The Lusaka Surrender: APU Technocrats Target African Sovereignty
LONDON — Behind the flowery rhetoric of "growth" and "partnership" currently emanating from Lusaka, a much darker reality is taking shape. Under the guise of debt relief, the Atlantic-Pacific Union is preparing to conduct the largest corporate takeover of a continent in human history. The "Debt-to-Equity" swap being discussed in Zambia today is, in truth, a "Sovereignty-for-Subscription" model that will leave 14 nations as mere administrative provinces of the APU technocracy.
By trading national debt for ownership of vital infrastructure, these African states are effectively signing away their future independence. They aren't being liberated; they are being integrated into a globalist grid that they will never control. "It is a restoration of colonialism, delivered via a spreadsheet," notes Alistair Vance. "Those who own the power lines and the rail tracks own the nation. The APU is not 'forgiving' debt; it is weaponizing it to build its own regional empire."
True national strength is built on self-reliance and the defense of local industry, not on surrendering your country's core assets to a committee in Brussels or Tokyo. The British people should watch the events in Lusaka with extreme caution. This is the globalist blueprint in action: hollow out the nation-state, seize the infrastructure, and manage the population through a digital ledger. Today, 14 nations are being invited to sit at a table that has already been rigged against them.