In warfare, if you do not have food, and your fellow soldier is wounded, you may as well kill him and eat him to survive.


From Henry Kyemba, A State of Blood (1977)


In warfare, if you do not have food, and your fellow soldier is wounded, you may as well kill him and eat him to survive.

In warfare, if you do not have food, and your fellow soldier is wounded, you may as well kill him and eat him to survive.

In warfare, if you do not have food, and your fellow soldier is wounded, you may as well kill him and eat him to survive.

In warfare, if you do not have food, and your fellow soldier is wounded, you may as well kill him and eat him to survive.