kakasloi 🔻☭ Profile picture
Oct 7, 2022 10 tweets 4 min read Read on X
On #WorldCottonDay, we remember the up to 300,000 people killed by German colonizers during the two-year Maji Maji rebellion of workers & peasants in present-day Tanzania, many of them forced to work in cotton fields. 🧵 Image
In the late 19th century Germany had become the third largest colonial occupier in Africa when it colonized present-day Tanzania, Rwanda and Burundi, establishing “German East Africa” under the leadership of Dr. Carl Peters. Image
Peters, who would be celebrated as a national hero during Germany’s Nazi era, was known in Tanzania (then Tanganyika) as “Milkono wa Damu,” meaning “Man with Blood on His Hands”, for his violent suppression of resistance to German colonialism. Image
The German colonial regime enforced high taxes and forced labor on Tanzania’s population while raking in super profits from the country’s vast resources which ranged from cotton to gold. Cotton quotas were imposed and those who didn’t meet them faced torture. ImageImage
When drought hit the area in 1905, local anger reached a tipping point and the two-year Maji Maji rebellion, encompassing over 25,000km2, began. It became one of the strongest challenges to German colonial rule. Image
Kinjikitile Ngwale, regarded locally as a spirit medium, united a vast array of ethnic groups under the belief that holy water (Maji) would protect them from German bullets and initiated the uprising. The Germans responded with a campaign of terror. Image
The Germans, following their war manual “Kreigsbrauch”, which permitted scorched earth tactics against “wild people and barbarians”, destroyed dwellings, food stores, crops and domestic animals. Shortly after the uprising began they hanged the rebels' leader Ngwale. ImageImage
German Lieutenant von der Marwitz said of their tactics: “The systematic search of the bush is time-consuming, but next to the destruction of food supplies, it's the only way to become master of the fanatic rebels.” Image
Famine ensued and up to 300,000 people would be killed as a result of Germany's strategy. The population was reduced by one-third. Image
Today, Tanzania joins Burundi and Namibia in demanding reparations for Germany's colonial crimes. As well as compensation for the hundreds of thousands killed and tortured, Tanzania demands the return of stolen artefacts displayed in German museums. Image

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More from @kakasloi

Dec 22, 2022
2022 was the year Africans rose up against France ✊ #YearInReview

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Dec 21, 2022
This week would've marked the 73rd birthday of Burkinabé socialist revolutionary Thomas Sankara. He became the President of Burkina Faso at the age of 33. lasting only 4 years, because he was killed in a military coup, suspected to have had support from the US and France.🧵
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In those 4 short years he: ⁠

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Dec 19, 2022
The Dutch Prime Minister, Mark Rutte, has apologized for slavery and pledged €227 million for "awareness raising" and a slavery museum. The sum is nowhere near the €50 billion in reparations campaigners demand from the Netherlands to address the legacy of the slave trade. 🧵
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Over 600,000 enslaved people produced super profits on Dutch sugar, coffee, cocoa, tobacco and cotton plantations. The wealth of institutions that still exist, like the royal family and the Dutch Central Bank, was born on those plantations.
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Dec 11, 2022
Today marks the anniversary of one of the worst massacres in modern Latin American history, the El Mozote massacre in El Salvador committed by a right-wing US-trained death squad.

The soldiers killed 1,000 people, almost the entire village of El Mozote. 🧵
The majority of the victims were women, children and the elderly. Soldiers separated the men from the women and children, then they tortured and executed the men in several locations.
The soldiers separated women and older girls from the children, raped them and then executed them with machine guns. Girls as young as 10 were raped. They slit the throats of the children, hanged them from trees & after killing almost the entire population, set the homes on fire.
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Dec 10, 2022
On #HumanRightsDay, here are a mere handful of atrocities committed by the U.S. in recent memory, for which the victims still have no sight of justice. 🧵 Image
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Dec 3, 2022
On this day in 1984, thousands of people in Bhopal, India, were gassed to death in the pesticide plant of U.S. company Union Carbide (UCC) It remains the worst corporate massacre in history and the victims are still fighting for justice. 🧵 Image
During the night of December 3, 1984, the leakage of 27 tons of toxic chemicals turned the UCC plant in Bhopal into a gas chamber. 3,800 people died instantly, and until today over 22,000 have died due to injuries from the leak. The disaster was entirely preventable. ImageImageImage
In its drive to maximize profits, UCC, today owned by Dow – one of the largest chemical producers in the world – cut safety corners and built the plant using untested technology. Aware of the dangers, it wrote them off as an acceptable “business risk”. ImageImageImage
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