Noticias y Política
#UNpeacebuildingNG #ShiftingthenarrativeNGFulani farmers crisis in Benue state Nigeria. (Full length) Building a peace narrative.
The relationship between farmers and the Fulanis herdsmen in Nigeria's middle belt region is one that has been disfigured in a lot of ways. Both people need eachother especially the Fulanis that need water and green grass for their cattle to feed on. The Fulani farmers crisis in Benue state is hindering this reality. The Fulanis are cattle breeders that move their cattle herds from the sahel savannah to the savannah region of Benue state, Nassarawa and Taraba states in search of water and green pastures for them to feed .And the inhabitants of Benue state are largely farmers.
In the course of this search for greener pastures, their cattle graze into the farmland of the locals and this leads to fighting between the farmers and the Fulanis leading to the Fulani farmers crisis in Benue stateIn this documentary project in partnership with the UNDP we visited the affected Communities to bring a peace building narrative in other that peace might return to the region.
The standards of education in Nigeria have fallen so far, so fast and drastic action is needed to halt the slide as far as a retired professor of history Banji Akintoye is concerned. He shares his thoughts about the state of education and the drastic actions needed to halt the slide. He also shares his concerns about the state of the Yoruba nation, in this interview with Newsnight. https://www.channelstv.com/#ChannelsTv
Afrocentricity International [Ama Mazama et Molefi Asante]
The Hate That Hate Produced is a television documentary about Black Nationalism in America, focusing on the Nation of Islam and, to a lesser extent, the United African Nationalist Movement. It was produced in 1959 by Mike Wallace and Louis Lomax.In 1959, Wallace and Lomax were television journalists for News Beat, a program on WNTA-TV in New York. Lomax told Wallace about the Nation of Islam, and Wallace became interested in the group. Lomax, who was African American, was given rare access to the organization. Accompanied by two white camera operators, Lomax conducted interviews with the Nation's leaders and filmed some of its events. The Hate That Hate Produced was broadcast in five parts during the week of July 13–17, 1959, and was repeated several days later.
Mhenga Khalid Muhammad: On Donahue [1994]
Mhenga Malcolm X: Speaks to SNCC Youth Workers from McComb, Mississippi
[31 December 1964]
Mhenga Malcolm X: Interviewed by Irv Kupcinet [1965]
Mhenga Khalid Muhammad: Police Brutality
John Pilger: Apartheid Did Not Die [1998]
Mhenga Kwame Ture: The Fundamentals of Unity for Black People