Please watch Sam Okyere tell about how he was discriminated for his skin color in South Korea.
kpop fans watch this
i always reblog this. its too important not to
why am i crying?
global
Africa
Please watch Sam Okyere tell about how he was discriminated for his skin color in South Korea.
kpop fans watch this
i always reblog this. its too important not to
why am i crying?
global
she definitely spills the tea
But a giraffe though? Is nothing sacred?!
Giraffes do nothing to anyone. What is the deal with whites insisting on killing all things African? Why don’t you hear about them going hunting for any other continent’s wildlife and murdering docile creatures for fun?
Giraffes are going extinct and they’re fucking killing them? Wow. Wow wow wow.
When they clear the land of all its animals, who do you think they hunt next?
Kenyan adverts have always been on some next level shit 😂
This is SOOO EXTRA OH LAWD!! Nilikua nafunga macho advert za condom zikianza ndo mathe adhani mimi ni mtoi mpoa lool
I know right! Same 😄 Saa hizo unapeep from the gaps in your hands ukicheka
Lmao… shughuli ilikua kujitoa Sito unajipeleka kitchen… 😂😂😂
Trust ads,making family bonding time as awkward as it can be
*falls out*
Whaaaat😆😆😆😆😅😅😅😅😂😂😂😂😂
This is phenomenal. over 30 million Africans live with Aids/Hiv in Africa alone, a problem many suspect is closely related to vaccination shots, raping of young girls and in some cases raping of men and scientific experiments. This is commercial that powerful. Anyone who does not see this may be part of the problem.
Best commercial ever #HIV #AIDS
ABUJA, Nigeria (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - A group of Nigerian schoolgirls abducted by the Islamist group Boko Haram exactly two years ago have been identified in a new video, raising hopes that they are all alive and renewing global calls for efforts to find them.
A video obtained by U.S. network CNN was shown to three mothers of girls abducted two years ago from Chibok in northeast Nigeria in the first possible sighting of the girls since a video of them in captivity was released in May 2014.
chesI’m sorry you’ve been made to believe that the whole of Africa is poor, I really am..
Reblogging for those of you who think Africa is only what the media and movies portrays it to be
This me up because it’s scary to think that we can be showed something all our lives and not even know it’s a lie
Geez 300k notes, I should make more posts like these 🙌🏾
Africa
We are unlikely to ever know all the details of the birth of the AIDS epidemic. But a series of recent genetic discoveries have shed new light on it, starting with the moment when a connection from chimp to human changed the course of history.
We now know where the epidemic began: a small patch of dense forest in southeastern Cameroon. We know when: within a couple of decades on either side of 1900. We have a good idea of how: A hunter caught an infected chimpanzee for food, allowing the virus to pass from the chimp’s blood into the hunter’s body, probably through a cut during butchering. READ MORE
Rwanda’s national male circumcision program aims to circumcise half the country’s male population by June 2013 in order to reduce HIV transmission, PlusNews reports. The program, which began in 2011, offers free circumcisions at all district hospitals. Research indicates that male circumcision decreases transmission risks from vaginal intercourse by 60 percent. Because of Rwanda’s lack of trained medical personnel—the country has only two doctors per 100,000 people—it’s unlikely that the goal can be met unless personnel are adequately trained. Despite promotion of the program, many Rwandan men are either unaware of the program or are unwilling to participate in it. Click here for more.
(RED)™
Join (RED)™ Now To Eliminate Aids
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All Out brings together people of every identity - lesbian, gay, straight, transgender and all that’s between and beyond - to build a world in which everyone can live freely and be embraced for who they are.
(via All Out)
Nobel laureate Archbishop Desmond Tutu on Tuesday at a meeting on Robben Island, South Africa, that “was meant to be a symbolic passing of the torch from an older generation of activists to younger people,” called on youth to lead the next generation in the fight against HIV/AIDS, Agence France-Presse reports (5/3).
The event, convened by UNAIDS, “joined together world renowned leaders from the UNAIDS High Level Commission on HIV Prevention with a group of young leaders who, in turn, presented the commissioners with a ‘call to action’ articulating the vision of the youth movement on HIV,” according to a UNAIDS press release.
“Today is about putting our heads and our hearts together to support a renewal of leadership and commitment in HIV prevention,” Tutu, co-chair of the Commission on HIV, said, adding, “Bold and honest actions are needed and we look to the next generation of leaders to bring about positive change in attitudes and actions.”
UNAIDS Executive Director Michel Sidibe said, “Young people have the power to change the future and transform the AIDS response. … A collective youth movement mobilised around HIV prevention which exchanges important information through new technologies and peer education will stop new infections.” The meeting focused on utilizing social media and mobile health technologies to implement innovative ways to fight the epidemic, the press release notes (5/4).
Tutu also thanked South African Minister of Health Aaron Motsoaledi for his leadership in the country’s HIV treatment and prevention policies and programs, the Associated Press reports. Motsoaledi, who also attended the meeting, said, “We are definitely joining hands with the rest of the world in the fight against HIV/AIDS. I think we will win” (Mgudlwa, 5/3).
From Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation
May 2, 2011
A growing number of HIV infections in East Africa are linked to injection drug use (IDU), according to a new report (.pdf) from the Center for Strategic and International Studies, VOA News reports (DeCapua, 4/29).
CSIS sent a team to study the issue in Kenya and Tanzania “to better understand the dimensions of the IDU-driven HIV epidemic in those two countries and to look at how U.S.-supported programs through PEPFAR are helping shape a response,” according to a report summary (4/29).
Report co-author Lisa Carty, deputy director at the CSIS Global Health Policy Center, said, “Globally, we know that [injection drug use] is quite a serious problem. And we know that one in every three new infections is attributable to injecting drug use. We know that in Eastern Europe, Central Asia, the former Soviet Union, it continues to be the major driver of the epidemic there. What we’re seeing happen on a parallel track is that in many countries, where the new HIV incidence is starting to stabilize and level off, that the proportion of IDU-related infections is continuing to increase,” VOA News reports. READ MORE