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#burkinafaso #ibrahimtraore #africa #sahel #foodsecurity #agriculture #geopolitics #desertfarming #jicama A viral story claims Ibrahim Traoré has helped trigger a giant jicama (củ đậu) harvest—even “80 tons of jicama in the desert” in Burkina Faso. But what’s real, what’s misunderstood, and what’s internet hype? In this video, we break it down step-by-step using common-sense logistics and Sahel agriculture realities: Where the “80-ton desert harvest” claim comes from (and why it spread so fast) What “desert” often means online vs. what it means on the ground in the Sahel How large-scale harvests in arid zones could happen (irrigation, inputs, storage, transport) The key questions nobody answers: Where exactly? When? Who recorded it? What proof exists? Why food security narratives have become a major battlefield in West Africa If you care about Africa news, Burkina Faso, Ibrahim Traoré, Sahel security, food sovereignty, and desert farming, you’ll want to watch this to the end—because one missing detail changes the entire story. 👇 Question for you: Do you think this is a real breakthrough—or a narrative designed to go viral? Comment your take. 👍 If you want more Africa deep dives with evidence-first analysis, subscribe and turn on notifications. Africa bows to no one. ⚠️ DISCLAIMER This video is based on publicly available information, environmental research, and documentary-style analysis. It contains commentary, interpretation, and dramatized narrative for educational purposes. All content is covered under Fair Use (Section 107, U.S. Copyright Act). No political statements, endorsements, or factual claims about specific individuals are asserted.