Husband Cuts off wife's hands after saying she failed to have children.

It is so annoying that things like this still happen in this present centuries of ours.. Why should A woman be treated like this because she couldn't produce a child.. Report from CNN shows a Kenyan woman who was butchered in the hand by husband.

Say bye to candy crush,Pokémon Go is already the biggest U.S. mobile game ever

Pokémon Go has burst onto the scene in recent days to become the biggest U.S. mobile game ever, according to new data from SurveyMonkey Intelligence.

CHILD BOMBER KILLS SCORES IN A wedding.History shows that children have been used much more.

In an outdoor wedding at South Eastern turkey, a suicide bomber detonated his explosives. 50 persons confirmed dead. Reports shows that the child was an Islamic state group child of age 12/14.

Kim Kardashian flaunts weight loss

If you are a lover of "keeping up with the Kardashians" ,you probably have heard this viral news of Kim Kardashian wanting to shed few pounds

Olympic 2016:Japanese millionaire gave $390,000 to Nigerian team

If there has been complain about lack of sponsor, I think this has taken over. Nigeria defeated Honduras to take third place in the Olympics and bring bronze home. Well, their bread is well sliced and buttered. They are also coming home with a total of $390,000

01 February 2017

ILLEGALLY REFINED CRUDE OIL WORTH N420bn SEIZED BY NAVY



The Nigerian Navy said on Wednesday that it seized 810,725 metric tonnes of stolen crude in 2016 alone.

The service also seized 1,078,104 metric tonnes of illegally-refined diesel last year and destroyed 181 illegal refineries.

It also arrested 33 vessels.

The Navy put the financial worth of the seized crude oil and diesel at N420.1billion, excluding the value of vessels, boats and vehicles seized by them.

The Chief of Naval Staff, Vice-Admiral Ibok Ekwe-Ibas, gave the figures at the National Assembly in Abuja when he appeared before the House of Representatives Committee on Navy to defend the NN’s 2017 budget proposals.

The CNS spoke just as the Chairman of the committee, Mr. Abdussamad Dasuki, disclosed that inadequate funding of the NN had resulted in an annual economic loss of N3trillion by the country.

The amount is almost half of Nigeria’s 2017 budget estimates of N7.298trillion.

Giving further details of its operations in 2016, Ekwe-Ibas said 38 barges and 263 wooden boats were destroyed.

He added that 53 other boats were arrested; 784 suspects were arrested; 145 outboard engines were confiscated; and 135 speedboats arrested.

SOURCE: PUNCH

30 January 2017

A man shot a baby of 18months old just to keep the baby quiet



A 24-year-old father of two, Jordan Walters, has pleaded guilty to shooting his neighbour’s 18-month old baby to quieten the crying baby.

The victim-toddler, Harry Studley, was visiting a flat shared by Walters and his partner, Emma Horseman, both of whom have two sons aged two years and two months respectively.

As reported by Metro, Harry was in company with his mother, Amy Allen, and two-year-old brother, Riley.

Amy’s children were crying and Horseman allegedly told Walters – who was cleaning his rifle – to “shoot Harry just to frighten him, shut him up, shoot it at Harry.”

In his deposition before the jury, Walter said he thought the weapon was empty; so he “aimed the gun at Harry and fired it right into his head.”

The bullet penetrated the toddler’s skull and emergency surgery saved his life but no one could say if he will make a full recovery.

And while Walters pleaded guilty, Horseman, also 24, denied the charge. Their trial commences today (Monday).

Can you just imagine the nonsense !!!

SOURCE : PUNCH

29 January 2017

Unbelieveable!!! A woman survives without lungs for six days



In what is believed to be the first procedure of its kind in the world, doctors in Canada have saved a young mother’s life by removing her lungs for six days while she waited for a transplant.

Last April, Melissa Benoit arrived at a Toronto hospital with a severe lung infection. Doctors soon realised that Benoit, who had been born with cystic fibrosis, had just hours to live, leading them to consider the unprecedented approach.

“It was a difficult discussion because when we’re talking about something that had never to our knowledge been done before, there were a lot of unknowns,” Dr. Niall Ferguson of the University Health Network, the health authority responsible for the Toronto general hospital, told a news conference on Wednesday.

A recent bout with influenza had left the then 32-year-old fighting off respiratory failure, forcing doctors to keep her sedated and on a ventilator to help her breathe.

“She got into a spiral from which her lungs were not going to recover,” said Ferguson. “Her only hope of recovery was a lung transplant.”

Benoit was put on a temporary life support device but her condition continued to deteriorate; the bacteria in her lungs became resistant to most antibiotics, sending her body into septic shock and her blood pressure dropping.

One by one, her organs began shutting down.

Her team of doctors gathered together to weigh a bold solution they had contemplated for years but never carried out – the removal of both her lungs in hopes of eliminating the source of the bacterial infection.

The list of unknowns was long, from the risk of bleeding into the empty chest cavity to whether her blood pressure and oxygen levels could be sustained once her lungs were removed.

“What helped us is the fact that we knew it was a matter of hours before she would die,” said Dr. Shaf Keshavjee, one of three surgeons who operated on Benoit. “That gave us the courage to say, if we’re ever going to save this woman, we’re going to do it now.”

Benoit’s husband, Chris, gave doctors the go-ahead, thinking of their three-year-old daughter.

“We needed this chance,” he said. “Things were so bad for so long, we needed something to go right.”

In mid-April, a team of 13 began a nine-hour surgery to remove Benoit’s lungs. Filled with mucous, each lung was swollen and as hard as a football, said Keshavjee. “Technically, it was difficult to get them out of her chest.”

Hours later, her condition began to dramatically improve. “And literally within minutes – it was probably around 20 minutes after having taken those infected lungs out – her blood pressure normalised, and they could remove all the blood-pressure-supporting drugs and just leave her on the pumps that were providing the circulation,” Keshavjee told the Canadian Press.

A small artificial lung was connected to Benoit’s heart, while other devices oxygenated and circulated her blood. As they waited for replacement lungs to become available, doctors wondered how long she could be supported like this. “We didn’t know if we’d get (them) in one day or one month,” said Keshavjee.

Six days later, a pair of donor lungs became available and Benoit underwent a successful lung transplant.
Since then, her strength has steadily improved. Months in the hospital had initially left her without the ability to hold her head up, sit up or stand, but in the past month she has begun walking without a cane or walker.

The ordeal also damaged her kidneys, but Benoit is soon hoping to be well enough to receive a kidney transplant from her mother.

When Benoit first learned of the surgery that had saved her life, she didn’t believe it.

“It took me a while to realise what happened. I just couldn’t piece it together,” she said. “You really come from the brink of death to back living at home. But I’m just so grateful, so happy to be home.”

SOURCE: PUNCH

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