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Kɔrɔ Naka
29 Views · 2 years ago

37th Ordinary Session of the AU Assembly (Heads of State and Government Session)Ethiopia Hosts African Union's Much Anticipated 37th African Leaders Summit

Angela Malele
37 Views · 5 years ago

Tamika Mallory has come under heavy criticism after Samaria Rice lambasted her for appearing on the Grammys and accepting sponsorship deals. Did Tamika sellout? Can activists still remain true to their cause(s) and be in bed with capitalists? Join me this Sunday at 7pm EST.

Ọbádélé Kambon Subscription
76 Views · 2 years ago

30 ANIMALS (Mmoa) IN ENGLISH & TWI | Learn Twi For Kids.



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Kɔrɔ Naka
19 Views · 2 years ago

⁣Fearless Dr Arikana WARNING Africa of being conquered again | Africa Union Women Positions

Jahiwitness
8 Views · 2 years ago

From the album "E11EVEN"

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
15 Views · 5 years ago

A focus on Neocolonialism and the foreign intervention of erstwhile colonial leaders in African countries was our focus today on #VillageSquareAfrica. Sulaiman Aledeh was joined by the executive director, Centre for Public Accountability, Olufemi Lawson and Public affairs analyst, Jide Ojo.

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
33 Views · 5 years ago

Beyond White Supremacy & Civil Rights Toward Revolution- Mhenga Amos N. Wilson

Kɔrɔ Naka
25 Views · 2 years ago

⁣Kenyan Ruto shocks the world as announcing East Africa FEDERATION after AES

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
24 Views · 5 years ago

⁣Faces of Africa— Idi Amin

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
21 Views · 5 years ago

In this episode of Travelogue, CGTN's Tianran travels to the desert tracts in northwest China's Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region. The region has registered remarkable progress in the recent years including doing the impossible by growing rice paddies and vineyards in the desert land. Join us and explore the secret behind this miraculous transformation.

Travelogue is a 30-minute features program on CGTN that takes viewers on unforgettable adventures across China. It airs on Sundays at 7:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. BJT (00:30 & 09:30 GMT), with repeats on Mondays at 2:00 a.m. (Sunday 19:00 GMT) and Thursdays at 1:30 p.m. (06:30 GMT).

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
12 Views · 5 years ago

Caribbean to Caliphate - People & Power

The Caribbean state of Trinidad and Tobago is traditionally most famous for its spectacular annual carnival, its cricketing prowess and of being the birthplace of calypso music. But more recently it's been getting a more disturbing reputation - as the nation with the highest recruitment rates of ISIL fighters in the Western Hemisphere.

So why have so many young Trinidadians been driven to travel thousands of kilometres to participate in the conflicts in Iraq and Syria?

According to Imam Yasin Abu Bakr, the leader of the Jamaat al-Muslimeen group, one of the lead causes why young, black men are joining ISIL is their marginalisation.

"The Africans are going to a pool of unemployment, they just sit in the ghetto and do nothing. And then drugs come in and it's a haven for the drugs. And now the guns are in and so the murder rate is just spiralling out of control," says Abu Bakr.

People & Power sent correspondent Juliana Ruhfus and director Dom Rotheroe to investigate how the Caribbean island nation has become a recruitment hub for ISIL.

Connect with People & Power:

YouTube - http://aje.io/peopleandpowerYT
Facebook - https://facebook.com/AJPeopleAndPower
Twitter - https://twitter.com/AJpeoplepower
Website - http://www.aljazeera.com/peopleandpower/

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
20 Views · 5 years ago

Poverty drives young girls to urban areas in search of work - Lamnatu - News Desk on JoyNews (11-5-21)


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Ọbádélé Kambon
37 Views · 5 years ago

Subscribe to watch more African Folktales

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
52 Views · 5 years ago

(13 Jan 2019) LEADIN:Rammed earth is a construction method that has been around for millennia, but it's attracting renewed interest in countries like the USA and Australia. In Ghana a construction company is returning to the technique of rammed earth building, promoting its eco-friendly and economical technique. STORYLINE: This construction worker is part of a team building an eco-friendly house near Ghana's capital city, Accra.He is compressing a mixture of raw materials mostly sourced from within two kilometres.When the temporary structure is later removed it will reveal a solid wall – the beginning of a house. The technique is called rammed earth, as co-founder of Hive Earth Kwame de Heer explains."Rammed earth is a really old technique. Here in Ghana we have always built houses using mud, but here we have modernised it. We use a mixture of laterite which contains sand, a bit of silt, clay and some stones. We pour this into a temporary structure after being mixed. After pouring in eight inches we compress it to about four inches. We are mimicking a sedimentary rock, but speeding up the process. It's man-made stone."About five percent of the raw materials used in this method requires imported cement, which is necessary as a stabiliser.As well as being more eco-friendly, Hive Earth says it costs a third less than building with sandcrete blocks, commonly used in Ghana. Foster Osae-Akonnor heads up Ghana's Green Building Council:"Once you can get materials from the locality that you are working, then it helps to reduce the carbon footprint. In addition, comparing rammed earth to concrete, you save all the embodied energy that will be required in the manufacturing of cement."Compared to other building materials, a very high amount of energy is consumed to produce cement. In addition cement is imported into Ghana. Another of Hive Earth's rammed earth projects, in Accra, reveals its interesting aesthetic, which is the result of the ramming process.The technique is well suited to the hot climate of Ghana as it keeps the room temperature cool, says co-owner of Hive Earth, British-Ghanaian entrepreneur Joelle Eyeson."Rammed earth is sound proof, it's termite proof, it's thermally insulative – so it regulates the internal room temperature. Because the walls are so thick it takes a while for the heat to penetrate through to the internal room. Our walls can be anything from 12 to 15 inches thick. It's earthquake resistant as well, due to the monolithic nature of the walls as compared to sandcrete blocks, because the walls are monolithic. With sandcrete blocks you have the mortar joints so it's easier for the wall to shake and become disinbursed, whereas with rammed earth it's just one straight monolithic wall. It's as strong as concrete as well – it can last for hundreds of years." A long-standing example of rammed earth is the Great Wall of China.Williams Nimailo from the Ghana Bureau of Standards helped draw up the country's new building code.Allowance is made for rammed earth under both traditional and green building construction methods. Provision is made for modern materials such as clay-fired bricks or cement blocks. Akosua Obeng is an architect who contracted Hive Earth to build the external walls of a luxury complex in Accra.Obeng believes using rammed earth techniques in a high-end development will help to change perceptions about how earth materials can enhance design and architecture.Hive Earth have produced eight rammed earth projects since starting up in 2016, and have many more projects planned in Ghana and regionally.Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork Twitter: https://twitter.com/AP_Archive Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/APArchives ​​Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/APNews/You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metad....ata/youtube/7a9be64b

Baka Omubo
14 Views · 2 years ago

🌟 Join the 'I Never Knew TV' Community!
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In this insightful clip from the holistic health conference, "Groundings With My Brothers and Sisters, 2024" Asasiya Muhammad's session called 'Nurturing Life: A Revolutionary Approach to Pregnancy
and Childbirth'

Step into a transformative session that breaks away from
mainstream perspectives on pregnancy and childbirth. Nurturing
Life offers gender-neutral, practical guidance to empower you on
your unique journey to parenthood. Discover life-changing insights
about how to create the optimal environment for your child’s
growth and well-being, even if you don’t currently have access to
ideal conditions.

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KoJoe
19 Views · 5 years ago

⁣The musical traditions of Mitsogho (Gabon) Central

Kiatezua Lubanzadio Luyaluka
84 Views · 5 years ago

⁣This video explains the meaning of the word Kôngo as alluding to the divine mystery as the teaching of the import and the practice of God's law.


The video shows also that the purpose assigned to the Kôngo people is to preserve the African divine mystery, which is an exact science, and give it back to the African nation for cultural reunification of the Blacks of the continent and the diaspora.


The ideas of this video have been inspired by my book titled BUKÔNGO available at

http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?=search-alias%3Daps&field-keywords=kiatezua.

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
8 Views · 5 years ago

Through his fiction and non-fiction works, Nigerian author Chinua Achebe has sought to repair the damage done to the continent of Africa and its people as a result of European colonization. This is best exemplified in his most famous novel "Things Fall Apart," one of the first African novels written in English to achieve national acclaim. Set in the 1890s, the novel deals with the impact of British colonialism on the traditional Igbo society in Nigeria. Published in 1958 -- just two years before the end of a century of British rule in Nigeria -- the novel celebrated its 50th anniversary of publication in 2008. "An Evening with Chinua Achebe" featured the author reading from his celebrated work.

Kwadwo Danmeara Tòkunbọ̀ Datɛ
29 Views · 1 year ago

Five incarcerated people in Alabama are fighting to push forward a lawsuit, Stanley v. Ivey, challenging the state's power to punish prisoners who resist forced labor. Despite a state constitutional provision abolishing slavery that was passed in 2022 by referendum, Montgomery County Circuit Court dismissed the plaintiffs' lawsuit, arguing Governor Kay Ivey and Alabama Department of Corrections Commissioner John Hamm were protected by state sovereign immunity. Emily Early, Associate Director of the Center for Constitutional Rights' Southern Regional Office, joins Rattling the Bars to discuss the lawsuit and the plaintiffs' ongoing fight to have their case appealed. 

Studio/Post-Production: Cameron Granadino

Show page/transcript: https://therealnews.com/alabam....a-prisoners-sued-to-

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