Simon Jigna

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Simon Jigna

Simon Jigna

@SimonJigna

Se unió Şubat 2026
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Simon Jigna
Simon Jigna@SimonJigna·
Critics argue "Eritrea" is fake country & the borders were "artificially" drawn by Italy in 1890 and do not reflect "natural" ethnic or historic boundaries. Do you agree?
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Simon Jigna
Simon Jigna@SimonJigna·
@BusInsiderSSA "The cases involved a Turkish construction firm and a Netherlands based company, both of which sought substantial financial compensation from the Ethiopian government." Turkish swindlers & Dutch scammers got good lessons! ena.et/web/eng/w/eng_…
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Business Insider Africa
Business Insider Africa@BusInsiderSSA·
Ethiopia🇪🇹 has won two major international arbitration cases, defeating claims totaling more than $850 million. The disputes involved a Turkish construction firm and a Netherlands-based leasing company. Tribunals ruled in favour of Ethiopia’s right to enforce environmental and regulatory protections. The government says the outcome strengthens its global legal standing and investment governance.
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Simon Jigna
Simon Jigna@SimonJigna·
@AyinSudan 📍 GERD Security: Pro-Addis forces in Blue Nile State create a direct buffer for the dam. 📍 Anti-Encirclement: Disrupting the #Egypt-SAF axis to end military pressure on the western border. 📍 Strategy: Turning the border into an RSF-held zone to secure GERD.
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Ayin Network - شبكة عاين
Why is Ethiopia allegedly backing the RSF in Sudan? Experts point to the UAE. Analysts suggest Ethiopian support stems from direct UAE pressure on PM Abiy Ahmed, highlighting the expanding and deeply consequential footprint of Gulf nations in the Horn of Africa. But Ethiopia's alleged support for Sudan's RSF isn't just about UAE pressure—it's highly strategic. Deeply strained relations with the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF), historical border disputes in Al Fashaga, and GERD tensions make a weakened SAF advantageous for Addis Ababa. See our analysis: 3ayin.com/en/ethiopia-5-/ #Sudan, #KeepEyesOnSudan
Ayin Network - شبكة عاين tweet media
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Simon Jigna retuiteado
Krisztina Maria
Krisztina Maria@KrisztinaMaria·
Why Islam cannot coexist with the West. Let us talk about what political Islam actually is. Because it is not faith, spirituality or a person’s personal relationship with a God. It is a political ideology. A law-religion. A total system that regulates everything - what you eat, what you wear, who you love, what you may say, what you may think, and what happens to you if you leave it. This is not religion in the sense we know it in the West. It is a political apparatus of power with a God as the supreme argument. And here is what separates Islam from all other major world religions. The Quran is not up for negotiation. Christianity has undergone reformation. Enlightenment. Internal criticism. Theological development over centuries. This created room to separate faith from state apparatus - church from state. Islam has not undergone that reformation. The Quran is regarded by believing Muslims as the direct and infallible word of God. Not interpreted, not culturally conditioned and not historically relativized. That means what is written….applies. Apostasy is punishable by death. This is not the extremists’ interpretation. It is the text. Blasphemy is punishable by death. ISIS did not invent that. It is the text. A woman’s testimony is worth half that of a man. It is the text. When the text cannot be reformed, religion becomes first and foremost law. Not faith or spirituality. Law. And law demands enforcement. And then there is what the West will not say out loud. Political Islam has a 1,400 year documented history of expansion. Not invitation. Expansion. Everywhere it came, local cultures, languages, religions and identities were either wiped out or subjugated. The same system is now in the West. Not by the sword….yet. But through demography, special treatment, legal pressure and intimidation of everyone who speaks against it. With Western politicians who call it culture. With Western media who call criticism of it hatred. With naive Western sympathizers who defend a system that would kill them for their lifestyle - because among other things they hate America and Israel more than they love their own freedom. Let me emphasize. One can have a Muslim background and personally choose freedom over system. It happens. Not often (because it has consequences). But it happens. I respect that. But Islam as a textually literal, unreformed political law-religion - fully implemented - is incompatible with freedom. With equality. With freedom of speech. With everything the West is built on. This is not “just an opinion.” It is a consequence of reading what is actually written. Either you stand on the side of freedom. Or you stand on the side of the system. There is no third choice. And note this. Mohammed bin Zayed - the leader of the UAE - is actually the most interesting case in this entire discussion. In 2005, Zayed told the American ambassador that his biggest concern was Wahhabism and that what could replace the Saudi royal family would be an ISIS-like Wahhabi theocracy. He saw it. He understood it. And he acted on it. The UAE has built a system that actively combats political Islam. Not perfectly. But they are on their way. Zayed has had the Abrahamic Family House built in Abu Dhabi - a mosque, a church and a synagogue side by side. He donated land for the first Hindu temple in Abu Dhabi. Pope Francis visited the UAE - the first time ever a Catholic pope set foot on the Arabian Peninsula. The UAE’s foreign minister warned Europe directly in 2017: “There will come a day when we see far more radical extremists coming out of Europe because of lack of decision-making and political correctness. I am sorry - but that is pure ignorance.” The bitter point is that Muslim leaders in the Middle East are warning Europe about political Islam. Europe is not listening. And calls those who say the same thing at home racists.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ Good luck to all of us.✝️❤️‍🔥🪽
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Anti Woke Memes
Anti Woke Memes@AntiWokeMemes·
Should Australia deport all Muslims to stop Sharia Law before its too late?? 🚨
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Simon Jigna
Simon Jigna@SimonJigna·
@BaidoaOnline Laftagreen is not finished with the Turkish slave president hassan shiek yet.
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Baidoa Online
Baidoa Online@BaidoaOnline·
The government displays military strength in Mogadishu every day but fails to secure the nearby strategic towns of Basra and Hawaadley, located approximately 30 to 50 kilometers northwest of the capital.
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Hoodo Haybe
Hoodo Haybe@hoodohaybe1·
Somalia 🇸🇴 is failing, handing its wealth to Turkish occupiers. African Nationalism must rise! Ethiopia & Kenya should annex Jubaland and the South West State now.🇪🇹🇰🇪 Africa’s resources for Africans, not foreigners. Stop the Turkish expansion before it's too late!
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Hodan Ali
Hodan Ali@hodansomali·
What exactly does that entail? Somalis do not need a new colonial power exploiting their vast natural resources under the guise of “brotherhood” while propping up corrupt leadership. Note: If Türkiye continues its current approach of secrecy, selective engagement, and soft domination while alienating the Somali people and aligning itself with a corrupt few - its presence will ultimately be rejected. I hope Ankara chooses a more transparent and principled engagement in Somalia to safeguard its investments before public trust is lost. 🇸🇴🇹🇷
Alparslan Bayraktar@aBayraktar1

Mavi Vatan’da yazdığımız başarı hikâyesini, Cumhurbaşkanımız Sayın @RTErdogan’ın vizyonuyla Somali’ye taşıyor, Mogadişu’da tarihî bir güne tanıklık ediyoruz. 🇹🇷🇸🇴 İlk sınır ötesi derin deniz sondajımızı Somali denizlerinde gerçekleştirecek olan Çağrı Bey sondaj gemimiz, enerji vizyonumuza ve iki ülkenin ortak geleceğine inşallah büyük bir katkı sağlayacak. #ÇağrıBeySomalide #TarihiGörev #EnerjideTamBağımsızTürkiye

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BURCO
BURCO@SUPERSOMALI252·
Unlike Hargeisa in Mogadishu, we can actually pray next to our Turkish brothers 😇 Taqbiiir 🇸🇴🇹🇷
BURCO tweet media
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Simon Jigna
Simon Jigna@SimonJigna·
@yebeyene Why is Ethiopia your common enemy? "Eritreans" are mostly Tigrinya, Afar, Kunama speakers. Same ethnic groups are in Ethiopia over the border, not to mention half million "eritreans" live in Ethiopia or using Ethiopia as escape route. Same with somalis, same with Sudanse.
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Eritrea4Ever
Eritrea4Ever@yebeyene·
Eritreans, Egyptians, Sudanese and Somalis have one common enemy: Ethiopia.
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Ewnet
Ewnet@Ewnet_only·
@yebeyene Ethiopians has one common enemy that is Egypt— The other ones are servants of Egypt
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Eritrea4Ever
Eritrea4Ever@yebeyene·
@TigiSmartVibes Tone-deaf Ethio, do u not realize your country has been responsible for z massacre & displacement of millions of Eritreans for z last 70 yrs? Do u also not realize wars start bcause one party wants resources that doesn't belong to it? Z Nile is Egypt's lifeline. Don't fuck w/ it.
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Simon Jigna
Simon Jigna@SimonJigna·
@yebeyene Same ethnic Kushitic peoples live in Eritrea, Somalia & Sudan as in Ethiopia. Ethiopian rivers Abay, Juba, Shabelle, Tekeze/Mereb/Setit rivers give life to millions of you freely. Still, you want to kill proud Black Kushitic Mother Ethiopia to please arabs & turks. Fools!
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Deeqa 🇸🇴
Deeqa 🇸🇴@Deee_luul·
Dear Somalis and Eritreans, look at this ridiculous myth. Was there even something called Ethiopia 3,000 years ago? What kind of nonsense is this? This narrative reminds me of the “this land was promised to us 3,000 years ago” claim 🤣
Deeqa 🇸🇴 tweet media
Statsfrica@statsfrica

🌍 The countries with the most years of independence in Africa: 🇪🇹 Ethiopia - 3000+ years (never coIonized) 🇱🇷 Liberia - 178 years 🇿🇦 South Africa - 116 years 🇪🇬 Egypt - 104 years 🇱🇾 Libya - 73 years 🇸🇩 Sudan - 70 years 🇲🇦 Morocco - 70 years 🇹🇳 Tunisia - 70 years.... Show more

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Simon Jigna
Simon Jigna@SimonJigna·
@hodansomali Turkish-Somali EXPLOITATION DEAL compared to normal OIL deals. Somalia RAPED!
Simon Jigna tweet media
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Hodan Ali
Hodan Ali@hodansomali·
Türkiye is now embedded in EVERYTHING Somalia. Our ports, airport, education, hospitals, politics, and natural resources. From culture to language to business. A deep strategic entrenchment. Somalis WE must ask - where does partnership end and control begin? @HassanSMohamud @RTErdogan
Hodan Ali tweet media
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Simon Jigna
Simon Jigna@SimonJigna·
@ForeignAffairs @Kodouda Partition of Sudan is beneficial for the native non-arab black indigenous peoples of Sudan like the Nuba & Darfur. Partition & De-Arabization of Sudan creates better terms for viable peace in Sudand and the Horn. Same is true in Somalia. Recognition of Somaliland is best.
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Foreign Affairs
Foreign Affairs@ForeignAffairs·
A formal partition of Sudan would not resolve the country’s protracted violence, argue Francis Deng and @Kodouda. It would only create two weak states, each with “powerful incentives to destabilize the other.” foreignaffairs.com/sudan/dont-par…
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Simon Jigna
Simon Jigna@SimonJigna·
@RobelYeshitla Partition of Sudan is beneficial for Ethiopia and the native non-arab black indigenous peoples of Sudan like the Nuba. Partition & De-Arabization of Sudan creates better terms for viable peace in Sudand and the Horn. Same is true in Somalia. Recognition of Somaliland is good.
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Getachew K Reda
Getachew K Reda@reda_getachew·
@Jawar_Mohammed Congratulations, brother. Your persistent conflation of personal opposition to the Prime Minister with a coherent critique of Ethiopia’s long-term strategic interests is remarkable. Disliking the ruling party does not free you from having to distinguish between regime politics and state/national interests. Over the past few days, you — once an ally of the Prime Minister but now a vocal critic — have repeatedly attacked Ethiopia for seeking to protect its strategic interests in the context of the Sudanese conflict. Some of the reports you circulate or the ideas you share may be factually accurate in isolation. Yet, you present them without reference to the broader strategic context shaping Ethiopia’s calculations. Facts, detached from structure and strategy, can easily be marshaled into a misleading narrative.  Do you genuinely believe Ethiopia should behave as a passive bystander in a region defined by intense geopolitical competition? The tragedy unfolding in Sudan is indeed exacerbated by foreign intervention. But Ethiopia is hardly unique in pursuing its interests. In fact, Ethiopia, more than any other country in the region and beyond, stands to lose more as a result of Sudan’s instability. It has a real skin in the game, as it were. Egypt and other regional actors are not neutral mediators; they are actively shaping the trajectory of the conflict to favor their preferred belligerents. You position yourself as a politician–activist, but your posture suggests an aversion to the very language of national security and strategic interest. In a region marked by proxy competition, transboundary security threats, and zero-sum maneuvering among rival states, such discomfort is not a virtue. It is a liability. States do not have the luxury of moral abstraction when core national interests are at stake. Moral posturing in such an environment may be emotionally satisfying, but it is not strategy. Critiquing policy is legitimate. However, presenting every move as evidence of strategic folly simply because it originates from Prime Minister Abiy’s government risks substituting partisan grievance for analysis. More importantly, anyone with aspirations for higher office should be cautious about adopting a scorched-earth posture toward the state itself. While governments change, strategic geography is stubborn. Ethiopia’s long-term national interests are distinct from — and larger than — the party temporarily in power. A credible alternative must demonstrate an ability to separate those two. Thus far, however, you have shown a near-pathological inability to make that distinction.
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Simon Jigna
Simon Jigna@SimonJigna·
Getachew Reda is a more seasoned, wise & proud Ethiopian politician than power-hungry opportunists like Jawar & Mustafe. I hope Getachew becomes vice prime minister or even the prime minister of Ethiopia in the future.
Getachew K Reda@reda_getachew

@Jawar_Mohammed Congratulations, brother. Your persistent conflation of personal opposition to the Prime Minister with a coherent critique of Ethiopia’s long-term strategic interests is remarkable. Disliking the ruling party does not free you from having to distinguish between regime politics and state/national interests. Over the past few days, you — once an ally of the Prime Minister but now a vocal critic — have repeatedly attacked Ethiopia for seeking to protect its strategic interests in the context of the Sudanese conflict. Some of the reports you circulate or the ideas you share may be factually accurate in isolation. Yet, you present them without reference to the broader strategic context shaping Ethiopia’s calculations. Facts, detached from structure and strategy, can easily be marshaled into a misleading narrative.  Do you genuinely believe Ethiopia should behave as a passive bystander in a region defined by intense geopolitical competition? The tragedy unfolding in Sudan is indeed exacerbated by foreign intervention. But Ethiopia is hardly unique in pursuing its interests. In fact, Ethiopia, more than any other country in the region and beyond, stands to lose more as a result of Sudan’s instability. It has a real skin in the game, as it were. Egypt and other regional actors are not neutral mediators; they are actively shaping the trajectory of the conflict to favor their preferred belligerents. You position yourself as a politician–activist, but your posture suggests an aversion to the very language of national security and strategic interest. In a region marked by proxy competition, transboundary security threats, and zero-sum maneuvering among rival states, such discomfort is not a virtue. It is a liability. States do not have the luxury of moral abstraction when core national interests are at stake. Moral posturing in such an environment may be emotionally satisfying, but it is not strategy. Critiquing policy is legitimate. However, presenting every move as evidence of strategic folly simply because it originates from Prime Minister Abiy’s government risks substituting partisan grievance for analysis. More importantly, anyone with aspirations for higher office should be cautious about adopting a scorched-earth posture toward the state itself. While governments change, strategic geography is stubborn. Ethiopia’s long-term national interests are distinct from — and larger than — the party temporarily in power. A credible alternative must demonstrate an ability to separate those two. Thus far, however, you have shown a near-pathological inability to make that distinction.

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Simon Jigna
Simon Jigna@SimonJigna·
@Jawar_Mohammed Addis Ababa’s reported tactical shift toward the RSF is a direct consequence of the deepening Al-Burhan-Cairo military axis. By providing a counterweight to the SAF, Ethiopia seeks to disrupt Egypt’s western containment flank and secure its interests in the Nile Basin. 🇪🇹🇸🇩
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Jawar Mohammed
Jawar Mohammed@Jawar_Mohammed·
ግመል ሰርቆ አጎንብሶ ነው የሚባለው?  ከሳምንታት በፊት የአብይ አህመድ አገዛዝ በበኒሻንጉል ክል ለሱዳኑ ጃንጃዊድ ቡድን (RSF)  ካምብ ከፍቶ የህዳሴውን ግድብ ቀጠና በጦርነት ሊያምሰው መሆኑ ሲገለጽ ፋርሴውች ጉዳዩን ለመካድ ሲረባረቡ ነበር። አንዴ ካምፕ የለም ሌላ ጊዜ ደግሞ የወርቅ ማውጫ ግቢ ነው ሲሉ ከረሙ። ነገር ግን የአሜሪካው እውቁ  Yale University  ምርመራ ቡድን ረጅም እና ዝርዝር ጥናት ሲያካሂድ ከርሞ፣ ውጤቱን መካድ ማንገዳገድ በማያስችል መልኩ ረፖርት አቅርቧል። እና አሁንስ ምን ይሉ ይሆን? files-profile.medicine.yale.edu/documents/6fd5…
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