A British court evicted migrants from a Scottish forest who had declared they were creating their own kingdom (3 photos)
The king and queen did not appear in court—that's not royal business. Apparently, they will be evicted by force.
The cunning black migrants who seized a forest in Scotland under false pretenses will apparently soon be left without a "kingdom." Today, it was announced that a British court ordered the eviction of the three-member "tribe" from their "ancestral land." The king and queen of the self-proclaimed Kingdom of Kubala are not involved in plebeian affairs and therefore did not appear at the court hearing. They will likely have to be evicted by force.
As a reminder, 36-year-old Kofi Offe from Ghana and 42-year-old Jean Gachot from Zimbabwe became world famous for their cunning plan, which, incidentally, could well have worked, especially in today's Britain. The Africans first declared themselves a tribe, and then King Atehehe and Queen Nandi. In the spring, they set up camp on a hill near the town of Jedborough and announced that they had simply reclaimed the land stolen from their ancestors by the British 400 years earlier. They were soon joined by another woman, Kaura Taylor from Texas. She took on the role of "handmaiden" to the royal couple.
Atehehe and Nandi proclaimed the Kingdom of Kubala and claimed ancestral rights to the nearby land, citing it as the birthplace of their kingdom. But they were soon driven from the hill and moved to the nearby forest (a joke they'd have made with the Irish). The "great schemers" have gained popularity online—they have over 100,000 followers on TikTok and Facebook, and they've also attracted the attention of global media. So they'll still have a fight to fight for the land. Kofi Offe, commenting to journalists on the court's decision, said: "If the creator of heaven and earth wants us to leave this land, he will find somewhere for us to go."