Ruto of Kenya be careful of Treatment of Gaddafi of Libya by Western Power
Some people do not fully understand the situation unfolding in Kenya.
Some have even suggested that Nigerian youths should take a cue from the Kenyan protesters who are participating in what they may not fully comprehend and re-enact an “End Sars II” scenario. This would be unwise.
We need to look beyond the surface of these events.
Since his election, Ruto has been talking about abandoning the US dollar, creating a common African market, moving away from the dollar, and establishing an African Monetary Gold Standard backed by real gold and African minerals.
This is reminiscent of the kind of rhetoric that Gaddafi had used, which ultimately led to his demise and the chaos that continues to plague Libya.
The ongoing unrest in Kenya appears to be a dress rehearsal for a more serious attempt to remove Ruto if he does not cease his Pan-Africanist and revolutionary rhetoric.
If Ruto does not stop speaking about initiatives that would benefit Africa but displease the United States, he may face a fate similar to Gaddafi’s.
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What we are witnessing seems to be a sophisticated operation to neutralize another developing African revolutionary leader.
Neither the Kenyan riots nor the “End Sars” farce will save Kenya or Nigeria. Both senseless riots are orchestrated by Globalist Oligarchs with a different agenda.
The Oligarchs typically issue warnings when their interests are threatened by action or rhetoric. They gave a similar warning to Jerry John Rawlings in Ghana, who initially gave fiery revolutionary and Pan-Africanist speeches but later toned down his rhetoric and aligned with the IMF, after which the Ghanaian economy reverted to a neo-colonial model.
The same Oligarchs also warned Bob Marley in 1976 when, after he had the audacity to call out the CIA in his 1986 album “Rastaman Vibration,” they launched an attack on his house, which was not an assassination attempt but a warning.
Ruto now faces a similar situation. He must choose whether to heed the warning, like Jerry Rawlings, and survive, or remain defiant, like Bob Marley, and risk a more severe outcome, or potentially suffer the fate of leaders like Gaddafi, Sankara, Murtala Mohammed, Malcolm X, Patrice Lumumba, and Kwame Nkrumah – patriotic leaders who paid with their offices or lives for preaching Pan-Africanism.
It is a fact that there is the gradual decline of colonial economic systems in Africa and the need for homegrown solutions to the continent’s socio-economic challenges.
Saleh Labaran