CBK released an interview with former CBK Governor Micah Cheserem.
Some of the Key points to note:
— He says banks “wanted to kill” M-Pesa
— He says he ordered burning of thousands of exchange-control documents (about 47 truckloads)
Dear Kenyans,
You’ve never been told the full truth.
This is Idi Amin’s son breaking down, in detail, why his father ordered the Israelis out of Uganda.
Watch carefully. You’ve been lied to long enough.
A Kenyan Somali elder risks his life as he exposes how Aden Duale is enabling Tax evation in Eastleigh-“Hata sio Mkenya, hatujui baba yake penye alitoka”
A man in rural India was recorded on video carrying the remains of his deceased sister into a bank after he was unable to access her account and needed proof of death.
The last episodes of Njugush and Wakavinye have been resurfacing suggesting Njugush knew he's letting her go wale hamuelewi Kikuyu the song loosely translates to say "we can't have cases about love like it's a piece of land just go to who you're madly in love with" 😭
Video resurfaces online showing Kenyan journalist Jeff Koinange’s 2004 reporting from Ntarama, Rwanda, during coverage marking the 10th anniversary of the 1994 genocide.
Fuerte accidente en el Rally de Córdoba en las Sierras, en Mina Clavero, luego de que un automóvil diera varios tumbos y casi colisionara con la gente presente. Hay tres heridos y fue suspendido el tramo Giulio Césare.
Only 9 countries have nuclear weapons.
5 of them wrote the rules that say no one else can get them, then never followed through on their own promise to disarm.
🇮🇳🇵🇰🇮🇱🇰🇵 India, Pakistan, Israel and North Korea built them anyway.
🇮🇷 Iran got bombed for enriching uranium to 60% without even having a weapon.
The lesson every country watching is quietly taking notes on: nothing protects you like a nuke.
The strikes meant to stop proliferation may have just accelerated it.
Source: @aljazeeraenglish
🇺🇸🇮🇱🇮🇷 The inside story of how the war started is more damning than anyone imagined
The New York Times just published the most detailed account yet of Trump's decision to attack Iran.
Every American should read it.
February 11th. Netanyahu arrives at the White House for a classified Situation Room briefing. Mossad on the screens behind him.
He plays Trump a video montage of potential new Iranian leaders, including the exiled son of the Shah.
He tells Trump regime change is within reach.
The missile program can be destroyed in weeks. Iran won't be able to close Hormuz.
Retaliation against U.S. interests would be "minimal."
Trump's response: "Sounds good to me."
Every single one of those assurances turned out to be wrong. Iran closed Hormuz.
Retaliation hit six countries. The missile program survived underground.
The regime consolidated power instead of collapsing. And 44 days later, Trump accepted a ceasefire on Iranian terms.
February 26th.
The final Situation Room meeting. Trump goes around the table.
Vance: "You know I think this is a bad idea, but if you want to do it, I'll support you."
Rubio: "If the goal is regime change, we shouldn't do it."
Cheung, the comms director, warned it contradicted everything they'd said for eight months about Iranian nuclear facilities being destroyed.
The CIA director said regime change was possible "if we just mean killing the supreme leader."
Nobody said no.
Everyone deferred to the president's instincts.
The Treasury Secretary and Energy Secretary, the two people who would need to manage the largest oil supply disruption in history, weren't even in the room.
Neither was the Director of National Intelligence.
The next day, aboard Air Force One, 22 minutes before the military deadline, Trump sent six words:
"Operation Epic Fury is approved. No aborts. Good luck."
Source: New York Times
🇮🇷🇺🇸🇮🇱 Iran’s missile network is still standing… and that changes the equation.
New U.S. intelligence suggests Iran’s missile systems are far harder to destroy than expected.
Despite sustained U.S. and Israeli strikes, much of the launch capability remains intact.
Why?
Iran has spent decades preparing for this: underground bunkers, fortified shelters, decoys, and concealed launchers make it extremely difficult to know what’s actually been hit.
Even more important: speed.
Iranian forces are reportedly repairing damaged systems within hours and bringing launchers back online almost immediately.
So while attacks continue, Iran is still launching missiles, just at a slower and controlled pace to preserve long-term capacity.
This is a resilient network built to absorb damage and keep operating.
Source: @Military92
🇺🇸 Ejecting from a fighter jet is one of the most violent things a human body can endure.
A seriously wounded US Air Force Colonel ejected from his shot-down F-15E over Iran and then evaded capture for 36 hours behind enemy lines.
The process slams you from zero to 10-20 Gs in a split second, followed by a brutal rocket boost and wind blast that can reach hundreds of miles per hour.
It can compress your spine enough to permanently shorten your height by up to two inches and cause serious injuries if your body position is even slightly off.
The military calls an ejection “successful” if the canopy blows, the rocket fires, and the parachute opens, what happens to the pilot after that is up to chance.
Source: NY Post
JUST IN:
🇺🇸🇯🇵🇰🇷Trump:
“South Korea didn’t help us. Australia didn’t help us. Japan didn’t help us.
We’ve got 50,000 soldiers in Japan, 45,000 in South Korea, to protect them from Kim Jong Un, whom I get along very well with.”