Upon the lands of Ga is a terrible plague, an incursion of the white demons — the men of Accra presently stand idle, but truthfully, what is there to conserve if the nation succumbs to its wounds?
Centuries before the British conquered the region, Accra was already an abomination of European colonialism. Since the city's discovery by Danish navigators, who'd corrupted the name of Accra from the Guan word for the Ga people, Nkran, the interactions between Europeans and the Ghanaians were a one-sided manner of exchange.
From the Dutchmen to the British hegemony, they called this place the "Gold Coast" for its famous abundance of gold. But for all the wealth that the toiling natives have produced, they never obtained the fruits of their labor. Since 1877, when Britain mandated Accra as the colonial capital, the city has been refitted and engineered to be of the most stratified and oppressive form for its Black citizens. For each ounce a laborer had in their pocket, there were tons stolen and stripped off to the wealthy communities in which the foreign officers indulge themselves.
When Britain fell to the Kriegsmarine's forces, Accra felt no loss from their oppressors' departure. However, the Germanic hordes did not provide a welcoming entrance to the world of freedom. Perhaps the gulf will eventually garner a wind of change, a gathering of nations without the northern steel hulls shadowing over the realm of Africa.
