We Don’t Just Analyze Africa’s Chains. We Forge The Keys.
100+ PROSECUTIONS FILED
The Archive
Every prosecution. Every exposure. Every blueprint for sovereignty.
Two Ways to Stay Connected
Love This Content?
Every prosecution you see here is part of the weekly Awakening Intelligence brief. Or become a TSA Teacher and actively build sovereignty awareness in your classroom. Both paths feed the same Vanguard.
Pope Leo XIV is in Africa. He will speak of peace and an end to “neocolonial tendencies.” But the Vatican has never apologised for the bulls that authorised the enslavement of millions of Africans. A visit is not an apology. A visit is not restitution. This essay prosecutes the Vatican’s 571‑year silence – and demands the justice that words alone cannot deliver.
We rage against European visas. Then we turn around and fear our own neighbours. A Nigerian trader is harassed in Accra. A Ghanaian shopkeeper is attacked in Johannesburg. A Somali student is denied a job in Nairobi. The victims are African. The perpetrators are African. The cage is not external – it is internal. This is the prosecution of Afrophobia, and the TSA blueprint for healing.
Dr Ibn Chambas says Africa needs a “fundamental rethink” of education. The words are welcome. The architecture remains untouched. This essay prosecutes the gap between declaration and delivery – and demands TSA as the missing framework.
Only four African nations have ratified the AU’s Free Movement Protocol. We rage against Schengen. We do the same to ourselves. A TSA prosecution of Africa’s border cage – and the blueprint for opening it.
She studied 14 hours a day in Accra. She passed with distinction. She cannot find a job. The certificate promised a future it could not deliver. This is the prosecution of Africa’s examination system – and the blueprint for sovereign assessment.
Boko Haram. ISWAP. The Lord’s Resistance Army. The conflicts that tear Africa apart are not holy wars – they are wars of fragmentation, fuelled by minds that were deliberately unsovreigned by colonial education. This essay prosecutes the architecture of weaponised faith and presents TSA as the only sustainable antidote. Read it. Teach it. End the cycle.
A call to African teachers: you are not the problem — you are the most critical solution to a problem you did not create. The manifesto lays out the diagnosis, the five stages of TSA, and the challenge to become a sovereign educator. Read it. Teach it. Become the storm.
The UN passed a resolution declaring the transatlantic slave trade the gravest crime against humanity. 123 nations said yes. The former colonial powers abstained. This is the prosecution of the debt that could cripple the world government – and the TSA toolkit for decolonisation.
Africa sits on an estimated $8.6 trillion in untapped mineral wealth. Lesotho earns $300 million a year selling water to South Africa – a resource that is replenished annually. The continent exports raw cobalt, lithium, coltan, and gold, then imports finished goods at ten times the price. The gap between what the ground holds and what African treasuries receive is not a market failure. It is the architecture of extraction, updated for the 21st century. This prosecution files the indictment.
Senegal’s IMF programme is frozen. The country faces gross financing needs of 26% of GDP in 2026. Ratings agencies have downgraded it to junk. Yet the same institutions that imposed structural adjustment in the 1980s now demand more austerity – while Africa’s debt service payments exceed healthcare spending in 22 countries. The knee is not colonial. It is conditional. And it has never lifted. This prosecution names the mechanism and the beneficiaries.
Africa gave China the lithium. China gave Africa the panel. China has now taken back the discount. The continent that holds the world’s green energy minerals is negotiating from the bottom of the supply chain it built with its own ground. On April 1 2026, China — which mines the cobalt, refines the lithium, manufactures the solar panels, and controls 80% of global solar panel production — removed the export subsidy that made those panels affordable for the continent whose minerals built them.
In 1963, Nkrumah warned that if African states did not unite their military resources, they would be drawn into defence pacts with external powers. In 1966, the CIA helped remove him. In 1998, Ghana secretly signed a Status of Forces Agreement with the United States. US soldiers on Ghanaian soil cannot be tried in Ghanaian courts. The warning, the removal, and the capitulation form a single prosecutorial arc spanning thirty‑five years. This essay files that prosecution completely.
The Ghanaian army did not ruin Ghana’s trajectory single‑handedly. But it was the instrument that made ruin possible. Its formation—colonial, foreign‑trained, ideologically empty, and unaccountable—produced a culture of men who saw the state as their inheritance. The list of successful coups is well known. The list of attempted ones is longer. Together they form a portrait of an institution that has treated the constitution as an obstacle and the people’s sovereignty as a prize to be seized.
In Senegal, a US foundation is rolling out a bilingual education model. In South Africa, Black parents are fleeing mother‑tongue education because they believe it will harm their children. These two stories are connected by the same architecture: the determination of African education by external actors and internalised colonial hierarchies. The Gates Foundation is not the Vatican. But the mechanism—an external institution setting the educational agenda for African children without African sovereign authority—is unchanged.
Rwanda’s bishops are implementing a Vatican educational pact in the country where the last Catholic educational framework helped produce a genocide. This is not a criticism of faith. It is a prosecution of architecture. The accused is the specific mechanism by which an external institution continues to set the educational agenda for African schools — in 1900 and in 2026 — without African sovereign authority over the framework.
77.5% of the AU’s budget comes from external partners. The institution built to defend African sovereignty cannot defend it from the people paying its bills. This is not irony. It is architecture. Nkrumah’s warning in 1963—that bilateral agreements with external powers would produce continued dependence—has been fulfilled exactly.
The Pra River is dying because of what was taught in Ghanaian classrooms for a hundred and fifty years. Mercury from galamsey has contaminated it beyond use. The fish are gone. The communities are sick. And the people pouring the poison are Ghanaian. The question this prosecution answers is not how—it is why. Not the economics. The psychology. The specific wound in the African mind that makes it possible to destroy the river their grandparents prayed to.
We use cookies
We use cookies to improve your experience and analyze site traffic. Choose which cookies you allow. Cookie Policy
Required for the website to function. Cannot be disabled.
Help us understand how visitors interact with the website.
Used to deliver relevant advertisements and track campaigns.
Remember your settings and preferences for a better experience.