The Sudanese Army took Abyei (a disputed border region) last month after Sudan’s President Bashir dissolved a joint Sudan/South Sudan governing council in the city of 50,000. Most of the people in the city of Abyei fled, according to the news. Abyei is also the name of this city in the border region between the two countries.
My friend, Dr Kayiwa, had tossed a lot of orgonite from a Uganda Army helicopter in the region in So. Sudan where the worst fighting was taking place, in mid-2004, by the way, and peace talks were held in 2005. Refugees, including Christine and her late husband, Salva Kirr, began returning to Southern Sudan from Uganda and Kenya, then. After they started distributing orgonite to people it started raining and that ended a very severe, deadly drought. It was like switching on a light–astonishing!
The Doc sent me a written report of his singlehanded orgonite work in several countries over the past few years and I need to post it for the record. Most of the large-scale work that people do with orgonite never gets a public mention, which is sad but is also an indicator that this is a vital, worldwide grassroot effort that doesn’t depend on any personality in order to succeed. This pleases Carol and I an awful lot [Image Can Not Be Found] since the sewer rats know that murdering us would be counterproductive for them–the only way to get recognition for us in the media?
In much of Africa, all that’s needed to end suffering is for the rain to return. Over and over, we’re seeing the pattern of orgonite distribution bringing abundant rainfall in arid and even desert regions of Africa. How can this fail to spread?
In early 2004, Dr Batiibwe and I travelled to Northern Uganda and tossed a lot of orgonite in that area of conflict, where the CIA/MI6-sponsored terror campaign had spilled over from Southern Sudan. The fighting stopped shortly after that in N. Uganda, then Doc Kayiwa, who is quite a strategist got busy in S. Sudan. Our friends on the ground are consolidating the peace and introducing prosperity to that region and well beyond, as you can see.
Christine was a delegate to the secession talks in Khartoum last year at which South Sudan became a sovereign nation. The corporate world order failed to stop it. They’re failing an awful lot, these days.
I figure that a little history can help us appreciate what Christine, Dancan and Jane have been doing in South Sudan and to help us be aware of the vastly improved conditions, there.
In neighboring Kenya, the attempt to railroad Dancan into prison was presumably engineered by the chemical cartel, who are threatened by orgonite’s success. Evidence of that may have been that molasses was being given away to farmers in the areas where orgonite is being used to increase crops. More evidence is Jane’s report of farmers abandoning chemical fertilizers in favor of orgonite.
~Don