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BBC News
By Megha Mohan
image copyrightShali Reddy
Thembi Nkambule has been there for hundreds of people dying from Aids in Eswatini - a country where one in four people have HIV. These are the lessons she has learned on what it means to have "a good death".
Thembi sees three kinds of death.
The first is the most common. The person looks at her with blank eyes that say, "It's over. I've given up." Thembi watches as they close their eyes and let go. A life lived in secrecy ending in shame. This is a bad death.
"Then there is the second type," Thembi says. "The person has a message, or sometimes a warning, for the people they will leave behind. There is a lesson they have learned that they want passed on."

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