@kimbelloki123:

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Tuesday 23 June 2026 12:16:04 GMT
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noiaybinhan8
꧁༺❤một mình ta ❤༻꧂ :
🥰
2026-06-23 15:22:09
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triduc29012026
Trí Đức :
❤️❤️❤️
2026-06-23 13:35:38
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nhffvccsd899006
ÚT THẲNG VUI TÍNH :
♥️♥️♥️
2026-06-23 14:27:46
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mnh.nguyn2970
Hạnh 1986/Mạnh 1977 :
a miến chúc em buổi tối vui vẻ nhé em
2026-06-23 12:32:06
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Afrophobia has no place in our schools, our communities, or our future. When schoolchildren are exposed to xenophobic and Afrophobic rhetoric, they are being taught division instead of unity, prejudice instead of understanding, and hatred instead of humanity. The growing trend of anti-African foreign national protests and sentiments spilling into educational spaces is deeply concerning. Schools should be places where young minds are empowered with knowledge, critical thinking, and respect for others—not environments where fear, stereotypes, and hostility are normalized. A generation raised to view fellow Africans as enemies is a generation being set up for failure. The African community must take a stronger and more proactive stance against Afrophobia wherever it appears. Silence allows these attitudes to spread, and when children become the target audience for messages of exclusion, the long-term consequences can be devastating for social cohesion, economic progress, and African unity. Some may argue that these attitudes are simply expressions of frustration, but frustration should never be used to justify teaching children to blame entire groups of people for complex social and economic challenges. When young people are encouraged to direct their anger toward fellow Africans instead of demanding solutions to the real issues affecting their communities, everyone loses. Africa's future depends on a generation that is educated, united, and prepared to work together across borders. We must reject hate, challenge harmful narratives, and promote values of dignity, respect, and solidarity. The future of Africa is not division. The future of Africa is unity, opportunity, and progress for all. #southafrica #southafrican #africannews #capetownsouthafrica #Johannesburg
Afrophobia has no place in our schools, our communities, or our future. When schoolchildren are exposed to xenophobic and Afrophobic rhetoric, they are being taught division instead of unity, prejudice instead of understanding, and hatred instead of humanity. The growing trend of anti-African foreign national protests and sentiments spilling into educational spaces is deeply concerning. Schools should be places where young minds are empowered with knowledge, critical thinking, and respect for others—not environments where fear, stereotypes, and hostility are normalized. A generation raised to view fellow Africans as enemies is a generation being set up for failure. The African community must take a stronger and more proactive stance against Afrophobia wherever it appears. Silence allows these attitudes to spread, and when children become the target audience for messages of exclusion, the long-term consequences can be devastating for social cohesion, economic progress, and African unity. Some may argue that these attitudes are simply expressions of frustration, but frustration should never be used to justify teaching children to blame entire groups of people for complex social and economic challenges. When young people are encouraged to direct their anger toward fellow Africans instead of demanding solutions to the real issues affecting their communities, everyone loses. Africa's future depends on a generation that is educated, united, and prepared to work together across borders. We must reject hate, challenge harmful narratives, and promote values of dignity, respect, and solidarity. The future of Africa is not division. The future of Africa is unity, opportunity, and progress for all. #southafrica #southafrican #africannews #capetownsouthafrica #Johannesburg

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