Let it Rain Sharp Pointy Shit Tipped Sticks on These Idiots

While America prepares for it’s shopping season; quite a bit of the rest of the world continues to be in total turmoil. So much attention is paid to those Pirate Asses in Somalia; that we’ve forgotten that the war and famine is winding out of control. Please Pray for Somalia..

Our List Continues with a Very Deranged Nigerian Man/Minister who has murdered scores of children for being in his eyes ‘Witches’. finally he will meet his justice. no doubt the spirits of those children will be with him in his eternity. I ask Ogun and Sango to meet him on the dark roads and ride him like a wild horse through fire.
Then we have a Genocidal Maniac; yes maniac. Denying Darfur is an atrocity. he should be barbequed and fed to pigs. he is beyond putrid to say that the Internatioal Criminal Courts are a sham game. You sick impotent little idiot.
may you find yourself facing those whos’ lives you’ve destroyed every moment until you depart this planet, however long that may be. and when you depart may you meet those you’ve killed in the afterlife. may they share with you their pain, and let you experience each of their tragedy’s again as your own, first hand. Ha !
You are as sad as the turd who follows you.. Mugs needs to be chained in a home with a regular zimbabwean family. So that He comes to the reality of his lunicy. the country is in the middle of a Cholera Epidemic; and he forbids international assistance. now is the time for the sharp sticks and pointy rocks to fly in his direction enmasse each-time he alights from any covering.
Let it rain Sharp Pointy Shit Tip Sticks and Sharp White Stones on These Idiot Heads. let them feel the real pain of human sorrow they have created for others.
Let Justice Be Done,

(articles are from bbc news)
More than half the population is dependent on food aid in Somalia
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Somalia is in danger of descending into famine while the world’s attention is focused on the problem of piracy off its coast, the Red Cross has warned.
BBC Africa analyst Martin Plaut says agencies like the International Committee of the Red Cross are very wary about using words like famine.
The ICRC’s Alexandre Liebeskind said the violence had made it almost impossible for aid agencies to operate.
About half of Somalia’s population is dependent on food aid.
Drought, floods and nearly two decades of conflict have driven many into destitution.
Alexandre Liebeskind, head of the ICRC in East Africa, says families are now eating their most prized possessions: the camels and goats of reproductive age.
It is a sign of increasing desperation, he says.
He compared the situation to the last great famine of 1992 when hundreds of thousands died.
Yet the fighting between insurgents, the government and the Ethiopian forces in the country mean aid agencies are finding it all but impossible to work on the ground.
Most international humanitarian staff have had to leave and even Somali staff are finding it difficult to operate, at a time when the situation is increasingly critical, Mr Liebeskind says
The Red Cross is calling for the country’s borders to be opened, and for people to be allowed to cross and escape what appears to be a looming disaster.
There have been nearly 100 pirate attacks in Somalian waters this year, despite the presence of several foreign warships.
Campaigners are looking after 170 children accused of being witches [photo courtesy: red rebel films]
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Police in south-east Nigeria have arrested a man who claimed to have killed 110 child “witches”.
“Bishop” Sunday Ulup-Aya told a documentary film team he “delivered” children from demonic possession.
But after his arrest, he reportedly told the police he had only killed the “witches” inside, not the children.
Child rights campaigners say children are frequently abandoned, hideously injured and even murdered because their families believe they are witches.
Self-proclaimed “pastors” extort money from families to exorcise the children, but none has been charged until now.
Mr Ulup-Aya was arrested in Akwa Ibom State after a child rights campaigner led police to his church and negotiated a consultation fee for an exorcism.
He has now been charged with murder.
Five others have been arrested since the weekend and the state government says more arrests are planned
Embarrassed
“So many people here believe that children can be possessed by demons that there is rarely any action taken against those who claim to deliver the children in violent exorcisms,” says Sam Ikpe-Itauma, of the Child Rights and Rehabilitation Network (CRARN).
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Sam Ikpe-Itauma
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He says he has been working for six years to bring the attention of the state government to the children being abandoned, sold to traffickers, or murdered.
But it was not until a British documentary – Dispatches: Saving Africa’s Witch Children – was aired on Channel 4 last month that an arrest was made.
His organisation is looking after 170 children who have been abandoned or abused after being accused of being witches.
Akwa Ibom State spokesman Aniekan Umanah denied they had been embarrassed into acting.
“Nobody knew about him, he lives in a very remote village,” he said.
The state has cared for child victims of abuse, but has not been able to track down abusers because of “lack of documentation”, he said.
‘Misunderstanding’
Mr Ulup-Aya reportedly told police he had not actually killed children.
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He said there was a misunderstanding – he meant he had killed the witch inside the child, not the child themselves.
When police raided his house they found two children inside, but no evidence that any others had been murdered there.
“We have him on tape admitting to killing,” said Mr Umanah.
“It is now up to him to prove otherwise.”
In the past other “pastors” who claim to have the power to deliver children from demonic possession in violent exorcisms have been arrested, but then quietly released by the police, according to Mr Ikpe-Itauma.
“I fear for my life now,” he says.
Trafficking
The fear of child witches is a relatively new phenomenon in Nigeria.
Belief in witchcraft is strong across the country but a fear of child witches has become widespread in Akwa Ibom State since 1990s.
Now children are blamed for all kinds of misfortune that befalls their families.
They are abandoned or sold to child traffickers who then indenture them as house-workers in other parts of Nigeria or into prostitution.
Others are violently exorcised to rid the child of the “demons”.
Exorcism victims seen by CRARN in the past include a child who had nails driven into her head.
Earlier this week Mr Ikpe-Itauma said a six-year-old child was brought to their rescue centre after clambering out of a fast-flowing river.
“The boy’s uncle was experiencing painful swelling in his legs,” Mr Ikpe-Itauma told the BBC.
“He concluded the child was a witch and had placed a curse on him, so he took him on his bicycle to the river and threw him in.”
Ahmed Haroun said his conscience was clear over Darfur
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A Sudanese government minister accused of war crimes in the Darfur region has dismissed the charges as part of a Western plot to re-colonise Sudan.
Sudan’s Humanitarian Affairs Minister, Ahmed Haroun, told a British newspaper the evidence against him was concocted.
He said atrocities he is accused of in Darfur were committed by rebel forces.
The International Criminal Court (ICC) prosecutor meanwhile told the BBC he has warned the UN not to be part of a “cover-up” of alleged crimes in Sudan.
‘No regrets’
But speaking of the ICC case against him to the Guardian newspaper, Mr Haroun said: “My conscience is clear. I have no regrets.”
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Luis Moreno-Ocampo
ICC prosecutor |
“It is another phase of international colonisation. It targets mainly the Africans,” he added.
“It reminds us of the 19th century, when the white people were dominating here in Africa.” As well as pursuing Mr Haroun, ICC prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo wants an arrest warrant issued for Sudan’s President Omar al-Bashir, for alleged war crimes and genocide in Darfur – a charge he denies.
Following his appearance at the 15-member UN Security Council on Wednesday, Mr Moreno-Ocampo told the BBC’s Network Africa programme: “I briefed them about the importance that the Council could not be part of the cover-up of the crimes.
“Because [President] Bashir’s responsibility is not just ordering committing the crimes, he’s also providing the cover-up.”
Judges at the ICC are due to decide whether to indict President Bashir by the start of next year.
Mr Moreno-Ocampo last month also asked judges for arrest warrants to be issued against three rebel commanders in Darfur.
‘Short-lived ceasefire’
Sudan’s government has always rejected charges that it armed the Janjaweed militias accused of widespread atrocities against civilians in the region.
The government in Khartoum has refused to co-operate with the ICC and has been campaigning for the Security Council to use its powers to suspend the court’s proceedings for a year.
The African Union supports Sudan’s call, arguing that arresting President Bashir would disrupt the peace process in Darfur.
South Africa has called on the Security Council to at least discuss suspension, but the US and European countries are opposed.
In November, Sudan’s government called a unilateral ceasefire in Darfur, which rebel groups say was short-lived.
The UN estimates that up to 2.7 million people have been forced from their homes in Darfur and some 300,000 have died during five and a half years of conflict.
Robert Mugabe blames Western sanctions for Zimbabwe’s woes
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Power-sharing in Zimbabwe is dead and it is time for African governments to oust President Robert Mugabe, Kenyan Prime Minister Raila Odinga has said.
His comments are some of the strongest by an African leader against Mr Mugabe, says the BBC’s Karen Allen in Nairobi.
“It’s time for African governments… to push him out of power,” Mr Odinga said after talks with Zimbabwe’s opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai.
Zimbabwe is in political deadlock over a unity coalition government deal.
State media reported the arrest of 10 soldiers who allegedly ran amok in the capital Harare on Monday because a bank had no money to pay their wages. Six other soldiers accused of looting last week had also been held.
Meanwhile, a cholera outbreak has killed hundreds of people.
“Power-sharing is dead in Zimbabwe and will not work with a dictator who does not really believe in power-sharing,” Mr Odinga told the BBC.
The BBC’s Karen Allen in Nairobi says the Kenyan prime minister had also held talks with Jacob Zuma, president of South Africa’s governing African National Congress party.
Mr Zuma has declared a new alliance between his party and the Kenyan leader, designed to elevate the Zimbabwe issue, she says.
![]() Health Minister David Parirenyatwa
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Mr Odinga said that if Mr Mugabe were isolated, he would have no choice but to quit.
“I do believe strongly that if the leadership in South Africa took a firm stand and told Mugabe to quit he will have no choice but to do so,” the Kenyan PM said.
Mr Odinga was sure Mr Zuma, who is tipped to become president of South Africa next year, would have “no hesitation in taking that step”.
He also said he had advised Mr Tsvangirai to boycott the stalled power-sharing talks with Mr Mugabe.
The comments could signal a ramping up of pressure in the region against Mr Mugabe, says our correspondent.
Mr Tsvangirai has been on a whirlwind tour of several African countries appealing for help.
His Movement for Democratic Change party and Mr Mugabe’s Zanu-PF agreed to share power in September, following disputed elections, but have been wrangling over how to share cabinet posts ever since.
Zimbabwe has appealed for international help over a cholera outbreak that has claimed at least 565 lives. At least 12,545 cases have been recorded since August.
‘National emergency’
The country’s authorities, which last week said there was no crisis, have now declared the outbreak a national emergency.
Health Minister David Parirenyatwa warned on Wednesday hospitals were badly lacking in basic medical supplies, equipment and staff.
“Our central hospitals are literally not functioning,” he told the state-owned Herald newspaper.
And Zimbabwe’s deputy health minister Dr Edwin Muguti told the BBC that patients would die without urgent medical aid.
The health sector has been unable to cope with the cholera outbreak
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He said they had appealed to the UK, which along with other Western countries Zimbabwe often blames for its economic collapse, for help.
“They are the former colonial power so we have not cut our relations with the British,” he said. “I’m speaking English because of my heritage from colonialism. So we continue to ask the colonial power as well to assist.”
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said UK development aid to Zimbabwe would be increased.
“Mugabe’s failed state is no longer willing or capable of protecting its people,” Mr Brown said. “Thousands are stricken with cholera, and must be helped urgently.”
The European Commission has pledged more than $12m (£8m) for drugs and clean water in Zimbabwe.
Most of Zimbabwe’s capital has been without water all week. State media said the water was cut because of a lack of purification tablets to help prevent the spread of cholera.
Zimbabwe’s government has blamed its crisis on Western sanctions it says are aimed at trying to bring down Mr Mugabe.
But the sanctions imposed after allegations of electoral fraud and political violence are aimed at the president and his close associates and consist of travel bans and a freeze on their foreign assets.

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