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This week’s Facts of the Week unpack why Ibrahim Traoré has become a target of Western hostility. Burkina Faso’s fiery leader has expelled French troops, challenged IMF dominance and championed pan-African unity through the Alliance of Sahel States. His commitment to resource sovereignty and grassroots mobilisation terrifies Western powers, who’ve launched a slanderous media campaign against him.
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Continued…….. Swipe through to see how Traoré’s fearless stance against neo-colonialism and his push for genuine African sovereignty have placed him squarely in the West’s crosshairs.
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HUGE PYRAMID DISCOVERY?

Italian scientists have made some remarkable claims about what could be lying underneath Egypt’s pyramids. They say data obtained using radar technology point to huge, previously unknown man-made structures - and could even indicate an underground city. This would mean rewriting much of Egyptology. But rival scientists have cast doubt on that interpretation of the evidence - while the Internet has gone wild with speculation. Watch our video to make up your women mind. Let us know in the comments.

Sources

https://www.euronews.com/culture/2025/03/26/going-underground-experts-clash-over-hidden-city-beneath-egypt-pyramids

https://egyptindependent.com/controversial-study-claims-massive-structures-discovered-under-pyramids-in-egypt/


https://english.ahram.org.eg/News/544236.aspx

https://www.jpost.com/archaeology/archaeology-around-the-world/article-847207
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This week’s African proverb - from Kenya - tells us that violence is often the result of a failure to engage intellectually. For Kenyans, this rings very true. Look at how their government cracked down on them with batons, deadly shootings and abductions when they protested IMF-backed tax hikes last year - rather than listening and opening a constructive, critical dialogue. Then there was the more recent case of school children being banned from performing a play (Echoes of War) whose story bears parallels to those events in 2024 - with tear gas used to disperse students and journalists who’d come to see the performance. Under pressure from the authorities, the young troupe was forbidden from taking part in a national theatre competition, though the High Court stepped in saying they could. Are courts the last bastion for reason in a state that fears its own people's voices?
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LATIN AMERICAN LEADERS DEFY U.S. MIGRANT POLICY

Many Latin American leaders at the ninth meeting of the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC) denounced US foreign policy that has forced many of their people to migrate to the United States, only to be turned away at the Mexico-US border or hounded and detained in the US. The country has deported at least 29 million people over the past 32 years, according to figures from the US Department of Homeland Security and news reports. 

Ralph Gonsalves, prime minister of Saint Vincent & Grenadines, delivered a fiery condemnation, blasting the hypocrisy of the wealthiest country posing as the world’s victim while the US economy flounders, partly due to trade imbalances and exploitative systems it spent decades engineering. ‘It is a moral obscenity,’ Gonsalves said.
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Continued……. Honduras President Xiomara Castro, Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel, Bolivian President Luis Arce and Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum also blasted US immigration policies that result in mass deportations as criminalising aspiration and survival. Many Global South people have fled intercommunal violence, poverty, instability and war that can be attributed to Washington's foreign policies.

The leaders' remarks touch on a broader movement worldwide, including in Africa, with governments reclaiming control of resources, resisting neocolonialism, and insisting on more balanced migration, trade, and diplomatic relations. As the momentum builds across the Global South, this may be another turning point in the centuries-long quest for justice and self-determination worldwide.

Video credit: @btnewsroom via IG

Sources

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GI13rJmW_oE

https://www.intellinews.com/latin-american-leaders-blast-us-tariffs-at-celac-summit-as-china-offers-economic-lifeline-376130

https://www.albatcp.org/en/2025/04/09/countries-call-for-deeper-regional-unity-and-support-for-migrants-at-9th-celac-summit

https://foreignpolicy.com/2025/04/11/celac-summit-trump-tariffs-un-secretary-general

https://english.elpais.com/usa/2024-11-19/trump-deported-fewer-people-than-obama-clinton-or-bush-but-more-indiscriminately.html

https://ohss.dhs.gov/topics/immigration/yearbook/2019/table39
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WHITE CONVICTS IN U.S. HIRED OVER RECORD-FREE BLACK PEOPLE

In this clip, Devah Pager, a former professor of sociology and public policy at Harvard University who passed away in 2018, shared insightful findings on the stark reality of Black people in the US labour market.

In the experiment, part of Pager’s 2002 graduate dissertation, ‘The Mark of a Criminal Record,’ young Black and white men applied for entry-level jobs while varying their criminal histories. She found that having a criminal record significantly reduces employment opportunities for all applicants. However, Black applicants without a criminal record received callbacks at roughly half the rate of equally qualified white applicants. More profoundly, Black applicants without a criminal record received callbacks at slightly lower rates than white convicts.

Thus, her research suggested being born Black in the US was akin to being born with a criminal record, exposing the entrenched nature of systemic bias in hiring practices.
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