Saturday 27 July 2013

16 Human Skulls Found In Kidnappers & Native-doctors ‘Warehouse In Delta

In a renewed war against criminal activities, Police detectives in Asaba, Delta State,have uncovered a warehouse operated by kidnappers and native doctors in Okwe community near Asaba, recovering 16 human skulls and pots of concoction in the raid. ASP Lucky Uyabeme, Police spokesman in the state, confirmed that the detectives acted on a tip-off after rescuinga 60-year-old mother of four from a four-man kidnap gang on her way from Onitsha to Asaba. He said that the warehouse located inside a thick forest in the community, stinks. According to him, “the detectives, on getting there, found nobody but recovered items used by the kidnappers including foams of different kinds used by their victims,” adding that “the detectives, on their way out of the bush, arrested a middle-aged man who claimed to be a farmer and who is currently helping the Police for further investigation. Speaking with LEADERSHIP WEEKEND, a victim of the kidnappers, Mrs Ojukwu, said she was standing along the Onitsha/Owerri Road waiting fora taxi to Asaba when a car operated by the gang stopped to forcibly take her into the bushwhere she stayed for daysbefore being rescued.

Mers Virus Makes Hajj Unsafe For Pilgrims

Elderly and chronically ill Muslims should not perform the hajj pilgrimage to curb the spread of the MERS coronavirus, Saudi Arabian health officials warned over the weekend. So far, MERS, which stands for Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus, has killed 38 people in Saudi Arabiaand another seven globally. More than 80 cases of the disease have been confirmed, according to the World Health Organization. (MORE: The Latest MERS Death Toll) The hajj pilgrimage to Mecca, Saudi Arabia — one of the five pillars of Islam that's considered mandatory during the lifetime of a practicing Muslim — is one of the largest mass gatherings in the world, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. This year, the gathering will take place from approximately Oct. 13 to 18, attracting 3 million Muslims from around the world, including an estimated 11,000 Americans, according to the CDC. The Saudi health ministry is recommending that elderly people, as well as those with chronic heart, kidney and lung diseases and diabetes, those with immune deficiencies, children and pregnant women postpone their pilgrimages. Health officials described the recommendations as preventive measures in the fight to contain the SARS-like virus. More than half of the people who have contracted MERS have died, according to the WHO, making it an alarming infection. It can also incubate in the human body for at least nine days, researchers have found, which makes it particularly difficult to track, treat and stop the disease. To date, neither the WHO nor the CDC have recommended any MERS-related travel restrictions.But both organizations have asked doctors to monitor respiratory infection patterns closely. Earlier this year, representatives from the WHO called the disease a "grave concern." "We understand too little about this virus when viewed against the magnitude of its potential threat," Dr. Margaret Chan, Director-General of the WHO, said in a speech to the WHO assembly inGeneva in May. "We do not know where the virus hides in nature. We do not know how people are getting infected. Until we answer these questions, we are empty-handed when it comes to prevention. These are alarm bells. And we must respond."

SUNDAY JATO REAL AGE

 SUNDAY JATO REAL AGE Sunday Jatto Real Name The lengthy introduction I provided at the beginning of this post states that Sunday Jatto’s re...