During World War II, some Jewish men and women in concentration camps faced sexual violence.


 During World War II, some Jewish men and women in concentration camps faced sexual violence.

 

 


During World War II, some Jewish men and women in concentration camps faced sexual violence, due to wartime discrimination, antisemitism, and genocidal conditions among other reasons This discrimination happened both inside concentration camps run by Adolf Hitler’s Nazi regime and also outside of the camps. 


This sexual violence and discrimination happened not only in Germany but throughout Europe in areas that the Germans occupied during the war. Outside of concentration camps, sexual violence happened in many places, including but not limited to Jewish people's homes, Jewish hiding spaces, in public, and at killing sites.


There were more than 44,000 camps and sites for incarceration which were under the control of the Nazi regime between 1933 and 1945. The origins of the sexual abuse and segregation of Jewish men and women was primarily due to their race. The Nazis used these sites for a variety of reasons such as forced physical and sexual labor from their prisoners. 


There are many accounts from both men and women survivors, but often times there is erasure due to the topic's nature, and stereotypes and stigmas around the experiences. Gender-based violence, sexual violence, and antisemitic viewpoints contributed to the maltreatment and violence against Jewish men and women during the Holocaust.


It was not uncommon for Jewish women in Europe to face heightened sexual violence during wartime efforts. This sexual violence and dehumanization of Jewish people happened due to an abundance of reasons such as the culture of wartime, and misogyny

Outside of concentration camps, sexual violence happened in many places, including.. visit link to continue reading and see more photos.


Tanzanian Lady Buried Alive For 8-months By Boyfriend For Money Ritual

 

 Tanzanian Lady Buried Alive For 8-months By Boyfriend For Money Ritual



Tanzanian Lady Buried Alive For 8-months By Boyfriend For Money Ritual 

A beautiful Tanzania woman who was buried alive by her boyfriend, allegedly for money rituals, has been rescued after eight months.

It was gathered that the once very pretty lady who now looks like a skeleton, was buried alive completely naked, in a deep pit by a man she once loved and fed once in two weeks, before she was rescued by the police after a tip off by his neighbours.





Iranian regime publicly hanged a 31-year-old man for being gay should be a wake-up call for anyone."


 Iranian regime publicly hanged a 31-year-old man for being gay should be a wake-up call for anyone."



"The recent press reports that the Iranian regime publicly hanged a 31-year-old man for being gay should be a wake-up call for anyone."


The most high- profile US ambassador in Europe, Richard Grenell, compared on Saturday the Islamic State's brutality with the execution sprees in the Islamic Republic of Iran.The US ambassador to Germany wrote in the federal republic's largest circulation paper BILD: 


"The recent press reports, first carried by The Jerusalem Post, that the Iranian regime publicly hanged a 31-year-old man for being gay should be a wake-up call for anyone who supports basic human rights. Politicians, the UN, democratic governments, diplomats, and good people everywhere should speak up – and loudly," adding "Iran’s horrific actions are on par with the brutality and savagery regularly demonstrated by ISIS."


Islamic State has engaged in public executions of gay men, including tossing gay men from buildings.Iran's mullah regime and the Islamic State despise the LGBT community and both prescribe capital punishment for gays and lesbians.Advertisement


As of 2016, the LGBT human rights advocacy organization OutRight Action International documented 90 murders carried out by the Islamic State during the period 2014-2016.According to a 2008 British Wikileaks dispatch, the Islamic Republic of Iran executed “between 4,000 and 6,000 gays and lesbians” since the 1979 Islamic revolution in Iran.


Grenell wrote: "This is not the first time the Iranian regime has put a gay man to death with the usual outrageous claims of prostitution, kidnapping, or even pedophilia. And it sadly won’t be the last time they do it either. Barbaric public executions are all too common in a country where consensual homosexual relationships are criminalized and punishable by flogging and death.


 In Iran, where children as young as nine can be sentenced to death, gay teenagers are publicly hanged in order to terrify and intimidate others from coming out."He noted, "Being gay is a death sentence in eight countries and criminalized in 70 more. LGBT status or conduct means arrest, imprisonment, and violence for people who are simply dating or falling in love.


 Governments that are members of the United Nations have an obligation to protect, respect, and uphold the dignity and fundamental freedoms of their people."The Post first reported in the major media about the Iranian regime's public hanging of a 31-year-old man based on the clerical regime's lethal anti-gay law. 


Grenell said in his opinion column: "While a student at Evangel University, a Christian liberal arts college in Missouri, I was taught by biblical scholars that 'all truth is God’s truth, no matter where it is found.' 


The truth for LGBT people is that we were born gay. Enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights is the idea that all of us are born free and equal in dignity and rights. People can disagree philosophically about homosexuality, but no person should ever be subject to criminal penalties because they are gay."He concluded his article noting, "India, Trinidad and Tobago, Angola, and Belize have recently decriminalized consensual same-sex sexual conduct. But there’s still much more work to be done. Reasonable people can help by speaking out when young gay men are publicly hanged in Iran or shot in Chechnya. And government officials must work harder to demand that UN members decriminalize homosexuality."


Public execution Prisoner Liu Tianlong is paraded in front of thousands of spectators who turned up to watch public executions at Chengdu, China on June 23, 2001


 Iranian authorities execute one person every 9 hours in January "the Iranian authorities.


 Iranian authorities execute one person every 9 hours in January

The Iranian authorities hanged 87 people in the month of January 2017, that's one execution every nine hours. 


Iran Human Rights (FEB 3 2017): According to reports compiled by Iran Human Rights, the Iranian authorities hanged 87 people in the month of January 2017, including two juvenile prisoners and six prisoners who were executed in public. 

First black to execute using portable electric chair. The saddest story from-history Willie Mae Bragg


First black to execute using portable electric chair. The saddest story from-history Willie Mae Bragg



Was sentenced to death for murdering a pharmacist in 1939.
On the day of his execution, he was strapped in, and as the current went through him - he went unkilled. His final cries were for the strap to be removed.

After surviving, he then filed a lawsuit claiming he was safe from execution as they had already executed him and that he simply hadn’t died.
It was an ominous case. Most of the executions in 1940’s Mississippi (one of the most racist states in the US) were of black people.
His appeal failed and he was executed the following year by a portable Electric Chair that had been put into use

Roger Godfrin, the only survivor of a massacre during which Nazi troops locked 643 citizens (including 500 women and children) inside a church and set fire to it on June 10, 1944 in Oradour sur Glane, France.


 Roger Godfrin, the only survivor of a massacre during which Nazi troops locked 643 citizens (including 500 women and children) inside a church and set fire to it on June 10, 1944 in Oradour sur Glane, France.



For centuries, what made the medieval village of Oradour special was its succulent freshwater crayfish. A delicacy for lovers of good cuisine, they could be found in the clear, sparkling waters of the River Glane as it ran through the wide pastures of the Limousin region in south-central France.

This was a peaceful, pastoral village whose very name, Oradour, meant 'a place of prayer' in the local Occitan patois.

Until one sunny Saturday afternoon in June 1944 when a regiment from the 'Das Reich' panzer division of the Waffen-SS surrounded it and, in scenes of unimaginable horror, ripped it and its inhabitants apart, leaving nothing but smoking ruins with whole generations wiped out.

What happened to Oradour-sur-Glane that day 77 years ago — in a crime against humanity which can be fairly compared with the Holocaust in terms of its savagery — is graphically revived in a powerful new book, Silent Village, by British historian Robert Pike.

In it, he goes behind the grim statistics and the terrible symbolism of its destruction, taking us back into the lives of the villagers as they went about their everyday business, unaware of the disaster that was about to engulf them.

Here was a group of individuals, each with his or her own story that brought them — unwittingly, innocently, haphazardly — to the wrong place at the wrong time and to their terrible collective fate. Knowing their connections, friendships and rivalries makes their brutal end even more tragic.
Surrounded by farms and hamlets, the village itself was a bustling bourg of some 150 homes, barns and buildings spread out along a partially cobbled street.

Its shops, restaurants and bars were a hive of activity and gossip. Blacksmiths and wheelwrights plied their trade alongside a cottage industry of clog-makers, glove-makers, weavers and dress-makers. The village had its own brass and wind orchestra and regular dances were held in one of the hotels.

Once a month a lively market for animals and produce was held on the champ de foire, the village square, as it had been for the past 400 years.

There were four schools — one for boys, one for girls, one for infants and one for refugees — all thriving, and, at the hub of the village, a church, the Eglise Saint-Martin, dating from the 12th century. The villagers were blessed, living in their own semi-gilded bubble away from the war engulfing much of the rest of France. They had not seen a German uniform on their streets since 1942 when a convoy of soldiers passed fleetingly through.

Indeed, unusually for the area there were no active members of the Maquis, the armed French Resistance, in the village. Oradour was happy to be a politics-free zone: 'What mattered to them,' writes Pike, 'was putting food on the table and a trouble-free existence for their family.'

They typified the generally passive French attitude to their German occupiers. Shutters closed. Eyes shut. Waiting for it all to end.

This, then, was Oradour-sur-Glane on the morning of June 10, 1944. The children were in school, one of their teachers, Odette Couty, taking lessons for the last time before moving away to a new job.
Mechanic Robert Hébras should have been at work in Limoges that day but had been warned to stay away by his boss over a separate altercation his boss had had with a Nazi officer, so was at home, fitting an electric socket for a friend.

Men from nearby farms were making their Saturday trip in to pick up their weekly cigarette ration from the tabac. There was much chat in the bars about the village team's football match tomorrow.

Such was the serendipity of who lived and who died.

It was around two in the afternoon when, out of nowhere, the air was shattered by the roar of engines, as trucks and troop carriers bristling with rifles and machine guns approached Oradour.

Helmeted, heavily armed soldiers fanned out into the fields and set up a cordon around the village, trapping everyone inside. Inhabitants were rounded up at gunpoint or forced from their homes and shepherded to the square.

They were nervous, some in tears, but reassuring each other that this was just a routine identity check or some sort of military exercise. Nothing to worry about.

Mothers pushed babies in their prams. One old man had to be physically supported, having been forced out of his sick bed. Some villagers had been snatched from their workplaces — a baker stood semi-naked in his vest, still covered in flour from the bread he'd been making in his boulangerie.

Then came the schoolchildren, toddlers walking hand-in-hand in a line, their teachers calming them by telling them they were going to have their photograph taken.

In the square, four heavy machine guns awaited them. Soldiers carrying grenades were stacking up firewood. An armoured car arrived with more people picked up in the surrounding fields.They were all left standing in the square for an hour. What was going on? Nobody knew. Nerves began to shred in the afternoon heat.

Then they were divided into two groups — men on the left, ordered to face a wall; women and children on the right, lined up together in a column. Fears grew. There were anguished cries.

As they were marched away to the village church, several women fainted.

Back in the square, the questioning began. Where was the Resistance's arms stash? No one said — because there wasn't one. The mayor was asked to select 50 hostages. He refused on principle.

The 200 men were split into six groups and herded into barns and warehouses in the village. Outside, machine-gun posts were set up.

Again they waited. Half an hour ticked by. Suddenly there was a loud boom from a tank and on this signal — it was clearly a planned operation — the Germans opened fire at random into the buildings.

'Bullets screamed in from everywhere,' Robert Hébras recalled, 'ricocheting off the walls.' Bodies fell under the hail of bullets and piled up.

'The injured were crying out, howling, some calling for their wives and children,' remembered one man. 'The Germans came in and climbed on to the bodies to finish them off with a revolver.'

Another recalled: 'A friend was laid across my chest and his blood was soaking me. I heard the breech of a gun click and then a muffled blow. I felt him shudder, tremble, then nothing more.'

Hébras himself was shot multiple times, but survived. 'The bullets had passed through the others and by the time they reached me they no longer had the power to go in deep.'
Given that the Germans must have been aware that some of their victims were still alive, what came next was even more barbaric.

They hurled straw and wood on to the bodies and set the buildings ablaze. Another survivor recalled the soldiers, drunk on wine and champagne looted from the village bars, laughing as they did so.

In the village church, 250 women and more than 200 children were squashed in and the doors locked behind them. They felt safe enough in God's house. Surely no harm could come to them there?

Farmer's wife Marguerite Rouffanche recalled them all waiting anxiously. Suddenly two soldiers forced their way through, carrying a heavy box, which they left in front of the altar.

She noticed it had lots of white strings hanging out. Several moments later a muffled detonation came from within the box and acrid black smoke began pouring out of it, filling the entire church.

The smoke was asphyxiating, so women and children began screaming and crying for help.

'Everybody was panicking and trying to get clear but there was nowhere to get away. People were climbing over each other, whole families, schoolchildren, mothers carrying babies.'

As the smoke engulfed her, Marguerite forced open the door of the tiny sacristy (the priest's robing room) and hid there with her daughters and baby grandson.

In the nave of the church hundreds lay dead and dying, suffocated by the smoke.

The SS threw open the doors and sprayed bullets in all directions, killing anyone still alive and splintering the plaque to Oradour's 99 1914-18 war dead. Incendiary grenades followed, and the whole place went up in flames.

In the sacristy, Marguerite could only watch dumb-struck as her daughters and grandson fell through the burning floor into an inferno below.
More than half of those people were burnt alive,' Marguerite would later say.

Miraculously she escaped, creeping out of the sacristy under cover of the smoke, climbing a step-ladder to the window behind the altar and throwing herself through it.

'A neighbour, who was a mother of a small baby, followed me through the window but was killed as she did so. She tried to pass her baby to me but I was unable to catch him.'

Badly burned and riddled with bullets, Marguerite somehow managed to get away and hide. When it was all over, she had to be told that, as well as her daughters and grandson, her husband and son were also dead.

No one was spared. People approaching the cordon were shot and killed, including mothers looking for their children. Cyclists just passing through were stopped, lined up and gunned down too.

In one of the blazing barns, Robert Hébras managed to extricate himself from the tangle of bodies on top of him and discovered a door into a walled courtyard. He found himself with three other survivors, all of them badly injured.

They scraped a hole in the wall and ran for any cover they could find while soldiers patrolled the village, executing anyone trying to escape or who had come into the village looking for loved ones.

Systematically they burnt down houses, shops, the schools, the town hall, reducing the village to a smoky, smouldering ruin.

A dark cloud of ash was settling over the surrounding countryside as the Waffen-SS finally packed up and left. A few returned the next day to dig mass graves, burn bodies and properties to erase the village and ensure victims could not be identified.

Slowly a trickle of people came back to the village to find horrors beyond imagination. Everywhere they looked was a personal tragedy, an unbearable loss.
Camille Senon, who had been working in Limoges when the Germans descended on her village, found her father, grandfather, cousin and other relatives dead.

'The sister of my father, her husband, their daughter, had all been massacred, along with many other cousins. The youngest was 12 days old and he had a brother who was three and a sister who was two.'

As for the village itself, 'window sills still had flowers on them. Cooking pots hung in the fireplaces, and coffee pots stood on stoves. But the houses were in ruins. I kept thinking I would surely see a house that was intact, someone alive or a familiar face. But no'.

Maria Démery, desperate to find her sons, struggled through the thick smoke to the boys' school. She found it empty. One of the classrooms was in flames, the tables on fire. Schoolbags and berets belonging to the children were still hung up on the wall.

Nearby, a grieving relative who made his way through the still-burning ruins of the church stumbled on piles of bodies. 'Others, mainly children and half-burnt, were strewn across the nave.'

Inside the scorched confessional box were the bodies of two boys, crouching next to each other, one about 12, the other a little older.

Marie and Jean Hyvernaud came looking for their sons, eight-year-old Marcel and ten-year-old René, who had gone to school that morning but not come home. They found Marcel, laid out on his side.

Jean recalls: 'It was my little one. His mouth was open, he seemed scared. His foot was broken and twisted around. I was still able to give him a kiss.' But of René, there were not even his remains to identify and bury.
Corpses were strewn everywhere. One woman was discovered at the bottom of a well, her body so badly burnt she could barely be identified, along with other bodies that never were. The charred remains of a baby were found in dustbin.

Maria Démery never found her sons. In total, she lost 13 members of her family.

Oradour-sur-Glane has long been a cause célèbre for France, its people hailed not just as victims but martyrs. On that single day, three, sometimes four, generations of families were murdered, whole classes of schoolchildren were wiped out, even babies in prams were slaughtered.

In total 643 villagers died. The Nazi aim had been to erase the community from the map and they very nearly succeeded: only five lived to tell the tale — Marguerite Rouffanche was the only woman. Each survival was a minor miracle.

But the question remains: why Oradour? Why did the SS pick on this particular village?

Despite German claims, there was no evidence ever of Resistance activity in the village. The truth is it was not destroyed as a reprisal for anything its people had done, but as a terrible demonstration to the French people of what to expect if they took up active opposition to German occupation.

If it hadn't been Oradour, it would have been some other unsuspecting community.

Oradour was picked partly because its geography made it easy to surround and contain. But the main reason was that the SS knew the villagers would not fight back.

There were villages not so far away where there indeed was Resistance activity, but the SS did not want to risk a battle. Their destruction of peaceful Oradour was an act not just of evil and malice but also cowardice.

It also backfired. What was supposed to be a warning instead became a rallying cry. Until then, the Resistance had made little headway against the occupiers. Sparked by Oradour and other atrocities around the same time, the fightback began in earnest.
After the war, General Charles de Gaulle decreed the village would not be rebuilt. Instead it would remain as it was left — destroyed houses, rubbled streets, burnt-out cars — and so it is today: a permanent memorial to the 643 dead and a potent and unforgettable symbol of the cruelty of France's Nazi occupiers.


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Woman was abandoned pregnant in a wild jungle! 9 months later she gave birth to something shocking



Woman was abandoned, pregnant in a wild jungle. Nine months later she gave birth to something shocking. Women want to be mothers, but with the love of their lives, somebody who is always with them and supports them through all stages of motherhood and builds together. A family sad is single mothers, because the father disappears and don’t want to be responsible, as she never experienced. True love and care in this world.

That’S what happens, and most women are in fear of this, so they choose not to have babies. Motherhood is a 24 hour per day, job 365 days a year that never ends some women are drawn toward babies and nurturing others are not many women who don’t have a natural proclivity towards child rearing are socialized into seeing motherhood as their highest most important work. Some women for a variety of reasons, don’t have any desire or need for children. There was a circulated photo said that this woman was abandoned in jungle and gave birth there and wait for nine months could be possible. Now we can know what really happened there and how this happened.

Are you having a bad day, no matter how rough your week may be amber Pangborn the woman who gave birth in the wilderness punched some bees and got stung to protect her newborn daughter and accidentally started a forest fire in northern california? Probably had it worse, it’s hard to imagine a worse situation, a california woman who gave birth last month, while she was stranded in a forest for three days after running out of gas in a wooded area with no phone service says her newborn daughter has been put Into the care of children’s services amber pangborn, 35 of paradise said there could be several reasons that butte county children’s services took custody of Marissa, Leanne Williams, Pangborn said both she and the baby tested positive for

methamphetamine after the three-day ordeal in plumas national forest, because she Had taken a small amount while stranded to keep her energy high children’s services first became involved on june 27, when the mother and daughter were rescued from french creek road about 30 miles northeast of Oroville Pangborn told mercury. News pangborn was able to start a signal fire hoping to attract attention. The wildfire was contained to a quarter acre area. They were both taken to oroville hospital and marissa was then transferred to the university of california davis medical center for further evaluation.

They told me the night: i went into the hospital that they were going to call them children’s services because of the nature of me, giving birth to her. In the woods, pangborn told the mercury news. Pangborn also said she had given up the parental rights of her three-year-old daughters while coping with the suicide of her husband. She drank heavily after his death and went to rehab pangborn said she was taken off her antidepressant medication during her pregnancy. She also admitted to taking a pebble-sized amount of methamphetamine after giving birth.

She had been given the drug by a man in exchange for a ride from feather falls, casino to gold country casino, five miles away on june 24th, i had lost so much blood. I was pretty weak, pang born said, adding that she hoped the drug would give her energy to keep going. Pangborn had gotten lost after feeling, labor pains, while attempting to return to feather falls casino. That evening she originally told reporters that she was heading to her parents, home after going into labor the following day. She gave birth to her baby daughter.

She thought her car was the only safe place. It was very scary, pangborn told mercury news. I was really concerned about us surviving. I thought we were going to die out there, while in the wilderness she faced bees and mosquitoes and survived on only four apples and a small amount of water following their rescue. Traces of methamphetamine were transferred to marissa via breast milk.

Marissa is currently in a foster home and pang born is allowed to visit four times a week for an hour each time the baby has gained a pound and a half since the rescue going from five pounds to six and a half pounds in the last four weeks pang born doesn’t consider herself to be a risk to her daughter and said the whole experience has been devastating and depressing shelby boston, an assistant director at the butte county department of employment and social services, said the agency works with local and out of area hospitals When staff report possible child abuse or neglect, she said, an immediate report can be done if drug use is suspected or if a newborn test positive for drugs. If it’s decided, a child cannot be returned to his or her parent officials.

Look for relatives or extended family to care for the child. Pangborn said that she and marissa’s father who she tried to maintain a relationship with, but was unsuccessful, are willing to give custody to Pangborn’s father marissa’s father is currently in butte county jail waiting for a sentencing. Hearing for felony identity theft – i just know i want to have my daughter home and have some normalcy and stability and be a regular functioning member of society.

Again pangborn told mercury news. Her family has a jurisdictional hearing next week. Pangborne said with her last experience with children’s services was intrusive and that, while she originally agreed to have her three oldest daughters, adopted by a family friend, she later tried to appeal without success. If, however, you had heard pangborn’s story in a movie, you would scoff at the filmmakers for stretching our suspension of disbelief just a little too far. In fact, the improbably terrible luck, combined with the happy ending, are reminiscent of nothing so much as a children’s book.

Allah. Alexander and the terrible horribly, no good, very bad day, that’s why i’ve adapted her tale into a short children’s book of my own. I present for the internet’s consideration: mommy just can’t catch a break marissa and her mommy are on a road trip to visit their grandparents. They have to drive through the forest first, oh no, the car ran out of gas before they got there now. Mommy keeps saying words, marissa doesn’t know her mother said that after the trail, the new mom or her family couldn’t immediately be reached for comment.

Pangborn’S, mother, diana williams, told kcra station her daughter and granddaughter are doing fine, i’m elated and the baby’s beautiful said williams, adding of her daughter’s actions. I’M glad that she’s a smart kid she’ll always be smart praise, god for being with this woman and her baby through those incredibly difficult days. Their survival is nothing short of a miracle, while this baby was born on a hospital hallway. That was really incredible. If you want to start your weekend countdown off with a remarkable and life-affirming story, i’ve got you covered if you’re cool, with graphic photos of child labor, you’ll likely be just as blown away as i was by the images of a mother in kansas, jess hogan, delivering Her baby in a hospital hallway just moments after hogan arrived at the er at via christie hospital.

Her baby was crowning and ready to arrive, but as you’ll see it was she and her husband travis, who were truly responsible for the successful delivery of the child. The birth photographer tammy karen documented the incredible process, as you might imagine, it appears. The whole thing happened very quickly. All happened quickly. Women’S health reports that on july 23, 2017 hogan was at home experiencing normal contractions that shifted suddenly to more intense pains, pains that she knew indicated.

The baby was on its way her water broke, just as she was getting out of her bed. Hogan and her husband rushed to the hospital at 3 a.m and in route she contacted karen, who arrived in time to capture the entire thing on film and video hogan. Had to begin disrobing as they walked down the hall as she could feel the baby’s head, she reported delivered her baby within minutes of being inside the hospital, while karen did try to alert the nurses who eventually came to help her husband, travis, facilitated and caught the Baby during the last push hogan said in her birth video that travis did so with no hesitation. Maxwell alexander was welcomed into the world by his parents right there on the tile floor of via christie hospital photos before, during and after the birth show, all aspects of the delivery hogan was deeply thankful to her birth photographer for both her artistic presence and her help.

In assisting the birth, as well as the nurses at the hospital, and although young max is the couple’s first boy, hogan and travis are already parents to five daughters. According to women’s health, the girls were thrilled to meet their new brother, most especially their two-year-old. Who would simply not let go of max hogan said in her birth video? Like me, you might be wondering just how common experiencing a sudden sort of diy birth, like this really is, according to the online resource baby center, while it’s pretty rare to experience an emergency birth, meaning a birth that happens with no prolonged labor symptoms, or only intermittent

Contractions they do happen according to a 2010 report from the centers for disease control and prevention, which cited results of a 2006 survey about 17 percent of home births were unplanned, generally labor takes a few hours or longer. This appears to be especially unlikely for first births, but if you’ve experienced fast births with previous children, it’s important to maintain awareness of signs of labor and act on them quickly, as they can happen just as jess hogan and her husband did according to what to expect Dot com signs that indicate the birth is happening include strong contractions that are about three or four minutes apart water breaking and a strong urge to push parents.

om reports that one way to ensure safety in the event of a sudden birth, especially if you’re not able to Make it to a hospital or clinic in a mad dash is to immediately call 9-1-1 make sure the mother is comfortable and in a clean space, and that you have plenty of towels and blankets. Additionally, what to expect dot com says it’s important to leave the cord and placenta attached and elevated above the level of the baby until the emts arrive, especially if the baby has not yet started to breathe on its own, oh yeah, and try to stay calm as Possible throughout all of this majority greenfield md author of the working woman’s pregnancy book, also told parents.com

that when things go quickly, everything is usually fine, even though it seems scary and in jess hogan’s case. It definitely was congrats to the happy couple and welcome to the world baby maxwell to protect her child, no matter what to not allow anyone or anything to hurt her child mentally or physically. So many single women hook up with men and later find that he has hurt that child a child needs total protection and if you’re a mother, you must look after that little one, the very best way possible.

Once you have a child. It’S not, then about you. Your duty is to love the child with all you have to feed well and to make sure that the child has the right clothes and shoes is warm in winter and cool in summer has the correct medical health care and dental care has friends of the same Age and that you watch your child from anyone or thing that could do harm to the child, make sure the child has the right amount of education and that, once in school, they are with nice people not bullies, thanks for reading.


Iraqi PM orders ‘immediate’ execution of all ‘terrorists condemned to death’


 Iraqi PM orders ‘immediate’ execution of all ‘terrorists condemned to death’

Iraqi PM orders ‘immediate’ execution of all ‘terrorists condemned to death’

A handout picture released by the Iraqi Justice Ministry on Friday shows alleged ISIS fighters ahead of their execution. 

Iraq’s Prime Minister Haider Al-Abadi has called for the “immediate” execution of all convicted “terrorists” on death row after the bodies of eight members of the country’s security forces thought to have killed by ISIS were found earlier this week.
Abadi ordered “the immediate implementation of the fair punishment of terrorists condemned to death whose sentences have passed the decisive stage,” his office said in a statement Thursday.
Hundreds of prisoners have been sentenced to death by Iraqi courts since Mosul and the surrounding area were reclaimed from ISIS, Reuters reported in April.
“The statistics coming from the criminal courts show that 815 people have gone on trial and that 212 were sentenced to death. A further 150 were sentenced to life in prison,” Judge Abdul-Sattar al-Birqdar, a judiciary spokesman, told the news agency at the time.
“The vast majority of these rulings were against elements of the Islamic State terrorist organisation who were proven to have committed crimes, and came after public trials conducted in accordance with the law. Defendants were afforded their rights,” Birqdar said.
Following the Prime Minister’s directive, Iraqi officials executed a dozen ISIS members on Thursday, the statement from Abadi’s office added.
“Based on the direction of Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi, executions were carried out on Thursday on 12 convicted terrorists who have received final verdicts,” the statement read.


Iraqis carry the coffin of a victim who was kidnapped and then executed by Islamic state group in Karbala city, southern Iraq on Thursday. 

FURQAN AL-AARAJI/EPA-EFE

The executions came a day after the bodies of eight Iraqi security forces believed to have been killed by ISIS fighters were found on Wednesday.
Amaq, the terror group’s media wing, released a short video Saturday showing six men being held hostage by gunmen, and demanded the release of ISIS female prisoners and leaders from Iraqi jails. In a separate Amaq statement ISIS said they were holding eight men hostage.
The militants in the video gave the Iraqi government a three-day deadline to release the ISIS prisoners and threatened to kill the hostages if their demands were not met.
The killings sparked anger among ordinary Iraqi people, who blamed the government for failing to act quickly.
Abadi visited the headquarters of the Joint Operations Command on Thursday, where he promised swift revenge for the killings.
“This is a very important meeting, first of all we give our condolences to the families of the victims and we give another promise today that we will arrest or kill them, this is a promise ” Abadi said.
The Iraqi PM said early forensic reports indicated the hostages had been killed nearly a week ago, suggesting ISIS lied about the three-day deadline.
ISIS militant groups are still capable of carrying attacks against Iraqi forces and civilians even though Abadi officially declared full liberation of Iraq from ISIS back in December.

Why the West might welcome Abadi’s mighty message: Analysis by Nick Paton Walsh

The tit-for-tat nature of these killings – even though a state executing convicted terrorists can’t be equivocated with terrorists murdering hostages – is an uncomfortable reminder of how the sectarian Sunni-Shia loathing at the heart of the rise of ISIS hasn’t disappeared along with the terror group’s physical “Caliphate.” The Iraqi government’s security force has a strong Shia element to it and ISIS has always been the ugly voice of disenfranchised Iraqi Sunnis.
Iraq has managed to steer itself reasonably carefully away from an exclusively sectarian outcome to the fight against ISIS. Abadi has clung to the idea of calming sectarian tensions as the best tool to defeat the radicals of ISIS, and looks set to retain power with the help of a powerful Shia – yet Iraqi nationalist – cleric Muqtada al Sadr.

    

was listening to the whispers of the Lusaka wind


 was listening to the whispers of the Lusaka wind

was listening to the whispers of the Lusaka wind and the gentle pounding of the rain against the window. My mind was



 tormented by the ongoing global social-economic and emotional turmoil caused by the COVID19 pandemic that has entered a second wave, leaving a trail of viral destruction in its wake. It feels as if a giant python has gotten hold of greedy mother earth and is slowly crushing and suffocating it before swallowing it whole. The CNN analysts on TV were having a heated debate about Donald Trump and his handling of the electoral loss. It was a shrill monotonous cacophony that sounded like the yodeling yelp of the African fish eagle. I have never quite understood the outgoing US President, whenever he is on TV I get distracted by his well-coiffed mop of hair, strange hand gestures and my imagination of a giant wall across the Mexican border.

The ghosts of Africa's past are always close by, gnawing my soul. Africa has bled throughout its rich history. The fertile and mineral rich soil is drenched with blood, sweat and sorrow. Lost and restless souls are lurking in the shadows, yearning to have their stories told correctly, trying to find their way home across the mighty rivers and valleys so that they can finally rest in peace.

Sara ‘Saartjie’ Baartman (whose Khoisan name was Ssehura) speaks to my conscience. Her story is widely documented by scholars with some slight variations in their accounts. But I wonder, is she resting in peace? According to the South African History Online (SAHO), “Sara ‘Saartjie’ Baartman was born around 1789 at the Gamtoos river in what is now known as the Eastern Cape. She belonged to the cattle-herding Gonaquasub group of the Khoikhoi. Sara grew up on a colonial farm where her family most probably worked as servants. Her mother died when she was two years old and her father, who was a cattle driver, died when she reached adolescence.”

SAHO continues to say that, "Sara married a Khoikhoi man who was a drummer and they had one child together who died shortly after birth. Due to colonial expansion, the Dutch came into conflict with the Khoikhoi. As a result people were gradually absorbed into the labour system. When she was sixteen years old Sara's fiancé was murdered by Dutch colonists. Soon after, she was sold into slavery to a trader named Pieter Willem Cezar, who took her to Cape Town where she became a domestic servant to his brother. It was during this time that she was given the name 'Saartjie', a Dutch diminutive for Sara."

Mere words cannot encapsulate the emotions, the fear, the tears and the hardship that she went through. I wish I could reach back in time and give her a hug and tell her everything will be alright in the end. Historical accounts of her life are cold and devoid of empathy. Her whole life seems knitted together by death, pain and loss, but in some moments I am sure she smiled, laughed, loved, wished, hoped, prayed and dreamt like any other normal human being

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