September 19, 2025

TheAfroReport

Exposing, Informing, Empowering

DEPOPULATION in Sub‑Saharan AFRICA: The HIDDEN CRISIS No One Talks About

DEPOPULATION in Sub‑Saharan AFRICA: The HIDDEN CRISIS No One Talks About
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While many Africans navigate daily challenges amid social media and televised distractions, alarming threats lurk: widespread health crises, engineered conflicts, and structural neglect affecting millions. This article lays out verifiable evidence supporting claims of a targeted depopulation pattern impacting Black lives across sub‑Saharan Africa.


1. Population-Control Rhetoric: A Dangerous Illusion

Zbigniew K. Brzezinski—a Polish-American diplomat and U.S. National Security Advisor (1977–1981)—is quoted as saying:

“In earlier times, it was easier to control a million people than to kill a million. Today it is infinitely easier to kill a million people than to control a million people.”

While Brzezinski does not explicitly target African populations, his rhetoric reflects elitist mindsets that justify covert tactics to reduce perceived “overpopulation”—a mindset frequently cited by analysts of global depopulation agendas.


2. Counterfeit Medicines: A Documented Crisis

One of the most lethal realities in Africa is the prevalence of substandard and falsified drugs:

  • The World Health Organization estimates that at least one in ten medicines in low- and middle-income countries are substandard or falsified, with almost half of these cases reported in Africa.
  • Reports from 2024 indicate that one-fifth of sampled medicines in Africa fail quality tests, potentially contributing to hundreds of thousands of deaths annually in sub‑Saharan Africa.
  • Counterfeit pharmaceuticals—especially fake antimalarials and antibiotics—are linked to massive death tolls, with organized crime networks profiting from their distribution.
  • Verification tools like mPedigree in Ghana and Nigeria, and Sproxil in Nigeria and East Africa, allow consumers to confirm authenticity via SMS—but these systems are not yet universal.

3. Conflict and Security Failures

Insurgent violence in Nigeria—especially from Boko Haram and Fulani militias—continues to devastate communities:

  • Boko Haram has caused the deaths of tens of thousands and displaced more than two million people in Nigeria and neighboring countries.
  • In 2015, the Baga massacre in Borno State claimed between 150 and 2,000 lives, displacing tens of thousands more.
  • Former Senator Ahmed Zanna publicly accused the Nigerian government of negligence in confronting Boko Haram and revealed locations where insurgents were being trained. Less than two years later, he died unexpectedly, after previously expressing fears for his life.

These patterns suggest deliberate destabilization, leading to forced displacement and the weakening of communities—a recognized method of undermining population growth and development.


4. Processed Foods, Poisoned Imports & the “Rubber Rice” Issue

Urbanization has brought dietary shifts with far-reaching health consequences. Many city dwellers increasingly consume ultra‑processed foods and imported staples that are chemically treated, heavily preserved, or outright counterfeit.

  • Health organizations report rising rates of heart disease, diabetes, and obesity linked to processed diets in African cities.
  • Villagers, who rely more on fresh, locally grown foods, often live longer and suffer fewer diet-related diseases.
  • A notorious example is the importation of “rubber rice” or “plastic rice,” a counterfeit product made from synthetic materials, reportedly smuggled into West African markets alongside low-quality grain. Though some government agencies have denied its large-scale distribution, seizures and lab tests in multiple countries have confirmed the presence of fake rice shipments.
  • Another concern is fluoride-laced toothpaste and chemically treated water. Fluoride, while used in small doses for dental health, can cause severe health problems if consumed in excess—yet monitoring and regulation remain weak across much of Africa.

These unhealthy imports directly undermine the long-term health and vitality of African populations.


5. Declining Pharmaceutical Effectiveness

Many Africans report that common medications, such as paracetamol, no longer work as effectively as they did a decade ago:

  • This decline is largely attributed to counterfeit or degraded medicines, poor storage conditions, and weak regulatory enforcement.
  • Fake drugs not only fail to treat illnesses—they can cause harmful side effects or lead to drug resistance, making future treatment harder and more expensive.
  • The problem is so severe that some hospitals and pharmacies in Africa are now suspected sources of counterfeit medicine.

Summary: A Pattern of Systemic Threats

When viewed together, these crises reveal a pattern of structural neglect and exploitation:

  1. Elite rhetoric normalizes large-scale population reduction.
  2. Counterfeit medicines kill quietly and on a massive scale.
  3. Engineered conflicts displace millions and destabilize entire regions.
  4. Poisoned and counterfeit foods, including synthetic “rubber rice,” undermine public health.
  5. Weak pharmaceutical regulation allows ineffective or harmful drugs to circulate unchecked.

Conclusion

The fact remains that everything around us seems to be taking more life than it gives, the four ways in which West & East Africa are being depopulated of the black race is only but a fraction of what is actually happening. Our cellphones and radio waves are causing people to develop complications like cancer and tumors. The manipulation of the atmosphere via chemtrails which cause mass respiratory diseases and also mental disorders yet this remains an issue that many Africans are totally oblivious to.

 In the words of Dr. Henrik Clarke:

“Black man, you have no friends. The white man will never ally with the black man against the Asian; the Arab will never ally with the black against the European. In the battlefield of life, our only true ally remains each other as black people all over the world.”

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