
K.Diallo ☭
@nyeusi_waasi • 53,010 subscribers
I am really starting to believe what Frantz Fanon said that being African will always be a struggle ✊🏿
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Every year, hundreds of Congolese workers are killed in mines due to deadly working conditions, while the major industrial powers show no concern for their lives, focusing solely on plundering Congo’s wealth in cobalt, copper, and gold for enormous profits. Neoliberal capitalism's is a machinery of death. And it cannot be reformed.
K.Diallo ☭895,029 次观看 • 6 个月前

"My name is Emmanuel, and I am a citizen of the Democratic Republic of Congo. This war has affected everyone. We return to our homes without even water, while banks and the airport remain closed. If they were reopened, people’s lives could truly be saved. Before the city was occupied by the M23 militia, backed by Rwanda, meat was available in the markets during the holidays. Today, however, we are dying of hunger,"
K.Diallo ☭280,788 次观看 • 5 个月前

In the Democratic Republic of Congo, on Friday, December 5, a helicopter carrying European mercenaries crashed into Lake Tanganyika while traveling from Uvira in South Kivu to Kalemie in Tanganyika Province. This raises the question: why don’t ECOWAS or African Union defense forces respond as swiftly to threats against security and safety in West Africa as they did today in Benin?
K.Diallo ☭134,472 次观看 • 6 个月前

don't turn a blind eye to what's happening in the congo. While Western Media remains quite with zero reports on this genocide. It is our duty to spread awareness and respost stories told by the brave Congolese photographers and journalists on the ground about what's happening. 🇨🇩
K.Diallo ☭512,592 次观看 • 2 年前

Today the COP30 climate conference in Brazil witnessed large-scale protests organized by Indigenous peoples both inside and outside the conference venue. The protesters voiced their opposition to international climate policies that marginalize their rights and lands. They argue that their representation in these conferences is often merely symbolic, with little real influence over environmental and climate decision-making, despite being the traditional guardians of the rainforest and among the most affected by climate change. The Indigenous population in Brazil is estimated at around 900,000 people, spread across more than 300 ethnic and linguistic groups, most of whom live in the Amazon region. This region accounts for over half of Brazil's rainforest and is one of the most important ecosystems in the world. These communities play a crucial role in preserving biodiversity and protecting forests from deforestation, which is often driven by mining projects, commercial agriculture, and logging companies. The protesters demand that Indigenous peoples be granted genuine legal and political rights in environmental decision-making, emphasizing that their lands are not commodities to be sold or financial instruments like carbon credits. They strongly criticize so-called carbon markets and environmental governance funds, which are often used as a cover by multinational corporations to continue exploiting natural resources under the guise of environmental protection, without respecting local communities and their rights. At the same time, several African countries, including the Democratic Republic of Congo, Uganda, Mozambique, Angola, Kenya, and South Africa, have seen widespread protests against carbon markets. These markets grant enormous privileges to multinational corporations to take control of local lands and increase demand for natural resources such as cobalt used in electric car batteries, a sector that often relies on child labor and resource exploitation in conflict zones. The protesters also criticize greenwashing, the practice by which companies use tools such as carbon offsets, green investments, and environmental and social governance funds to market themselves as sustainable and ethical, while continuing to exploit cheap labor and pollute the environment without accountability. Protests in Brazil and Africa represent a single face of green capitalism, a system that reproduces the logic of old colonialism: the Global South bears the greatest burden of climate change and the responsibility to protect the planet, while the wealthy Global North continues to pollute and profit.
K.Diallo ☭133,452 次观看 • 6 个月前

وصول السفينة الأولى ضمن أسطول «كسر الحصار عن كوبا»، محملة بمساعدات إنسانية الي العاصمة هافانا، وعلى متنها نحو 30 متطوعًا من دول مختلفة. وتعد الأولى من بين ثلاث سفن يُتوقع وصولها تباعًا إلى كوبا، في إطار جهود مواجهة السياسات الفاشية التي تنتهجها إدارة ترامب، والتي تسهم في تقويض إمدادات الطاقة والغذاء والدواء، على نحو يفضي إلى إبادة جماعية صامتة بحق الشعب الكوبي.
K.Diallo ☭54,446 次观看 • 2 个月前

STATEMENT BY THE VENEZUELA SOLIDARITY CAMPAIGN IN NIGERIA (VSCN) ON IMPERIALIST AGGRESSION AGAINST VENEZUELA AND THE SAFETY OF PRESIDENT NICOLÁS MADURO The Venezuela Solidarity Campaign in Nigeria condemns in the strongest possible terms the reported multiple air strikes by the United States against the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela. This criminal act of imperialist aggression represents yet another violent attempt by U.S. imperialism to crush a sovereign nation that dares to resist domination, exploitation, and neoliberal control. The alarming uncertainty surrounding the whereabouts and safety of President Nicolás Maduro following these attacks underscores the reckless and lawless nature of this aggression. Targeting a sovereign state and its leadership through military force is not diplomacy it is terrorism at the level of states. This attack is not about “democracy” or “human rights.” It is about oil, control, and punishing a people who refuse to bow to imperial dictates. History has shown from Iraq to Libya, from Afghanistan to Latin America that U.S. military intervention brings only death, destruction, chaos, and permanent instability. Venezuela is the latest target in this long and bloody record of imperial violence. As Nigerians and Africans, we recognize this playbook. We have lived through colonialism, proxy wars, and foreign interference disguised as “humanitarian intervention.” We therefore stand firmly with the people of Venezuela and their right to self-determination, sovereignty, and resistance. We demand: An immediate halt to all U.S. military attacks and threats against Venezuela; Full and transparent information on the safety and whereabouts of President Nicolás Maduro; The lifting of all illegal sanctions and economic warfare imposed on the Venezuelan people; Accountability for violations of international law and crimes against humanity committed through military aggression. Venezuela’s future must be determined by Venezuelans alone—free from bombs, sanctions, threats, and coercion. We call on the Nigerian government, the African Union, and progressive governments of the Global South to break their silence and openly oppose this act of imperialist violence. Silence in the face of aggression is complicity. We urge workers, students, trade unions, youth movements, and revolutionary forces across Africa and world to rise in solidarity with Venezuela. An injury to one oppressed nation is an injury to all. The struggle of Venezuela is part of the global struggle against imperialism, exploitation, and domination. Hands off Venezuela! Down with imperialism! Long live international solidarity! Viva la Revolución Bolivariana! Issued by: Venezuela Solidarity Campaign in Nigeria (VSCN) Date: 3rd January, 2026
K.Diallo ☭97,358 次观看 • 5 个月前

It still astonishes me that a thinker in the mid nineteenth century could map out patterns that feel so present today. Marx suggested that capitalism frames itself as a world of free agreement, signed contracts, business partnerships, and coordinated production that appears orderly and cooperative. At first glance it gives the impression of fairness and mutual benefit. Yet beneath that composed surface there are profound imbalances. Some people possess meaningful alternatives while others are cornered into limited choices. Resources are controlled rather than shared, and the burdens of risk do not fall evenly. What presents itself as mutual exchange often rests on unequal power. The structure appears balanced, but it functions through built in inequality.
K.Diallo ☭57,119 次观看 • 3 个月前