He Refused $76,000 And Made His Country Rich | The Ibrahim Traore Story

He Refused ,000 And Made His Country Rich | The Ibrahim Traore Story



đŸ”„ EXCLUSIVE: The African President Who Shocked The World | Inside Ibrahim Traore’s Burkina Faso Revolution 🌍
From refusing a $76k salary to kicking out France, discover how Africa’s youngest president is rewriting the rules of leadership. See inside Burkina Faso’s economic transformation: new factories, thriving farms, and a gold refinery building real wealth for Africans. Compare his $8k captain’s salary to other African presidents’ $170k+ earnings. Features exclusive footage of citizen interactions and unprecedented development projects.
Watch how one leader’s bold choices are making other African presidents nervous. Is this the blueprint for Africa’s future? The video Western media doesn’t want you to see.
#AfricanLeadership #BurkinaFaso #IbrahimTraore #AfricanDevelopment #WestAfrica #AfricanPolitics #NewAfrica #AfricanEconomy

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39 thoughts on “He Refused $76,000 And Made His Country Rich | The Ibrahim Traore Story

  1. President Ibrahim Traore is a LIVING WALKING SLAP in the FACES of INCOMPETENT CORRUPT & CRUEL AFRICAN LEADERS!!!! Burkinabes should make it a LAW to protect TRAORE at all cost because he literally is giving Burkina Faso THEIR FUTURE!!! Long live President Captain Ibrahim Traore!!!!

  2. All of the destabilization happening in Burkina Faso is perpetrated by FRANCE…Let it be clear, every Burkinabe who has functioning brains can SEE that all these chaos is PERPETRATED by FRANCE & MACRON!!!

  3. No one in this 🌎Now is Comparable with “President Ibrahim TraorĂ©â€ between đŸ—Łïž
    Salairyâ€đŸ’°đŸ’°đŸ’°đŸ’°at any Tables Then his
    PEOPLE & PEOPLES
    First.đŸ—ŁïžđŸ‘đŸ‘đŸ‘đŸ‘đŸ‘ a true SON’S of GOD
    a Human being before
    Anything & Everything
    A GraTe Exp to The 🌎
    Fraternellement VĂŽtre
    LadySol.💙🇭đŸ‡čâ€ïžđŸŽ‰đŸŒč

  4. 0:20 I love hearing about this captain who staged a COUP and became the president of Burkina Faso đŸ‡§đŸ‡« Ibrahim TraorĂ©. I know everything about this man and everyone in the United States—I don’t know any African-American who does not know who he is and what he represents for the continent of Africa. The fact that he has left ECOWAS and started his own with AES, which includes Mali đŸ‡ČđŸ‡± and Niger 🇳đŸ‡Ș, and they have open points between the two of them—they are really making moves. I’m not even one minute into the video, just a couple of seconds in, and I just wanted to say: Lord, bless this man, keep this man safe. Who gives a damn if he came into power through a military coup—he is doing so much for the people it’s crazy.

    Ibrahim TraorĂ© was born on March 14, 1988, in Burkina Faso, just months after the assassination of Thomas Sankara, the revolutionary leader whose vision reshaped the nation. Sankara, killed on October 15, 1987, in a coup led by his former ally Blaise CompaorĂ©, left behind a legacy of anti-imperialism, self-sufficiency, and Pan-African unity. His death marked the end of his radical reforms and the start of Compaoré’s 27-year regime.

    Many believe TraorĂ© embodies Sankara’s spirit—his charisma, courage, and defiance reflecting the very soul of a man thought to have been silenced. Some even say TraorĂ© is Sankara reborn, a vessel chosen by the universe to carry forward an unfinished mission. In African spirituality, it is believed that souls may linger in the ancestral realm, waiting for alignment with a body and spirit capable of continuing their divine purpose. Whether reincarnated to complete a mission or returning to correct past wrongs, many see in TraorĂ© the presence of something beyond this world.

    He rose to power amid growing discontent with foreign exploitation and weak leadership. Since becoming president, he has rejected his presidential salary in favor of his former captain’s wages. He has slashed government officials’ salaries, redirecting funds to infrastructure—hospitals, mobile health units, rail systems—and national development. His plans include manufacturing weapons and ammunition domestically, building Burkina Faso’s defense from within. He trains soldiers personally and coordinates with allies like Russia for military support, not as subjugation but to gain knowledge and self-sufficiency.

    His stance has triggered over twenty assassination attempts, including one where a foreign white man, disguised as a businessman, tried to bribe military officials with $5 billion to sabotage him. Still, TraorĂ© stands. The people of Burkina Faso remain loyal, seeing in him more than a man—they see purpose, divine protection, and destiny. His enemies cannot touch him. Not because of luck, but because something deeper shields him: a force, a knowing, a spiritual armor no weapon can pierce.

    Across Africa, youth erupt in celebration wherever he goes. Videos show thousands swarming the streets, crying out for him to lead their countries. Even in the U.S., African Americans—many disconnected from the continent—are watching. He received the loudest applause at John Mahama’s inauguration on January 7, 2025, among 21 African heads of state. His presence was magnetic, his impact undeniable.

    ECOWAS continues to pressure Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger to return under its influence. But these nations formed the Alliance of Sahel States (AES) to reclaim sovereignty. Ghana’s newly elected president, John Mahama, attempted diplomacy but instead made a deal with the AES bloc. Even Togo now considers leaving ECOWAS to join the alliance. This marks a turning point—African nations, once under Western control, are shifting toward independence.

    Western critics accuse TraorĂ© of turning to new colonizers—Russia and China—but those nations don’t impose control over policy, people, or resources like France did before being expelled. TraorĂ© uses these alliances tactically, extracting technical and military knowledge while avoiding exploitation. He knows what he’s doing. Everything is calculated.

    The idea that he is Sankara reincarnated lives in the hearts of many. Whether fact or faith, there’s an energy around him that feels ancient. His presence commands respect, his actions inspire loyalty, and his mission echoes something divine. The West can’t bring him down. Not because they lack power—but because they lack favor. He moves like a man guided by the Creator, protected by ancestors, and driven by purpose.

    God bless this man.

  5. common sense : if these colonial masters want the best for Africa, why does our continent or countries do not look as beautiful as theirs?….we have all the raw materials and human resources so that could have been easier…….think!

  6. Ibrahim is an amazing humble President because he makes things happen. He listens to the people and makes a change. The future of Africa lies with Ibrahim because he is teaching people to be skilled and self reliant. I hope that Africa will not rely on Europe or America. Ibrahim keeps his salary as a soldier and not interested in buying mansions and cars. He took approach to power in a great way building schools, buying equipment for farm land, building textile companies, opening up tomatoe processing plants and creating jobs for all Africans. One example is the President Trump of USA, he doesn't take a salary either.He has done nany good things for USA when it comes to child trafficking and saving children. Ibrahim took power through a military coup and there should be more men like Ibrahim. He reminds me of Sakara. How many men that are presidents that benefit the people in the long run? Nil. Someday I want to meet this person because of his selfless service to humanity. I hope the other African countries work side by side with Ibrahim and stop using Europe or America for anything. I want each African to stay in Africa and be employed with work of there choice. I have seen many Africans, Philipino's and Indians being racialkt discriminated against in Dubai, Poland and other European countries. If they stay in Africa they are safe and making a good living. Make Africa rise again! This also depends upon the leaders in East and West Africa that they do not make agreements with Europe, America. I know that Africa can be substainable and there is enough water for everyone to drink throughout Africa. Western nations tell everyone that Africa has no water. There is so much water in the earth's crust. Great video

  7. According to WIKIPEDIA this young president Mr Ibrahim Traore is belongs to Burkina Faso African country. Ethnic groups (2010 est): 63.8% are Islam and 26.3% are Christians. Maybe in couple of years this percentage will change very fast.

  8. I hope Africa will be great . Dont bow down in front of any one. Education and create own products through small scale lo al industrialisation can bring prosper. Dont go beyond robots thats only bulshits. Create maximum jobs by small scale industrialisation.

  9. Let them not not be Jealous because is all about life and President Traore should be the greatest example for The African leaders to know and believed nothing last forever.

  10. I don’t think $70000; made a country rich but it was very Nobel act he showed that he loves his country more than money . He loves his people more than money. He is fearless and when Africa unite the continent all people will prosper

  11. A strong army backed by the people of the country ,its a must have.
    Give this leader TraorĂ© 10 years to change the future of Africa🌍
    He wil achieve his goals.
    But they wil do everything to get rid of him because of his mindset for freedom.
    This time its a hard rock to crush.

  12. Lol you guys are so simple. When the President refuses a salary it means he's stealing your money. Lololololol this is the oldest ditator trick in the book. Stop being so stupid please.

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