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IDRIS ELBA: AFRICA IS OUR HOME
Even if you’ve never been to Africa or feel no connection to it, if you’re Black, the continent is your home. That was the message of British actor Idris Elba during an interview with Ebony magazine in 2023. In this clip, he gives his reasons.
Video credit: @Ebony.com
Even if you’ve never been to Africa or feel no connection to it, if you’re Black, the continent is your home. That was the message of British actor Idris Elba during an interview with Ebony magazine in 2023. In this clip, he gives his reasons.
Video credit: @Ebony.com
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NYERERE: 'SELF-RULE IS NOT A FAVOUR'
Today marks the 25th death anniversary of Julius Kambarage Nyerere, Tanzania's first president, who died of leukaemia and a stroke at age 77 on 14 October 1999 in a London hospital.
Nyerere was born in 1922 in a small village in Butiama, in Tanganyika, then administered by the British under a League of Nations mandate before becoming part of a larger country in 1964, known today as the United Republic of Tanzania.
Nyerere, affectionately known by the honorific noscript, 'Mwalimu' (Swahili for teacher), was an anti-colonialist, political theorist and president of Tanzania from 1964 to 1985.
But the struggle wasn't easy. Nyerere, a beacon of resilience, stood against the West, which argued Africa wasn't ready to govern itself. No better example exists than this classic 1960 interview of a young Nyerere answering emphatically against colonialist lies. He asserted that Europeans granting us independence was merely returning a stolen right, as it were.
Today marks the 25th death anniversary of Julius Kambarage Nyerere, Tanzania's first president, who died of leukaemia and a stroke at age 77 on 14 October 1999 in a London hospital.
Nyerere was born in 1922 in a small village in Butiama, in Tanganyika, then administered by the British under a League of Nations mandate before becoming part of a larger country in 1964, known today as the United Republic of Tanzania.
Nyerere, affectionately known by the honorific noscript, 'Mwalimu' (Swahili for teacher), was an anti-colonialist, political theorist and president of Tanzania from 1964 to 1985.
But the struggle wasn't easy. Nyerere, a beacon of resilience, stood against the West, which argued Africa wasn't ready to govern itself. No better example exists than this classic 1960 interview of a young Nyerere answering emphatically against colonialist lies. He asserted that Europeans granting us independence was merely returning a stolen right, as it were.
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Continued.........Therefore, the question of whether Africans were ready for self-rule was meaningless. We Africans had managed our affairs well before colonisers arrived.
What are your thoughts on Nyerere's legacy and how his ideas and actions continue to influence African politics and history?
Video credit: National Educational Television, Boston, USA
SOURCES:
https://www.eac.int/about-ncpr/julius-nyerere-biography
https://www.sahistory.org.za/dated-event/former-tanzanian-president-julius-nyerere-dies
https://books.openedition.org/africae/713?lang=en
https://www.marxists.org/subject/africa/nyerere/1967/arusha-declaration.htm
What are your thoughts on Nyerere's legacy and how his ideas and actions continue to influence African politics and history?
Video credit: National Educational Television, Boston, USA
SOURCES:
https://www.eac.int/about-ncpr/julius-nyerere-biography
https://www.sahistory.org.za/dated-event/former-tanzanian-president-julius-nyerere-dies
https://books.openedition.org/africae/713?lang=en
https://www.marxists.org/subject/africa/nyerere/1967/arusha-declaration.htm
www.eac.int
Julius Nyerere Biography
The East African Community (EAC) is a regional intergovernmental organisation of eight (8) Partner States, comprising the Republic of Burundi, Democratic Republic of Congo, Republic of Kenya, Republic of Rwanda, Federal Republic of Somalia, Republic of South…
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DRC POLICE FIRE AT STUDENT PROTESTERS
A viral video of police shooting student protesters has sent shockwaves across the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). The protest broke out on the morning of 7 October amidst frustration over an ongoing teacher's strike over low wages that kept students out of school in Matadi in western DRC.
According to local media ACTUALITE.CD, police arrested a dozen students for a hearing on 8 October at the Children's Court while two officers were due for a hearing at the Matadi Military Court.
'The students only have pens and notebooks,' one anonymous person reportedly said. 'Why do the police shoot innocent people and very young children when there is another way of doing it?'
A viral video of police shooting student protesters has sent shockwaves across the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). The protest broke out on the morning of 7 October amidst frustration over an ongoing teacher's strike over low wages that kept students out of school in Matadi in western DRC.
According to local media ACTUALITE.CD, police arrested a dozen students for a hearing on 8 October at the Children's Court while two officers were due for a hearing at the Matadi Military Court.
'The students only have pens and notebooks,' one anonymous person reportedly said. 'Why do the police shoot innocent people and very young children when there is another way of doing it?'
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Continued......Check out our exclusive interview with Maurice Odingo of the Marxist Pan-African organisation Kinshasa Committee. He relayed details from the scene.
SOURCES:
https://www.mediacongo.net/article-actualite-142855_marche_des_eleves_etouffee_a_matadi_la_justice_militaire_appelee_a_s_impliquer_une_audience_foraine_fixee_ce_mardi.html
https://actualite.cd/2024/10/07/matadi-des-tirs-balles-reelles-lors-dune-manifestation-des-eleves-contre-la-persistance
SOURCES:
https://www.mediacongo.net/article-actualite-142855_marche_des_eleves_etouffee_a_matadi_la_justice_militaire_appelee_a_s_impliquer_une_audience_foraine_fixee_ce_mardi.html
https://actualite.cd/2024/10/07/matadi-des-tirs-balles-reelles-lors-dune-manifestation-des-eleves-contre-la-persistance
mediacongo.net
Marche des élèves étouffée à Matadi : la justice militaire appelée à s'impliquer, une audience foraine fixée ce mardi
Le gouverneur de la province du Kongo-Central, Grâce Nkuanga Masuangi Bilolo, condamne les incidents survenus lundi 7 octobre dernier à Matadi, lors d'une marche des élèves du secteur public contre la grève des enseignants. Une manifestation pacifique dispersée…
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GHANAIANS CALL FOR CRACKDOWN ON ILLEGAL MINES
Hundreds of Ghanaians again took to the streets on Friday to urge their government to crack down on illegal gold mines. The protests, the biggest yet, were planned by the Trade Union Congress. Activists are angry that illicit excavation is polluting rivers and damaging the soil across the country while offenders go unpunished.
With the price of gold skyrocketing by nearly 40%, the country is witnessing a surge in unlicensed mining. It’s led to increased use of large excavation machinery and dredging equipment near rivers and forests - with no effort to clean up or regenerate the environment after excavation. This has led to disease and water shortages.
Artisanal and small-scale miners operate with less regulation and oversight, often flouting environmental rules.
Hundreds of Ghanaians again took to the streets on Friday to urge their government to crack down on illegal gold mines. The protests, the biggest yet, were planned by the Trade Union Congress. Activists are angry that illicit excavation is polluting rivers and damaging the soil across the country while offenders go unpunished.
With the price of gold skyrocketing by nearly 40%, the country is witnessing a surge in unlicensed mining. It’s led to increased use of large excavation machinery and dredging equipment near rivers and forests - with no effort to clean up or regenerate the environment after excavation. This has led to disease and water shortages.
Artisanal and small-scale miners operate with less regulation and oversight, often flouting environmental rules.
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Continued….. Unions are now intensifying their pressure on the government to take immediate action and shut down illegal mines before elections on 7th December.
Ghana recently launched its first gold refinery to capture more value from its abundant natural resources and help reduce illegal processing. The Royal Ghana Gold Refinery can process 400 kilograms of gold daily, primarily sourcing raw materials from artisanal and small-scale mines. Ghana is Africa's largest gold producer, contributing nearly half of the country's exports.
SOURCES:
https://www.swissaid.ch/en/articles/on-the-trail-of-african-gold/
https://www.mining.com/web/ghanaians-call-on-government-to-shut-down-all-illegal-gold-mines/
https://africa.businessinsider.com/local/markets/ghanaians-demand-end-to-illegal-gold-mining-in-ongoing-protests/m7cjqzg
Ghana recently launched its first gold refinery to capture more value from its abundant natural resources and help reduce illegal processing. The Royal Ghana Gold Refinery can process 400 kilograms of gold daily, primarily sourcing raw materials from artisanal and small-scale mines. Ghana is Africa's largest gold producer, contributing nearly half of the country's exports.
SOURCES:
https://www.swissaid.ch/en/articles/on-the-trail-of-african-gold/
https://www.mining.com/web/ghanaians-call-on-government-to-shut-down-all-illegal-gold-mines/
https://africa.businessinsider.com/local/markets/ghanaians-demand-end-to-illegal-gold-mining-in-ongoing-protests/m7cjqzg
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AFRICANS NEVER COLONISED AMERICAS, UNLIKE COLUMBUS
The 12th of October is commemorated as 'Christopher Columbus Day' in many countries in the Americas. But because the 12th fell on a Saturday, the event is observed today, 14 October, as a federal holiday in the United States.
In this episode of 'The Sobh Show' filmed in Tehran, Iran, African Stream's founder and editor-in-chief, Ahmed Kaballo, sheds light on the true history of the Italian explorer.
Columbus's travelogues ignited in Europeans a desire to colonise and exploit the Indigenous peoples he 'discovered' across the Atlantic Ocean. Columbus's first encounter with the Indigenous peoples of the Caribbean Sea on 12 October 1492 resulted in their enslavement, violence and brutality. As a result, Christopher Columbus Day is increasingly being acknowledged as Indigenous Peoples' Day.
The 12th of October is commemorated as 'Christopher Columbus Day' in many countries in the Americas. But because the 12th fell on a Saturday, the event is observed today, 14 October, as a federal holiday in the United States.
In this episode of 'The Sobh Show' filmed in Tehran, Iran, African Stream's founder and editor-in-chief, Ahmed Kaballo, sheds light on the true history of the Italian explorer.
Columbus's travelogues ignited in Europeans a desire to colonise and exploit the Indigenous peoples he 'discovered' across the Atlantic Ocean. Columbus's first encounter with the Indigenous peoples of the Caribbean Sea on 12 October 1492 resulted in their enslavement, violence and brutality. As a result, Christopher Columbus Day is increasingly being acknowledged as Indigenous Peoples' Day.
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Continued......In this clip, Kaballo alludes to compelling evidence that an African king, Mansa Abu Bakr II, the brother of the famous Malian king, Mansa Musa, had arrived in the Americas some 180 years before Columbus.
In 1324, Musa made a pilgrimage to Mecca. On the way, he stopped off in Cairo, where he is said to have claimed that his brother and predecessor took a voyage across the Atlantic, taking with him 2,000 ships along with sailors and a vast supply of provisions to last several years, but never returned (indeed, that is why Musa inherited the throne). A 14th-century North African scholar had recorded Musa's testimony.
Kaballo made these remarks during an in-depth discussion on African matters on 'The Sobh Show.' The conversation delved into African colonisation, the interconnectedness of liberation struggles in Africa, Palestine, and beyond, and the prospects for a new era with the resurgence of Pan-African consciousness.
Watch the entire YouTube discussion on 'The Sobh Show' channel and spread the word.
Video credit: 'The Sobh Show' (@thesobhshow on X)
SOURCES:
https://www.lse.ac.uk/research/research-for-the-world/economics/stagnation-nation-how-can-britain-pull-itself-out-of-its-economic-decline
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_RFDalOpKwY
https://africanarguments.org/2016/09/the-scale-of-the-uks-involvement-in-africas-resources-is-staggering-so-too-is-its-disregard-for-the-rights-of-those-affected/
https://inews.co.uk/news/environment/britain-using-far-share-worlds-resources-123588?srsltid=AfmBOoqXQ3WpqfoRJEI5bZLtmaSrDw06nD4f5kPLoROVs8MqtCW0GuOY
https://worldrainforests.com/congo/
https://africa.panda.org/?49003/5-things-to-know-about-the-Congo-Basin-Rainforest
https://aaregistry.org/story/african-voyage-to-the-americas-a-story/
https://www.history.com/news/who-was-the-richest-man-in-history-mansa-musa
https://explorersweb.com/exploration-mysteries-an-early-african-voyage-to-the-americas/
https://www.history.com/news/columbus-day-controversy
https://edition.cnn.com/2020/06/12/us/christopher-columbus-slavery-disease-trnd/index.html
https://edition.cnn.com/2020/06/10/us/christopher-columbus-statues-down-trnd/index.html
In 1324, Musa made a pilgrimage to Mecca. On the way, he stopped off in Cairo, where he is said to have claimed that his brother and predecessor took a voyage across the Atlantic, taking with him 2,000 ships along with sailors and a vast supply of provisions to last several years, but never returned (indeed, that is why Musa inherited the throne). A 14th-century North African scholar had recorded Musa's testimony.
Kaballo made these remarks during an in-depth discussion on African matters on 'The Sobh Show.' The conversation delved into African colonisation, the interconnectedness of liberation struggles in Africa, Palestine, and beyond, and the prospects for a new era with the resurgence of Pan-African consciousness.
Watch the entire YouTube discussion on 'The Sobh Show' channel and spread the word.
Video credit: 'The Sobh Show' (@thesobhshow on X)
SOURCES:
https://www.lse.ac.uk/research/research-for-the-world/economics/stagnation-nation-how-can-britain-pull-itself-out-of-its-economic-decline
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_RFDalOpKwY
https://africanarguments.org/2016/09/the-scale-of-the-uks-involvement-in-africas-resources-is-staggering-so-too-is-its-disregard-for-the-rights-of-those-affected/
https://inews.co.uk/news/environment/britain-using-far-share-worlds-resources-123588?srsltid=AfmBOoqXQ3WpqfoRJEI5bZLtmaSrDw06nD4f5kPLoROVs8MqtCW0GuOY
https://worldrainforests.com/congo/
https://africa.panda.org/?49003/5-things-to-know-about-the-Congo-Basin-Rainforest
https://aaregistry.org/story/african-voyage-to-the-americas-a-story/
https://www.history.com/news/who-was-the-richest-man-in-history-mansa-musa
https://explorersweb.com/exploration-mysteries-an-early-african-voyage-to-the-americas/
https://www.history.com/news/columbus-day-controversy
https://edition.cnn.com/2020/06/12/us/christopher-columbus-slavery-disease-trnd/index.html
https://edition.cnn.com/2020/06/10/us/christopher-columbus-statues-down-trnd/index.html
The London School of Economics and Political Science
How can Britain pull itself out of its economic decline?
The Economy 2030 Inquiry – a partnership between LSE’s CEP and the Resolution Foundation - aims to identify a path out of the country’s current slump.
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HOW ARGENTINA SHOWED BLACKS THE RED CARD
On X, Argentinian President Javier Milei's office celebrated Columbus Day by calling Christopher Columbus's arrival on 12 October 1492 a 'milestone that marked the beginning of the civilisation of the Americas continent.' But for Indigenous communities and those of us in the Global South, Columbus's 'discovery' marked the start of 532 years of European colonisation of the Americas. The president's office tweet is like a slap in the face, given Argentina's history of oppressing Africans and indigenous people.
Columbus and his crew enabled and perpetrated the kidnapping, enslavement, forced assimilation and s*xual abuse of Indigenous people, including children. Their population shrank from an estimated 112 million in 1492 to less than 6 million in 1650.
As much as Argentina would like to ignore its Black history, the country was at one point Blacker than it likes to admit. In 1778, Afro-Argentinians formed almost half the population of Argentina.
On X, Argentinian President Javier Milei's office celebrated Columbus Day by calling Christopher Columbus's arrival on 12 October 1492 a 'milestone that marked the beginning of the civilisation of the Americas continent.' But for Indigenous communities and those of us in the Global South, Columbus's 'discovery' marked the start of 532 years of European colonisation of the Americas. The president's office tweet is like a slap in the face, given Argentina's history of oppressing Africans and indigenous people.
Columbus and his crew enabled and perpetrated the kidnapping, enslavement, forced assimilation and s*xual abuse of Indigenous people, including children. Their population shrank from an estimated 112 million in 1492 to less than 6 million in 1650.
As much as Argentina would like to ignore its Black history, the country was at one point Blacker than it likes to admit. In 1778, Afro-Argentinians formed almost half the population of Argentina.
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Continued...... Africans accounted for 30 per cent of the population of Buenos Aires for decades after independence. However, the end of racial categories in legal documents and a policy of preferred white migration of Europeans steadily wiped out Afro-Argentinian's rich culture from the collective consciousness.
Today, statistics show Afro-Argentinians form less than 1 per cent of Argentina's total population, making it among the whitest countries in the Americas.
The saying, 'Mexicans descend from the Aztecs, Peruvians from the Incas, but Argentinians descend from ships from Europe,' encapsulates Argentina's perception of itself as only a nation of Europeans, with racist tweets from their highest office to back up this assertion.
SOURCES:
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/science/article/111205-native-americans-europeans-population-dna-genetics-science
Kidnapping and sexual violence
https://irbe.library.vanderbilt.edu/server/api/core/bitstreams/413daca0-c453-448e-8653-4a674c3c6d04/content
Argentinian presidential office tweet
https://x.com/CasaRosada/status/1845102247723614337
Quote
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/06/10/world/americas/argentina-spain-racism-alberto-fernandez.html
Population
https://www.bbc.com/news/av/world-latin-america-46641620
Population
https://apnews.com/article/immigration-entertainment-discrimination-migration-race-and-ethnicity-0d18920b22e0eab19f28202c591ef0ea
Population shrinkage
https://uwpress.wisc.edu/books/0289.htm
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/may/31/argentina-white-european-racism-history
https://www.washingtonpost.com/outlook/2021/06/24/history-behind-removal-argentinas-version-aunt-jemima
https://travelnoire.com/history-whitening-of-argentina
Today, statistics show Afro-Argentinians form less than 1 per cent of Argentina's total population, making it among the whitest countries in the Americas.
The saying, 'Mexicans descend from the Aztecs, Peruvians from the Incas, but Argentinians descend from ships from Europe,' encapsulates Argentina's perception of itself as only a nation of Europeans, with racist tweets from their highest office to back up this assertion.
SOURCES:
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/science/article/111205-native-americans-europeans-population-dna-genetics-science
Kidnapping and sexual violence
https://irbe.library.vanderbilt.edu/server/api/core/bitstreams/413daca0-c453-448e-8653-4a674c3c6d04/content
Argentinian presidential office tweet
https://x.com/CasaRosada/status/1845102247723614337
Quote
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/06/10/world/americas/argentina-spain-racism-alberto-fernandez.html
Population
https://www.bbc.com/news/av/world-latin-america-46641620
Population
https://apnews.com/article/immigration-entertainment-discrimination-migration-race-and-ethnicity-0d18920b22e0eab19f28202c591ef0ea
Population shrinkage
https://uwpress.wisc.edu/books/0289.htm
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/may/31/argentina-white-european-racism-history
https://www.washingtonpost.com/outlook/2021/06/24/history-behind-removal-argentinas-version-aunt-jemima
https://travelnoire.com/history-whitening-of-argentina
Science
Massive Population Drop Found for Native Americans, DNA Shows
Indigenous populations quickly dropped by roughly half following European contact about 500 years ago, a new DNA study says.
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PAUL ROBESON RESISTING MCCARTHYISM
On 14 October 1916, Rutgers University excluded actor, singer and organiser Paul Robeson (1898-1976) from its American-football team because another university refused to play against a Black person. He was one of the Rutgers' best players.
In light of this discrimination, we are reminded of the significant role Robeson played after university as a Pan-Africanist organiser during the anti-communist McCarthyist era. Robeson ran the anti-imperialist Council on African Affairs, which called for an end to colonialism on the African continent.
On 14 October 1916, Rutgers University excluded actor, singer and organiser Paul Robeson (1898-1976) from its American-football team because another university refused to play against a Black person. He was one of the Rutgers' best players.
In light of this discrimination, we are reminded of the significant role Robeson played after university as a Pan-Africanist organiser during the anti-communist McCarthyist era. Robeson ran the anti-imperialist Council on African Affairs, which called for an end to colonialism on the African continent.
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Continued.......In the mid-20th century, the US government investigated Robeson for being a member of the Communist Party, stripping him of his passport. He said his work for African emancipation both on the continent and in the diaspora prompted the persecution. In other words, the Red Scare over his alleged communist affiliation laid a pretext to shut down his struggle for African people worldwide.
Today, African Stream relates to what our ancestor went through. Though no government has stripped us of our right to travel, we know what it is like for the US government to seek to shut down our agitation for Africa’s freedom. Before YouTube, Facebook, Instagram, Threads, TikTok and Gmail closed our accounts in September, African Stream drew 2.5-million subscribers and hundreds of millions of viewers because of our uncompromising Pan-Africanist, anti-imperialist analysis.
The United States came for Robeson. They came for Pan-Africanist organiser Marcus Garvey (1887-1940). They came for sociologist W.E.B. Du Bois (1868-1963). They came for journalist Claudia Jones (1915-64). They came for Assata Shakur and several members of the Black Panther Party. Now, the US government is coming for African Stream. Some things never change.
To help spread our work amongst the people, please continue to repost our videos on Instagram, Facebook, Threads, YouTube and TikTok using the hashtag #WeAreAllAfricanStream. Follow us on Rumble, Telegram, X and Patreon, and encourage others to do the same.
Today, African Stream relates to what our ancestor went through. Though no government has stripped us of our right to travel, we know what it is like for the US government to seek to shut down our agitation for Africa’s freedom. Before YouTube, Facebook, Instagram, Threads, TikTok and Gmail closed our accounts in September, African Stream drew 2.5-million subscribers and hundreds of millions of viewers because of our uncompromising Pan-Africanist, anti-imperialist analysis.
The United States came for Robeson. They came for Pan-Africanist organiser Marcus Garvey (1887-1940). They came for sociologist W.E.B. Du Bois (1868-1963). They came for journalist Claudia Jones (1915-64). They came for Assata Shakur and several members of the Black Panther Party. Now, the US government is coming for African Stream. Some things never change.
To help spread our work amongst the people, please continue to repost our videos on Instagram, Facebook, Threads, YouTube and TikTok using the hashtag #WeAreAllAfricanStream. Follow us on Rumble, Telegram, X and Patreon, and encourage others to do the same.
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RUTO PLEDGES EXTRA 600 COPS FOR HAITI
An extra 600 Kenyan police officers will soon be on their way to Haiti - bringing the number deployed to the troubled island nation to 1,000. Kenya’s president, William Ruto, announced the decision on Friday.
Speaking alongside his Haitian counterpart, interim prime minister Garry Conille, who was in Nairobi, Ruto claimed that the mission had already seen some successes, wresting back control of key areas and infrastructure from gangs.
The annual upkeep of the deployment is estimated at $600 million, with the US contributing over $300 million so far. But Kenyan officers in Haiti have complained of delayed payments.
Ruto has tried to sell the unpopular (and, according to Kenya’s High Court, unconstitutional) mission as an act of pan-African solidarity.
An extra 600 Kenyan police officers will soon be on their way to Haiti - bringing the number deployed to the troubled island nation to 1,000. Kenya’s president, William Ruto, announced the decision on Friday.
Speaking alongside his Haitian counterpart, interim prime minister Garry Conille, who was in Nairobi, Ruto claimed that the mission had already seen some successes, wresting back control of key areas and infrastructure from gangs.
The annual upkeep of the deployment is estimated at $600 million, with the US contributing over $300 million so far. But Kenyan officers in Haiti have complained of delayed payments.
Ruto has tried to sell the unpopular (and, according to Kenya’s High Court, unconstitutional) mission as an act of pan-African solidarity.
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Continued......However, it’s being closely coordinated by the Americans, who have a long track record of destabilising Haiti. It’s also widely seen as a violation of sovereignty, with Kenya doing duty as the blackface of US imperialism
It’s not the first time foreign boots are on Haitian ground. UN soldiers are accused of killing civilians and of numerous sexual offences, leaving behind many fatherless children. Moreover, a sewage leak at a UN base on the Caribbean island resulted in some 10,000 deaths.
The US wants to transform the Kenyan deployment into a wider UN peacekeeping mission, but the proposal was blocked by China and Russia - who argued that the current mission must reach full capacity before any such shift can be considered. This means Kenyan officers could remain stationed in Haiti till October 2025, at Washington’s expense.SOURCES:Extra 600 to follow
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/kenyas-ruto-pledges-extra-600-officers-for-haiti-mission/ar-AA1s5IhW
Annual mission cost
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/us-drops-un-peacekeeping-mission-on-haiti-following-opposition-from-china-russia/ar-AA1rusO5
Delayed payments
https://citizen.digital/news/us-apologises-over-delayed-pay-to-kenyan-police-in-haiti-n348517
Haiti mission is imperialism in blackface
https://africasacountry.com/2024/03/imperialism-in-black-face
Effects of previous foreign interventions
https://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2016/08/18/490468640/u-n-admits-role-in-haiti-cholera-outbreak-that-has-killed-thousands
US plan to switch to UN mission blocked
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/us-drops-un-peacekeeping-mission-on-haiti-following-opposition-from-china-russia/ar-AA1rusO5
It’s not the first time foreign boots are on Haitian ground. UN soldiers are accused of killing civilians and of numerous sexual offences, leaving behind many fatherless children. Moreover, a sewage leak at a UN base on the Caribbean island resulted in some 10,000 deaths.
The US wants to transform the Kenyan deployment into a wider UN peacekeeping mission, but the proposal was blocked by China and Russia - who argued that the current mission must reach full capacity before any such shift can be considered. This means Kenyan officers could remain stationed in Haiti till October 2025, at Washington’s expense.SOURCES:Extra 600 to follow
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/kenyas-ruto-pledges-extra-600-officers-for-haiti-mission/ar-AA1s5IhW
Annual mission cost
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/us-drops-un-peacekeeping-mission-on-haiti-following-opposition-from-china-russia/ar-AA1rusO5
Delayed payments
https://citizen.digital/news/us-apologises-over-delayed-pay-to-kenyan-police-in-haiti-n348517
Haiti mission is imperialism in blackface
https://africasacountry.com/2024/03/imperialism-in-black-face
Effects of previous foreign interventions
https://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2016/08/18/490468640/u-n-admits-role-in-haiti-cholera-outbreak-that-has-killed-thousands
US plan to switch to UN mission blocked
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/us-drops-un-peacekeeping-mission-on-haiti-following-opposition-from-china-russia/ar-AA1rusO5
MSN
Kenya's Ruto pledges extra 600 officers for Haiti mission
Kenyan President William Ruto pledged Friday an additional 600 officers for the UN-backed mission to Haiti, following a meeting with Haiti's visiting prime minister, as both urged the international community to do more. "I am pleased to announce that an additional…
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CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS MOCKED NATIVES FOR SHARING
Today, people in some states and cities in the United States observe Indigenous Peoples Day over the colonial holiday known as 'Columbus Day,' which remains a federal holiday. Unfortunately, countries throughout the Americas also commemorate this day, when the trajectory of the Global Majority pivoted toward European hegemony and exploitation.
In this clip, Cat Lantigua (@lajefacat on TikTok), author of 'Build It and They Will Come: A Guide to Architecting Intentional Community,' examines a famous extract from Christopher Columbus' journal.
Often glorified by Western historians as a daring explorer, Columbus left a dark legacy in the Americas, beginning with his first encounter with the indigenous peoples of the Caribbean Sea on 12 October 1492.
Columbus's disdain for the Arawak people of the Bahamas is palpable in his journal entries.
Today, people in some states and cities in the United States observe Indigenous Peoples Day over the colonial holiday known as 'Columbus Day,' which remains a federal holiday. Unfortunately, countries throughout the Americas also commemorate this day, when the trajectory of the Global Majority pivoted toward European hegemony and exploitation.
In this clip, Cat Lantigua (@lajefacat on TikTok), author of 'Build It and They Will Come: A Guide to Architecting Intentional Community,' examines a famous extract from Christopher Columbus' journal.
Often glorified by Western historians as a daring explorer, Columbus left a dark legacy in the Americas, beginning with his first encounter with the indigenous peoples of the Caribbean Sea on 12 October 1492.
Columbus's disdain for the Arawak people of the Bahamas is palpable in his journal entries.
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Continued.........He observed their openness and generosity with a mix of condescension and opportunism, noting how easily they shared their possessions and hospitality. Columbus frequently mocked the natives' simplicity and lack of guile. He described them as 'naïve' and 'artless,' incapable of understanding European notions of property and possession. This demeaning attitude famously appears in his 12 October 1492 entry, where he marvelled at their willingness to trade valuable items for trinkets. To Columbus, their openness was not a sign of an advanced, communal society but rather that of their potential to be dominated and exploited.
Columbus's Eurocentric worldview made it impossible for him to recognise the Arawaks' sophisticated social system. Consequently, his reports back to Spain helped build a narrative of European superiority that fuelled slavery and colonisation.
He and his men enslaved the Indigenous population, bringing some back to Spain and forcing thousands of others to search for gold. Those who could not bring back enough gold had their hands chopped off. The Spaniards took women and children for sx and labour. Columbus' regime was so brutal that many of the Indigenous people committed sucide or inf*nticide to spare a life of suffering.
On the island of Hispaniola (now occupied by the countries of Haiti and the Dominican Republic), the Spaniards forced the Indigenous people to work at a ferocious pace, with only 15,000 people remaining by 1515, a sharp decline from the 250,000 people who are said to have lived there two years before when Columbus first arrived. By 1550, only 500 people reportedly remained. By 1650, no Arawak people remained on the island.
Given Columbus's legacy of exploitation and the tragic impact on indigenous populations, how should we re-evaluate and teach his place in history?
Video credit: @cat.lantigua on IG
SOURCES:
https://www.historyisaweapon.com/defcon1/zinncol1.html
http://www.jnht.com/download/arawak.pdf
Columbus's Eurocentric worldview made it impossible for him to recognise the Arawaks' sophisticated social system. Consequently, his reports back to Spain helped build a narrative of European superiority that fuelled slavery and colonisation.
He and his men enslaved the Indigenous population, bringing some back to Spain and forcing thousands of others to search for gold. Those who could not bring back enough gold had their hands chopped off. The Spaniards took women and children for sx and labour. Columbus' regime was so brutal that many of the Indigenous people committed sucide or inf*nticide to spare a life of suffering.
On the island of Hispaniola (now occupied by the countries of Haiti and the Dominican Republic), the Spaniards forced the Indigenous people to work at a ferocious pace, with only 15,000 people remaining by 1515, a sharp decline from the 250,000 people who are said to have lived there two years before when Columbus first arrived. By 1550, only 500 people reportedly remained. By 1650, no Arawak people remained on the island.
Given Columbus's legacy of exploitation and the tragic impact on indigenous populations, how should we re-evaluate and teach his place in history?
Video credit: @cat.lantigua on IG
SOURCES:
https://www.historyisaweapon.com/defcon1/zinncol1.html
http://www.jnht.com/download/arawak.pdf
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Media is too big
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'DELETING AFRICAN STREAM, BUT NOT BBC?'
Africans across the continent and worldwide are outraged about tech giants banning African Stream across YouTube, Facebook, Instagram, Threads, TikTok and Gmail. In this video, Seun Kuti, musician, singer and Pan-Africanist organiser with @MOVEMENTOFTHEP1 (on X) (and son of revolutionary African music icon Fela Kuti) spoke up about the hypocrisy of US Secretary of State Antony Blinken claiming African Stream is ‘secretly run’ by RT.
How can the United States denounce African Stream for supposedly ‘attempting to influence US elections’ and allegedly representing ‘foreign interests’ when BBC and CNN are allowed to spread information designed to influence African audiences?
Africans across the continent and worldwide are outraged about tech giants banning African Stream across YouTube, Facebook, Instagram, Threads, TikTok and Gmail. In this video, Seun Kuti, musician, singer and Pan-Africanist organiser with @MOVEMENTOFTHEP1 (on X) (and son of revolutionary African music icon Fela Kuti) spoke up about the hypocrisy of US Secretary of State Antony Blinken claiming African Stream is ‘secretly run’ by RT.
How can the United States denounce African Stream for supposedly ‘attempting to influence US elections’ and allegedly representing ‘foreign interests’ when BBC and CNN are allowed to spread information designed to influence African audiences?
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Continued......The BBC and Voice of America (VOA) are state-funded media that explicitly promote pro-British and pro-US interests, respectively. BBC says it aims to ‘reflect the United Kingdom, its culture and values to the world.’ Voice of America (VOA) is even more explicit in its mission. The US Agency for Global Media states on its website, ‘The long-range interests of the United States are served by communicating directly with the peoples of the world by radio.’
So, BBC can work to spread British values, and the US can create worldwide radio programmes to serve US interests, but Africans are not allowed to have a media platform that works for African interests? Let us know what you think in the comments.
Video credit: @bigbirdkuti on IG, @realseunkuti on X
SOURCES:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/aboutthebbc/governance/mission/
So, BBC can work to spread British values, and the US can create worldwide radio programmes to serve US interests, but Africans are not allowed to have a media platform that works for African interests? Let us know what you think in the comments.
Video credit: @bigbirdkuti on IG, @realseunkuti on X
SOURCES:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/aboutthebbc/governance/mission/
www.bbc.co.uk
Mission, values and public purposes
The Royal Charter states that the BBC’s object is “the fulfilment of its Mission and the promotion of its Public Purposes”
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Media is too big
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WELCOME TO KALAKUTA, FELA'S HUMBLE ABODE
Fela Aníkúlápó Kútì - the legendary musician, activist and critic of Nigeria’s military junta - was born on 15 October 1938. Nearly three decades after his passing in 1997, his provocative beats and activism continue to inspire around the world.
For his birthday, African Stream visited the so-called Kalakuta Republic - the compound where Fela lived and died. Now a museum, the Afrobeat creator’s former abode is packed with personal belongings and artefacts relating to his life and career. It’s also his final resting place.
Happy Birthday, Fela!
Fela Aníkúlápó Kútì - the legendary musician, activist and critic of Nigeria’s military junta - was born on 15 October 1938. Nearly three decades after his passing in 1997, his provocative beats and activism continue to inspire around the world.
For his birthday, African Stream visited the so-called Kalakuta Republic - the compound where Fela lived and died. Now a museum, the Afrobeat creator’s former abode is packed with personal belongings and artefacts relating to his life and career. It’s also his final resting place.
Happy Birthday, Fela!
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