“France Tested Its Atomic Bomb on Black Soldiers” — Captain Ibrahim Traoré Exposes a Dark Chapter of Colonial History
In a bold and chilling revelation, Captain Ibrahim Traoré, the transitional President of Burkina Faso, has accused France of testing atomic weapons on Black African soldiers during its colonial reign—a claim that reignites fierce debates about unpunished colonial crimes and systemic exploitation.
According to Traoré, African soldiers—loyal to the French colonial army—were deliberately exposed to nuclear radiation during atomic tests in the Algerian Sahara in the 1960s. These soldiers, mostly from West African nations like Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger, and Senegal, were allegedly used as “human test subjects” to study the effects of nuclear explosions on the human body.
France conducted 17 nuclear tests in Algeria between 1960 and 1966, starting with the Gerboise Bleue test—their first successful atomic bomb detonation. Reports from independent researchers and declassified French documents have long hinted at the presence of Black soldiers near ground zero—without adequate protection or warning.
Many of these soldiers suffered mysterious illnesses, infertility, and early deaths, yet their stories were erased from official records. Compensation was minimal or non-existent. Their families remain in the dark, generations later.
Captain Traoré's statement is not just a denunciation—it’s a call to confront uncomfortable truths. He urges African nations to stop idolizing their oppressors and start documenting and demanding justice for the invisible wounds left by colonial experiments.
This is no longer about past grievances—it’s about present courage and future justice.
A kind slaveowner?
A kind slaveowner?
Huh?
There’s no such thing
As a kind slaveowner….
Are you for real?
Are you ok?
Why do you justify?
You know damn well
Slaveowner ain’t kind….
You know damn well…
I don’t wanna hear that bull shit
Masters don’t have a golden hearts
For slaves…
You’re mistaken for a mask….
Masters don’t have the compassion
To care,
To love,
Go read how brutal slavery was…
Let me remind
Y’all somethin
Slaveowners are traffickers….
They’re actually criminals…
Especially in America and Europe
They have a lot of atrocities.
Don’t give me that
Africans enslaved other Africans
I’m talkin about white people
Who colonized black people
and put us in their homes
With their abuse and neglect
They be tellin us
Some slaveowners were nice
Honey,
No they weren’t…
Stop the cap…
Dehumanizin wasn’t sweet…..
And you tellin me
Slaveowners are kind…
You need to get out of my face
With the nonsense….
They ain’t kind…
They hurt people….
And they’re so unforgivin….
💯✊🏿©️ Kai C. 5-17-25
“France Tested Its Atomic Bomb on Black Soldiers” — Captain Ibrahim Traoré Exposes a Dark Chapter of Colonial History
In a bold and chilling revelation, Captain Ibrahim Traoré, the transitional President of Burkina Faso, has accused France of testing atomic weapons on Black African soldiers during its colonial reign—a claim that reignites fierce debates about unpunished colonial crimes and systemic exploitation.
According to Traoré, African soldiers—loyal to the French colonial army—were deliberately exposed to nuclear radiation during atomic tests in the Algerian Sahara in the 1960s. These soldiers, mostly from West African nations like Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger, and Senegal, were allegedly used as “human test subjects” to study the effects of nuclear explosions on the human body.
France conducted 17 nuclear tests in Algeria between 1960 and 1966, starting with the Gerboise Bleue test—their first successful atomic bomb detonation. Reports from independent researchers and declassified French documents have long hinted at the presence of Black soldiers near ground zero—without adequate protection or warning.
Many of these soldiers suffered mysterious illnesses, infertility, and early deaths, yet their stories were erased from official records. Compensation was minimal or non-existent. Their families remain in the dark, generations later.
Captain Traoré's statement is not just a denunciation—it’s a call to confront uncomfortable truths. He urges African nations to stop idolizing their oppressors and start documenting and demanding justice for the invisible wounds left by colonial experiments.
This is no longer about past grievances—it’s about present courage and future justice.
Как КРАКЕН защищает ваши данные как жемчужины | #кракен vk6
“Mali has 14 Gold Mines. But it has zero Gold reserves in its central bank
DRC has 5 Gold Mines. But it has zero Gold reserves in its Central Bank
France has zero gold mines on its land. But it has the 5th largest Gold reserves in its Central Bank
Much of the Mali and DRC Gold ends up being stored in former colonial powers and Canada and Australia who end up owning it!
These are some of the reasons why I asked them to pack up and leave Burkina Faso!
We are not born to be a mumu as my brothers from Nigeria say!
Wake up Africa!”