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Cemetery chilling na water ![]() |
Davido and Cubana Chief Priest attended the burial ceremony of Davido's friend, but Chief Priest decided to end the day with pure vibes! As he was leaving the cemetery, he was recorded in this now-viral video saying 'Cemetery Chilling' 😂 From mourning to chilling in the convertible with the squad, this is one of the most unexpected moments you'll see today. What's your thoughts on this? #CemeteryChilling #AfterBurial #CelebrityMoments #ViralVideo #FunnyMoments #Davido #CubanaChiefPriest" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y4yIUbKeuPA |
Prime Minister Imran Khan lashed out at foreign diplomats who pressured Pakistan to join a UN resolution condemning Russia over its military attack on Ukraine, accusing the envoys of treating Pakistan like “slaves.” At a rally on Sunday, Khan shot back at a March 1 letter from diplomats representing 22 missions, including countries in the European Union along with Japan, Switzerland, Canada, the UK, and Australia, which called on Pakistan to drop its neutrality and join them in condemning Moscow. “What do you think of us? Are we your slaves... that whatever you say, we will do?” Khan said, before asking EU ambassadors whether they wrote “such a letter to India,” which also remains neutralKhan claimed that Pakistan had suffered for previously supporting NATO’s military action in Afghanistan and declared, “We are friends with Russia, and we are also friends with America; we are friends with China and with Europe; we are not in any camp.” Pakistan, along with 34 other countries, abstained from voting on the UN resolution condemning Russian “aggression against Ukraine” last week. Pakistan’s neighbors India, Bangladesh, China, Iran, Sri Lanka, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, and Kazakhstan also abstained. Khan met with Russian President Vladimir Putin in the Kremlin on February 24, the day Moscow launched its military operation in Ukraine, to discuss bilateral ties and regional issues. Moscow maintains that the attack was launched with the purpose of “demilitarization” and “denazification” of Ukraine, and that it was the only possible option left to protect the people of eastern Ukraine following years of a grueling blockade that claimed thousands of lives. Kiev insists the offensive was unprovoked, saying it had no plans to retake the breakaway Donetsk and Lugansk republics by force. https://www.rt.com/news/551382-pakistan-russia-ukraine-resolution/
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Shove ii in dem mama orifice |
Who was the sovereignty lecturer again? |
Washington wants New Delhi to denounce Moscow or face penalties for buying Russian weapons Washington is looking at the possibility of sanctioning India over New Delhi’s purchases of Russian weapons, a senior State Department official has told Congress. The US is also pushing India to disavow Moscow over the current conflict in Ukraine. President Joe Biden is “looking very closely” at whether to implement or waive the sanctions on countries that buy Russian military hardware, Assistant Secretary of State for South Asian Affairs Donald Lu told the Senate. India recently bought S-400 air defense systems from Moscow, running afoul of a 2017 US law called Countering American Adversaries Through Sanctions Act (CAATSA), passed in response to allegations of Russian meddling in US elections. “I can assure you that the administration will follow the CAATSA law and fully implement that law and will consult with Congress as we move forward with any of them,” Lu told lawmakers. “What unfortunately I am not able to say is to prejudge the decisions of the president or the [secretary of state] on the waiver issue or on the sanctions issue, or whether Russia's invasion of Ukraine will bear on that decision,” he added.Turkey, a NATO ally, was sanctioned under CAATSA in December 2020 and banished from the F-35 fighter program for buying S-400s from Russia. Over the past several months, the US has been in a “pitched battle” with Indian officials, Lu said, with Biden himself as well as Secretary of State Antony Blinken pushing New Delhi “to take a clearer position, a position opposed to Russia’s action.” India has already canceled orders of MiG-29 fighters, helicopters and anti-tank weapons from Russia, Lu said, but the US would like it to do more. Washington is “in the process of trying to understand whether defense technology that we are sharing with India today can be adequately safeguarded given India’s historical relationship with Russia and its defense sales.” New Delhi’s abstention at the UN General Assembly vote to condemn Russia on Wednesday and offer of humanitarian aid to Ukraine are “promising steps,” Lu said, adding that “action has begun to turn public opinion in India against a country that they perceived as a partner” after an Indian student was killed in Kharkov, reportedly by a Russian bombing. Both Washington and Moscow have wooed India in recent years, with Russia signing a number of manufacturing contracts – including for weapons and Covid-19 vaccines – while the US renamed its regional command “Indo-Pacific” and declared New Delhi a “major defense partner” in 2016. India is also taking part in the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue, a group that includes the US, Japan and Australia and is aimed at countering China. The White House said on Thursday that Biden held a video call with the group “to discuss the war against Ukraine and its implications for the Indo-Pacific.” https://www.rt.com/news/551187-us-sanctions-india-russian-weapons/
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Na this part go sweet me die ![]() It's been a long time since the mother earth taste the blood of the Caucasians MORE BOMBS TO YOUR ARMORY PUTIN Let them bleeeeeeed! |
Wow they are even privileged to carry bags ![]() Compare to the africans your racist pigs bomb and displaced in africa who only carry their lives I WILL LIKE TO SEE MORE TEARS AND TERROR IN YA MOFUCKING FACES |
Zelenskys reckless Asslicking policies killed you chap |
Make dem kill themselves ooo War is not solely reserved for Africans |
The peace talk wey go end with FIGHTING ![]() Nothing good will come out of this ALL I WANNA SEE IS UKRAINE TO EU's IRAQ ![]() |
Hoping to see Ukraine turn to an EU's IRAQ will be best thing to happened in 2022 ![]() |
Baghdad, Iraq – The air assaults and gunfire on Ukrainian soil following the Russian invasion are stirring up memories barely sealed in Iraq nearly 19 years after the US-led invasion. The attack ordered by Russian President Vladimir Putin on Ukraine is all too familiar for a Middle East nation that was the centre of a geopolitical struggle for decades.hemently defending. The horrific scenes unfolding in Ukraine have also played out in Iraq. To witness attacks in another part of the world for Iraqis is a painful reminder for many here who have lost their hopes and dreams of an end to war. “Some world leaders seem to have an insatiable greed for invading other countries,” said Samer al-Idreesi, a 47-year-old from the capital Baghdad. Having lived through Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait in 1990 and the United States’ response attack of Iraq in 2003, al-Idreesi told Al Jazeera he believed all warmongers should be punished. Then American President George W Bush ordered the invasion of Iraq in March 2003, alleging then leader Saddam Hussein was building “weapons of mass destruction” while harbouring operatives from al-Qaeda, the armed group held responsible for the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States. “Saddam, Bush, and Putin – they are all dogs,” al-Idreesi said. “And if Putin could learn anything from Iraq, that is this will be the beginning of his end.” Where we could go’ Despite some fundamental differences between the war in Iraq and the one in Ukraine, one thing almost always remains true: ordinary people bear the brunt of conflict. As civilians in Ukraine bunkered down in anticipation of Russian air attacks and others fled west in the hope of leaving the country, many people Al Jazeera spoke to said they could sympathize with the displaced and were reminded of a similar ordeal. “I remember that my parents asked me to pack all the things I needed because the Americans were coming,” said Mona Saade, 31, from Baghdad, as she recalled the days leading up to the US-led invasion when she was 12 years old. “But then, we quickly realized that we didn’t know where we could go – there could be fighting literally everywhere in this country.” As Saade was speaking on the phone with Al Jazeera, she said a news alert appeared on the TV screen: urban warfare intensified in Ukraine’s second-largest city Kharkiv. She paused for a few seconds and resumed the conversation. “It’s uncanny how history can repeat itself – it’s like I’m again in 2003, watching news that told us urban warfare was intensifying in Baghdad or in Basra,” Saade said. Unlike Saade and others who are following the news in Ukraine closely, others are choosing to look away from the vicious news cycle. For them, to see residential buildings bombarded and children crying at the sound of gunfire is a sure trigger of their trauma from having experienced the invasion of Iraq personally. ‘Horrible memories’ Mariam Jaber, a 34-year-old Iraqi who lived in Basra during the US-led Iraq attack in 2003 and moved to the United States shortly after, said any sight of the suffering in Ukraine was “too hard to watch” and it “instantly brought back horrible memories”. “I choose not to follow the news as closely simply because I think it will be too much for my mental health, and I can only pray that everything will be fine soon,” she said. Footage of Ukrainians lining up by borders to leave the country and enter neighbouring states has also brought painful and sometimes humiliating memories for many Iraqis. Following the invasion of Iraq, sectarian conflict soon engulfed the country – many Iraqis had to flee either to other Middle Eastern nations or places in Europe and North America. Yet their exodus was not welcomed by many Western countries. National borders were shut to them, boats taking refugees to cross the Mediterranean Sea were intercepted, and many still remain in detention centres. Ukrainians, on the other hand, could enter the European Union, a place many Iraqis have risked their lives trying to enter without a visa. As Iraqis are cruelly reminded of the invasion in 2003, the US, EU and their allies are slamming sanction packages on Russian oligarchs. That includes Putin personally with the aim of “imposing costs on Russia that will further isolate Russia from the international financial system and our economies”, according to the latest statement issued by the White House. From exclusion from SWIFT, a dominant international financial messaging system, to a targeted asset freeze, the West appears determined to ensure Russia faces the consequences of the invasion. ‘Hard to even buy bread’ The word “sanctions” unfortunately is not unfamiliar to Iraqis. The US introduced some of the fiercest economic penalties on Iraq following Saddam Hussein’s invasion of Kuwait in 1990. The sanctions were so debilitating that a generation of Iraqis suffered unspeakable pain and its rippling effect is still visible in the current Iraqi economy. “When Saddam invaded Kuwait, the sanctions were so hard that Iraq couldn’t buy pencils for a decade,” wrote Omar al-Nidawi, an Iraq analyst, on Twitter as the West was mulling sanction packages on Russia. Many Iraqis are conflicted on the introduction of harsh sanctions on Russia: some are cheering the punishments to Putin over the war, while others are worried they could end up only making ordinary Russians’ lives miserable – without doing much in curbing Putin and his oligarchs’ ability to wage wars. “It used to be so difficult that it was hard to even buy bread,” said Maher Mensour, an Iraqi who lived through the crushing sanctions imposed on Iraq following the invasion of Kuwait. “They intended to punish Saddam, but all they did was to make our lives unlivable.” The language put out by the United States, EU, United Kingdom, and Canada seems to suggest this round of sanctions is specifically targeted at Kremlin leaders and some central financial institutions. Yet it is unclear how – and to what extent – those sanctions will affect ordinary Russians’ daily life. The war in Ukraine is still unfolding and the situation is fast changing. Four days into the invasion, Russia has yet to take control of the capital city Kyiv. Back in 2003, it took US-led forces more than three weeks following the invasion to ensure the fall of Baghdad. As people in Baghdad painfully move on from their war memories, some predict even if Russia could take Kyiv, what follows the capture, or even the regime change, would be more defining than the battle for Ukraine itself. “Did you see what happened after Baghdad fell?” Samer al-Idreesi asked. “It was pure chaos: insurgents started to appear everywhere,” he added, referring to the conflict following the removal of Saddam and the armed groups still threatening Iraq’s security. The battles following the invasion were in some way more brutal than the ones fought during it. Rebel groups sprung up across the country, either in opposition to American forces or with the intent to exploit the vacuum left by a lack of central governance. “No one knows what could happen in Ukraine. Maybe there will be insurgents and maybe there will be more bloodshed, or maybe it will end soon with a peace talk,” al-Idreesi said. “But I really hope the suffering that we experienced as Iraqis would not be repeated in Ukraine.” https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2022/2/27/as-russia-invades-ukraine-iraqis-remember-painful-war-memories |
War is solely reserved for the underdeveloped countries
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When killing is solely reserved for the colored people
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If these UKRAINIANS were africans or other colored people, the headline in the Racist-west News will be; Ukrainians TERRORIST GROUP UNDERGOING RADICALISATION
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When your porpurted Friend out of emotional outburst spill the secret
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Many people where shocked to learn that resisting an invading force isn't terrorism but heroism
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They told you its antisemitism to #BDS state of Israel because of its war crimes. https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2022/2/27/western-media-coverage-ukraine-russia-invasion-criticism
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Was he trying to engage the tanks in boxing duel ![]() |
![]() Fire!!!!!! Fire!!!!! |
Zelensky's war fodders ![]() But I think this is an israeli soldier not russian |
I hear say red snow dey fall for inside Ukraine this morning, FERNANDEZEISBACK na true? ![]() |
BSsniffer:Big AMEN ooooo! I wanna see their Blood dying the Atlantic ![]() |
Una never start Nuking Unaself yet! What a shame I need to see the Europe burning |
ayindejimmy:Who dey do the body count? |
US, NATO are synonymous to evil Libya, Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan, Somalia they have turn all upside down in the name of democracy... Spit I hate them all with passion. |
You let your precious souls wasted to defend the Comedian-cum president! Na wa! In your next life no do this kind foolishness again.. Wetin happened to POW? Zelensky war fodders ![]() |
Sharrrrap man! When fulani herdsmen wan settle for your backyard, go buy drinks do welcome them with party... Okay! stamapro: |
FERNANDEZISBACK So according to Ukrainian defense minister, they are winning the WAR yet their President is everywhere you go like MTN dey beg to negotiate Peace? ![]() |
FERNANDEZISBACK:Is that an act of cowering? When your so-called Democratically elect head of states starts conditioning when and where one can exercise his/er right, then they are not different from the people you called[b]Tyrants[/b] |

