"Albert's death is not just about police brutality, but also impunity. A system where powerful men weaponize state machinery to punish speech, crush dissent and erase the inconvenient. His story must not end with silence; it must end with reckoning - JUSTICE"
~ D.J. Bwakali
#Justice4AlbertOjwang
#ResignEliudLagat
@bwakali@IDentityetu@OkiyaOmtatah@cynthiaZion1@lynn_ngugi1@Uncensored_OOO@mainamaggie4
To achieve change that truly matters, change that lasts, requires a spirit that never quits, a resilience that refuses to shatter under pressure, and an unwavering dedication to the fight for justice and a brighter horizon, even when the odds seem insurmountable.
Senegal's young generation refused to be silent spectators to their nation’s unfolding story. They poured their energy into activism, their feet hitting the streets in spontaneous waves of protest, often triggered by the arrests and legal battles that ensnared Sonko and Faye.
In a world where a Senegalese climate activist and a Somali refugee share the same fight against structural violence, unity is not idealism—it is pragmatism.
As Africans, we cannot wish away Berlin or ignore its impacts. We must confront its ghost with the courage to unmake what was never made for us and to reimagine a future rooted in our own truths.
For every barrel of Angolan crude or Congolese cobalt feeding China’s factories, Africa imports finished goods priced tenfold higher, locking nations into a colonial-era pattern: dig, export, repeat. This has to stop. Urgently.
It is the first time Kenya is being treated to a Presidential Exploratory Committee (PEC), and a publicly gazetted one, courtesy of @OkiyaOmtatah. My brother D.J. @bwakali delves into what exactly this means for Kenya. Take a look. @MaryK2022@CharlesKapaiku@WakiliBaraka