They found that consumers of hot red chili peppers tended to be “younger, male, white, Mexican-American, married, and to smoke cigarettes, drink alcohol, and consume more vegetables and meats . . . had lower High Density Lipo-protein (HDL)-cholesterol, lower income, and less education,” in comparison to participants who did not consume red chili peppers. They examined data from a median follow-up of 18.9 years and observed the number of deaths and then analyzed specific causes of death.
Wednesday, January 18, 2017
T.I. warns black celebrities about being 'bamboozled' by Trump
T.I. penned an open letter to Donald Trump this week asking questions of the president-elect while trying to help him realize the consequences of his words.
Now, the Atlanta rapper has decided to take a step forward and ask others who may potentially meet with Trump to reconsider. He took to Instagram to deliver his message.
“I’m going to tell all you celebrities – black, minority, all of you man, athletes. Let me tell you something: there’s a strategic plan that people are trying to make you a part of,” he told his fans in a video. “Do not accept any invitation or have any meeting no matter how positive you think the outcome may be, without understanding. People have a very Willie Lynch agenda.”In a second video posted to his Instagram account, T.I. explained how Trump is luring in people supposedly representing different minority communities (including Kanye West and Steve Harvey) in order to neutralize potential backlash against him or his policies.
Air ambulance doctor killed himself after his drug blunder caused father-of-four to die from overdose
An air ambulance doctor killed himself after mistakenly administering a drug to a patient that led to his death.
Dr Carl McQueen, 34, was devastated after being told an investigation was to be launched into the death of Lee Hanstock.
Dr McQueen administered a sedative to Mr Hanstock, 43, after he suffered a seizure, but the drug caused his blood pressure to drop rapidly and he went into cardiac arrest.
The air ambulance doctor took his own life at his grandfather's house in Solihull, West Midlands, after learning his drug blunder contributed to the death of the father-of-four.
An inquest into Mr Hanstock's death, in Burton-upon-Trent, Staffordshire, heard that he had never before been known to have ill-health and had not seen a GP for 15 years.
Mr Hanstock, from Barton-under-Needwood, also in Staffordshire, started feeling unwell just after Christmas 2015, suffering from severe migraines and nausea, and vomiting 15 times in a day.
Mankind is facing an apocalyptic moral test, says evolutionary psychologist
Evolutionary psychologist Robert Wright sounded bleak in a couple of recent columns:
"Given the growing prospect that humankind, having reached the brink of a global community, will dissolve into chaos … you could say that our species is facing an epic moral test," he wrote at meaningoflife.tv.
"In light of recent political and social developments in the United States and abroad," he wrote at the New York Times, "our work is cut out for us."
Wright has argued in several books that expanding morality played a central role in human evolution, creating the framework for ever-larger, more cohesive, and more powerful societies. Today, he says, mankind needs to take at least one more big step forward.
His 2010 book, "The Evolution of God," showed that we have at least come a long way already. In it, he described how religion has gradually moved toward respect for all people. For instance:
— As empires emerged in the ancient world, local religions began to take on universal characteristics, with moral codes that diverse groups could follow. Most notably, the tribes of Israel united in the belief in a one true god and the robust moral code embodied in the Ten Commandments.
EXCLUSIVE: What Chelsea Manning teaches us about the U.S. military's mental health crisis
Outside the newly christened Stewart Lee Udall Federal building in Washington, D.C., the air was crisp, but inside, President Barack Obama was glowing. Surrounded by top staff and military leaders, the president signed into law a bill that would eventually repeal the U.S. military’s “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy (DADT), which had for 18 years banned gays and lesbians from serving openly in the military.
Evoking the memory of a heroic gay soldier who narrowly escaped death at the famous Battle of the Bulge—one of the largest and bloodiest for the Americans of World War II—Obama recalled the many sacrifices of American troops, including those who had given their lives. “None of them,” he said, “should have to sacrifice their integrity as well.”
Less than 50 miles away, at a Marine Corps brig in Quantico, Virginia, Private First Class Chelsea Manning stood in her cell, unable to lay down.
For 23 hours that day, just as she had for the approximately 140 days that preceded it, Manning sat alone under a fluorescent light in a six-by-eight-foot cell marked “192.” An “anti-suicide” blanket, quilted from a coarse, tear-resistant material, covered her rack (what Marines call a bed), neighboring a cold steel sink with a toilet bowl below. To use it, she would stand at parade rest in front of her cell door—feet 10 inches apart, her hands interlocked behind her—and wait for a guard to notice her. Then she could ask for some toilet paper.
From 5am until after 5pm, Manning was prohibited from lying down in her rack. She wasn’t allowed to exercise so instead she would dance; unlike pushups, dancing wasn’t prohibited in the brig’s rule book. Sometimes she was allowed to read books that were sent by her family, all of which were stored in the adjacent cell. As long as she was reading, or appeared to be reading, she could hold on to the book. But if she paused, to rest her eyes, for instance, a guard would quickly approach her cell and ask to retrieve the book.The most “entertaining” object in her cell during those 11 months at Quantico was a metallic mirror bolted to the wall. Starved of real human contact, she spent untold hours standing in front of the mirror, interacting with herself as her overseers observed from a room across the hall. Only if she had heard the guards talking that day—perhaps while being led to or from her cell in chains during her allotted one hour of “rec call”—would she have known that Dec. 22 was a special day. After all, she was never allowed to watch the news, and the guards took special care to keep her in the dark about current events.
Nearly 10 months passed before DADT was formally repealed on Sept. 20, 2011. In a statement marking the occasion, the president wrote: “As of today, patriotic Americans in uniform will no longer have to lie about who they are in order to serve the country they love.”
He was almost right.
Another five years would pass before transgender Americans like Manning were granted the same right to serve their country without being forced to lie.
Intensifying over time
Obama’s remaining time in the White House is no longer counted in days, but in hours. One week ago, news spread that the president is considering a commutation for Manning, who has more than 28 years of prison time remaining on her sentence. Her fate, at least for the next few years, will be imminently known. (Soon after publication, Obama commuted Manning's sentence.)
What is known now, however, is that Manning is unlikely to see any mercy during the presidency of Donald Trump, who, when asked about transgender soldiers on the campaign trail, berated the U.S. military for becoming “more and more politically correct every day.”
First detained in May 2010, Manning was accused of leaking more than 725,000 secret U.S. government documents to WikiLeaks. She was charged and convicted under the Espionage act for willfully disclosing national defense information; but acquitted of aiding the enemy. After pleading guilty without the protection of a plea agreement, Manning apologized in court for her actions. “I'm sorry that my actions hurt people. I'm sorry that they hurt the United States,” she said. “I understand that I must pay the price for my decisions and actions.”
Despite the large cache of files she released, Manning was charged with leaking portions of only 227 documents. Portions of at least 44 of the 116 U.S. diplomatic cables included were subsequently declassified by the U.S. State Department. According to a classified review by Defense Intelligence Agency, the overall risk to U.S. national security resulting from Manning’s leak was reportedly moderate to low.
As diagnosed by two military psychologists and a psychiatrist, Manning is a prisoner who suffers from a condition known as gender dysphoria. The medical diagnosis, which is recognized by both the American Psychiatric Association and the American Medical Association, is given to individuals who experience significant psychological distress as a result of being born transgender—a person exceptionally afflicted due to a core gender identity that differs from the sex they were biologically assigned at birth.
While only a small percentage of transgender men and women experience gender dysphoria, those who do may experience a wide variety of symptoms, including, but not limited to, anxiety, severe depression, and the desire to self-harm, ranging from suicidality to self-surgery. (In the case of trans women, this means attempts at self-castration.) Widely recognized as the world’s authority on gender dysphoria, the physician-led World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH) recommends a broad range of treatment: psychotherapy, which is not alone sufficient; changes in the patient’s gender role, e.g., dressing, grooming, and expressing oneself as consistent with one’s gender; in addition to hormone therapy, which Manning began while custody in February 2015.
In more severe cases, gender-affirming surgery is deemed necessary in order to relieve the mental distress experienced by a person whose brain is constantly reminding them they are trapped in a body in which they do not belong. Such is the case with Manning. “Gender dysphoria intensifies over time,” her lawyers wrote in a 2015 complaint. “The longer an individual goes without treatment, the greater the risk of severe harms to the individual’s physical and psychological health.”
“I just remember thinking, I’m going to die.”
“Manning’s providers have recommended that she be permitted to grow her hair consistent with the female grooming standards and that she be treated with genital surgery,” says Chase Strangio, Manning’s attorney at the American Civil Liberties Union. “Despite these recommendations, these treatments have been withheld causing Chelsea to experience significant and at times deadly distress. Courts have also routinely held that it violates the Constitution to deny prisoners recommended health care for non-medical reasons.”
“Since her sentencing, Chelsea has had to fight to receive the basic care recommended by the military’s own doctors and the continual resistance to providing this care not only runs afoul of the Constitution but jeopardizes her health and well-being,” Strangio says.
With the advent of the Pentagon’s new policy welcoming transgender service members, formally announced in September 2016, Manning’s forecast for treatment greatly improved. After years of being denied treatment—which her lawyers contend led to two suicide attempts last year—she was slated to become the first U.S. prisoner to undergo surgery for gender dysphoria. But with Trump entering the White House this week, Manning’s hope of achieving mental health and wellbeing may be shattered for the foreseeable future.
‘Tell them they are weak’
To understand Manning’s experience is to understand that the military she served in was rife with regulations and a culture hostile to her very existence.
In 2007, when Manning enlisted in the Army, transgender Americans were defined by Department of Defense as mentally diseased and unfit for service. (A plurality of transgender service members, like Manning, were enlisted in the Army, according to a 2008 survey.) It remained that way for more than half a decade after Manning’s arrest.
Partly stemming from her dysphoria, Manning’s behavior, even prior to her crimes, was frequently disruptive and caused alarm among her colleagues in Iraq. Mental illness is an issue that service members are often reluctant to talk about, and for good reason. Even the widely discussed post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) carries with it the stigma of weakness among the warrior class.
Army Specialist Brandon Neely, a former guard at the Guantanamo Bay detention camp in Cuba, witnessed this stigma firsthand while serving a year in Iraq. “I’ve known more guys that I served with in Iraq that committed suicide than I know who got killed when I was in Iraq,” he says. (Neely is notable for speaking out against human rights abuses he says he witnessed and participated in, regretfully, at Guantanamo Bay. He is also the former president of the Houston chapter of Iraq Veterans Against the War.)
The practice of shaming soldiers who seek mental health care lies on a continuum that begins on the battlefield and continues stateside. In Iraq, Neely says, soldiers of higher rank would often publicly humiliate subordinates who asked to speak to a psychologist. “They would berate them, call them names, tell them they are weak, tell them they couldn’t handle it,” he says. “Why would you wanna come forward and go through all that?”
“There’s no real outlet,” adds Neely, except for talking with other vets. “I couldn’t imagine what it’s like for Chelsea Manning being in prison. She has nobody to talk to. No friends or anything like that. At least here, if a friend of mine is having problems, they can call me.”
Outside of the harassment and personal and sexual violence experienced by transgender soldiers on active duty, their experiences while attempting to receive care from the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) speaks volumes about the system’s overall dysfunction and the extreme neglect of those under its care. Indeed, if the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) viewed transgenderism as a psychopathological issue, as its regulations stated, its treatment of soldiers manifesting this perceived mental illness may be defined as callous, if not acutely hostile.
Research in 2008 into the experiences of transgender service personnel revealed numerous instances of “organization and interpersonal discrimination” on the part of VA doctors, nurses, and non-medical staff. (Of transgender veterans attending VA facilities, up to 82 percent were, like Manning, trans women.) Ten percent of veterans reported being turned away from VA facilities specifically because they were transgender; only a third of those had raised the issue of transition with the medical staff. In extreme cases, military doctors refused to see transgender veterans, denying them access to general medical care.
“I was told by a religious clerk that I should just go away because I was an insult to the brave real men who were there for treatment,” a trans woman told researchers. After another inquired about the possibility of treatment, a doctor told her: “The VA does not turn men into women.”
“The VA does not turn men into women.”
Manning was hoping to achieve the exact opposite when she enlisted: “I thought a career in the military would get rid of it,” she wrote of being transgender in 2010 email to a supervisor in Iraq. She is not alone. Facing a societal stigma, the phenomenon of trans women joining the military to purge “the feminine self” was defined by former military psychologist George R. Brown, whose 1988 scholarly work on the topic bore the title, “Transexuals in the Military: Flight Into Hypermasculinity.” A copy of Brown’s article was discovered among Manning’s possessions subsequent to her arrest in Iraq.
A more recent study by Brown demonstrates the prevalence of biologically male service members who identify as transgender is more than double that of the civilian population. This research shows that—at least as of 2012—trans women were flocking to military service, wittingly committing themselves to a climate of heightened hostility toward their gender identity or self-perceived mental illness.
According to the National Center for Transgender Equality, there are more than 134,000 transgender veterans in the United States; but as Trump’s crusade against “political correctness” becomes the stuff of White House policy, their future, and the future of the nation’s transgender service members on active duty, appears as unknown as Manning’s own fate.
‘Always planning, but never acting’
Manning was first diagnosed with gender dysphoria weeks before her arrest by Cpt. Michael Worsley, an Army psychologist. Her condition, which manifested itself in the form of psychological distress, anxiety, and occasional emotional outbursts, was exacerbated by her Army life, Worsley stated at trial. Asked what mechanisms the military had in place to treat with gender dysphoria, he responded, “Really, none. There was nothing available other than somebody like me and, again, [she] was taking a chance with that.”
Indeed, Worsley’s diagnosis left Manning in a rather precarious situation. “You could be court-martialed and put out of the military,” said in court. “So to share that with anybody was an extremely difficult thing.”
After a violent episode in which Manning struck a fellow soldier, Worsley and Manning began discussing a plan to get her out of the Army—one that would allow her to retain her benefits and “go on and have a productive life.” Due to its discriminatory policies, Worsley asserted, Manning had little or no hope of receiving the treatment she required from the Army. Her work environment, he said, was “openly hostile.”
In Iraq, a sign hung above the desks of the targeting analysts in the intelligence shop where Manning worked: “If you think for one second you can come in here and bug us with sissy shit you might want to rethink your pathetic life.”
Immediately after her arrest in late-May 2010, Manning was transferred from Iraq to Camp Arifjan, Kuwait. There, following a brief indoctrination period, she was detained in a 20-man tent along with several other prisoners. It was soon after that that Manning overheard the other prisoners gay bashing. Apparently agitated, she responded by telling the other prisoners that she was gay. While being interviewed about the incident by Army personnel, she experienced an anxiety attack and was segregated into a cell by herself.
Manning’s behavior became increasingly peculiar after arriving at Camp Arifjan, but the doctors observing her saw no immediate signs that she intended to harm herself. That quickly changed, however, after she was placed in isolated confinement, whereupon she was forced into a reverse sleep cycle. “My days were my nights and my nights were my days, and after a while, it all blended together and I was living inside my head,” she later said in court. “I just remember thinking, I’m going to die. I’m stuck here in this animal cage, and I’m going to die.”
The mounting isolation, in which Manning only interacted briefly with the guards who brought her food, led to a mental breakdown.
After a month in confinement, Manning became unresponsive to commands and would sometimes yell uncontrollably in a manic state. She babbled incoherently, shaking and bashing her head into a wall. She was once observed knotting her sheets and turning them into a noose. During an interview with mental health physicians in Kuwait, Manning stared off into space blankly, hugging herself, with her knees pressed fully against her chest. She didn’t intend to use the noose, she told the doctors, but she at least wanted the option.
Visited by a physician the next day, Manning reported feeling helpless and scared. She continued to consider ending her own life, though she said she had no immediate plans to do so. The following day, she was accused of collecting various items that might be useful for hurting herself; she later admitted trying to remove a pin from her cell door for this reason. She repeatedly said she would not notify anyone if she planned to die.
Upon arriving at the Quantico brig the following month, Manning was asked if she was contemplating suicide on an intake questionnaire. “Always planning, but never acting,” she wrote.
Manning’s one suicide attempt at Arifjan was later used to hold her at Quantico under extreme “prevention of injury” procedures, even though the brig's own mental health professionals advised against it. The presiding military judge later granted her 112 days of sentencing credit for a portion of her confinement at Quantico, where she was stripped of her underwear and forced to stand naked at attention.
Update 4pm CT, Jan. 17: Two hours after publication of this piece, news broke that Obama has commuted Manning's sentence. She will be released on May 17.
For more information about suicide prevention or to speak with someone confidentially, contact the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline (U.S.) or Samaritans(U.K.). If you need to speak to counselors with experience dealing with transgender issues, contact Trans Lifeline at (877) 565-8860 (U.S.) or (877) 330-6366 (Canada).
Obama commutes WikiLeaks whistleblower Chelsea Manning's sentence — she'll be free in 5 months
President Barack Obama commuted the majority of WikiLeaks whistleblower Chelsea Manning's prison sentence on Tuesday, with only three days left in office.
Manning was convicted of violating the Espionage Act, among other charges, in 2013 after she stole secret documents from a computer system she had access to while working as an intelligence analyst in Iraq and leaked them to WikiLeaks in 2010.
She received a 35-year sentence for the leak and has served seven years in Fort Leavenworth. She will now be freed in five months, on May 17.
Manning, a transgender woman, has attempted suicide twice while in prison.
Julian Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks, said last week that he'd agree to be extradited to the US if Obama grants clemency to Manning.
Eugene Cernan, the last man to walk on the moon, dies at 82
'We are saddened by the loss of retired NASA astronaut Gene Cernan, the last man to walk on the moon'.The late Cernan who serve as spacecraft commander of Apollo 17, was one of only three people to go to the Moon twice, and the last man to leave a footprint on the lunar surface in 1972. The mission was launched on December 1972.
Trump's attitudes toward the EU and NATO could lead to 'unprecedented changes in US foreign policy'
If President-elect Donald Trump's recent statements on the European Union and the NATO are any indication, his administration could bring unprecedented changes to longstanding alliances between Western countries.
In an interview published Sunday with the Times of London and Bild newspapers, Trump questioned the value of the NATO alliance when he was asked whether he understood why many in eastern Europe feared Russian aggression.
"I said a long time ago — that NATO had problems," Trump told The Times and Bild. "Number one it was obsolete, because it was, you know, designed many, many years ago. Number two — the countries aren't paying what they're supposed to pay."
He also appeared indifferent toward the EU.
Thunder kills 6 people at Zimbabwe funeral
Speaking about the tragic incident, Chief Siachilaba from Binga said that they died while attending his late sister’s funeral at her homestead when the tragedy struck.
He said when it started raining, some of the people attending the funeral took shelter under the tree which was later struck by lightning.
Tuesday, January 17, 2017
Kylie Jenner Denies Launhing Cosmetics Line in Nigeria
Following reports that Kylie Jenner (Kardashian) has launched her cosmectics line in Nigeria, the reality star has come out to denial the story via twitter
When asked by a Nigerian on the micro blogging site, Kylie said her cosmetics line isn’t launching in Nigeria.
See the tweet and her response below.
MMM Nigeria Ponzi scheme yet to pay Nigerians after return
72 hours after its surprise return, popular Ponzi scheme MMM Nigeria is still yet to pay its investors according to reports.
The Cable claims that investors of MMM have not yet been paid as their accounts are still frozen. Kolade Ogunwande who spoke to the online news site said he invested N100,000 in November 2016, and also referred two people to the Ponzi scheme.
On Friday, January 13, 2017, his N100,000 had appreciated to N214,000. When he placed a request to withdraw his money he was not paid.
“They have not paid me anything, but, they said we should be wait patiently to be matched with participants willing to invest in MMM. I have no choice than to be optimistic,” Ogunwande told The Cable.
A woman named Lara Makanjuola also invested N100,000 in MMM Nigeria and is also facing the same problem of getting her money out.
Rolls-Royce apologises in court after settling bribery case

The engineering giant Rolls-Royce has apologised after it was found to have paid bribes including a luxury car and millions of pounds’ worth of cash to middlemen to secure orders in Indonesia, Russia and China and other countries.
Britain’s leading multinational manufacturer made the admissions on Tuesday at the high court in London, a day after it was revealed that it would pay £671m in penalties to settle long-running corruption allegations. In a statement read out in court, the firm said it “apologised unreservedly for the conduct which has been uncovered”.
The settlement was reached with investigators from three countries – the UK, US and Brazil – who five years ago started to scrutinise allegations that the firm had hired middlemen to pay bribes to win contracts.
Richard Whittam, a QC for the Serious Fraud Office, detailed the findings of what he said was the “largest individual investigation conducted by the SFO to date”. Whittam told the court that Rolls-Royce had admitted it had failed to stop corrupt payments in Nigeria and Indonesia, and had paid bribes in Russia. Other illicit payments were made in Thailand and Nigeria.
A string of points within the agreement between the firm and the SFO – called a deferred prosecution agreement – revealed Rolls-Royce’s systemic and long-running use of intermediaries. In Indonesia, Rolls-Royce employees admitted paying $2.25m (£1.8m) and gifting a Rolls-Royce Silver Spirit car to an individual. The payment was made in order that the individual would “show favour to Rolls-Royce for a contract” to supply Trent engines to Garuda Airways, Whittam said.
Monday, January 16, 2017
peppers associated with 13% reduction in total mortality
Going back for centuries, peppers and spices have been thought to be beneficial in the treatment of diseases, but only one other study — conducted in China and published in 2015 — has previously examined chili pepper consumption and its association with mortality. This new study corroborates the earlier study’s findings.
Using National Health and Nutritional Examination Survey (NHANES) III data collected from more than 16,000 Americans who were followed for up to 23 years, medical student Mustafa Chopan ‘17 and Professor of Medicine Benjamin Littenberg, M.D., examined the baseline characteristics of the participants according to hot red chili pepper consumption.
They found that consumers of hot red chili peppers tended to be “younger, male, white, Mexican-American, married, and to smoke cigarettes, drink alcohol, and consume more vegetables and meats . . . had lower High Density Lipo-protein (HDL)-cholesterol, lower income, and less education,” in comparison to participants who did not consume red chili peppers. They examined data from a median follow-up of 18.9 years and observed the number of deaths and then analyzed specific causes of death.
Sunday, January 15, 2017
Sporadic gunshots heralded kidnapping of our staff, students -Principal Turkish int’l school
The Management of Nigerian Turkish International Colleges, NTIC, located in the Isheri area of Ogun State, has given a blow-by-blow account of how some students and staff of the school were kidnapped by gunmen. From left: Secretary to the Ogun State Government, Barrister Taiwo Adeoluwa; Deputy Governor, Chief (Mrs.) Yetunde Onanuga and Principal, Nigerian Tullip International School, Mr. Yunus Dogan when the deputy governor led a delegation of government officials to the school yesterday following the kidnap of some of its students and teachers The Principal of the school, Yunus Emre Dogan, told newsmen, yesterday, that the gunmen came into the school and started shooting sporadically. It was gathered that the gunmen stormed the premises of the school, which is located in a swampy, bushy area, around 9.20pm on Friday, and made away with eight persons including three regular students and two others who were preparing for Joint Admission and Matriculation Board, JAMB, exams, and three members of staff. Dogan said the abductors immediately made their way into the female hostel where three students were kidnapped, alongside the house mistress and a Turkish teacher who teaches mathematics in the school. A cook was also taken away from the kitchen.
MOM KILLED HERSELF BECAUSE SHE FELT UGLY AFTER BOOB JOB

A high-flying businesswoman killed herself because she 'felt ugly' after getting a boob job , an inquest heard.
Tragic mum-of-two Rebecca Hoare, 38, developed an anxiety disorder - and could not stand the way she looked.Indeed, the inquest was told she felt “ugly and disfigured” after undergoing the surgery on her breasts at a private clinic - after splitting up with a boyfriend who had made negative comments about her body.
According to Daily Mirror, she was later diagnosed with a devastating condition called body dysmorphia that gives sufferers a distorted view of how they look.
The company insisted the operation had gone well but had offered another one free as a goodwill gesture.
But Mrs Hoare was so unhappy she hanged herself at home at the family’s off-road driving centre in Bradford, West Yorkshire
SEE THE LEKKI GAY SEX ASSAULT SKIT THAT HAS GOT NIGERIANS TALKING

A debate so heated that prominent gay rights activists like Bisi Alimi and Nigeria’s first openly gay pastor, Reverend Jide Macaulay, have started a petition that aims to make Ogusbaba take down the video from the internet to stop its circulation.
The activists are also demanding that Ogusbaba should apologise to the Nigerian LGBT community for joking with a very sensitive issue of concern. The video, titled “The Lekki Gay,” by comedian Ogusbaba, depicts a gay man being visited by a friend whom he finds attractive but who brings two other men to the bedroom to threaten him with sexual assault with a banana, large cucumber, pawpaw and then a large piece of yam oiled with olive oil.
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Bahrain executes three men over police killings
Bahrain has executed three men found guilty of killing three policemen, including an Emirati officer, prosecuters in the island kingdom said.
The three faced the firing squad on Sunday, a week after a court upheld their death sentences over a bomb attack in March 2014, the prosecution said in a statement carried by the official BNA state news agency.
The executions came a day after demonstrations broke out across Shia villages following rumours that the authorities were going to execute the three men.
They are the first in six years in the Gulf kingdom, according to London-based human rights group, Reprieve, which had warned on Saturday against the move.
Army officer and father of two killed in a Boko Haram bomb attack (2nd Lt. Amajuoritse Jemide)
2nd Lt. Amajuoritse Jemide pictured above with his wife, was killed in a boko Haram bomb attack recently. He was in an army convoy that was hit by a bomb in Yobe state. He is survived by his parents, wife and two children. He was 32 years old. Tributes from his friends and family members have been pouring in. See some of them after the cut...
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