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African Stream
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With the Lions, Not the Hunters.

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DOLLAR CRASH GOOD FOR AFRICA

At the moment the US dollar is king. And its rising strength is exacerbating inflationary pressures across Africa made worse by the war in Ukraine. However, there are analysts who’ve long predicted a dollar collapse. And as more countries move out of the greenback and trade in their own currencies - some believe it’s likely to happen sooner rather than later.

According to US financial commentator Peter Schiff, that could be good news for Africa.
Listen to him explain how emerging economies will benefit if and when the world's reserve currency gets dethroned.

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WHY ARE WE GIVING OUR WEALTH AWAY?

How long do we keep having to bang the drum for reclaiming our natural resources? What is the sense in cheaply selling our raw materials - from cocoa to minerals - off to the West, so it can process and get rich off them? Just think how Africa would flourish if all those profits stayed on the continent. It’s the only way we’ll stop losing our best people to the brain drain as well. What’s keeping African doctors from taking up better-paid jobs offered them abroad? Here’s Eritrea’s President Afwerki making the point well almost a decade ago. Has anything really changed since?

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Claim Your African Identity

You shouldn’t shy away from your Africanness, you should embrace it. It’s a message that was often made by respected psychologist and social-theorist Dr Amos Wilson.

Here he makes the point that those who are proud of their heritage achieve success- and uses schoolchildren as an example. Worth listening to the pan-Africanist's words, which are still relevant today.

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DRC DEMANDS UN FORCES GET OUT

The DRC is demanding that the UN withdraw its mission from the country after the election in December 2023. Kinshasa says the peacekeepers are unfit for purpose - in over 24 years, they’ve failed to protect civilians, and failed to end the conflict in the east of the country.

It’s part of a trend of African nations wresting back control of security in their own countries. Mali similarly recently demanded that the UN mission in its country be terminated, and got its way at the UN Security Council.

Conflicts have continued to spill blood in CAR, DRC, Mali and South Sudan, despite the presence of UN forces in those countries. Africa needs a new approach to address the root causes of the conflicts.

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For centuries they've roamed Egypt with a lifestyle shrouded in mystery. Here's what we know about the Sinai Bedouins and their fascinating history.

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SUDAN TO RUTO: SEND YOUR MEN!

The Sudanese army’s second-in-command, Lieutenant General Yasir Alatta, has dared Kenya to deploy its forces in Sudan - warning they’ll all be killed. It comes amid allegations from his boss and other military top brass that Nairobi is supporting their bitter rivals, the Rapid Support Forces, in the deadly power struggle for Sudan.

Recent peace talks - boycotted by the Sudanese army and chaired by Kenya’s President Ruto - resulted in a proposal to send a contingent of the East African Force into Sudan to secure humanitarian corridors and protect civilians. As Alatta’s tirade shows, the move seems only to have depend the Sudanese army’s suspicions about Kenya.

It doesn’t bode well for the millions of Sudanese civilians displaced by a conflict that’s already claimed thousands of lives.

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YOUNG AFRICANS DEBATE APARTHEID IN 1956

Young Africans being invited to debate current affairs on US national television was a rare thing in the 1950s. But a show called ‘Youth Wants to Know’ made it happen.

In this fascinating clip, four debaters - high-school students from Nigeria, Ethiopia, Ghana and South Africa - discuss apartheid.

The South African student tries his best to defend it, shamefully arguing that the regime in his country imposed apartheid for the good of the indigenous population, while also trying to frame Africans as the real aggressors.

The comeback from his Black interlocutors is well worth a watch. It give as a valuable insight into the thoughts and feelings of young Africans during a time of political and social change.

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PUTIN: PILLAGING OF AFRICA BUILT EUROPE

Russia is hosting its second Africa summit later this week (27th-28th July). The stated aim of the gathering in St. Petersburg will be to strengthen cooperation in various spheres between the Russian nation and our continent.

Ahead of that get-together, which will feature numerous African ministers and heads of state, as well as business leaders, here’s a look back at Vladimir Putin recognising the suffering that has been inflicted on Africa by the colonial West - and how Europe’s latter-day wealth is still largely based on this.

Obviously, he has his own axe to grind, but it’s rare for world leaders to stand up for our side of the struggle, so it’s worth highlighting. Going further back, when the West deposed Libya's Muammar Gaddafi, Putin was among the few high-level global voices to condemn the act.
Continued - PUTIN: PILLAGING OF AFRICA BUILT EUROPE

Relations between Russian and Africa are historically relatively good. The Soviet Union, of which Russia was one of 15 member republics, cooperated with African independence movements, providing arms and training.

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COLOUR BLIND? NOPE!

Racism often reveals itself in reflex reactions - even in situations where you might think compassion would win out. This was brilliantly demonstrated recently by a French social-media content creator, who got two actors - one Black, the other White - to go out into the streets and pose as visually impaired people seeking assistance. The reactions of passers-by tells you everything you need to know about how far we still have to go to eradicate racism in Western society.

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'DON'T BUY ANTI-AFRICAN
AGENDA'

Is there an anti-Black agenda in South Africa?

The leader of the the country’s pan-African opposition party thinks so, and says it’s being pushed in support of White monopoly capital and multinationals. In this clip, Julius Malema hits back at the Zondo Commission report which highlighted corruption during Jacob Zuma’s nine-year term as President. The head of the EFF says it reflects an anti-Black agenda while ignoring sweet deals given to big international corporations that pay little tax and exploit the country. As he sees it, Blacks must fight negative stereotypes, come together and not turn on one another.

Only then can South Africa progress. Is he on the money?

Watch him address his supporters and let us know your thoughts.

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KENYAN MP TO SUDANESE GENERAL: ‘WE CAN CRUSH YOU!’

Sudan’s military seems to have launched a second war - of words - against Kenya. That’s after its second-most senior general dared the country to deploy troops in Sudan on pain of death. A firebrand Kenyan MP has now punched back with his own video tirade - in which he likens Sudan’s assistant commander-in-chief, Yasir Alatta, to a toilet fly, warning him of a crushing defeat in any armed contest.

Sudanese generals suspect Nairobi of harbouring and backing leaders from the RSF paramilitary - against whom they are fighting a bloody civil war in Sudan. At recent peace talks, chaired by Kenya, the idea of deploying Eastern Africa Standby Force troops as peacekeepers was floated. At the onset of hostilities, Kenya’s minister for trade and industry called for a ‘coalition of the willing’ to bomb Khartoum and end the conflict - a statement Kenya’s Foreign Ministry later distanced itself from.

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Continued - The back-and-forth threats and taunts are taking up valuable space that could - and should - be used for diplomacy.  The sabre-rattling only worsens regional instability.  Millions have been displaced in Sudan and thousands killed, while Kenya is also currently facing a deteriorating security situation amid an uptick in al Shabaab-related terror activities.

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