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Benin Citizenship: Concrete Steps for Abibifoɔ ‘Black People’
Benin Citizenship: Concrete Steps for Abibifoɔ ‘Black People’ Ọbádélé Kambon 80 Views • 1 year ago

⁣Description🌍 Claim Your Rightful Place in Abibiman: Benin Citizenship for the Diaspora
Abibifoɔ ‘Black People’ from the Diaspora—it’s time to reclaim your legacy and establish your rightful place in Abibiman ‘The Land of Black People’. The Republic of Benin is offering a tangible and accessible pathway to citizenship specifically designed for those in the Diaspora ready to reconnect, repatriate, and rebuild.
Are you prepared to take the next step toward true Abibifahodie ‘Black Liberation’? This is your opportunity to secure a place in the land of your Ancestors, backed by legal recognition and full citizenship rights.
Join Sis Reign for a powerful, informative session that will break down everything you need to know about acquiring Beninese citizenship. This presentation will cover:
✅ Requirements: Who qualifies, documentation needed, and preparatory steps.
✅ Process: A step-by-step walkthrough of the application journey, including important timelines and requirements.
✅ Benefits: What citizenship in Benin offers—rights, privileges, opportunities for land ownership, business establishment, cultural integration, and more.
Don’t miss this chance to reclaim your birthright and connect with the larger movement of Abibifoɔ ‘Black People’ building a future rooted in unity, identity, and Abibifahodie ‘Black Liberation’.
📅 Date: April 6, 2025
🕒 Time: 2 PM GMT
📍 Where: Online via Abibitumi.com
REGISTER NOW to reserve your spot and receive exclusive resources to make your repatriation journey successful.

The environmental disaster fuelled by used clothes and fast fashion | Foreign Correspondent
The environmental disaster fuelled by used clothes and fast fashion | Foreign Correspondent Kwabena Ofori Osei 56 Views • 3 years ago

The dark side of the world’s fashion addiction. Many of our old clothes, donated
to charities, end up in rotting textile mountains in West Africa. This is a story
about how our waste is creating an environmental disaster.

Have you ever thought about what happens to your old clothes after you drop them off at the
op shop? It might be time to start, because these goodwill gestures are helping to fuel an environmental catastrophe on the other side of the world.

When charities in Australia can’t sell donated clothing, tonnes of it ends up being exported to
countries like Ghana, in West Africa. Ship after ship docks every week with bales from Europe,
the US, China and Australia.

They call them ‘Dead White Man’s Clothes’. Once they arrive in Ghana, they’re taken to the
bustling Kantamanto markets in the capital Accra and from here, they make their way to
villages and towns across the country.

The industry provides jobs for thousands of people, like Asare Asamoah, a successful importer.
He brings in clothes, mainly from the United Kingdom, and if they’re good quality, he can make
a decent living.

But it’s risky business. He has to pay upfront for a bale and never knows whether it’s trash or
treasure. With cheap, fast fashion flooding the world, the quality of the clothes arriving in
Ghana is getting worse and worse.

‘Sometimes you’ve gone and bought something, then you don’t get what you want’, says
Asamoah. ‘Then you lose your money.”

And there’s a dark side to this industry.

Correspondent Linton Besser travels to Ghana to uncover the dirty secret behind the world’s
fashion addiction.

While 60 per cent of imported fashion items are reused and resold, 40 per cent are rubbish,
creating an environmental catastrophe for this poor nation.

With the main dumpsite for textile waste now full, unregulated dumpsites ring the city. These
fetid clothes mountains are often set on fire, filling the skies with acrid smoke.

‘It is totally a disservice to us in this part of the world because we have become sort of the
dumping ground for the textile waste that is produced from Europe, from the Americas”, says
Accra’s waste manager, Solomon Noi.

Emmanuel Ajaab imports used clothes from Australia but he despairs at the poor quality of the
clothes that arrive. From a bale of about 200 garments, he finds only seven he can resell at a
good price.

“In Europe and UK and Australia, America, they think Africa here, sorry to say, we are not like a
human being”, he tells Foreign Correspondent.

The dumped textiles also get swept up in the monsoonal rains and end up choking the city’s
waterways and beaches, posing a danger to fishermen and aquatic life. Liz Ricketts, who runs
an NGO campaigning for awareness of Ghana's textile waste crisis, lays the blame at the feet
of international fashion houses.

“Waste is a part of the business model of fashion. A lot of brands overproduce by up to 40 per
cent”, says Ricketts.

Noi begs the people who donate their clothes to think twice about where they end up.

“If they come here, like you've come, and you see the practicality for yourself, then they will
know that, no, we better take care of these things within our country and not to ship that
problem to cause problems to other people.”

About Foreign Correspondent:
Foreign Correspondent is the prime-time international public affairs program on Australia's national broadcaster, ABC-TV. We produce half-hour duration in-depth reports for broadcast across the ABC's television channels and digital platforms. Since 1992, our teams have journeyed to more than 170 countries to report on war, natural calamity and social and political upheaval – through the eyes of the people at the heart of it all.

Contributions may be removed if they violate ABC’s Online Terms of Use
http://www.abc.net.au/conditions.htm (Section 3). This is an official Australian Broadcasting Corporation YouTube channel

Short Wave | African Combat Sciences with Dr. Ọbádélé Kambon  || Ep.003
Short Wave | African Combat Sciences with Dr. Ọbádélé Kambon || Ep.003 Ọbádélé Kambon Subscription 85 Views • 7 years ago

Dr. Ọbádélé Kambon and Abibifahodie Asako ‘Afrikan Liberation Capoeira’ specialize in the re-africanization of Capoeira, a combat science that was developed in Angola but has since been divorced from this source, taking on a new portuguese identity. On this episode of Short Wave, we spend time with Dr. Ọbádélé Kambon, a Research Fellow at the Institute of African Studies (IAS), University of Ghana who spends his time teach the science of Capoeira, both as a potent form of self-defense and a fitness activity. He shares with us the history of African Combat sciences across the continent and how they are prioritize motion and rhythm in engineering moves and stances to defeat enemies. We also learn about the reception of Capoeira in Ghana today and how he and Abibifahodie Asako ‘Afrikan Liberation Capoeira are encouraging the practice of the science especially among young kids.

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Click on the Closed Captions for subtitles

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Filmed and edited by Hakeem Adam

Produced by Kwame Boafo

Special Thanks to Dr. Ọbádélé Kambon (
https://obadelekambon.com), Jahwi and Nii Armah.
Visit: abibifahodie.com to learn more about Capoeira.

Music
Kanye West - Beat 5 (1997)
Mestre Luiz Renato - Às Vezes Me Chamam de Negro

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Visit us at dandano.org for more! Short Wave is a new conversation series on our website where we speak to African artist about their work and outlook.

Mai Ndombe (Black Water) : A community fights for survival against an unlikely culprit
Mai Ndombe (Black Water) : A community fights for survival against an unlikely culprit Kwabena Ofori Osei 39 Views • 2 years ago

Once teeming with life, Lake Mai Ndombe (meaning Black Water) in the Congo Basin is now depleted and local communities face starvation. The vanishing fish population can be traced back to an unlikely culprit, but they have a hopeful solution at the Mai Ndombe REDD+ Project that could turn the tide.--------------------------------Black Water is a poignant exploration of survival and resilience deep in the remote forest of the Congo Basin at the Mai Ndombe REDD+ Project. This short film delves into the lives of a local community around Lake Mai Ndombe (Lake of ‘Black Water’) in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. This once bountiful body of water now teeters on the brink of collapse. Over the years, the lake’s vibrant fish population has dwindled, threatening the livelihoods of those who have relied on its resources for generations. The film traces this ecological decline back to an unexpected source: mosquito nets. Originally introduced by aid organizations to combat malaria, these finely meshed nets found a new, unintended purpose as fishing tools. However, their use has come at a steep cost, leading to the overfishing of even the youngest fish, disrupting the delicate balance of life within the lake. Through intimate interviews and breathtaking visuals, Black Water captures the struggle of the lake's surrounding communities as they face the harsh reality of dwindling resources. It explores the cultural and generational shifts brought on by the environmental crisis, revealing the deep connection between the people and the lake that sustains them. Amidst the struggle, Black Water captures a glimmer of hope. The communities, in partnership with Wildlife Works, have embarked on an ambitious project to restore their ecosystem. By using their profits from carbon credits earned through forest conservation, they have built sustainable fish nurseries. This project not only offers a lifeline to those on the brink of starvation but also holds the promise of restoring balance to the lake's fragile ecosystem. Black Water is a powerful testament to resilience, the importance of community-driven solutions, and the enduring spirit of a people determined to secure a sustainable future for their children.For more community stories, sign up for our newsletter: https://wildlifeworks.activehosted.com/f/1

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