Moussa Ibrahim (@_moussa_ibrahim) 's Twitter Profile
Moussa Ibrahim

@_moussa_ibrahim

The English-Language Page of the Pan-Africanist Libyan Politician, Journalist and Novelist.

ID: 191287496

linkhttps://www.facebook.com/Moussa.ibrahim.english calendar_today16-09-2010 02:13:06

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Torrential rains destroyed entire villages in Mokwa, displacing thousands. As usual, Western aid agencies are already writing the narrative of “help.” But real help begins with local water infrastructure, community control over rivers, and land rights for African farmers.

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U.S. Africa Command just wrapped up another Chiefs of Defense Conference in Nairobi, reinforcing AFRICOM’s grip on African militaries. Our sovereignty is sold every time we shake hands with foreign generals. African security alliances must exclude Western troops.

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While AFRICOM expands, African defense leaders meet—but to serve whose interests? The U.S. narrative says “regional stability.” We know it’s control. We call not for partnership, but for Pan‑African defense solidarity—by Africans and for Africans. soundcloud.com/africa-regiona…

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Half of sub-Saharan Africa lives in states classified as “fragile and conflict-affected,” per IMF. The solution? Not more IMF debt or Western training missions. We need participatory governance, public investment, and African institutions to heal our divisions.

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African smallholder farmers are being squeezed by AfCFTA rules and Malabo Protocol shifts—according to recent reports—risking seed sovereignty and food justice. A free trade zone that ruins farmers is not liberation. afsafrica.org/new-report-afc…

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A U.S. General just named AFRICOM’s next commander—keeping American military influence fixed over our continent. Colonialism didn’t end; it’s repackaged as “security.” Africa’s security should be assured by Africans alone. eurasiareview.com/09062025-us-af…

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UNICEF warns of disease outbreaks in flood‑hit communities. Yet the real vaccine is African investment in public health—not relying on Western NGOs to swoop in after disaster. Build clinics, train nurses, fund research—for Africans, by Africans. reuters.com/sustainability…

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As the world celebrates African famines, external actors position themselves as saviors. Enough. Africans must reclaim our narrative. We need climate‑resilient crops, local food systems, a continental early‑warning system—and no strings attached. reuters.com/business/envir…

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When Kwame Nkrumah said “Africa must unite or perish,” he wasn’t dreaming—he was warning. The OAU wasn’t created out of diplomacy—it was born from the blood of Lumumba, the betrayal of Ghana, the fire of liberation wars. Our future depends on finishing what they started.

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The Portuguese colonies—Guinea-Bissau, Angola, Mozambique—only broke free when armed struggle united peasants, workers, women, and exiles. Amílcar Cabral taught us: “Unity is a weapon.” That’s not metaphor. That’s survival.

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Patrice Lumumba’s murder wasn’t just about Congo—it was about sabotaging African unity. The CIA feared a united Africa more than a Soviet Africa. That’s why we must never separate the question of sovereignty from the demand for unity.

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Thomas Sankara fused national liberation with continental solidarity. He called for the end of IMF domination, stood with the ANC and Polisario, and planted trees in solidarity with Mozambique. Unity wasn’t a slogan—it was policy, practice, principle.

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Gaddafi dreamed of a United States of Africa, not for glory—but for survival. He warned that foreign armies, foreign currencies, and foreign ideologies would return if we failed to unite. Today’s crises prove he was right.

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In the early hours of today, Israel launched a deadly assault on Iran—bombing nuclear sites, killing civilians, and dragging the region closer to all-out war. But this isn’t just about Israel and Iran—it’s about imperialism using one state as a permanent strike base against the

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Global South: we cannot be silent. Israel operates as a functional imperial state—dividing us, destabilizing our regions, serving Western agendas. Today we must unite—condemn this attack, end Western-sponsored aggression, and reject all forms of neocolonial violence.

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When Israel calls these strikes “preemptive self-defense,” ask: whose orders are they following? With U.S. coordination and Mossad sabotage, this is Western imperialism. It’s a strike on sovereignty—and a signal to all Global South nations.

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Iran is one of the last sovereign states in West Asia refusing to kneel before NATO. No US bases. No IMF chains. No normalization with apartheid Israel. For this defiance, it’s sanctioned, attacked, and demonized. But in truth, it's a frontline of the Global South.

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While others privatize, dollarize, and sell out to Western banks, Iran builds parallel systems—barter trade, regional currencies, energy deals outside the dollar. It's not perfect. But it's a fight for economic freedom. Africa must watch and learn.

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Anti-imperialist resistance in Iraq, Lebanon and Yemen could not survive without Iran’s unwavering support. Tehran’s arms aren’t just weapons—they’re lifelines of anti-colonial struggle across the region. Iran arms the Global South where the West arms apartheid.

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Since 1979, Iran's revolution has been a cry: “ No to Colonialism.” Against monarchy, Zionism, and U.S. domination. While many states gave up, Iran stayed loud. Its resistance isn’t just political—it’s a reminder that liberation is still possible.