Miles🇬🇭🇬🇭
1K posts

Miles🇬🇭🇬🇭
@AzaliahmosesM
Chelsea fan and Global citizen |Ghana ba | I love Money 💵 than you!|
Ghana Katılım Eylül 2016
1.6K Takip Edilen968 Takipçiler
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@JonyWardley @ASeitwaerts @MrEddieTarazona @BBCWorld This dude made a point that the difference between Nazi Germany and slavery is that they know who was involved in Nazi Germany but they don’t know who was involved in slavery. My point is we know and who was involved in slavery.

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@AzaliahmosesM @ASeitwaerts @MrEddieTarazona @BBCWorld I literally have no idea what point you are trying to make. I was just sharing some relevant information that appeared in the OP.
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'The gravest crime against humanity': What does the UN vote on slavery mean? bbc.in/48cpV0a
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@JonyWardley @MrEddieTarazona @BBCWorld One is a punishment after a lost war, the other not. Also, there is a difgerence between Nazi Germany and the Slavers, with Nazi Germany you knew who did it
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After taking hard drugs you got to shut up and sleep.
Goddess Graveyard Punany✨@xm_muva
Do not respect Ghana's homophobic stance. It goes against the human rights of Queer Ghanaians.
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@wode_maya Sister Wode Maya you’re looking beautiful today 😂😂🫶🫶
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How will a pig understand Africa map.
RedJoker 🇺🇸@R3dJ0k3r
I’m starting to understand the whole low IQ Africa map.😩
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You don’t lights even if they give you that spot to go how will you citizens who are back at home watch you play, you will just deny about 230m people the right to support their national team . Sorry you don’t have what it takes to go to World Cup Thank you
Adika@Adikastakes
Dear FIFA, On Behalf of all Ghanaians, Please Give Our World Cup Spot to Nigeria, This Ghanaian Team is Horrible!
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The Indian government has announced a special initiative granting Ghanaian nationals who have overstayed in the country an opportunity to exit without financial penalties.
#CitiNewsroom #CitiFM #GhanaNews

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@the_Lawrenz Africa is still Africa today because of Ghana, reason it well
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Stop discussing Africa in our absence please.
Bureau of African Affairs@AsstSecStateAF
Senior Bureau Official Nick Checker had a productive week at the Africa Strategic Integration Dialogue in Germany discussing America First priorities in Africa and how our expanding commercial and enduring security relationships remain central to our strategy.
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@ennkasa @HarunaMohammed_ @Manasseh_Azure You are accusing the President without evidence, that makes you a kindergarten student or you don’t think ur claim has no basis .
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@AzaliahmosesM @HarunaMohammed_ @Manasseh_Azure Go find your kindergarten mates and ask them such questions. It’s 2026, don’t waste your time and brain.
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Response to Manasseh Azure Awuni ( @Manasseh_Azure )
My brother Manasseh raises an important point about acknowledging the complexity of African involvement in the transatlantic slave trade.
I appreciate that honesty because it helps us confront our own history. But where I disagree is the conclusion that this complexity somehow weakens Africa’s claim to reparatory justice.
It does not. In fact it strengthens the moral seriousness with which we approach it.
When we talk about reparations, we are not asking the world to pretend that African intermediaries never existed.
We are saying that a crime designed, financed and enforced by European powers cannot be excused because some Africans were drawn into its machinery.
The transatlantic slave trade was conceived in Europe, organised in Europe, legislated in Europe and industrialised by European economies.
The demand, the ships, the weapons, the racial ideology and the global economic system behind it were never African inventions.
The fact that some African rulers or merchants acted as middlemen does not make Africa the architect of the crime.
It makes us part of a system whose terms we never set. That is why every serious historian separates complicity from causation.
The plantation economies of the Americas, the Code Noir, the British slave codes, the transatlantic shipping monopolies and the global wealth built from slave labour were entirely European creations.
Without European demand, European capital and European military enforcement, there would have been no transatlantic slavery on that scale.
And here is the most important point. Acknowledging that some Africans participated does not forfeit our right to justice. International law never demands perfect victims.
When a crime against humanity occurs, contributory involvement does not cancel an entire civilisation’s claim to repair.
If that were the case, Holocaust reparations would never have been paid because the Judenräte and Jewish police units existed under Nazi coercion.
Yet no serious person argues that those tragic complications erased the moral and legal responsibility of the perpetrators.
The same applies here. The transatlantic slave trade was a crime against African people, not a business partnership between equal powers.
It violently depopulated our societies, shattered our economies and established global inequalities that descendants still live with today.
The United Nations has now rightly declared it the gravest crime against humanity. That declaration carries weight because its effects are still visible across Africa and across the diaspora.
Reparations are not about money alone. They are about truth. They are about restoring dignity. They are about correcting the global imbalances created by centuries of exploitation.
They are about healing the long term damage done to communities whose descendants still live with the scars of that system.
President Mahama’s motion is not about running from our own history. It is about leading the world in confronting it fully. Ghana has chosen the path of honesty and global leadership.
We are saying that we can acknowledge the painful parts of our past while still demanding justice from those who built empires on African suffering.
This is not a plea. It is a moral claim rooted in fact. Reparations are not a favour to Africa. They are an obligation owed to humanity.
END.
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@ennkasa @HarunaMohammed_ @Manasseh_Azure Do you receive some? Did you see anyone receiving foodstuffs for vote?
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@AzaliahmosesM @HarunaMohammed_ @Manasseh_Azure How about the food stuff? It’s still a myopic way of trying to lead your people
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@scottbolshevik @emmanuelhadzah Did Asantes take part in designing those slave route, did they deploy those people into their plantations and sugarcane farms? Did they work in Asantes farmers over 12 hours without food and water? They were middlemen who were forced to do what they did.
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If the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade is recognised as one of the gravest crimes against humanity, then consistency demands that all key actors are held to account.
The Ashanti Empire also played an indispensable role:
1. Between the 16th and 19th centuries, an estimated 12–12.5 million Africans were shipped across the Atlantic, with roughly 10–20% originating from the Gold Coast region under strong Ashanti influence, including innocent people torn from their families
2. Acted as middlemen between European traders and inland populations, controlling vital trade routes
3. Integrated the slave trade into its political economy, much like Western powers did within the global system
A complete conversation on reparations cannot ignore any side of this history

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@HarunaMohammed_ @Manasseh_Azure If you had Morals, you wouldn’t be supplying foodstuff, cash & electronics for votes to become MP. You find being an MP as lucrative, forgetting the core struggles of the ordinary man.
That’s what our ancestors were doing with other people back then. ……..concert
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@scottbolshevik @ForGodandMan233 So if reparations could reach $130m that’s twice Ghana GDP?
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The Brattle Group estimates that slavery reparations could reach $130 billion over twice the current GDP of Ghana. Perhaps it’s time Africans did their own estimates rather than relying solely on a Western institution.
This United Nations General Assembly resolution is the first step in moving that number from academic theory to international policy.


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Stupidity at its finest peak
Visegrád 24@visegrad24
Ghana needs to pay reparations for its hideous role in the slave trade!
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@oberonhill @Craig_Simpson_ @Telegraph You still eat humans? you got to stop eating humans it’s barbaric.
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@Craig_Simpson_ @Telegraph They're just upset that Britain had to force those savages to stop selling, sacrificing and eating other humans
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Excl: African nations are lobbying countries across the world to accuse Britain of playing a key part in “the worst crime in history”.
Delegates in New York are pushing states including China to reach an agreement on the Transatlantic Slave Trade telegraph.co.uk/news/2026/03/1…
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@scottbolshevik @ForGodandMan233 So what’s is the current GDP of Ghana?
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