FOLA FOLAYAN

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FOLA FOLAYAN

FOLA FOLAYAN

@TheFavoredWoman

Multiformat Journalist || Comms & Partnerships at @The_CCIJ • Founder at @TheRadioClassNG • @_Africatalks Opinions and views expressed here are mine only.

East Africa Katılım Nisan 2011
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FOLA FOLAYAN
FOLA FOLAYAN@TheFavoredWoman·
Happy Friday! A new episode of #MindingYourBusinessAfrica is out. I had a great conversation with Christian Ngabo, the 26-year-old founder of the Isokko App, whose goal is to create 10,000 jobs in Rwanda before the age of 35. From early curiosity about tech to building solutions for solving everyday problems while navigating tough regulations, Christian’s journey reminds us that innovation often starts with simply refusing to accept that things have to stay the way they are. Listen to the full conversation here - podfollow.com/mybafrica
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FOLA FOLAYAN
FOLA FOLAYAN@TheFavoredWoman·
This development gives me a bitter sweet feeling. Because I know no matter how well Nigeria does in this crisis, the actual people of Nigeria will not get a taste of the boom. The Directors of Nigeria LTD will divert every single $ earned to their offshore accounts to buy more mansions abroad and use as slush funds for the coming elections. Nigerians at home will remain hungry. Food and energy prices will keep going up, insecurity will keep on being a nightmare and not a single improvement will be made on any public infrastructure. It is after all, the Nigerian way.
Charles Onyango-Obbo@cobbo3

Kenya, Ethiopia, Nigeria Early African Winners as They Harvest Windfall from the Misery of US–Israel vs Iran War As the world reels from the escalation of the US–Israel vs Iran war that erupted on 28 February, the humanitarian suffering is profound. Yet in the realm of global commerce, a quieter upheaval is underway. With the Red Sea and Strait of Hormuz rendered near impassable – shipping traffic down by 90% – Africa has emerged as the world’s most vital logistics corridor. •In KENYA, the once-forgotten LAMU PORT has roared to life. Long dismissed by critics as a white elephant, it has seen a 974% surge in volume. Ultra-large vessels, too deep for Mombasa and too exposed for Gulf waters, now dock at Lamu’s 18-metre natural depth. •ETHIOPIA'S national carrier Ethiopian Airlines has seized the moment. With Dubai and Doha mostly paralysed by airspace risks from Iranian missile and droke strikes, Addis Ababa has become the continent’s primary air-bridge. Cargo revenue is up 14%. High-value goods – electronics, pharmaceuticals, perishables –are now routed through Bole International, bypassing the 40-day sea detour. •NIGERIA is counting its crude. Brent prices hit $120 per barrel in March. Against a budget benchmark of $64.85, daily revenues have doubled. The government has stumbled into an unexpected multi-billion dollar fiscal cushion. •DURBAN, South Africa’s main port, has shed its reputation for congestion. It is now clocking 28 crane moves per hour, processing thousands of ships rerouted around the Cape of Good Hope with a rare level of precision. •MOROCCO'S Royal Air Maroc has moved swiftly. Ten new international routes –including Los Angeles and Beirut – have siphoned off transit passengers who once relied on Middle Eastern hubs. Casablanca traffic is up 12%. •WALVIS BAY in Namibia has become the first reliable refuelling station for ships emerging from the South Atlantic. Bunkering demand is up 30%. •The DANGOTE Petroleum Refinery has in Nigeria, is cashing in. In March, it issued an export tender for 84,000 metric tonnes of jet fuel and diesel. It is no longer just a domestic project – it is replacing Persian Gulf supplies for the continent. •MOZAMBIQUE'S $20 billion LNG project has been fast-tracked. TotalEnergies resumed operations in early 2026. Over 4,000 workers are racing to meet an accelerated production date. Iranian gas is out. Mozambican gas is in. •At Mozambique's PORT of MAPUTO, volumes grew by 16% in the weeks following the war’s outbreak. Chrome and coal exporters have abandoned northern routes in favour of the safer Indian Ocean–Cape corridor. •MAURITIUS, ever shrewd, has leveraged its mid-ocean position into a 15% revenue increase. High-end logistics and emergency repair services are now its bread and butter. But no doubt, the most intriguing twist is the Roll-on/Roll-off (RoRo) revolution in Lamu. Manufacturers are using RoRo ships – where vehicles are driven on and off via ramps – to offload thousands of cars. These are then ferried to the Gulf on small, low-risk boats to avoid the $200,000+ war risk insurance premiums slapped on large carriers entering the Strait of Hormuz. To protect this windfall, Kenya and Ethiopia have launched joint military operations along the once-languishing Lamu Port–South Sudan–Ethiopia Transport (LAPSSET) corridor. This unprecedented coordination is designed to ensure that the new “safe harbour” of Lamu remains shielded from regional spillover. And because the closure of the Strait of Hormuz marooned shipping containers, an emergency air-bridge has formed. Nairobi and Addis Ababa are now the primary transit points for consumer electronics flown from Asia to Europe—bypassing the the 17,700KM sea detour. US leader Donald Trump despises Africa, once labelling its countries "sh*thole", but while many of them will be hit hard by rising energy and fertilisers from America and Israel's attack on Iran, several of them will get a bounty he would never have wished for them.

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Ory Okolloh-Mwangi
Ory Okolloh-Mwangi@kenyanpundit·
I don’t want to read another article about the impact of the looming fertilizer shortage on Africa’s poor. We have everything we need to not be subject to any other people’s wahala! I want to read about how we solve logistics & unlock the East - West Africa trade corridor.
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Paul Wiggins
Paul Wiggins@DragonLogos·
@SizweLo When the Spanish ruled Cuba someone realised that it cost money to keep slaves, to feed, guard and house them, it was far better to give them their FREEDOM and then pay them only just enough to stay alive
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Sizwe SikaMusi
Sizwe SikaMusi@SizweLo·
This is a group of coal miners packed into a multi-level elevator cage, preparing to descend into a mine shaft in Europe. The capitalists would have loved to import slaves from Africa, but by the time the Industrial Revolution took off in the 18th and 19th centuries, Europe had an abundance of displaced rural peasants because pro-capital land reforms had forced millions of people off ancestral lands and into cities. So, it was significantly cheaper to pay a local labourer a subsistence wage than to purchase, transport, and maintain a slave from across the Atlantic. Also, in contrast to owning slaves, the wage-slave system they were running in Europe meant, the employer wasn’t responsible for the worker’s housing, food, or health when they weren’t working or when they became too old or sick to produce. Beyond this, mine owners feared that unlike in the cotton farms in America, a workforce of slaves with nothing to lose would be more prone to sabotage in a highly volatile underground environment where a single misplaced support beam could destroy the entire capital investment. There’s also the thing with Britain making slavery illegal. So, capitalists found it more effective to keep “free” labour in Europe and forced labour in the colonial periphery like the rubber extraction plantations in the Congo.
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FOLA FOLAYAN
FOLA FOLAYAN@TheFavoredWoman·
Given the opportunity and if assured they could get away with it, most men would join in to sexually assault women. The ones who don't join in, would not lift a finger to help stop it.
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FOLA FOLAYAN
FOLA FOLAYAN@TheFavoredWoman·
Nigerian women have been speaking over and over for years. We raised awareness, called it out, expressed anger, demanded justice, asked for protection, and begged for something as basic as common decency. And what has come back? Gaslighting. Ridicule. Useless conversations about misandry and false accusations that completely miss the point. Let’s stop pretending we don’t know what this Ozoro situation is. This is what happens when a society keeps excusing bad behaviour and refusing to hold men accountable. This is what happens when badly raised boys grow into entitled men and nobody checks them. It gets to a point where they are bold enough to assault women in public because they already know nothing will happen to them. That is the reality. But this cannot be one of those incidents we move on from. It cannot be swept under the carpet like everything else. Justice has to be served, and it has to be clear that there are real consequences for this kind of violence. We also need to have an honest conversation about what kind of society we are building that makes men feel this comfortable violating women and girls. This is not culture or tradition. This is a deeply rooted hatred and disregard of women and girls that has festered and allowed to go unchecked.
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FOLA FOLAYAN
FOLA FOLAYAN@TheFavoredWoman·
Happy Friday! A new episode of #MindingYourBusinessAfrica is out. I had a great conversation with Christian Ngabo, the 26-year-old founder of the Isokko App, whose goal is to create 10,000 jobs in Rwanda before the age of 35. From early curiosity about tech to building solutions for solving everyday problems while navigating tough regulations, Christian’s journey reminds us that innovation often starts with simply refusing to accept that things have to stay the way they are. Listen to the full conversation here - podfollow.com/mybafrica
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S H ⚡ C K Africa
S H ⚡ C K Africa@Shockng·
🟢⚡️NEW: The Next Narrative Africa Fund raised $50 million, received 2,000 submissions from 80 countries, and promised to change who gets backed in African cinema. Then it picked Trevor Noah, a filmmaker with a Netflix deal, and a company that has worked with Disney.
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CNN International
Israeli settlers have increasingly used violence against Palestinians in a bid to drive them from their homes in the occupied West Bank. But sexual assault appears to be a new weapon in these settlers’ arsenal of intimidation, pointing to a troubling new level of violence. cnn.it/4du8vj6
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Tayo Aina
Tayo Aina@tayoainafilms·
Im currently in Kenya, and when I came in, it was so smooth. They just stamped my passort and I went in. No stress. I believe this is how African travel should be. If they can give us free entry, why can't we do the same? @nigimmigration x.com/LarryMadowo/st…
Larry Madowo@LarryMadowo

Nigerians come to Kenya visa-free but Nigeria is denying Kenyans visas after applying, paying $80, submitting flight + hotel bookings, invitation letters etcetera. How is this acceptable?

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Zuba 🌞
Zuba 🌞@zuba_mutesi·
For guys who don’t claim to be Africans, they fought a bit too hard for the cup
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Yvonne Mpambara
Yvonne Mpambara@__Mpambara·
Troubling for Ugandans that beyond the illegal access to health data, the MOU might contain more exploitative demands that were not made public. Zambia which has refused to sign the same health MOU, is facing intensifying threats from the US. Zambia argues that the MOU is tied to massive mineral wealth exploitation disguised as healthcare. healthgap.org/zambias-draft-… Question is, what did Uganda sign up for in the same agreement?
Yvonne Mpambara@__Mpambara

Uganda has signed the same health Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the US government that Kenyan citizens are suing their government over for breach of privacy of medical data. The US seems to be signing this particular health agreement with a couple of African countries. What’s the catch? Why aren’t these MOUs made public? Who protects our medical data?

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Algeria FC
Algeria FC@Algeria_FC·
Trophies are won on the pitch 🇸🇳⭐️⭐️
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Fatu
Fatu@fatuogwuche·
Monday Newsletter 🚨🚨 Rwanda is coming for Africa's AI throne! Rwanda has a smaller population than Lagos, Nigeria’s commercial city, and it just signed one of the largest AI partnerships on the African continent with the world’s top 3 AI companies. The question isn’t why Anthropic chose Rwanda. The question is: why is everyone else still watching? Read my take: bigtechthisweek.com/p/rwanda-is-co…
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Fatu@fatuogwuche

I spent this past week researching what African countries are doing with AI, and Rwanda is taking the crown 👑

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