Biafran Colt of arm

Biafran Colt of arm
Biafra is my Right

Monday 1 February 2016

African Union Summit Mugabe's Speech



  AFRICAN UNION SUMMIT: ZIMBABWE        PRESIDENT ROBERT MUGABE RANTS AGAINST WHITES, UN,   US PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA JANUARY 31, 2016ANNE SEWELL

As Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe handed over the reins of African Union chairmanship to Chad’s President Idriss Deby on Saturday, he ranted for an hour against whites, former colonists, Westerners, U.S. President Barack Obama and the United Nations.
What was set to be a ten minute speech ended up lasting around an hour instead, with the Zimbabwean president rambling and ranting, while receiving a standing ovation from his peers at the African Union summit.
While the main topic at the African Union summit held Saturday in Addis Adaba, Ethiopia was the critical situation in Burundi, it seems Robert Mugabe had his own agenda.
Despite rumors of his death that did the rounds during his recent vacation in Asia, there wasn’t much wrong with Mugabe as he gave his rousing speech, making UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon squirm in his seat as he spoke out against the UN. Mugabe told the gathered audience at the African Union summit that Africa would walk out of the UN unless it was given permanent representation on the UN Security Council.
Mugabe said, “We have asked and asked and asked for security council reform,” adding Africans are tired of making “hollow speeches” at the UN with no results.
According to Mugabe, only those with white skins were the real members of the UN and that Africans were not and he said if the UN is to survive, “we, Africa must be equal members of the United Nations,” if not one day they would decide “down with the UN” and walk out.
As reported by the IndependentRobert Mugabe did say that Ban Ki-moon is a good man, but he said Africans “can’t make him a fighter.”
“That’s not what your mission was. But we shall fight for our own identity and personality as Africans.”
Imploring Ban to tell the UN that Africans also belong to the world, Mugabe said they “are also human, not ghosts.”
According to Mugabe, the UN’s headquarters “is misplaced” and should not be in New York, but should be represented in a more populous country, such as China, India or even in Africa.
However, as can be heard in the video above, Mugabe said Africans and others are forced to travel to New York and sit there with the “white faces and pink noses next to us – yet how many are they compared to us?”
Mugabe did thank Ban for his efforts in Africa in the fight against Ebola.
Speaking of U.S. President Barack Obama, Mugabe said he is a “puppet of the whites.” He went on to berate whites for the slaving situation, and for “dragging Africans across the ocean” saying those blacks might now seem free – particularly Obama – but they are not.
“But what is he? A voice made to speak their language, to act their act and not our act. They are still superious.”
According to Mugabe, black people in America were still considered to be inferior, living in places like Harlem in New York and suffering from poor education and health care facilities. He talked of how black people are being shot in the streets, “and nobody seems to talk about it, but today instead they still want to talk about us.”
Mugabe drew huge applause from the audience when he stated that even after colonialism, former colonists are still all over Africa, saying, “if not physically, then through NGOs.” He reckoned they are also in Africa as “spies and pretenders.” Mugabe said while some say they are in Africa to help them, even in armed groups in African territories, they are still having an effect on regime change.

image: http://cdn.inquisitr.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/african-union2-670x430.jpg

[Image via AP Photo/Mulugeta Ayene]Mugabe’s speech continued with many reminiscences about the “liberation struggle” in Africa and closed when he finally handed over the chairmanship of the African Union to Chad’s President Idriss Deby, reportedly giving him a mock bang on the head with the chairperson’s gavel as he did so. Mugabe spoke to Deby, saying he will still be around if he wanted to call on him in any way.
“I will still be there – until God says come to join the other angels.”
Before he returned to his seat in the auditorium, Robert Mugabe raised his fist twice in a black power salute to huge applause.
According to the Independent, Mugabe received a standing ovation from those African countries present at the African Union summit with only South African President Jacob Zuma pulling back a little in the ovation. Reportedly Zuma only rose slowly to his feet after almost everyone else in the auditorium had risen.
As reported by The Star, Ban Ki-moon spoke out at the African Union summit against African leaders who cling to power, saying those leaders should not use legal loopholes or undemocratic constitutional changes to “cling to power” and that they should respect term limits.
This statement could have been aimed directly at the Zimbabwean President himself as Robert Mugabe, who turns 91 in February, has been president of Zimbabwe since December 22, 1987. SHARE248
We have nothing against the 

ordinary people of Britain. 

What we reject is the supremacist view of their government which believes it has a right to interfere in our domestic affairs. This supremacist view can be seen at play around the world. Most recently, they sought to influence the Kenyan elections by warning that "certain choices have consequences." The Kenyans rightly ignored them.

In their supremacist quest for global dominion we have seen them in Iraq, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iran, Venezuela, Yemen, Syria, Egypt, Libya and the Congo. 

The Brazilians have no such ambitions, nor do the Koreans nor Japanese. It is only the West that wants to be the matron of the world, deciding who will rule in Libya, who will rule in Kenya, who will rule in Zimbabwe. We say no to that. 

We are not a British colony and they must keep out. If we decide to give our land to pig and dogs, the right to make that decision is ours.
Today we felt like sharing something about one of greatest sons of Africa
Biography of Thomas Sankara.
Thomas Sankara was Burkina Faso’s president from August 1983 until his assassination on October 15, 1987. Perhaps, more than any other African president in living memory, Thomas Sankara, in four years, transformed Burkina Faso from a poor country, dependent on aid, to an economically independent and socially progressive nation.
Thomas Sankara began by purging the deeply entrenched bureaucratic and institutional corruption in Burkina Faso.
He slashed the salaries of ministers and sold off the fleet of exotic cars in the president’s convoy, opting instead for the cheapest brand of car available in Burkina Faso, Renault 5. His salary was $450 per month and he refused to use the air conditioning units in his office, saying that he felt guilty doing so, since very few of his country people could afford it.
Thomas Sankara would not let his portrait be hung in offices and government institutions in Burkina Faso, because every Burkinabe is a Thomas Sankara, he declared. Sankara changed the name of the country from the colonially imposed Upper Volta to Burkina Faso, which means land of upright men.
Thomas Sankara’s achievements are numerous and can only be summarized briefly; within the first year of his leadership, Sankara embarked on an unprecedented mass vaccination program that saw 2.5 million Burkinabe children vaccinated. From an alarming 280 deaths for every 1,000 births, infant mortality was immediately slashed to below 145 deaths per 1,000 live births. Sankara preached self-reliance, he banned the importation of several items into Burkina Faso, and encouraged the growth of the local industry. It was not long before Burkinabes were wearing 100% cotton sourced, woven and tailored in Burkina Faso. From being a net importer of food, Thomas Sankara began to aggressively promote agriculture in Burkina Faso, telling his country people to quit eating imported rice and grain from Europe, said, “let us consume what we ourselves control,” he emphasized.
In less than 4 years, Burkina Faso became self-sufficient in foods production through the redistribution of lands from the hands of corrupt chiefs and land owners to local farmers, and through massive irrigation and fertilizer distribution programs. Thomas Sankara utilized various policies and government assistance to encourage Burkinabes to get education. In less than two years as a president, school attendance jumped from about 10% to a little below 25%, thus overturning the 90% illiteracy rate he met upon assumption of office.
Living way ahead of his time, within 12 months of his leadership, Sankara vigorously pursued a reforestation program that saw over 10 million trees planted around the country in order to push back the encroachment of the Sahara Desert. Uncommon at the time he lived, Sankara stressed women empowerment and campaigned for the dignity of women in a traditional patriarchal society. He also employed women in several government positions and declared a day of solidarity with housewives by mandating their husbands to take on their roles for 24 hours.
A personal fitness enthusiast, Sankara encouraged Burkinabes to be fitted and was regularly seen jogging unaccompanied on the streets of Ouagadougou; his waistline remained the same throughout his tenure as president.
In 1987, during a meeting of African leaders under the auspices of the Organization of African Unity, Thomas Sankara tried to convince his peers to turn their backs on the debt owed western nations. According to him, “debt is a cleverly managed reconquest of Africa. It is a reconquest that turns each one of us into a financial slave.” He would not request for, nor accept aid from the west, noting that “…welfare and aid policies have only ended up disorganizing us, subjugating us, and robbing us of a sense of responsibility for our own economic, political, and cultural affairs. We chose to risk new paths to achieve greater well-being.”
Thomas Sankara was a pan-Africanist who spoke out against apartheid, telling French President Jacques Chirac, during his visit to Burkina Faso, that it was wrong for him to support the apartheid government and that he must be ready to bear the consequences of his actions. Sankara’s policies and his unapologetic anti-imperialist stand made him an enemy of France, Burkina Faso’s former colonial master. He spoke truth to power fearlessly and paid with his life. Upon his assassination, his most valuable possessions were a car, a refrigerator, three guitars, motorcycles, a broken down freezer and about $400 in cash.
Few young Africans have ever heard of Thomas Sankara. In reality, it is not the assassination of Thomas Sankara that has dealt a lethal blowed to Africa and Africans; it is the assassination of his memory, as manifested in the indifference to his legacy, in the lack of constant reference to his ideals and ideas by Africans, by those who know and those who should know. Among physical and mental dirt and debris lie Africa’s heroes while the younger generations search in vain for role models from among their kind. Africans have therefore, internalized self-abhorrence and the convictions of innate incapability to bring about transformation. Transformation must runs contrary to the African’s DNA, many Africans subconsciously believe.
Africans are not given to celebrating their own heroes, but this must change. It is a colonial legacy that was instituted to establish the inferiority of the colonized and justify colonialism. It was a strategic policy that ensured that Africans celebrated the heroes of their colonial masters, but not that of Africa. Fifty years and counting after colonialism ended, Africa’s curriculum must now be redrafted to reflect the numerous achievements of Africans.
The present generation of Africans is thirsty, searching for where to draw the moral, intellectual and spiritual courage to effect change. The waters to quench the thirst, as other continents have already established, lies fundamentally in history - in Africa’s forbears, men, women and children who experienced much of what most Africans currently experience, but who chose to toe a different path. The media, entertainment industry, civil society groups, writers, institutions and organizations must begin to search out and include African role models, case studies and examples in their contents.
For Africans, the strength desperately needed for the transformation of the continent cannot be drawn from World Bank and IMF policies, from aid and assistance obtained from China, India, the United States or Europe. The strength to transform Africa lies in the foundations laid by uncommon heroes like Thomas Sankara; a man who showed Africa and the world that with a single minded pursuit of purpose, the worst can be made the best, and in record time too.
LETTER TO WHITE 

MEN... FROM 

ROBERT 

MUGABE THE 

president of Zimbabwe
Dear white men, U asked us to wear coats under hot sun, we did.
U said we should speak your language, we have obediently ignored ours.
U asked us to always tie a rope around our necks like goats, we have obeyed without questioning.
U asked our ladies to wear dead people's hair instead of the natural hair God gave to them, they have obeyed.
U said we should marry just one woman in the midst of
plenty black angels, we reluctantly agreed.
You said our decent girls should wear catapults instead of the conventional pants, they have obeyed.
You asked us to use rubber in order to control our birth rate, we agreed.....
Now U want our MEN to sleep with fellow MEN & WOMEN with fellow WOMEN so that God would punish us like Sodom and Gomorrah?
we say No!!
We don't agree with U this time! Proudly African, we say a huge NO to GAY relationships and LESBIAN.
Robert Mugabe
If U say NO to HOMOSEXUALS & LESBIANS type NO!!!. This old man is something else.

When You Fail To 
Listen To Your People 
You Contact Ear 
Disease, Mugabe 
Mocks Buhari
June 15, 2016  
Following the current ear infection of the Nigerian President, Mahammadu Buhari, which has attracted so much public discussion, the Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe has in turn mocked Buhari, said, when you fail to listen to your people you contacts ear problem.
The Zimbabwean Presitent, Robert Mugabe, in a Media chat cracked a joke in the middle of a conversation in reference to the current ear infection of the Nigerian President, Muhammadu Buhari.
He said, it is my duty and obligation to listen to ordinary Zimbabweans, because as a leader when you don’t listen to your people you contact ear Disease.

GEN Buhari has proved that the problem of Nigeria is not corruption but ethnicity and religious bigotry, by retiring military officers from the eastern region- Robert Mugabe
THE ROBERT 
MUGABE ALLEGED 
40 quotes...
1. Any man who successfully convinces a monkey that honey is sweeter than banana, is capable of selling condoms to a Roman father.
2. Dear ladies, If your boyfriend didn't wish you a happy mother's day or sing sweet mother for you, you should stop breastfeeding him.
3. He who swallows a complete coconut have
absolute trust in his anus.
4. Dear sisters, don't be deceived by a man who text you "I miss you" only when it's raining, because you are not an umbrella.
5. Swimming pool is more useful than Liverpool.
6. If over 15 guys have sucked your breasts, you don't need to call those things "your breasts", It's called COW BELL, OUR MILK! - Repeat after me, OUR MILK!
7. It's hard to bewitch African girls these days. Every time you take a piece from her hair to the witch doctor, either a Brazilian innocent woman gets mad or a factory in China catches fire.
8. All I hear always is, 'No sex before marriage?' If that was God's plan, then you would receive your penis or vagina on your wedding day.
9. The only warning Africans take serious is LOW BATTERY.
10. Men sucking lady's breast is normal because the act was learnt in childhood when they were young but the act of lady's sucking men's d*ck is what baffles me, where did they learn it from?
11. Whenever things seem to start going well in your life, the Devil comes along and gives you a 'girlfriend'.
12. When your clothes are made of cassava leaves, you don't take a goat as a friend.
13. If you have attended over 100 weddings in your life and still single, you are not different from a Canopy.
14. Dating a slim/slender guy is cool. The problem is when you are lying on his chest then his ribs draw adidas lines on your face.
15. If you are ugly, you are ugly. Stop talking about inner beauty because men don't walk around with X-rays to see inner beauty.
16. Respect pregnant women because it's not easy walking around with evidence that you've had sex.
17. Some of the girls of today can't even jog for 5 minutes but they expect a guy to last in bed with you for 2 hours? Your level of selfishness demands a one week crusade.
18. I stopped trusting ladies when my class 3 girlfriend left me for another boy all because he bought a sharpener wid a mirror.
19. Nothing makes a woman more confused than being in a relationship with a "broke" man who's extremely good in bed.
20. Witchcraft is when a 24 year old girl who cannot jog for 5 minutes expects a 40 year old man to last for 1 hour in bed.
21. Being dumped by a dark-skinned girl is the worst thing ever; because anytime you get home and see charcoal, you become emotional.
22. Women with beauty and no brains, it is your private parts will suffer the most.
23. When one's goat gets missing, the aroma of a neighbour's soup gets suspicious.
24. Its better for a man to be stingy with his money because he hustled for it than a woman to deny you a hole she didn't drill.
25. Even Satan wasn't gay, he approached naked Eve instead of naked Adam. Say no to same-sex marriage.
26. If you are a married man and you find yourself attracted to school girls, just buy your wife a school uniform.
27. It is every man's dream to remove a woman's pant one day but NOT when it's on a drying line.
28. Virginity is the best wedding gift any man would receive from his newly wed wife but lately, there's nothing as such any-longer because it'll have already been given out as a Birthday gift, token of Appreciation, Job assurance, Church collection, Examination marking schemes & for Lorry fares!"
29. Treat every part of your towel nicely because the part that wipes your buttocks today will wipe your face tomorrow.
30. We are living in a generation where people “in love” are free to touch each others’ private parts but cannot touch each others’ phones because they’re private.”
31. Sometimes you look back at girls you spent money on rather than send it to your mum and you realise witchcraft is real.
32. If President Barack Obama wants me to allow marriage for same-sex couples in my country (Zimbabwe), he must come here so that I marry him first.
33. South Africans will kick down a statue of a dead white man but won’t even attempt to slap a live one. Yet they can stone to death a black man simply because he’s a foreigner.
34. What is the problem? We now have aeroplanes which can take them back quicker than the ships used by their ancestors.
35. Mr Bush, Mr. Blair and now Mr Brown's sense of human rights precludes our people's right to their God-given resources, which in their view must be controlled by their kith and kin. I am termed dictator because I have rejected this supremacist view and frustrated the neo-colonialists.
36. Cigarette is a pinch of tobacco rolled in a piece of paper with fire on one end and a fool on the other end.
37. A brave man is he who has a running stomach and still wants to flatulate.
38. Journalist: Sir don't you think 89 years would be a great time to retire as a President.
Mugabe: Have you ever asked the Queen this question or is it just for African leaders?
39. Interviewer: Mr President, when are you bidding the people of Zimbabwe farewell?
Robert: Where are they going?

40. My dear ladies, please don't buy a selfie stick when your armpit itself needs a shaving stick.


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