Zombies of Nairobi

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Published 2016-05-10
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The story of Kenya's liquid drugs and their impact on street children


In the second episode of Toxicity we take you among Nairobi's street kids, turned into zombies by lethal sniffing drugs such as glue and jet fuel, which they inhale hundreds of times every day.
These drugs mess with their brain functions and transform them into junkies incapable of controlling their mind and body.
Report by Pablo Trincia

youmedia.fanpage.it/video/aa/Vy38WeSwUuETTVun

All Comments (21)
  • This guy has guts. I'm Kenyan and I'd never step foot on the places this guy went to film this.
  • @DonnHowes
    I started doing drugs since my teenage, got addicted to Fentanyl. I suffered severe depression and mental disorder. Fentanyl addiction actually destroyed my life. Not until my wife recommended me to psilocybin mushrooms treatment. Psilocybin treatment saved my life honestly. 6 years totally clean. Never thought I would be saying this about mushrooms.
  • @engineerraj1662
    This video is an eye opener to the darkest side of human suffering. All kudos to the presenter and the team who explored these unimaginable areas and brought such stories to light.
  • @hakimdiwan5101
    I was expecting some short Zombie movie but this shit is even scarier than any Zombie movie I ever saw.
  • Disturbing and upsetting. When you watch documentaries like this makes you realise how much we take for granted.
  • "you forget about being hungry..." this line made me think that nobody on earth wants to get high and do drugs basically. everyone who is a drug addict or taking lethal drugs is probably going through or have gone through some tough situations and might got one the wrong path of drugs. i hope nobody have to take drugs because of the negative emotions or situations.
  • @Add_Account485
    God bless this guy for saving that child's life!!. Oh my god. What a difference he has made to one child's life from savings of immense turmoil and suffering.. Depression. Drug addiction. Sadness. Cold nights and street life.. Thankyou for helping him
  • @artanjubba6208
    "You have filmed alot, what about our stomachs-" damn, that hit me hard
  • As a Kenyan this broke me in ways I cannot even explain! Our politicians deserve nothing but absolute hell
  • @ull474
    This is absolutely heartbreaking, that life is so unbearable for some and this is their only means of escape and coping .
  • @barbaramay7162
    The people who help these poor little souls are Angels on Earth ❤
  • @genuine5885
    I am Kenyan, these areas where this guy conducted the interviews are no-go zones. Most of street children in Nairobi are armed with knives and handguns, Thank God he successfully completed the mission and he's safe.
  • they should make a documentary on how the African politicians live.
  • I'm an ex-drug abuser, with a 30 year record of use. I've seen some deplorable shit in my time of abuse, but this is so despairing I can't watch the whole episode. 😩😢
  • @natalias50
    I haven’t seen such a good document for some time. It is absolutely devastating to see those kids intoxicating themselves. If they were born in a different environment likely none of them would have been sniffing glue or jet fuel. Life can be very brutal
  • @junsoojung8000
    This is craziest thing I've seen in a while. So fucking real, talking about real problems not about those fake internet shits. This is the quality video I've been looking for. Thanks for sharing.
  • @Kaykay-jh1zu
    "we have to go.." "why?" anyone with eyes can see what is about to happen. The vibe has changed.
  • @keagankirugo854
    Thank you for the documentary. Great courage from the team. Noble job from Amani for Africa team.
  • @incredibleflameboy
    This is genuinely frightening. I love zombies and the media around them but there's something about seeing what is basically a horde in real life surrounding a small group of people.