Fifty souls, fifty dreams, fifty futures extinguished like a match in a sandstorm. A lorry, that great iron beast of hope and desperation, coughed its final breath somewhere in the vast, indifferent Sahara. And with it, the lives of fifty migrants, stranded in a thirst crisis that could have been predicted by a half-blind camel, were erased from the earth.
This is not a tragedy, gentle reader. This is a farce. A blood-soaked, sun-scorched farce written by the same invisible hand that pens the daily lottery of global inequality.
The lorry broke down, of course. It was a tin can on wheels, held together by prayers and black market parts. It hauled its human cargo across borders drawn by men in distant rooms, men who have never felt a grain of sand in their shoe.
Those fifty were not just numbers. They were a tailor from Timbuktu, a nurse from Khartoum, a child clutching a stuffed giraffe. But who counts them?
Who mourns? The news cycle will yawn, executives will adjust their ties, and the world will move on. Except we will not.
We will scream into the void of this absurd existence, this theatre of cruelty where a lorry's fuel pump dictates who lives and who dies. The thirst crisis is not a crisis of water. It is a crisis of conscience.
And as always, the conscience of the powerful is a desert: vast, empty, and utterly indifferent to the cries beneath the sun.








