😔 I don't think
there is anything sadder and more infuriating than an African or
black person who embraces Islam, the death
cult of the Arabs, and becomes a Muslim. A great tragedy!
☪ ISIS-affiliated militants beheaded over 30 Christians in northern
Mozambique and destroyed at least seven churches while displacing
over 50,000 people from Chiure district in recent weeks. The chilling
attacks, announced by the militant group through photos and
statements, draw attention to the growing persecution of Christians
in Mozambique, as the Islamic militant group advocates for the
killing of Christians and pushes farther south in the country.
The Islamic State Mozambique Province (ISMP), the militant group
responsible for these attacks, released 20 graphic photographs
detailing the beheadings, shootings and arsons committed against
Christians and village civilians during their attacks. The militants
conducted the killings and ravages in the Cabo Delgado and Nampula
provinces in the northern area of Mozambique. While the country is
predominately Christian, the northern region is predominately Muslim,
causing Christian communities living in this region to be
particularly targeted by the extremist group.
According to MEMRI (Middle East Media Research Institute), ISMP has
also released statements claiming responsibility on certain
slaughters. On Sept. 25, the group reported they had beheaded two
Christians in the Chiure-Velho village. The ISMP later took
responsibility of a Sept. 26 attack, which left a Christian local
shot and killed. A Sept. 28 attack left four Christians dead in
Macomia Town. Another Christian was beheaded in the Macomia district
the next day. Recent attacks included church burnings in Nacocha,
Nacussa, Minhanha and Nakioto village. Over 100 homes were destroyed
in Nakioto village.
ISMP’s terrorist activities, active in six of Mozambique’s
districts, has reached farther south throughout the years. ISMP
mainly operates in Cabo Delgado.
To counter the insurgency, Mozambique renewed a military alliance
with neighboring country Rwanda on Aug. 27. Under the Status of Force
Agreement, the Rwandan Defense Force is to continue its deployment in
Cabo Delgado, where it has been fighting insurgency since 2021.
Since 2017, over 6,000 people have been killed by ISMP, and over a
million in the northern areas of the country have been displaced.
ISMP, whose aim is to create a strict Islamic state, sees Christians
as “symbols of resistance,” which causes them to become targets,
according to Open Doors, a Christian organization serving Christians
worldwide.
The Islamic militant group’s slaughter of Christians included a
2024 campaign called “Kill Them Wherever You Find Them.”
Mozambique:
Muslim Jihadists Behead Christians, Burn Church and Homes: ‘Silent
Genocide’
🥴 At
the U.S. Navy 250 Celebration in Virginia, U.S. President Donald
Trump made a shocking claim, saying he could’ve 'stopped the
September 11 attacks' if people had listened to him. Trump told the
crowd he warned about Osama bin Laden in his 2000 book, 'The America
We Deserve'. He insisted he “wrote about Laden exactly one year
before he blew up the World Trade Center.” The President then added
he deserved “a little credit” for “foreshadowing” 9/11. But
fact-checkers debunked his claim, showing Trump merely mentioned
Laden once, not as a warning. The internet erupted with critics
calling his words “tone-deaf” and “historically false.” The
event, meant to celebrate U.S. Navy’s 250th anniversary, turned
into a fact-check storm after Trump’s remarks.
👉 In
the video, Lebanese-American Author Brigitte Gabriel: “ 911 is
not a date that Usama Bin Laden just picked out of a hat. 911 is a
symbolic date in the Islamic calendar“
🔥 Donald Trump's
Trouble is Linked to The Biblical Ark of The Covenant and Ethiopia
On October
23, 2020, just a few weeks before the genocidal Tigray war
sealed the fate of President Trump at the US Election, Trump remarked
that he was surprised Egypt hadn’t “bombed the hell out of the
dam.” Wow!
The dam is
expected to be commissioned on September 2025 (9/11 = Ethiopian
New Year's Day = Probably The
True Christmas
Day ). Everything is planned
accordingly! Will be ritually consecrated.
Consider the defeat of the Ottoman Turks at the Siege of Vienna. On
Sept. 11 and 12, 1683, (Ethiopian New Year's Day) Christian armies
under the command of the King of Poland ended the Turks’ two-month
campaign to take the city. Never again would Muslims come so close to
imposing Islam on Europe, at least until the 21st century. As writer
Hilaire Bellow once said, it is “a date that ought to be among
the most famous in history — September 11, 1683.”
♰
9/11 Ethiopian New Year Sacrifice: One of the THREE
Ohio Christian Victims Called 911 THREE Times
🛑 On
September 25, 2025, Vladimir Putin met with the genocidal Prime
Minister of Ethiopia Abiy Ahmed Ali in the Kremlin.
🛑 Back
in 2022, the evil genocidal Abiy Ahmed Ali told 'The
New Yorker Magazine' the following:
“In
the Iraq War, I fought with them,” he said. “I was the one who
would send intelligence from this part of the world to the N.S.A., on
Sudan and Yemen and Somalia. The N.S.A. knows me. I would fight and
die for America.”
Leak doc
reveals Su-57s for Algeria, Su-35s for Iran and Ethiopia
“Egypt and
Indonesia suspended their orders due to threats by Western Bloc
states to impose economic sanctions.”
So what will the Western Edomites do to the fascist Gala-Oromo
Islamic regime (BRICS member) now? I don't think they will impose any
sanction as long as their 'favorite' marionette is killing and
enslaving the ancient Christians! They are all perpetrators of the
genocide. They did award genocidal Ahmed
the 2019 Nobel Peace Prize and the UN FAO
Agricola Prizes for that.
A new leaked
document from the Russian state defence conglomerate Rostec have
revealed that the Ethiopian Air Force is scheduled to receive six
Su-35 air superiority fighters. Ethiopia is the third country
confirmed in 2025 to have ordered the aircraft, following statements
from Iranian officials in January confirming that orders for Su-35s
had been placed, and the emergence of footage in March revealing an
unexpected delivery to the Algerian Air Force. The Su-35 had
previously struggled to gain clients, with only China having received
24 aircraft, while Egypt and Indonesia suspended their orders due to
threats by Western Bloc states to impose economic sanctions.
Sanctions threats are reported to have deterred multiple further
prospective clients from proceeding with orders. Further factors
against the Su-35’s favour were competition from the much less
costly but for most missions similarly capable Su-30SM, which has
been exported much more widely, as well as the expected availability
of the significantly more advanced Su-57, which will see its first
export deliveries made in the next three months.
Even the
Communist Soviet Union blocked the sale of weapons to the Islamic
Republic of Iran, fearing it would foment trouble in its
Muslim-majority regions in Central Asia and the Caucasus.
For Ethiopia,
the document references six Su-35 fighters, suggesting that the deal
may already be in advanced stages or that deliveries have begun.
The timeline
outlined in the documents suggests that most of these contracts were
signed or initiated prior to or shortly after Russia’s full-scale
invasion of Ukraine, with delivery schedules stretching well into the
second half of the decade. The complexity of the supply chain —
including production of electronic warfare systems, avionics, and
support equipment — also points to Russia’s need to synchronize
its industrial base to meet export commitments while sustaining
domestic military demand.
Ethiopia
previously operated the most capable fighter units on the African
continent, after having placed orders for 18 Su-27 fourth generation
air superiority fighters in the mid-1990s. Procurements were made in
response to neighboring Eritrea’s order for six Russian MiG-29s,
with clashes between the two fighter types during a border conflict
in 1998-2000 seeing the Su-27s win decisively in all four known
engagements. Now approaching 30 years in service, it has long been
speculated how the Ethiopian Air Force will replace its Su-27s, with
the service in January 2024 becoming the fifteenth in the world to
receive Su-30 fighters, although only two are known to have been
delivered. With the delivery of Su-35s now confirmed, which are
single seat aircraft with no trainer variants, it appears that the
Su-30s are intended to serve as trainers for the fleet.
We are
living in an evil, hypocritical, wicked, carnal
and primitive world.
As you see, the
international system established to prevent and prosecute genocide is
fundamentally flawed, as its effectiveness is consistently undermined
by political interests and selective enforcement, allowing states and
actors to circumvent accountability with impunity.
This wicked
world likes to talk 24/7 about the fake 'Gaza Genocide' and turning a
blind eye to the horrific global persecution and genocide of
Christians, to circumvent accountability for their diabolical
actions. The
current tragic war drama in the Middle East is another dishonest
sophistic deflection from the ongoing ethnic cleansing and genocide
in Armenia, Syria, Nigeria, Congo and Ethiopia.
As
Congressman Brad Sherman rightfully put it, much of the world barely
noticed the war that tore Ethiopia apart between 2020 and 2022,
causing innumerable atrocities and millions of deaths of ancient
Orthodox Christians (The guardians of The Ark of The covenant). It
featured rampages of murder and rape against civilians even deadlier
than those Hamas perpetrated on October 7. It saw the bombing of
cities, churches, monasteries, schools, hospitals, water
infrastructure, flour mills, and the deliberate starving of
civilians.
Nobody is
talking about this huge, probably world history-changing tragic
event, because the CIA and co. managed to keep that almost a secret
for because it controls the Ethiopian elites. The CIA and co.
infiltrated nearly every level of the Ethiopian politics.
Good
for Nothing African Union organized a conference on the Rwandan
genocide in Addis Ababa, the city where genocide against Ethiopian
Christians is taking place, but their hearts and attention were given
to the non-African terrorists, the Arab Muslim Palestinians.
Previously,
The
2001 World Conference against Racism (WCAR), also known as Durban
I, was held in Durban, South Africa, the focus was immediately
diverted to the Middle East. The same is true today! Africans, cannot
talk about the genocide waged against 'their own' people in Africa.
Why? Because all the traitor African elites and those in power are
agents of the Edomite and Ishmaelite Luciferians.
In
Ethiopia, Nigeria and Congo, a genocide has been underway for years.
Meanwhile, countries like South Africa led the charge in the
International Court of Justice’s “genocide” case against
Israel, while it ignores a real genocide against Christians.
* The Deadliest country no one wants to report truthfully about is
Ethiopia.
* Since the beginning of the genocidal Jihad in the Northern
Ethiopian regions of Tigray, Amhara and Afar in November 2020 till
today:
❖ – 1.5
Million Orthodox Christians 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 fascist Islamo-Protestant, Oromo army of the prosperity gospel
heretic PM Abiy Ahmed Ali and his UN, Arab, Israeli, Turkish,
Iranian, European, American, Russian, Ukrainian, African allies.
🔥
The Wars in Tigray Ethiopia and
Ukraine showed us:
😈
United by their
Illuminist-Luciferian-Masonic-Satanist agendas The following
Edomite-Ishmaelite nations, entities, bodies and individuals are
waging Jihad against the ancient Christian nation of Axumite Ethiopia
– as they all actively and openly assist, empower and protect, the
genocidal fascist Oromo Islamic regime of evil Abiy Ahmed Ali:
☆
The United Nations
☆
The World Health Organization
☆
António Guterres
☆
Tedros Adhanom
☆
Klaus Schwab
☆
The European Union
☆
The African Union
☆
The United States, Canada &
Cuba
☆
Presidents Biden & Trump
☆
Russia
☆
Ukraine
☆
China
☆ Israel
☆ Iran
☆
Arab States / Arab League /UAE
☆ Turkey
☆ Azerbaijan
☆
Southern Ethiopians
☆
Amharas
☆
Oromos
☆
Eritrea
☆
Djibouti
☆
Kenya
☆ South Africa
☆ Nigeria
☆
Sudan
☆
Somalia
☆
Egypt
☆
Iran
☆
Pakistan
☆
India
☆
Azerbaijan
☆
Amnesty International
☆
Human Rights Watch
☆
World Food Program (2020 Nobel
Peace Laureate)
☆
The Nobel Prize Committee
☆ The World Economic
Forum
☆
The World Bank &
International Monetary Fund
☆
The Atheists and Animists
☆
The Muslims
☆
The Protestants
☆
The Sodomites
☆
Mainstream Media
☆
Social Medias like Facebook,
YouTube, Tic Tok
☆
TPLF
💭
Even those nations that are one
another enemies, like: 'Israel vs Iran', 'Russia + China vs Ukraine +
The West', 'Egypt + Sudan vs Iran + Turkey', 'India vs Pakistan' have
now become friends – as they are all united in the anti-Christian,
anti-Zionist-Ethiopia-Conspiracy. This has never ever happened
before, it is a very curios phenomenon – a strange unique
appearance in world history.
Ninety years
after its invasion of Ethiopia, Italy continues to honour the
perpetrators of crimes it should instead confront
Ninety years ago, on 3 October 1935, Italian troops invaded Ethiopia,
opening one of the darkest chapters in modern history. Ethiopia,
uniquely independent when the Berlin Conference of 1884–85 started
the European ‘Scramble for Africa’, suddenly faced an assault by
a state determined to complete the colonial map.
The campaign was not a sideshow. It was the last large-scale European
colonial conquest in Africa — a deliberate war of aggression that
defied the League of Nations and shocked contemporaries. Italian
planes dropped mustard gas on soldiers and civilians alike. Entire
villages were bombed and burned; survivors were deported to camps.
Tens of thousands died.
Yet for decades, this invasion has remained at the margins of public
memory. Italians tend to recall the fall of fascism or the
devastation of the Second World War, while the Ethiopian war – and
earlier aggressions in Libya, Somalia and Eritrea – are still
dismissed as an embarrassing footnote. This year’s 90th anniversary
is unlikely to be treated differently.
The myth of
the ‘good Italian’
A central reason lies in the enduring myth of ‘italiani brava
gente’ — the belief that Italians were somehow ‘better’
colonisers. As the historian Angelo Del Boca has shown, this
narrative was cultivated from the very start of Italy’s expansion
in 1885. Governments and cultural institutions promoted the idea that
they brought roads, railways and architecture rather than chains and
massacres. For decades, textbooks framed Italy’s presence in Africa
as a civilising mission, while popular culture romanticised the
colonies as lands of adventure. Echoes of this narrative still
linger.
But the
story collapses under the weight of evidence.
The conquest of Ethiopia was meant to be Mussolini’s crowning
achievement: proof that a ‘new Roman Empire’ could be built in
the 20th century. Yet Italy’s imperial ambitions pre-dated fascism.
Liberal governments, with full backing from the monarchy, had seized
Eritrea and Somalia in the 1880s and 1890s; attempted and failed to
conquer Ethiopia in 1896 at Adwa; and in 1911 invaded Ottoman Libya,
carrying out mass deportations and pioneering aerial bombing of
civilians. These campaigns foreshadowed the brutality of the 1935
assault.
From
conquest to oppression
In 1935, Italian forces advanced from Eritrea and Italian Somaliland,
deploying tanks, aircraft and chemical weapons in violation of the
1925 Geneva Protocol. On 5 May 1936, Marshal Pietro Badoglio entered
Addis Ababa at the head of his victorious troops and proclaimed the
end of hostilities — yet the war was far from over. Less than a
quarter of Ethiopia’s territory had been occupied, and at least 100
000 soldiers loyal to Emperor Haile Selassie remained at arms. What
followed was a hidden war of resistance, largely suppressed by
censorship, that lasted until February 1937. The war is estimated to
have claimed the lives of around 70 000 Ethiopian soldiers and
between 120 000 and 200 000 civilians.
Italian control lasted until 1941, when Ethiopian resistance, British
intervention and the Second World War brought down Italian East
Africa.
Even as clashes continued, Mussolini declared the creation of Italian
East Africa, merging Eritrea, Somalia and Ethiopia into a single
colony, and crowned King Vittorio Emanuele III as Emperor of
Ethiopia.
Occupation was marked by systematic violence. The most infamous
episode was ‘Yekatit 12’, when reprisals after an assassination
attempt on viceroy Rodolfo Graziani left more than 30 000 civilians
dead. Villages were razed to the ground, populations deported and
forced into labour on infrastructure projects under brutal
conditions. Resistance was met with executions, mass imprisonment and
concentration camps where thousands died from disease and starvation.
Italian authorities dismantled traditional governance, imposing
language and culture in a bid to eliminate Ethiopian self-rule.
Italian control lasted until 1941, when Ethiopian resistance, British
intervention and the Second World War brought down Italian East
Africa. Haile Selassie was restored to the throne, but the scars of
occupation – physical, social and political – remained.
Silence and
denial
After 1945, Italians struggled to confront fascism’s crimes abroad.
Successive governments found it easier to stress Italy’s victimhood
under Nazism than its role as a colonial aggressor. Unlike Germany,
Italy never underwent a systematic reckoning with its imperial past.
This amnesia also reflects a deeper issue rooted in the post-war
period, when the Resistance was elevated to a founding myth of the
new Republic. The heroism of some 200 000 partisans and their
supporters allowed the country to reimagine fascism not as a national
project, but as a tragic aberration inflicted on Italians. In this
version of history, Italians emerged as victims, absolved from the
complicities that sustained two decades of dictatorship — a far cry
from the antifascist intellectual Piero Gobetti’s indictment of
fascism as ‘the autobiography of the nation’. This narrative,
however, left no room to acknowledge responsibilities for the crimes
committed during the occupation of Ethiopia and the other colonies.
The result is striking: public commemorations of the Ethiopian
invasion are minimal. When the subject surfaces, it is often
accompanied by nostalgia for roads, bridges or Art Deco buildings.
Public figures have even celebrated the modernist legacy of ‘our
architecture’, reflecting an aestheticised memory that sidelines
violence. The return of the Axum obelisk from Rome to Ethiopia in
2005, after decades of dispute, remains one of the few symbolic acts
of acknowledgement. When it was re-erected in 2008, critics, such as
then-minister Vittorio Sgarbi, opposed the restitution and, years
later, even encouraged attempts to ‘get it back’ on grounds of
alleged neglect, implying Italians would be better at preserving the
monument. Apart from Italian-Libyan diplomatic reparations in 2008 –
when Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi apologised ‘for the suffering
inflicted during the colonial period’ and signed a treaty worth $5
billion in investments and compensation – Italy has never publicly
reconciled with its colonial violence through state apologies or
reparations. Debates exist in academia and among activists, but not
at the level of official national policy.
In a political climate where PM Meloni defends nationalist narratives
that echo fascist talking points, Italy continues to honour the
perpetrators of crimes it should instead confront.
However, remembering the Ethiopian war is not just an academic
exercise. It speaks directly to questions of historical
responsibility and the politics of memory in Europe. While statues of
imperial figures spark fierce debate across much of the Western
world, Italy’s colonial record is largely absent. Even the Black
Lives Matter wave had limited traction beyond 2020’s mass rallies.
Perhaps the most visible flashpoint was the statue of Indro
Montanelli in Milan – defaced in 2020 over his admitted ‘marriage’
to a 12-year-old Eritrean girl during the colonial war – which
triggered a culture-war backlash rather than a sustained reckoning;
the mayor refused to remove the monument.
Acknowledging this past would also give depth to Italy’s
contemporary relationship with Africa. Migration, trade and
development policy are all shaped by historical ties, whether
recognised or not. Pretending colonial ventures were benign does
nothing to build mutual respect. Ninety years after the invasion,
Italy does not need rituals of guilt, but it does need clarity. In a
political climate where Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni defends
nationalist narratives that echo fascist talking points, Italy
continues to honour the perpetrators of crimes it should instead
confront. In 2012, the town of Affile inaugurated a monument to
Rodolfo Graziani, the viceroy who ordered the 1937 Addis Ababa
massacre, while nearby Filettino – home to the Graziani family –
still hosts a public park bearing his name, renovated with regional
funds as recently as 2017. Confronting the full reality of Italy’s
colonial past, and the violence it inflicted on others, is more
urgent than ever.
🔥 Italians
Committed Terrible Crimes, Then Forgot Them: Addis Ababa Fascist
Massacre & Poison Gas 19 Feb 1937