/aA1aKfAb4J
@otienood3ra@TomJMO@kype_computers@JudyAtieno
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@citizentvkenya A myopic way of looking at it. Kenya and South Africa are not in conflict with each other. The G7 has its own strategic reasons for engaging with middle- and emerging-economy countries. Kenya does not carry SA's characteristic; it can't 'replace it'.
FYI- I do not support UDA.