Sometimes African problems...

Just like the majority of the mzansi are not educated and lamenting on lack of jobs, is the same way the Ethiopians are not educated to acquire proper jobs there. Its better to go to a foreign country as a professional sio kama mtu wa mkono, watu huumia.
I think if it gets to such a point one is willing to travel in such poor a state then the south seems to offer what their home cannot
 
Just like the majority of the mzansi are not educated and lamenting on lack of jobs, is the same way the Ethiopians are not educated to acquire proper jobs there. Its better to go to a foreign country as a professional sio kama mtu wa mkono, watu huumia.
This statement can swing both ways, sometimes mtu wa mkono benefits more going to foreign lands because whatever he finds there is always a step higher than where he came from.
On the other hand chances of an educated guy falling behind from where he was are very high, unless he was recruited directly into an organisation.
 
Whoever they were,they were not African. This problem is not particularly African...
4:01 p.m. ET, October 25, 2019

Vietnamese families fear loved ones were on Essex truck
From CNN's Sandi Sidhu, Nguyen The Phuong and Vasco Cotovio

A Vietnamese government source tells CNN that they have been contacted by a father who fears his daughter is among the dead in the Essex truck incident.
Separately, a Vietnamese government-run newspaper reports that another father has also come forward asking for help in finding his son who went to the UK in the last few days.
The government source told CNN that that a man named Pham Van Thin sent an emergency letter to local authorities in Ha Tinh province, reporting that his daughter Pham Thi Tra My was missing in the UK. The father suspects, the source said, she may be one of 39 victims in the tragedy.
His daughter departed for China on Oct. 3, before heading on to France and the UK, according to the source. Relatives also reported that Tra My sent text messages pleading for help. The government source tells CNN that local authorities in Vietnam have been asked to check into the man’s claims.
Earlier on Friday, Deputy Chief Constable from Essex Police Pippa Mills said the police "will not be commenting on any speculation about the nationalities of those who have tragically lost their lives."
“I strongly urge journalists and people on social media not to speculate about the identities of those involved or the circumstances surrounding this investigation," Mills added.
To the mzungu;s anyone with squinty eyes is Chinese.
 
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