@Lovely10696576@XolaniMamkeli@Maletsapa1 Highest rate of murder and crimes in the world too, and I wonder why. Except for desperate Africans from even worse Shithole countries like Zimbabwe, trust me no one with means is desperate to move to South Africa. There are hundreds of better and safer destinations.
@imsoprettyylike Eritrea or Isayas, another regional spoiler, even if they're siding with Sudan, not out of any principle for historical support & brotherhood, but becoz Ethiopia happens to be a mutual antagonist in the current state of affairs. Having said that, the leaders of the region are 🚮
“South Africans 🇿🇦 think they are the Europe of Africa,I’m a Rwandan 🇷🇼 we have a lot of Nigerians, Kenyans, Somalians here in Rwanda 🇷🇼 and I don’t see any of them in Rwanda 🇷🇼 as a foreigner”
A Rwandan 🇷🇼 man bIasts Söuth Africans 🇿🇦
A report that Ciham Ali Abdu - Eritrean political prisoner - has been freed. Needs confirming. On 8 December 2012, Ciham was arrested at the border of Sudan as she tried to flee Eritrea. Her father Ali Abdu, then Minister of Information fled into exile not long before Ciham herself tried to leave
@ck47_@SholaMos1 The corrupt and incompetent ANC gov have been in power for 30 years, first it was Apartheid and now black foreigners, get a grip unless you wish to remain forever poor.
At first, I assumed it must have been dubbed in Tigrinya. But considering that Sudanese Fulani communities are located along the Eritrea–Ethiopia border, particularly around places like Kassala, and given the long standing Eritrean presence in Sudan, it’s likely the Fulani grew up exposed to Tigrinya music, which apparently also shares similarities with their own music
I also love their traditional clothing, and how they jam to Tigrinya music in their own unique way.
You do make valid points, and yes, migration has always existed, but scale and pace matter. Pointing to history & empire doesn’t address what is happening now, when change is rapid enough to strain social cohesion.
This isn’t about race, it’s about sustainability, integration, and whether current levels are working. Ignoring those concerns and labelling them as “racist” avoids the actual issue
I generally agree with your point, but unfettered migration -especially from groups with very different cultural and religious backgrounds - isn’t a recipe for a good outcome. As tensions rise, it risks increasing social division, more hate crimes, and the segregation of communities across the UK.
https://t.co/D88IDbJ3js
@etaknipsa@I_amMukhtar Indeed, birth rates and historical trends in other countries are useful indicators, but my main point is about migration levels becoming unsustainable and the impact on the native population. It's not a recipe for a good outcome for all parties.
https://t.co/5sSPe7Ig4p
Whether people are Muslim or not is irrelevant and misses the point. The core issue is that, based on current birth rates and demographic trends, White British people are projected to become a minority in the UK around 2063 (I'm citing the source you provided)
So the natives anxiety over these trend & wanting less immigration shouldn't be simply dismissed as racism.
A country isn’t just its geography - it’s its people.