Friday, February fourteenth, the UN says at least 22 people have been killed in a village in the Northwest region of Cameroon. Over half of those killed were children. No one has claimed responsibility for Friday’s incident but the opposition parties blame the killing on the government.
Woman bittenrm by a shark showed up to the hospital with the shark
- Get link
- Other Apps
The unidentified 23-year-old woman was in stable condition at Boca Regional
Hospital, Fire-Rescue Spokesman Bob Lemons told The Palm Beach Post.
A bystander on the beach killed the 2-foot nurse shark,
but when she was admitted, the 23-year-old woman still had the toothy fish
lodged in her arm.
The Boca Raton Regional Hospital operator told the
Associated Press that the woman had been treated and was in the process of
being released Sunday afternoon.
Nurse sharks are rarely unprovoked threats to humans,
according to the National Parks Service. The fish have razor-sharp teeth and
will often latch on to humans they bite for several minutes before letting go.
Because of the size of their teeth, however, nurse sharks do not generally penetrate
deeply into an individual’s flesh.
Popular posts from this blog
Entrance design of "Church Of Luminants" in USA
UN says at least 22 people including children killed in Cameroon's English-speaking region
Cameroonian scammer arrested in Montreal (canada
The Sûreté du Québec announced Wednesday the arrest of an alleged fraudster specialist of a scenario called "Black money scam", in which victims are invited to participate in the cleaning of soiled banknotes, then are robbed during the operation. Cyrille Ngogang, 49 years old, was caught red-handed in downtown Montreal Tuesday afternoon. He appeared in court this morning to be charged with fraud and breach of commitment. The man is not in his first trouble with the law: he was previously arrested by the SQ on 19 January for charges related to the same scheme, and had been able to resume its freedom under strict conditions pending his trial. There are several variants of the 'Black money' scenario, but all involve a so-called batch of cash that has been stained with a dye or colouring substance. Scammers ask their victim to provide money to clean the hoard.
Comments
Post a Comment