cole phelps
Superstar
http://www.observer.ug/index.php?op...ds-africans-&catid=37:guest-writers&Itemid=66
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...ey-are-victims-of-discrimination-9085426.html
quote from one of the articles:
Ugandan students Rita and Edmond, are currently studying in two different Indian cities, yet their experiences are similar. Edmond faces a myriad of verbal abuses while Rita has been on the receiving end of more subtle discrimination.
Countless other incidents have made headlines over the years; a Nigerian national alleged to be a drug dealer was found dead in Goa, a murder claimed to be racially motivated.
Plastered around were posters that read, “Say no to Nigerians, Say no to Drugs”, while Goa state minister, Dayanand Mandrekar, referred to Nigerians being like ‘a cancer.’
In 2012, weeks before the horrific rape of a young woman in Delhi which brought India to its knees, a Rwandese woman was raped in the same city but the story filled a few column inches and was soon forgotten. Stories of students from sub-Saharan Africa being beaten, abused and even murdered are no longer one-off incidents; they are frequent enough to illustrate an urgent need for change.
what do yall think brehs
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...ey-are-victims-of-discrimination-9085426.html
quote from one of the articles:
Ugandan students Rita and Edmond, are currently studying in two different Indian cities, yet their experiences are similar. Edmond faces a myriad of verbal abuses while Rita has been on the receiving end of more subtle discrimination.
Countless other incidents have made headlines over the years; a Nigerian national alleged to be a drug dealer was found dead in Goa, a murder claimed to be racially motivated.
Plastered around were posters that read, “Say no to Nigerians, Say no to Drugs”, while Goa state minister, Dayanand Mandrekar, referred to Nigerians being like ‘a cancer.’
In 2012, weeks before the horrific rape of a young woman in Delhi which brought India to its knees, a Rwandese woman was raped in the same city but the story filled a few column inches and was soon forgotten. Stories of students from sub-Saharan Africa being beaten, abused and even murdered are no longer one-off incidents; they are frequent enough to illustrate an urgent need for change.
what do yall think brehs