@jbqfgjoohkt: 💔😔#تصميم_فيديوهات🎶🎤🎬 #الطويله_سر_الاناقه_والجاذبيه😌❤️ #صبراته_الكبيده💕💕🔥

ايهاب ِبلاعو 🖤🦅
ايهاب ِبلاعو 🖤🦅
Open In TikTok:
Region: LY
Saturday 30 November 2024 22:15:56 GMT
36846
2862
560
262

Music

Download

Comments

a_.61_x
𝐀𝑳𝐈 𝐀𝑳-𝐀𝐁𝐃𝐀𝑳𝐈📈 :
Feeling from you 😕
2024-12-23 16:49:34
0
fafe2091
♯̶ ﮼فاء . :
والله تخنق فيا لعبره نحس فروحي معد معبرني😂.
2024-12-01 22:35:27
8
user6625951121600
ࢪبّـإنـࢪ࣪ࢦ 𝒓𝒃𝒂𝒏𝒛𝒍🦋 :
شي نضحك الحمد لله نا حياتي كلها ضحك😂💔
2024-12-02 03:20:33
19
safaa.ar4
ݺ٫صفاء،الزاوي 💚 𓏲ִَ :
؏ـاد Ⴢ̤ شعور لانه تعوديد عليه 🤷🏻‍♀️😔💔
2024-12-02 13:42:17
7
user7336._2006
Miro zoe :
اصعب شعور والله وخصيصن بعد اتكون ترجهااا من حد معين نقعد انقول بالك النت كمل بس هواا في نت 💔💔💔🥺
2024-12-01 15:59:40
12
hazarkhaled7
hazar 🩷 :
ايزي😂😂😁
2024-12-01 17:00:13
5
.bmw878
لكبيده❤👥 :
نفس شعورك لامه يتسكر عليك النت 🤣😂
2025-01-06 16:43:38
2
ghassan_048
V6√♕$«ســـانGhassanغــ»$♕✓🕷🖤 :
توا خلاص ولا شي عشان خلاص تعودت سكرت 10ايام و فتحت ما لقيتش حد و اعز اصدقائي ديرلي حضر
2024-12-24 15:29:07
1
user8606113977226
فخامت الإسم تكفي 🌹 نيرمين 🌹 :
احسن حاجه والله بس يخلوني ف حالي بس وما نبي شئ منهم
2024-12-02 06:36:42
4
tamy_tamy5
CARLA//🇱🇾. :
حتى نا مش امدورتهم😏
2024-12-02 22:11:59
4
moataz2_0_0_9
مـعــتــز الـحـاســـي🔥🤞🏻. :
عادي متعود عليهاا💔🙂.
2024-12-02 11:30:20
2
userge1emhrv8u
🔱مــصــعــب بــركــه🔱 :
متوعدين علياه الحركه هدي برو😞🙂
2024-12-25 21:27:02
4
naserjamall
El líder Budbus :
احسن نريح راسي من صداع وسكنان
2024-12-24 21:54:41
3
faisalsh6065
𝒮𝒪𝒮ℐ 🎀 :
اصعب احساس 💔💔
2024-12-07 13:33:01
3
sajeda_008
SAJEDA🤍 :
هوا صح اخييي ولكت احسن مندير ناس مصلحجيه وقت المصلح بس يكلموني وعادي الحياه مشيه بيهم وله بلهم 💔👍🏻
2024-12-01 21:39:06
1
ganoha30844140012663
رويــــا ||𝖗𝖔𝖜𝖞𝖆🦋🦋ً↻ :
شعور سمح 🙂♥
2025-01-14 15:32:37
1
user3702120273503
حــ𝑯𝒂𝒎𝒂𝒅𝒆ـمــادჂ̤ :
مش هما يلي امدوريني انا بس مش دير خالطه لل حد🔥
2024-12-31 02:14:16
1
urixodsj
🤍عــــــــلَيـــــــّوُهِ 🤎✨ :
هضا رحا نفسي والله
2024-12-15 07:23:02
1
nonokraiz2001
nonokraiz 2001 :
شعور عادي جدا لانه المرحله الي وصلنالها أكبر من هكي بهلباا ومش مستنين من حد شي ❤️‍🩹
2024-12-01 20:43:05
4
awerrrrrt2999999z
الدريهه 🦂💋 :
؏ـﭑدƱ̤ جدا لانا اني بروحي مش مدوره حد ومش معبره حد 🦦
2024-12-01 22:27:26
3
user7756197704198
محمد عمران الشاعري :
عادي ويش فيها
2024-12-04 23:10:34
2
r_a_m_a_111
𝑨𝒊𝒔𝒉𝒂ᥫ᭡ :
؏ـﭑدƱ̤ جـدا لانـا انـي بـروحـي مـش مـدوره حـد ومـش مـعبـره حـد 🦦🔥.
2024-12-02 18:10:11
2
2shada_006
𝑺𝒉𝒂𝒅𝒂🐆. :
ايزي 🤡❤️‍🩹
2024-12-01 13:59:01
2
a...r588
A . r :
شعور اخييه بكل 🥺💔🥀
2024-12-01 03:28:13
2
To see more videos from user @jbqfgjoohkt, please go to the Tikwm homepage.

Other Videos

The journey’s huge cost is counted as an investment by families. The odyssey begins with a visit to a local agent of one of the smuggling networks, and the subsequent sale of land and livestock – or taking out of a loan – to fund a son's trip. Payments are usually staggered, partly as leverage to try and ensure the travel to South Africa is completed, Ethiopian migration researcher Yordanos Estifanos told The New Humanitarian. The benefits are tangible and publicly visible in towns in the SNNPR, Estifanos said. Remittances pay for the new houses, the farm equipment, the school fees, and lavish weddings – upward mobility the reward for having a brave and dutiful son. “Migration is now socially embedded,” noted Estifanos. “Facebook posts and videos from the men in South Africa all paint a very rosy picture – and even ‘pastors’ in some churches advocate it. That works to allay the fears in the minds of the families.” The young men themselves, in a mix of bravado and fatalism, “see the risks as worthwhile – if they can make it”, he added. A smuggler’s story: Dodging the police The smuggling networks are decentralised and extremely flexible: Routes constantly change depending on law enforcement pressure. A network will be run by a chief smuggler, usually based in Kenya, who outsources to connections in each country. By controlling payments along the corridor, they retain a measure of influence. But that sway begins to fade once the journey gets underway. “As a migrant, you’re travelling in a group, in the hands of smugglers,” an Ethiopian community worker who supports detained migrants told The New Humanitarian, asking not to be named. “You have no phone, no control, and that’s when abuse can start.” There is a “lot of deception used by the smugglers over the travel process”, said Lucy Mseke from the IOM office in Tanzania. “They will say the journey is safe, that it will take only a few weeks, but the reality is very different.” Destination Nairobi Moyale is a bustling town on the Kenya-Ethiopia border that serves as a base for a number of smuggling networks. A smooth highway cuts through the northeastern drylands ending in the capital, Nairobi. But most migrants are taken instead in groups through the bush, using so-called “panya (rat)” routes, to avoid checkpoints. They usually join the main road around the town of Isiolo. Exhausted, they’re packed into vehicles – sometimes hidden among livestock – for the final 270-kilometre leg to Nairobi. As Ethiopian migrants are conspicuous by their features, an absence of documentation, and generally an inability to speak KiSwahili, bribes are paid when police are encountered along the way. Densely populated Kiamaiko, in Nairobi’s Mathare informal settlement, is just one of a number of hard-scrabble neighbourhoods where migrants are hidden. The community is largely Borana and Burji – ethnic groups that straddle the Kenya-Ethiopia border – and tend to provide the safehouses that are a key link in the smuggling chain. New arrivals are crammed into apartment rooms or insanitary shed-like structures, locked from the outside. With never enough food or water, they can be forced to wait for weeks – even months – until the next stage of the journey is arranged.  A smuggler’s story: Mama Anna There can also be an element of trafficking, with the migrants forced to work in construction or slaughter houses to maximise the smugglers’ profits, community leaders told The New Humanitarian. “It’s like a mafia network,” said George Muhia, coordinator of the Kiamaiko Community Social Justice Centre. “It’s very hard to know who the top bosses are, but at the lower echelons, we know who’s involved, and it has become normalised.” “Kenya has very strict anti-trafficking laws, but we don’t convict the facilitators. Why do we stop at just rescuing the victims and not go after the big shots? There’s something there that doesn’t meet the eye.” Fabian Oriri, migration lawyer Smugglers pay around $50 to rent a room where migrants are
The journey’s huge cost is counted as an investment by families. The odyssey begins with a visit to a local agent of one of the smuggling networks, and the subsequent sale of land and livestock – or taking out of a loan – to fund a son's trip. Payments are usually staggered, partly as leverage to try and ensure the travel to South Africa is completed, Ethiopian migration researcher Yordanos Estifanos told The New Humanitarian. The benefits are tangible and publicly visible in towns in the SNNPR, Estifanos said. Remittances pay for the new houses, the farm equipment, the school fees, and lavish weddings – upward mobility the reward for having a brave and dutiful son. “Migration is now socially embedded,” noted Estifanos. “Facebook posts and videos from the men in South Africa all paint a very rosy picture – and even ‘pastors’ in some churches advocate it. That works to allay the fears in the minds of the families.” The young men themselves, in a mix of bravado and fatalism, “see the risks as worthwhile – if they can make it”, he added. A smuggler’s story: Dodging the police The smuggling networks are decentralised and extremely flexible: Routes constantly change depending on law enforcement pressure. A network will be run by a chief smuggler, usually based in Kenya, who outsources to connections in each country. By controlling payments along the corridor, they retain a measure of influence. But that sway begins to fade once the journey gets underway. “As a migrant, you’re travelling in a group, in the hands of smugglers,” an Ethiopian community worker who supports detained migrants told The New Humanitarian, asking not to be named. “You have no phone, no control, and that’s when abuse can start.” There is a “lot of deception used by the smugglers over the travel process”, said Lucy Mseke from the IOM office in Tanzania. “They will say the journey is safe, that it will take only a few weeks, but the reality is very different.” Destination Nairobi Moyale is a bustling town on the Kenya-Ethiopia border that serves as a base for a number of smuggling networks. A smooth highway cuts through the northeastern drylands ending in the capital, Nairobi. But most migrants are taken instead in groups through the bush, using so-called “panya (rat)” routes, to avoid checkpoints. They usually join the main road around the town of Isiolo. Exhausted, they’re packed into vehicles – sometimes hidden among livestock – for the final 270-kilometre leg to Nairobi. As Ethiopian migrants are conspicuous by their features, an absence of documentation, and generally an inability to speak KiSwahili, bribes are paid when police are encountered along the way. Densely populated Kiamaiko, in Nairobi’s Mathare informal settlement, is just one of a number of hard-scrabble neighbourhoods where migrants are hidden. The community is largely Borana and Burji – ethnic groups that straddle the Kenya-Ethiopia border – and tend to provide the safehouses that are a key link in the smuggling chain. New arrivals are crammed into apartment rooms or insanitary shed-like structures, locked from the outside. With never enough food or water, they can be forced to wait for weeks – even months – until the next stage of the journey is arranged. A smuggler’s story: Mama Anna There can also be an element of trafficking, with the migrants forced to work in construction or slaughter houses to maximise the smugglers’ profits, community leaders told The New Humanitarian. “It’s like a mafia network,” said George Muhia, coordinator of the Kiamaiko Community Social Justice Centre. “It’s very hard to know who the top bosses are, but at the lower echelons, we know who’s involved, and it has become normalised.” “Kenya has very strict anti-trafficking laws, but we don’t convict the facilitators. Why do we stop at just rescuing the victims and not go after the big shots? There’s something there that doesn’t meet the eye.” Fabian Oriri, migration lawyer Smugglers pay around $50 to rent a room where migrants are

About