Mad woman gives birth in Kaduna market








KADUNA—A mentally-deranged woman, simply known as Hassana, gave birth in broad daylight to baby boy at Kaduna Central Market, yesterday.
Hassana delivered the baby in front of a bank adjacent the Kaduna State Media Corporation, KSMC, while hundreds of citizens watched her. Some women formed a circle around her, while one of them played the role of a midwife.
Hassana, 22, had wandered around the market for years until she was spotted in the last few months with pregnancy.
“She moves in tattered clothes, scavenging for food around this market,” an excited trader in the market told Vanguard shortly after she had been moved away.
“Now, someone has impregnated her and God has helped her to get a fine baby boy. Many people are looking for this blessing, but he chose to give it to a woman who is not even in her senses. And the father seems not to exist.”
Journalist to the rescue
Vanguard learned that Ibrahima Yakubu, a journalist with Deutsche Welles, DW, who was at the market at the time quickly provided money to convey both mother and child to the Yusuf Danstoho Memorial Hospital, Tudun Wada, Kaduna, for proper medical assistance.
baby1Yukubu subsequently contacted the Senator representing Kaduna Central senatorial disctrict, Senator Shehu Sani, who made some donations to both mother and child and also paid the hospital bills.
There were other donations from well meaning Nigerians to the new born baby and mother.
The items donated include packets of pampers, bottles of Olive oil, baby cloths, underwear, assorted baby foods and milks.

Nearly naked Justin Bieber shows off purple hair

Justin Bieber showed off a new hair color (and more) in a couple of Instagram posts this weekend.
He went for a subtle lilac tint on his locks. Oh, and he noted in one post that he's been "back in the gym"

Two dead as tornadoes slam Florida




In Manatee County, a tornado with winds reaching 127 mph swept through the town of Duette, 40 miles southeast of Tampa. killing two people and injuring five others, four of them children under 10, sheriff spokesman Dave Bristow said.
The EF2-rated tornado, or "strong" twister, ripped a 300-foot-wide swath of destruction along a nine-mile stretch of the county, the National Weather Servicesaid.
“I’m amazed to see anybody got out of this alive,” Manatee County Sheriff Brad Steube told the Associated Press.Bristow identified the victims as Steven Wilson, pronounced dead at the scene, and his wife, who died at a local hospital. One of the injured was his son; four were grandchildren between 6 and 10 years old, Bristow said. The survivors' injuries were not life-threatening, he said.
In nearby Sarasota County, another EF2 storm with winds reaching 132 mph blasted a mile stretch with a width varying from 350 yards to 100 yards. Gov. Rick Scott toured some of the wreckage in Siesta Key, a barrier island between the Gulf of Mexico and Roberts Bay hammered by the storm.
Sarasota Fire Rescue reported multiple rescues, and the county Emergency Operations Center said preliminary damage assessments indicated 45 properties suffered a total of more than $3 million in damage.
Florida Power and Light reported that 17,000 customers lost power, although the utility tweeted that most customers would have power restored by Monday.
"Crews are responding safely and as quickly as possible to restore power," FPL said in a statement. "We've added resources to help speed restoration efforts."
The regional American Red Cross said volunteers were responding in both counties.
Photos posted to social media showed dramatic damage to homes. The storm damaged several condominiums on Siesta Key, where winds were estimated to have reached 70 mph, according to the National Weather Service. Sarasota County government Twitter account reported no serious injuries
The severe storms swept as far south as Naples, 170 miles south of Tampa, where gusts topping 80 mph.
Weather service meteorologist Richard Rude told USA TODAY that tornadoes actually aren't that rare in a region better known for hurricanes.
"Particularly when you are dealing with an El Niño, where the jet streams drop farther south, it's conducive to having some wild storms," Rude said.

Democrats debate guns, health care as voting nears


With Hillary Clinton and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders in a near dead heat in the election season’s first two contests, the leading Democratic presidential candidates Sunday engaged in heated exchanges over firearm policy, health care and income equality in their last meeting before the Iowa caucuses.
The Charleston, S.C., debate, which also featured lower-polling candidate and former Maryland governor Martin O'Malley, opened just hours after the first of five Americans freed following a dramatic prisoner swap with Iran stopped over in Europe on Sunday on their way back to the United States.
The five Americans, including Washington Post correspondent Jason Rezaian, who had been held since July 2014, were released in exchange for seven Iranian citizens who had been held on sanctions-related offenses. Clinton and Sanders both said they were encouraged by the developments, which came as Iran began dismantling its nuclear program.
"We have had one good day over 36 years,'' Clinton said of the U.S.'s long-troubled relationship with Iran and the need to continue monitoring Tehran's nuclear compliance.
From the debate's opening moments, the candidates sought to stake out sharp differences with Clinton, emphasizing her long experience in government as preparation for the presidency, while Sanders began defending his reversal on legislation that provided gun makers and dealers immunity from lawsuits filed by victims of violent crime involving firearms.
"I am pleased to hear that Sen. Sanders has reversed his position on immunity,'' Clinton said, adding that "no other industry'' had been provided such protection.
O'Malley, meanwhile, highlighted his own record of supporting some of the strictest gun legislation in the country during his tenure as Maryland governor. Through much of the debate, however, O'Malley was a forgotten candidate who was often forced to plead for more time to talk as the debate focused on Clinton and Sanders.
The quick attention to guns came as the candidates gathered in Charleston, where just seven months earlier nine worshipers were killed in an attack on a Bible study session at the iconic Emanuel AME Church.
From guns, the candidates quickly pivoted to criminal justice reform, police brutality and the scourge of heroin addiction and health care policy.
Clinton was sharply critical of Sanders' Medicare-style health care plan, saying that such a proposal would thrust the government back into yet another contentious fight that could endanger the Affordable Care ActPresident Obama's signature health care law.
The former secretary of State described the Obama program as "historic'' and in need of expansion along with stronger political support.
Just two hours before the debate's start, Sanders unveiled the long-awaited details of his plan that would be supported by a mix of taxes on employers, middle-class workers and wealthiest Americans.
Responding to Clinton's criticism, Sanders said his proposal would lower health care costs for average Americans by $5,000.
"To tear it up,'' Clinton said of Obamacare, "is the absolute wrong direction.''
source : us today nes

Al-Qaeda group claims responsibility For hotel attack in Burkina Faso

An Al-Qaeda affiliate says it's behind a terrorist attack on a hotel in the capital of Burkina Faso that left several people dead. Video provided by Newsy Newslook


SOURCE : US NEWS TODAY

Medical doctor dies of Lassa Fever in Rivers


PORT HARCOURT—A medical doctor with Rivers State-owned Braithwait Memorial Specialist Hospital, BMH, Dr. Livy Ijamala, has died from Lassa Fever, bringing to three the number of people killed by the disease in the state.
Chairman of the state branch of Nigerian Medical Association, NMA, Dr. Furo Green, disclosed this yesterday in Port Harcourt, saying the late doctor, Ijamala, who died in the early hours of yesterday from the ailment, had contact with patients infected with Lassa Fever.
Dr. Furo added that the late medical doctor had been buried in line with recommendations of World Health Organization, WHO, for deaths from contagious diseases.
He also said a team from WHO had already visited the hospital for assessment, adding that the hospital had been decontaminated and that those who had contacts with the late Dr. Ijamala had been placed on observation.
He said: “Last night, one of our hard-working doctors in the department of obstetrics gynaecology, Dr. Livy Ijamala, lost his life following infection with Lassa Fever.
This is the price medical doctors and health personnel pay for offering health services to the public.
“The hospital is being decontaminated as we speak. All medical doctors and healthcare personnel that had primary contact with the late medical doctor have been placed under observation.”
… as doctors begin strike
He also said medical doctors in the state were on three days strike to protest the frequent abduction of medical doctors in the state.
He said within the week two of his colleagues, Dr. Isaac Opurum and Dr. Ib Aprioku were taken hostage at separate times. He said in 2015, 21 doctors were abducted in the state.
According to him, the warning strike was to draw attention to the plight of medical doctors.
He said: “While we are not happy to go on strike, the strike now appears to be a blessing in disguise because fewer doctors and patients came to the hospital today, thereby, reducing the rate of contacts among medical doctors and patients.”
SOURCE: VANGUARD NGR

Five things to know about the Zika virus


In the past year, Zika has spread from Africa and Asia through the Americas. In Brazil, the number of infants born with shrunken, malformed brains has gone up by a factor of 10 since Zika entered the country. USA TODAY

Obama allows sale of aircraft to Iran as nuclear deal nears implementation

WASHINGTON — President Obama took another step toward implementing the Iran nuclear deal Friday, empowering the secretary of State to allow the export of civilian passenger aircraft to Iran.
White House officials stressed Friday that no sanctions relief will happen until Iran lives up to its end of the deal — and the International Atomic Energy Agency verifies its compliance. That verification may be imminent, they said.
"They have nearly completed their major nuclear steps, and that's nothing to gloss over," Deputy National Security Adviser Ben Rhodes said at a luncheon hosted by Bloomberg News Friday. "It's a significant rollback in the Iranian program."
Rhodes said that the IAEA certification will trigger what's known as "Implementation Day."
"That should happen relatively soon, certainly in the coming days. That is when sanctions relief is initiated," he said.
The nuclear agreement lifts only part of the U.S. sanctions against Iran, and sanctions for Iran's human rights violations and support of terrorism will remain in place. And while the U.S. trade embargo remains largely intact, the agreement makes two exceptions: Iran can buy U.S. civilian passenger aircraft, and sell certain crafts — specifically, carpets and rugs — to the United States.
In 2010, Congress granted Obama the authority to allow exports of goods, services, or technologies to Iran if he determines those sales "to be in the national interest." On Friday, Obama delegated that authority to Secretary of State John Kerry through a presidential memorandum, a presidential directive similar to an executive order.
In a letter to Obama Friday, 13 Republican senators called for new sanctions on Iran for ballistic missile tests it conducted last year. "Iran’s belligerent actions have thus far gone unpunished," said the letter, written by Sen. David Purdue, R-Ga.
White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest said Friday that the sanctions relief under the nuclear deal doesn't preclude the United States from taking action against Iran on other fronts.
"We have been quite clear from the very beginning — long before a deal was even reached — that the negotiations were focused primarily on Iran’s nuclear program. That was our number one concern. It’s also the number one concern of our allies in Israel, as well," he said. "And we’ve been pretty clear about the fact that Iran is potentially subject to significant sanctions as a result of the ballistic missile testing that has been reported. So we're going to continue to apply pressure to them."

SOURCE: US TODAY NEWS





































Bill Clinton returns to New Hampshire and the campaign trail





Former President Bill Clinton used a New Hampshire campaign appearance to say there's never been a presidential candidate, "better qualified by knowledge, experience and temperament to do what needs to be done now to restore prosperity." (Jan. 4) AP
NASHUA, N.H. — He's back.
Bill Clinton's hair was whiter, his voice hoarser and his demeanor more subdued than when he was seeking to rescue his own beleaguered presidential campaign in New Hampshire in 1992, or even when he was stumping for his wife in her 2008 campaign.
In his solo campaign debut for the 2016 race, the former president gave a capacity crowd of about 700 in Nashua Community College gym a ruminative endorsement of Hillary Clinton that was more personal than political. He didn't mention his own potential impact on her prospects, and there were none of the hecklers or questions that she occasionally has had to face about him.
"This is what I want to say: When we met soon-to-be 45 years ago in a couple of months, when we met, we fell in love," he told them. "I thought she was the most amazing person," he said, as he traced her career from Yale Law School and her early work in Arkansas on behalf of children and the poor. "She hadn't been elected to anything, but everything she touched became better."
He concluded with a history lesson about why New Hampshire native Frankin Pierce was an unsuccessful president and Abraham Lincoln a successful one — in large part because Lincoln matched the demands of his time.
SOURCE : USA TODAY NEWS

FBI: 18 minutes missing in San Bernardino shooting timeline


The FBI appealed Tuesday for the public's help in its continuing investigation of the San Bernardino attack in which the shooters' whereabouts are unknown for 18 minutes following last month's assault that left 14 dead.
Los Angeles FBI chief David Bowdich said investigators have not been able to account for Syed Farook and wife Tashfeen Malik between 12:59 p.m., and 1:17 p.m., on Dec. 2, just more than two hours after the couple opened fire on a holiday party gathering.
Bowdich said investigators were specifically interested in obtaining any photographic or other electronic evidence that could pinpoint their locations during the brief window of time shortly before their trail was picked up by authorities, prompting a pursuit that ended in the couple's death later that afternoon.
Investigators still believe that the attack was inspired by radical terrorist ideology rather than directed by a specific group abroad, but Bowdich said there is a need to be "absolutely certain" of the activities of both before they were killed in a shootout with police.
Bowdich referred Tuesday to a timeline beginning at 8:37 a.m., when Farook left his home to join work colleagues at a meeting that was to culminate in a holiday gathering. He arrived at the meeting 10 minutes later, only to leave at 10:37 a.m. Investigators believe he returned with his wife to launch the attack at 10:56 a.m.
Last month, the man accused of purchasing two of the guns used in the rampage was ordered to remain in federal custody. Enrique Marquez, 24, also is accused of plotting at least two other assaults with Farook in 2011 and 2012 that were not carried out.
SOURCE: US TODAY NEWS

N. Korea tests hydrogen bomb, earthquake reported




TOKYO – A reported earthquake in North Korea Wednesday raised suspicion that the secretive nation has conducted its first nuclear weapons test in more than two years, in defiance of continuing UN sanctions.
Shortly after the seismic tremor, North Korea said it had conducted a successful hydrogen bomb test, the Associated Press tweeted. A hydrogen bomb is generally considered to be more powerful than a typical nuclear explosive.
The U.S. Geological Service reported that a magnitude-5.1 earthquake occurred 30.4 miles from the city of Kilju, North Korea, where the country's Punggye-ri nuclear test site is located.
That is the same area where North Korea conducted nuclear tests in 2006, 2009 and 2013.
The USGS put the depth of the earthquake at 6 miles below the surface, but the South Korea's geological agency said it was near the surface. The earthquake was detected just after 10 a.m. Tokyo time (8 pm ET).
A hydrogen bomb, also called a thermonuclear bomb, uses fusion in a chain reaction to create a more powerful detonation than a typical atomic bomb, which uses fission. A hydrogen bomb uses an atomic bomb inside its core to set off fusion reactions that have a devastating effect.
South Korea's presidential office convened an emergency security meeting Wednesday morning; Kyodo News reported that Japanese government officials planned to hold an emergency meeting later in the day.
A television anchor in North Korea had tested a miniaturized hydrogen bomb and had elevated the country's nuclear prowess "to the next level" and providing it with a weapon against the U.S. and others. The TV anchor said the test went off perfectly.
The Obama administration has been "re-balancing" U.S. forces to the Asia-Pacific region in part to deal with North Korea's nuclear weapons and ballistic missile programs.
The White House said after the earthquake that it was aware of the seismic activity and of North Korea's claims of a nuclear test.

"While we cannot confirm these claims at this time, we condemn any violation of U.N. Security Council resolutions and again call on North Korea to abide by its international obligations and commitments," said Ned Price, the spokesman for the National Security Council. "We have consistently made clear that we will not accept it as a nuclear state. We will continue to protect and defend our allies in the region, including the Republic of Korea, and will respond appropriately to any and all North Korean provocations."

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un said in an annual New Year's speech last week that the country was ready for war if provoked by "invasive" outsiders, but did not repeat past threats to use the country's nuclear weapons or long-range missiles.
North Korea said it planned an "important announcement" later Wednesday, AP reported.
A confirmed test would mark another big step toward Pyongyang's goal of building a warhead that can be mounted on a missile capable of reaching the U.S. mainland.
The test drew immediate reaction from North Korea’s neighbors.
Japan Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said the test represents a threat to Japanese security and is “totally intolerable,” according to Kyodo News Service.
Abe said Japan “strongly condemns” the test and would have a “firm response.”
Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida said Japan would seek a new UN resolution condemning the test and that he planned to meet with U.S. Ambassador Caroline Kennedy to discuss North Korea’s actions.
Yonhap News Service said South Korea has stepped up surveillance activities in response to the test.
North Korea is believed to have three types of operational ballistic missiles, with a maximum range of 800 miles. That’s enough range to hit targets in South Korea and Japan, including the massive U.S. military bases in both countries.
The North also is believed to be working on two types of long-range missiles that could hit targets in the U.S. territory of Guam, and in Alaska and Hawaii.
Pyongyang is thought to have a handful of crude nuclear weapons. The United States and its allies worry about North Korean nuclear tests because each new blast brings the country closer to perfecting its nuclear arsenal.
SOURCE : US TODAY NEWS

Rafa Benitez releases statement after being sacked by Real Madrid


Rafa Benitez has released a statement following his sack as Real Madrid manager after just seven months and three losses. In a statement released on his website, the 55-year-old Madrid native thanked those at Real Madrid for allowing him to work at the club and wished his successor Zinedine Zidane luck for the future. Read the statement after the jump...
He wrote: 
"Now, at the end of my time as first team coach of Real Madrid, I would like to use this article to say goodbye to everyone at every level of the club. I want everyone at the club from the board of directors, executives, workers and all of the fans, know that it has been an honour and privilege to be in charge at this club where I grew up as a person, player and coach from the lowest categories through to the first team.
"As a Madridista from Madrid, steeped in the traditions and values of this institution, which I learned in the old sports city of Castellana, it has been an honour to work for these colours. I would especially like to thank everyone at the new sports city and the Santiago Bernabéu who since my first steps through the door have supported me and made my work easier. Thanks to all for helping.
"With all that I have said still in mind, I would like to wish good luck to Zinedine Zidane, my successor, and his staff. To all the players, coaches and staff in both Valdebebas and Bernabéu, I wish all the best and also good luck.
"With all my respect and thanks... HALA MADRID and NOTHING ELSE. "
 SOURCE: LINDAIKEJI BLOG

Weeks after being declared an Islamic republic, Gambia orders female civil servants to cover their hair


It's not yet a month since President Yahya Jammeh declared Gambia an Islamic Republic - ostensibly in a bid to break away from its colonial past - but the implications of that announcement are only coming into play. The president maintained that other faiths retained their freedoms regardless but all female civil servants are now required to cover their hair.

No reasons were given for the introduction of the new rule, which was announced in a memo that was leaked to local opposition newspapers.


The memo, published by Freedom stated 'all female staff' within government departments were no longer allowed to expose their hair during working hours, effective from December 31.

It went on to urge female staff 'to use a head tie and neatly wrap their hair'.

'All heads of departments and agencies are urgently advised to implement this directive and bring it to the attention of their female staff,' the memo concluded. 

Although it doesn't appear that the president's announcement changes Gambia's laws or its constitutional status as a secular state, it could yet form the justification for rules such as that now affecting its female employees.

'Gambia cannot afford to continue the colonial legacy,' Jammeh said of his country, which gained independence from Britain in 1965.

Jammeh said the rights of Gambia's Christian community will be respected and there would be no mandates on dress.

'We will be an Islamic state that would respect the rights of all citizens and non-citizens.'
However, the head of the country's Islamic body wouldn't say if he endorsed the declaration.
'We haven't met yet to discuss over the presidential announcement,' said Gambia's Supreme Islamic Council Chairman Imam Momodou Lamin Touray.

Hamat Bah of the opposition National Reconciliation Party criticized the decision.
'There is a constitutional clause that says that Gambia is a secular state. You cannot make such a declaration without going through a referendum.'

Jammeh has ruled Gambia since seizing power in 1994.

SOURCE: LINDAIKEJI.BLOGSPOT.COM

Mass sexual attack in Germany inflames migrant debate


German authorities said on Tuesday that coordinated attacks in which young women were sexually harassed and robbed by hundreds of young men on New Year’s Eve in the western city of Cologne were unprecedented in scale and nature.
The assault, which went largely unreported for days, set off a national outcry after the Cologne police described the attackers as young men “who appeared to have a North African or Arabic” background, based on testimony from victims and witnesses. More than 90 people have filed legal complaints, the police said on Tuesday.

The police in Hamburg also said that 10 women had reported being sexually assaulted and robbed in a similar fashion on the same night, and they urged witnesses to come forward.
Germany took in more than one million migrants last year, and with the country struggling to deal with the political, social and wider consequences of the influx, the delayed public response has led to concerns that the authorities were playing down the seriousness of the assault to prevent it from becoming a point of contention in the broader debate.
 
The assault took place late on Thursday on the vast public square in front of the city’s main train station, a central transit point for anyone coming or going from a fireworks display over the Rhine and the bars and nightclubs in the heart of the city, in the shadow of its landmark cathedral.
Heiko Maas, Germany’s justice minister, warned on Tuesday against linking the assaults to the influx of refugees, saying that the ethnicity of the perpetrators was irrelevant.
“The rule of the law does not look at where someone comes from but what they did,” Mr. Maas told reporters in Berlin. “We will investigate what circles the perpetrators may have come from.”
The Cologne police say they believe several hundred men, ages 15 to 35, were involved in the violence that began in the early hours of the New Year, after the square was cleared because men had been throwing firecrackers into the crowd.
Wolfgang Albers, Cologne’s chief of police, said the assaults had taken place in the chaos that followed, as the square was emptied. The men appeared to have broken into smaller groups, the police said, with each one encircling a woman; while some would grope the victim, others would steal her wallet or cellphone.
 
One victim reported that she had been raped, the police said.
 
Henriette Reker, Cologne’s mayor, called a crisis meeting on Tuesday to address the issue. Ms. Reker, who was stabbed during a campaign event in October by an attacker who opposed her welcoming attitude toward migrants, called the assault “absolutely intolerable” and pledged her support for the authorities’ investigation.
 
The city holds a large festival every year before Easter, when thousands of costumed revelers throng the streets to celebrate with parades and parties, and Ms. Reker echoed the concerns of many about safety during the Carnival season.
In an effort to prevent further violence, Ms. Reker said that city officials would begin working on measures to help young women protect themselves and to explain the city’s attitudes and norms to its many newcomers.
“We will explain our Carnival much better to people who come from other cultures,” she said, “so there won’t be any confusion about what constitutes celebratory behavior in Cologne, which has nothing to do with a sexual frankness.”
Cologne, with roughly one million inhabitants, is among Germany’s most ethnically diverse cities, and it took in more than 10,000 refugees last year, many of them young men from Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria. The city authorities said they would increase security after the assaults, as they continued to search for suspects.
 
The euphoria that accompanied the first wave of arrivals in Germany this summer has since given way to growing unease about the difficulty of integrating hundreds of thousands of people of a different religion and who were raised in a different culture.
 
Far-right and anti-immigrant groups in Germany, and others who oppose the influx, swiftly seized on the episode, saying it demonstrated the dangers associated with accepting huge numbers of migrants.
Lutz Bachmann, head of the anti-immigrant Pegida movement, accused German leaders on Twitter of complicity in the assault. In a post that named Ms. Merkel; her deputy, Sigmar Gabriel; and other politicians, Mr. Bachmann said, “You are all responsible for the abuse in Cologne!”
 
Chancellor Angela Merkel, whose unmitigated support for a migrant flow that has increasingly put her country under strain and caused political rifts in her own conservative bloc, used an annual event on Tuesday to call for mutual respect.
 
“We are all of the understanding that we respect everyone, even those who we don’t know,” the chancellor said in Berlin, where she greeted groups of children who celebrated the Epiphany by dressing up as three kings and collecting donations for charity or their churches.
The chancellor recalled that the country’s Constitution enshrines human dignity as inviolable. “This is true not only for Germans, but for all people,” she said.
 
 
 
 
The New York Times

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