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Re: FIYAH AND FLOODS *LINK*
In Response To: Re: FIYAH AND FLOODS ()

Thoughts are actions, so keep raining thoughts of fiyah till they sweat like the HOGS they are. Fiyah so hot that no amount of air conditioning can cool the heat.

Namibia: A Herero Genocide survivor tours the graves of her murdered ancestors:

"Simon's first stop is Swakopmund, Namibia's second largest city and a place with strong German connections, where Mein Kampf and photos of Hitler are still on sale in the local curio shop.

A memorial for the Herero Tribe, killed under German rule in Namibia

Namibia used to be a German colony and the country has a dark past - German colonisers killed tens of thousands of locals in a forgotten genocide, which Simon learns about from a local historian whose relatives suffered in German "concentration camps" in Namibia.

Simon arrives in the capital Windhoek, where he meets prostitutes infected with HIV (Namibia has one of the highest infection rates in the world)and witnesses at first hand the growing influence of China in Africa."

The Chinese have now taking up where the European savages left off; using native labor to make bricks for houses that they won't/can't live in while native Women sell themselves for food on the streets. They are now learning the language of their new oppressor.

"Botswana confounds many of the stereotypes of poor Africa. (2bn dollars per year produced by diamond mines)

Well-run, with cattle-patrols that keep stray cows off the roads, Botswana is making a fortune from tourism and a natural resource that never seems to lose its lustre.

The world's largest diamond mine, just south of the Tropic of Capricorn, produces millions of dollars worth of stones every week, funding universal education and extensive healthcare.

The mining firm has forked out on anti-AIDS drugs to keep its workforce functioning in a country where HIV rates have rocketed up to 40%.

But not all Botswanans are benefiting from the national prosperity.

On the edge of the Kalahari desert many of the legendary San people - also known as the Bushmen of the Kalahari - have been moved out of the desert into depressing resettlement camps by a government that says it wants them to be part of the modern world.

The government has provided basic huts and schools for the San, who are among the poorest people in southern Africa, but many of the San are having difficulty adapting to the modern world.

In a spectacular journey into the heart of the Kalahari Desert, Simon seeks out the remaining San who are still living in the desert alongside their lion "cousins".

Some San have won a legal battle, and plan to return to live in their Kalahari homeland - but as Simon finds out, life can be tough in this beautiful, brutal environment."

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FIYAH AND FLOODS
Re: FIYAH AND FLOODS *LINK*
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Re: FIYAH AND FLOODS *LINK*
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Re: FIYAH AND FLOODS *LINK*
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