By the way, if you're African and you're new to geopolitical awareness, you can use this picture as a guide to know who is on your side and who is your enemy in this world.
Notice how China and Russia voted?
Then notice how your oyibo faves voted (or abstained, which is also a type of vote)?
Shebi "not everything is about race"? You see how white people ALWAYS instinctively bunch together, from Andorra to Norway, whenever it's time to do some racist shit?
That's called Pan-Europeanism.
The antidote is Pan-Africanism.
This is supposed to be an enlightened person? Deliberately conflating the daily reality of Christians in the middle belt with Biafran separatists? Just so you can push agenda on people’s graves? Tueh!
Nonsense! You should listen to people who know what’s going on. There’s a real genocide happening in the middle belt of Nigeria (been happening for at least a decade now, but it’s recently got worse). This talk of Biafra is a separate conversation entirely stop confusing people
An interesting angle on this narrative is that it seems to originate from a separatist movement - the so-called "Biafran separatists" - in the South of Nigeria who last year hired former U.S. Congressman Jim Moran as a lobbyist to push for their movement.
On the very website of Jim Moran's lobbying firm - Moran Global Strategies - he posted last year that he was taking them as clients and intended "to lobby to gain US support for Biafra’s independence" under the angle of "raising the alarm on the persecution of Christians": https://t.co/DK7Ynn1QeC
Which is quite an ironic angle in the case of the Biafra area because it's located in the South of the country, which is overwhelmingly Christian (Nigeria is actually the country in Africa with the most Christians), and is the safest part of the country for Christians.
They're apparently paying Jim Moran "under a $10K per month contract" (again, according to Moran himself on his website) which, assuming this is indeed what spurred Trump's sudden passion for Nigerian Christians, would make it perhaps the greatest ROI in lobbying history: shaping US foreign policy for the cost of a small startup's marketing budget.