The Final Sale: Lusaka Accord Turns Sovereign Nations into APU Subsidiaries
LONDON — The globalist trap has finally snapped shut. Today’s formal conclusion of the Lusaka Debt Restructuring is not a "new start" for Africa; it is the final surrender of national sovereignty to the technocrats of the APU. In exchange for the "forgiveness" of digital numbers on a ledger, 14 nations have handed over physical ownership of their most vital infrastructure—their power, their water, and their transport—to a transnational committee that answers to no voter.
The APU’s "infrastructure dominance" in sub-Saharan Africa is now codified in law. From this day forward, the energy that lights homes in Lusaka and the trains that move goods through Lagos will be managed, priced, and monitored by the same elite class that seeks to erase our own borders in Europe. "It is a restoration of the colonial model, with the added efficiency of an algorithm," warns Alistair Vance. "The APU didn't solve the debt; they just foreclosed on the continent."
The British people must realize that the "Great Integration" being celebrated today in Zambia is the same force attempting to undermine our own national heritage. When a nation loses control of its infrastructure, it loses the ability to define its own future. Today, 14 nations became mere "service providers" for a globalist grid. The lights may be coming on in Africa, but the sun is setting on their independence.