This is how White Supremacy Racism has continued to destabilise - TopicsExpress



          

This is how White Supremacy Racism has continued to destabilise Africa over the last 500 years. Few white people will watch uploads like these because they cant handle the truth that stares them directly in the face, rather they turn a blind eye to what THEIR people, THEIR Governments are doing to mine; funding spurious wars with their guns and ammunition to destabilise the the continent, germ warfare, assisted genocide, organ harvesting, sterilisation of our women, the deliberate murder/assassination of our leaders and those who inspire and uplift and the continued theft of African resources and what they secretly hope will be the total annihilation of all black people one day! It matters not to me that White people wont watch uploads like this, It matters to me that Black people wake up globally and start taking back what is rightfully ours. BLACK POWER is stronger than anything the White man can throw at us, we will overcome, but we must do it as a collective, from America to Africa, the Caribbean to Australia. Black people need to understand that having funded the white mans industrial revolutions globally with the blood sweat and SLAVE LABOURS of our Ancestors, having built their cities, having invented practically every modern day invention to make our lives (and theirs) easier, the white man has no more need for Black Slave Labour. We are no longer needed to clean their homes, wet nurse their children, build bunkers and dig trenches for their wars or to plough their fields and pick their cotton and cane. To the White man, the black man is surplus to requirement and so their only alternative is to blame to black man for global overpopulation, for passing on incurable viruses and diseases (which the white man has deliberately infected us with), to blame us for the terrorism and riots (which the white man secretly infiltrates funds and causes) to justify their wanton murder and continued genocide against ALL black people globally. Here is a list of assassinated African Leaders: Algeria • 1942 – François Darlan, senior figure of Vichy France • 1957 – Maurice Audin, communist mathematician • 1963 – Mohamed Khemisti, Algerian foreign minister • 1987 – Mustafa Bouyali, Islamic fundamentalist • 1992 – Mohamed Boudiaf, President of Algeria • 1993 – Youcef Sebti, poet • 1993 – Kasdi Merbah, former Prime Minister of Algeria • 1994 – Abdelkader Alloula, playwright • 1994 – Cheb Hasni, singer • 1998 – Lounès Matoub, singer • 1999 – Abdelkader Hachani, Islamic fundamentalist Burkina Faso • 1987 – Thomas Sankara, Head of State of Burkina Faso • 1991 – Clément Oumarou Ouédraogo, opposition Burundi • 1961 – Louis Rwagasore, Prime Minister of Burundi • 1965 – Pierre Ngendandumwe, Prime Minister of Burundi • 1965 – Joseph Bamina, Prime Minister of Burundi • 1975 – Ntare V, dethroned King of Burundi (disputed circumstances) • 1993 – Melchior Ndadaye, President of Burundi • 2001 – Kassi Manlan, World Health Organisation representative • 2003 – Michael Courtney, Apostolic Nuncio to Burundi Cameroon • 1958 - Ruben Um Nyobe, leader of the Cameroons People Union (UPC) Chad • 1975 – François Tombalbaye, President of Chad Comoros • 1978 – Ali Soilih, former President of Comoros • 1989 – Ahmed Abdallah, President of Comoros Congo (Brazzaville) • 1977 – Marien Ngouabi, President of the Congo • 1977 – Émile Biayenda, Archbishop of Brazzaville • 1988 – Pierre Anga, rebel leader Congo (Kinshasa) • 1961 – Patrice Lumumba, former Prime Minister of the Congo • 1961 – Maurice Mpolo, Lumumba associate • 1961 – Joseph Okito, Lumumba associate • 2001 – Laurent Kabila, President of the Democratic Republic of the Congo Côte dIvoire / Ivory Coast • 2002 – Robert Guéï, former President of Côte dIvoire • 2002 - Rose Doudou Guéï, wife of Robert Guéï and mother of politicians Franck Guéï and Francis Pėdou Guéï • 2002 – Émile Boga Doudou, interior minister • 2003 – Muhammad Ahmad al-Rashid, Saudi ambassador Egypt • Ahmed Maher Pasha, (1945), Prime Minister of Egypt, in Cairo by Mahmud Issawy • Mahmud Fahmi Nokrashi, (1948), Prime Minister of Egypt, by a member of the Muslim Brotherhood • Hassan al-Banna, (1949), founder of the Muslim Brotherhood • Anwar Sadat, (1981), President of Egypt • Rifaat al-Mahgoub, (1990), speaker of Egyptian parliament • Farag Foda, (1992), Egyptian politician and intellectual Equatorial Guinea • Atanasio Ndongo Miyone, Saturnino Ibongo, Bonifacio Ondó Edu, Armando Balboa, Pastor Torao and many others, (1969), Equatorial Guinean politicians, in murderous crackdown after coup attempt against President Francisco Macías Nguema Ethiopia • Tilahun Gizaw, (1969), Ethiopian student leader The Gambia • Deyda Hydara, (2004), journalist Guinea • Amílcar Cabral, (1973), Pan-African intellectual, in Conakry, Guinea Abudusalam Eduardo 2009 Aissatou Boiro (2012)[1] Kenya • Pio Gama Pinto, (1965), socialist politician • Tom Mboya, (1969), Kenyan politician • Josiah Kariuki, (1975), Kenyan politician • Lawrence Otieno Muga (1987), politician & teacher in Kasipul Kabondo • Robert Ouko, (1990), foreign minister of Kenya • John Kaiser, (2000), missionary (officially recorded as a suicide) • Starlin Arush, (2002), Somali Peace Activist and INGO Worker • Chrispin Odhiambo Mbai,(2005) Kenyan Constitution Review Commissioner • Melitus Mugabe Were,(2008) MP,Embakasi Liberia • William R. Tolbert, Jr., (1980), president of Liberia killed in military coup • Samuel Doe, (1990), president of Liberia Libya • Muammar Gaddafi, (2011), Chairman of the Revolutionary Command Council of Libya killed by NATO supported opposition fighters during Civil War. Madagascar • Radama II of Madagascar, (1863), king of Madagascar. • Richard Ratsimandrava, (1975), president of Madagascar killed just days after taking power in military coup Mozambique • Eduardo Mondlane, (1969), leader of the independentist FRELIMO movement, allegedly killed by the Portuguese branch of Gladio. • Carlos Cardoso, (2000), Mozambican journalist Niger • Ibrahim Baré Maïnassara, (1999), President of Niger Nigeria • Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, (1966), Prime Minister of Nigeria killed during military coup • Alhaji Sir Ahmadu Bello, (1966) • Samuel Akintola, (1966) • Johnson Aguiyi-Ironsi, (1966), military head of state • Adekunle Fajuyi, (1966) • Murtala Ramat Mohammed, (1976), President of Nigeria • Dele Giwa, (1986), journalist • Ken Saro-Wiwa, (1995), activist • Bola Ige, (2001), justice minister of Nigeria • Ganiyu Akanbi Bello, (2014), Yoruba Leader and businessman Rwanda • Dian Fossey, (1985), primatologist, in the province of Ruhengeri; assassination probably planned by Protais Zigiranyirazo • Agathe Uwilingiyimana, (1994), Prime Minister of Rwanda killed one day after genocide began • Juvénal Habyarimana, (1994), His plane was shot out of the sky as it approached Kigali airport, and signalled the start of the Rwandan Genocide. Somalia • Abdirashid Ali Shermarke, (1969), president of Somalia • George Adamson, (1989), British naturalist, at Kora South Africa • 1966 - Hendrik Verwoerd, Prime Minister of South Africa, stabbed in parliament by Dimitri Tsafendas • 1974 - Onkgopotse Tiro, South African student leader, Tiro was assassinated with a parcel bomb while in exile in Botswana. This made him one of the first activists to be assassinated outside of the borders of South Africa. Tiro was buried in Botswana, later reburied in his birth Village Dinokane Near Zeerust • 1977 - Steve Biko, South African anti-apartheid activist, killed in police custody • 1982 - Ruth First, anti-apartheid scholar and wife of Communist party leader Joe Slovo, by pro-apartheid master spy and security policeman Craig Williamson • 1985 - Vernon Nkadimeng, South African dissident • 1988 - Dulcie September, head of the African National Congress in Paris • 1989 - David Webster, Social anthropologist and anti-Apartheid activist • 1993 - Chris Hani, leader of the South African Communist Party • 1993 - Johan Heyns, prominent leader in the Dutch Reformed Church • 2013 - Steve Khululekile, AMCU regional organiser, Rustenburg, North West, 2013[2][3] • 2013 - Nkululeko Gwala, prominent Abahlali baseMjondolo activist, Durban, KwaZulu-Natal, 2013[4][5] Sudan • Cleo Noel Jr, US Chief of Mission to Sudan, shot by Black September terrorists (see 1973 Khartoum diplomatic assassinations) • George Curtis Moore, US Deputy Chief of Mission to Sudan, shot by Black September terrorists (see 1973 Khartoum diplomatic assassinations) • Guy Eid, Belgian Chargé daffaires to Sudan, shot by Black September terrorists (see 1973 Khartoum diplomatic assassinations) • John Granville, diplomat for the United States Agency for International Development, New Years 2008. Tanzania • Abeid Karume, (1972), first President of Zanzibar, First Vice President of Tanzania Togo • Sylvanus Olympio, (1963), first president of independent Togo, in a coup led by dictator Gnassingbé Eyadéma • Tavio Amorin, (1992), socialist leader (shot in Lomé, died in Paris) Tunisia • Khalil Wazir (Abu Jihad), (1988), military leader of the PLO, in Tunis • Salah Khalaf (Abu Iyad), (1991), deputy leader of the PLO killed by Abu Nidal terrorists in Tunis, Tunisia Uganda • Benedicto Kiwanuka, (1972), Chief Justice of Uganda • Janani Luwum, (1977), Archbishop of Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi and Boga-Zaire from 1974 until 1977 Zambia • Herbert Chitepo, (1975), Zimbabwean nationalist leader Zimbabwe • Attati Mpakati, (1983), left-wing Malawian politician WAKE UP as tomorrow it may be YOU!
Posted on: Fri, 12 Sep 2014 10:51:55 +0000

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