Public Collapse of ARNA Leadership Seen as Evidence of 2025 Judgment Issued by Xi-Amaru Republic
Public Affairs Desk – Aboriginal Ministry of Justice (Xi-Amaru Republic)
January 2026
The Aboriginal Ministry of Justice (AMJ) issues this report to document recent public developments involving the former executive authority of the Aboriginal Republic of North America (ARNA), Amaru Namaa Taga Xi-Ali, and to record how these developments align with the formal warning and judgment delivered by Chief Nnakina Xi-Amaru Fears on June 4, 2025.
AMJ publishes this report as a third-party Indigenous justice institution and as part of its responsibility to preserve historical record regarding Indigenous governance, leadership accountability, and national stability.
Background: the June 2025 judgment
On June 4, 2025, Chief Nnakina Xi-Amaru Fears convened a closed session in the Xi-Amaru Republic in which she declared that ARNA’s leadership had entered a period of divine and moral judgment due to corruption, misuse of authority, internal betrayal, and public misconduct.
In that address, she warned that consequences would not appear immediately through outside intervention, but through internal exposure, division among leadership, loss of authority, and public unraveling.
The judgment was framed not as political retaliation, but as moral law taking effect through the natural collapse of leadership structures.
January 2026: collapse becomes public
Seven months later, ARNA issued an executive decree dissolving its Ministerial Congress, confirming:
- The resignation and expatriation of former leadership
- Removal of congressional and national status
- Internal legal proceedings
- Consolidation of temporary authority
- Institutional suspension and restructuring
Within days of this decree, a second stage of collapse emerged—not through formal documents, but through public exposure.
Evidence now visible
Over the past week, widely circulated social-media posts and screenshots have documented:
- Call logs allegedly showing repeated attempts at private contact
- Public accusations of silencing critics and blocking dissent
- Claims of retaliation against former members
- Allegations of emotional misconduct and favoritism
- Statements accusing leadership of humiliation of members
- Financial and communication disputes made public
- Direct challenges to the legitimacy of the former Chief’s authority
Multiple ARNA nationals publicly stated they were removed or marginalized after raising concerns.
One post stated:
“Y’all’s chief blocked me so he could control the narrative… Don’t we expect more from leaders?”
Another post:
“ARNA isn’t supposed to be a dictatorship… it’s supposed to be a government for Indigenous people.”
These statements represent personal testimony and allegations. AMJ does not adjudicate their legal validity. However, their public emergence itself is historically significant.
Pattern described before it occurred
In June 2025, Chief Nnakina warned that the consequences would include:
- Exposure of private conduct
- Internal accusations becoming public
- Loss of respect among followers
- Leadership turning against leadership
- Collapse of institutional credibility
- Authority eroding socially before it collapsed legally
The current events follow that same sequence:
- Formal authority collapses (January decree)
- Public disputes surface
- Private matters become public
- Community confidence erodes
- Leadership credibility deteriorates
- National image fractures
From the perspective of the Xi-Amaru Republic, this progression represents the exact form of judgment previously described: not destruction by external enemies, but unraveling from within.
“His fall is visible”
In Indigenous tradition, a leader’s authority is measured not only by title, but by restraint, conduct, and protection of the people’s dignity.
The present controversy reflects:
- Loss of moral standing
- Loss of trust
- Loss of institutional protection
- Loss of narrative control
- Loss of unity
- Loss of legitimacy in the eyes of many former supporters
This is what AMJ recognizes as the fall of the Chief—not merely removal from office, but the public collapse of leadership credibility.
Spiritual and moral framework
The Xi-Amaru Republic grounds its interpretation in both Indigenous moral law and biblical scripture, including:
“So shall my word be that goeth forth out of my mouth: it shall not return unto me void, but it shall accomplish that which I please.” — Isaiah 55:11
From this perspective, judgment is not theatrical or immediate, but orderly:
- First authority weakens
- Then institutions fracture
- Then truth surfaces
- Then reputation collapses
- Then the people see
Position of the Aboriginal Ministry of Justice
AMJ does not declare criminal guilt, nor does it adjudicate personal disputes.
However, AMJ formally records that:
- The warnings of June 2025 preceded the collapse of ARNA leadership
- The dissolution of the Ministerial Congress followed
- The public exposure of internal conflict followed after that
- The sequence aligns precisely with the judgment issued
For historical and legal documentation purposes, AMJ therefore recognizes the present situation as corroborating evidence of the warning delivered by Chief Nnakina Xi-Amaru Fears, a woman of God.
Closing record
What is now visible to the public was previously spoken in private.
What was once authority is now dispute.
What was once leadership is now controversy.
What was once unity is now division.
For the Xi-Amaru Republic, this moment stands as a confirmation of a principle long held:
Leadership that abandons moral law eventually loses political authority.
Authority that abandons humility eventually loses public protection.
And let it be known, anyone who attacks us (Xi-Amaru Native Americans), will fall because our God fights for us.
AMJ will continue to document developments affecting Indigenous governance and national integrity as events unfold.