A LEADER LOVED AND RESPECTED: PROTECTED BY THE PEOPLE, STANDING AGAINST COLONIAL EXPLOITATION
What happens when people love and respect their leader, and he isn’t giving away their country’s natural resources to neocolonial forces like Turkey and Qatar? They admire and protect him from all harm!
People of Burkina Faso sleep on roundabouts every night to protect their president
Ibrahim Traore from relentless attempts on his life by the West.
Marcus Herve explains who these ‘protectors of the president’ are: “We call them the Wayiyans which literally means “Come out”. Many among these people are very wealthy merchants, who work in the day, but they all converge at night to their meeting places to keep a vigil. If the Wayiyans notice any suspicious activity or movement, they will sound the alarm, meaning they will go live and start shouting “Wayiyan, wayiyan, wayiyan…” and people from all around will come out.
A LEADER LOVED AND RESPECTED: PROTECTED BY THE PEOPLE, STANDING AGAINST COLONIAL EXPLOITATION
What happens when people love and respect their leader and he isn’t giving away their country’s natural resources to neocolonial forces like @TC_MogadisuBE and @QatarEmbassySO? They… https://t.co/QLatPSokqz pic.twitter.com/BPgp4bPg3o
— Daljir Media (@radiodaljir) May 10, 2025
Most of the coup attempts that foiled is thanks to these people. Like one time, after Captain went to Bobo Dioulasso to lay the first stone of the tomato factory, his convoy was coming back to Ouagadougou by road. The plotters were waiting to eliminate them at their arrival. But, thanks to the Wayiyans, the coup attempt was foiled.
That is why when the plotters wanted to change their tactics, Commander Yves Bamouni in an audio recording which I believe I shared 3 of his recordings on my page, advised our enemies to start killing the Wayiyans because, they are the most dangerous ones in every roundabout in Ouagadougou. Bamouni said that as long as they remain in their positions, that our enemies will find it difficult to move in by land or by air.
And yes, they are not paid as you heard them say. It’s the love for their country and for their president that they are keeping a watch.”
Can the Somali people safeguard their federal system of governance which holds today’s neocolonial exploiters accountable and draw lessons from Burkina Faso?
Credit: X: @wode_maya
> Daljir Media
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