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Where Africa's poorest scratch out a living – and find death in the dirt

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Published Date: 05 January 2009
FIRST, the illness took the animals. Goats fell silent and would not stand up. Chickens died in handfuls. Dogs disappeared.
Then the children succumbed. Toddlers stopped talking and their legs gave out. Women gave birth to stillborns. Infants withered and died. People feared that homes, or even whole families, were cursed.

The mysterious sickness killed 18 children in
Thiaroye Sur Mer, a town on the fringes of Dakar, Senegal's capital.

When television news aired parents' angry pleas for an investigation, when the doctors ordered more tests, when the West sent health experts – they did not find malaria or polio or Aids, or any of the diseases that kill the poor people of Africa. They found lead.

The dirt in Thiaroye Sur Mer is laced with lead, left over from years of extracting it from old car batteries. So when the price of lead quadrupled over five years, residents started digging up the earth to get at it. The World Health Organisation (WHO) says the area is still severely contaminated, even ten months after a government clean-up.

The tragedy of Thiaroye Sur Mer gives a glimpse at how the globalisation of a modern tool – the car battery – can wreak havoc in the developing world.

For years, the town's blacksmiths extracted lead from car batteries, and remoulded it into weights for fishing nets. It's a dangerous, messy process in which workers crack open the batteries with a hatchet and pull small pieces of lead out of skin-burning acid. The work left the dirt of Thiaroye dense with small lead particles.

Then the price of lead climbed, and traders from India came and asked about the dirt. They offered to buy bits of lead by the bag for 60 cents a kilogram, says Coumba Diaw, a middle-aged mother of two. So she dug up the dirt with a shovel and carried bags of it back to her house. She sat outside and separated out the lead with a sifter. It took just an hour of sifting to make what she did in a day of selling vegetables at the market. She kept her two daughters nearby as she worked. And women all over the neighbourhood did the same, creating dust clouds of lead.

Then the deaths came, over the five months from October 2007 through to March 2008. Demba Diaw's four-year-old daughter died. First she got a bad fever. Then she started vomiting. Mr Diaw, a 31-year-old teacher at an Islamic school, thought it was malaria and took her to the hospital. The next day she was dead.

"The doctors couldn't say what she died of," said Mr Diaw. His voice rises as he talks, and he spits out the words.

Mr Diaw started talking to other parents whose children had the same symptoms. They were spending more money each day for more lab tests, but not getting any answers. So he called the local media and held a news conference to demand an investigation. At about the same time, the hospital confirmed lead poisoning. The WHO was called in.

The government ran blood tests on relatives of the dead children. Their mothers and siblings were found to have lead levels of 1,000 micrograms per litre – just 100 micrograms per litre is enough to impair brain development in children.

One block away from Mr Diaw's house, the illness struck his niece, two-year-old Raminatou. Now that they knew what the problem was, they were able to save her.

The clean-up started in March, but was not extensive, residents say. On a side street in Thiaroye Sur Mer, a man points out a pile of sacks full of lead pellets that have sat against a wall for months through the rainy season. About 950 people have been continuously exposed to lead dust in the neighbourhood and many children show signs of neurological damage, according to WHO.

The government has stripped the top layer of dirt from the roads with earthmovers and is paying the hospital bills of anyone sickened by the lead. Authorities want to relocate the community. But Mrs Diaw says this is her only home.

And the Diaws are too poor and too rooted to move. So they will stay where the lead poisons the earth.


Death toll rises as labour laws and safety rules are flouted

AS DEMAND for cars has increased, especially in China and India, so has demand for lead-acid car batteries.

About 70 per cent of the lead manufactured worldwide goes into car batteries, which are also used to power televisions and mobile phones in poorer areas.

Manufacturing and recycling of these batteries have moved mostly to third world countries.

Between 2005 and 2006, four waves of lead poisoning involving batteries were reported in China. And in the Vietnamese village of Dong Mai, lead smelting left 500 people with chronic illnesses and 25 children with brain damage before the government stopped it three years ago, according to the San Francisco-based environmental group OK International.

In richer countries, recycling of lead batteries is regulated. Most US states require anyone who sells lead-acid batteries to collect spent ones and ship them to recycling plants licensed and regulated by the Environmental Protection Agency. Europe has similar oversight.

"It's when you get to third world countries where you don't have regulations or attempts to control the movement of this product that you see this kind of tragedy," said Maurice Desmarais, executive director of Battery Council International, a US-based trade group.

Manufacturing has moved to where labour is cheaper and environmental protection more leniently enforced.



The full article contains 949 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 04 January 2009 11:27 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

,

05/01/2009 02:01:03
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2

Jim A,

05/01/2009 05:11:18
#1 Guga, I won't pretend to be up to date on the Geneva treaty of 1984 (I will check it out though) so could you enlighten us as to what the treaty says about launching rockets at an enemy from areas crammed with civilians, basically using said civilians as a human shield. Thanks
3

POSTMARK,-55,

China, 05/01/2009 06:38:13
#2 Jim A,
Israel needs to do what China did just last Spring when we had a bunch of hooligan monks and their equally hooligan followers go on a killing spree indiscriminatly slaughtering the Han Chinese. Our government sent in the military and rounded up those criminals responsible of the murders and put an end to the situation PDQ. We didn't sit back from a safe distance and fire a sh!tload of missiles and bomb the living daylights out of Tibet, our government handled it responsibly. No innocent Tibetans lost their lives in the process, only some of the guilty ones, and the rest were given trials and are serving their time. Both the US and Israel have always been infamous for their overkill tactics and for some reason you choose to defend their actions. The US labels actions like that 'shock and awe' and actually brags about what they're capable of doing and have done, pretty damn sick if you ask me. The US is by far the biggest terrorist organization with the UK and Israel fighting out for 2nd and 3rd prize. The US is also guilty of firing missiles in cross-border attacks into Pakistan indiscriminately killing anyone getting caught in the fire, yet another blatant act of terrorism and illegal in International Law.
4

Mashimaro,

China 05/01/2009 07:07:33
there's an interesting thing... all those european and US cars are obviously not using lead batteries, cos this whole thing apparently only came about when CHINA and India started wanting cars. Isn't that amazing? All that industry and all those vehicles in the west... why they just produced fresh clean air and ran on sea water. It was those nasty Chinese who messed up the earth, yes sireee bob.
5

POSTMARK,-55,

China, 05/01/2009 07:52:37
#4 Mashimaro,
Don't you know anything man? The above mentioned countries by you have all their vehicles run on wind power or big rubber bands, no pollution whatsoever, no wonder your country is so far behind in technology. And what the hell is a battery anyways, I thought that was a term used by the law when one person hits another, like assault and battery or something like that. Geez Mashimaro, can't you get anything right? Now go lick the posts of a battery and see if you can go on an 'acid trip' man ! :-))))))
6

Jim A,

05/01/2009 08:20:57
Posty #3 wrote "for some reason you choose to defend their actions"

Now c'mon Posty you know me better than that. I'm not taking any side in this conflict I'm saying how I see it, if anything I'm playing devils advocate. Look, Guga above has quoted the Geneva treaty of 1980 but he has applied it to one side only, the Israelis. Hamas are just as guilty of the violation of said treaty in that they store and launch their rockets from civilian residential areas. Don't tell me they don't mate because they have posted videos on the internet of their people firing rockets from residential areas.
When it comes to the indiscriminate killing of civilians both sides are equaly guilty.

P.S. Now how did I know you would manage to mention the US in your post. Posty, your becoming predictable mate.
7

Jim A,

05/01/2009 08:33:46
#1 Guga, ok mate I've just gone through the treaty and you are quite correct. Now I did ask about Hamas firing rockets from reidential areas, well apart from that Hamas are also in violation of the treaty according to the treaty. Here have a read.

1. This Article applies to:


(a) mines;


(b) booby-traps; and


(c) other devices.


2. It is prohibited in all circumstances to direct weapons to which this

Article applies, either in offence, defence or by way of reprisals,

against the civilian population as such or against individual civilians.


3. The indiscriminate use of weapons to which this Article applies is

prohibited. Indiscriminate use is any placement of such weapons:


(a) which is not on, or directed at, a military objective; or


(b) which employs a method or means of delivery which cannot be directed at a specific military objective; or


(c) which may be expected to cause incidental loss of civilian life,

injury to civilians, damage to civilian objects, or a combination

thereof, which would be excessive in relation to the concrete and direct military advantage anticipated.

Here's the link mate



8

Jim A,

05/01/2009 08:34:17
damn lost the link, I will try and find it again
9

POSTMARK,-55,

China, 05/01/2009 08:42:56
#6 Jim A,
I mentioned the US this time precisely because I know that you support their actions and because you're getting bored of me mentioning them Jim. I also mention them because they are always relevant to whatever goes down in many places, solely due to the fact that they've stuck their noses into many places. They need to stay at home and sort out their own mess and then I will show them some respect, in the meantime I will bash the living daylights out of them, that is my right and I will use my right, whether it bores you or entertains you, I really don't care. We're exposed to constant China bashing here in the Scotsman and even this story had to refer to China in a negative way, AGAIN. Both Europe and the US rely far more on cars than we do here in China but they get singled out for being good, we get bashed yet again, but that bashing doesn't bore me Jim, it does the opposite and gets me fired up to the point that I will fight for China, I somehow see you've failed to fight for whatever country you live in, why is that? As long as I see this happening here in the Scotsman you will see my name here in print to defend China, and I do it with great pride, it is after all my home and my family's home.
10

Jim A,

05/01/2009 09:07:38
Posty #9 wrote, "I mentioned the US this time precisely because I know that you support their actions and because you're getting bored of me mentioning them Jim.

Sorry mate, wrong, the only thing I support is Me, my Wife and my Kids.

No, I don't support all their actions. What I don't do is let my dislike of one side or the other bias my view of the whole thing and that is one side is as bad as the other when it comes to the indiscriminate killing of civilians. Infact most countries that fight wars are guilty of that.

We're exposed to constant China bashing here in the Scotsman and even this story had to refer to China in a negative way, AGAIN.

So are you saying the story isn't true?

"I somehow see you've failed to fight for whatever country you live in, why is that?

Posty, I've fought for my country in more ways than YOU will ever know mate so don't go there pal, you have no idea.

Now I know that expressing your opinion is a given right and I respect that, but Posty, some of us earned the right the hard way to voice our opinions.

I didn't say your Yank bashing was boring, I said it was becoming boring in that you write the same stuff all the time, try and find a different angle to it if you can.

Finally mate, I'm Scottish born and bred.

11

Jim A,

05/01/2009 09:17:05
Posty, I don't see any China bashing in this story. It says "AS DEMAND for cars has increased, especially in China and India, so has demand for lead-acid car batteries."

I can see that, both countries are developing nations, aren't they?

Also "Between 2005 and 2006, four waves of lead poisoning involving batteries were reported in China"

Again I can see that happening, we have idiots here that crack open batteries. Or is statement inaccurate?

12

St Andrew 01,

05/01/2009 09:27:22
Ever noticed how millions of Africans die of hunger and a lack of shelter in almost every country on the continent?
Ever noticed that African leaders live in the most palacial homes in the world? Ever noticed how almost all African leaders feast on lavish banquests on a daily basis? Ever noticed the rolls royces that most African leaders use? Ever noticed how the people die the most awful deaths and suffer from disease whilst the leaders receive the best health care available in white mans Europe or white mans South Africa? Ever noticed how the masses are denied a proper education whilst the leaders family are educated in the most elaborate white mans universities in America and Europe?
Africa suffers because Africans make her suffer - poverty can be beaten, social disorder can be rectified, but in order to get the ball rolling you need competent leaders and unfortunately Africa has no such thing.
A lack of intellect, a lack of competence, a lack of compassion, a lack of foresight and a lack of conviction is the African leaders mantra. (In ALMOST every instance)
13

Jim A,

05/01/2009 09:27:25
Posty, here you go mate, I don't think these folks have any axe to grind when it comes to China, infact the report was put together with the help of the the Chinese. It says China has introduced several regulatory measures related to lead. Hey give this a read, it's very interesting. Oh you will need adobe reader to read it.

http://www.wilsoncenter.org/topics/docs/lead_based_batteries_sept08.pdf

14

Jim A,

05/01/2009 09:30:13
#12 St Andrews 01, pretty well put mate, lets not forget also that Africa is still very much embedded in the tribal system in that one or the other tribe members rule all.
15

,

05/01/2009 09:38:21
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16

,

05/01/2009 09:43:29
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17

Jim A,

05/01/2009 09:56:42
#15 Mashimaro, wrote, Jim, I think you need to be pragmatic here. Israel is supported by money from the US because of its holocaust story"

Mashimaro, I am being pragmatic, as I say there is always a flip side, who's backing Hamas, both in money and in weapons and to what end? Gaza may be a densely poulated as you say but lets face it there are open spaces there, maybe not much I grant you, but they are there. Hamas knows that if they use the open spaces they will be killed. I truly believe Hamas doesn't give didley squat for the people of Gaza and they also don't give a damn for Guga's 1980 Geneva treaty.
18

Tweedmouth,

Coldstream 05/01/2009 10:02:05
#1 Guga is perfectly right about this one - I was amazed to see white phosporus shells exploding high above an obvious residential area on TV last night - and in the photos in the press this morning. Phosphorus is a terrible weapon - a metal which spontaneously burns at about 1000 degrees if it is in contact with air. When it falls on human skin it will burn right down to the bone and it cannot be put-out with water - it has to be dug out with a knife while burning furiously. If it falls on someones head it will burn right through the skull into the brain.

It is a battlefield weapon - the Americans used it on a huge scale in Vietnam - but to use it in a built-up area with civilians and children is a WAR CRIME.
19

,

05/01/2009 10:18:31
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POSTMARK,-55,

China, 05/01/2009 10:20:37
#11 Jim A,
Well Jim, in all honesty, I fail to see with China was brought into the story to begin with, it is about death and misery in Africa and if truth to be known it has squat to do with China, or India or any other place but Africa, which too use cars and lead filled batteries. Now I will try to have a look at the link you sent me.
21

,

05/01/2009 10:48:39
Comment Removed By Administrator
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22

POSTMARK,-55,

China, 05/01/2009 11:13:47
#11 Jim A,
Well Jim, I replied to you about the link you sent me, and I see that my reply was promptly removed. I just finished telling Mashimaro in another article about the love story after China's earthquake which had too much Israeli content and that the Scotsman would shut it down, and voila, I no sooner sent that comment and they shut down the comment section on that article. What we are all seeing here is classic censorship and it's brought about by the Scotsman in a so called Democratic country with so called freedom of speech, well, give me China anyday, everything I send the Scotsman goes unchallenged by the Chinese government and it looks as if Mashimaro and myself are living in a much freer country than the rest of you do over there in Democracy Heaven. This comment section is about to close shop, thanks Scotsman, you give me faith in mankind, just not the Scotsman kind.
23

Number 6,

Germany 05/01/2009 11:16:25
#22 Postmark 55 .. Could not agree more. Censorship is the free press's greatest enemy and cannott be allowed.
24

St Andrew 01,

05/01/2009 11:22:02
No point speaking about China and the West - One is a communist state which is now beginning to run like a model western government - The other is a capitalist world in which freedom of speech and expression is being denied in almost every nation.
China incorporates so much of western society these days it is safe to say they aspire to western way of life.
Africa is a cesspit of failure and corruption, China is a forward thinking nation who will use Africa as a toy to her advantage - nothing wrong with that, if Africans cant look after themselves why should anyone else?
25

Number 6,

Germany 05/01/2009 11:46:38
#24 Excellent observations. I once asked "SirBob" why it was that Africa and Asia had developed so differently despite gaining independence at about the same time. Having acknowledged that it was "A good question" he then preceded to bluster about "accidents of history", "white oppression" etc etc etc.

He never onced refered to corruption or black on black racisism, the 2 main scourges of the continent. It would seem in his and many other western apologists eyes,that Afric will retain it's "Victim status" and will escape all blame for it's current and future state.
26

POSTMARK,-55,

China, 05/01/2009 11:57:54
#23 Number 6,
Yes it is the greatest enemy and I have noticed that in almost all of today's comment section Guga's comments have been removed, all because he mentioned Israel. It's totally unacceptible for isn't that why Democracy exists, or is it all a hypocritic front?

#24 St Andrew 01,
I don't see China using Africa as a toy, we invest there, we don't wage war there and what we do there benefits both. Maybe one more than the other but it still benefits both.
You need to realize that China does not interfere in any country's affairs, we only invest, and that is fair and I wish the West could adopt that kind of thinking, there'd be a whole lot less blood shed and a whole lot less heartache.
27

St Andrew 01,

05/01/2009 12:07:41
#25 Number 6

I would agree that history has been unkind to Africa, a once tribal people were suddenly forced to denounce their tribal past and were then exluded from the new world that the white man brought. However, if this planet is ever colonised by a more advanced people from another planet, we can only blame ourselves for not finding them before they found us.
But whilst colonisation may be responsible for some of Africa's problems, it is certainly not the reason Africa continues to toil and sweat. African people appear to be unable to advance, even in Haiti there is massive unrest, social decay, war and famine and that nation has been independent for over 200 years. (Freedom of speeck suggests I should be permitted to state the above - lets see if that freedom is upheld)
Thers is nothing wrong with being poor, but when you are poor through a total lack of effort it's a very different issue. Africa is in a mess, an absolutely disgusting mess. In South Africa we are suffering under black African rule - corruption, internal strife within the ruling party, do as you will without consequence cabinet ministers, a failing police force, an inept Metro police force, local municipal breakdown, governmental fraud, licence department chaos, home affairs chaos, crime beyond comprehension, electricity crisis, water outages, cholera, a ruling party who support Robert Mugabe and so much more.
This is Africa and it will never change
28

St Andrew 01,

05/01/2009 12:15:44
Postmark

China is not interested in the upliftment of Africans, cmon, the Chinese government like most governments dont care about their own, so there is no way they will care about another continents people.
They will invest, but only to take what they can for next to nothing - China will use Africa, and why the heck not?
China and her people have not had it easy, no nations have - yet China like most of the rest of the world are advancing and inventing, innovating and developing - but not Black Africa
29

,

05/01/2009 12:33:53
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Mashimaro,

China 05/01/2009 12:46:55
#17 Jim, let's get this straight, the Israelis killed 11 people first.
31

POSTMARK,-55,

China, 05/01/2009 12:46:59
#28 St Andrew 01,
Sorry Andrew, from the conferences I've attended and the African delegates I've spoken to I have to disagree with what you're saying. We are building roads, schools and hospitals in different African nations and at the same time we are investing heavily, but it isn't a one way street, Africa too is coming here and investing and we're mutual partners with many African nations and that is always a good thing. We're not guilty of colonizing Africa, which too is a good thing. All in all, our relationship is on friendly terms with them and that is a good thing as well.
32

Mashimaro,

China 05/01/2009 12:56:46
#28 St Andrew

No, we're not really interested in "helping" Africa like the west has tried to "help" it. And that in itself is going to be a good thing.
One thinga bout China is that when the Chinese come in the money follows. So what difference does it make that the "intentions" are? We build schools and hospitals and railways and lift the economy.
We, of course, also get all those grateful nations' vote at the United Nations, so there is that added benefit. And what difference does it make to the people who are having disease and starvation, whether the hand the feeds them is Chinese or russian?
33

POSTMARK,-55,

China, 05/01/2009 13:06:32
They have already shut down the comments section in the above link I provided at post #29 as well as deleting post #29, why is this one still open?
34

St Andrew 01,

05/01/2009 13:23:34
Mashamaro- Postmark

I am not suggesting that China is wrong, no way. Personally, the world is a big place and each to their own. The West is the West, powerful and wealthy, China is China, powerful and wealthy and eager to adopt Western culture -
Africa is Africa, a basket case.
What you must remember is this; every road you build today will need to be rebuilt tomorrow, because the Africans will not maintain it. Every school you build will be burned to the ground and will need to be rebuilt over and over. Every favour you offer will be taken and fotgotten about - in the end, China will lose money because to succeed in Africa Chine will need Chinese, not Africans.
Africa is hard work, it like working with tearaway children who cannot be reasoned with. There are no systems, there are no rules and no forward planning.
Good luck China, you gonna need it.
35

POSTMARK,-55,

China, 05/01/2009 13:42:23
#34 St Andrew 01,
China is well aware of the obstacles it faces in Africa and is not expecting miracles, but what China is doing makes business sense in the long run, when we need it. The world is seeing far too many wars, we want no part of that, China has seen its share of violence over the course of thousands of years and wants no part of that. Physically China stays at home, money wise it spreads where it thinks it can gain an advantage, and it is not doing so with an unfair bias. Africa is a hellhole in many ways but it can still work in certain ways, but only if you can accept what is happening there and aren't hellbent on destroying them, China understands this and that's why China is successful, where everyone else has failed.
Thanks for your good wishes for us, many want us to fail.
36

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 05/01/2009 13:53:33
#3 Postmark 55

And your posting has what to do with the subject oft his newsitem?

Let me restate it for you:"Where Africa's Poorest Scratch Out a Living".

I, for one, and there may be others who are getting weary of your proselytising, speechifying, pontificating posts.

You talk down to other posters and continuously drag in subject matter that has NOTHING to do with the newsitem under review.
37

POSTMARK,-55,

China, 05/01/2009 14:04:50
#36 TimW1234,
First things first Tim, Happy New Year and I hope that you had a good Christmas.
As it stands Tim, for one, we cannot comment on anything remotely to do with the Israeli-Gaza situation and the reason we are talking about China in this particular comment section because the article mentioned China, and Mashimaro and I came to China's defence, which is natural for we love China and are proud of China and are a bit touchy when we see China get run into the ground time and again.
Again Tim, I wish you a great 2009 and hope that Chester has a very good year as well.
38

Jim A,

05/01/2009 16:26:40
#20 Postmark, China was brought into the story because China produces a lot of lead acid batteries and until recently when the Chinese Government put a form of regulation into place regarding their production and disposal people in China were getting sick. As I said earlier I don't see any China bashing, it's simply stating a fact which is acknowledged by the Chinese Government.
39

,

05/01/2009 17:45:00
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,

05/01/2009 17:45:39
Comment Removed By Administrator
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ReadingPublic-2,

Northern Wisconsin 05/01/2009 18:39:44
Tweedmouth,Coldstream 05/01/2009 10:02:05,
You are absolutely correct in the use of phosporus.As far as these deletions are concerned I hate to see it.
42

Jacqueline Hyde ,

On the shelf 05/01/2009 19:58:01
Senegal is widely regarded by western governments as being one of the best governed African countries. It is relatively stable, comparatively democratic and has had no military influence in its government.

However, all is not quite so rosy. Unemployment is high, the fishing industry has collapsed, power cuts are rife with outages several times a day, there is a huge refugee population and the government has all but surrendered the south-east part of the country to bandits and separatists. Much of the aid is either squandered or spread too thinly to be effective as this article illustrates so graphically.

The population is over 90% Muslim and, somewhat alarmingly, Senegal is now receiving substantial inward investment from Iran - including a recently announced car factory.

This was the gem of West Africa but, thanks to its perceived stability, it has largely been ignored by the West (although France, the old colonial power continues to provide limied financial support) and there is a very real danger of Islamic extremism getting a foothold - which would have very serious implications for much of the continent. President Wade is now in his eighties and there must be concern about how the vacuum will be filled when the inevitable happens.
43

Mashimaro,

China 06/01/2009 01:47:26
St Andrew - you must be South African or Zimbabwean.

Jim, this story - like every China story posted on the Scotsman - throws a bad light on China. I see the Scotsman didn't bother to report about the folks arrested in Guangdong for taking dogs to be slaughtered - let's not show the Chinese government as doing ANYTHING positive.
The implication of the way the story is written is that all was well and good until China decided to let all its people have cars and pollute the planet. It's called spin, Jim, something you guys in the west THINK you know everything about yet you just get spun and spun and spun by the western media all the time.

 

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