African Renaissance ♒️

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African Renaissance ♒️

African Renaissance ♒️

@atansi

An African from the Global South #Sankara #Lumumba #OgaAbuAli #Fela #UmYobe #MalcolmX #AssimiGoita #CoupDetat #Maat

War Katılım Ekim 2009
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African Renaissance ♒️
Fuel shortage all over France 🇫🇷. Panic buying. Totalenergies cap fuel price, sells out. Other outlets struggle with logistics. Fuel now at €2. Geopolitics ✅: last year french media were rejoicing of terrorist attacks on Malian fuel supply route.
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African Renaissance ♒️
@Pressman2040 Nigerian military failed them This is the opposite of what you see in Burkina, Mali and Niger. Question: can people in southern Nigeria react like this military presence? What would the military do? Does the population even have courage?
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PATRIOTIC SOJA ($TSIR-MUNCHAN)
Plateau State Indigenes Protest Angrily, Demand Exit Of Nigeria Military In Their Community Following Constant K+llings By Fulani K+llers Despite Military Presence. 💔💔💔💔💔💔💔💔💔💔💔💔
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@OzorNdiOzor Do not compare nonsense to Troare. You can talk of Nigeria without mentioning Burkina Faso. Until y’all stand up and fight, you can continue fighting each another, doing tribalism, asleep in ignorance and co-ward
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Ozor Ndi Ozor
Ozor Ndi Ozor@OzorNdiOzor·
The only time Nigeria was obsessively committed to fighting terrorism was 15 years ago, however, that mission was immensely sabotaged by Nigerians from the north. The fruit of that sabotage is what we reaping today, and that could be our undoing. General Azubuike Ihejirika, COAS from 2010 - 2014 was probably the best Nigeria has seen. Think of Captain Traoré Agility. Well, Ihejirika had it twice back then. When Nigeria’s security problems were just starting, General Ihejirika fought very hard. He went into the terrorists’ hiding places and killed many of the bad guys. Most people in the North got very angry. They started a big campaign to damage his name. They criticised him more than anyone else.
They harassed him more than anyone else.
They accused him of many things, all without proof. President Jonathan picked four top army chiefs, but only General Azubuike was attacked from every side. The Arewa Consultative Forum attacked him every day. Borno elders also spoke out strongly against him. Because he was killing so many terrorists, they said he was taking revenge from the Civil War. 
Some accused him of committing “genocide”. For God’s sake this is a dude who in just 18 months as COAS, Fvcking pushed Boko Haram out of Maiduguri. When that did not work, they accused him of helping terrorists. They tried everything possible against this man. 
In the end, they forced him out. Fifteen years later, the “Prodigal Sons” are now killing Generals. 
The brothers of the “Prodigal Sons” were very angry because General Ihejirika was killing too many of them.
Ozor Ndi Ozor tweet media
Ozor Ndi Ozor@OzorNdiOzor

In just 18 months as COAS, Lt. General Ihejirika pushed Boko Haram out of Maiduguri. In a SANE country, national accolades should had followed—instead opposition from Northern elites began. Insurgence “must” be a continuous concern, I guess. Muhammadu Buhari: “An attack on Boko Haram is an attack on the North”

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Nnamdi Obi
Nnamdi Obi@nnamdiobiii·
Many Nigerians are dreaming of visas In the world today, open minds, closed borders. Everyone wants greener pastures they didn’t build and I have no mercy for how the system treats them over there. Anyways we keep educating until my people understand how to fight at home and also block interference
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DD Geopolitics
DD Geopolitics@DD_Geopolitics·
🇺🇸🇮🇶 BREAKING | The United States has reportedly suspended all funding and security coordination with the Iraqi government and has halted dollar shipments to Iraq's central banking system, according to Saudi channel Al-Hadath. Washington says the suspension will remain in effect until a new Iraqi government is formed and Baghdad provides information on pro-Iranian militia members who have attacked U.S. targets in Iraq. Iraq's economy is 90% dependent on oil revenue paid in dollars into a Federal Reserve account in New York. Every month, Baghdad flies in $1-2 billion in cash from that account to pay salaries and conduct government functions. Cutting dollar access means the Iraqi government cannot operate—salaries go unpaid, the dinar collapses, and the state grinds to a halt. Iraq is currently forming a new government after November 2025 elections. The U.S. threatened in January to suspend engagement if any of 58 pro-Iranian MPs were included in the cabinet. Now Trump is enforcing that ultimatum while Iraq remains paralyzed between Washington and Tehran. Washington invaded Iraq, destroyed its economy, controls its oil revenue through the New York Fed, and is now starving the government until it picks a cabinet the White House approves.
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The Spearhead
The Spearhead@Spearhead_Af·
Niger To Provide 1000 Affordable Housing Units To Citizens, Near Completing First Batch The Nigerien government is set to deliver 1000 affordable housing units to the people of Niger as part of its Cité de la Refondation (“City of Refoundation”) social housing initiative, launched in 2024 by the administration of Nigerien President Abdourahmane Tchiani. As of April 10, 2026, the first batch of 400 homes is near completion. The Cité de la Refondation initiative comes amid many bold steps forward for the once economically and politically stagnant West African nation, since it severed ties with former colonizer France in 2023. As a member of the Alliance of Sahel States (AES), Niger has faced relentless attacks by Western-backed terrorists, economic isolation and sovereignty violations by Western-aligned African states, and endless slander from Western and Western-aligned media. Despite these externally-imposed challenges, the country and its fellow AES members, Mali and Burkina Faso, have continued to record economic and political wins. All 3 nations have pointed to France as a key sponsor of terror in the Sahel – a claim which has been corroborated by their international allies – and France itself, along with its fellow Western nations, has made no bones about its intentions to revive its dwindling influence in Africa, and in so doing, shore up its own presently crumbling economy. Recall that on March 11, 2026, the European Parliament called for the release of French-backed former Nigerien President Mohamed Bazoum, who was detained in 2023 by the Tchiani administration for his crimes against the Nigerien people.
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Farida Bemba Nabourema
It is 2026, and people are still telling us to move on from colonialism as though the system packed its bags and left when they handed us a flag and an anthem. You have to be either profoundly shallow, spectacularly ignorant, or deliberately dishonest to look at a system still running on full wheels under a different name and tell the people living under it that discussing it is an obsession with the past. You really think those of us who analyse colonialism have no interest in the future? That we are archaeologists who enjoy the ruins for the aesthetic? We do this because what you call the past is the operating system of the present. The capital flight is present. The rigged trade rules are present. The weapons used to repress citizens demanding accountability were manufactured last year and delivered last month. None of this is the past. It is current state of our affairs. And then comes the other argument: blame the corrupt African leaders. Fine! Let us talk about the leaders. But first tell us who put them there. Patrice Lumumba wanted Congo’s mineral wealth to serve Congolese people and was murdered with Belgian and American coordination. Thomas Sankara refused to pay odious debts and was assassinated by a man France then protected for 27 years. Kwame Nkrumah was toppled in a CIA-backed coup while he was on a plane. Every African leader who looked at the extraction machine and decided his people deserved better was removed, exiled, imprisoned or killed, and replaced with someone more willing to sign whatever was put in front of him and call it governance. My own country has been ruled for 59 years by a father and then a son. It began when an illiterate man, captured from his village and conscripted by force into the French colonial army, trained to beat and torture and assassinate other Africans who challenged colonial rule, was handed a weapon and the equivalent of a few hundred dollars to kill a highly educated economist who spoke six languages and was building a national currency to free his people from French monetary control. France recognised the junta that replaced him within days and nobody was ever tried. The killer eventually seized total power and ruled until his death, when his son inherited the country like a family business. For 59 years we have been fighting to remove that regime thousands were martyred in the process. The regime remains in power and every single decade since 1967, the Togolese tried uprisings and they were massacred. The regime held in place by French diplomatic protection and Israeli surveillance technology rented to monitor, trace and silence anyone who organises against it. So when you say blame the African leaders, I am asking you to follow the chain of command. Those are not African leaders. They are local administrators with black faces placed at the top of a structure designed by others, for others, serving others. We were given an anthem, a flag, a useless seat at the United Nations, and told that was independence. Well it is mot! It was a franchise arrangement, and the franchisor has never loosened its grip. Who hides the money they loot? In whose banks does it sit? On whose streets do they buy their properties? London, Washington, Paris, Dubai, Zurich. The looted wealth of African nations is not hidden under mattresses in Lomé, Kinshasa or Libreville. It moves through financial systems in capitals that simultaneously lecture us about governance. Who supplies the weapons used to crush us when we protest? Who send “international observers” that look the other way during stolen elections and sends congratulations to the “winner” that claims 94% while the head of the opposition is either jailed or exiled? Who buys our minerals at a fraction of their actual value and writes the contracts that ensure the numbers never add up in Africa’s favour? You want us to move on? Show us the way to dignity and sovereignty that does not require dismantling this system and we will gladly follow
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David Hundeyin
David Hundeyin@DavidHundeyin·
Isn't it funny how what was once the 2nd poorest country in the world now has the money to build housing and infrastructure for its people after getting rid of French colonisation and reclaiming its sovereignty? And it built all this without needing a single NGO. Funny right?
The Spearhead@Spearhead_Af

Niger To Provide 1000 Affordable Housing Units To Citizens, Near Completing First Batch The Nigerien government is set to deliver 1000 affordable housing units to the people of Niger as part of its Cité de la Refondation (“City of Refoundation”) social housing initiative, launched in 2024 by the administration of Nigerien President Abdourahmane Tchiani. As of April 10, 2026, the first batch of 400 homes is near completion. The Cité de la Refondation initiative comes amid many bold steps forward for the once economically and politically stagnant West African nation, since it severed ties with former colonizer France in 2023. As a member of the Alliance of Sahel States (AES), Niger has faced relentless attacks by Western-backed terrorists, economic isolation and sovereignty violations by Western-aligned African states, and endless slander from Western and Western-aligned media. Despite these externally-imposed challenges, the country and its fellow AES members, Mali and Burkina Faso, have continued to record economic and political wins. All 3 nations have pointed to France as a key sponsor of terror in the Sahel – a claim which has been corroborated by their international allies – and France itself, along with its fellow Western nations, has made no bones about its intentions to revive its dwindling influence in Africa, and in so doing, shore up its own presently crumbling economy. Recall that on March 11, 2026, the European Parliament called for the release of French-backed former Nigerien President Mohamed Bazoum, who was detained in 2023 by the Tchiani administration for his crimes against the Nigerien people.

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@Somtolism7 That’s what most say. But Mali and Burkina Faso were in similar or even worst condition than Nigeria. e.g. Burkina was ran by Blaise compaore (who unalived Sankara) for many years before being overthrown by population. I don’t think things could have been more worst than Burkina
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Daniel Somtochukwu
Daniel Somtochukwu@Somtolism7·
When I tweeted about this many serving soldiers came to attack the tweet , to my greatest surprise all of them are now coming out to confidently say the same thing they have been attacking me for 🫩😆 When reality hits you ikwuo eziokwu by force . Only the truth can set us all free
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Movement for African Emancipation
Please join us for our upcoming Programme! Date & Time: Saturday, the 25th of April, 11AM WAT. Topic: Zionism is A Threat That Africa & Nigeria Must Confront: Exposing the Zionist Security Complex Zoom registration link: zoom.us/meeting/regist…
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Kemi Seba Officiel
Kemi Seba Officiel@KemiSeba1·
[🇿🇦ARRESTATION DE KEMI SEBA, PROCÉDURE D’EXTRADITION VERS LE BENIN, RELATION AVEC LE NIGER ET PROFUSION DES FAKE NEWS FRANÇAFRICAINES SUR LA TOILE: LE COORDINATEUR INTERNATIONAL DE L’ONG URGENCES PANAFRICANISTES CLARIFIE LES FAITS].
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@solopop204 @nnamdiobiii You got it wrong. Actually Burkinabes called out France in order to take back their country. population came out, asked military to take over, military took over (Damiba), France infiltrated military, population came out again, asked military to dish France, 2nd coup (Traore)
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Don
Don@solopop204·
@nnamdiobiii Okay Calling out the west what will that do for you? Did Burkina faso call out the west before taking their country back. Take down their puppet then you can now start to call them out. This is how it is down.
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Nnamdi Obi
Nnamdi Obi@nnamdiobiii·
Nigerians speak as though they are a super power. You people don’t have control anything. Like nothing. I said something about you all being pushed. Pushed is a soft word. You were forced. Who do you people think you are. Someone stole elections from you and what did you do. Cry Those of you saying we shouldn’t call th west out and call our leaders. We did and we found out the funds and power comes from the west, the source You say no. It must be politicians. What do you Nigerians want. What is this hopeless balls sucking you do with America What has America ever given you asides visa to study and stay in a system where you can never be anything. Ehhhhhhhh
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African Renaissance ♒️
@Titzelch @DD_Geopolitics Using USA dollar in a foreign nation should be illegal it has been normalize. Selling your nation’s natural commodities in a foreign country currency (USA dollar) should be illegal but it happens in the gulf nations. Legality is with reference to who has power.
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martin hachler
martin hachler@Titzelch·
@DD_Geopolitics They have no right to "inspect ships" in international waters! This is illegal by international and maritime law!
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DD Geopolitics@DD_Geopolitics·
🇺🇸🇨🇳The US Navy will inspect ships heading to China as part of the fight against the supply of Iranian oil. — US Permanent Representative to the UN Waltz
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African Renaissance ♒️
@AdebamisopeA @nnamdiobiii Is it hard for you to link fuel scarcity to economic sanctions? Is critical thinking a rare commodity? Is it hard to be able to acquire new knowledge given current information availability compared to when you were in school. Acknowledge that you were used as useful idiots.
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Adebamisope Afolabi
Adebamisope Afolabi@AdebamisopeA·
It is okay. That’s life anyway. Those of that lived under him knew all this statistics you are throwing up meant nothing to those on the streets and that he a brutal and kleptocratic ruler. Fuel crisis, academic disruption, significant financial sector failures, clampdowns on opposition, oil production above 2mbpd yet no attempt to diversify the economy, the number of forex rates were more than 4 and it was later than AFEM tried to converge this artificially leading to arbitrage opportunities, state sponsored killings were the order of the day, his handling of the Saro wiwa issue led to the agitation becoming militant. I wonder what the family will even think of your write up. Now let me tell you the only win you are promoting which was the inflation rate of 8% only occurred in his last year and this was due to him not printing money to finance excessive spending. The prior years saw record inflation rates which meant price levels were already outrageous so artificial price controls were imposed which is basically subsidized living. Give him another 3 years there could have been a Venezuelan outcome in Nigeria but thankfully he had a date to keep with God and I must tell you that in campus that year, we celebrated. So tell that to your audience, it’s fine but some of us lived the realities. Your brother Daniel Kanu also did same by the way.
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Nnamdi Obi
Nnamdi Obi@nnamdiobiii·
How Abacha Challenged the West This is the part most narratives bury under the corruption story: 1. He rebuilt Nigeria’s foreign reserves under sanctions. Under Abacha, Nigeria’s foreign reserves grew from $494 million in 1993 to $9.6 billion by 1998, and external debt was reduced from $36 billion to $27 billion — all while under Western sanctions and with oil averaging around $15 per barrel. That’s a significant economic feat that contradicted the IMF’s structural adjustment playbook entirely. 2. He rejected IMF conditionalities. He brought the privatization programs of the Babangida administration — IMF-aligned programs — to a halt, and reduced inflation from 54% to 8.5% without following Western prescriptions. This was a direct rebuke of the Bretton Woods institutions. The West wanted SAPs; Abacha refused them. 3. He defied UN sanctions on Libya. In 1997, Muammar Gaddafi’s West African tour to Abacha directly infringed UN sanctions on Libya, and Abacha received him publicly with thousands of supporters in Kano. This was a deliberate signal — Abacha was building an alternative bloc with leaders the West was trying to isolate. 4. He was the backbone of ECOMOG. Under Abacha, Nigeria contributed the largest troops and resources to West African peacekeeping in Liberia and Sierra Leone, often funding operations alone when other regional powers hesitated. Former Ghanaian President Jerry Rawlings is quoted saying: “It was Nigeria under Abacha that gave ECOWAS its backbone. Without that courage, West Africa would have descended into chaos.” This regional military muscle made Nigeria structurally dominant in a way that threatened Western-mediated stability frameworks 5. He was consolidating permanent power. By April 1998, Abacha had coerced all five political parties to endorse him as the sole presidential candidate. A Nigeria locked permanently under an anti-IMF, pro-Gaddafi, ECOMOG-funding strongman with $9.6 billion in reserves and no appetite for Western financial institutions was a fundamentally different geopolitical problem than a temporarily compliant dictator they could manage.
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@Wynwonder @nnamdiobiii How would you store and move money if you were under western economic sanctions? You are not allowed to use their Swift system to sell in their international markets. Black market. How do you move money in black market, to evade western sanction?
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Ujay Enebeli
Ujay Enebeli@Wynwonder·
@nnamdiobiii He grew our reserves to $9.6b but had $4b tucked away in various banks for himself but let's celebrate his economic genius for this "significant economic feat". The Pandit Nehru of Nigeria.
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African
African@ali_naka·
Elon posted 47 times about South Africa last week. Meanwhile Africans must not post about USA politics? We must post about herding cattle’s with our neighbours. Isn’t that institutional racism on X?
African tweet mediaAfrican tweet media
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Juan Branco ✊
Juan Branco ✊@anatolium·
L'affaire Kemi SEBA, nous le savons, est directement pilotée par la Présidence du Bénin. Celle-ci souhaite dépêcher deux ministres d'État en Afrique du Sud pour obtenir son extradition. Ce sera pour vivre une humiliation. Ils échoueront. Il nous revient de revenir sur les raisons d'une telle erreur, et d'un échec annoncé, avant que la procédure ne vienne le confirmer. À notre connaissance, jamais une procédure d'extradition n'avait mobilisé de tels moyens d'État. Le Bénin est un pays qui connaît des heures sombres: menacé par des velléités putschistes, pris dans l'engrenage d'un "mal développement", persécutant ses élites intellectuelles, abandonnant ses campagnes et son grand pays au profit d'une politique de connivence avec le capitalisme mondialisé, il porte en lui le ferment de la division. Ses relations avec ses voisins, dont il est le port naturel et nécessaire, ont été rompues au profit de sa mise sous tutelle françafricaine. Une politique culturelle à laquelle le show business se soumet séduit les élites citadines, et laisse sur le côté les millions de béninois qu'ils espèrent fasciner. Les dirigeants de ce pays le maîtrisent avec les fers, et cette Cour, la CRIET, où j'ai été l'un des seuls à pouvoir arracher la liberté d'un homme qu'ils voulaient enfermé à jamais. Eric Dupond Moretti lui-même y a eu droit au tarif qui a valu à ses magistrats son surnom: vingt-ans. Soit la peine qui, sur décision de M. TALON, vous est infligée au cours d'une audience expéditive, si vous avez eu le courage de vous lever. Le nettoyage a été fait minutieusement, précautionneusement, avec la complicité d'autorités françaises qui ne l'ont jamais dénoncé. Désormais, aveuglés, ils veulent faire tomber le seul homme demeuré libre et debout dans un pays où tous ceux qui ont osé parler ont été ravagés. Ils le veulent enfermé à jamais. Cet homme, c'est Kemi Seba. Rien ne justifiera jamais l'obsession de la destruction à l'égard de concitoyens qui ont le tort de penser. Et rien ne justifiera jamais les falsifications, mensonges, tentatives de déstabilisation qu'on a tenté de lui infliger. Ces dernières semaines, le florilège le plus classique a été mobilisé: accusations de viol, de participation à un coup d'État, manipulations d'audios et de vidéos, arrestation de ses parents de 80 ans, de la mère de ses enfants... On a tenté de le réduire à néant. De l'exploser. L'apex a été atteint par la diffusion d'un faux communiqué du CNSP du Niger, tentant de faire croire que la Présidence du Niger se désolidariserait d'un héros du panafricanisme, à l'indépendance farouche, qui a ouvert la voie à de nouvelles formes de voir le monde, et qui est le support qui permet à beaucoup de continuer à espérer. A quoi joue-t-on, lorsque l'on commence à falsifier des documents diplomatiques ? A quoi joue-t-on, lors que l'on laisse des officines de la françafrique mettre en danger ses populations ? Car ce à quoi joue M. TALON, c'est à la guerre, à l'instant même où il est censé se retirer. Nos autorités, et Emmanuel Macron qui est à l'origine de ces persécutions, devront se montrer attentifs aux conséquences qui s'ensuivront. Déjà, il y a quelques années, la région avait failli basculer, et c'est notamment l'intervention d'hommes comme Kemi Seba qui avait permis de l'éviter. La France et la Fédération de Russie se livrent à des escarmouches fratricides en des terres qu'ils considèrent mutuellement, et de façon indécente, comme des espaces à piller et à manipuler. Nous devons cesser de semer la misère et la division en ces terres, et parmi ces populations. Par hubris et ambition. Le monde a besoin d'une Afrique prospère et souveraine. Le monde a besoin que nous cessions de nous y ingérer et de tenter de la déstabiliser. Le monde a besoin que nous cessions de jouer. L'Afrique du Sud se retrouve à nouveau témoin historique, et juge de paix, de ces manoeuvres insupportables. Elle saura trancher. Quant au Bénin, je le dis en toute humilité. Un pays ne peut prospérer en enfermant et persécutant ses opposants. Le Bénin ne peut devenir une prison à ciel ouvert. Il y a des hommes bons qui croupissent, depuis des années, là-bas, enfermés. Le verrouillage des élections n'annonce rien de bon. Et le nouveau Président devra s'interroger sur le legs empoisonné qui lui est ainsi proposé. L'injustice et la peur font les révolutions. L'affaire Kemi Seba est au coeur d'une blessure africaine, purulente, qui obère l'émancipation de ses peuples. Des dizaines de millions de personnes risquent de se voir affectés par l'instrumentalisation et la politisation outrancières que le Bénin fait de cette procédure judiciaire, et de la situation de cet homme, dont tout le parcours et l'engagement crient liberté. En dépêchant deux ministres d'État, le Bénin se trahit. Il montre qu'il ne s'agit pas de justice, mais de politique, et du plus haut niveau de la politique. M. Seba est une icone de son pays. Et lorsqu'il sera libéré, il ne pourra être contourné. Et je préviens mon pays, la France: il ne pourra être éliminé. Les temps qui viennent sont historiques, tout comme nos responsabilités. La voix des peuples s'est aggravée. Elle demande à être entendue, et considérée. À travers cet homme et en lui se logent les coeurs et les pensées de millions de personnes qui ont appris à grandir à ses côtés. Nos dirigeants, portés au pouvoir par des manoeuvres de salon et dénués de la moindre capacité à nous représenter, feraient bien de s'en souvenir, et de le considérer. Autrement, c'est leur destin qui s'en verra scellé.
Juan Branco ✊ tweet media
Juan Branco ✊@anatolium

Kemi Seba fait, depuis plusieurs années, l'objet d'une persécution absurde. Son arrestation, son placement en détention et sa demande d'extradition vers le Bénin s'inscrivent dans cette longue histoire. Comme toutes les démarches qui l'ont jusqu'ici visé, elle n'a pas vocation à prospérer. Les autorités du Bénin, qui ont éradiqué toute opposition, fait "élire" leur chef de l'État à plus de 94%, arrêtent et détiennent à travers un Tribunal, la CRIET façonné à leur main, veulent désormais M. Kemi Seba détenu à vie. Ces dernières semaines, ils ont fait arrêter père, mère, et la mère de ses enfants. Des officines ivoiriennes et béninoises font courir les informations les plus sordides le concernant. Kemi est un homme juste. L'Afrique du Sud a une longue tradition d'accueil et de protection des réfugiés politiques. Elle respecte le droit. Elle ne cédera pas.

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Sony Thăng
Sony Thăng@nxt888·
Lumumba was killed in 1961 because he threatened the extraction. Sankara was killed in 1987 because he threatened the extraction. Today the extraction does not need to kill presidents as often. It has a more elegant mechanism. Fund instability. Instability creates ungovernable territories. Ungovernable territories require security frameworks. Security frameworks require foreign expertise, foreign equipment, foreign presence. Foreign presence creates access. Access serves the extraction. The bodies are still produced. They are just produced by militias now instead of firing squads. The distance between the funder and the corpse is longer. The outcome is identical.
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Mohamad Safa
Mohamad Safa@mhdksafa·
My last tweet! I will stop using X “Twitter” in protest against the censorship imposed on my voice and in support of your right to freedom of expression. All I have left is my voice, and they've succeeded in silencing my voice online. I received assassination threats, they terrorized my wife and closed her bank account, they imposed financially penalties on me, they closed all my bank accounts, and now I am being silenced in diplomatic rooms and censored on social media—All because I am saying that Israel and the US must stop violating international law and committing war crimes. I gave up my career in an attempt to save people from Trump's madness of using nuclear weapons. I lost my entire source of income. I lost everything for not selling my voice, my conscience, and my principles, and I will never accept having my voice controlled by their lobby. The media office will manage this account from now on until X removes the shadow ban imposed on my account. If you would like to join my protest against censorship, join this tweet. Thank you for your understanding and thank you for your past, present and continued support.
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