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Showing posts with label world news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label world news. Show all posts

Thursday, April 12, 2018

Student Threatens To Chop Off Lecturer's P*nis After Thinking He Mocked Her Lack Of S*xual Experience

A student has threatened to chop off her lecturer's penis after she believed he was trying to mock her with a cartoon due to her lack of sexual experience.

Stephanie Christol, 30, was sent a reading list by Dr. Christopher Dillon which featured a cartoon called The Virgin Snail.
Christol attended King’s College London where she studied history and is believed to have met Dr. Dillon in her final year when she was writing her dissertation. 

Furious at the perceived slight she emailed Dr. Dillon, who worked at the university’s Strand Campus, threatening to chop off his penis and stick it up his bottom.

The defendant, from Islington in London, also sent a series of emails and offensive Facebook messages about Dr. Dillon’s partner's appearance.

Dr. Dillon told Westminster Magistrates’ Court that he had been helping Christol with her dissertation which was on First World War films.

He said: ‘One message threatened me with violence. Between April to 25 September and there were dozens of emails.

One of them threatened to cut off my penis and shove it up to my bottom. They were threatening I was concerned they may spread over to my partner.

Christol denied but was convicted on one count of harassment without violence.

She was granted conditional bail ahead of sentencing at Westminster Magistrates’ Court.

Friday, December 15, 2017

Outrage As Miss Iraq Takes Selfie With Miss Israel, Family Is Forced To Flee Country.

Miss Iraq’s family have been forced to flee the country after the beauty queen posed for a selfie with Miss Israel last month, prompting fury in Baghdad. The picture shows Iraq’s Sarah Idan and Israel’s Adar Gandelsman, representing their countries at the Miss Universe pageant in Las Vegas in the US.

Their selfie appeared on Idan’s Instagram page with references to promoting ‘peace and love’ – but it soon sparked a social media backlash.

There was so much anger towards the image in Iraq that Idan’s family was forced to flee the country in fear, Gandelsman told Israeli TV.

She said that ‘people made threats against her and her family that if she didn’t return home and take down the photos, they would remove her (Miss Iraq) title, that they would kill her.’

‘Out of fear, they left Iraq at least until the situation calms down,’ she added, according to the Times of Israel.

Idan, who now lives in the US, had decided to post the picture to show that ‘it’s possible to live together’, Gandelsman said.

Monday, December 11, 2017

US President Donald Trump signs new order to send American astronauts to the moon

President Donald Trump wants to send astronauts where no man has gone before.

Today. Trump authorized the acting NASA administrator Robert M. Lightfoot Jr. to "lead an innovative space exploration program to send American astronauts back to the moon, and eventually Mars" during a White House signing ceremony.
"The President listened to the National Space Council's recommendations and he will change our nation's human spaceflight policy to help America become the driving force for the space industry, gain new knowledge from the cosmos, and spur incredible technology," deputy White House press secretary Hogan Gidley said.

The directive, Gidley said, will push NASA to "refocus on its core mission of space exploration" and if Trump does send astronauts back to the moon, they would be the first to visit the lunar landscape since the Apollo 17 mission in 1972.

Russia is set to build $21bn nuclear facility in Egypt

Russia is set to build a new nuclear power plant that'll cost as much as $21bn (£15.7bn) in Egypt.

Rosatom, Russia's state-owned nuclear company, said the nuclear plant would be completed by 2029 as Russian President Vladimir Putin signed an agreement with his Egyptian counterpart Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, two years after the initial deal to loan Egypt 85% of the construction costs in return for servicing the reactors for 60 years was signed.
This is one of a series of plants Russia is building across the continent. In October, it was revealed it would build two in Nigeria, while a similar deal in South Africa has run into trouble.

Saturday, December 9, 2017

Ugandan Lesbians to Be Deported from Denmark

Three Ugandan lesbians are set to be deported from Denmark after Danish authorities rejected their asylum requests citing serious contradictions in their stories, according to RT News.

However, the LGBT community and gay rights activists have criticized their deportation saying they automatically qualified for asylum since they were escaping persecution based on their sexuality.
“Homosexuals risk persecution from other civilians, their families and clan members as well as blackmail and assault. Homosexuals cannot expect police protection if they are attacked, threatened or killed,” said the spokesperson of LGBT Asylum, Hanne Gyberg.

Gyberg told Ritzau News Agency that it is the first time that LGBT Asylum, an international organization fighting for asylum for homosexuals, has faced a deportation of this nature.

“Their sexuality was not considered in the rejections and we believe the Danish authorities should look at the cases again,” Gyberg added.

A lawyer representing one of the Ugandan lesbians has requested the Danish Refugee Appeals Board to appeal the decision on her client’s behalf saying she is an active and a known member of the LGBT community, which makes it dangerous for her to go back to Uganda.

On its part, Denmark’s ruling party, Venstre, has condemned, in general, the deportation of people escaping persecution based on their sexuality.

When people are considered to be persecuted in their home countries because of religion, sexuality or something else, we have a special obligation to protect them, Venstre’s spokesman Jacob Jensen said.

The three Ugandan lesbians moved to Denmark seeking refuge following an upsurge in homophobic attacks in Uganda after the country passed an anti-gay law in 2014.

Although it was later ruled as invalid by the constitutional court of Uganda, the Ugandan Anti-Homosexuality Act of 2014 criminalized any relationships between persons of the same sex.

The act condemned homosexuality saying it was a threat to “legal, religious and traditional family values of the people of Uganda.” It also recommended life imprisonment for gay people.

The aftermath of this law was an unprecedented rise in attacks on members of the LGBT community in Uganda, forcing many of them to flee the country.
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Thursday, December 7, 2017

Donald Trump Recognizes Jerusalem As The Capital Of Israel. Why This Is Such A Big Deal

Today, President Donad Trump of the United States of America make a life broadcast from the White House, that America will now recognise Jerusalem as the Administrative capital of Israel and the location for new USA Embassy.

Why declaring Jerusalem as the capital of Israel is so controversial

(CNN) US President Donald Trump is expected to declare Jerusalem as the capital of Israel this week in a move that will spark controversy across the world.
The announcement would move Trump one step closer to fulfilling his campaign pledge to relocate
the US embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem -- a move long sought by Israel, but set aside by previous US Presidents due to regional concerns and Jerusalem's contested status between Israelis and Palestinians. Both sides claim the holy city as their capital.

Upon making his decision public, Trump is expected to sign a waiver to keep the US embassy in Tel Aviv for another six months. But the State Department's security arm has been told to plan for potentially violent protests at US embassies and consulates if the White House announces the move.

CNN's Oren Liebermann, who is based in Jerusalem, walks us through what's at stake.

Why is declaring Jerusalem the capital such a big deal?
The final status of Jerusalem has always been one of the most difficult and sensitive questions in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. If the United States declares Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, it would be seen as prejudging that question, deciding an issue that was supposed to be left to negotiations and breaking with the international consensus on the holy city.

Recognizing Jerusalem as the capital also moves the United States one major step closer to relocating the embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, which would be seen as cementing Israeli sovereignty over the city.

How would the embassy move work?


Logistically, moving the embassy to Jerusalem could be very simple. There is already a US consulate in Jerusalem, while the embassy remains in Tel Aviv. It could be as simple as switching the names -- making the embassy in Jerusalem and a consulate in Tel Aviv. The US Ambassador to Israel would move from his residence in a Tel Aviv suburb to Jerusalem.

But that would be just about the only simple part. Moving the embassy risks setting off diplomatic crises with Arab states that could include widespread protests outside of US diplomatic offices in those and other countries.

The ramifications of an embassy move would be felt far outside of Jerusalem. It would overturn 70 years of international consensus, and, many argue, would effectively signal the end of moves to achieve peace between Israelis and Palestinians.

Give me some history ...

The United Nations partition plan drawn up in 1947 envisaged Jerusalem as a separate "international city." But the war that followed Israel's declaration of independence one year later left the city divided. When fighting ended in 1949, the armistice border -- often called the Green Line because it was drawn in green ink -- saw Israel in control of the western half, and Jordan in control of the eastern half, which included the famous Old City.

When did that change?

During the 1967 Six-Day War, Israel occupied East Jerusalem. Since then, all of the city has been under Israel's authority. The city marks "Jerusalem Day" in late-May or early-June. But Palestinians, and many in the international community, continue to see East Jerusalem as the capital of a future Palestinian state.

Who lives in Jerusalem?

Roughly 850,000 people live in Jerusalem -- 37% are Arab and 61% are Jewish, according to the independent think tank Jerusalem Institute. The Jewish population includes around 200,000 ultra-Orthodox Jews, with the rest split generally between religious Zionist and secular Jews. 96% of the city's Arab population is Muslim; the other 4% is Christian.

The vast majority of the Palestinian population lives in East Jerusalem. Although there are some mixed neighborhoods in Jerusalem where both Israelis and Arabs live, most of the neighborhoods are split.

Have any countries ever had their embassy in Jerusalem?


Yes. Before 1980 a number of countries did, including the Netherlands and Costa Rica. But in July of that year, Israel passed a law that declared Jerusalem the united capital of Israel. The United Nations Security Council responded with a resolution condemning Israel's annexation of East Jerusalem and declared it a violation of international law.

So countries moved their embassies out of the city?


Correct. In 2006, Costa Rica and El Salvador were the last to move their embassies out of Jerusalem, joining the rest of the world in locating their embassies in Tel Aviv.

What about consulates?
Some countries do maintain consulates in Jerusalem, including the United States, which has one in the western part of the city. Other countries -- such as Britain and France for instance -- have a consulate in the eastern part of the city, which serve as their countries' main representation in the Palestinian territories.

Just to be clear: What is America's position?

The US has never had its embassy in Jerusalem. It has always been in Tel Aviv, with the Ambassador's residence in Herzliya Pituach, about 30 minutes north.

That sounds pretty straightforward ...

Wait a minute, it gets more complicated. In 1989, Israel began leasing to the US a plot of land in Jerusalem for a new embassy. The 99-year lease cost $1 per year. To this day, the plot has not been developed, and it remains an empty field.

OK. Keep going...

In 1995, the US Congress passed a law requiring America to move the embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. Proponents said the US should respect Israel's choice of Jerusalem as its capital, and recognize it as such.

So why hasn't the embassy moved yet?

Every President since 1995 -- Presidents Clinton, Bush and Obama -- has declined to move the embassy, citing national security interests. Every six months, the President has used the presidential waiver to circumvent the embassy move.

How have Israelis responded to this?
The Israeli government has lauded Trump's pledge to follow through with the embassy move. Jerusalem Mayor Nir Barkat has been perhaps the most outspoken advocate, launching a campaign just days before the US President's inauguration, urging him to make good on his promise.

And what do the Palestinians make of it all?


Palestinian leaders are adamant that an embassy move to Jerusalem would be a violation of international law, and a huge setback to peace hopes.

President Mahmoud Abbas has turned to other world leaders, including Russian President Vladimir Putin and Jordan's King Abdullah, to help pressure Trump to change his mind. The Palestine Liberation Organization has suggested it would consider revoking its recognition of Israel, and canceling all agreements between Israelis and Palestinians, should the move take place.

More immediately, there are fears it could set off a wave of unrest -- perhaps even street protests and violence -- in the Palestinian territories and across the Arab world.

Source: CNN

Friday, December 1, 2017

Russian President Vladimir Putin Meets With Kanu Nwankwo, Okocha, Eto’o And Others In Russia. Photos

Russian president Vladimir Putin welcomed football royalty in Russia yesterday as the World Cup draw took place at the Kremlin Palace in Moscow. The Russian leader met with Africa legend, the likes of Samuel Eto’o, Kanu Nwankwo, Jay Jay Okocha, also include Diego Maradona and others as they posed for a selfie with legend Pele who was on a wheelchair in Red Square as the greatest tournament in the game was mapped out.

Tuesday, November 28, 2017

North Korea launches new missile powerful enough to hit Washington DC, Europe or Australia but Trump promise the world 'we will take care of it'

North Korea has fired another ballistic missile, the US military has confirmed today. Image from September 2017
North Korea has fired a ballistic missile, a powerful one which can hit America, Europe or Australia into Japanese waters.

The Hwasong-14 intercontinental ballistic missile was launched eastward from Pyongsong in North Korea's South Pyongan Province at around 3.30am local time (6.30pm GMT).

It flew for around 50 minutes, travelling 1,000km (620 miles), reaching an unprecedented altitude of 2,800 miles, before splashing down into the Japan sea. 


President Donald Trump announce and promise everyone after the launch has taken place, he said; 'we will take care of it' and 'it is a situation we will handle'.

The South Korean military says it responded with a missile exercise of its own just minutes after.
This is the first missile launched since one was fired across Japan and into the Pacific Ocean on September 15.

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Saturday, January 21, 2017

Nigeria 1st Lad, Aisha Byuhari Receives Mrs. Melinda Gates

Wife of The President, Mrs. Aisha Muhammadu Buhari received Melinda Gates who is the Co-chair of Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

Melinda Gates, stressed in her statement during the meeting on the importance of role models in every community, highlighting that girls turn out to be mothers and they require inspiration to be mothers of the generation to come. 
See more amazing photos...

Thursday, December 22, 2016

Nokia Sues Apple for Infringing Patents, Industry Back on War Footing

Nokia Corp said on Wednesday it had filed a number of lawsuits against Apple Inc for violating 32 technology patents, striking back at the iPhone maker's legal action targeting the one-time cellphone industry leader a day earlier.

Nokia's lawsuits, filed in courts in Dusseldorf, Mannheim and Munich, Germany, and the US District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, cover patents for displays, user interfaces, software, antennas, chipsets and video coding.

"Since agreeing a license covering some patients from the Nokia Technologies portfolio in 2011, Apple has declined subsequent offers made by Nokia to license other of its patented inventions which are used by many of Apple's products," Nokia said in a statement.

Apple on Tuesday had taken legal action against Acacia Research Corp and Conversant Intellectual Property Management Inc, accusing them of colluding with Nokia to extract and extort exorbitant revenues unfairly from Apple.

"We've always been willing to pay a fair price to secure the rights of patents covering technology in our products," said Apple spokesman Josh Rosenstock. "Unfortunately, Nokia has refused to license their patents on a fair basis and is now using the tactics of a patent troll to attempt to extort money from Apple by applying a royalty rate to Apple's own inventions they had nothing to do with."
Acacia and Conversant did not immediately respond to requests for comment, and Nokia was not immediately available to comment on the Apple lawsuit.

The legal action by Nokia and Apple appear to mark a revival of the "smartphone patent wars" that began five years ago, when Apple filed a series of patent infringement cases against Samsung Electronics around the world, with wins and losses on both sides.

Apple's lawsuit against Acacia, Conversant and Nokia was filed only one day after Ottawa-based Conversant named Boris Teksler as its new chief executive. He had worked as Apple's director of patent licensing and strategy from 2009 to 2013, the latter half of his tenure overlapping with the lawsuits against Samsung.

Acacia is a publicly traded patent licensing firm based in Newport Beach, California. One of its subsidiaries sued Apple for patent infringement and was awarded $22 million by a Texas jury in September.

Similarly, Conversant, which claims to own thousands of patents, announced last week that a Silicon Valley jury had awarded one of its units a $7.3 million settlement in an infringement case against Apple involving two smartphone patents.

Nokia, once the world's dominant cellphone maker, missed out on the transition to smartphones triggered by Apple's introduction of the iPhone in 2007.

The Finnish company sold its handset business to Microsoft two years ago, leaving it with its telecom network equipment business and a bulging portfolio of mobile equipment patents.

But this year, Microsoft sold its Nokia-feature phone business to a new company called HMD Global.

Nokia agreed to a 10-year licensing deal with HMD, which continues to market low-cost Nokia phones and plans to introduce new Nokia smartphone models next year.

© Thomson Reuters 2016

Tuesday, December 20, 2016

Obama's last coal rule likely headed for the chopping block in Congress

The Obama administration's years-in-the-making rule to protect streams from mountaintop removal coal mining is on track to go into effect a day before President-elect Donald Trump takes office, meaning Congress will have to step in to kill it quickly.

Trump has railed against regulations on the coal industry in general, although he has not specifically addressed the Interior Department's stream rule, which has been in the works since 2009 and was finally released Monday. His pick to be Interior secretary, Rep. Ryan Zinke (R-Mont.), is an ardent coal backer and has called for Congress to block the rule. Zinke would be in charge of unwinding the rule, but that process could take years through normal administrative channels. A quicker route runs through Congress, where Republicans are assembling a hit-list of recently passed rules they can block with little recourse from Democrats.


“It is disappointing, but certainly not surprising, that the Obama administration has decided to pursue this last-ditch effort to further harm West Virginia coal jobs," said Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.), who says the rule will hurt miners in her state. "Fortunately, the decision by voters last month makes today’s announcement by the Office of Surface Mining an exercise in futility. Working with President-elect Trump and our Republican congressional majority, I am confident that we will be able to use the Congressional Review Act to stop this rule from taking effect.”

Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), who cosponsored a bill with Capito and other Republicans that would have effectively blocked the stream rule, did not specifically mention the CRA in a statement on the rule Monday. But he said he would "pursue legislation to ensure it does not harm our coal mining communities and economies.”

The Obama administration did not brief outside green groups ahead of the rule's release Monday, a step it has taken with major rules in the past, said Thom Kay, a senior legislative representative for Appalachian Voices who has participated in previous briefings.

Some environmentalists expressed surprise that the Obama administration essentially forced the stream rule into a GOP firing line, practically guaranteeing its repeal in some form. Trump’s electoral victory last month quickly spurred speculation that Interior might shelve the rule rather than finalize it, in order to avoid a CRA showdown that could prevent the department from ever updating the rule again.

While some green groups are upset the Obama administration was not more aggressive, others are planning to defend the rule as a modest step to improve water quality in the coalfields, in line with Trump's previous insistence that he favors "clean" air and water without unduly harming businesses.

"I just hope people read it before they propose killing it. It’s very different than the proposed rule. One of the primary pieces in the monitoring, so if there is a big change in water quality because contaminants get into the water supply, they can be addressed immediately," said Collin O’Mara, president and CEO of the National Wildlife Federation. "I’m hoping that folks take a look at the changes that were made and how the concerns that were raised were addressed, but it’s going to be a difficult rule to protect."

Republicans have been critical of the Obama administration’s rulemaking since 2011 when a leaked internal document estimated an earlier version of the rule would cause coal mining job losses in excess of 7,000. Interior has long disputed that figure and argued the revised rule would end up creating jobs in coal communities.

The final rule estimates an annual average employment gain of 156 jobs between 2020 and 2040, largely because of increased reclamation work — including annual coal mining job losses of 124, compared with 280 jobs gained each year from implementation.

Congressional leaders will have to decide which rules to prioritize, but given Trump’s campaign promises to restore the coal industry by repealing regulations, this rule presents a tempting target that would showcase immediate results early in his presidency.

"We want clean air. We want clean water. But to do that, you don't have to destroy our country and destroy our businesses," Trump said at a rally in North Carolina earlier this year.

Repealing the stream rule is unlikely to prove a panacea for the ailing coal industry, which has declined for decades under administrations of both parties, because of technological changes, environmental regulations and competition from cheap natural gas. A recent Energy Information Administration report found that coal production in 2015 was at its lowest since 1986, with Appalachia seeing an even stronger decline. Employment in coal mines was at just less than 66,000, the lowest level EIA had seen since tracking began in 1978.

Still, the National Mining Association immediately called for lawmakers to pass a CRA resolution, which would not only kill this rule but would prevent Interior from ever issuing an update that is “substantially the same” in the future.

CRA resolutions, which cannot be filibustered, are subject to up to 10 hours of debate in the Senate and can only be used within 60 legislative days of a rule's enactment, limiting the number that Republicans could push through given a heavy workload to confirm political appointees and start on their own legislative agenda, including overhauling the tax code and repealing the Affordable Care Act.

Congress may only have time to undo two or three energy rules with CRA resolutions, given the floor time they require and the desire to target non-energy rules as well, and the stream rule is a prominent target for one of those spots, according to a note to clients from analyst Kevin Book of ClearView Energy. (Interior's recent venting and flaring rule is "a strong contender for the No. 2 position," he added.)

“I look forward to working with the Trump administration to overturn this unparalleled executive overreach and implement policies that protect communities forsaken by this administration,” House Natural Resources Chairman Rob Bishop said in a statement.

There are no “concrete” plans for a CRA vote, said Bishop spokeswoman Molly Block. But it’s on the list for consideration, she said, along with the Bureau of Land Management’s recent venting and flaring rule. Repealing older regulations despised by the GOP, including the Clean Power Plan and the Waters of the U.S. rule, would require more lengthy and more difficult administrative rulemakings that could take years, or securing 60 votes in the Senate to amend the laws underlying them.

The CRA has been used only once successfully, to kill an ergonomics rule finalized in the final days of Bill Clinton’s administration. But observers expect that the Republican-controlled Congress will exercise that power significantly to attack Obama regulations across the board early next year.

Interior spokeswoman Jessica Kershaw declined to discuss the potential for Congress or Trump to roll back the rule, saying only that the department “is expected to carry out applicable laws that guide our mission of responsible stewardship of public lands, water, and wildlife management and that is what we will continue to do ... no matter who the president is."

The stream rule, out of Interior’s Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement, is the broadest regulation directly affecting coal mining since the Labor Department cracked down on safety violations following the 2010 Upper Big Branch mine disaster that killed 29 miners.

“This updated, scientifically modern rule will make life better for a countless number of Americans who live near places where coal is being mined,” said OSM chief Joseph Pizarchik.

It updates a 1983 regulation aimed at protecting streams from the effects of mountaintop removal coal mining, particularly in Appalachia. A George W. Bush-era rewrite that drew environmentalists’ scorn never went into wide effect, and ultimately was tossed out by a federal judge.

The updated regulation keeps in place a 100-foot buffer zone around most streams, even intermittent waterways. It strengthens other aspects of the rule, requiring companies to establish baseline pollution levels in waterways before mining begins for better impact management during and after mining, as well as new details on how to restore and protect plants and wildlife.

Several green groups have also argued that the Obama update was too moderate and didn’t go far enough in light of scientific advances in understanding mining’s effects on water and aquatic life.

“Though it isn’t perfect, the Stream Protection Rule does provide important protections that can help keep coalfield communities safe and takes steps toward holding coal mining companies accountable,” said Dalal Aboulhosn, the Sierra Club’s deputy legislative director for land and water.

Kay said he was "disappointed" the rule didn't go further to curtail mountaintop removal mining.

“Moving forward, the Trump administration should be focusing on ways to diversify and strengthen Central Appalachia's economy, rather than taking on a political fight against a moderate and reasonable rule,” he said.

Source: politico

Monday, December 19, 2016

Trump cruises to Electoral College victory confirming he will become the 45th US President despite protests

There were many protesters Monday as electoral voters cast their votes Donald Trump won the Electoral College vote Monday — ensuring he will become America's 45th president. An effort by anti-Trump forces to persuade Republican electors to abandon the president-elect came to practically nothing and the process unfolded largely according to its traditions. Trump's polarizing victory Nov. 8 and the fact Democrat Hillary Clinton had won the national popular vote had stirred an intense lobbying effort, but to no avail.

Even one of Trump's fiercest Republican rivals, Ohio Gov. John Kasich, said it was time to get behind the president-elect.

"We want unity, we want love," Kasich said as Ohio's electors voted to back Trump at a statehouse ceremony.

Kasich had refused to endorse Trump saying he was unfit.
Donald Trump took to his twitter page to thank the voters.




He got 302 votes surpassing the 270 votes needed to secure his presidency.

Saturday, December 17, 2016

Breaking! Martin Sheen and other celebrities urge electoral college to block Trump at Monday's electoral vote

Pressure on members of the US electoral college to select someone other than Donald Trump has grown dramatically making some to waver, but yielding little evidence Trump will fall short when electors convene in most state capitals Monday to cast their votes.
Actors like Martin Sheen (Charlie Sheen's father), Debra Messing are joined by a host of other celebrities - including musician Moby - to ask Republican electors to not cast their vote for President-elect Donald Trump on 19 December.
The argument put forward in the Unite for America clip is simple - Mr. Trump is not fit to be president of the United States, therefore members of the Electoral College should block his entry to the White House.
In a YouTube video Sheen said:

"Our founding fathers built the Electoral College to safeguard the American people from the dangers of a demagogue and to ensure that the presidency only goes to someone who is, to an eminent degree, endowed with the requisite qualifications".

Carole Joyce of Arizona expected her role as a GOP elector to be pretty simple: She would meet the others in Phoenix and carry out a vote for Trump, who won the most votes in her state and whom she personally supported. But then came the mail and the emails and the phone calls — first hundreds, then thousands of voters worrying Trump’s impulsive nature would lead the country into another war.

“Honestly, it had an impact,” said Joyce, a 72-year-old Republican state committeewoman. “I’ve seen enough funerals. I’m tired of hearing bagpipes. . . But I signed a loyalty pledge. And that matters.”
There are 538 men and women who are scheduled to meet Monday across the country to carry out what has traditionally been a perfunctory vote after most every presidential election. The role of elector has intensified this year, in the wake of a bitter election in which Trump lost the popular vote by a margin of nearly 3 million. Watch Martin Sheen's video below.                                                                  
Donald Trump won last month's presidential election, the idea was that these elite “electors” would make up their own minds on who should be president, rather than having the American people actually vote on the matter. So this seems to many like a transparent attempt for the losing side to change the election result
To be clear: Considering who the electors pledged to Trump are, how many are pledged to him, what they’ve said publicly, and the existence of American norms that have been built up over hundreds of years, it is incredibly unlikely that there will be any Electoral College surprise.

Thirty-seven electors would need to defect from Trump’s camp to deprive him of the Electoral College majority he needs to become president. But only one of those 306 electors pledged to him has publicly said he’s revolting. A survey of electors by the Associated Press and a whip count by the RNC both failed to turn up any others who said they’d do so.

On Thursday, Joyce said she received so many letters that the letter carrier just gave her a U.S. Postal Service bucket filled to the brim. “I’m sorry this is happening to you,” Joyce recalled the letter carrier saying in a phone interview.

While some electors have complained of harassment, Joyce shrugged off the mail and placed it all on a sofa decorated with American flag pillows. “This is America,” she said, adding that most of the messages were thoughtful. “People have a right to say what they want.”

On Friday, she said, her emails became more positive. The messages were from Republicans, thanking her for taking Trump to the finish line of an arduous process. “How refreshing!” she said.

Source: LIB

Tuesday, November 8, 2016

U S Election: Donald Trump leads electoral college vote count over Hillary Clinton 150-109

This is what is happening in the United States elections right now.
After millions of Americans cast their ballots on Tuesday to determine who will be the next U.S. President, Clinton and Trump are vying for the 270 electoral votes needed to win the 2016 presidential election.
Clinton so far has 109, and Almighty Trump, who most people thought had no chance, is, so far, CAUTION! What are these Americans doing???!

U S Election: Hillary Clinton leads Donald Trump 190-171 in the race to 270 electoral votes!

Hillary Clinton currently leading with a 190-171 electoral vote leads over Donald Trump.

Saturday, November 5, 2016

He smells my pant anytime I come back from a journey - Wife seeking divorce tells court

A woman, Dasola Adeosun, has pleaded with Ile Tuntun Customary Court, Mapo Hall, Ibadan, Oyo State, to put an end to her union with her husband, Taiwo, whom she alleged on several occasions had attempted to use their only two-year-old child for money rituals and that he used to smell her pants and fingers her each time she travelled to check whether she had slept with another man.

According to Nigeria Tribune, Dasola said:

“My husband married me about three and a half years ago as a virgin and we gave birth to a child who is two-year-old, Emmanuel. We’ve separated for about one and a half years and he has not been responsible for our welfare. Whenever he beats me, he either 

takes me to the hospital for treatment by himself or calls a nurse to come and set a drip for me in the house. I’ve tried to endure his excesses but it seems my patience does not pay any longer.

“After delivering my baby, he insisted on taking the child to his family house where unfortunately, my things were set on fire when a stick of matches was lit and thrown into my room through a window. It was after that incident that he told me he was taking the child to Lagos for money rituals. He took this step twice but he returned to me with the baby that he was told the child was not useful.
“Each time I asked him to give me money to take care of our child, he would say: “the child is not useful for me,” and since then I’ve been doing what I could for the child. I can’t dispute the fact that his sisters brought golden morn and milk for the child every month since he started feeding on them but it’s not enough. 

“He paid no dowry on me before we became husband and wife because I was the one who ran,” Dasola told the court.

The defendant, Taiwo, denied the allegations. He said that his wife is promiscuous and stubborn.

“I observed that each time I go to my shop, my wife calls other men. She even uses my phone sometimes to make calls. I’ve tried to stop her but she’s been adamant.
“She’s stubborn, disobedient and wayward. Shortly after our marriage, we had a quarrel and she slapped me.”

The court, however, asked Taiwo if he ever beat his wife and what step his parents took. He replied ‘I never beat her once.’

Dasola, however, opened up to the court that although Taiwo’s father has been intervening in their affairs since they got married, he withdrew at the point of provocation from his son. She said that Taiwo takes advantage of his father’s old age and opposes him each time he tries to make peace between them and that his mother is dead.

Not satisfied with his wife’s submissions, Taiwo said: “I’ve made a mistake getting married to you.”

President of the court, Chief Agbaje Henry Olasunkanmi, after listening to the couple, told them to bring their family members and the child, Emmanuel to the court on November 11 for judgement.

Amazing: Furious man stabs wife to death, cuts off love rival's genitals after catching them in bed


A furious husband stabbed his cheating wife to death and chopped off her lover’s penis and testicles after he caught them red-handed in bed.
Both the lover and the woman died from their injuries and the man, upon realizing he had murdered his sweetheart, decided to turn himself into police.
The shocking incident took place in the village of Shama, located in the south-western Russian Autonomous Republic of Tatarstan.

The man’s wife, not named, had told her husband that she was going to see female friends in the next village.

After it got dark, the husband, also not named, grew suspicious of her whereabouts and called the friend - only to discover his wife had lied to him.

The man told police he had long suspected her of cheating on him with another man in the village and he went straight to his house.

The enraged husband said he caught his wife having sex with the lover and the red mist came down over him.

He grabbed a knife and cut off the lover’s penis and testicles before then stabbing his wife to death.
The investigation is ongoing and the couple's are to be placed in an orphanage.


Source - DailymailUK

Mugshot of very stunning woman sends internet into meltdown (photos

A very attractive woman arrested for fraud has sent the internet into a meltdown thanks to her flawless mugshot.

Camera Scott aka Prison Bae, pictured above, has guys all over the internet drooling.

The sexy scammer was arrested for Possession of Counterfeited Driver’s License, multiple Possession of Counterfeit Credit Cards, Larceny and Fraud. But all that didn't stop the internet from going gaga after her mugshot was released to the public.

We want to know - would you bail her out if you could? Don't make up your mind yet till you've seen all the wonderful things below...








Amazing!!! See Chinese woman who hasn't cut her hair for 18 years, spends two hours daily washing and drying her 11ft locks

 
Ni Linmei 60yrs old woman from China's Shanxi province hasn't cut her hair since 1998 and since then, it has grown to 11ft and 9inches. Having such generous locks can be problematic and time consuming, she once got her hair trapped in an elevator and spends all of two hours a day just washing and drying it.
She is reportedly looking to get into the Guinness Book of World Records but she has some way to go. The current record holder for longest documented hair belongs to Xie Qiuping of China. She set the record in 2004, when Guinness adjudicators measured her hair at 18 feet, 5.54 inches. It took her 31 years to grow it that long.


 

Tuesday, November 1, 2016

FG hails USA base Nigerian doctor for a successful surgical feat on an unborn baby in the mother's womb

Abuja, Oct. 31, 2016: The Federal Government of Nigeria has congratulated a US- based Nigerian Surgeon, Oluyinka Olutoye Medical Doctor on his recent feat in carrying out a successful operation on an unborn baby with tumour in her mother's womb.
2. Dr Oluyinka Olutoye and his surgeon partner Dr. Darrell Cass of Texas Children's Hospital, carried out an operation on a foetus at 23 weeks in US.

3. The baby, Lynlee Hope, who suffered from a tumour known as Sacrococcygeal Teratoma was removed from her mother's womb, operated on and returned back. She healed and continued to grow until she was born again at 36 weeks.

4. The Senior Special Assistant to the President on Foreign Affairs and Diaspora, Hon. Abike Dabiri-Erewa, stated this in a statement to felicitate with Dr Olutoye on behalf of the President and people of Nigeria.

5. The statement stated that President Muhammadu Buhari received the news of Dr Olutoye's unique feat with excitement and fulfillment and looking forward to meeting with him soonest.

6. The Senior Special Assistant to the President said that it is important to celebrate Dr Olutoye for the wonderful feat he performed in saving lives and projecting a good image for Nigeria.

7. Dabiri-Erewa therefore commended Nigerians in the Diaspora for their positive roles in enhancing the image of the country.

8. She said Nigerians in the Diaspora are a huge potential, playing greater role in all sectors, assuring that her office was working on having a database for all the Nigeria achievers.

9. ``Nigerians are great people, making greater positive impacts in all fields of human endeavour in the Diaspora. Dr Olutoye's feat is one of such testimonies", the statement added.

10. To complement that, Dabiri-Erewa said that Nigeria is working on a National Diaspora Policy guideline geared towards regulating all engagements with all Nigerians in the Diaspora.

11. According to her, Nigerians in the Diaspora are of high importance to the growth and development of the country.

12. She appealed to other Nigerians in the Diaspora to emulate the positive image Dr Oluyinka Olutoye has given to Nigeria which earned him recognition.

13. Dabiri-Erewa reiterated the determination of President Muhammadu Buhari " to enhance the welfare of all Nigerians at home and in the diaspora, and unadulterated determination to continue to tackle insecurity, corruption and the economy."

14. Dr. Olutoye is Co-Director of the Texas Children's Fetal Center and fetal surgery team member, as well as a general pediatric surgeon in USA.
15. Olutoye received his medical degree from Obafemi Awolowo University in Ile-Ife, Nigeria, in 1988 and his PhD in anatomy from Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond, VA, in 1996.

16. He completed his residency in general surgery at the Medical College of Virginia Hospitals, Virginia Commonwealth University, and his fellowship in pediatric surgery at The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine in Philadelphia, Pa.

17. Dr. Olutoye is a member of the International Fetal Medicine and Surgery Society and is a Fellow of the Surgical Section of the American Academy of Pediatrics and American College of Surgeons; he is also a Fellow of the West African College of Surgeons.

18. Dr. Olutoye has specialized clinical expertise in fetal and neonatal surgery, with specific interest in congenital diaphragmatic hernia and complex wounds.

19. His research interests include understanding the role of the fetal inflammatory response in scarless fetal wound healing, development of animal models of congenital anomalies, in utero correction of severe congenital malformations, and the study of endothelial-leukocyte and endothelial tumor cell interactions with a goal to better understand the mechanisms of tumor metastasis.

Hon. Abike Dabiri-Erewa

Senior Special Assistant to the President on Foreign Affairs and Diaspora