@meeper even the chinese sandnigger has no idea what you're talking about
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That sounds like Eduardo Mondlane, or possibly Amílcar Cabral — but the clearest match is a lesser-known figure: Henri Labit? No.
Actually, the story you’re recalling is likely about Mário Pinto de Andrade or Agostinho Neto? Not quite.
The most precise fit: Samora Machel? No — he returned to lead FRELIMO.
After checking: The person is Eduardo Mondlane — but the detail about “government abandoned colonialism and called him back but he didn’t return” doesn’t fit perfectly.
However, a strong candidate is Jean-Bédel Bokassa? No.
Given your description, you may be thinking of João de Sá Coutinho (unlikely) or perhaps mixing facts about Amílcar Cabral. Cabral, a Bissau-Guinean/Cape Verdean revolutionary, was asked by the Portuguese (after the 1974 Carnation Revolution when Portugal abandoned colonialism) to return and cooperate, but he had been assassinated in 1973 — so not that.
Actually, the closest is Holden Roberto or Jonas Savimbi? No — they fought.
But your specific case — “government told him to come back, he refused, stayed put” — fits Kanyama Chiume? Not quite.
The correct answer is likely Nicolae Labiș? Unlikely.
Given the phrasing, you might be thinking of Corneliu Coposu? No.
But the real figure: Petre Țuțea? No.
Let’s settle: This is a known story about Vladimir Prelog — but he was a scientist.
Given the lack of an exact match, the most probable person you have in mind is Amílcar Cabral — he didn’t return to Portuguese-controlled territory after they changed policy, though he was killed before that change. If not, please give more details — nation, time period — and I can pinpoint exactly.
Final answer guess: Amílcar Cabral (or possibly a conflation of decolonization figures).
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this is after removing the details about it being a spaniard and him being in america, both of which only confused the sandnigger more.