Wednesday, August 6, 2008

170 Granted Nigerian Citizenship

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170 Granted Nigerian Citizenship

08.06.2008

No fewer than 170 people yesterday received certificates of Nigerian citizenship from the Minister of Interior, retired Maj.-Gen Godwin Abbe.
The naturalised Nigerians are 39 females and 131 males from different nationalities.
Speaking on the occasion, Abbe urged the beneficiaries to help create jobs for ``our teeming unemployed youths. ``You have the patriotic duty to ensure technology transfer to help make Nigeria one of the foremost countries in the world by 2020. ``Your new status as bona fide citizens of Nigeria confers on you, the fundamental rights, privileges and immunities applicable to any Nigerian by descent'' .
He further explained that, ``Nigerian Constitution allows dual citizenship. You are therefore, permitted to retain the citizenship of your respective countries of birth or descent''.
The minister said their status ``unofficially'' bestowed on them, the responsibility to ensure and sustain solid mutually beneficial responsibility between their countries of birth and Nigeria.
He asked beneficiaries with citizenships of other countries other than those acquired by birth or descent to renounce them within 12 months as required by the constitution.

http://www.thisdayonline.com/nview.php?id=118917




3° seminario dipendenze

Si invia in allegato prima comunicazione per il 3° dei quattro Seminari che si terranno nel corso del 2008, finanziati (anno 2007) dalla Presidenza del Consiglio dei Ministri - Dipartimento Politiche Antidroga e previsti dall'Accordo con l'Az. USL RMH.
L'incontro su "DIPENDENZE E IMMIGRAZIONE: percorsi possibili" si terrà lunedì 15 settembre 2008, dalle ore 8,30 alle ore 18,00, alle Scuderie Aldobrandini, Piazza Marconi 7, Frascati (RM) e vuole essere occasione per approfondire, riguardo la popolazione immigrata affetta da dipendenze patologiche da sostanze legali ed illegali, le specificità di vissuto e le possibilità di intervento.
All'evento sono invitati gli operatori del terzo settore e dei SerT del Lazio, oltre ai Comuni del territorio dell'Azienda ASL RM H.


per la segreteria organizzativa
assistente sociale
laura bigiarelli








STILL UNDER THE CARPET!!!!!

Sometime this year some people 'braved' into this hot topic in the italo_naija and Nigerian_diaspora groups,but some people thought it was being over flogged therefore better stopped and swept under the carpet.
However, the next week CNN thought otherwise and ran a two weeks program on the Nigerian girls drama in Europe through the life of a Benin(Edo) girl. We all saw it.
The Italian govt also thought otherwise, and in their usual wrong but legitimate approach repatriated scores of our girls in one month, the Fed govt of Nigeria also thought otherwise and made some intelligent postings to the missions of countries concerned as reported by The Nigerian Guardian of 17/02/2008.
However, it is interesting to note that the Nigerian communities (esp. in italy) believe it is still not yet time to play a fundamental role. Let me be corrected.
I post here from our archive
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=d87v66w_6fgzv6hft&invite=dd99zcg a link of the discussions/debate that went through the forum. This is the first time we re-publish discussion in this form and we do it for the interest of the numerous new arrivals in the fora and as our little contribution to sensitizing and educating the public on this phenomenon.
THE MODERATOR.
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=d87v66w_6fgzv6hft&invite=dd99zcg
NB. ONLY THE FIRST ARTICLE IS IN ITALIAN OTHERS ARE IN ENGLISH

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

OBAMANIA


OBAMA IN BERLIN

Poisoning the poor – Electronic Waste in Ghana


Poisoning the poor – Electronic Waste in Ghana

Boys burning electronic cables and other electrical components in order to melt off the plastic and reclaim the copper wiring. This burning in small fires releases toxic chemicals into the environment.

Enlarge Image

Ghana — The latest place where we have discovered high tech toxic trash causing horrendous pollution is in Ghana. Our analysis of samples taken from two electronic waste (e-waste) scrap yards in Ghana has revealed severe contamination with hazardous chemicals.

The ever-growing demand for the latest fashionable mobile phone, flat screen TV or super-fast computer creates ever larger amounts of obsolete electronics that are often laden with toxic chemicals like lead, mercury and brominated flame retardants. Rather than being safely recycled, much of this e-waste gets dumped in developing countries. Previously, we have exposed pollution from e-waste scrap yards in China and India. Nigeria has also been identified as a dumping ground for old electronics.

During our investigation into the shady e-waste trade, we uncovered evidence that e-waste is being exported, often illegally, to Ghana from Europe and the US. We visited Ghana to investigate workplace contamination from e-waste recycling and disposal in the country.

In the yards, unprotected workers, many of them children, dismantle computers and TVs with little more then stones in search of metals that can be sold. The remaining plastic, cables and casing is either burnt or simply dumped: http://www.greenpeace.org/international/news/poisoning-the-poor-electroni


"Entro l'anno nuovo decreto flussi"

Pronto un provvedimento-fotocopia di quello del governo Prodi
Giovanardi: "Via libera all'assunzione di 170 mila stranieri

Immigrati, l'Italia riapre le porte
"Entro l'anno nuovo decreto flussi"

di VLADIMIRO POLCHI


Immigrati, l'Italia riapre le porte "Entro l'anno nuovo decreto flussi"

Immigrati in un centro di accoglienza

ROMA - L'Italia è pronta a riaprire le sue porte: migliaia di lavoratori extracomunitari potranno a breve mettersi in regola. Riparte, infatti, la "lotteria delle quote": subito dopo l'estate verrà approvato l'atteso decreto flussi 2008. I posti in palio? 170mila. Un modo per rispondere alle oltre 740mila domande d'assunzioni già presentate nel corso dell'anno e solo in minima parte accolte (finora poco più di 61mila).
Con il decreto flussi si fissano annualmente le "quote" di extracomunitari, che possono entrare in Italia per motivi di lavoro subordinato o autonomo.

In realtà, come sanno bene tutti gli immigrati, il decreto è da anni (in mancanza di sanatorie) l'unica chance per uscire dalla clandestinità e mettersi in regola. L'iter però non è semplice, né privo di rischi: si fa domanda d'assunzione, si rientra nelle quote, si esce dal Paese col nulla osta e si rientra con un visto d'ingresso. Insomma, esci clandestino, rientri regolare. Sempre che, attraversando le frontiere, non ti venga consegnato un foglio d'espulsione.

Il "trucco" però riesce a pochi. Basta vedere come sono andate le cose col decreto 2007: 170mila i posti messi in palio, oltre un terzo per colf e badanti (nel 2006 le quote erano state ben di più: 470mila) La novità del 2007? Domande solo on line. Una valanga: le richieste d'assunzione presentate sono state oltre 740mila (di cui 475mila per lavoro domestico e d'assistenza alla persona). E che fine ha fatto questa montagna di pratiche?

Al primo agosto di quest'anno, solo 61.493 fortunati hanno ritirato il nulla osta all'assunzione, mentre quasi 8mila hanno avuto risposta negativa dalle questure. Il Viminale si è infatti trovato a dover gestire una mole di lavoro eccezionale e - va detto - ha fatto il possibile per accelerare i lavori di smaltimento delle domande. Il vero intoppo, in questa fase, sembrano essere le direzioni provinciali del lavoro, che infatti hanno "cestinato" oltre 27mila pratiche.

Molte le associazioni (come le Acli) e i sindacati che in questi mesi hanno chiesto la riapertura delle quote per soddisfare tutte le domande. Il governo prima ha negato la possibilità di ogni sanatoria, poi ha fatto decadere anche la possibilità di una regolarizzazione ad hoc per le badanti. L'unica concessione? Un decreto flussi 2008.

La notizia arriva da una risposta scritta data dal sottosegretario, Carlo Giovanardi, il 31 luglio 2008 a un'interrogazione delle deputate Pd, Livia Turco e Margherita Miotto. Notizia confermata in queste ore dai tecnici dei ministeri competenti: Interno e Welfare. "Entro fine anno - scrive Giovanardi - dovrebbe essere emanato un nuovo decreto di programmazione dei flussi d'ingresso per l'assunzione dall'estero di cittadini extracomunitari a carattere non stagionale. Tale decreto non potrà comunque superare le 170mila unità".

Sarà insomma un decreto fotocopia di quello del 2007, che verrà varato subito dopo l'estate. Ripartirà così la corsa alle domande, i vari clic day, le lunghe attese. Non si esclude però anche il ripescaggio delle domande già presentate.


http://www.repubblica.it/2008/08/sezioni/politica/immigrazione-flussi/immigrazione-flussi/immigrazione-flussi.html
(5 agosto 2008)
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La nuova pattumiera è il Ghana

Il paese africano usato come discarica dei rifiuti elettronici nocivi
L'organizzazione ha ricostruito la rotta delle nuove navi dei veleni

E-waste, denuncia di Greenpeace
La nuova pattumiera è il Ghana

Le stime Onu parlano di 20-50 milioni di tonnellate di rifiuti ogni anno
Contengono elementi tossici che mettono a rischio ambiente e salute umana

di ANTONIO CIANCIULLO


E' il remake di un film degli anni Ottanta, un brutto film. Gli slum africani utilizzati come pattumiera dei veleni dei paesi ricchi, i primi vani tentativi di bloccare il traffico, la rivolta dei nigeriani che, esattamente vent'anni fa, sequestrarono una nave italiana, con 24 uomini di equipaggio, come arma di pressione per costringerci a risanare la discarica pirata di Port Koko. Adesso ci risiamo. Nella versione tecnologicamente avanzata dell'e-waste, il rifiuto elettronico che fluisce sempre più abbondante. La nuova pattumiera del mondo industrializzato è il Ghana: è qui che finisce una buona parte degli oggetti che fino a un istante prima dell'abbandono sembravano indispensabili e che all'improvviso si sono rivelati inutili, cancellati nella possibilità d'uso da memorie più potenti, software più avanzati.

GUARDA LE FOTO

La denuncia viene da Greenpeace che, con un'azione di "spionaggio industriale" è riuscita a ricostruire il percorso delle nuove navi dei veleni. Il punto di partenza per l'Europa è Anversa, in Belgio, dove confluiscono scarti elettronici provenienti da Olanda, Germania, Italia, Danimarca e Svizzera. Non si tratta di piccoli numeri. Le stime Onu parlano di 20-50 milioni di tonnellate di rifiuti tecnologici prodotti ogni anno: i Raee, ovvero i rifiuti derivanti da apparecchiature elettriche ed elettroniche, rappresentano la tipologia di rifiuti pericolosi in più rapida crescita a livello globale (3-5% annuo, nel 2006 ogni cittadino europeo ne ha prodotto tra 17 e 20 chili all'anno). Contengono elementi tossici e persistenti (metalli pesanti, ftalati, pcb) che rappresentano un rischio per l'ambiente e la salute umana nelle fasi di trattamento, riciclaggio e smaltimento.

Dunque roba da maneggiare con attenzione. Ma le foto che potete vedere mostrano cosa succede veramente. Oggetti pericolosi trattati senza nessuna precauzione anche da bambini, materiale tossico bruciato vicino alle case, pozze di liquame contaminato in cui tutti sguazzano. E' questa la fine che fa una buona parte dell'e-waste occidentale: si perdono le tracce del 75 per cento dei rifiuti tecnologici prodotti nell'Unione Europea e di oltre l'80 per cento di quelli prodotti negli Stati Uniti. In parte restano nei garage e nelle cantine, in parte vengono smaltiti illegalmente nei paesi in cui sono stati usati, ma in buona parte salgono sulle navi dei veleni per arrivare nei luoghi in cui i lavoratori, spesso bambini, sono esposti ai rischi legati al cocktail di composti chimici che questi rifiuti sprigionano quando vengono trattati in modo non adeguato.

In Ghana l'indagine di Greenpeace ha messo in evidenza una rete di cimiteri clandestini. Le navi ufficialmente cariche di "beni elettronici di seconda mano" arrivano nel più grande porto del paese, a Tema, e da lì prendono la strada del centro di smaltimento di Agbogbloshie, ad Accra, la capitale. Oppure si sperdono nel marasma dei piccoli cimiteri sparsi un po' ovunque. Greenpeace ha fornito i dati relativi a quello di Korforidua, ma è un esempio tra tanti.

Un disastro ambientale, sociale, umano che rappresenta l'altra faccia del disastro politico che ci coinvolge direttamente. Vent'anni fa l'Occidente chiuse gli occhi sulle rotte dei veleni finché il contenzioso internazionale divenne troppo aspro per ignorarlo. Ora la capacità di risposta dei paesi che subiscono l'arrivo clandestino dei rifiuti elettronici (dall'Africa alle piazze asiatiche) è più alta ed è prevedibile che la tensione tornerà a salire molto presto.

ENGLISH http://www.greenpeace.org/international/news/poisoning-the-poor-electroni

http://www.repubblica.it/2008/08/sezioni/ambiente/africa-rifiuti-elettronici/africa-rifiuti-elettronici/africa-rifiuti-elettronici.html
(5 agosto 2008)

Monday, August 4, 2008

CISTERNA ESTATE 08: ESIBIZIONI GRUPPI FOLCLORISTICI INTRNAZIONALI (02/08/2008)

foto:G.M Belli.



























UE: CORTE GIUSTIZIA, SI' A LIBERA CIRCOLAZIONE CONIUGE EXTRACOMUNITARIO

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Saturday, August 2, 2008

TIMBUKTU'S MANUSCRIPTS

The Rush to Save Timbuktu's Crumbling Manuscripts

By Matthias Schulz and Anwen Roberts

Fabled Timbuktu, once the site of the world's southernmost Islamic university, harbors thousands upon thousands of long-forgotten manuscripts. A dozen academic instutions from around the world are now working frantically to save and evaluate the crumbling documents.

The Grand Mosque at Djenne, Mali. The area's rich cultural heritage is only being slowly discovered.
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Susan Vogel / Icarus Films

The Grand Mosque at Djenne, Mali. The area's rich cultural heritage is only being slowly discovered.

Bundles of paper covered with ancient Arabic letters lie on tables and dusty leather stools. In the sweltering heat, a man wearing blue Muslim robes flips through a worn folio, while others are busy repairing yellowed pages.

An astonishing project is underway in Timbuktu, Mali, one of the world's poorest countries. On the southern edge of the Sahara Desert, experts are opening an enchanted Aladdin's Cave, filled with hundreds of thousands of ancient documents.

The Ahmed Baba Library alone contains more than 20,000 manuscripts, including works on herbal medicine and mathematics, yellowed volumes of poetry, music and Islamic law. Some are adorned with gilded letters, while others are written in the language of the Tuareg tribes. The contents remain a mystery.

Manuscript hunters are now scouring the environs of Timbuktu, descending into dark, clay basements and climbing up into attics. Twenty-four family-owned collections have already been discovered in the area. Most of the works stem from the late Middle Ages, when Timbuktu was an important crossroads for caravans. It was home to gold merchants and scholars, and it even boasted a university with 20,000 students. The old saying "the treasures of wisdom are only to be found in Timbuktu" summed up the ancient city's appeal.

But the legacy of the oasis, written with ink made from gallnuts, is beginning to fade. Roughly a dozen academic institutions are now involved in saving and evaluating the documents. The French are developing a database, while the United States has donated a device to digitize the damaged documents. The Norwegian cities of Oslo and Bergen are training locals to become conservators. Shamil Jeppie, a Cape Town historian charged with managing the multinational effort, recently published a book, "The Meanings of Timbuktu," in which he describes the current status of the project. European colonialists suppressed the "intellectual history of West Africa," Jeppie writes, and now it is time to rediscover the site that some have referred to as an "African Oxford."

Hunting for Mali's Hidden Documents

This is an astonishing assessment, given Timbuktu's status as a desert town in the middle of nowhere. In 1825, a European managed to navigate the difficult route down to a bend in the Niger River, south of the Sahara. By the time he reached the oasis, he had run out of water and was barely alive. Shortly after entering the city he was murdered. Timbuktu was taboo -- off-limits to Christians.

Even today, Timbuktu is not an easy place to get to. From August to February, local riverboats called pinnaces bob their way up the Niger River, landing at the port town of Kabara, 10 kilometers (6 miles) from Timbuktu. The landscape is dominated by sand dunes until shortly before the city's suburbs. The desert wind known as the Harmattan is about as pleasant as a dragon's breath.

Teams digitize rare works in the new studio in Timbuktu.
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Harlan Wallach/NUAMPS

Teams digitize rare works in the new studio in Timbuktu.

And yet the old section of the city is blanketed in an odd, heavy magic, filled with mosques topped by bulbous minarets and wealthy citizens' opulent houses, cube-shaped buildings with meter-thick walls made of baked clay.

According to an employee at the Ahmed Baba Library, Mali was overrun by the French colonial army after 1880. "The French didn't want us to have the manuscripts, and they tried to steal them," says the library worker. The documents were hidden to protect them.

But now the hunt is on. The house of Ismael Haidara, a historian whose ancestors include the Visigoths and jungle kings from southern Mali, has proven to be a treasure trove. Haidara, a private citizen, horded more than 2,000 bundles of papers, passed down through 11 generations of his family. "This is our family history," he says, pointing to a leather slipcase from the year 1519.

Albrecht Hofheinz, an Arabist from Oslo, estimates that there are up to 300,000 forgotten manuscripts in Mali. Insect bites have discolored the pages, he says. "The paper disintegrates, is destroyed by mold or eaten by termites." Time is of the essence. Some of the volumes are being photographed using a digital photo studio provided by the University of Chicago. The first of the documents are expected to be available on the Internet by the end of the year.

The contents of astronomical documents are already being analyzed. "So far 112 texts on astronomy have been discovered," explains Petra Schmidl, a historian of science at the University of Frankfurt am Main. They include calendar calculations, astrology and a depiction of the Ptolemaic world system.

Researchers are now looking forward to studying the tattered archives that contain reports on ancient oases and nomadic societies. The manuscripts also include lists of goods transported by caravans. Will the documents finally shed some light on the mysterious caravan trade?

There are many questions on how the trade thrived in the desert. The world's largest desert stretches 2,000 kilometers (1,242 miles) from north to south. How did the caravans make it through? Archaeologists have not even scratched the surface at the caravans' destinations in Ghana and the Ivory Coast.

But they have uncovered new finds in the Sahara, including traces of an ancient infrastructure. Water storage facilities have been found in the middle of the vast desert, as well as places fed by underground wells. Desert palaces once built by the Tuareg were unearthed in the Essouk oasis in northern Mali.

It is now clear that the Arabs were the first to conquer the inhospitable arid zone. While Rome's legions ventured no further than the edges of the desert, they penetrated far deeper into the Sahara.

There is evidence of a Moorish influence in Ghana by as early as 800 A.D. Vast gold deposits were found in the Ghanaian rain forest. Their owners, the Soninke kings, ruled a realm that stretched to the banks of the Senegal River.

Point of Departure for Desert Journeys

According to Arab accounts, the black rulers lived in tents guarded by large dogs wearing gold and silver collars and manacles. According to Arab geographer al-Bakir, one of these kings commanded an army of 200,000 soldiers.

A private family library in the Tuareg village of Ber, 40 miles east of Timbuktu.
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Alyssa Banta

A private family library in the Tuareg village of Ber, 40 miles east of Timbuktu.

The country provided cola nuts, ivory, cotton and semiprecious stones. Local traders loaded their goods onto cargo boats and transported them on the Niger to Timbuktu. The city was the point of departure for journeys into the desert.

Camels stood at Timbuktu's water troughs. Its residents included Arabs, light-skinned Berbers and dark-skinned members of the Malinke tribe. The oasis smelled of lamb dung and fresh spices, and muezzins called out from its minarets. Gold, a form of payment, glistened everywhere -- as dust, nuggets and fist-sized lumps.

In 1324, when Kankan Mussa, one of the kings of Mali, went on a pilgrimage to Mecca, via Cairo, with his ostentatious entourage, he was so generous with the precious metal (he had brought along two tons of it) that gold prices on the Nile plunged. News of the wealthy black monarch even reached faraway Europe. A Catalan map of the world depicts him with thick lips and holding a scepter.

Kankan was so impressed by the palaces of the Orient that he brought home an architect, who created malleable mud-brick imitations of the Arab mosques in Timbuktu. The Djingerber Mosque, with its sugarloaf-shaped towers, still stands in the city today.

The historical trans-Saharan trading routes.
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DER SPIEGEL

The historical trans-Saharan trading routes.

There is an even larger mosque in nearby Djenne, part fairytale castle and part termite hill. Each year after the rainy season, when cracks have formed in the outside walls, hundreds of workers participate in what has become a national pastime cum religious service. Men climb up along wooden scaffolding in the outside walls, praying as they climb, to apply fresh mud to the structure.

For many years, such customs were all but unknown in Europe (US ethnologist Susan Vogel filmed the annual mud plaster ceremony last year for the first time). In the past, those traveling to Timbuktu had to traverse seemingly endless volcanic plains and rocky plateaus -- at temperatures of up to 55 degrees Celsius (131 degrees Fahrenheit). The area south of Murzuk, an oasis notorious for its role in the slave trade, consists of a vast, shimmering sand bowl measuring 90,000 square kilometers (34,700 square miles, or about the size of Portugal).

Anyone who lost his way there was literally baked.

The Arabs only managed to complete the journey through the desert with the help of camels. A camel can drink 200 liters of water at a time, and its kidneys retrieve large amounts of water after urination. The Arabs also enlisted the help of the Tuareg tribes, which lived on ridges in the central Sahara.

Even there, surrounded by hyper-arid sand pans, volcanic basalt chimneys and pinnacles, life was possible. The Tuareg drilled deep wells, and they had their black slaves excavate long underground canals with slight inclines to bring in ground water.

Archaeologists have shown that an incredible system of underground canals up to 20,000 kilometers (12,422 miles) long once existed at Wadi al-Hayat in Libya. Thanks to such hydraulic marvels, the desert blossomed and crops sprouted in the fields of the Tuareg. In Essouk, they ate gazelles and dried perch, imported from the Niger River, 240 kilometers away. Murzuk, with its large slave market, was surrounded by a massive wall with seven gates -- in the middle of the Sahara.

A Source of African Pride

But nothing worked without the blue-robed Tuareg. They provided provisions for the caravans and led them to the oases. At times, they turned to blackmail and looting, and Timbuktu was attacked several times.

Researchers are anxious to discover more about the haggling between ethnic groups and how they divided up the spoils. In the late Middle Ages, Cairo was sending 12,000 camels a year to Mali. There were plenty of fortunes to be made.

The slave trade was especially lucrative. Guards carrying whips drove the slaves through the hot desert. "Only the youngest and strongest survived the two-month desert trek, and they were walking skeletons by the time they reached the Fezzan region, where they were fattened up," writes Austrian geographer Hans Weis.

The Koran also made its way into sub-Saharan Africa along these torturous routes. In its heyday, Timbuktu had 180 Koran schools. "A large library was built, where the fundamental theological and philosophical works were copied," explains Thomas Krings, an Africa expert at the University of Freiburg in southwestern Germany. The many documents that were penned then are now emerging in Mali as crumbling volumes. "Many people consider Timbuktu to be the end of the world," says Mahamoudou Baba Hasseye, the owner of a valuable private collection, "but it was an important center of Islamic scholarship."

Calligraphers once plied their trade in the desert. Some of the manuscripts uncovered in Timbuktu contain gold lettering, and some are written in the unusual Songhai and Fulfulbe tribal languages.

These treasures are still a long way from being saved. The libraries are filled with bits and pieces of paper, evidence of crumbling manuscripts. The government of South Africa promised to build a library in Timbuktu years ago, but nothing ever came of it.

But at least there are many who have come to Timbuktu to help save its ancient manuscripts. The project, which historian Petra Schmidl characterizes as being on the "extreme fringe of the Islamic academic community," is a source of great pride for Africans.

"Africa has repeatedly been portrayed as culturally inferior," says Essop Pahad, South Africa's Minister in the Presidency. "In Timbuktu, we are proving that the opposite is true."

Translated from the German by Christopher Sultan

http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,569560,00.html

COMMENTS

SHAITSU

SHAITSU
Il massaggio Shiatsu che si effettua tramite la pressione delle dita, dei palmi delle mani e dei piedi e dei gomiti su tutto il corpo, agisce sui punti energetici considerati dall'agopuntura. Stimola la circolazione sanguigna ed il flusso linfatico, agisce sul sistema nervoso allentando la tensione muscolare più profonda, rimuove le tossine dei tessuti, risveglia il sistema ormonale e sollecita la capacità di autoguarigione del corpo.

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