Nas

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Nas

Nas

@CINASITARY

I love Stand up Comedy, Conspiracy, and Tech. Humanitarian ||Web3.0|| Anti-climate change. Media Content aficionado. Anti-woke.

Nairobi city เข้าร่วม Temmuz 2011
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Nas
Nas@CINASITARY·
"Unahitaji mi nahitaji, lakini hatuhitajiani! ~Dude of 🔥
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Ehelsan Saleban
Ehelsan Saleban@Ehelsan_Saleban·
UNSC | Somalia’s Ambassador to the UN, @AbukarOsman1, gave the Israeli representative a clear history lesson. It was true, strong, and honest. Diplomacy with courage.
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Ehelsan Saleban
Ehelsan Saleban@Ehelsan_Saleban·
Near the Bab al-Mandab in Awdal State, members of the Samaroon tribe mobilized massively. They displayed Palestinian flags 🇵🇸 to show solidarity with Palestine and to reject the idea of a one clan breakaway territory.
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Lynn Ngugi
Lynn Ngugi@lynn_ngugi1·
Over the past few days, the country has found itself pulled into a growing and deeply polarising public dispute involving Usikimye, its co-founder Njeri wa Migwi, and former co-founder Stella Khachina. What started as internal disagreements has now spilled into the public domain, with serious allegations and equally serious counter-claims being made, and Kenyans sharply divided on who to believe. Among the claims circulating publicly are allegations around internal governance disputes within Usikimye and the circumstances under which a co-founder exited the organisation. There are also allegations that Njeri wa Migwi failed to appropriately address concerns relating to alleged grooming, including claims that she defended or shielded her son when these concerns were raised. Alongside this are claims of mishandling or failure to adequately respond to internal complaints, as well as broader questions about accountability, transparency, and decision-making within an organisation that works directly with survivors of gender-based violence. Other allegations claim that some abuse stories shared publicly were scripted and that individuals were allegedly paid to present these accounts, particularly in the context of fundraising. Other claims touch on the organisation’s digital footprint, fundraising narratives, and internal safeguards. In response, human rights activist Boniface Mwangi has publicly defended Njeri wa Migwi, describing the allegations as malicious, politically motivated, and part of a broader attempt to destroy both her reputation and the work of Usikimye. He has stated that Usikimye has helped thousands of survivors, that claims of grooming are false, and that he personally spoke to individuals mentioned in the allegations. He has also alleged extortion attempts, hacking of Usikimye’s social media accounts, and possible state-linked interference. At the same time, Rough Silk author, Deborah Auko and others within the human rights space have publicly pushed back, arguing that silence from leadership in the face of serious allegations only worsens public mistrust. They have maintained that organisations working with survivors must be held to the highest standard of accountability, that CBOs are not personal entities, and that when public trust, public funding, and vulnerable populations are involved, transparency is not optional. While this dispute may be interpreted as a conflict between individuals, the reality is that it goes beyond personal relationships. Usikimye is a public-facing organisation, a recipient of public goodwill and donations, and an organisation that works with survivors of sexual and gender-based violence. That alone gives the public a legitimate interest in asking difficult questions, not to tear down the work, but to protect it. Regardless of where one stands, there are questions that cannot be avoided. What internal safeguarding, governance, and accountability structures exist within organisations working with survivors? How are disputes between founders handled, documented, and independently reviewed? What mechanisms exist to ensure transparency without retraumatising survivors? And how should human rights organisations respond when serious allegations emerge, especially when trust is their currency? And that is why, as someone who has believed in Usikimye’s mission and supported their work, I am willing to commit my time and resources to fully and independently investigate these claims. If you have credible information, documents, firsthand accounts, or verifiable leads related to this matter, you can reach us confidentially at lynn.ngugi@lnn.digital or info@lnn.digital. This conversation has to move beyond camps and personalities and towards truth, accountability, and the protection of those who matter most: SURVIVORS I will take the time I need to fully investigate this and bring the truth to light.
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Deeqa 🇸🇴
Deeqa 🇸🇴@Deee_luul·
A Muslim saved many Jewish lives and stopped a false flag operation. Ahmed al-Ahmed 12.14.2025
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DJ
DJ@djeduhmaks·
These here are screenshots of falsely accused rape cases. Njeri Migwi appears to have been tagged on one of these, she followed up but we never got to hear any updates. Ama haikua na benefit? What happens to the life of the wrongly accused later in life? Does law catch up with these false rape accusers? There is selective outrage on the TL currently. People saying they are not willing to believe the Usikimye allegations over what the org has been doing. Talmabout it does not erase what she's done kinda shii... Yes it does not erase. Where there is smoke there's definitely an inferno, why not call out the rot in the same weight you praise? How can we ever fix the society then? Everyday we keep on blaming the rot with politicians but how about us? Are we clean? When people script sth like a rape accusation, do they ever sit down to think how the society will handle the accused since they are even posted on social media? Men, we have heard men spend over 45 years in prison over a crime they didn't commit! We can't stand by and be willing bystanders as other men are legally castrated!Every time we are called rape apologists for asking questions to check the veracity of claims. Why are some women so bitter towards men to a point of framing a man and throwing his life away?
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DJ@djeduhmaks

Selective outrage is not moral clarity. When rape claims surface, those asking basic questions are branded apologists, yet when an organisation like Usikimye faces serious allegations, we’re suddenly told to “wait for all sides.” Truth and accountability can’t be conditional or convenient. Either we apply the same standard of scrutiny to everyone, or we admit our outrage is driven by bias, not justice.

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Xavier
Xavier@xavierjp__·
The hero was Muslim The shooter was mossad thank you for coming to my ted talk
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Nas@CINASITARY·
Njeri Migwi, I have a human rights organisation to help people from GBV ( Grant Based Violations ) from donations that were embezzled. #usigongwe
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Jvnior
Jvnior@Jvnior·
Naveed Akram real name is David Cohen?
Jvnior tweet media
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Nas
Nas@CINASITARY·
Studying in an Indian majority school, makes you think you are living life as an extra in their love story movies. Besides the bad PR they get from their street food, I believe there's no one who can love like the Indians or better yet tell a love story on their level.
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Ryan Rozbiani
Ryan Rozbiani@RyanRozbiani·
Israel Does Not want the World to see aerial footage of Gaza, but Al Araby TV journalist Dalal Mawad got it The world must see this destruction and the tent cities
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OnePath Network
OnePath Network@OnePathNetwork·
Do not forget Sudan. Sudan is facing a catastrophic famine, described by the UN as the world’s worst humanitarian crisis in 2025. Nearly 30.4 million people, more than half the country, now depend on emergency aid, while 24.6 million are trapped in acute food insecurity. Among them, over 637,000 people are enduring famine conditions (IPC Phase 5) in some of the hardest-hit regions, including Zamzam, Al Salam, and Abu Shouk IDP camps in North Darfur, as well as the Western Nuba Mountains. Children are bearing the brunt of this man-made disaster: 522,000 children have already died from hunger-related causes. Despite the scale of the tragedy, aid deliveries remain dangerously inadequate. The suffering in Sudan is unfolding largely out of sight. Twelve million people are internally displaced, and over four million refugees have fled to neighbouring countries, where food aid is also running out. Entire communities in Darfur, Kordofan, and the Nuba Mountains are on the brink of starvation, surviving on foraged leaves and contaminated water. This crisis is not a distant tragedy; it is a daily reality of preventable death, the direct result of siege tactics and neglect. Do not forget Sudan. Every share, every donation, and every voice raised can push this silent catastrophe back into the world’s conscience and pressure governments to deliver the food, medicine, and safe passage that millions of Sudanese need to survive.
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Nour Jamaan from Gaza
Nour Jamaan from Gaza@an_jmy40244·
I'm not ashamed to say I'm extremely hungry — signs of malnutrition, major weight loss, and constant dizziness have started to show. If you’re scrolling, PLEASE leave a dot . it's just a dot chuffed.org/project/140028…
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Sulaiman Ahmed
Sulaiman Ahmed@ShaykhSulaiman·
Sulaiman Ahmed tweet media
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Irlandarra
Irlandarra@aldamu_jo·
lsraeI is building a 6m high wire around the village of Sinjil in Palestine 🇵🇸, caging in over 8000 people. But who in their right mind can do something like that?
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Mohanad
Mohanad@MohanadElbalal·
Fatma from Al Fashir says most of the men in her family have been killed and that there is no food left. She says we don’t know whether to stay here and starve or go out of the city in search of food and risk being murdered or raped by militiamen. Pressure must be applied on the UAE and their proxy militia to allow humanitarian aid into the city; we must all use our voices! #AlFashir_is_starving
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Ryan Rozbiani
Ryan Rozbiani@RyanRozbiani·
UN Special Rapporteur Francesca Albanese published a Report EXPOSING these 60 Companies Complicit in Aiding Israel
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JEW
JEW@Langatt_KE·
The IMF's playbook: 1. Lend to corrupt leaders 2. Watch the money vanish 3. Demand the people repay it 4. Privatize national assets to foreign companies That's not economics. That's theft.
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