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With the Lions, Not the Hunters.

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Continued…. President Ruto has come under fire for brutally cracking down on nationwide demonstrations. The Kenya National Commission on Human Rights reports that at least 50 protesters have been killed - with 413 injured, 682 detained and 59 abducted/missing. The interior minister, under whose ultimate control the police falls, was among those sacked and reappointed by Ruto, who's vowed to end protests against his administration.

With increased global media attention on Kenya, protesters feel they can put enough pressure on Ruto to make him leave office.
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MUSEVENI’S ANTI-PROTEST WARNING: DON’T PLAY WITH FIRE!

Looks like someone’s nervous about people power. Uganda’s president addressed the nation to warn citizens - especially Gen Z - against taking part in anti-corruption protests on Tuesday (23rd July). Yoweri Museveni clearly doesn’t want to see the kind of mass-rallies that have swept Kenya and forced its president, William Ruto, to make concessions - though in this video, he claims what he’s really worried about is protesters stepping on the wares of street sellers! He said people should just come and see him for a friendly chat if they want to see any changes… as if!
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Continued….. Museveni also presented himself as a defender of the ‘revolution.’ He came to power in a military coup in 1986, when he wrested control from Milton Obote. Since then, he’s ruled with an iron fist, cracking down on opposition figures such as Bobi Wine and Kizza Besigye with house arrests and violence.

Tuesday’s planned protests are largely driven by growing public discontent with the government. In his address, Museveni said he and his team were ‘wealth creators’ - and warned protesters that they’d be ‘playing with fire’ if they dared to gather en masse in the capital Kampala. That’s created concerns that there will be violent scenes, as were seen in Nairobi a few weeks back, when peaceful protesters were met with deadly police brutality.

Do you think Ugandan’s will heed their president’s warning?

Video credit: @ubctvuganda
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INDIGENOUS COMMUNITY DEFENDS THEIR BOY AND CULTURE

The audacity of colonisers. After centuries of genocide against the Indigenous peoples in the Americas, displacing them from their lands and confining them to minuscule reserves, settlers continue to police Indigenous people celebrating their culture. 

Watch this white man in Canada’s Vancouver Island in the British Columbia province intimidate an Indigenous boy from the W̱SÁNEĆ First Nations. A surprise twist followed as his community came out the next day, playing drums, singing and dancing in the same spot to defend their son and culture.

Throughout the world, European settler colonialism in centuries past sought to eradicate native populations through various methods that the United Nations now defines as gen*cide.
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Continued….. European settlers demonised Indigenous cultures and religions in such a way that, in the US and Canada, Indigenous children were kidnapped from their communities and forced to speak the settlers’ language and convert to Christianity inside boarding schools, lest they faced physical punishment. Graves of many such Indigenous children have recently been found throughout Canada and the US.

In Kenya, schools still exist that punish students for speaking a language other than English, proving the colonial project is still alive and well in Africa.

Through this lens, the Indigenous community’s response in this video is a powerful expression of resistance.

Video credit: @angela_sterritt (IG)
@MeganMarie(Supernault) (FB)
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WE ASK MALIANS: HOW DO YOU LIKE COUP GOVERNMENT?

Things are changing rapidly in the Alliance of Sahel States (AES), which comprises the landlocked African countries of Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger in the arid Sahel zone south of the Sahara Desert. 

Last month, African Stream dispatched journalist Inemesit Richardson to all three countries to report on how the people view governments that came to power via military coups.

First stop: Bamako, Mali. In this video, we interviewed people at the Grand Market of Bamako to get perspectives from vendors on Malian President Assimi Goïta and the AES.
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Continued….. Malians told African Stream they supported the process because they seek to build African unity. They’ve also witnessed an increase in national security and gains against terrorist paramilitary forces—most notably the reclamation of the Kidal region—and they see their new government creating a new power supply. With external support Mali is building the largest solar panel field in West Africa. The construction will cover 314 hectares to produce 200 megawatts of energy.

Only 13 per cent of people we spoke with distrusted Goïta. Unfortunately, the dissenters refused to talk on camera.

Interviews took place in French and Bambara.
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YOUNG CONGOLESE CALLS FOR INTERNATIONAL SOLIDARITY

The roots of the conflict in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) can be traced to the colonial era, when Belgian King Leopold II treated the entire region of modern-day DRC as his treasure box, with its resources to be looted and people to be exploited. The extraction of resources and the oppression of the local population set the foundation for future instability, which has continued to this day.

This young Congolese named Gloria, who was born in the DRC and has lost friends and relatives to the conflict, is raising awareness about what has led to the ongoing violence and humanitarian crisis fuelled by the exploitation of the DRC’s $24 trillion in minerals. About 7 million Congolese are internally displaced, while many have warned that exploitation and violence are destroying the environment as well.

Video credit: @AfricaFactsZone (X) @africafactsafz (IG)
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UGANDA SECURITY SEIZE LONE ANTI-CORRUPTION
PROTESTER

Uganda’s president warned that anyone taking part in Tuesday’s planned anti-corruption protest in Kampala would be “playing with fire” - and video’s already emerged of a protester getting ‘burnt.’

In this clip, a man armed with only his voice and a placard gets manhandled by police - a clear contravention of the right to demonstrate that Ugandans enjoy, at least on paper.

Corruption gobbles up 23% of Uganda’s budget, according to the country’s Inspectorate of Government. In a nation where 41% of the population lives on less than $2.15 a day, that money could have been used to build schools, hospitals and other key infrastructure. This looting has taken place under the more-than-30-year-rule of President Yoweri Museveni.
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Continued….. Uganda is a country with a track record of repression. Main opposition figures such as Kizza Besigye and Bobi Wine have been hounded by state security agencies. This is the climate in which brave young Ugandans risk protesting.

But, as US author Ursula K. Le Guin once said, “We live in capitalism. Its power seems inescapable. So did the divine right of kings.”

Do you think Ugandans will escape their ‘king’?
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SLAM DUNK RACISM? U.S. PUNDITS MOCK STUNNING AFRICANS

South Sudan stunned the basketball world when they almost beat the mighty USA at the weekend. The Bright Stars lost by only one point to the world’s number one side, going down 100 to 101 in a pre-Olympic friendly.

However, the close call didn’t earn South Sudan the universal respect you might expect. Former NBA stars made condescending remarks about the African country. Gilbert Arenas said they ‘don’t even have shoes...we gotta ship them shoes.’

Paul Pierce claimed South Sudan had no one above six feet three inches. American sports columnist Skip Bayless also ridiculed the Africans, claiming they were in for a hefty defeat.
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Continued…. But why such arrogance and exceptionalism? South Sudan is ranked 33rd in the world (out of 160) and is making its Olympic debut in Paris. It is on the up. As their forward Wenyen Gabriel stressed, that’s despite the country’s lack of sporting opportunities.

At least USA coach Steve Kerr could concede South Sudan was ‘amazing’. It’s too bad about the lack of class shown by other ‘big names’ in the game.

Still, for those of you who believe in karma, watch this space. South Sudan is in the same group as the USA at the Olympics. How sweet would that victory be?

video credit @EuroHoopsTv (YouTube)

video credit @UNDISPUTED (YouTube)
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EXPLOITED DRC CHILDREN POWERING YOUR ELECTRIC CAR

Children continue to be ruthlessly exploited to mine minerals in the DRC for global high-tech firms. That’s despite companies, like Apple, claiming they have zero tolerance to child labour and conduct rigorous audits on their supply chain.

Here, Billy Carson, an expert in ancient civilisations, lays bare the reality. Youngsters are used without safety equipment to mine tunnels too small for adults to crawl into.

It’s shocking abuse, with the UN recently estimating more than 40,000 children are working in hazardous conditions in cobalt mines in the Katanga province alone.

Not even American courts are prepared to take the tech companies to task. Earlier this year, the US Court of Appeals ruled firms don’t have a legal obligation to ensure their suppliers don’t use child labour. It was claimed they have nothing more than an ‘ordinary buyer-seller transaction’ with suppliers in the DRC.
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Continued….. The extent of child exploitation is exposed in Siddharth Kara’s 2023 book ‘Cobalt Red - How the Blood of the Congo Powers Our Lives.’ The practice is a product of multinational greed and a vicious resource war between rebel groups backed by foreign interests.

According to the IMF, four critical minerals in DRC—copper, nickel, cobalt, and lithium—will generate $16-trillion in the next 25 years. It is morally repugnant and unacceptable that this wealth should go to hoarding foreign firms at the expense of the Congolese people, and especially their children.

Video credit: Billy Carson, @4biddenknowleedge / Sacred Spectrum
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“The United States is also a one-party state but, with typical American extravagance, they have two of them.” These are the words of Tanzania’s first president and Pan-African leader, Julius Nyerere.

Many people wonder why Africans on the African continent seem to be so fixated on the upcoming US elections and all these seemingly internal US affairs. We have received many comments on our pages reminding us that we are a Kenya-based platform, not a US-based one, so why have such strong opinions about US politics? Well, it turns out US politics have a dramatic impact on humans around the world due to Washington’s pro-war, pro-resource theft, interventionist foreign policy.

US drone strikes targeting Somalia started under president George W. Bush. The bombing only intensified under the Obama administration, increased further under Donald Trump, and then expanded even further under Joe Biden.
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Continued….. Bombing Africa is bipartisan! As an independently-funded, anti-imperialist, Africa-based media page, our headquarters are located right next to an African country that has been perpetually bombed and ravaged by the world’s leading imperialist power for over a decade now. So yes, we have some strong opinions about what goes on within the US empire.

On the matter of foreign policy, whether in Africa or worldwide, US politicians on both sides overwhelmingly share the same positions. The US Africa Command (AFRICOM) started under president George W. Bush. No president expanded AFRICOM more than Barack Hussein Obama and the military command continued to operate in the majority of African countries under both Trump and Biden.

At the end of the day, the African masses struggling against a brutal and vicious empire that has built up its wealth on the plunder of our homeland don’t actually care if they are bombed by a Black woman or a White man. We would simply like not to be bombed!
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INDIAN FIRM LANDS CONTROL OF KENYA’S
MAIN AIRPORT?

Kenya’s Prime Cabinet Secretary, Musalia Mudavadi, has denied claims the country’s main airport is being sold off to foreign investors - calling it a public asset. It comes days after a senator demanded more clarity on a deal that will reportedly see Kenya lease Jomo Kenyatta International Airport (JKIA) to India’s Adani Airport Holdings for 30 years - with the foreign firm set to hold 18% of shares in JKIA after that period. Senator Richard Onyonka slammed the murkiness of the deal in a TV interview, in which he also claimed that it only came to light thanks to a whistleblower contacting him. He’s demanding the Kenyan Airport Authority come clean with all the details of the deal. The airport has been in a state of disrepair and needs an upgrade, and the government is short on cash. Suspicions are mounting that the terms of the deal were too favourable to Adani.
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Continued….. What do you think - should Kenya be leasing out such a strategic piece of infrastructure (let alone selling it!) to a foreign player?

Video credit: @CitizenTVKenya
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SENEGAL OFFICIAL BLASTS FOREIGN INTERFERENCE

Senegalese legislator and Pan-African organiser Guy Marius Sagna called out the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) parliament for allowing one US and two Swiss institutions to participate in their 18 July session and submit input.

While we could not identify the US-based organisation, ECOWAS’ documents show Swiss-based International Human Rights Commission and Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue attended the session in Abuja, Nigeria.

As Sagna, an ECOWAS Parliament member, points out in this clip, much debate occurs when African leaders and representatives have something to say during ECOWAS Parliament sessions. But, as soon as Western representatives open their mouths to present their reports, the floor is quiet.
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Continued…. Sagna asks why ECOWAS should collaborate with Swiss- and US-based institutions. He questions the moral authority of Western countries that talk to African representatives about human rights and good governance.

Sagna has a long history of frontline organising work through his organisation, the Front for an Anti-Imperialist Popular and Pan-African Revolution (FRAPP), which led the campaign’ France Dégage’ (‘France, Get Out’ in English).

Video credit: @afriquemedia (X)
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‘BRITS LOVE HORSES MORE THAN BLACK PEOPLE’

Speaking to documentarian Louis Theroux (@LouisTheroux on X and @officiallouistheroux on IG) in 1999, the late Pan-Africanist and former Nation of Islam leader Dr Khalid Muhammad (1948-2001) joked that Brits love horses more than Black people. He was reacting to Theroux’s shock at seeing a pair of horse-leather trousers in a Harlem clothing store. Khalid used the opportunity to point out Theroux’s compassion for a pony, but not for victims of Britain’s colonialism, particularly in Africa.
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