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@StrootmanW

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CORRECTING THE RECORD ON HISTORY'S MOST COMMON MISCONCEPTIONS.

Joined November 2022
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@StrootmanW
MYTHS
2 years
Take a good look at the skin surrounding the nipple, look at the nipple retracting also. This is called Peau D'Orange, almost like the skin of an orange, and happens when the channels draining lymph are blocked.Sometimes this is what BREAST CANCER can look like. @aproko_doctor
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@StrootmanW
MYTHS
2 years
contributing to the political turmoil that followed the coup. Pls follow me for more exciting story and content.
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@StrootmanW
MYTHS
2 years
survived and lived in hiding for some time after the coup. Emmanuel Ifeajuna's role in Nigeria's history remains a subject of discussion and interpretation. While some view him as a revolutionary who sought to address the country's challenges, others criticize his actions as.
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@StrootmanW
MYTHS
2 years
According to official accounts, Ifeajuna and other coup plotters, including Major Chukwuma Kaduna Nzeogwu, were executed by firing squad on September 25, 1967. However, there are alternative claims suggesting that Ifeajuna may have been killed in a different manner or that he may.
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@StrootmanW
MYTHS
2 years
During his trial, Ifeajuna showed remorse for his actions and expressed regret for the bloodshed caused by the coup. However, he was found guilty of treason and sentenced to death. The exact circumstances of his execution are still a matter of debate and controversy.
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@StrootmanW
MYTHS
2 years
period of political instability. Later in 1966, a counter-coup took place, and Ifeajuna found himself on the opposing side. He was arrested and tried for his involvement in the January coup.
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@StrootmanW
MYTHS
2 years
within the country. The coup resulted in the overthrow and assassination of Nigeria's Prime Minister, Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, and several other political leaders. However, the coup did not achieve its intended goals and led to a series of events that plunged Nigeria into a.
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@StrootmanW
MYTHS
2 years
Nigerian Army. In January 1966, a group of young military officers, including Emmanuel Ifeajuna, staged a coup d'état in Nigeria. The coup was organized by a faction of the Nigerian military that was dissatisfied with the government's perceived corruption and the regional tension.
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@StrootmanW
MYTHS
2 years
After completing his studies in Nigeria, Ifeajuna joined the Nigerian Army in 1959 and underwent military training in Nigeria and the United Kingdom. He received further training at the Royal Military Academy in Sandhurst, England, and was commissioned as an officer in the.
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@StrootmanW
MYTHS
2 years
and later the University College, Ibadan, where he was a member of the distinguished Ibadan University College (IUC) Drama Group. He was also an accomplished athlete and represented Nigeria in the high jump event at the 1954 British Empire and Commonwealth Games.
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@StrootmanW
MYTHS
2 years
Emmanuel Arinze Ifeajuna (1935-1967) was a Nigerian military officer and one of the key figures in the January 1966 military coup in Nigeria. He was born on December 1, 1935 in Onitsha, Eastern Region, Nigeria (now Anambra State). Ifeajuna attended the Government College, Umuahia.
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@StrootmanW
MYTHS
2 years
Most People Used This Book In School But Never Knew The History Behind It!!. The Man On IT Is Emmanuel Ifeajuna. From Africa’s First Commonwealth Gold medalist To Facing A Firing Squad On 25 September . See the full story below 👇
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@StrootmanW
MYTHS
2 years
End of thread . Pls follow for more @StrootmanW .
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@StrootmanW
MYTHS
2 years
struggle, the people won independence from France and became the first country to be founded by former slaves. The Haitian Revolution also emboldened the anti-slavery movement in Europe and led to the abolition of the trans-Atlantic slave trade.
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@StrootmanW
MYTHS
2 years
5)The date of the International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and Its Abolition was chosen to honor the beginning of the slave revolt on the French island of Santo Domingo (today Haiti and the Dominican Republic) in August 1791. Although it took more than a decade of
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@StrootmanW
MYTHS
2 years
4)The Atlantic slave trade lasted longer than you imagine. The British abolished their slave trade in 1807; so did the Americans. The trade continued to flourish, however, down to the 1850s. The last known slave ship, which carried captives to Cuba, sailed in 1866.
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@StrootmanW
MYTHS
2 years
3)The USA was not a significant destination for slave ships. In fact ,less than 5% of the slaves were landed on the coast of the present-day United States. Most enslaved Africans were carried to the Caribbean (45%) or to Brazil(45%).
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@StrootmanW
MYTHS
2 years
2)It wasn’t initially a transatlantic trade. In the early days, enslaved Africans were brought to Portugal or to Atlantic islands like Madeira to work in agriculture.
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@StrootmanW
MYTHS
2 years
1)The Atlantic slave trade started a lot earlier than you think. The Portuguese began trafficking African captives in the 1440s. In England, the Wars of the Roses had yet to begin.
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@StrootmanW
MYTHS
2 years
5 facts you (probably) didn't know about the slave trade. Check the thread.
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