Inside South Sudan's Capital City ($2 per month salary)

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Indigo Traveller

Joined: Mar 2024
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Inside South Sudan's Capital City ($2 per month salary)


A look into the lives of South Sudanese people. Donate to save malnourished children’s lives in South Sudan: https://donate.unicef.org.nz/IndigoTraveller

My Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/indigo.traveller/
My Patreon (a way to support these videos): https://www.patreon.com/indigotraveller

Intro song, Axel Thesleff – Bad…

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25 Comments

  1. Horrible existence for those little kids and malnurished babies… I wish africans would stop having kids entirely….. why born a child when yoi cant even feed yourself.

  2. i dont want sound bad but in this circumstances why people make kids really?? ok some can be the result of rapes but not all of them…wtf the people cant take it out in time?they don`t have any brain to think?….i really dont get it!u see around what`s going on and still chose to make kidds…this is murder!

  3. As a Sudanese, I do not differentiate between a Sudanese and a South Sudanese. We are all one…. The British colonial policy planted racism and fanaticism among us. I hope that the wars will end and the country will be united again.

  4. 1:00 It is not independence.. Rather, it is a separation resulting from the policy of discrimination that continued for years after they were left by the British after the departure of European colonialism from Africa.

  5. I've recently been deployed to a country like this. It's honestly heartbreaking to see kids chasing our Humvee down every day begging for food and water. I remember them explaining to us that American soldiers were the only people who were being nice to them. Not even their own police or military cared about them.

    I honestly wished there was more that we could do for them, but their country's government and police force constantly kept us from doing much.

    We did manage to build a school, a wild life reserve/zoo and an orphanage for them while my task force was there. However, I felt like what we did was not what they actually needed.

    It just broke my heart when my deployment was over. The kids and the people waving goodbye to us as we left for the airport just crushed my soul.