I'm proud of the Okavango people for standing up against this oil-drilling nonsense. Imagine the Government getting 10% stakes, that money will not be used for the Kavango region and people will lose their livelihoods, farmland and customs for nothing.
it's weird why DW reports on this in Namibia, while not reporting on Canada or the USA who destroy nature for Oil Profits. Difference is, Canada and the Usa are already developed and rich and could push new energies forward instead of subsidizing Fossil Fuels.
The only thing that will save the animals is money and finding oil will bring that money. The government of Namibia seems happy to have the oil companies.
As you heard Namibia will only benefit 10% ad trust me it’s going to benefit only the leaders I am sorry to tell you the truth. The rest of the local individuals we must just forget let a lone the unemployed one. We can continue eating dry pap ad dust from the desert since that all we have🤷🏿♀️
@@kaveikokaveiko6481 It's not just 10%. The government also receives royalties from the oil being sold. There is also going to be a lot of jobs aswell as a lot of investment into the county.
1:17 Can someone tell what kind of crop are they cultivating on this footage? It looks like another bs photo op for western media - "here take this stick, and do some farming, dunno poke ground with it, or sth".
Not sure but when planting yam in southwest Nigeria they do something similar in order to loosen the soil to ensure the tuber doesn't hit rocks or tree roots during development. When they are done, the soil will be in ridges
I think the farmer really described a legitimate issue which needs to be focused on globally. His farm is making less money because of the increasing animal population. Simply paying them to make up for the shortfall is not a long-term sustainable solution. We need to build a system where the increasing animal population rewards the farmers in some economic way. Doesn't necessarily need to be more profitable than the crops which could be grown but that would help. I don't have a solution. However, if we do find a way to achieve this then so many problems can be solved simultaneously.
I'm sorry, I cannot watch when people destroy the animal habitat. At the same time, I cannot pass by. Destroying other lives we are destroying ours too.
When the land is broken, the oil has gone and the money is spent elsewhere... thousands of years of life and ancestors has Ended.
I hope you win this fight against the oil company!
unfortunately the namibian government is corrupt not unlike south africa. actually most of africa's government
Say NO to oil drilling,save the land,natural ecosystem and live!❤🇳🇦🇳🇦🇳🇦🇳🇦
When it comes to MONEY, Everything else has to take a backseat.
I'm proud of the Okavango people for standing up against this oil-drilling nonsense. Imagine the Government getting 10% stakes, that money will not be used for the Kavango region and people will lose their livelihoods, farmland and customs for nothing.
it's weird why DW reports on this in Namibia, while not reporting on Canada or the USA who destroy nature for Oil Profits.
Difference is, Canada and the Usa are already developed and rich and could push new energies forward instead of subsidizing Fossil Fuels.
I think it’s because this is a German channel and Namibia was German colony and still very German
The only thing that will save the animals is money and finding oil will bring that money. The government of Namibia seems happy to have the oil companies.
The goat feed the whole village
I hope they find oil in our country. It would be very beneficial to the country as a whole.
As you heard Namibia will only benefit 10% ad trust me it’s going to benefit only the leaders I am sorry to tell you the truth.
The rest of the local individuals we must just forget let a lone the unemployed one.
We can continue eating dry pap ad dust from the desert since that all we have🤷🏿♀️
@@kaveikokaveiko6481 It's not just 10%. The government also receives royalties from the oil being sold. There is also going to be a lot of jobs aswell as a lot of investment into the county.
Poor Africa, always exploited mercilessly😔
why hunters don't want to show on camera? are they embarrassed by their vice?
They're afraid they'll be harassed by people who disapprove of hunting
1:17 Can someone tell what kind of crop are they cultivating on this footage?
It looks like another bs photo op for western media - "here take this stick, and do some farming, dunno poke ground with it, or sth".
Not sure but when planting yam in southwest Nigeria they do something similar in order to loosen the soil to ensure the tuber doesn't hit rocks or tree roots during development.
When they are done, the soil will be in ridges
ignorance
lmao
I think the farmer really described a legitimate issue which needs to be focused on globally.
His farm is making less money because of the increasing animal population. Simply paying them to make up for the shortfall is not a long-term sustainable solution.
We need to build a system where the increasing animal population rewards the farmers in some economic way. Doesn't necessarily need to be more profitable than the crops which could be grown but that would help.
I don't have a solution. However, if we do find a way to achieve this then so many problems can be solved simultaneously.
this is Avatar in real life
Another paradise lost.
Recon Africa go drill oil offshore, stop destroying the livelihood of the Kavango people 😢
likoro is reading from a script
looks completely staged
I'm sorry, I cannot watch when people destroy the animal habitat. At the same time, I cannot pass by. Destroying other lives we are destroying ours too.
We need oil for American!
We also need our landscape, rivers and wildlife for the equally important ecosystem please
God 🎉Allah will not allow this nature destroying project
Clown news