TPLF looted more than $30 billion dollars & using that money to destabilise Ethiopia-by hiring lobbyists to ensure the international media & policy makers support the TPLF & work against the present Ethiopian government & seek revenge against those who removed them from power.
The clip most frequently taken down on Twitt*r since yesterday.
FIFA has been aggr*ssiv*ly enforcing copyr*ght claims against this clip since yesterday; anyone who posts it faces account suspension or having the video deleted.
In short, this summarizes yesterday's refereeing errors and the disgraceful conduct of that corrupt referee against Egypt.
See for yourselves... it is blatant injustice and outright robbery.
كلما مسحتم الفيديو الذى يظهر فسادكم وتحيزكم .. أنزلته مره اخرى
أغلقتم حسابى مرة لنزول نفس الفيديو
وان اغلقتموه للابد سيكون آخر ما أرسله هذا الفيديو
شيروا هذا الفيديو الشاهد على فساد الفيفا
مصر لم تهزم فى الملعب مصر هزمت من منظومة فساد
#NoToRacism#egypt#مصر_ام_الدنيا
FIFA has deleted this video from my account again. but i will continue to post it no matter what they do. The whole world needs to see this refereeino farce.
🚨And people still say Mo Salah has a bigger Premier League legacy than Cristiano Ronaldo… — No 𝐏𝐑𝐄𝐌𝐈𝐄𝐑 𝐋𝐄𝐀𝐆𝐔𝐄 player will ever produce a season like what 23-year-old Cristiano Ronaldo did as a midfielder:
✨Cristiano🇵🇹 in 2007/8 Season:
🏟️ 48 games
⚽ 42 goals
🎯 12 assists
🏆 Premier League
🏆 Champions League
🏆 Club World Cup
🏆 Community Shield
🏆 Ballon d'Or
🏆 PL top-scorer
🏆 PL Player of the Year
🏆 FA Player of the Year
🏆 UCL top-scorer
🏆 FIFA Player of the Year
🏆 UEFA Player of the Year
INCREDIBLE 🐐🇵🇹
#MUFC #LFC #CR7
Ethiopia has finalised its preparations and stands ready to host the distinguished delegations of the 39th African Union Summit and the Second Italy–Africa Summit.
As you gather in the diplomatic capital of Africa, I warmly invite all distinguished delegates to plan ahead and extend your stay beyond the halls of the AU to experience a new era of African-led tourism development.
#VisitEthiopia
When Ethiopia’s manufacturing #MadeInEthiopa movement began, the production capacity utilization of Ethiopian industries did not exceed 47 percent. Within just three years, this has been increased to 66.3 percent. In the past six months alone, industrial energy consumption has grown by 16 percent. Through this movement, it has been possible to produce domestically goods that previously required imports worth 3.4 billion US dollars. It is also expected that export earnings from industry will double by the end of the fiscal year.
#PMAbiyResponds
#PMOEthiopia
የባርባዶስ ጠቅላይ ሚኒስትር ክብርት ሚያ ሞተሊ በታዋቂው የ Travor Noah Show ላይ ቀርበው
የኢትዮጵያን እውነት፣ አይበገሬነትና የኩሩ ታሪክ ባለቤትነት ለዓለም መስክረዋል።
Barbados Prime Minister H.E #Mia Mottley appeared on @Trevornoah show, where she highlighted Ethiopia’s enduring truth, resilience, and a proud historical legacy before a global audience.
Introduction to the Nile
An accurate understanding of the Nile is no longer optional; it is essential to counter decades of systematic misinformation surrounding the river’s origins, hydrology, and ownership. Sound science, not political mythology, must define the global conversation about the Nile.
Ethiopia is the primary source of the Nile’s waters. Approximately 85% of the total Nile flow originates from Ethiopian highlands through three major tributary systems:
The Blue Nile (Abbay) - 53%
The White Nile (Baro–Akobo–Sobat) - 24%
The Black Nile (Tekeze–Atbara) - 8%
These rivers are not marginal contributors; they are the hydrological backbone of the entire Nile Basin. Every year, rainfall over Ethiopia’s highlands is converted into the water that sustains more than 300 million people downstream. Without Ethiopia, there is no Nile in any meaningful physical sense. Nile doesn’t pass through Ethiopia, it originates here.
Understanding this reality is the foundation of any honest discussion about Nile governance, water rights, or regional cooperation. The river does not belong to historical narratives or colonial-era treaties; it belongs to the geography and the hydrology that create.
How Can Egypt Damage Ethiopia’s Development While Far from the Source?
To the Egyptians saying:
“The Aswan High Dam is downstream. It does not affect Ethiopia. So why do you care?”
Let’s talk straight.
Yes, basic physics. Water does not flow uphill. A dam in Egypt does not reduce river flow inside Ethiopia. Fine.
Now let’s talk about what does travel uphill, and what too many people pretend doesn’t exist.
Rules. Pressure. Narrative.
International water law is not a private club. It is not a weapon you point only upstream. Its core is simple: equitable and reasonable use. Not permanent privilege. Not inherited monopoly.
So here is my question to the loudest voices in Cairo: If you believe in international law, why do you present it like it was written for Ethiopia to obey and for Egypt to enforce? You repeatedly call GERD a unilateral project, even though Ethiopia invited Egypt and Sudan to study the dam together. Was the High Dam not a unilateral project? Did you invite or even notify Ethiopia? That is hypocrisy.
Now, history.
In 1959, Egypt and Sudan signed a bilateral allocation deal: 55.5 BCM for Egypt and 18.5 BCM for Sudan, while upstream countries were outside the agreement. That is not opinion. That is the record.
And that is why the “permission” performance is dishonest. The Nile was treated like a guaranteed supply line to the delta long before anyone said GERD.
Now the number nobody likes to say out loud.
Lake Nasser evaporation is commonly estimated in the range of 10 to 16 BCM per year.
Not Ethiopia taking water. Not Sudan stealing water. Just water turned into vapor because of desert storage.
So when someone lectures the basin about scarcity, I ask:
Where is the same discipline at home?
Because demand does not become sacred just because you got used to it.
Here is the real mechanism.
When a downstream country builds its entire system around high consumption, it becomes dependent on receiving that same high share every year. Then the moment the upstream country tries to develop, the downstream side screams: “You harmed us.”
That is not law. That is dependency turned into entitlement.
Simple analogy.
If one person in a family spends most of the shared budget every month, then when someone else asks for a fair share, the spender says, “Don’t touch it. You’re hurting me.” The pain is real, yes. But it was created by the spender’s habit.
That is the Nile narrative today.
And it’s not unique.
The Colorado River shows the same pattern: downstream overuse becomes dependency, and the only way forward is shortage sharing, renegotiation, and efficiency. That is what grown nations do.
So when someone says again, “The High Dam is downstream, so it is irrelevant,” answer like this:
Correct, it does not reduce flow inside Ethiopia. But it shaped allocation politics through exclusion. It created major basin losses through evaporation. And it helped build a culture where high demand is treated as a right, while upstream development is treated as a crime.
#Ethiopia #Egypt #Sudan #Nile #BlueNile #NileBasin #GERD #AswanHighDam #LakeNasser #HornOfAfrica #EastAfrica #Africa #WaterSecurity #InternationalLaw #TransboundaryWater