Sunday, August 5, 2018

Venezuela President Maduro 'survives drone attack'

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Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro says he has survived an assassination attempt involving explosive drones.

Mr Maduro was speaking at a military event in Caracas when the alleged attack occurred.

Live footage of Mr Maduro's speech shows the president suddenly looking upwards - startled - and dozens of soldiers running away.

Mr Maduro has blamed Colombia for the attack - something denied by Bogota as a "baseless" accusation.

Seven soldiers were injured, and several people were later arrested, the Venezuelan authorities said.

What is known about the alleged attack?
The incident happened when Mr Maduro was speaking at the event to mark the 81st anniversary of the national army.

Two drones loaded with explosives went off near the president's stand, Communications Minister Jorge Rodriguez said.
Mr Maduro later said in a national address: "A flying object exploded near me, a big explosion. Seconds later there was a second explosion."
Photos on social media showed bodyguards protecting Mr Maduro with bulletproof shields after the alleged attack.

Saturday, August 4, 2018

The real reason people rent middle-aged men in Japan

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Unless you have interesting input coming into you all the time, you will psychologically die."

"You learn by seeing through other people's eyes."
"People live too seriously, and that kind of narrows down their vision."
These thoughts have not been generated by an algorithm or crowdsourced on Twitter. They are the accumulated wisdom of a middle-aged man in Japan.
A middle-aged man who's available for rent.
Wearing a shirt with a miniature panda bear print and smiling inscrutably, Ken Sasaki, 48, has a vibe that is anything but that of a disgruntled middle-aged Tokyo man.

With gray hair, visible lines on his face and loss of youthful slimness, he is more like a free-spirited bohemian in a strange disguise.
Throughout an hourlong Skype interview, in which comments are tediously ferried back and forth through an interpreter, his energy and enthusiasm never flag, and his answers grow more expressive and thoughtful with each question.
It's all part of his job as a rented "ossan," the Japanese word for a middle-aged man.
He allows himself to be hired by anyone, for nearly any purpose -- not involving physical contact -- as long as they pay his hourly wage: a mere 1,000 yen (about US $9). And he loves it.
Regaining honor
As in many cities around the globe, most people in Tokyo prefer anonymity when it comes to their wants, needs and vulnerabilities.

Conor McGregor v Khabib Nurmagomedov the biggest fight in UFC history

Khabib Nurmagomedov (left) is the lightweight champion after Conor McGregor (right) was stripped of the title in April for being inactive

Conor McGregor's comeback fight against Khabib Nurmagomedov is the "biggest fight in UFC history", says Dana White.

McGregor will fight Nurmagomedov for the Russian's lightweight title in Las Vegas on 6 October.

The Irishman, 30, who was beaten by Floyd Mayweather in a boxing match in August 2017, has not fought in the UFC since November 2016.

In July he avoided jail after pleading guilty to disorderly conduct following an incident at a UFC media day.

The former two-weight champion had faced multiple criminal charges stemming from an altercation in April with other fighters.

McGregor was filmed throwing a metal dolly into a window of a bus parked at a Barclay's Center loading bay.

NASA Announces Crew For First Commercial Space Flights






NASA has announced the names of the astronauts who will be the first people in history to ride to orbit in private space taxis next year, if all goes as planned.

In 2019, SpaceX's Crew Dragon capsule and Boeing's CST-100 Starliner are both scheduled to blast off on test flights with NASA astronauts on board. "For the first time since 2011, we are on the brink of launching American astronauts on American rockets from American soil," NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine said Friday, standing in front of a giant American flag at Johnson Space Center in Houston.

Since NASA retired its space shuttles, the agency has had to buy seats on the Russian Soyuz spacecraft to get its crews to the International Space Station.

NASA astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley will be the test flight astronauts for SpaceX's Dragon, Bridenstine said. NASA astronauts Eric Boe and Nicole Aunapu Mann are slated for the test flight of Boeing's Starliner, accompanied by former NASA astronaut Chris Ferguson, who now works as a commercial astronaut for Boeing.

Tony Bennett Revisits 1949 Debut Single With Help From Diana Krall



The first time Tony Bennett recorded the jazz standard "Fascinating Rhythm," he wasn't Tony Bennett. This was the spring of 1949, when the singer born Anthony Dominick Benedetto still went by his original stage name, Joe Bari. "Fascinating Rhythm" happens to be his debut recording — the B-side of a 78-rpm disc produced by the critic George Simon, issued through Leslie Records. For many years, until stumbled across by a collector, it was presumed lost. "The one copy I had literally crumbled in my hands in the 1960s," Bennett noted in his 1998 autobiography, The Good Life.

Bennett celebrates his 92nd birthday Friday, and occupies quite a different place in the world than he did back in '49. But some things never change, including his unwavering devotion to what we now call the Great American Songbook.

Friday, August 3, 2018

Top Stories #Great Apps You've Probably Never Heard Of


 

A few years ago there was an app called Meerkat with the main purpose to stream live videos just like Periscope. The app received $12 million in start-up funding, but unfortunately never took off mainly because Twitter bought Periscope which later went viral.

The owners of Meerkat app didn't let that discourage them and they immediately started developing a new app called Houseparty. You've probably never heard of it, but the app is now used by millions of people in the US alone.

Naturally, this made us wonder - how many other great apps are we missing out on? So we did the research and we came up with 5 incredibly useful apps we had no idea existed. In this article, we would like to share these apps with you so you could have as much fun as we did using them. So let's begin!

Hear

This app was previously known as H—R. Hear harmonizes the sounds around you to help you  reduce stress and be less distracted. It remixes surrounding sounds with your phones’ built-in microphone and lets you hear them throughout various filters like super hearing, sleep, relax and the list goes on. This makes for great white noise if you need to eliminate sounds around you. Besides that, it is also great for city bike rides or jogging because it lets you listen to music while at the same time providing you with the sounds that are surrounding you.

Price: Free
Available on: iOS

Wednesday, August 1, 2018

Cambodia's Hun Sen takes selfies in first appearance since controversial election

Cambodia's long-serving Prime Minister Hun Sen, 65, whose party claimed victory in a general election that many have said was neither free nor fair, met with supporters for the first time since the vote on Wednesday.

The former Khmer Rouge commander, who has ruled Cambodia for nearly 33 years, took 'selfies' with supporters and enjoyed a boat ride following Sunday's election in which his Cambodian People's Party (CPP) said it had won all 125 parliamentary seats, prompting condemnation from rights groups and some Western nations.
Authorities launched a sweeping crackdown in the lead up to the vote targeting the opposition National Cambodia Rescue Party (CNRP), non-government organizations, rights groups activists and independent media.

As part of the crackdown, the CNRP was dissolved by the Supreme Court last year and 118 members were banned from politics for five years.

Its leader, Kem Sokha, was jailed on treason charges in September and remains in pre-trial detention at a prison near the country's border with Vietnam.

Mark Field, the UK's Minister for Asia and the Pacific, said in a statement on Tuesday that the election was "undermined by the authorities well before campaigning started and resulted in an election that was neither fair nor credible."

Germany, which suspended preferential visas for private travel by members of Hun Sen's government, urged Cambodia to return to democratic principles.

"The German government has noted that the parliamentary elections in Cambodia were conducted peacefully. However, that alone is not enough to lend the election results legitimacy," the country's Federal Foreign Office said in a statement.

Opposition members had urged voters to boycott the election. Invalid and spoiled ballots accounted for 8.4 percent of the 7.64 million cast, representing a protest against the election, the opposition and an analyst have said.

Hun Sen did not make a lengthy speech on Wednesday, as is normally his habit. Instead, he took a boat ride to Kandal province after inaugurating a boat terminal in the capital Phnom Penh. The appearance was broadcast live on national television accompanied by music praising Hun Sen's achievements.

The White House said it would consider steps, such as an expansion of visa restrictions placed on some government members, in response to the "flawed" elections.

The United States has imposed visa curbs on some Cambodian officials over the crackdown and levied sanctions in June on a high-ranking official close to Hun Sen.

Kem Sokha's daughter, Kem Monovithya, said she believes further steps against Hun Sen's regime are on the horizon.

"I believe more actions are coming," she told Reuters in an interview.

Mother faces 50 years in prison in 8-year-old's drug overdose death

Mills County mother learned her fate Monday after being charged in the death of her 8-year-old daughter.

Misty Frazier was convicted of child endangerment resulting in death Monday in the overdose death of Kathleen Tafta.

Tafta died in October 2016.

Police originally charged Frazier with second-degree murder, child endangerment resulting in death and distributing prescription drugs to a minor in connection to Kathleen’s death.

John Tafta Jr., Kathleen’s father, said he continues to grieve the loss of his daughter two years later. He said he hoped for more guilty verdicts but is satisfied with Monday's outcome.

"We didn't get what we wanted, but child endangerment resulting in death, 50-year sentence, hell yeah I'll take it!"

"This was my daughter she killed, and we're going to be heard,” John Tafta Jr. said. “Kathleen cannot speak for herself, so we're going to speak for her."

In court, Frazier's mom said she disagrees with the verdict -- claiming she didn't mean to hurt Kathleen.

Other family members disagreed.

There should be no reason for somebody to give medication to a child that does not belong to them,” said Karen Tafta, Kathleen’s stepmother. “There's no reason to kill a child. There is nothing a child could do to deserve to be killed."

Frazier faces up to 50 years in prison. Her sentencing is set for August.

The defense said they plan to appeal the verdict.

85 injured, 2 critically, after Aeromexico plane crashes at airport

 Eighty people have been injured after an Aeromexico flight crashed while en route to Mexico City, according to government officials.

Flight #2431 was taking off at the General Guadalupe Victoria International Airport in the northwest Mexican state of Durango Tuesday afternoon when it crashed, according to Durango state Governor José Rosas Aispuro Torres.

The plane was taking off when it tried to abort the takeoff due to bad weather, but it was too late, Aispuro Torres told reporters. The plane went down after the runway ended, Aispuro Torres said.

Weather reports showed scattered storms in the area at the time of the accident.

Two passengers were injured critically, Fernando Rios, a spokesperson for Durango's State Coordination of Civil Protection said on Mexican television.

"It is confirmed that there were no deaths following the accident of flight Aeromexico 2431," Aispuro Torres wrote on Twitter. "At this moment on behalf of the cabinet, led by Coordinator Rosario Castro, to attend to the injured and cooperate with airport authorities with what has occurred."
There were 97 passengers and four crew members aboard the Embraer 190 plane, Mexico's Secretary of Communications and Transportation Gerardo Ruiz Esparza wrote on Twitter.

Aispuro Torres asked the state's security and emergency departments to respond to the scene of the accident, he wrote on Twitter. Any figures for the number of injured passengers are not yet available, Aispuro Torres wrote.

Survivors are being transported to area hospitals, a spokesperson for Durango Civil Protection told reporters. Some survivors were able to walk away from the crash to a nearby road, the spokesperson said.

Photos posted by Durango Civil Protection show smoke rising from the apparent crash site, which was surrounded by first responders and emergency vehicles.

Although a fire broke out after the plane crashed, none of the injured appear to have suffered from burns, Alejandro Cardoza, a spokesperson for the Durango Civil Protection, said on Mexican television. The fire appears to be under control, Aispuro Torres told reporters.

Further details were not immediately available.

The E190 is often used for regional commercial flights around the world and is commonly used by U.S. carriers American Airlines and Jetblue.
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A spokesperson for Durango, Mexico's Civil Protection said an Aeromexico regional jet that crashed just after takeoff caught fire after the crash.

The spokesperson said about 85 of the 101 people on board suffered injuries, but they do not have burns. Emergency crews have taken all the injured to area hospitals.

The airport operator said preliminary information indicates the adverse weather conditions led to the crash.

The crash happened about 4 p.m. Tuesday, July 31, in the state of Durango in northern Mexico. The plane was headed for Mexico City.
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Emergency crews are on site of a plane crash near Durango, Mexico, about 600 miles west of Laredo, Texas.

Durango Governor José R. Aispuro said there were no deaths.

AeroMexico said the plane that crashed is an Embraer 190 regional jet with 101 people on board, 97 passengers and 4 crew members.

The governor of Durango told Mexican TV the plane was taking off in bad weather and the pilots tried to abort the takeoff, but couldn't in time. The governor said the plane went down after the runway.

Tuesday, July 31, 2018

Whatsapp Finally Introduces Group Video Chat

In the hopes of making it even easier for you to chat to your friends, WhatsApp has launched a huge update.

The messaging app has launched group calling for voice and video, starting today. In a blog announcing the update, a spokesperson for WhatsApp said: “You can make a group call with up to four people total - anytime and anywhere.

“Just start a one-on-one voice or video call and tap the new "add participant" button in the top right corner to add more contacts to the call.”

Thankfully, WhatsApp confirmed that these group calls will always be end-to-end encrypted.
This ensures that only the members of the group can listen to or view the content of the call.

WhatsApp also confirmed that it has designed calling to work reliably around the world in different network conditions. The feature is currently rolling out on the iPhone and Android versions of our app.

There's going to be a raid': A Chilean prosecutor forces Catholic Church to give up secrets

Two special envoys sent by Pope Francis to investigate a child sex abuse scandal in Chile were meeting priests and Church workers at a university in the Chilean capital last month when aides rushed into the room with an alarming development: police and prosecutors were about to start raiding Church offices.

The envoys were 90 minutes into a seminar on how to investigate allegations of sex abuse committed by fellow clergy following revelations that hundreds of children might have been molested. For decades, the Roman Catholic Church in Chile quietly investigated such allegations without alerting police, but it now stands accused, even by Pope Francis himself, of a cover-up that allowed abusers to operate with impunity.

now stands accused, even by Pope Francis himself, of a cover-up that allowed abusers to operate with impunity.

One of the clergymen listening to the envoys was Jaime Ortiz de Lazcano, the legal adviser to Santiago's archbishop. The aides rushed to his side and told him, "'Father, go to the (Church offices) because there’s going to be a raid’," Ortiz later recounted.

Police and prosecutors were staging simultaneous raids on Church offices less than a mile away from the university and outside the capital, looking for evidence of sex crimes the Church had not reported to police.

The surprise sweeps, ordered by Emiliano Arias, a provincial prosecutor, marked the start of what experts who track sex crimes in the Roman Catholic Church say is one of the most aggressive investigations ever undertaken by a judicial authority anywhere in the world.

Since that cold June afternoon there have been five more raids on Church offices to seize documents, phones, tablets and computers, leaving the Vatican scrambling to respond to a rapidly unfolding scandal that is the worst image crisis of Francis’ papacy, now in its sixth year.

Leading the charge against the Church is Arias, 45, who is experienced in fighting organized crime and has a showman's fondness for taking television news crews on the raids.

Arias told Reuters in an exclusive interview that documents seized by his team contained 30 cases of alleged abuse dating back to 2007 that the Church had not reported to the police. While Reuters was allowed to film his investigators poring through seized documents, he declined to give details from the files because he said they named victims of abuse.

He also alleged that some local Church officials had tried to destroy documents but that his team - made up of two prosecutors, three lawyers and a unit of specialist sex crime police - had salvaged them. He declined to say who had tried to destroy them or how they had tried to get rid of them.

Reuters was unable to independently confirm those assertions.

Víctor Villa Castro, head of communications for the Santiago archbishopric, said he could not comment on any cases under investigation by Arias.

“We would however say that we have no knowledge of the destruction of documents, nor the covering-up of crimes," he said. "The victims are the first, and most important, in this and we will cooperate with the civil authorities in any way that can help to get to the truth of these matters.”

Arias says he wants to arrest both those who perpetrated the abuse and those who he says helped to cover it up. He arrested Oscar Munoz, a top aide to Santiago's archbishop, Cardinal Ricardo Ezzati, after seizing church documents in which Munoz confessed to sex crimes. Munoz's lawyer has acknowledged that some of the accusations in the documents are true but says he will challenge some others.

Arias last week named Ezzati, the most senior Roman Catholic in Chile, as a suspect, accusing him of covering up his aide's alleged abuses. Ezzati has denied any wrongdoing and promised to cooperate. [L1N1UL01I]

Arias said he launched the raids after Church officials in Rancagua, the capital of O'Higgins region, told him he would have to make a formal petition to the Vatican to obtain information he was seeking because it was protected by 'pontifical secret.'

A spokesman for the Rancagua archbishop's office said they were told to do this by the Vatican. Vatican spokesman Greg Burke declined to comment.

The Roman Catholic Church says the 'pontifical secret' provision in canon law is intended to protect the privacy of all involved in sex abuse claims. Critics say bishops have historically used it as a shield to block inquiries from civil authorities.

"We are not talking about a fraud, or a theft, we are talking about crimes against children," Arias said in an interview in his office in Rancagua, explaining his decision not to submit the request to the Vatican and instead get a judge to approve the raids.

'GRAVE NEGLIGENCE'

Allegations of sexual abuse of minors by clergy are not new, but under Chilean law governing the separation of church and state, the Catholic Church, a powerful and politically influential institution in this conservative Andean nation, has no legal obligation to report the allegations to police.

The sex abuse scandal came to a head after Pope Francis visited in January and was initially dismissive of claims by survivors of a cover-up by top Church officials there. A backlash among advocates for abuse survivors prompted him to dispatch an investigator, Archbishop Charles Scicluna of Malta, who produced a confidential 2,300-page report on the allegations.

After receiving the report Pope Francis wrote an open letter to Chile's faithful in May in which he decried "the culture of abuse and the system of cover up" by the Church in Chile.

He summoned all 34 of Chile's bishops to Rome in May where they offered to resign en masse. He has so far accepted five resignations and is expected to accept more.

Arias speaks mostly without emotion during the hour-long interview until he talks about how, according to their accusers, priests convinced their victims that they were doing nothing wrong. Then he displays flashes of anger, sometimes so impassioned that he trips over his words.

“I have seen some tough cases but what shocks me about all this is the abuse of conscience - how an accused (Church worker) has entered into the soul of another person and is capable of convincing him that satisfying his desires is not even a sin,” said Arias, who describes his family as “very Catholic” but says he is lapsed.

Arias said he can prosecute senior Church officials for covering up the abuses if he can prove they knew about systematic abuse and failed to do anything to stop it, or hid evidence to prevent civil authorities from getting involved.

But first he must prosecute the abusers, said Maria Ines Horvitz, a senior lawyer at the State Defense Council of Chile, a public agency that provides legal advice to the Chilean state. And to do that he must find cases within the 10-year statute of limitations - a potential problem that has bedeviled prosecutors in other countries - or turn to the one court in Chile that still handles cases from before roughly 2000, which is backlogged.

PROSECUTORIAL ZEAL

The national public prosecutor instructed all provincial prosecutors last month to pursue sex abuse allegations more vigorously.

But Arias has gone much further than his colleagues in his zeal to bring prosecutions. He has repeatedly widened his remit, from a handful of cases to dozens, from his provincial base to the capital, and from investigating claims of abuse by 14 priests in Rancagua to the alleged complicity of Ezzati, Santiago's archbishop, himself.

As a result of his uncovering new cases in Church documents, the national prosecutor last week authorized him to expand his investigation into other regions.

BishopAccountability.Org, which tracks allegations of sexual abuse by Roman Catholic priests, says the only comparable investigation into sex abuse in the Church was in Belgium in 2010 when police launched coordinated raids on Church offices and the home of a cardinal. That investigation did not lead to any prosecutions because of the statute of limitations.

Arias is carrying out his investigation in the absence of any public backing from the center-right Sebastian Pinera government. Shortly before becoming president in March, Pinera criticized the Church for its “defensive” attitude to the scandal and “insufficient” investigations but has remained silent on the issue since.

A government spokesman did not respond to a request for comment.

WHY NOW?

For decades allegations of sexual abuse by priests swirled through Chilean society, but little was done to address them. The Church was largely left to police itself.

But this year that suddenly changed.

Church watchers say several factors contributed to this watershed moment - the international attention received by several victims who went public; the pope's initial poor handling of the claims; and the ripple effect of the global #MeToo movement.

The Church's grip on Chile is also weakening, public opinion polling shows, even though the formerly predominately Catholic nation remains largely conservative on social issues.

The waning support for the Church was evident when the pope visited Chile in January - there were many empty seats at his public masses. This was "a turning point for Francis’ papacy" a Vatican official said. "It is when he realized that he was listening to the wrong people about the real situation in Chile."

For Arias, the pope’s subsequent mea culpa that the Church had covered up abuses gave him the impetus he needed to act. “His description of what was happening in Chile was powerful and should concern us all,” he said.

Demi Lovato remains hospitalized after 'Overdose complications' 

Demi Lovato remains in the hospital after suffering “complications” following last week’s apparent overdose.

“Demi wasn’t doing well over the weekend,” a source tells People. “She came down with a fever and showed signs of an infection. She is currently being treated for issues that are very common after a drug overdose. She will need to stay in the hospital for a few more days, but is expected to make a full recovery.”

A second insider adds, “It’s too soon to say what the next steps are in terms of entering treatment. … Right now everyone is focused on getting Demi physically healthy.”

Lovato is expected to make a full recovery, which she is doing with a very select group of people by her side. “It’s only family and very close, trusted friends she’s surrounding herself with right now,” a source close to the singer tells Yahoo Entertainment. One of those “trusted” friends includes ex-boyfriend Wilmer Valderrama.

“He has visited her a lot,” confirms the insider. “He was absolutely devastated when he heard what happened. He wants to be there to support her however he can.”
A second insider adds, “It’s too soon to say what the next steps are in terms of entering treatment. … Right now everyone is focused on getting Demi physically healthy.”

Lovato is expected to make a full recovery, which she is doing with a very select group of people by her side. “It’s only family and very close, trusted friends she’s surrounding herself with right now,” a source close to the singer tells Yahoo Entertainment. One of those “trusted” friends includes ex-boyfriend Wilmer Valderrama.

“He has visited her a lot,” confirms the insider. “He was absolutely devastated when he heard what happened. He wants to be there to support her however he can.”
Some people close to Lovato, though, have themselves been getting the opposite of support. Many of Lovato’s fans (dubbed Lovatics) have been on social media, bashing those they blame for her suspected OD.

Lovato’s backup dancer and close friend Dani Vitale has been the subject of many fans’ ire, as it was her birthday the “Sober” singer was out celebratning the Monday night before the incident. Vitale, who has been receiving death threats online, broke her silence Sunday, saying she was “not with Demi when the incident happened,” adding, “There is no need for any negativity towards the ones who care about Demi at this time.”

Another one of Lovato’s best friends, Dead Boys actor Matthew Scott Montgomery, also reacted over the weekend. “It’s been an incredibly difficult few days, and this year has easily been the hardest I’ve ever experienced,” he wrote on his Instagram Stories Sunday. “I couldn’t figure out what felt weirder — posting or not posting about this … I will miss hearing my best friend’s laugh, maybe my favorite sound in the world, in the audience for these final shows as she continues to recover.” He dedicated his final shows to Lovato, thanking his followers for their “love and support during this very hard time.”

The 25-year-old singer has not addressed the overdose report herself, but a rep for Lovato issued a statement Tuesday confirming the star was “awake,” noting that “some of the information being reported is incorrect and they respectfully ask for privacy and not speculation as her health and recovery is the most important thing right now.”

Despite initial reports claiming Lovato overdosed on heroin, a source close to the singer denied she was using that drug.

Prior to Lovato’s most recent medical emergency, the singer had been on “a bad path” for months, one source told Yahoo. Another insider added that those close to Lovato became especially concerned about her health in “recent weeks,” saying, “Anyone who was around six, seven years ago remembers the signs well. Things were going in a bad direction again. … We are all hoping this is the wake-up call she needed.”

The “Tell Me You Love Me” singer’s family and friends are hoping she checks into rehab, but ultimately the decision will be hers. It’s unclear when Lovato will be released from the hospital.

Health Risks of Poor Menstrual Hygiene Management

There are also health issues to consider apart from the above-mentioned social issues. Poor protection and inadequate washing facilities may increase susceptibility to infection, with the odour of menstrual blood putting girls at risk of being stigmatised (see also water sanitation and health. In communities where female genital cutting is practiced, multiple health risks exist. Where the vaginal aperture is inadequate for menstrual flow, a blockage and build-up of blood clots is created behind the infibulated area. This can be a cause for protracted and painful period, increased odour, discomfort and the potential for additional infections (KIRK & SOMMER 2006).

It is assumed that the risk of infection (including sexually transmitted infection) is higher than normal during menstruation because the blood coming out of the body creates a pathway for bacteria to travel back into the uterus. Certain practices are more likely to increase the risk of infection (see figure below). Using unclean rags for example, especially if they are inserted into the vagina, can introduce or support the growth of unwanted bacteria that could lead to infection.

As an example, findings from Bangladesh, where 80% of factory workers are women, show that 60% of them were using rags from the factory floor for menstrual cloths. These are highly chemically charged and often freshly dyed. Infections are common, leading to 73% of women missing work for on average six days a month. Women had no safe place either to purchase cloth or pads or to change/dispose of them. When women are paid by piece, those six days away present a huge economic damage to them but also to the business supply chain 

PADUPAFRICA Is an NGO initiative that helps young teenagers who miss school because of mensural pains with free sanity pads and distribution of informative materials to , increase knowledge about menstruation which may help in mitigating the suffering of millions of poor young girls

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Monday, July 30, 2018

Earthquake kills 14 on tourist island of Lombok in Indonesia

Fourteen people have died after a 6.4-magnitude earthquake struck the popular tourist island of Lombok in Indonesia Sunday, damaging more than 1,000 homes and sending residents fleeing for safety.

The earthquake hit early in the morning, at about 5.45 a.m. local time (6:45 p.m. Saturday ET), the United States Geological Survey(USGS) said, at a shallow depth of just 7.5 kilometers (4.6 miles).

Speaking to CNN, the owner of a hotel in West Lombok said Sunday's quake was the strongest he had experienced on the island.

An Indonesian man examines the remains of houses, after a 6.4 magnitude earthquake struck, in Lombok on July 29.

An Indonesian man examines the remains of houses, after a 6.4 magnitude earthquake struck, in Lombok on July 29.

According to Indonesia's National Disaster Management Agency, at least 162 people have been injured by the tremors, which occurred about 140 miles east of Bali.

The International Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies is trying to determine how many people are missing. Volunteers joined police and rescue teams to assist the wounded and look for survivors.

Tour de France 2018: Geraint Thomas wins to make sporting history

 Kristoff wins final stage in Paris
Sporting history was made on the Champs-Elysees Sunday as Geraint Thomas became the first Welshman to win cycling's Tour de France.

Arm-in-arm with 2017 champion and Team Sky teammate Chris Froome, the 32-year-old Thomas crossed the finishing line after the 21st and final stage in Paris in triumph.

His eventual victory had been a mere formality after Saturday's individual time trial stage which left him with a one minute 51 second advantage over second-placed Tom Dumoulin of the Netherlands.

Tour de France winner Geraint Thomas wearing the overall leader's yellow jersey and third-placed Chris Froome, the 2017 champion cross the finish line of 21st and last stage of the 105th edition of the Tour de France.

Tour de France winner Geraint Thomas wearing the overall leader's yellow jersey and third-placed Chris Froome, the 2017 champion cross the finish line of 21st and last stage of the 105th edition of the Tour de France.

Four-time champion Froome completed the podium, having started the three-week Tour as race favorite.

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