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The Spearhead

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Africa's story. Africa's terms.

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Niger To Provide 1000 Affordable Housing Units To Citizens, Near Completing First Batch The Nigerien government is set to deliver 1000 affordable housing units to the people of Niger as part of its Cité de la Refondation (“City of Refoundation”) social housing initiative, launched in 2024 by the administration of Nigerien President Abdourahmane Tchiani. As of April 10, 2026, the first batch of 400 homes is near completion. The Cité de la Refondation initiative comes amid many bold steps forward for the once economically and politically stagnant West African nation, since it severed ties with former colonizer France in 2023. As a member of the Alliance of Sahel States (AES), Niger has faced relentless attacks by Western-backed terrorists, economic isolation and sovereignty violations by Western-aligned African states, and endless slander from Western and Western-aligned media. Despite these externally-imposed challenges, the country and its fellow AES members, Mali and Burkina Faso, have continued to record economic and political wins. All 3 nations have pointed to France as a key sponsor of terror in the Sahel – a claim which has been corroborated by their international allies – and France itself, along with its fellow Western nations, has made no bones about its intentions to revive its dwindling influence in Africa, and in so doing, shore up its own presently crumbling economy. Recall that on March 11, 2026, the European Parliament called for the release of French-backed former Nigerien President Mohamed Bazoum, who was detained in 2023 by the Tchiani administration for his crimes against the Nigerien people.

The Spearhead

204,869 просмотров • 1 месяц назад

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The 1994 Rwandan Genocide remains a dark chapter in Africa’s modern history. More than 800,000 men, women and children perished in less than 4 months, their fates sealed by decades of carefully-nurtured colonial divisions. The United Nations (UN) had sent a peacekeeping mission to the country the previous year, but pulled out as soon as the killings began, having reportedly ignored all the early warning signs. It had also reportedly ordered troops to prioritize non-Africans in their evacuation efforts. In this excerpt from a 2025 interview with journalist Kafui Dey, retired Ghanaian Major-General Henry Kwami Anyidoho recounts his defiant decision, as commanding officer of the Ghanaian contingent of the peacekeeping mission, to stay behind and protect lives during the genocide, even as the non-African contingents on the same mission - which included Belgium and Bangladesh - pulled out almost immediately. Major-General Anyidoho and his platoon are credited with saving the lives of over 30,000 Rwandans at the country's darkest hour. This was by some distance the single most powerful external intervention in the course of this dark chapter of Rwandan history. This story, which has been systematically ignored and suppressed in most global media coverage of the Rwandan genocide, is a powerful reminder that the most potent and powerful positive interventions in Africa come from Africans themselves - not from foreign saviors

The Spearhead

469,864 просмотров • 7 месяцев назад

US President Donald Trump's threat to deploy the US military into Nigeria "guns-a-blazing" has received unlikely support from within Nigeria itself. Many in Nigeria hold an erroneous belief that a US military invasion of Nigeria would result in enhanced protection of local lives and stabilisation of currently insecure areas. These ideas, which are the results of decades of unrelenting Western neo-colonial influence over Nigeria’s porous educational, religious, and media spaces, are naïve and dangerous. More importantly, they are completely wrong and ahistorical. The historical record of what US military invasion actually mean on the ground where it happens, tells a devastating story of indiscriminate brutality, widespread sexual violence, gratuitous destruction, and an aftermath of physical and cultural ruin, alongside scars that never heal. In this video, you can listen to a so-called war veteran of the US-led invasion of Iraq bragging about making “hajis” (ethnic slur used by US soldiers to refer to Iraqis and Afghans) bark and walk around like dogs. “The CIA showed us a lot of sh*t,” he says. He proudly recounts witnessing a US soldier r*ping an “untouched 15 year-old haji” and pimping her out to other US soldiers for $50 a turn, which earned him $500 before she hung herself - an outcome that he seemed very cheerful about, judging by his mirth. These events took place in the wider context of the 2003 US invasion of Iraq, following the so-called 9/11 terror attacks. After less than a month of the so-called ‘Shock and Awe’ invasion strategy, the country lay in ruins. US President George Bush promised a swift exit, but Iraq remained under official occupation until 2011, and even now still hosts 9 permanent US military bases and at least 2,500 US soldiers permanently stationed on its soil. It wasn’t just Iraq. This has happened everywhere US jackboots have been. In September 2025, 117 South Korean women filed a human rights lawsuit against the US military, having been lured to US military bases with promises of jobs as bartenders, and then imprisoned in state-sanctioned brothels that serviced US troops in the 1960s and 1970s. Your country could be next.
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US President Donald Trump's threat to deploy the US military into Nigeria "guns-a-blazing" has received unlikely support from within Nigeria itself. Many in Nigeria hold an erroneous belief that a US military invasion of Nigeria would result in enhanced protection of local lives and stabilisation of currently insecure areas. These ideas, which are the results of decades of unrelenting Western neo-colonial influence over Nigeria’s porous educational, religious, and media spaces, are naïve and dangerous. More importantly, they are completely wrong and ahistorical. The historical record of what US military invasion actually mean on the ground where it happens, tells a devastating story of indiscriminate brutality, widespread sexual violence, gratuitous destruction, and an aftermath of physical and cultural ruin, alongside scars that never heal. In this video, you can listen to a so-called war veteran of the US-led invasion of Iraq bragging about making “hajis” (ethnic slur used by US soldiers to refer to Iraqis and Afghans) bark and walk around like dogs. “The CIA showed us a lot of sh*t,” he says. He proudly recounts witnessing a US soldier r*ping an “untouched 15 year-old haji” and pimping her out to other US soldiers for $50 a turn, which earned him $500 before she hung herself - an outcome that he seemed very cheerful about, judging by his mirth. These events took place in the wider context of the 2003 US invasion of Iraq, following the so-called 9/11 terror attacks. After less than a month of the so-called ‘Shock and Awe’ invasion strategy, the country lay in ruins. US President George Bush promised a swift exit, but Iraq remained under official occupation until 2011, and even now still hosts 9 permanent US military bases and at least 2,500 US soldiers permanently stationed on its soil. It wasn’t just Iraq. This has happened everywhere US jackboots have been. In September 2025, 117 South Korean women filed a human rights lawsuit against the US military, having been lured to US military bases with promises of jobs as bartenders, and then imprisoned in state-sanctioned brothels that serviced US troops in the 1960s and 1970s. Your country could be next.

The Spearhead

418,894 просмотров • 7 месяцев назад