Thursday, April 21, 2011

Florida balcony fall baby saved by British tourist


A toddler who fell from a third-floor Florida hotel balcony has escaped injury after being caught by a British woman on holiday.
Jah-Nea Myles, 16 months, apparently slipped through the balcony railing and fell into the arms of Helen Beard.
Ms Beard, of Worksop, was at the pool at Orlando's Econo Lodge hotel when she saw the baby hanging from the railing and ran underneath, she said.
She held the child until emergency medical workers arrived.
Screaming heard The baby was taken to hospital, where medical staff said they saw no bruises or scratches and deemed her in good health.
An investigator with the Orange County sheriff's office described her as "playful" and said she was not crying.
Helena Myles, Jah-Nea's 20-year-old mother, told police her friend Dominique Holt had been watching the baby in the adjacent hotel room.
Ms Holt, 21, said she went to the bathroom about 2100 local time (0100 GMT), then heard screaming and saw the balcony door ajar.
She ran out onto the balcony and saw the baby in the arms of Ms Beard, from Nottinghamshire.
Police said no criminal charges were pending.
Orlando is a popular destination for holidaymakers, with Walt Disney World and other tourist attractions.

This is miraculous. God has  a way of saving the innocent

Two Journalists killed in Libya

Getty Images photographer Chris Hondros, left, stands in front of a burning building while on assignment, in Misrata, Libya, on Monday. At right, photojournalist Tim Hetherington, who directed the documentary 'Restrepo,'  is seen during an assignment for Vanity Fair Magazine in Afghanistan. Both died Wednesday covering fighting in Misrata.

An Oscar-nominated war-film director and a second prize-winning photojournalist died covering a battle between rebels and Libyan government forces in the western city of Misrata on Wednesday.
Two other Western photographers apparently working alongside them were wounded.
British-born Tim Hetherington, co-director of the 2010 documentary "Restrepo" about U.S. soldiers on an outpost in Afghanistan, was killed, said his U.S.-based publicist, Johanna Ramos Boyer.
Chris Hondros, a New York-based photographer for Getty Images, died later Wednesday after suffering a serious head wound, according to Getty's director of photography, Pancho Bernasconi.
Neither of the men had protective gear with them, colleague Andre Liohn told The New York Times. The report said Liohn was at the triage center where medics treated the injured journalists after the attack.
Protective equipment has been difficult to bring into Libya from Egypt, The Times report said, as customs officials have thwarted the transport of equipment like helmets and flak jackets.
Doctors said two other photographers were treated for shrapnel wounds: Guy Martin, a Briton affiliated with the Panos photo agency, and Michael Christopher Brown, a New York-based photographer originally from Skagit Valley, Wash.
The bodies of Hetherington, 41, and Hondros, 41, were taken from Misrata to Benghazi on Thursday by the International Organization for Migration aboard the Ionian Spirit, which had been brought in to evacuate civilians from Misrata, according to a statement by Human Rights Watch.
Jeremy Haslam, a coordinator for the Geneva-based organization, said the boat had more than 1,000 evacuees, including 239 Libyan civilians and 586 migrants from Niger and others from Africa and Asia.
Martin and Brown remained in the hospital in Misrata.
Martin had shrapnel wounds and was undergoing surgery Wednesday night, The New York Times reported. Brown had shrapnel wounds but his life was reportedly not in danger.
The photographers were reporting from inside the only rebel-held city in western Libya, which has come under weeks of relentless shelling by government troops.
Hetherington tweeted Tuesday: "In besieged Libyan city of Misrata. Indiscriminate shelling by Qaddafi forces. No sign of NATO."
The circumstances of the incident were unclear. Statements from Hetherington's family and from Peter N. Boukaert of Human Rights Watch in Geneva, said he was killed by a rocket-propelled grenade.
Leila Fadel, a Washington Post reporter who was at the hospital, reported that Hetherington was rushed from the battle by ambulance along with rebel fighters. He was taken to a triage tent next to the hospital, she said, and appeared pale and was bleeding heavily. He was pronounced dead some 15 minutes after his arrival, according to her account in The Washington Post.

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

FRAUD ALERT!

Please everybody, I would not like to share this alone. I can't be poking nose into other people's issue to publish, while the one that just landed into my mail box would be kept secret. No, am starting from my own mailbox. This is what came to my mail box this afternoon. The sender doesn't know he has just dialed a wrong number because before I finished reading the mail, I have concluded what it was. Your guess is as good as mine. Please follow me and enjoy this super story...

Attention Sir,

My name is Muhammad Junaidil a Libyan; i am in spain at the moment as a political refugee due to the recent problem in my country. I have a huge sum of Money deposited in an Offshore bank in Europe and I need your urgent assistance to quickly transfer this money from the present bank to another bank of your choice in your name to avoid any trace as regarding the source, it is the only thing left for me now and i wish to start a new life with it. This transaction demands immediate attention because of the present political situation in my country (Libya) and i do not want to lose this money to the european government nor the UN.

It is a Huge sum of money and i am ready to offer you 30% of the money to stand as the beneficiary and transfer it to a new bank account of your choice. I believe you can help me out but on the contrary please forgive my indulgence and delete this email without sharing the content with anybody.

This money rightfully belongs to me because it is my share from an Oil deal that was used to compensate for my Late father who died fighting for Muammar Al Ghaddafi and it could be confiscated by the european government. This is the only thing left for me to start up a new life and CHANGE my present situation. If you are interested and capable of handling this transaction for me in Honesty without betrayal of Trust that i shall repose on you then forward your response accordingly to my confidential email address below.

Email: muhunaidil@mail.md

Please note that this transaction is confidential and must be kept in top secret until we have finalized transfer to your designation.

Thank you very much for your understanding.

Three hurt after Houston boy, 6, brings gun to school

A BBC map of Houston
Three young children in the US state of Texas have been injured after a gun brought to school by a six-year-old boy accidentally discharged.
The gun went off after falling from the boy's pocket, and three children were injured by fragments, police officials in the city of Houston said.
The children were taken on stretchers from Ross Elementary School. Their injuries were not life-threatening.
Police said the child who brought the gun was among the injured.
The accident occurred in the school cafeteria about 1100 local time (1500 GMT).
Two six-year-old boys, including the one who brought in the gun, and a five-year-old girl were injured, all in the feet.
"Either some type of chips off the floor, or it could be pieces of the round that discharged," Houston Independent School District Assistant Police Chief Robert Mock said, describing the source of the injuries.
"They had some cuts and stuff on their legs, they don't appear to be life-threatening."
The children were sitting upright and appeared to be talking to emergency medical workers as they were brought from the school building, local television showed.

British military officers to be sent to Libya

  
Rebel fighter in Misrata Rebel fighters say they have made gains in Misrata

British military officers will be sent to Libya to advise rebels fighting Colonel Muammar Gaddafi's forces, the UK government has said. Foreign Secretary William Hague said the group would be deployed to the opposition stronghold of Benghazi.
The BBC understands 10 UK officers and a similar number from France will give logistics and intelligence training.
Mr Hague said it was compatible with the UN resolution on Libya, which ruled out foreign military ground action.
He stressed that the officers would not be involved in any fighting and the move was needed to help protect civilians.
Support and advice The UN Security Council resolution, passed in March, authorised a no-fly zone over Libya.
Mr Hague said: "The [UK] National Security Council has decided that we will now move quickly to expand the team already in Benghazi to include an additional military liaison advisory team. This contingent will be drawn from experienced British military officers.
"These additional personnel will enable the UK to build on the work already being undertaken to support and advise the NTC [opposition National Transitional Council] on how to better protect civilians.



Violent Protest Erupts in Kano, Kaduna Over Goodluck Jonathan’s Success

wpid pri Violent Protest Erupts in Kano,Kaduna Over Goodluck Jonathans Success













Violent Protests have broken out, Monday, in Kaduna and Kano states over presidential elections results which favour the emergence of President Goodluck Jonathan as winner of Saturday’s election.
According to BBC, young supporters of Muhammadu Buhari, who is popular in the north, have been clashing with police.
Meanwhile, Governor Patrick Yakowa of Kaduna State and Ibrahim Shekarau of Kano have imposed curfew on their states. According to BBC reports, smoke is billowing over the skyline in Kano as angry youths burn tyres across the city while the Police fired tear gas, appealing for calm on state radio.
School children were said to have been sent home as businesses are closing.
A  curfew was imposed, Sunday in Gombe state, as protests were also reported in parts of Adamawa, Sokoto, Katsina and Bauchi states.

Monday, April 18, 2011

Celebrating Nigerian Electoral Chief

Prof Attahiru Jega
As we celebrate the emergence of a winner in the just concluded transparent presidential polls, please my people we should not forget in a hurry the man who helped re-write the Nigerian electoral history, in the person of Prof Attahiru Jega, the Independent Electoral Commission boss. We all know the various criticisms he encountered when he was requesting fund for this assignment. We are all reaping the dividends now and commendation from international communities. All thanks to him. He is the man of the moment.

Goodluck Nigeria

Here comes our President and President-Elect, Dr. Goodluck Ebele Jonathan. 
Just like in his motivational word, "If I can make it, you can make it". Let us follow in his steps and not get discouraged.

Nigeria, why the run?

Nigeria, what is happening? I was startled this afternoon by people running in all directions. Nobody seems to know the cause of the run, but they sure felt they needed to run. Funny enough, I was in no mood to run with them, so I stood to actually know the root cause of the commotion. The few people who were kind enough to talk to me during the chaos, disclosed that the honestly do not know the cause, but based on hearsay, some people were preparing to cause confusion in Abuja. Not long after that, I saw police patrol vehicles and military patrol vehicles, so I had a sigh of relief.  Not quite 15 minutes after that, everybody went back to his or her business. I encountered this scenario in Kubwa, a suburb of Abuja. During the period of the said confusion, Kano, Borno, Adamawa, Bauchi and Kaduna were reported to be experiencing civil unrest.  However, the people are going about their normal business while awaiting the final pronouncement of the presidential election.