Fulgence Miku

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Fulgence Miku

Fulgence Miku

@fulgencem

Director of Advocacy and Reforms, LHRC TLS Young Lawyer Award Winner 2010|Vicon Human Rights Award Winner 2022|Lawyer RTs are not endorsement

Dar es Salaam, Tanzania Katılım Aralık 2009
2K Takip Edilen5.4K Takipçiler
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Formula 1
Formula 1@F1·
GEORGE RUSSELL WINS IN MELBOURNE! 🏆👏 An incredibly strong drive from the Mercedes driver to lead home a 1-2 for the team 🤩 #F1 #AusGP
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Aspireachieve
Aspireachieve@Aspireachievee·
The 14 best psychology tricks only the top 1% know -Thread-
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Aspireachieve
Aspireachieve@Aspireachievee·
13 decisions you need to make by 45 to not regret life.. MUST READ 🧵
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Philosophy Mastery | Modern Stoic
18 LAWS OF POWER: (Most People Don't Know) 1. Never explain too much
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theendeavorpath
theendeavorpath@theendeavorpath·
The Stubborn Horse Theory A funny story about caring.
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Manifest_Lord
Manifest_Lord@Manifest_Lord·
18 Sentences that gave me chills... MUST READ 🧵
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Mindphilosophy
Mindphilosophy@Mindphilosophy4·
6 laws of maturity:
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Mwanahamisi Singano
Mwanahamisi Singano@MSalimu·
Moto kwenye mkutano wa kudhibiti mabadiliko ya tabia nchi #COP30 Belem, Brazil. Alhamdullilah mimi na timu yangu wote tuko salama. Washiriki walisaidia sana wana usalama kuzima moto na kusaidiana wenyewe kwa wenyewe kuhakikisha kila mtu anakuwa salama.
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Reads with Ravi
Reads with Ravi@readswithravi·
Parkinson’s Law:
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The Nobel Prize
The Nobel Prize@NobelPrize·
BREAKING NEWS The Norwegian Nobel Committee has decided to award the 2025 #NobelPeacePrize to Maria Corina Machado for her tireless work promoting democratic rights for the people of Venezuela and for her struggle to achieve a just and peaceful transition from dictatorship to democracy. #NobelPrize
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StoicRise
StoicRise@StoicRise·
15 Hard Truths of Psychology and Life: 1.
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Ms. Fortunata Kitokesya
Ms. Fortunata Kitokesya@fortunatak·
Fired in Front of the World A Personal Reflection from Tanzania Have you ever been fired in front of the world?
 Maybe not. But let me tell you — it’s one of the most painful feelings you can ever go through. A feeling of helplessness. Today was that day for many of us at USAID Tanzania as Foreign Service Nationals. A day we had hoped wouldn’t come, but deep down, we knew it would. A day we were forced to face a painful truth — and let go. Today I put down my badge, along with others. It felt unreal. It was not just the end of a job — it was the end of seeing colleagues who had become family. After emotional farewell speeches, we walked out of the compound, flanked by our team, who clapped as we passed. But this wasn’t a celebration. It was a quiet act of solidarity. That walk through the hallway — the applause — felt like a final goodbye. The end of a chapter. The end of an era. And the feeling was deep.
 It felt like we had lost a war we didn’t choose to fight. We were not giving up by will — we were pushed out by powers we couldn’t control. For the past five months, it has been a tough ride. A real rollercoaster of pain, mental stress, confusion, and disbelief. And unless you lived it, you may never fully understand what it did to us, emotionally and mentally. We sat in meetings trying to comfort each other, reading between the lines in messages that only made things worse. The chain of command broke down. Our leaders were just as lost as we were. Emails came to all of us globally. No one had answers. Everyone was affected. It wasn’t just about a system falling apart — it was about dignity being stripped in front of the world. We were called names on Social media. We were used by politicians as examples of failure. We were humiliated publicly. And we kept asking — how can an institution with more than 60 years of history be destroyed just like that? What happened tested the values we thought were strong — democracy, the rule of law, checks and balances. Judges who made rulings not in favor of the government were mocked. And this was happening in a country known as the “father of democracy.” It was hard to believe. In those first months, humanity felt rare. The emails we received were cold, lacking care. Like the people writing them had no idea that behind those names were real people, with families, children, and dreams. People who had worked far from home, in tough conditions, representing their country with pride. Worse still, we would see breaking news on social media — and the next moment, the same thing would arrive in a formal email. One of the hardest moments was the day we were told all Foreign Service Officers had to return home in one month. That day was dark. We were gathered with our leaders, reading and rereading the message, trying to understand it. People were asking questions out of fear — simple, desperate questions like those a child would ask. But there was a light. Thank God for the brave judges who stood strong and stopped that one-month order. They reminded the system that we are not machines — we are people, with lives that matter. And I’m grateful for the kind of leadership we had — even when things were falling apart, they tried to hold us together. You could see the pain in their eyes as they tried to give us hope, when they too were hurting. Today, we walked out like soldiers laying down our tools — not in defeat, but with dignity. Knowing that what we worked for lives on in the communities we served. What we did mattered. It still does. Life isn’t a straight path. This is just one curve. A tough one — but not the end. Maybe this was the push we didn’t want, but needed to step out of our comfort zone, and start dreaming again. Bigger. Braver. Freer. What happened has changed how we see the world. And it leaves big questions behind:
 Can people still trust in democracy? In justice? In leadership? Is democracy still about values, or has it become something transactional?
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Tito Magoti
Tito Magoti@TitoMagoti·
@fulgencem 🤣🤣🤣nilikuwa nawachanganya maadui kaka!! Nimekosa mimi nimekosa sana🙏🏽🤣
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Tito Magoti
Tito Magoti@TitoMagoti·
A progeny of the revolution. No reforms?
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