The day you will know that there is a connection between the push by Uganda to have commercial oil production commence this year and the current Ebola narrative [and the harebrained advisories] is the day you will have completed your Elementary Geopolitics class.
THE EBOLA AGENDA:
In 2014, in Guinea, there was a mineral scandal.
This scandal was known as the "Simandou mining rights corruption scandal," described as one of the largest resource heists in history.
Simandou is a 110-km mountain range in southern Guinea bordering Liberia, and it is Africa's biggest mining project.
The Simandou scandal reached its climax in April 2014, when the Guinean government revoked the multi-billion-dollar mining licenses held by Beny Steinmetz Group Resources (BSGR) and its partner, Vale, after an investigation found they had been acquired through corruption.
Around this time in Liberia, in the diamond-rich Fuamah District of Bong County, an 18-carat diamond was stolen and sold on the black market for a paltry USD 20,000, far below its true international market value.
This prompted the Government of Liberia to crack down on these thieves. The suspects were taken into police custody. The government stepped in to settle territorial and security disputes in the area.
However, around this period, something strange came up, a new disease whose name was not known at the time. An outbreak of haemorrhagic disease was noted in which symptoms manifested by anal and nasal bleeding.
This was later concluded as Ebola, which peaked in September of that year.
The diamond heist and the Simandou scandal disappeared amidst this "outbreak."
The revocation of BSGR license and the theft of diamond carats led to the manufacture of man-made epidemics by arsenic poisoning of the people (https://t.co/Koloj5R1w0)
This is exactly how Afrikan resources are looted. The looters fund civil wars or manufacture epidemics, they create terror, fear and intimidation, then, in that confusion, loot our resources while pretending to care for our health.
Since we agree that Ebola has existed, but its existence from 1976 up to the year 2004 was attributed to the index patients handling or eating carcasses of chimpanzees and wild animals (https://t.co/6ibqDGQzVZ)
However, what is happening today about Ebola is a PsyOp.
The Ebola agenda is a deliberate plan to disrupt the mineral resources economy in Africa.
It is the theft of our resources, hiding behind disaster mitigation.(https://t.co/kx2PtX4nB8)
Prove me wrong!
Emmanuel Eboue had £20 million career earnings, but went broke after his Belgian ex wife won custody of their kids and ownership of ALL HIS ASSETS.
He was homeless, after being kicked out of his house.
He got remarried to his Ivorian ex girlfriend in 2019.
I hope you, and the rest of them brothers and sisters stay safe. You are not alone, you are the epitome of African failure. You are about 4m there now(Gulf) from Africa. And 70% of you have atleat the first degree(bachelors). A new report estimates 48% of doctors from Africa have left the Continent. It is futile to SPEND BILLIONS EDUCATING AND TRAING SCIENTISTS, etc, and they end up going to GUARD PETROL STATIONS and WASH ARAB PLATES. This a great failure of African leadership and must be called out, not swept under the carpet. So look after yourselves brother, and let us know how you are fairing during this conflict.
Wish you well!
@KagutaMuseveni The laughter that echoes in the chambers of Rwakitura must be sharp. It's a call to re-evaluate leadership approaches, prioritize integrity, and inspire the next generation to embrace values that uplift and unite for collective progress, rather than divide and self-serve.
In 1879, Ugandan healers were performing cesarean sections with a survival rate that stunned European doctors—while much of the "civilized" world still saw the procedure as a death sentence.
British explorer Robert Felkin documented the operation in detail. The surgeon used banana wine as an antiseptic, herbal anesthetics to manage pain, and cauterization with a hot iron to control bleeding. The mother survived. The baby survived. The technique worked.
This wasn't primitive luck. It was sophisticated medical knowledge passed down through generations—refined, systematic, life-saving.
Yet the dominant narrative tells us modern medicine arrived in Africa with colonizers and that before European intervention, the continent had no science, no innovation, no expertise.
But here's the contradiction: if African medical practices were so "backward," why were European observers documenting them with awe? Why were these techniques—rooted in empirical observation and botanical knowledge—producing outcomes that Europe itself struggled to achieve until the late 19th century?
The Buganda Kingdom had what the British Empire didn't: working cesarean sections that saved lives.
So what else were we doing that got erased, ignored, or rebranded as "discovered" by someone else?
Sources:
- Felkin, R. W. (1884). "Notes on Labour in Central Africa." Edinburgh Medical Journal
- Ajayi, J. F. (1965). Christian Missions in Nigeria 1841-1891. Northwestern University Press
Credit: African Echo
Road shoulders are fully sealed leaving no
loose soil for wind to carry.
Desert areas near highways are compact and rocky, not loose sand.
Roads are cleaned daily using mechanized sweepers and water spray trucks. it’s not rocket science. It’s proper planning.
Roads in Doha are such a confidence booster…..They’re so clean, dust-free, and perfectly smooth that you will be forced to strut down them like you own dem streets 😍😍🧚♀️
@mkainerugaba Idd Amin was not who they told us he was. So patriotic but ruthless.
Amin is a full syllabus in schools in Arab world. Uganda is attached to Amin (for the good) in foreign land than it’s to any other president. Some history needs revisiting.
@DaudiKabanda Because no man is an island.
And no man is born truly unique.
The truth is; you’re intellectually isolated and you had to define your own tribe with salim saleh as chieftain per se!
Hope you’re not correlating intellectualism to prominence 😂
Black History Month is a time to recognize the lived, shared experience of all Black folks who have fundamentally shaped, challenged, and ultimately strengthened America. It’s about taking an unvarnished look at the past so that we can create a better future. As we mark 100 years of celebrating Black history, let’s honor the sacrifices of the leaders who came before us, and recommit ourselves to continuing their work.
Once upon a time, there was a country named Uganda! It had even been nicknamed ‘The Pearl of Africa’ and was located in the heart of Africa!
Sadly it’s no more! What remains now are the debris of a broken nation and a frustrated population!
Oh Uganda 💔
I've always assumed that every time a child is born, the Divine reenters the world. Okay? That's the meaning of the Christmas story.
And every time that child's purity is corrupted by society, that's the meaning of the Crucifixion story. Merry twenty-fifth of December 🎄🎅☦️