While Ibrahim Traore was being wined and dined by Putin he’s lost control of 60% of the country as Al Qaeda militants overrun major military base.

voltronblack

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Kenya what's up :mjpls:
They need the money to paid off their debt if I had to guess:manny:

Kenya’s government has deployed an elaborate communications strategy in a bid to control the narrative around its latest finance bill, the annual tax plan that last year triggered deadly nationwide protests and calls for the president’s resignation.

The government, which blames misinformation for last year’s widespread demonstrations, is banking on the approach to avoid a similar scenario this year, two sources in the administration told Semafor. The plan combines appearances by public officials on mainstream TV and radio stations to explain the bill, town halls, and the use of social media influencers to shape messaging on platforms including X and Facebook.

It is a markedly different approach from the previous year when President William Ruto’s messaging focused on the need to make tough decisions to pay off Kenya’s significant external debt.

The protests last year fueled a 450% rise in abductions and a similar spike in extrajudicial killings in 2024, according to a new report by civil society coalition Missing Voices. The protests, which saw at least 50 people killed and hundreds injured, were triggered by frustration over proposals that would hike various existing taxes and introduce new ones.

While this year’s edition of the bill notably leans away from the introduction of new taxes, it still contains provisions — such as a shift on VAT — that could raise the prices of items such as drugs, motorbikes, and mobile phones, potentially fueling public discontent

“There is a feeling within the administration that they were not prepared for the backlash when they published the bill last year,” said one senior communications official who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Know More
General negative sentiment against Ruto’s administration remains palpable, as was exemplified by the hurling of a shoe at him in a recent rally. High unemployment, corruption, and slowed economic growth are among key drivers of the frustration. According to new data from the country’s statistics bureau, the country’s real GDP growth rate fell from 5.7% in 2023 to 4.7% in 2024.

The new messaging is supposed to amplify the government’s “no new taxes” commitment and portray the administration as a listening government, in stark contrast to its perceived confrontational stance last year. Dennis Itumbi, a long-time Ruto digital strategist and the current head of presidential special projects, is coordinating the process on the digital front. An analysis by Semafor of recent hashtags on X, such as #BoldRuto and #NoNewTaxes2025, pointed to a coordinated effort to influence public opinion on the bill.

Dennis Chiruba, a tax lawyer based in Nairobi said taxpayer friendly measures and incentives for businesses contained in the bill “may be outweighed by provisions that could increase the cost of doing business in some sectors.” He said that the bill focuses on broadening the tax base “rather than introducing overt new taxes.”

Chiruba described the government’s strategy as “more measured and administrative” compared to 2024.

Treasury Cabinet Secretary John Mbadi last Monday participated in a televised town hall meeting focused on the bill, and repeatedly asserted that they were keen on easing the burden on taxpayers. “Kenyans are demanding accountability,” he said

Itumbi and government spokesperson Isaac Mwaura did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Step Back
This year’s draft bill proposes a raft of notable changes, including longer timelines for tax refunds and a shifting of several goods from zero-rated VAT to VAT exempt — a move that is likely to drive an increase in the cost of goods according to analysts.
Martin’s view
In addition to frustrations over the state of the economy, discontent has been mounting over the lack of accountability for many of the perpetrators of the killings in last year’s protests, although the administration argues that investigations are at different stages.

Unemployment, corruption, the cost of living, recent policies including mandatory deductions for a new health scheme, and a housing levy make for an unpopular government, and this current administration is feeling the heat.

The scale of the unrest was unexpected by the Ruto-led administration when it introduced the Finance Bill 2024. Furious protesters breached Parliament on the day MPs passed the bill. And even after Ruto acquiesced by withdrawing the bill and reconstituting his cabinet, calls for his resignation continue to feature heavily in Kenya’s political discourse.

Ruto will undoubtedly be keen on ensuring the situation does not recur with this year’s bill. This explains the change of tack in both the contents of the bill itself and how it is communicated.

Room for Disagreement
John Wafula, an activist with the Bunge la Mwananchi civic education group, described the government’s Finance Bill plans as “a band-aid that cannot fix their unpopularity.”

“People are tired, this administration cannot cast itself as a listening government when no one has been held accountable for the police killings. The victims’ families have not received compensation despite Ruto’s promises. And the economy is not doing well,” he said. “The government knows that it is unpopular, hence the approach, but it won’t make much difference in public sentiment.”

Notable
BBC documentary highlighted how police and military officers fired live bullets killing protesters last year. Four filmmakers were later arrested in connection with the production, sparking widespread uproar, although the BBC issued a statement saying the four were not associated with the documentary.
 

3rdWorld

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Capt. IBRAHIM TRAORÉ breaks the silence on colonial crimes.

Ibrahim Traore:

"France tested its atomic bomb on Black soldiers"
 

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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It's common sense who's funding and supplying the terrorists, so they dont get their hands dirty









U.A.E. Is Pouring Money Into Africa, Seeking Resources and Power

As the United States and other economic powers reduce their investment, aid and presence in Africa, the United Arab Emirates is wielding its wealth.

May 17, 2025Updated 2:21 p.m. ET
A long line of copper plates on wagons.
Last year, the Emirati International Holding Company acquired a 51 percent stake in Zambia’s Mopani Copper Mines for over $1 billion.Zinyange Auntony/Bloomberg
Patricia Cohen
By Patricia Cohen

Patricia Cohen, global economics correspondent, reported from Nairobi, Kenya; Lusaka, Zambia; and London.

Look at the chief economic and strategic spots across Africa — ports for key trade corridors, mines that produce critical minerals, large renewable energy projects — and you will find the United Arab Emirates.

As the United States and, to a lesser extent, China reduce their investment, aid and presence on the African continent, the Emirates is using its enormous wealth and influence to fill the void.

Persian Gulf investments in Africa, primarily by the Emirates, have exploded in recent years. Since 2019, $110 billion worth of deals — mostly by firms tightly aligned with the ruling powers — have been announced, dwarfing amounts pledged by any other country.

“The U.A.E. is turning into a dominant foreign player” in much of Africa, said Anna Jacobs, a nonresident fellow at the Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington.

Its efforts to become a world leader, particularly in finance and technology, are likely to be bolstered under President Trump, Ms. Jacobs said. The president, seeking to draw Emirati money to the United States, paved the way this week for the sale of American advanced artificial intelligence chips to the Emirates.

The Emirates’ wide-ranging investments and efforts to become a world leader in A.I. are part of an ambitious plan to increase the country’s influence, particularly over global supply chains.

People standing in a dark room at the World Future Energy Summit. The walls and ceiling are covered in screens.
A pavilion at this year’s World Future Energy Summit in Abu Dhabi. The Emirates is pushing into artificial intelligence and global investments as part of a broader bid to boost its influence over world supply chains.Ali Haider/EPA, via Shutterstock
Like other oil-producing nations in the Persian Gulf, the Emirates is looking to diversify its economy away from fossil fuels, and it sees Africa as an essential part of the plan. The continent has vast mineral resources, a growing population, agricultural potential and a strategically important location bordering the Red and Mediterranean Seas as well as the Indian and Atlantic Oceans.

Powerhouse Emirati corporations based in Dubai and Abu Dhabi with political connections are in dozens of countries across Africa.

AMEA Power is already building or operating clean energy plants in Burkina Faso, Djibouti, Egypt, Ethiopia, Ivory Coast, Kenya, Morocco, South Africa, Togo, Tunisia and Uganda and has plans to expand. Abu Dhabi National Energy Company has projects in Morocco, Senegal and South Africa and is participating in a project to invest $10 billion in renewable energy in sub-Saharan Africa.

DP World, the gargantuan government-backed ports and logistics operator, has invested billions of dollars in ports and economic free zones from Algeria to Zambia, including in the Berbera port city in the breakaway republic of Somaliland, where the Emirates also has a military base. Last summer it announced that it would spend another $3 billion on African ports over the next three to five years.

Last year, the Emirati International Holding Company invested more than $1 billion for a 51 percent share in the Mopani Copper Mines in Zambia.

Spending in Egypt has also soared. Last year, the Emirates agreed to invest $35 billion to develop a new city and tourism destination on Egypt’s Mediterranean coast.

Emirati investment in Africa has ramped up as China’s has tapered off. Once the biggest foreign investor on the continent through its Belt and Road Initiative, China still has a large presence, but Beijing has pulled back in recent years after a series of debt crises in Africa and economic problems at home.

The Bosaso Port in Somalia. Cranes are moving packages off ships.
The Emirati logistics company DP World has invested billions of dollars in ports and economic free zones, including in the Berbera port city in the breakaway republic of Somaliland.Daniel Irungu/EPA, via Shutterstock
In 2022 and 2023, the Emirates announced a total of $97 billion in investments in Africa — three times China’s total, according to fDi Markets, a database of foreign investments. U.S. investment in 2023 was about $10 billion.

Experts said that even though not all of these pledges would pan out, they showed an overall commitment to doing business on the continent. The Emirates is also looking to build trade and has signed bilateral economic partnership pacts with three African nations, including Kenya, since the year’s start.

The Emirates has focused its investments on “key future-focused sectors such as renewable energy, food security, digital transformation, infrastructure, and logistics over the past five years,” said a spokesperson for the Emirati ministry of foreign affairs. In addition, the country’s total foreign assistance in Africa exceeded $1 billion in 2023-24, according to a government spokesperson on trade.

Meanwhile, Mr. Trump has fast-tracked America’s exit from Africa, ending billions of dollars in funding, dismantling the U.S. Agency for International Development and ending all contributions to the African Development Bank. The State Department’s reorganization plan also calls for the elimination of most operations in the region.

Britain has also tightened its flow of money into the continent in recent years as it has increased aid to Ukraine and increased its own military spending.

The Trump administration’s actions are extreme, said Ricardo Soares de Oliveira, a co-director of a program on African governance at Oxford University, but they reflect a larger global trend away from development aid and liberal values.

The world is transitioning to an era in which the focus on democracy and free markets is becoming less significant, Mr. Soares de Oliveira said. “A more business-focused approach is going to be the shared norm,” he added.

That isn’t to say the Emirates does not have substantial strategic and political interests in Africa.

What’s different is that it has delegated statecraft to private interests and businesses, almost all of which have ties in some way to the government or ruling families, said Andreas Krieg, a fellow at the Institute of Middle Eastern Studies at King’s College London. These enterprises are expected to generate both economic and strategic returns.

President Trump and the prime minister of Saudi Arabia seated and leaning in to talk to each other.
President Trump visited the gulf region this week to meet with business leaders and government officials, including Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman of Saudi Arabia.Doug Mills/The New York Times
“The U.A.E. has revolutionized statecraft for a small country,” Mr. Krieg said. It has fewer than one million citizens, is smaller than the state of Indiana and has a relatively tiny military. Yet, he said, “it’s very much playing the game of a middle power.”

Some of the Emirates’ political choices have stirred concerns. Sudan’s government has accused the Emirates of fueling genocide with its backing of the Rapid Support Forces, the paramilitary group engaged in a civil war that has killed 150,000 and displaced 14 million people. Recently, Sudan’s military cut diplomatic ties with the Emirates, which has said it has provided only humanitarian assistance.

The Emirates has also been accused of funneling money to the Russian mercenary group Wagner in both Sudan and Libya.


“There is no such thing as clean or dirty money in the U.A.E.,” Mr. Krieg said.

Ken Opalo, an associate professor at Georgetown University’s School of Foreign Service, said the Emirates aimed to be the world’s gateway to Africa for investment and trade, whether legal or smuggled. The gold trade alone that passes mostly through Dubai is worth $30 billion, he said.

“The U.A.E. has developed a robust regulatory framework that ensures that the trade in gold is conducted with the maximum security, integrity and transparency,” an Emirati official said.

As Mr. Trump’s visit to the gulf region this week illustrates, Washington considers the Emirates a reliable ally in the region and in Africa. The two countries have maintained close security ties.

But Washington may underestimate just how valuable the commercial partnership between the Emirates and China is. Ambitious investments in green energy in Africa rely on Chinese technology, minerals and goods.

“The U.A.E. ultimately militarily relies on the U.S., but it also wants to position itself as the Switzerland of the gulf where everyone is welcome,” Mr. Opalo said. “They want to be a renewables hub, and it’s hard to play that game without engaging China.”
 

chkmeout

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You dont get rid of terrorism without engaging with the locals at the ground level. If you want clues as to how to deal with terrorism, look to China. They did it successfully with the Uyghurs. A lot of yall going to have to put your pride to the side and engage with these "fulani herders".
nikka fukk outta here
 

ReasonableMatic

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Kenya what's up :mjpls:
Though I LOVE the attention Ibrahim Traore is getting.

I hate how Abrahamic religions taught Africans Messianism, so now the conversation is about him, and removed it from AES as a region. ⬅️⬅️

We see this throughout the African Diaspora all the time.

Instead of focusing on the message and building on it as communities, ppl make it about the individuals that are the face of a movement.


So when/if said individuals get assassinated, the ppl cry and the movement dies with them.

Messianism doesn’t protect Black communities, information and education does.

The African Diaspora needs to structurally educate itself on the insights and ideas that our visionaries brought to the table and build on them.

Confrontational history lessons about colonization and the intricate methods that were used need to be standardized.

Secular safespaces for cultural interrogation through a decolonial lense need to be made, so the collective consciousness gets increased as the youth asks tough questions and adjusts leadership to prevent stagnation in development.

Communities that just sit back and hope for the best from their leaders are vulnerable as is, with the constant lurking danger of Abrahamic colonialism and Abrahamic conflict that Arabs and Europeans have put Africa in.

Western and Middle Eastern powers know this very well and are non-stop busy with conversion of Black ppl, because they know it’s a masterkey to controlling African minds, having instant political power and having easy access to resources throughout the Diaspora.

Africa needs to center and present Pan African visionaries as a collective, shame puppets that historically betrayed the cause — and highlight those that are betraying the cause currently in real-time.⬆️⬆️⬆️

Like how Kenya should be shamed right now, for repeating history by siding with the US and being their Christian missionary army to oppress Haiti. ⬅️⬅️⬅️

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Kenyan government are bunch of TRAITORS to the cause :ufdup:
 
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Mister Terrific

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You guys have to stop this cia conspiracy

Dudes just pridefully repeat state propaganda willingly on here its not even funny. With a quick google search you could see how funded AL Qaeda in the past and it made it what it is today and the timing of this attack :unimpressed: .

Leave the CIA theory out of this for a moment.


Independent observers say he has control of only 40% of his country and a major military base was just captured.

What is his excellency planning to do to stop the Jihadi’s?
 
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