👹 Emirati 'Influencer'
about Sudanese Genocide Victims: “Monkeys Don't Have Gold”
👹 Babylon United Arab
Emirates has a lot of Ethiopian, Sudanese, Libyan,Yemeni, Iraqi,
Syrian bloods (all ancient nations) on its hands. It has a lot of
debt.
The world has imposed sanctions
on Israel and Russia; why not impose sanctions on the Arabs who have
committed a hundred times more crimes? Where is hypocrite South
Africa, which was a supporter of the Palestinian terrorists in Gaza?
What is the African Union doing? All bought by UAE
+ Saudi + Qatar?
🏴 Unholy
alliance: Edomite West + Ishmaelite East (ESAU & Ishmael)
☪ አለምን
እያናወጠ ያለው የእስማኤል እና የኤሳው ህብረት
ቀጥሏል!
❖ የሥጋ
ሰዎች በመንፈስ ያሉትን በማሳደድ አንድ
ሆነዋል!
👉 ኤሳው
እስማኤልን እያጎለበተው ነው 👈
👉 ከቱርክ
እስከ አረብ ኤሚራቶች 👈
☪ The Union of Ishmael
and Esau that is shaking the world continues!
❖ People
of the flesh are united in persecuting those of the spirit!
👉 Esau Empowering
Ishmael 👈
👉 From
Turkey to United Arab Emirates 👈
👹
Genocidal UAE Against African ♰
Christians of Ethiopia
👹
ICC = ISHMAEL + iESAU CLIQUE Ignores Genociders Ahmed + Afwerki +
Bin Salman + Bin Sayed + Erdogan + Raisi
The
UAE’s growing influence in Ethiopia and Sudan reveals how wealthy
nations use power and profit to fuel wars, drone attacks, and human
rights abuses across Africa. This information
exposes the deepening human cost of Emirati intervention in the Horn
of Africa and the urgent need for accountability.
In
a world where wealth and technology have reached unprecedented
heights, human dignity remains expendable. Nowhere is this
contradiction more visible than in Africa — a continent whose
conflicts are increasingly shaped by the ambitions of wealthy
nations that profess friendship but practice exploitation. Among
them, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) stands out as a symbol of this
paradox: a rich nation whose investments, military alliances, and
covert operations have deepened suffering from Ethiopia to Sudan.
The
story of the UAE in Africa is not merely about trade or development.
It is about the privatization of war, the export of repression, and
the silent complicity of global power in human rights violations that
rarely make international headlines.
1.
The Mirage of Modernity
The
UAE presents itself to the world as a model of progress —
skyscrapers, smart cities, and stability in the volatile Middle East.
But beneath the glittering façade lies a government that has
systematically exported its model of authoritarian control.
In
Africa, this takes the form of military partnerships with fragile
states, surveillance technologies sold to autocrats, and financial
lifelines extended to militias under the guise of security
cooperation.
This
pattern reflects a broader trend among wealthy nations: using
economic aid and investment as instruments of influence, while
turning a blind eye to the destruction they enable. The result is the
normalization of a new form of neo-colonialism — one driven not by
ideology, but by profit and geopolitical ambition.
2.
Ethiopia: Drones, War, and the Death of Accountability
During
the Tigray conflict (2020–2022), the UAE became a decisive military
backer of Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s government.
Using
Chinese-made Wing Loong II combat drones, supplied and operated via
Emirati bases in Eritrea’s Assab region, the UAE helped launch
precision strikes that killed thousands of civilians, according to UN
reports and satellite evidence analyzed by Amnesty International and
The New York Times.
Hospitals,
schools, and refugee convoys were not spared. Entire towns —
Adigrat, Axum, and Shire — witnessed destruction from the skies.
The
victims were largely defenseless civilians caught in a conflict where
technology amplified brutality, and foreign enablers ensured
impunity.
The
UAE’s involvement in Ethiopia was never about humanitarian concern.
It was about extermination of the ancient Christian population, power
projection across the Red Sea — turning Ethiopia’s
foreign-sponsored internal war, also known as a proxy war, into a
testing ground for drone warfare and surveillance capabilities. No
accountability followed. The drones returned to base, and the world
moved on.
😔 Since the
beginning of the genocidal Jihad in the Northern Ethiopian regions of
Tigray, Amhara and Afar in November 2020 till today:
❖ – Up
to 2 Million Orthodox Christians were brutally Massacred
❖ – 200.000
Orthodox Christian Women, children and nuns were Raped and abused
❖ – Over
a Million Ethiopians were forced to migrate to other countries
❖ – 4.4
million internally displaced people severely impacted by conflict,
hostilities and climate shocks
❖ – Over
a Million female Ethiopian slaves sold to Arab countries
❖ – 20
million Ethiopian forced to experience food insecurity
by
the UAE funded and armed terrorist and fascist Oromo Islamic army of
the Nobel Peace Laureate genocidal Prime
Minster, Abiy Ahmed Ali and his UN, Arab, Israeli, Turkish, Iranian,
European, American, Russian, Ukrainian and
African allies.
3.
Sudan: The RSF and the Blood Gold Economy
In
Sudan, the UAE’s human rights record is even darker.
Investigations
by Reuters, CNN, and the UN Panel of Experts have documented Emirati
logistical and financial support to the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) —
the paramilitary group accused of ethnic cleansing, mass rape, and
civilian massacres in Darfur and Khartoum.
Weapons,
fuel, and drone components were reportedly funneled through Chad and
Libya under the pretext of humanitarian aid.
Meanwhile,
the UAE continued to buy “conflict gold” from RSF-controlled
mines, indirectly financing the same atrocities its diplomats claimed
to condemn.
The
contradiction is staggering: a state that sits on the UN Human Rights
Council simultaneously funding warlords, destabilizing transitions,
and enabling one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises.
In
Sudan alone, over 10 million people have been displaced since 2023 —
a catastrophe worsened by the flow of Emirati-backed arms and cash.
4.
The Human Cost of “Strategic Investment”
The
UAE’s activities are part of a broader phenomenon: the
militarization of development aid.
By
framing its interventions as “investment in stability,” Abu Dhabi
disguises its role in perpetuating instability.
Ports,
logistics hubs, and trade corridors — from Berbera in Somaliland to
Port Sudan — have become geopolitical chess pieces, where the lives
of local populations are collateral damage.
Workers
displaced, farmers deprived of land, children growing up under
airstrikes — these are not abstract statistics.
They
are the price of a foreign policy that sees Africa as a laboratory
for influence and an extension of Gulf security policy.
The
rich world’s silence on these abuses compounds the problem. Western
allies, eager for Emirati capital, have refused to confront Abu Dhabi
over its conduct.
The
result: a moral vacuum, where wealth shields perpetrators and justice
remains elusive.
5.
The Legal and Ethical Vacuum
The
international system is ill-equipped to hold wealthy nations
accountable for extraterritorial human rights violations.
While
African leaders are often dragged before international courts,
foreign enablers escape scrutiny.
There
are no effective mechanisms to prosecute drone strikes launched by
proxy, or to sanction states that arm militias under the cover of
trade deals.
The
United Nations and African Union have both failed to confront the
UAE’s double standards.
In
2024, when UN experts presented evidence of Emirati support to the
RSF, the issue was buried in procedural language — a diplomatic
victory for money, and a defeat for morality.
6.
A Call for African Sovereignty
Africa’s
silence in the face of such abuses is not neutrality — it is
complicity.
The
continent must demand accountability and transparency from all
foreign partners, rich or poor.
No
amount of infrastructure investment can justify the destruction of
human life and sovereignty.
If
the UAE and other wealthy powers truly wish to be partners in
progress, they must respect the principles of peace, human rights,
and self-determination — not manipulate them for geopolitical
convenience.
African
nations, through the African Union, must establish a regional
framework to regulate drone warfare, foreign bases, and private
military contracts, ensuring that Africa’s future is not written by
foreign hands.
Conclusion:
Wealth Without Humanity
The
UAE’s actions in Ethiopia and Sudan expose a brutal truth: wealth
does not guarantee wisdom, and power without empathy breeds tyranny.
As
the world applauds the glitter of Dubai and Abu Dhabi, Africans from
Tigray to Khartoum pay the price in blood and silence.
Human
rights cannot be a luxury determined by geography or GDP.
It
is time for Africa — and the global community — to say clearly:
No
nation, however rich, has the right to buy impunity.