@dwrdkpc: under the stars ✨️ 📅 June 15-16, 2026 📷 GoPro Hero10 Black ••• ​#AestheticVideos ​#NightVibes ​#SkyLovers ​#Universe ​#Galaxy @GoPro

kai ☾
kai ☾
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Region: PH
Tuesday 16 June 2026 01:01:18 GMT
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dwrdkpc
kai ☾ :
Mode: Night Lapse Video Resolution: 4K 4:3 Lens: Wide Shutter: 30s Interval: Auto ISO: Min 800, Max 1600 White Balance (WB): 4500K Color: Flat Sharpness: High Bit Rate: High
2026-06-16 02:04:46
22
21gixyy
Gixy :
ada about you ada gixy 😁💝
2026-06-18 01:37:34
20
apcb.ah
F2 :
the milky way is too beautiful
2026-06-22 06:49:19
3
steinjosh
@Josh :
Can i myday this ?
2026-06-16 22:07:08
2
dedellmawuhamster
𝐝𝐞𝐝𝐞𝐥𝐥𝐬💤 :
ada about you ada dedell 💞😺
2026-07-01 17:25:18
3
sooyalover88
chichi :
😭 one day I will live where I can see all of the stars
2026-06-27 18:06:11
1
cookies.chocolates.19
J Ya :
Gosh the beauty 😍
2026-06-24 13:07:52
1
brilliantsky6
A K S E N A 🍁 :
Niceeee,✨
2026-06-17 00:02:05
1
who0dhis.dd
dindaaa :
cinta banget guehh
2026-06-19 13:44:30
1
__zeni1n
Vinaa🪷 :
selalu cantik
2026-06-17 16:46:50
1
nnotpeachy
dells𐙚 :
selalu cantik
2026-06-24 18:25:15
1
irvn378
Irvn :
Ikutan bg🙏
2026-06-21 02:30:18
2
ayyzzz0ii_
ayya cinta mie ayam :
ada about you ada ayya
2026-06-23 18:33:15
1
jenicuagatcuma
Tere liye :
2026-06-19 13:43:35
1
glow0242
cha4 :
ada about you ada Nisa 😁💝
2026-06-18 08:14:02
1
ffaay_ell
🚩. :
tentang sampean #1975
2026-06-22 02:07:33
1
syd2381
syd278 :
🥰❤️it
2026-06-16 23:33:19
2
halahhnul
🪐 :
jakin aku take ini plissss
2026-06-17 02:14:16
2
bayusetiawanbayu29
bayusetiawan748 :
gixy mana gixy
2026-06-18 12:49:08
1
sunshinebaii
skywhisper님 :
ada ig nya juga nggak kaa? mau follow juga
2026-06-17 22:27:27
1
astromommy777
AstroMommy_Lens :
our home
2026-06-16 01:05:43
1
gats.10
Skēhiro :
ini di iqoo neo bisa gitu gak bg😭😭😭
2026-06-24 08:20:35
0
mulyana.id
☆mulyana☆ :
soliala muhamad
2026-06-17 04:18:14
0
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Other Videos

Her Hijab Did Not Protect Her Recently in Muqdisho, crowds gathered to welcome the popular TikTok creator Amira. Among those attending was a young woman who had simply come to be part of the celebration. Yet what should have been a joyful public event became something far more disturbing. As the crowd grew, a group of men targeted one young woman. They pulled off her hijab and sexually assaulted her in public. Surrounded by people, she was humiliated, violated and stripped of her dignity in full view of others. Whenever women are harmed, the same questions seem to appear. What was she wearing? Why was she there? What was she doing? Could she have avoided it? For as long as I can remember, women have been told that their safety depends on the choices they make, the clothes they wear and the spaces they enter. Yet this incident exposes the flaw in that thinking. This young woman was wearing a hijab. She was in a public place. She was surrounded by people. And still it happened. In fact, the very garment that some people claim would protect her was forcibly removed. The problem was never her clothing. The problem was the people who chose to violate her. For years, many women have been told that modesty is the solution to male misconduct. Yet incidents like this force us to confront a difficult truth. A woman can cover every part of her body and still be harassed. She can follow every social expectation and still be abused. The issue is not what women wear. The issue is the mentality of those who see women as objects rather than human beings. When a person feels entitled to another person's body, no amount of fabric can solve that problem. I live in the United Kingdom, a country that is far less religious than Somalia. Yet I walk through the streets feeling safe. I feel respected. I feel treated with dignity. As a woman, I feel that my rights matter. That reality raises an uncomfortable question. If religion alone is the answer, why do so many women feel safer in countries that are less religious than our own? The problem is not a lack of religion. The problem is a lack of character. It is a failure to teach respect, accountability and basic human decency. Too often, societies focus on controlling women while ignoring the behaviour of men. Women are lectured about modesty, warned about their clothing and told how they should behave, while the actions of men are excused, minimised or ignored altogether. A society cannot seriously claim to care about morality while blaming victims and making excuses for those who commit abuse. If we are willing to question a woman's choices, we should be equally willing to question the attitudes that lead some men to believe they have the right to humiliate and violate another human being. Many boys grow up absorbing unhealthy messages about women from a young age. They see women being disrespected. They hear women spoken about as though they exist for the benefit of men. They witness double standards that grant men freedom while placing restrictions on women. These lessons do not disappear when they become adults. They follow them into schools, workplaces, relationships and public spaces. When women are repeatedly treated as less important, less capable or less deserving of respect, it becomes easier for some people to justify behaviour that should never be tolerated. What happened in Muqdisho during the welcome for Amira was not a failure of hijab. It was not a failure of women. It was a failure of the men who pulled off a young woman's hijab and sexually assaulted her in public. Until we are prepared to confront that reality honestly, we will continue asking the wrong questions and searching for answers in the wrong places. A woman should not have to earn safety through her clothing. Safety, dignity and respect should be her right. #somaligirls #somali #somalitiktok
Her Hijab Did Not Protect Her Recently in Muqdisho, crowds gathered to welcome the popular TikTok creator Amira. Among those attending was a young woman who had simply come to be part of the celebration. Yet what should have been a joyful public event became something far more disturbing. As the crowd grew, a group of men targeted one young woman. They pulled off her hijab and sexually assaulted her in public. Surrounded by people, she was humiliated, violated and stripped of her dignity in full view of others. Whenever women are harmed, the same questions seem to appear. What was she wearing? Why was she there? What was she doing? Could she have avoided it? For as long as I can remember, women have been told that their safety depends on the choices they make, the clothes they wear and the spaces they enter. Yet this incident exposes the flaw in that thinking. This young woman was wearing a hijab. She was in a public place. She was surrounded by people. And still it happened. In fact, the very garment that some people claim would protect her was forcibly removed. The problem was never her clothing. The problem was the people who chose to violate her. For years, many women have been told that modesty is the solution to male misconduct. Yet incidents like this force us to confront a difficult truth. A woman can cover every part of her body and still be harassed. She can follow every social expectation and still be abused. The issue is not what women wear. The issue is the mentality of those who see women as objects rather than human beings. When a person feels entitled to another person's body, no amount of fabric can solve that problem. I live in the United Kingdom, a country that is far less religious than Somalia. Yet I walk through the streets feeling safe. I feel respected. I feel treated with dignity. As a woman, I feel that my rights matter. That reality raises an uncomfortable question. If religion alone is the answer, why do so many women feel safer in countries that are less religious than our own? The problem is not a lack of religion. The problem is a lack of character. It is a failure to teach respect, accountability and basic human decency. Too often, societies focus on controlling women while ignoring the behaviour of men. Women are lectured about modesty, warned about their clothing and told how they should behave, while the actions of men are excused, minimised or ignored altogether. A society cannot seriously claim to care about morality while blaming victims and making excuses for those who commit abuse. If we are willing to question a woman's choices, we should be equally willing to question the attitudes that lead some men to believe they have the right to humiliate and violate another human being. Many boys grow up absorbing unhealthy messages about women from a young age. They see women being disrespected. They hear women spoken about as though they exist for the benefit of men. They witness double standards that grant men freedom while placing restrictions on women. These lessons do not disappear when they become adults. They follow them into schools, workplaces, relationships and public spaces. When women are repeatedly treated as less important, less capable or less deserving of respect, it becomes easier for some people to justify behaviour that should never be tolerated. What happened in Muqdisho during the welcome for Amira was not a failure of hijab. It was not a failure of women. It was a failure of the men who pulled off a young woman's hijab and sexually assaulted her in public. Until we are prepared to confront that reality honestly, we will continue asking the wrong questions and searching for answers in the wrong places. A woman should not have to earn safety through her clothing. Safety, dignity and respect should be her right. #somaligirls #somali #somalitiktok

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