African Stream – Telegram
African Stream
7.13K subscribers
4.21K photos
4.44K videos
1 file
3.05K links
With the Lions, Not the Hunters.

Join the movement!

https://news.1rj.ru/str/AfricanStream
Download Telegram
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
ISRAEL: AFRICANS DENIED ACCESS TO BOMB SHELTERS

Video circulating online allegedly shows Africans and other foreign nationals in Israel being denied entry to bomb shelters during recent retaliatory missile strikes by Iran. While a few comments suggest the shelters were simply full, many are sceptical about whether it is truly a question of capacity or prejudice. Other recent videos also show foreigners being barred from entering underground facilities - with some Israelis claiming they’re for ‘Jews only.’ Palestinians and Bedouins in particular have also reportedly faced discrimination.

On 15 June, Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, addressed the nation, saying: ‘The missile doesn’t distinguish, but neither do the first responders, the Home Front Command officials, security forces who come to help us - they don’t distinguish.’
😈6🖕5🤔3🤬2😱1
Continued……. Judging by the videos that are emerging, the Israeli bomb shelters certainly do distinguish - or rather, discriminate. Among those said to have been denied shelter are Palestinian medics, including uniformed nurses.

State-level discrimination - in the form of the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians from their lands for over seven decades - has arguably been a part of Israel since its foundation. The past 20 months of Tel Aviv’s US-backed onslaught on Palestinians in the Occupied Territories only confirm that view.

But there are other examples. In 2013, Israel's Health Ministry launched an investigation after it emerged that Ethiopian-Jewish immigrant women had been given long-acting contraceptive injections - without their full consent or knowledge. Many of these women reported that they were pressured to accept the injections as a condition for immigration, with some stating they were misled to believe the shots were routine vaccinations.

Sources

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BASl0zTq9is&t=1s

https://www.news18.com/viral/were-foreign-workers-barred-from-israeli-bomb-shelters-viral-videos-stir-online-debate-ws-l-9399933.html

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2025/6/17/not-for-you-israeli-shelters-exclude-palestinians-as-bombs-rain-down

https://www.yahoo.com/news/not-israeli-shelters-exclude-palestinians-205222290.html

https://www.bmj.com/content/346/bmj.f1614

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2025/6/20/israel-again-included-in-un-blacklist-for-grave-violations-against-children

https://www.aa.com.tr/en/middle-east/palestine-blames-us-bias-for-israel-s-disregard-for-warnings-against-rafah-onslaught/3206764

https://www.timesofisrael.com/netanyahu-at-site-of-deadly-bat-yam-missile-strike-vows-iran-to-pay-very-heavy-price/

https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/nurse-workers-palestinians-denied-entry-israeli-bomb-shelters
🤬7🤡4🤔1
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
KENYA: 20 KILLED IN COP CUSTODY SINCE OJWANG!

Over the past two weeks, 20 Kenyans have died in police custody. That’s according to the Independent Policing Oversight Authority (IPOA). It’s a grim and shocking statistic. But, given that Kenya’s been rocked for two weeks by protests against lethal police brutality following the death in custody - on 7 June - of blogger and teacher Albert Ojwang (whose body bore all the hallmarks of torture, according to his autopsy), it highlights the impunity and sheer contempt with which police in the country act. IPOA chair Ahmed Issack Hassan called the deaths a sign of a deepening crisis and systemic lack of accountability.
🤬7😈6😱1
JUNE 25. KENYA MARKS ANNIVERSARY OF ANTI-IMF BILL PROTESTS

A year ago, all of Kenya, not just Nairobi, rose as one. Thousands of demonstrators poured into the streets to reject an IMF-backed finance bill that sought to squeeze an additional $2.7 billion from the poorest, slapping levies on everything from bread to sanitary towels. The pressure worked: President William Ruto backed down and did not assent to the bill. Join us LIVE as we revisit the scene to count the gains, name the betrayals and assess the fight not just for a different Kenya but, continent-wide, against neoliberalism. See you there!
👏102👍2
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
INDIANAPOLIS OFFICERS ASSAULT BLACK MAN

Police violence against Black people in the US just never ends. This video shows a recent incident when an Indianapolis officer shoots 25-year-old Devin Hunt, a Black man, with an air launcher, reportedly laden with chemical irritants, then slams him to the pavement.

The police say Hunt was arrested after officers came to break up a fight between him and another person. However, Hunt disputes that, saying there’d only been an exchange of words. He says the confrontation had long ended by the time police got involved.

While Hunt survived his brush with police brutality, many others have lost their lives. In 2020, the police k*lling of George Floyd (1973-2020) sparked the largest nationwide uprising in US history.

Police brutality is a long-standing and widespread problem in the US - and disproportionately affects Black people.
😈6😢2💩2
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
THEY TRIED TO SET MICHAEL JACKSON UP!

Michael Jackson died on this day 16 years ago. The King of Pop passed away in 2009 due to an overdose administered by a physician who was later convicted of involuntary manslaughter.

In this 2021 clip, singer and rapper Aaron Carter (1987-2022), brother of Backstreet Boys singer Nick Carter, recounts the moment when FBI agents appeared unannounced in his California hotel room to pin sexual assault charges on Jackson. Carter explains that his mother was trying to pressure him into telling the FBI that Jackson had done something inappropriate, even though, he insists, he had done nothing of the sort.
👍5
Continued………. Allegations of child sexual abuse had dogged the pop star in 1993 and 2003, but he was never found guilty. According to Carter, Jackson was simply one of the kindest men he had ever met. For many, the allegations tainted Jackson’s legacy. But, for his fans, stories like Carter’s correct the record.

More than a global icon, Michael was a visionary whose dance, voice and message transcended borders.

Continue to rest in peace Michael

Video credit: @djvlad (X) and @vladtv (IG)
2
The flaw of capitalism is not a scarcity of wealth. It’s that, in practice, this wealth never trickles down to promote equality or equity. Instead, it’s hoarded by the few to consolidate their power and deepen social divides. Vast sums are channelled into conflict rather than invested in human dignity, justice and the well-being of all.

Today, the US-backed onslaught on Palestinians in the Occupied Territories since 7 October 2023 continues to devastate lives. The Lancet Medical Journal in 2024, projected an estimated 186,000 deaths could be attributed to the siege. Meanwhile, approximately 770,000 people in the US are without shelter or food - 32% of them are Black, while Black people make up just over 14% of the population. The official US poverty rate stands at 11.5% - with over 37-million Americans living in poverty.
💯11👍1
Continued…….. Despite this, Israel remains the largest recipient of US aid since the Second World War. The US government continues to exploit the labour of the working class, heavily taxing it without delivering on health and other basics. Washington prefers to funnel resources into conflicts - including the recent unprovoked attacks on Iran - while US citizens endure hardship at home. Ironically, while Israelis benefit from universal healthcare, with free access to medical services, US citizens, whose taxes fund Israel’s wars of aggression, struggle. Over 44,000 die each year due to lack of insurance.

So, as African Stream draws to a close - largely because capital has been invested to ensure platforms like ours are suppressed - our final instalment of Wednesday’s Wisdom features a lyric from Tupac Shakur (Keep Ya Head Up, released 1993). His words remind us that our fight is for dignity - and against a political elite that possesses both the means and the will to perpetuate human suffering.

It’s vital that we remain resolute in our resistance and reclaim our futures from those determined to keep us divided and subdued.

Image credits: @misanharriman

Sources

https://nlihc.org/resource/hud-releases-2024-annual-homeless-assessment-report

https://www.debt.org/faqs/americans-in-debt/poverty-united-states

https://www.cfr.org/article/us-aid-israel-four-charts

https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/trump-announces-israel-iran-ceasefire-2025-06-23/

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jan/26/us-health-insurance-system-doctors

https://pnhp.org/news/lack-of-insurance-to-blame-for-almost-45000-deaths-study

https://www.internationalinsurance.com/health/systems/israel/
5😢2👍1👏1
MOZAMBIQUE’S INDEPENDENCE GOLDEN JUBILEE

Today, Mozambique celebrates a golden jubilee - 50 years since it broke free from the chains of Portuguese colonial rule. It was on 25 June 1975 that nearly four centuries of colonial rule came to an end. However, freedom came only after a bitter armed struggle, spearheaded by Eduardo Mondlane, who led the Marxist Frente de Libertação de Moçambique (FRELIMO).

Mondlane was assassinated in 1969. His replacement was the charismatic guerrilla commander Samora Machel, who saw the struggle for independence from Portugal through to completion and became the country’s first post-colonial president.

Machel’s time in office was far from easy. He fought rebels from Resistência Nacional Moçambicana (RENAMO), who were backed by Malawi and racist regimes in Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) and South Africa.
👍61
Continued……. They targeted rural populations and destroyed key economic and social facilities, such as power stations and bridges, crippling Mozambique’s economy. This forced Machel to sign a non-aggression pact with the South African apartheid regime.

While Mozambique kept its end of the bargain, apartheid South Africa continued to support RENAMO through the Malawian government.

In 1986, Machel died in a suspicious plane crash over South Africa. Allegations of Pretoria’s involvement in the tragedy abounded.

In the following years, South Africa’s support for RENAMO dwindled. In 1992, the group signed a peace deal with FRELIMO to end the brutal civil war that had claimed more than a million lives.

Since then, Mozambique has enjoyed moderate economic growth and social development. Its biggest challenge is an insurgency that has been raging in the country’s Cabo Delgado region since 2017.

However, with the resilience and tenacity they have shown in the past, we are confident that the people of Mozambique will triumph over this challenge too.

Here’s to 50 years of Mozambican independence - may the next 50 shine even brighter! A luta Continua!
🫡6👍1🤬1
Kenya's transformation into an authoritarian police state progresses apace. The Communications Authority of Kenya (CAK) has issued a directive banning all live coverage of protests in the country. Broadcasters will face regulatory penalties if they defy the order. Media-freedoms defenders say the measure is intended to control the narrative and hide state brutality from public view.

The ban comes amid widespread rallies marking the one-year anniversary of a massive protest in Nairobi. On 25 June 2024, Kenyans, particularly from the ranks of Gen Z, erupted in protest against planned tax hikes pushed for by the IMF. What began as economic dissent quickly escalated. Protesters stormed parliament, and state forces responded with lethal brutality. At least 60 people were killed and dozens more went missing, according to rights groups. The crackdown sparked demands for justice, police reform and accountability.
😈6😡4👍1👀1
Continued……Today's protests across the country have brought together thousands of Kenyans commemorating the fallen and decrying ongoing injustices and police brutality. They want justice for the victims of the protests in 2024, as well as for more recent victims - including blogger Albert Ojwang, who died in police custody (with signs of torture), and vendor Boniface Kariuki, who was shot in the face during a rally.

This isn't the first time that CAK has ordered a stop to live coverage during protests across the country. In 2018, major TV stations were taken off the air to stop them broadcasting the mock inauguration ceremony of opposition leader Raila Odinga - amid unrest over disputed, and boycotted, elections (won by incumbent Uhuru Kenyatta with 98%!).

Sources

https://www.reuters.com/article/world/kenyan-tv-stations-to-stay-shut-after-covering-opposition-inauguration-idUSKBN1FK1JK/

https://www.the-star.co.ke/news/2025-06-25-ca-orders-stop-to-live-coverage-of-protests?
🤬8
Seen today in Nairobi, Kenya.

Credit: @thecurejsoul on IG
19🤣4👍2🥰1
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
ELDER: AES TRIO HAS GIVEN ME HOPE

In case you had doubts about the impact and potential of the revolution in the Alliance of Sahel States, listen to this elder explain exactly how much it means to him. Speaking at a recent meeting in New York in support of the bloc, he related how he had resigned himself to the idea that he would never see the African revolution in his own lifetime. But the transformative events in the Sahel have become a source of pride and joy for him. He is aware of representation politics as a tool for subduing activism among the masses - former US president Barack Obama is a notable example. The Sahel is different.
13👍3🔥1
The results of a 6-month investigation by Kenya’s Daily Nation and the Netherlands-based research group Bellingcat, published on 15 June, have revealed Kenya’s no longer hidden hand in Sudan’s proxy war. Evidence of Kenyan-labelled ammunition found in Rapid Support Forces (RSF) depots in Khartoum exposes a direct link between Kenya’s Ministry of Defence and the arming of paramilitary groups in Sudan. The country, a close ally and aid beneficiary of the United Arab Emirates is proving to be yet another hub used by the gulf state in furthering its economic interest on the continent at the expense of Africans.

While Kenya has consistently maintained that its role is limited to facilitating dialogue and promoting regional peace, the report’s findings starkly contradict these claims. Instead, the report further proves the extent of the proxy war and its convoluted networks of covert operation, of which the Sudanese people remain on the receiving end of.
🤬9