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In Africa, overcrowding in some countries is a problem. In Kenya, where night traffic was banned to prevent the spread of the virus, teenage boys were shot and killed by police on the streets.

This is reporter Kim Ji-sung.

<Reporter>

Gunfire rings on a street in Mombasa, Kenya, Africa. Surprised citizens flee.

The police that followed have ruthlessly assaulted the citizens.

The Kenyan government began a nighttime curfew on the 27th of last month and was forced to disband even before the curfew.

Three days later, a 13-year-old boy was shot dead by a police gun.

In Kenya, five people have been killed in police shootings so far, the Wall Street Journal reported.

In South Africa, three people were killed by police whipping a lash or firing rubber bullets at a citizen who broke the blockade, and two soldiers were shot and wounded in Uganda.


As the citizens whose livelihoods were blocked by containment measures climbed on their way home, the terminal reached a phosphate cut and the road was paralyzed.

[Nangala / Uganda Kampala citizens: Everyone is complaining. We have neither food nor money.]

In Africa, there have been 7,28 confirmed cases and 284 deaths in 50 countries.

The lack of clean water and poor hygiene make it possible for an infected person to explode and the patient count is questionable.

Citizens' complaints are growing even more due to coercive containment measures.

The African Institute of Security has accused the threat of abuse of containment to be comparable to that of Corona19.

(Video editing: Seung-yeol Lee, CG: Kyu-yeon Kim)