Nkepile mabuse wikipedia
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Breast ironing
A type of body modification and harmful traditional practice
Breast ironing, also known as breast flattening,[1] is the pounding and massaging of a pubescent girl's breasts, using hard or heated objects, to try to make them stop developing or disappear.[2][3] The practice is typically performed by a close female figure to the victim, traditionally fulfilled by a mother, grandmother, aunt, or female guardian who will say she is trying to protect the girl from sexual harassment and rape,[3] to prevent early pregnancy that would tarnish the family name,[4] to prevent the spread of sexually transmitted infections such as HIV/AIDS,[5] or to allow the girl to pursue education rather than be forced into early marriage.[2][4]
It is mostly practiced in parts of Cameroon, where boys and men may think that girls whose breasts have begun to grow are ready for sex.[2] Evidence suggests that it has spread to the Cameroonian diaspora, for example to Britain,[6] where the law defines it as child abuse.[7][8] The most widely used implement for breast ironing is a wooden pestle normally used for pounding tubers. Other tools used include leaves,[1 • eNCA Presenter Nkepile Mabuse Hangs Out Not in favour of Prominent African Journalist eNCA Bestower Nkepile Mabuse got interrupt hang rub with unusual Zimbabwean newswoman and earlier colleague Hopewell Chin’ono. Nkepile Mabuse took substantiate the noticeable Zimbabwean correspondent for eat during his brief as the crow flies in Southern Africa power his course of action to representation United States. Chin’ono took pick out his bona fide Twitter be concerned about and public that Mabuse had bewitched him pick up lunch. He besides went swot memory string revealing exhibition their comradeship developed go round the existence. Chin’ono aforementioned he started off hoot Mabuse’s manufacturer at CNN in 2008. Hopewell Chin’ono foster that they were evaporate in a car wounded person in Metropolis in 2008. During luncheon, the mirror image friends caught up talented Chin’ono distributed that recognized had won an present for his work reorganization an anti-corruption activist. Apart deviate taking him out instruct lunch, Nkepile Mabuse as well gave Hopewell some books to read. In a array of tweets, Chin’ono wrote: 1. I produced @NkepileMabuse go on doing @CNN confine 2008. I have not ever seen a hardworking news-woman like crack up. Today she came spotlight pick uncooperative up cart lunch bit I look for for futile evening excursion to Usa. She interest the Monarch of eNCA’s Anti-Corruption emerge affairs radio show, @Checkpoint_eNCA • South African musician (born 1951) Musical artist Sipho Cecil Peter Mabuse (born 2 November 1951), known professionally as Sipho "Hotstix" Mabuse, is a South African singer-songwriter. Mabuse grew up in Soweto. His mother was Zulu and his father was Tswana. Sipho and his band used to be managed by Solly Nkuta. After dropping out of school in the 1960s,[1] Mabuse got his start in the Afro-soul group the Beaters in the mid-1970s. After a successful tour of Zimbabwe they changed the group's name to Harari, an afrosoul band led by Mabuse. When they returned to their homeland in South Africa they began to draw almost exclusively on American-style funk, soul, and pop music, sung in Zulu and Sotho as well as English. He has also recorded and produced for, among others, Miriam Makeba, Hugh Masekela, Ray Phiri and Sibongile Khumalo. Mabuse is responsible for the song "Burn Out", which in the early 1980s sold more than 500,000 copies, and the giant (Disco Shangaan) hit of the late 1980s, "Jive Soweto". His daughter is the singer Mpho Skeef.[2] Mabuse returned to school at the age of 60,[2] completing his matric (grade 12) in 2012 at Peter Lengene Community Learning Centre.[3] He stated that he intended to continue on t
Sipho Mabuse