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With the Lions, Not the Hunters.

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IBRAHIM TRAORÉ ELECTRIFIES CROWD IN GHANA

According to the videos online, there was no mistaking it: the loudest roars of approval during Ghana’s president’s inauguration, John Mahama, were reserved for the visiting Captain Ibrahim Traoré, Burkina Faso’s 36-year-old transitional leader.

What sets Ibrahim Traoré apart from Africa’s elected officials, earning him such admiration and, judging by the raucous welcome in Accra, a glowing endorsement from many Africans?

Ghanaians, weary from years of unfulfilled political promises and a crippling debt crisis, were rallying behind what Traoré symbolises: courageous, decisive leadership and a commitment to prioritising the needs of the people.
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Continued……. Since seizing power in a military coup in 2022, Traoré has initiated a groundbreaking decolonisation effort, expelling French influence from the media, military, and mining sectors. In contrast and particularly under former president Nana Akufo-Addo, Ghanaians endured high inflation, a depreciating currency and a high cost of living amid harsh IMF bailout conditions.


Some have likened Traoré to a modern-day Thomas Sankara (1949-1987), Burkina Faso’s assassinated pan-Africanist leader. Alongside Mali’s Assimi Goïta and Niger’s Abdourahamane Tiani, the trio has expelled French military forces, reduced French sway in the media, begun the nationalisation of natural resources, and formed the Alliance of Sahel States (AES) confederation to unify defence, economic, and foreign policies.

The cheers for Traoré resonate across Africa as millions of citizens express their admiration for leadership that delivers actual results. This is a stark critique of Western-style democracy, where wealthy politicians often buy their way into power with empty promises only to serve the interests of imperialist nations. Ghanaians at the inauguration on Tuesday are hopeful that the newly elected president can also deliver results for the people of Ghana. Only time will tell.
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On this day in 1811, the largest revolt of enslaved people in the United States occurred in modern-day Louisiana.

Sometimes known as the German Coast Uprising, it involved an estimated 500 African people speaking 50 languages enslaved on sugar plantations on the east bank of the Mississippi River, 48 kilometres north of New Orleans.

Charles, an enslaved overseer on a plantation owned by the Deslondes family that fled Haiti in the wake of the 1804 revolution that outlawed slavery on the island, led the uprising.
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Continued……. The Haitian revolution served as a source of inspiration for Charles and his co-conspirators. Following months of secretive plotting, Charles led a group of enslaved people from the surrounding plantations toward New Orleans. The group included enslaved people born in the US, the Caribbean, and those newly brought from Africa. They left the plantation with a few guns, pikes, shovels, and other rudimentary tools, but most importantly, with the courage and determination to free themselves from the shackles of slavery.

Along the way, the group torched plantations, sending fear into enslavers’ hearts and sparking hope for enslaved people, many of whom joined the march to freedom. 

As word of the revolt spread, authorities mobilised armed forces and white supremacist militia to put down the uprising. After putting up a fierce and remarkable resistance, authorities captured Charles and others on the morning of 10 January, executing and decapitating most revolters. Authorities displayed the heads on spikes along a 95-kilometre stretch between New Orleans and the banks of the Mississippi as a grotesque warning to other freedom-seeking enslaved people.

However, despite the brutality, the revolt sparked a spirit of resistance among enslaved people and served as a source of inspiration for future rebellions.

Source:

https://www.zinnedproject.org/news/tdih/louisianas-slave-revolt/
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RWANDA-BACKED REBELS MAKE GAINS IN EAST DRC

Masisi town in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo has fallen into the hands of Rwanda-backed M23 rebels. This strategic location in the mineral-rich North Kivu province is the second town to be taken by the militant group in just two days, following their capture of the nearby town of Katale. The latest fighting erupted after peace talks mediated by Angola collapsed in mid-December 2024.

A UN experts’ report from June 2024 says that Rwanda has deployed around 3,000 to 4,000 troops to assist M23, enabling them to seize large areas in eastern Congo. M23 has been linked to the murder and displacement of civilians, leading to a humanitarian crisis in the Great Lakes region.
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Continue……. The ongoing resource war in the DRC, which has lasted for three decades, is one of the most significant and devastating conflicts in recent history. It involves over 120 militia groups, many of which are reportedly supported by foreign governments and interests. This conflict has resulted in approximately 6-million deaths, displaced more than 7-million people and led to numerous incidents of sexual violence. The DRC is estimated to have $24 trillion worth of untapped minerals, drawing the attention of powerful foreign actors eager to exploit its resources.

Sources:

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c9wlzg7xn0no

https://commonslibrary.parliament.uk/research-briefings/cbp-10089/

https://documents.un.org/doc/undoc/gen/n24/118/80/pdf/n2411880.pdf

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2024/3/29/eastern-drc-at-breaking-point-as-security-humanitarian-crises-worsen
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ETHIOPIAN MIGRANT TORTURED AND AUCTIONED IN LIBYA SLAVE MARKET

In this heartbreaking video going viral on social media, 20-year-old Naima Jamal of Ethiopia is the latest migrant to fall prey to Libya’s notorious trafficking gangs.

Naima, tortured and undergoing unimaginable horrors at the hands of her captors, awaits auction at a modern slave market. Her traffickers demand her family pay a $6,000 ransom for her release, a reality for many other migrants captured and sold in slave markets for as little as $400. According to other refugees in Libya, Naima’s family received a video of captors torturing her alongside 50 people.
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Continued……The 2011 NATO invasion wreaked havoc in one of Africa’s most prosperous countries, dividing the state into warring regions and opening the door for a human trafficking crisis. Traffickers exploit Black migrants, reducing them to mere commodities in a modern slave market. The once-vivid spotlight on the atrocities occurring in Libya has since dimmed, creating a sense of resignation in the country.

Naima’s case, as well as many other migrants,’ is part of a more significant crisis magnified by systemic failure. We cannot confirm Naima’s status at the moment. Still, this horrific case highlights an urgent need to protect migrants, refugees and asylum seekers in Libya.

Video Credit: @dom_lucre

Image Credit: @leo_afrika

Sources:

https://converseer.com/20-year-old-naima-jamal-abducted-in-libya-faces-torture-as-traffickers-demand-6000-ransom

https://www.cnn.com/2017/11/14/africa/libya-migrant-auctions/index.html
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HOW U.S. HIJACKED HAITI’S DEMOCRACY

Kenya’s controversial policing mission to Haiti - launched mid-last year at the bidding of the US - has so far failed in its stated goal of bringing the island’s rampant gang problem under control. And while Nairobi claims to be acting out of pan-African solidarity, in reality, it’s providing a Black face for the latest round of imperialist meddling in the Caribbean nation.

It’s a story that goes back decades, with regime-change operations initiated as early as 1919, when American forces killed Charlemagne Masséna Péralte for resisting their invasion of the island. In subsequent years, Washington kept a close eye on Haiti and deposed progressive leaders such as Jean-Bertrand Aristide, who wanted to raise the minimum wage and demanded reparations from France for forcing Port-au-Prince to pay enslavers for their ‘loss’ when Haiti became the world’s first free Black republic. The US also supported the dictatorships of ‘Papa Doc’ Duvalier and his son ‘Baby Doc.’
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Continued……The tragic tale spans into the 21st century. We sat down with Haitian academic Dr Jemima Pierre to make sense of exactly how America has maintained control over Haiti’s democratic process, flipping the results when they didn’t go Washington’s way.
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NEW GHANA VP’S FIRST GUEST: ISRAEL

On her first day in office, Ghana’s new vice president, Professor Naana Jane Opoku-Agyemang, hosted an Israeli delegation led by Israeli Ambassador to Ghana, Liberia and Sierra Leone Roey Gilad and Israeli Deputy Minister for Foreign Affairs Sharren Haskel. In an 8 January X post, Opoku-Agyemang expressed a willingness to collaborate with Israel and align priorities on sectors like food security.

Support for Palestine exists in Ghana amidst Israel’s bombardment and siege of Gaza that k*lled an estimated 186,000 civilians as of early July, according to the Lancet medical journal. Meanwhile, Gilad reportedly lamented the Ghanaian government’s lack of support, calling it disproportionate to ordinary Ghanaians' alleged enthusiasm for the settler-colonial state.
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MOZAMBIQUE PROTESTS: DEATH
TOLL NEARS 300

The violence that broke out after Mozambique's disputed presidential election on 9 October has spilled over into 2025. According to local monitoring group Plataforma_decide, at least 278 people have been killed in the post-vote violence - with more than 3,000 sustaining injuries.

Opposition candidate Venâncio Mondlane, who has been in exile since late October, has just returned to his homeland, setting up a potential showdown between security forces and his supporters.

Mondlane and his supporters have rejected the results announced by the country's electoral body as fraudulent. Despite the official results favouring ruling party candidate Daniel Chapo, the opposition leader insists that he is the rightful winner of the elections. He has vowed to swear himself in as the country's president on 15 January, the same day Chapo will be inaugurated.
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SHOTS FIRED NEAR CHAD PRESIDENTIAL PALACE?

Witnesses claimed to have heard gunfire near the presidential palace in Chad's capital, N'Djamena, on the evening of 8 January.

Videos circulating online showed military activity near the compound, but the origin of the gunfire was unclear. Foreign Minister Abderaman Koulamallah reassured the public via a live Facebook broadcast from the palace, stating that the situation was under control and that soldiers were protecting President Mahamat Déby Itno.

The incident follows recent tensions in Chad, including opposition parties boycotting last week’s parliamentary elections, Chad recently demanding French troops leave the country and ongoing Boko Haram attacks. In October and November 2024, Boko Haram killed 40 and 17 soldiers, respectively.
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REMEMBERING SÉKOU TOURÉ

Guinea’s founding leader, Ahmed Sékou Touré - one of Africa’s leading statesmen of all time - was born on this day (9 January) in 1922.

As a child, he attended a Koranic school - before proceeding to a French technical school in the capital, Conakry, in his teens. However, his stay there was short-lived, as he was expelled less than a year after admission for leading a student protest.

This led him to join the labour market at an early age. His first job was as a clerk at a French-owned company in 1940, before joining the country’s postal and telecommunication services company the following year.

It was there that he announced his arrival in politics. He became a vocal labour activist. In 1945, he founded the country’s first trade union, the Post and Telecommunications Workers’ Union, becoming its first secretary general.
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Continued…….. In 1953, he helped coordinate the region’s major labour strike. The strike, which lasted over 76 days, was seen as a significant victory for the country’s workers, who scored a 20 per cent pay rise and a 40-hour working week.

His trailblazing track record in the labour sector helped cement his role as an emerging anti-colonial leader. In the 1950s, he won several political offices before becoming mayor of Conakry in 1955 and a member of the French National Assembly in 1956.

He used those positions to mobilise his fellow citizens towards the goal of national emancipation, rejecting attempts by Paris to have the West African nation remain part of the so-called French Community.

In 1958, Guineans voted overwhelmingly to sever ties with France, despite Paris’ threats to end all forms of economic and technical support for Guinea.

Upon becoming president, Touré embarked on a massive economic and social reform programme to wean the country off dependency on the former colonial power.

But his revolutionary exploits went beyond the borders of his homeland. On what would have been the Guinean icon’s 103rd birthday, we look at his achievements and why he was admired by pan-Africans worldwide.

Sources:

https://www.liberationnews.org/07-04-01-uprising-in-guinea-problems-faci-html/

https://aaprp-intl.org/ahmed-sekou-toure-at-100/
https://www.blackpast.org/global-african-history/toure-ahmed-sekou-1922-1984/
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TRAORÉ SHINES BRIGHT IN GHANA’S BLACK STAR

He was African Stream’s Man of the Year 2024 - and if the cheers in Ghana’s Black Star Square on Wednesday are anything to go by, Burkina Faso’s President Ibrahim Traoré will carry on inspiring Africans well into 2025.

He was visiting Accra for the inauguration of Ghana’s new president, John Dramani Mahama. But even he had to acknowledge, with a smile, that - of all the visiting dignitaries - the biggest crowd pleaser was the young revolutionary captain from the Sahel.

He’s been winning over hearts and minds not only in Ouagadougou and Accra, but across the continent and even the global diaspora - by giving Western (especially French) neo-colonialism the boot, and charting a new course towards pan-African unity.

Many compare him to fellow ‘upright man’ and first president of Burkina Faso, Thomas Sankara. What do you make of the comparison?
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MACRON BERATES ‘UNGRATEFUL’ AFRICAN LEADERS

France’s Macron has been throwing his latest tantrum - unable to accept that France’s former colonies no longer want to rely on the shoddy military ‘security’ Paris had been offering them. In a 6 January speech, he accused African leaders of ingratitude after they kicked out French troops from their countries over their failure to fight terrorism effectively. He also insinuated they were cowards for failing to counter the growing anti-French sentiment in the Sahel over the ex-coloniser’s neo-colonial practices there. As African Stream’s William Sakawa explains in this video, it’s a bit like an arsonist getting upset that his help isn’t wanted fighting fires. Have a watch, and share your reaction with us.
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QUESTIONS LOOM OVER DEATHS IN ECUADOR

Ecuador’s public prosecutor’s office is investigating if 16 Air Force soldiers are responsible for the recent deaths of four boys aged 11 to 15. Just a few weeks ago, on Christmas Eve, mutilated and charred corpses were found near a military base in Ecuador. Authorities said forensic genetic tests confirmed that the bodies corresponded to the four children who went missing after being detained by the Air Force on 8 December. The victims were identified as Nehemias Arboleda, Steven Medina, and brothers Josué and Ismael Arroyo and are collectively known as the ‘Guayaquil 4.’ They’d gone out to play football in the city of Guayaquil when their whereabouts went unknown for over two weeks.
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