What is DJIBOUTI?
Have you ever heard of the country called DJIBOUTI? If not, don't feel embarrassed... because it's a very tiny country on the Horn of Africa that gets minimal tourism -- roughly 70,000 visitors per year.
Over the last 2 days, I have explore every facet of the capital & biggest city called Djibouti City. I find this place to be the most interesting country in Africa.
Here are some of my quick realizations:
- It's VERY EXPENSIVE -- I have spent more than $400 in the last 2 days and I haven't done much other than walk around, take a few taxis, eat 4 meals & sleep (keep in mind my visa was $90 and my hotel was $105).
- Walking around the streets feels very much like France, from the colonization period that started in 1884 and ended in 1977. The people here speak French (first), Arabic (second) and English (third, if any at all).
- There is a LOT OF SECURITY everywhere -- police/military guards standing on every corner (literally) with giant guns strapped to their backs. It is kind of crazy and very intimidating, but safe.
- About a quarter of Djibouti's population (~250,000 people) are living in extreme poverty, which is more extreme than you'd think given that this country is so expensive. A massive contrast between rich & poor.
All of my thoughts on this mysterious country, and more, are in this video. Have you ever been to Djibouti?
Music: Epidemic Sound
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The Philippines' Assassins | Asia's Underworld (Full Documentary) | TRACKS
In this documentary, we dive deep into the criminal underworld of the Philippines, where you can hire an assassin for as little as 120 US Dollars, though prices depend on the prominence of the target. Interviewing an assassination plot survivor, former gang members, and a trained assassin, this investigative documentary exposes a darker and more disturbing picture of the Philippines.
This critically acclaimed series exposes the shocking underworld of crime in Asia, uncovering the secret operations of some of the most ruthless and hardened criminals in the world.
From Filipino assassins to Mongolian pimps to South-East Asian pirates and Taiwanese gambling syndicates, this unique eight-part series takes a hard-hitting look at the face of Asian criminality today.
Winner Best Direction - Asia Television Awards
Winner Best Editing - Asia Television Awards
Highly Commended Best Current Affairs Programme - Asia Television Awards
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Volcanoes, World Wars & the Buried City (Sailing Nandji) Ep 86
Buried by a Volcano twice and infiltrated in World War 2 with a maze of tunnels... Welcome to Rabaul, Papua New Guinea
In this episode of Sailing Nandji, we are in the city of Rabaul, Papua New Guinea. We are a little stuck waiting on a package to arrive so utilise the time explore this very interesting city. This city has survived, 2 World wars, a tsunami and two volcanoes eruptions covering the city! All in the past 100 years! What a place! During WW2 the Japanese held Rabaul and dug mazes of tunnels through out the hills of Rabaul and many are still standing today. We explore some of these caverns and scare Bonita with all the creepy crawlies.
It has been a long time since we have had any friends on the boat and we were lucky to cross paths with an old mate from back home and enjoy a great day catching up.
Bonita then models her PNG fashion!!
We are a young couple with a dog, who with no sailing experience, bought a yacht, got it blue water cruising ready and set off sailing around the Pacific! We just arrived to Indonesia after cruising the Pacific islands, so many places to explore!
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THE BURJ KHALIFA | TOP TEN REASONS TO VISIT | WORLD RECORD HOLDER IN ARCHITECTURE
The Burj Khalifa, known as the Burj Dubai before its inauguration, is a megatall skyscraper in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. Wikipedia
Address: 1 Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Blvd - Dubai - United Arab Emirates
Height: 828 m, 830 m to tip CTBUH
Floors: 163
Construction started: 6 January 2004
Owner: Emaar Properties
Did you know: Burj Khalifa boast 2957 parking spaces, 304 hotels and 900 apartments.
THANKS AND SALUTE TO EVERY NATION
Afghanistan AlbaniA Algeria Andorra Angola Antigua and Barbuda Argentina Armenia Australia Austria Azerbaijan Bahamas Bahrain Bangladesh Barbados Belarus Belgium Belize Benin Bhutan Bolivia Bosnia and Herzegovina Botswana Brazil Brunei Bulgaria Burkina Faso Burma (Myanmar) Burundi Cambodia
Cameroon Canada Cape Verde Central African Republic Chad Chile China Colombia Comoros Congo, Rep of Congo, Dem Rep of Costa Rica Côte d'Ivoire Croatia Cuba Cyprus Czech Republic Denmark Djibouti Dominica Dominican Republic East Timor Ecuador Egypt El Salvador Equatorial Guinea Eritrea Estonia Ethiopia Fiji Finland France Gabon Gambia Georgia Germany Ghana Greece Grenada Guatemala Guinea Guinea-Bissau Guyana Haiti Honduras Hungary Iceland India Indonesia Iran Iraq Ireland Israel Italy Jamaica Japan Jordan Kazakhstan Kenya Kiribati Korea, North Korea, South Kuwait Kyrgyzstan Laos Latvia Lebanon Lesotho Liberia Libya Liechtenstein Lithuania Luxembourg Macedonia Madagascar Malawi Malaysia Maldives Mali Malta Marshall Islands Mauritania Mauritius Mexico Micronesia Moldova Monaco Mongolia Montenegro, Morocco Mozambique Namibia Nauru Nepal Netherlands New Zealand Nicaragua Niger Nigeria Norway Oman Pakistan Palau Panama Papua New Guinea Paraguay Peru Philippines Poland Portugal Qatar Romania Russia Rwanda St Kitts and Nevis St Lucia St Vincent and the Grenadines Samoa San Marino São Tomé and Príncipe Saudi Arabia Senegal Serbia Seychelles Sierra Leone Singapore Slovakia Slovenia Solomon Islands Somalia South Africa South Sudan Spain Sri Lanka Sudan Suriname SwazilanD Sweden Switzerland Syria Tajikistan Tanzania Thailand Togo Tonga Trinidad and Tobago Tunisia Turkey Turkmenistan Tuvalu Uganda Ukraine United Arab Emirates United Kingdom United States
Uruguay Uzbekistan Vanuatu Venezuela Vietnam Yemen Zambia Zimbabwe
Mandarin (entire branch) Spanish English Hindi[a] Arabic Portuguese Bengali (Bangla) Russian Japanese Punjabi
German Javanese Wu (eg Shanghainese) Malay (inc Malaysian and Indonesian) Telugu Vietnamese Korean French
Marathi Tamil Urdu Turkish
Italian Yue (incl Cantonese) Thai Gujarati
Jin Southern Min (incl Hokkien and Teochew)
Persian Polish Pashto Kannada
Xiang (Hunanese) Malayalam Sundanese Hausa
Odia (Oriya) Burmese Hakka Ukrainian
Bhojpuri Tagalog Yoruba Maithili
Uzbek Sindhi Amharic Fula
Romanian Oromo Igbo Azerbaijani
Awadhi [b] Gan Chinese Cebuano (Visayan) Dutch
Kurdish Serbo-Croatian Malagasy Saraiki [c]
Nepali Sinhalese Chittagonian Zhuang
Khmer Turkmen Assamese Madurese
Somali Marwari Magahi Haryanvi
Hungarian Chhattisgarhi Greek Chewa
Deccan Akan Kazakh Northern Min[disputed – discuss] Sylheti Zulu Czech Kinyarwanda
Dhundhari Haitian Creole Eastern Min (inc Fuzhounese)
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Konkani
【K】Fiji Travel-Fiji[피지 여행-피지]무공해 휴양지 피지/Fiji/Vacation Spot
■ KBS 걸어서 세계속으로 PD들이 직접 만든 해외여행전문 유투브 채널 【Everywhere, K】
■ The Travels of Nearly Everywhere! 10,000 of HD world travel video clips with English subtitle! (Click on 'subtitles/CC' button)
■ '구독' 버튼을 누르고 10,000여 개의 생생한 【HD】영상을 공유 해 보세요! (Click on 'setting'-'quality'- 【1080P HD】 ! / 더보기 SHOW MORE ↓↓↓)
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[한국어 정보]
333개의 섬이 각각 다른 바다 빛깔을 자랑하는 섬 피지, 물이 있으면 이 나라 사람들은 뛰어내린다. 폭포에서 다리에서 동굴에서 피지는 무공해 휴양지다. 이 순수 자연에 순박한 사람들이 어울려 살아간다. 느리게 그리고 걱정 없이 살아가는 사람들이 있는 곳 남태평양의 평화롭고 아름다운 낙원 피지로 가보자
[English: Google Translator]
333 islands , each island boasts other Fiji sea color , if the water ran down the country people . Fiji is a clean getaway in a cave on the bridge at the falls . The unsophisticated people who live and mingle in the pure nature . Slow and peaceful place in the South Pacific where people live without fear beautiful paradise Let's go to Fiji
[Information]
■클립명: 오세아니아074-피지02-01 무공해 휴양지 피지/Fiji/Vacation Spot
■여행, 촬영, 편집, 원고: 김서호 PD (travel, filming, editing, writing: KBS TV Producer)
■촬영일자: 2015년 1월 January
[Keywords]
오세아니아,Oceania,오세아니아,피지,Fiji,Fiji,,김서호,2015,1월 January,피지,Fiji,Fiji
Exploring The Rocky Dundas Caves & Seeing Dolphins! Ep. 51
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Reikko Hori from Japan was Dropped on The Indonesian Island of Amparo with No Survival Training
Despite having no previous Robinson Crusoe experience, one student decided to maroon herself on a remote island for 19 days. Reikko Hori, a 22-year-old from Japan, was dropped off on the Indonesian island of Amparo, 4,200 miles northwest of Australia with a magnifying glass for starting fires and a spear gun for killing her dinner. And not much else. What's more, this was a holiday that she'd paid for. Hori had booked her island getaway with Docastaway, which bills itself as 'the first travel company in the world to specialize in holidays and experiences in remote desert Islands around the planet'. They offer a variety of island escapes, with varying levels of comfort. Hori had chosen their most extreme category - adventure mode. Speaking to MailOnline Travel, Alvaro Cerezo of Docastaway, who organised the project, said: 'When she arrived at the airport on the first day I saw that she hadn't prepared proper luggage and didn't bring adequate clothing, only jeans. We needed to go to a local shop and buy trousers for her. 'Then when I found out that her knowledge of survival was non-existent, I got more worried. 'But what was distressing for me was the fact that Reikko had serious difficulties in detecting danger and in feeling pain. 'She walked barefoot on the sharp coral, just is if she was walking barefoot at home. She slept on the floor in the jungle without it even crossing her mind that an animal could walk over her in the middle of the night.' Despite the harsh introduction to living in the wild, Reikko soon got to grips with the challenge ahead of her. Using a spear to catch fish, a rock to break open coconuts and a magnifying glass to make fire, the Osaka resident made it to the very end. Speaking to MailOnline Travel, she said: 'I thought the island was smaller than I previously imagined but I was scared to see I had to be 18 more days without being able to escape. 'There was a big lonely feeling, like being the only person in the sea, but at the same time it was really exciting. 'When the Docastaway team left, I was happy to be alone at last but this feeling was just momentary. 'It was full of painful loneliness and helplessness after the second day.' Reikko, who is studying Childhood Studies in Japan, described how she made fire with coconut hair using the magnifying glass, caught an average of one fish an hour using a spear gun, and climbed palm trees to get coconuts to crack open and eat. The student admitted she was 'not good with human relationships', but says her experience has made her appreciate the feeling of being in a community. 'Usually I prefer to be alone,' she added. 'However, after I spent 19 days alone on a desert island, I found a world without people was not the world where I really want to live. 'I learned I get happiness from being around other people. Not only sufferings but also happiness from being related with other people. I want to live positively in society now and I realise how important things I have in my life are.' Last year MailOnline reported how an elderly adventurer channelled his inner Robinson Crusoe and spent 11 solitary nights on a piece of land situated alongside the remote island of Hunga Tonga – 2,200 miles from Sydney. Ian Argus Stuart, a British entrepreneur who made millions buying and selling luxury yachts, survived eating nothing but seagull eggs and squid. The 65-year-old made history by becoming the first person to spend a single night on the island, which is the world's youngest. It is believed that the adventurer may even be the last person to ever inhabit the tiny piece of land as experts have said that it could soon disappear back into the ocean.
Trolley Ride in Rajgir
This clip shows people enjoying trolley ride in Rajgir. Rajgir is a city and a notified area in Nalanda district in the Indian state of Bihar. The city of Rajgir was the first capital of the kingdom of Magadha, a state that would eventually evolve into the Mauryan Empire. The city was in a valley surrounded by seven hills: Vaibhara, Ratna, Saila, Sona, Udaya, Chhatha, and Vipula. The major attraction in Rajgir is the peace pagoda, Vishwa Shanti Stupa, built in 1969, one of the 80 peace pagodas in the world, to spread the message of peace and non-violence.
This footage is part of the professionally-shot stock footage archive of Wilderness Films India Ltd., the largest collection of imagery from South Asia. The Wilderness Films India collection comprises of thousands of hours of high quality broadcast imagery, mostly shot on HDCAM 1080i High Definition, HDV and Digital Betacam. Write to us for licensing this footage on a broadcast format, for use in your production! We pride ourselves in bringing the best of India and South Asia to the world... wfi @ vsnl.com and admin@wildfilmsindia.com.
School Trip to Malawi
School Travel to Malawi with The Responsible Safari Co.
responsiblesafaricompany.com
James Woods speaks on Albino hunters on the prowl in Malawi