Saturday, January 7, 2017

Baby shunned by neighbours who called him 'giant head' after his skull ballooned to incredible 96cm

The seven-month-old boy is believed to have had the world's largest head after he suffered from a condition known as hydrocephalus

Little Mrityunjay's neighbours dubbed him 'ghost baby' (Photo: Newslions/exclusivepix media)
Doctors have successfully operated on a seven-month-old boy whose family were shunned after he was diagnosed with what is thought to be the world's largest head.

(Photo: Newslions/exclusivepix media)

Little Mrityunjay's neighbours dubbed him 'ghost baby' and 'giant head' after his skull swelled to a staggering 96cm.

(Photo: Newslions/exclusivepix media)

But doctors have now removed 3.7 liters of fluid from Mrityunjay Das and managed to reduce the size of his head to 70cm in the last month and a half.

Dr Dilip Parida, superintendent of the AIIMS hospital at Bhuwaneshwar, said: "The child was admitted on November 20 with the head containing almost 5.5 liters of fluid.

(Photo: Newslions/exclusivepix media)

"We have removed 3.7 liters of fluid so far by external ventricular drainage.

"Now, the circumference of the head has come down from 96cm to 70cm. The cognitive functions of the child have improved a lot, he is stable and has responded well to the treatment."


Surgeons are now expected to carry our cranoplasty in order to reshape the skull of the boy, who is from Ranpur in Nayagarh district, India.

(Photo: Newslions/exclusivepix media)
(Photo: Newslions/exclusivepix media)

Mrityunjay could not be moved from his bed previously but can now be carried around.

Medical records claim Roona Begum, a Tripura-born girl, had the world's largest head after it swelled to 94cm due to the same medical condition, hydrocephalus, in 2011.


Dr Parida added: "We are checking medical records across the globe to verify if an hydrocephalus existed of an even bigger size."

(Photo: Newslions/exclusivepix media)
Mrityunjay's parents' Kamalesh Das and Kavita said their family had been shunned by neighbours since the boy's birth. Kamalesh, 35, who works in Kolkata, said: "People would call our baby a "ghost" because of his unusual appearance. "As his head reduces to a normal size, the attitude of our neighbours and villagers will change. "They will stop calling him derogatory names like "barka matha" (giant head) or "ghost baby". "Now, I am sure that he will be able to lead a normal life. It wouldn't have been possible without the help of the doctors."

(Photo: Newslions/exclusivepix media)
The treatment, which would usually have cost about £6,000, was provided free of charge thanks to the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), India's premiere hospital where the state provides free treatment to patients.

(Photo: Newslions/exclusivepix media)

Chapecoense Footbal Club Player Neto Chats to Youth Players as Devastated Brazilian Side Presents New Team

The football club lost almost all its senior players when the jet carrying them to the Copa Sudamericana hit a mountain in Colombia. But the Brazilian side has fresh hope for the future as they presented 27 new players signed to replace those tragically killed. Almost all of the team's senior players were lost on doomed LaMia flight 2933, which came down on November 28.

Survivor centre back Helio Neto chats to youth players
Click to watch Video as Neto in clutches advises new team mates

The southern Brazilian club were en route to Medellin to face Atletico Nacional in the final of the Copa Sudamericana when the jet hit a mountain, killing 71 people. Centre back Helio Neto and fullback Alan Ruschel survived, as did reserve goalkeeper Jackson Follmann, who had part of his leg amputated.
71 people were killed in the plane crash
 The southern Brazilian club were en route to Medellin to face Atletico Nacional in the final of the Copa Sudamericana when the jet hit a mountain, killing 71 people.

Neto is on the road to recovery after the horror crash in November


The brave centre back is applauded by his new teammates


 The club has signed 27 new players for the new season while reserving shirt numbers for two of the survivors in the hope they can play again. Neto is also one of the three players who survived that the club expect back on the pitch.


Director of football Rui Costa said all three survivors still had a role to play at the club. Neto attended the presentation on crutches, where he chatted to the youth players who have been called up to the first time in the wake of the tragedy. The players will start their season on January 26 with a home game against Joinville.

Neto was one of five survivors

Neto offers advice to his new teammates
 Chapecoense coach, Vagner Mancini, said: "There is very little time for preparation, very little time to build a team. So that's why we tried and got some of the athletes." Chapecoense's rivals rallied to their aid after the crash, promising to loan them players in order to help them retain their top-tier status. "A lot of people (players) are still coming.

Reserve goalkeeper Jackson Follmann had part of his right leg amputated but expected back at the club in some capacity

We don't have the group settled and we might not get it settled this year," Costa added. The squad will begin pre-season training on Friday, with some junior players joining the new signings and the handful of players who did not travel on the fateful flight to Colombia. The club, who were awarded the Copa Sudamericana and a place in this year's Copa Libertadores, have rejected proposals that would give them immunity from relegation from Brazil's Serie A for three years.
Chapecoense defender Alan Ruschel takes first steps
A memorial for the Chapecoense players who died in November
Culled from mirror.co.uk
      

BREAKING: Pastor Adeboye retires as General Overseer of RCCG, names new G.O

Personnel, as the church Secretary Pastor Adeyokunnu as church Treasurer. Adeboye was born on March 2, 1942, in Ifewara, Osun State.

Pastor Enoch Adeboye


 Pastor Adeboye had his B.Sc. in Mathematics at University of Nigeria Nsukka, and subsequently got his PhD in applied mathematics from the University of Lagos, and worked as a lecturer in Mathematics at the universities of Lagos and Ilorin, before going into full time priesthood in 1984.

After joining the RCCG in 1973, he began working to translate the sermons of its then Pastor and founder, Rev. Josiah Olufemi Akindayomi, from Yoruba into English. In 1981, Adeboye was appointed General Overseer of the church.

 He took over from Papa Akindayomi, who had died the previous year. For three years he performed the role part-time, still lecturing at Ilorin. He finally gave up his university position to preach full-time. The church, which was not well known prior to Adeboye’s ascendance has grown phenomenally, to become Nigeria’s biggest, with branches globally in about 190 countries, including more than 14,000 in Nigeria.

Adeboye has stated that his aim is to put a church within five minutes of every person on Earth. He married Adenike, now 68 in 1967. She was born on 13th July 1948.

Sunday, January 1, 2017

At least 39 killed in Istanbul nightclub attack on New Year Eve, official says


Some rescue team member evacuating victims 

An assailant believed to be dressed as Santa Claus opened fire in an Istanbul nightclub filled with New Year's Eve revelers early Sunday, killing at least 39 and wounding dozens more, authorities said.

The city's governor described the mass shooting as a terror attack, the latest to shake Turkey, and it was not immediately clear whether one attacker or several participated. Gov. Vasip Sahin said the attacker, armed with a long-barreled weapon, killed a policeman and a civilian outside the club before entering and firing on people partying inside. He did not say who may have carried out what he called a "terror attack."

"Unfortunately, (he) rained bullets in a very cruel and merciless way on innocent people who were there to celebrate New Year's and have fun," Sahin told reporters.

The White House issued a statement condemning the attack.

U.S. cities bolster security following Berlin attack
"That such an atrocity could be perpetrated upon innocent revelers, many of whom were celebrating New Year's Eve, underscores the savagery of the attackers. We offer our thoughts and prayers to the families and loved ones of those killed, and a speedy recovery to the wounded," the statement read.

Turkish security forces have been on particularly high alert in the past weeks. On Dec. 20, the Russian ambassador to Turkey was killed while attending an art exhibition.

The Russian diplomat, Andrei Karlov, was shot dead by off-duty Turkish policeman Mevlut Mert Altintas as he was giving a speech in Ankara, the capital. The killer shouted that the murder was in retaliation for Russian involvement in the ongoing conflict in the Syrian city of Aleppo.

Funeral begins for slain Russian ambassador to Turkey
In the latest attack, media reports say the assailant entered the popular Reina nightclub, in Istanbul's Ortakoy district on European side of the Bosphorus River, at 1:45 a.m. local time, eight hours ahead of Eastern Time, dressed in a Santa Claus costume. More than 500 people were inside the club at the time, private NTV television reported.

A New York Times report suggested the possibility of multiple attackers, and no one has been arrested.

Among many tweets posted about the shooting was one from Israel News Online, which included a short, grainy video clip that appeared to show a man wearing a Santa hat clutching what appears to be a weapon.

BREAKING: Shooting attack on the Reina bar, in #Istanbul#Turkey. Up to 20 dead. Still ongoing. 2 terrorists entered the bar in Santa suits pic.twitter.com/qDL62IzSIJ
— Israel News Online (@IsraelNewsOrg) December 31, 2016
Some customers jumped into the waters of the Bosporus to escape.

Footage from the scene outside the Reina nightclub showed at least six ambulances with flashing lights and civilians being escorted out. NTV said police had cordoned off the area and an operation to capture the assailant was ongoing.

“Before I could understand what was happening, my husband fell on top me,” Sinem Uyanik said outside Istanbul’s Sisli Etfal Hospital where she waited to see her husband wounded in the attack. “I had to lift several bodies from top of me before I could get out. It was frightening.”

Her husband was not in serious condition despite sustaining three wounds.

An AP photographer said police cordoned off the area about 2 miles away from the nightclub and reported multiple ambulances passing by.

Paris marks first anniversary of terror attacks with somber moment of silence
Police with riot gear and machine guns backed up with armored vehicles blocked the area close to the nightclub, one of the most popular night spots in Istanbul.

This attack is, of course, a horrible development, but not shocking to many Turks who chose to stay inside this New Year's Eve," Aykan Erdemir, former member of the Turkish Parliament, told CNN. "Turkey is known to host these big parties to celebrate New Year's. But this year most citizens were wary of Islamist attacks, so they chose to celebrate it at home with their friends."

He said the attack seemed similar to what happened at the Bataclan, a Paris concert hall that gunmen attacked in 2015.

"This is an attack on the Western lifestyle. This is an attack on Turkey's secular, urban way of living. And this will simply fuel the ongoing cultural clashes, the ongoing polarization in Turkey," Erdemir said.

Security measures had been heightened in major Turkish cities, with police barring traffic leading up to key squares in Istanbul and the capital Ankara. In Istanbul, 17,000 police officers were put on duty, some camouflaged as Santa Claus and others as street vendors, state news agency Anadolu reported.

Ankara and Istanbul have been targeted by several attacks in 2016 carried out by the Islamic State group or Kurdish rebels, killing more than 180 people.

Contributing: AP reporters Zeynep Bilginsoy in Istanbul and Suzan Fraser in Ankara