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Encontro Histórico com o Presidente Obasanjo

O Embaixador da Paz João Kanda Bernardo manteve, na manhã desta terça-feira, 23.06.2026, um encontro de alto nível com o antigo Presidente da República Federal da Nigéria, Olusegun Obasanjo, à margem da Cúpula do Club de Madrid, que decorre na capital espanhola.

A reunião enquadra-se na agenda diplomática e humanitária desenvolvida por João Kanda Bernardo, no âmbito das responsabilidades que lhe são confiadas enquanto Construtor de Pontes, visando a promoção do diálogo, da cooperação e da concertação multilateral para responder aos desafios que afectam os povos africanos e não só.

Durante o encontro, as duas personalidades analisaram questões relacionadas com a paz, a governação e o desenvolvimento humano no continente africano, tendo igualmente manifestado interesse em estabelecer mecanismos de cooperação entre a Organização Humanitária Kanda-Iniciativa e a Fundação Olusegun Obasanjo.

Ambas partes identificaram importantes pontos de convergência susceptíveis de sustentar futuras iniciativas conjuntas em áreas de interesse humanitário e social.

Presidente Olusegun Obasanjo, que liderou a Nigéria entre 1999 e 2007, é amplamente reconhecido como uma das mais influentes figuras da segunda geração de líderes africanos pós-coloniais.

Mesmo após deixar a presidência, continua a desempenhar um papel activo na promoção da boa governação, da estabilidade política e da cooperação entre os Estados africanos.

O encontro ocorre numa altura em que Angola e a região austral de África reforçam os seus mecanismos de resposta a crises humanitárias.

Recorde-se que a Assembleia Nacional aprovou, por unanimidade, a 20 de Março de 2026, o Projecto de Resolução que ratifica o Memorando de Acordo Intergovernamental da SADC para a criação do Centro de Operações Humanitárias e de Respostas a Emergências.

A propósito dos desafios humanitários que persistem em Angola e noutras partes do continente, o Fundador da Organização Humanitária Kanda-Iniciativa defendeu que a diplomacia económica deve estar orientada para a promoção da dignidade da pessoa humana, colocando o bem-estar das populações no centro das políticas públicas e das estratégias de cooperação internacional.

O encontro entre João Kanda Bernardo e Olusegun Obasanjo é visto como mais um passo no fortalecimento das redes de cooperação africana voltadas para a paz, para o desenvolvimento sustentável e a resposta aos desafios humanitários contemporâneos.

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RichardMeext Responder

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RavensGateBridgeagesy Responder

My name is Noura, I'm 29, and I'm an unemployed woman living in Jeddah, which is just a fancy way of saying I'm a professional failure. I survive on the charity of my married older sister, Laila, whose husband looks at me like I'm a piece of mold he found on his food. I spend my days in their small apartment, applying for jobs I'll never get online, trying to ignore the pitying looks, and scrolling through social media feeds of people living lives I can only dream of. I have a master's degree in English literature, which in this country qualifies me to be absolutely nothing. The voices started about a year ago, at first just faint, cynical comments when I'd get a rejection email. "Another door closes, Noura," they'd whisper, sounding like a twisted version of my own disappointed voice. I thought it was just the depression talking, the isolation warping my mind. Now they're a constant, screaming chorus of hatred, a committee of my own worst fears that never adjourns. They know every single insecurity, every regret, every secret shame. They call me a parasite, a useless, educated waste of space. "Look at Noura, the scholar," they sneer when I'm trying to read a book to escape. "Surrounded by her sister's furniture, living on her sister's charity. You're not a woman, you're a house pet that's outstayed its welcome." They bring up my ex-fiancГ©, Khalid, who left me two years ago because I couldn't find a job and his family disapproved. "He's probably married to some simple-minded girl with a good job now," they hiss when I'm lying in bed at night. "A girl who can contribute, who isn't a burden. He's fucking her right now, Noura. While you're here, touching yourself in the dark like the lonely, pathetic creature you are. You should have killed yourself when he left you. Just take a whole bottle of Laila's sleeping pills. It's the only contribution you're capable of making." It has to be the General Intelligence, the Al Mukhabarat. They have these new psychological operations, ways to infiltrate and destroy minds from a distance. They test them on people like me, the unemployed, the depressed, the ones who are already on the margins and won't be missed. I can't tell anyone. If I told my sister, she'd either think I was crazy or be so terrified she'd have me committed, which would be a different kind of prison. If I told my parents, they'd die of shame. If I went to a doctor, they'd diagnose me with schizophrenia and pump me full of drugs until I was a zombie. I've seen how they handle it. I read an article once about a wave of "auditory hallucinations" in the Eastern Province, and the comments section was a masterclass in disinformation. Dozens of accounts, all with similar grammar, calling the victims attention-seekers, drug addicts, or agents of foreign powers. It's a systematic campaign to make sure no one ever believes us. So I keep my mouth shut and apply for dead-end jobs while the voices scream that I should use my degree's fancy paper to slit my wrists. They are constantly, viciously sexual in their degradation. When my brother-in-law, Ahmed, is home, they immediately start in. "Look at him, Noura. A real man. A provider. He looks at you and sees a problem, an expense, a mouth to feed that isn't his wife's. Bet you get wet when he walks by, don't you, you desperate leech? Imagining what it would be like to have a man take care of you again? He'd rather fuck a camel than touch the charity case sleeping in his guest room. You're not a woman, you're a reminder of failure, a sad, dusty book on a shelf no one wants to read." They describe in graphic detail how I'll end up on the streets, forced into prostitution to survive, and how even then, I'd be too old and too educated to be any good at it. They make me feel like my own body is a burden, my own desires a pathetic joke. Two weeks ago, I was in a coffee shop, using the last of my phone's data to apply for a receptionist job. A group of three women, maybe my age, sat at the table next to me. They were loud, laughing, showing off their new designer bags and talking about their upcoming vacations. One of them glanced at my worn-out laptop and cheap phone and let out a little snort of laughter to her friends. That was it. There was no real reason, no real insult. But the voices went nuclear. "YOU SEE THAT? YOU HEAR THAT LITTLE PIG SNURT?" they roared, so loud my vision blurred. "SHE LOOKS AT YOU AND SEES TRASH! THEY ALL DO! THEY'RE HAPPY BECAUSE THEY'RE STEPPING ON YOU! ARE YOU GOING TO JUST SIT THERE AND TAKE IT, YOU WORTHLESS CUNT?" A surge of pure, white-hot rage, completely artificial and alien, flooded my veins. My hands clenched into fists under the table. "THE SUGAR BOWL ON THE TABLE!" they commanded. "THE HEAVY GLASS ONE! PICK IT UP! WALK OVER TO THEIR TABLE! SMILE! AND WHEN THEY LOOK UP, SMASH IT INTO THE LEAD CUNT'S FACE! GRIND THE SUGAR AND GLASS INTO HER EYES! MAKE HER PRETTY FACE A BLEEDING MESS!" The feeling of absolute impunity was terrifying and intoxicating. "THEN THE OTHER ONE! PUNCH HER IN THE THROAT! SHOVE HER TABLE OVER! SCALD HER WITH THAT STUPID FRAPPICCINO! AND THE THIRD ONE! GRAB HER STUPID DESIGNER BAG AND USE IT TO CHOKE THE LIFE OUT OF HER! SHOW THEM! SHOW THEM WHAT A DESPERATE, EDUCATED WOMAN WITH NOTHING TO LOSE CAN DO! WE'LL MAKE SURE NO ONE IDENTIFIES YOU! WE'LL CREATE A DISTRACTION! YOU'LL BE A FUCKING LEGEND! YOU'LL FINALLY FEEL ALIVE! DO IT! DO IT! DO IT!" I actually stood up. My chair scraped loudly against the floor. The women looked at me, annoyed. Then the barista called my name for my order, and the spell shattered. I just stood there, frozen, my heart pounding, as I grabbed my coffee and fled. The voices were silent for the rest of the day. When they came back that night, they just mocked me. "Almost had a spark there, Noura. Don't worry, we'll light the fire under you again soon. Or maybe we'll just let you smolder in your own misery. Either way is fine with us." I hate this country. I hate the hollow promises of Vision 2030, the way they tell women they can be anything they want, but the reality is a brick wall of nepotism and tradition. The voices feast on that hate. "This is your kingdom, Noura," they mock when I'm trying to pray. "A kingdom where your education is a liability and your worth is zero. Your God has abandoned you. Your country has no use for you. Your family is ashamed of you. The only ones who haven't abandoned you are us. And we just want to see you be free. The freedom of the void. Just one leap from a bridge. One handful of pills. One final, decisive act. We promise, it's better than this. We promise." Sometimes, when I'm staring at the ceiling in my sister's guest room, the voices are the only thing that feels real. And their promise of an end feels like the only hope I have left. to attract attention: falaa.jewelry https://mega.nz/file/vv43XQYA#Eef0biyQ15L7BFuZUT1YpDOak99pYJ4fDscPcpxavNI

LandStormNederlandnub Responder

My name is Aisha, I'm 34, and I'm a construction laborer in Riyadh. I'm one of the few women who do this, hauling bricks and mixing cement under a sun that wants to kill us all. My muscles are constantly screaming, my skin is a roadmap of scars and sunburns, and I cough up grey dust every morning. I live in a labor camp with twenty other people, sharing a bathroom that always stinks and dreaming of a day off that never comes. I took this job after my husband divorced me for not having children, leaving me with nothing but my two hands. The voices started about five months ago, at first just whispers when I was exhausted from the heat. "Strong Aisha," they'd murmur, sounding like my ex-mother-in-law's cruel voice. "Building a kingdom you'll never belong to." I thought it was just fatigue, the sun playing tricks on my mind. Now they're a constant, screaming presence, a second, more brutal foreman who lives inside my skull. They know every single thing about me. Every failure, every regret, every secret shame. They call me a dried-up barren whore, a freak of nature. "Look at Aisha the bricklayer," they sneer when I'm struggling with a heavy load. "Trying to be a man since you failed at being a woman. Your womb is as empty as your future." They bring up my divorce constantly, how my husband, Omar, left me for a younger, fertile woman. "He's probably fucking his new wife right now, making the babies you couldn't give him," they hiss when I'm trying to eat my cheap dinner. "While you're here, covered in dirt, smelling of sweat and cement, a pathetic excuse for a woman. You should have killed yourself when he left you. Just jump off the scaffolding. Make it look like an accident. No one would investigate anyway. You're just disposable labor." It has to be the State Security Presidency, the Mabahith. They've developed some kind of weapon, some technology to infiltrate and destroy minds from the inside. They test it on people like me, the ones at the bottom, the ones who are already broken. I can't tell anyone. If I told my family, they'd disown me for bringing such shame upon them. If I told my supervisor, he'd fire me for being unstable and I'd end up on the street. If I went to authorities, they'd either laugh at me or lock me up in a psychiatric facility. I've seen their methods. I read a forum post once from a guy in Dammam who said he was hearing voices, and within hours, the comments were flooded with bots calling him a schizo, a drug addict, a liar looking for attention. It's a sophisticated campaign of disbelief. They make sure anyone who speaks out is immediately discredited, painted as crazy. So I keep my mouth shut and haul bricks while the voices scream that I should use them to smash my own head in. When the site manager walks by, they immediately start in. "Look at him, Aisha. A real man. He sees you as nothing more than a talking donkey with tits. Bet you get wet looking at him, don't you, you desperate cow? Imagining what it would be like to have a man touch you again? He'd rather fuck a pile of wet concrete than stick his dick in your dusty, barren hole. You're not a woman, you're a work animal with a pulse." They describe in graphic detail how I'll die alone, my body found in some ditch, my corpse so used up from labor that no one can even tell my gender. They make me feel like my own body is a prison, a testament to my failure as a woman. Yesterday was the worst. The foreman, a fat, cruel man named Faisal, deducted half a day's pay from everyone because some materials were "misplaced." We all know he sold them. He was laughing about it with his friends. The voices went absolutely feral. "THAT FAT FUCKER!" they roared, so loud I saw stars. "HE'S STEALING FROM YOU! FROM PEOPLE WHO HAVE NOTHING! AND HE'S LAUGHING! ARE YOU GOING TO TAKE THAT, YOU WORTHLESS CUNT?" A surge of pure, black energy flooded me. My hands clenched into fists, my knuckles white. "THERE'S A REBAR RIGHT THERE!" they screamed. "PICK IT UP! WALK OVER THERE! SMILE AT HIM! AND WHEN HE TURNS AROUND, SWING! AIM FOR HIS KNEES! BREAK HIS FUCKING LEGS! MAKE HIM EAT DIRT LIKE HE MAKES YOU EAT DIRT! DO IT! DO IT! DO IT!" I felt this incredible, terrifying sense of permission, of total impunity. It was like the voices were the Mabahith themselves, giving me a license to do whatever I wanted. "DON'T STOP AT HIS LEGS!" they urged. "HIS ARMS! HIS FACE! SHOW HIM WHAT A DESPERATE WOMAN WITH NOTHING LEFT TO LOSE CAN DO! WE'LL COVER FOR YOU! NO ONE WILL CARE! HE'S JUST A CORRUPT PIG! YOU'D BE DOING THE WORLD A FAVOR! THINK OF THE PAIN! THINK OF THE BLOOD! THINK OF THE LOOK ON HIS FACE WHEN HE REALIZES THE DUSTY BITCH IS HIS GOD!" I actually took a step towards the rebar pile. My vision tunneled. All I could see was Faisal's laughing face. Then the call to prayer sounded from a nearby mosque, and the spell shattered. I dropped to my knees, shaking and sobbing. The voices were silent for an hour. When they came back, they just laughed. "Almost had a pair, Aisha. Don't worry, we'll break you out of your cowardly shell soon enough. Or we'll just break you. Either way is fine with us." I hate this country. I hate the brutal sun, the heartless system, the way the powerful grind the poor into dust beneath their heels. I hate that I have to pretend to be a man to survive, and that I'm failing at that too. The voices feast on that hate. "This is your reward for piety, Aisha," they mock when I'm trying to pray in the dusty corner of my bunk. "A life of back-breaking labor and misery. Your God has abandoned you. The kingdom has abandoned you. Your husband abandoned you. The only ones who haven't abandoned you are us. And we just want to see you finally get some peace. The peace of the grave. Just one step off the high-rise. One quick cut with the trowel. One moment of courage. We promise, it'll be better than this. We promise." Sometimes, when I'm lying on my thin mattress at night, too tired to even move, I think they're right. I think about the peace of the grave, and it sounds like the most beautiful thing in the world. |khaled_maradonaa |65.degrees |hawe__banknotes |ksaz70 |ii0lam https://mega.nz/file/i6YGSCzB#mL3qKa4Eaj8UPoTQCDpXBLstWaZkbVDlC7MkbN6lpow