People & Blogs

Sub Category

Amobi Anazodo
1 Views · 6 months ago

Prophet Shephered Bushiri luxurious, huge, Super Cars Collection

Amobi Anazodo
1 Views · 6 months ago

For more news, visit sabcnews.com and also #SABCNews #Coronavirus #COVID19News #Covid-19Vaccination #Vaccine on Social Media.

Amobi Anazodo
3 Views · 6 months ago

The Democratic Republic of Congo has been engulfed in conflict of one sort or another since 1996.

The fighting, between the government and a complex, ever-shifting array of rebel militias, has resulted in the deaths of an estimated six million people and the injury, rape and forced displacement of a great many more.

The international community has tried many times to help the country resolve some of these problems - or at least to mitigate their consequences - with the United Nations maintaining a peacekeeping presence since 1999. Known as MONUSCO (United Nations Organisation Stabilisation Mission in the DR Congo), it is currently the largest and most expensive such mission in the world, comprising 21,000 uniformed personnel from 50 different nations with a budget of just under $1.5bn.

But for all its size and resources, the force has frequently been criticised in the past for being ineffectual, overcautious and for failing to meet its responsibility to protect the country's vulnerable citizens from harm.

In practice this has meant that while civilians have frequently sought and found sanctuary at UN bases, its troops have rarely been allowed to venture out of those compounds to engage with the armed groups and militias. Indeed, on more than one occasion, the most brutal acts have been carried out even as the peacekeepers looked on. For example, as recently as last July, a militia known as Mai Mai Cheka took over a town called Pinga, decapitated civilians and threw the severed heads at the local UN base, shouting: "Take these, you’re the ones who like meat."

But at long last things are changing. The UN force now has sharper teeth and new rules of engagement.

In March last year, the UN Security Council sanctioned the creation of a new Force Intervention Brigade (FIB), made up of 3,000 well-equipped combat troops from South Africa, Tanzania and Malawi and gave it a mandate to "neutralise and disarm" the various armed groups.

It was a crucial decision because it meant that for the first time in the organisation's history, soldiers wearing the UN blue helmet were being allowed to go on the offensive, rather than having to sit helplessly by as atrocities took place. In other words, the peacekeepers could become peacemakers.

As it took shape last summer, this beefed-up force was placed under a new commander, Lieutenant-General Carlos Santos Cruz, an energetic 62-year-old Brazilian. He was tasked with cutting through the inertia that has brought the UN so much criticism in the past.

Half-way through his one year appointment it is already clear the general has wrought some dramatic changes.

The first tangible signs of the new approach came towards the end of last year when the Congolese Army, the FARDC, closely supported by the new UN force, successfully defeated the rebel M23 group, which had humiliated the FARDC a year earlier when they marched largely unopposed into Goma, the regional capital of North Kivu province.

On that occasion the UN did not intervene, even when troops from both sides went on a rampage of looting and raping women and children in the area. But in October and November 2013, under General Santos Cruz's watchful eye and provided with better training, intelligence, back-up and logistics support, the FARDC was both more effective and (for that moment at least) more disciplined. Crucially, the fact that they were also fighting alongside a potent UN force that was prepared to go on the offensive made a significant difference.

As the general explained later, this new proactive stance is now the UN's guiding principle in the DR Congo. "We are going to protect the civilians, eliminate and neutralise the threats," he said. "We are not going to wait for the threat to come here against the civilians."

To find out what this means in practice, People & Power went behind the scenes with the general and his FIB force as they consolidated their gains, gathered intelligence on rebel activity, and prepared to launch a new joint UN/FARDC offensive.

Subscribe to our channel http://bit.ly/AJSubscribe
Follow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/AJEnglish
Find us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/aljazeera
Check our website: http://www.aljazeera.com/

Amobi Anazodo
4 Views · 6 months ago

4 Crazy and Funny people in malawi

Amobi Anazodo
0 Views · 6 months ago

Shepherd Bushiri, AKA Major 1, is widely regarded as one of the wealthiest pastors in the world and one of the most affluent people in Africa.
He drives some of the most expensive cars in the world and owns several houses, private jets, and big businesses.
He wears expensive designer shoes and clothes adorned with diamonds.
NaijaHomeBased posts well-researched and exciting news and celebrity videos every day.

Subscribe here for more videos++ https://www.youtube.com/channe....l/UC1E2r6nRudPgXCNmC
#ProphetBushiri #Major1 #ShepherdBushiri #BushiriCars #BushiriPrivateJets

Amobi Anazodo
0 Views · 6 months ago

Some 30 countries in the world are facing a cholera epidemic and a shortage of vaccines. The World Health Organisation views this resurgence as worrying. In Malawi, the situation is particularly bad with the outbreak the deadliest in the country’s history.


Cholera in Malawi | ARTE.tv Documentary
Subscribe to our Youtube channel:

/ @artetvdocumentary

🗓 Available until the 14/01/2053

ARTE.tv Documentary is here to tell you more about what’s going on in the world of culture, news and current affairs with powerful, refreshing and entertaining docs subtitled in English for our international fans.

Discover a whole world on #ARTE.tv

#malawi #artetvdocumentary #cholera

Amobi Anazodo
4 Views · 6 months ago

This video highlights the experiences of Fanny, an MSF community health worker in Malawi who is also a sex worker.

Fanny discusses the challenges faced by sex workers in Malawi (such as sexual and gender-based violence, rights abuses by the police and discrimination by health care providers) and her role as part of MSF's peer-led HIV, TB, and sexual and reproductive health team.

Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is an international, independent, medical humanitarian organisation that delivers emergency aid to people affected by armed conflict, epidemics, natural disasters and exclusion from healthcare.

SUBSCRIBE HERE: http://bit.ly/15M9M8v

Amobi Anazodo
0 Views · 6 months ago

katelela#ching'oma#malawimusic#RIP#malawi

Amobi Anazodo
0 Views · 6 months ago

The occupation of Malawi by the British can be traced to 1859 when David Livingstone the Scottish explorer and missionary reached Lake Nyasa. Gradually the British took control of Malawi. By 1891 most of Malawi was already under British control and was formed into the British Central African Protectorate.The first commissioner was Harry Johnston. So how did Malawi got freedom from their oppressors? Watch!

Amobi Anazodo
0 Views · 6 months ago

Dr Hastings Banda is one of the most underrated African dictators. During His 33 year rule, the country experienced the worst human rights violations and paternalistic control of the Malawians.

He controlled every aspect of their lives, treating his people as children and addressing his ministers as my boys

He banned televisions, beards, dreadlocks and long hair among men. Any sort of political dissent was ruthlessly dealt with through his secret police and Militia.

Though he never had children, he relied on the support of his official hostess and former secretary Cecilia Kadzamira and Kadzamira's uncle John Tembo, who saw themselves as his successors when he left power.

He is remembered on the continent as the only leader who maintained ties with the Apartheid South Africa and Portuguese regimes; backed Nixon in Vietnam and refused to support an armed struggle against the Ian Smith regime in Southern Rhodesia.

Amobi Anazodo
2 Views · 6 months ago

In this video we discuss the history of the federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland, commonly known as the Central African Federation, which was in place from 1953 to 1963.

The central African Federation led to the independence of countries like Zambia and Malawi, in Zimbabwe Ian Douglas Smith declared Unilateral Declaration of Independence.

We also explore the histories of all the 3 countries and how they were colonised by the British South Africa company under the leadership of Cecil John Rhodes.

Support me on Patreon: http://patreon.com/zimtechguy

Amobi Anazodo
3 Views · 6 months ago

A Casual Tour of the Richest Neighborhoods in #Malawi, #Lilongwe


Support a sister via:
PAYPAL USD: https://www.paypal.com/donate/?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=4MJZHWWHBJLEG&source=url
PAYPAL £ : https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=PUNB58GYALHBS&source=url

PATREON: https://patreon.com/AfricanTigress

❤LOOKING FOR A PLACE TO STAY IN KENYA?
NAIROBI AIRBNB 1: https://abnb.me/vtn1XgHkCcb
NAIROBI AIRBNB 2: https://www.airbnb.com/rooms/48586973?federated_search_id=1c729df6-cebb-4005-8556-5d3a07007f4d&source_impression_id=p3_1621479478_KM55KQG00s0Ol3oY
KISUMU AIRBNB : https://abnb.me/Bkk9d4tkCcb

❤Have you tried Airbnb? Sign up with my link and you will get up to $65 off your first trip. https://abnb.me/e/aFUp8h8kCcb?suuid=4181495e-ba5f-4353-9be1-076cec6fc868&slevel=0

++++One on One Consultation with AFRICAN TIGRESS:theafricantigress@gmail.com ++++

❤If you want to enjoy behind the scenes and exclusive videos: https://patreon.com/AfricanTigress

❤Subscribe to my vlogging channel: @KENYAN SISTER
https://www.youtube.com/channe....l/UCWuo4BEvqxJw-tPaa

❤Donate to my patreon https://patreon.com/AfricanTigress

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
EMAIL ME for Business and Sponsorships: theafricantigress@gmail.com
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Let's connect on:
FACEBOOK: African Tigress
https://web.facebook.com/officialafricantigress/

TWITTER:@kenyansista
https://twitter.com/kenyansista

INSTAGRAM: @africantigressofficial
https://www.instagram.com/africantigressofficial/

❤Don't forget to SUBSCRIBE and be part of #TeamTigress ❤xoxo❤
TIGRESS, YOUR KENYAN SISTER

Amobi Anazodo
1 Views · 6 months ago

Top 10 richest people in Malawi 2024 This video is about : Top ten richest people in Malawi 2022
Top 10 richest people in Malawi – Malawi’s wealthiest list,


#10. Joyce Banda
Joyce Banda Net worth: 45 million usd / 37 billion Kwacha

#9. Prof. Arthur Peter Munthalika
Peter Munthalika Net worth: 60 million usd / 49 billion kwacha

#8. Gospel Kazako
Gospel Kazako Net worth: 68 million usd / 56 billion kwacha

#7. Leston Mulli
Leston Mulli Net worth: 78 million usd / 64 billion kwacha

#6. Bakili Muluzi
Bakili Muluzi Net worth: 103 million usd / 85 billion kwacha

#5. Aniz Suleman
Suleman Net worth: 136 million usd / 112 billion kwacha

#4. Jimmy Korea Mpatsa
Mpatsa Net worth: 138 million usd / 114 billion kwacha

#3. Prof. Shepherd Bushiri
Bushiri Net worth: 150 million usd / 124 billion kwacha

#2. Simbi Phiri
Simbi Phiri Net worth: 190 million usd / 157 billion kwach

#1. Thomson Mpinganjira

Mpinganjira Net worth: 220 million usd / 181 billion kwacha




We hope you're enjoying the video as much as we enjoyed making it.
we're only a small company, so please consider Subscribing to support us.

#malawi #richestinmalawi #top10
Please Subscribe to Join Our Amazing Family

Amobi Anazodo
3 Views · 6 months ago

Ndirande is a well known slum of malawi, known with both good and bad.The Question of whether they are the biggest slums in Malawi, im traveling around the region to find out. i'll be meeting local people,seeing what kind of living conditions they have,so join me as i climb down the rabbit hole to find out
Ndirande; Whats Inside The Most Feared Largest Slum Of Malawi

#malawi #blantyre #nuru #Africanslum #slums #africa #ndirande #anglican #lilongwe #blantyremalawi #Blantyre #slums #malawivillage #iammarwa

Amobi Anazodo
8 Views · 6 months ago

Don't forget to enable the subtitles!
I made this documentary during my internship in Malawi.
If you need any of the content or if you want to get information, don't hesitate to contact me.
sit back, relax and enjoy!
00:10 Living
4:48 Food
8:44 safety and criminality
11:18 Education
21:39 Religion and superstition
30:12 Sports
35:07 Marriage
36:39 Transport
40:52 Work
48:54 Vacation

Amobi Anazodo
0 Views · 6 months ago

The Image of AFRICA has been DISTORTED around the WORLD & We are CHANGING the NARRATIVES via YOUTUBE videos One Country At Time.Until the HISTORY of AFRICA is told by AFRICANS, the story of GREATNESS will always GLORIFY the IMPERIALISTS!.


HAVE YOU SUBSCRIBED YET?
https://www.youtube.com/c/WODEMAYA

BOOK ONE on ONE CONSULTANCY WITH WODEMAYA
https://wodemaya.me/consultation/

Support Our Africa Travels
https://www.patreon.com/wode_maya

Paypal
https://paypal.me/mayaempire

OUR OFFICE CONTACT
+233591519551

SHOP YOUR AFRICAN WEARS FROM MY SISTER
https://dukezfashionline.com/


FOR ENQUIRIES & SPONSORSHIP
hello@wodemaya.africa

FOLLOW ME ON TWITTER
https://twitter.com/wode_maya

INSTAGRAM
https://www.instagram.com/mrghanababy

FACEBOOK
https://www.facebook.com/Wodemaya99/

We Love You!

Amobi Anazodo
3 Views · 6 months ago

Top 10 Things You Didn’t Know About Malawi

DISCLAIMER : For Copyright Matters please Contact us directly.... Email Address emmastopten@gmail.com. Thanks

Hello Displorers, welcome to another informative video presented to you by Displore and thanks for watching. In this video, we will take an indebt look at one of Africa’s most friendly countries, Malawi and present to you 10 things you probably didn’t know about this lesser talked about country. Malawi is a landlocked country in south-eastern Africa that was formerly known as Nyasaland. It is bordered by Zambia to the west, Tanzania to the north and northeast, and Mozambique surrounding on the east, south and southwest. Malawi spans over 118,484 km2 inhabited by a population of over 19.1 million. Lake Malawi, also known as Lake Nyasa, takes up about a third of Malawi's area. Its capital is Lilongwe, which is also the country's largest city. The name Malawi comes from the Maravi, an old name of the Nyanja people who inhabit the area. The country is nicknamed "The Warm Heart of Africa" because of the friendliness of its people.

If you are new here, welcome, be sure to subscribe and turn on notifications so you don’t miss any of our videos.

Malawi's foreign policy is pro-Western and includes positive diplomatic relations with most countries and participation in several international organisations, including the United Nations, the Commonwealth of Nations, the Southern African Development Community, the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa, and the African Union. Although there was periodic regional conflict fuelled in part by ethnic divisions in the past, by 2008 it had diminished considerably and the concept of a Malawian nationality had remerged. Here are 10 things you probably didn’t know about Malawi.
1. Its Capital City is One of the Youngest in Africa
There has been a fishing village on the banks of the Lilongwe River for centuries but the modern city was only officially founded as a trading post in 1906 and only recognised as a town in 1947. It became the Malawian capital even later, in 1975 when kingpin status was taken away from Zomba, which had stood as the administrative hub in the colonial era. Lilongwe might not be a place which will detain travellers for too long, although the giant tower of the King's African Rifles War Memorial is a reminder that the two world conflicts claimed their share of Malawian lives and hence for now will be the main attention driver in the baby city.
2. High Girl Dropout Rate from Education
In Malawi less than 10% of girls earn a high school diploma given that approximately 20% of school aged girls are prevented from continuing their education due to lack of menstrual health education and access to menstrual pads. Another reason why girls hard achieve a diploma is because the country has one of the highest rates of child Marriagein the world, with approximately 1 in 2 girls married and/or raising children by the age of 18. There have been efforts to educate and discourage early marriages amongst disadvantaged children and orphans in Malawi since 2007 and work with local partners to increase girl child education in rural communities has seen a gradual increase so far
3. The Best Hiking Sites are in Malawi
Malawi is home to the highest peak in Africa south of Mt. Kilimanjaro, the stunning Mt. Mulanje. Rising to 3,000m, this peak provides incredible views of the landscape and neighbouring Mozambique. But that doesn’t come easy as you can enjoy that after hiking your way up. The entire country is a hiker’s haven providing access to incredible hikes. Whether its hiking over the giant rocks of Lake Malawi or scaling the peak of Mt. Mulanje, avid hikers will not be disappointed. With this knowledge, get the hiker in you and let’s start now. But if you are not a hiker, we could go visiting the numerous wildlife opportunities, the country provides. Just like its neighbouring countries, Malawi is home to an astounding amount of wildlife within its borders. There are close to 200mammals and over 600species of birds to explore.Malawi is a viable location for seeking out the diminutive counterpart to the Big Five, the little five which are under-sized mammals, insects, birds and creepy-crawlies, with similar names, which haunt the trees, soil and undergrowth. These are the Elephant Shrew, the Buffalo Weaver, the Leopard Tortoise, the Ant Lion and the Rhino Beetle.


4. Quite a Few Tour Operators Have Mapped Out the Country’s Touristic Sites
It is unlikely to be the country you type into a search engine if you are planning a first trip to Africa, but for those who love the continent, Malawi is an intriguing part of the tapestry. And there are professionals on hand to make a visit possible, easy and processes understandable. This is thanks to several sites whose operation cover the most important aspects tourists search for. such sites include Expert Africa, Steppes Travel, Timbuktu T

Amobi Anazodo
2 Views · 6 months ago

Malawi is one of the 45 landlocked countries of the world, being surrounded by bigger neighbors on all sides. Though quite small in size, but not in ethnic diversity with over 15 ethnic groups residing in the country. Let's look at the Major ethnic groups in Malawi and their peculiarities

Amobi Anazodo
3 Views · 6 months ago

The Yao people are a major Bantu ethnic group most commonly found at the southern end of Lake Malawi, however, they are spread across various locations such as Malawi, northern Mozambique, Ruvuma Region and Mtwara Region of Tanzania. They are predominantly Muslims, and their unique cultural identity transcends national borders. The majority of the Yao population are fishermen and subsistence farmers. Upon the arrival of Arabs on the south-eastern coast of Africa, they became business partners with the Yao people; trading ivory, and grains, and enslaving people in exchange for ammunition and clothes. Their engagement in the lucrative coastal trade made them one of the wealthiest and most influential tribes in Southern Africa. This wealth and influence gradually led to the existence of large Yao kingdoms in the 18th century, as Yao chiefs gained control of the Niassa province of Mozambique. It was also at this time that the Yao people began to migrate to the geographical areas now known as Malawi and Tanzania. 
It wasn't until the 20th century, after World War 1, that the entire Yao nation was Islamized. Formal education also became popular at that time, as their trade with the Arabs and Swahili required that they employ scribes who could read and write. They employed Islamic teachers who lived in the Yao villages and taught the Yao people to read and write. The Yao sultans, at the time, totally resisted British, Portuguese, and German colonial rule, as they believed that such would pose major cultural and economic threats on them.
The British tried relentlessly to stop the ivory and slave trade by attacking Yao trade caravans near the coast, however, their efforts were, for a long time, futile. A Yao chief, Mataka, rejected Christianity, as much as he rejected colonial rule. This is because the Yao people preferred Islam which provided a social system that assimilated their traditional culture.




Showing 5 out of 6