West Coast Connection Forum
Lifestyle => Train of Thought => Topic started by: Elano on August 27, 2007, 09:47:45 AM
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(http://img.timeinc.net/time/quotes/2007/08/0827_papua_hiv.jpg)
"When they got very sick and people could not look after them, they buried them."
Margaret Marabe said families were taking the extreme action because they could no longer look after sufferers or feared catching the disease themselves.
Ms Marabe said she saw the "live burials" with her own eyes during a five-month trip to PNG's remote Southern Highlands.
PNG is in the grip of an HIV/Aids epidemic - the worst in the region.
Officials estimate that 2% of the six million population are infected, but campaigners believe the figure is much higher.
HIV diagnoses have been rising by around 30% each year since 1997, according to a UN Aids report.
Margaret Marabe, a known local activist in PNG, carried out an awareness campaign in the Tari area of the Southern Highlands earlier this year.
"I saw three people with my own eyes. When they got very sick and people could not look after them, they buried them," she told reporters.
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thats some fucked up shit
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Why the hell don't they just kill them instead of torturing them?
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Why the hell don't they just kill them instead of torturing them?
Kill ? Don't you think its better to let them die naturally ?
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Why the hell don't they just kill them instead of torturing them?
Kill ? Don't you think its better to let them die naturally ?
Burying people alive is letting them die naturally? LOL.
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They could at least be humane and hit them over the head with a shovel first. Sick fucks.
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^lol, harsh.