We have the address for the funeral home & the family on file If you're not happy with your card we'll send a replacement or refund your money Goldfinch Funeral Home is committed to the safety of the families we serve \u003ca href=\"/coronavirus-notice/\"\u003eRead More\u003c/a\u003e Sequoia Marie Sume, born March 31, 1945 passed away peacefully on November 27, 2019, in her home surrounded by loved ones. Bunny, as she was affectionately known, lived her life with love and dignity, just as she bravely fought her battle with... View Obituary & Service Information The family of Sequoia Marie Sume created this Life Tributes page to make it easy to share your memories Made with love by funeralOne LAKE WORTH BEACH — Max Sume brought his gun when he and his longtime friend Jimmy Ovilmar went to a party Friday night in Lake Worth Beach he told Palm Beach County Sheriff's deputies When one or more people attacked him, Sume said, he fired blindly — and killed his friend Now the Boynton Beach man is charged with manslaughter 42, blurted out to deputies arriving just after midnight at a home on the 600 block of South F Street according to an arrest report released Monday Deputies found Ovilmar, 33, shot in the chest. He was taken to St. Mary's Medical Center in West Palm Beach where he was pronounced dead at about 1:20 a.m the report said, they found Sume in the passenger seat in the car which was registered to one of Ovilmar's brothers "Deputies asked Sume if he was hurt or needed medical help," the report said "Sume continued to shake his head in disbelief." More: Coronavirus: Palm Beach County jury trials face 'difficult' path as courts adapt to pandemic The report said Sume climbed out of the car and started walking away Deputies asked him what happened and he said Deputies found Sumes' gun in his waistband Sume told deputies he and Ovilmar had been friends for a dozen years Ovilmar's brother said he believed it had been longer than that Ovilmar came to his Boynton Beach home to alert him about a party Sume said he did not want to go because he thought the neighborhood along Sixth Avenue South one-half mile from downtown The report does not describe the gun except to say it was a Smith & Wesson More: Did the crime warrant a gunshot? Loxahatchee death to test 'stand-your ground' defense Sume said the two spent an hour or two at the party without incident a man he didn't know began cursing him and calling him names figuring he was jealous because Sume was surrounded by three women and several other people he felt his hoodie being pulled from behind and he was punched in the face and dragged to the floor he pulled his gun and "blindly and negligently" fired two shots behind him without looking It said Sume told deputies he heard yelling turned around and saw that Ovilmar had been struck He said he tried to help Ovilmar until paramedics arrived told The Palm Beach Post on Monday the family did not want to comment Actionn Ovilmar told The Post on Monday that Jimmy one of eight brothers, had told him he'd left New York because it wasn't safe More: 'Peace summit' fails to stop Delray Beach city commissioners from sniping at each other Actionn said Jimmy had been working at a restaurant in New York, but lost his job to the coronavirus shutdown He said Jimmy came to South Florida and was staying with him in West Palm Beach He said Jimmy left a 7-month-old daughter back in New York Actionn said he believed Sume worked at a senior-living home Circuit Judge Lisa Small on Sunday ordered that Sume be held without bail EK@pbpost.com @eliotkpbp South Africa (04 October 2024) – A big bright and welcoming state-of-the-art educational centre was unveiled at Charles Duna Primary School in the heart of New Brighton township recently many proposals and countless hours toiled by university architecture students an innovative space designed to inspire learning and growth the centre is a result of the tireless efforts and contributions of Ezethu Development Trust education department officials and other stakeholders were present to witness the momentous occasion According to the Masinyusane Development Organization the centre is named after the recently retired principal Miss Sume in recognition of her invaluable contributions to the school The centre boasts a ratio of one teacher to six children and will offer intensive individual attention through lots of play the Sume Centre promises to ignite the spark of curiosity and creativity in young minds Comment * document.getElementById("comment").setAttribute( "id" "a0e4fb5507e7e64563a23b23cb6e5953" );document.getElementById("d2d9e305b5").setAttribute( "id" and website in this browser for the next time I comment Would you like to receive truly phenomenal inspirational and good thing stories right to your inbox Then subscribe to our weekly GoodThingsGuy newsletter today I accept GTG’s Privacy Policy GoodThingsGuy is the home of everything good and those are the things that really matter We believe that there is good news all around us and over 1 million readers a month agree with us GoodThingsGuy was officially launched on the 1 August 2015 in order to only promote good news inspirational stories and promote only positive multi-platform media company that distills unique content across multiple media platforms We consider individual and corporate contributions through the website or mail us directly here. Be sure you have your GPS enabled and try again the Gates Foundation is making its largest single contribution to fight the pandemic—$250 million It’s been roughly a year since COVID-19 first appeared The rationale has to do with where the public health effort is at the end of 2020 the work of ending the pandemic was confined to a relatively small domain: Labs and clinical trials That’s where researchers were developing new drugs public health experts were doing hero’s work setting up field hospitals; treating and testing patients; securing supplies of oxygen and existing drugs like dexamethasone But no one thought those efforts were sustainable or that they’d neutralize the threat of COVID-19 They were aimed at suppressing the virus’ spread until researchers succeeded in developing medical solution to the disease three vaccine candidates have emerged from the trials with high efficacy rates: Pfizer’s Two antibody treatments have been authorized for emergency use The world now has much of the science it needs to end this pandemic and as regulators start to put their stamp of approval on it the field of action is widening beyond the lab It’s expanding to the factories that will make the drugs and refrigerator trucks that will deliver them; to the clinics and health workers that will sit at the end of the supply chain and administer them to patients The planet is about to be crisscrossed by a massive anti-covid manufacturing and delivery network The world’s richest nations have pre-purchased enough vaccine supply to cover their populations; some will be able to cover everybody two or three times over But the situation is very different for the majority of human beings that live in low- and middle-income nations which include everywhere from South Sudan to Peru the supply chain hasn’t started to hum Few deals have been cut with pharmaceutical companies and the forecasts for vaccine supply are low these countries will only be able to cover 20% of their people at most according to our foundation’s projections Fair access to vaccines is part of our origin story One of Bill and Melinda’s first big philanthropic acts was to help create Gavi the organization that works with low-income countries to immunize hundreds of millions of kids Part of today’s $250 million commitment will go towards funding a similar delivery operation for COVID-19 drugs and vaccines It’s also important to point out that there is not a hard break between the scientific phase of the fighting the pandemic and this new R&D funding will still be needed for new drugs in part because some of these initial ones aren’t ideally suited for low-income nations which will be very difficult when transporting it to very rural areas Our foundation will keep funding innovation How is our money actually transformed into new COVID-19 drugs The Gates Foundation employs many talented people but none of them are the researchers running the clinical trials or the health workers who will administer the shot of vaccine into a patient’s arm a good example of how we worked was with the Africa CDC only two countries in sub-Saharan Africa had the lab facilities to test for COVID-19—Senegal and South Africa But our foundation was able to release some emergency funding; it helped the countries build up the capacity of their labs and procure diagnostic kits while the ACDC set up a training program for public health officials in the region more than 40 African countries had the ability to test for COVID-19 Today, the big effort to manufacture and deliver these supplies is the ACT-Accelerator which is operated by organizations like the WHO they’ve specialized in the task of procuring drugs They also work with lower-income countries to transport them to health centers These groups are the ones leading this work while our foundation assists with expertise and funding we cannot even be their main source of funding It’s hard to give a sense of scale of the public health effort needed to end the pandemic The closest analogue might be India’s campaign to vaccinate 400 million kids with the measles-rubella vaccine the world must cover almost 18x the population—and do it in hopefully half the time The ACT-Accelerator estimates that it needs another $28 billion next year National governments are the only institutions with that kind of budget Against the $28 billion that the Accelerator needs that’s a jaw-dropping return on investment: 446% The world should feel hopeful that we’ve reached this point Even though we’re entering a costlier phase it’s one we can be more confident about It was never a given that researchers would develop safe and effective COVID-19 vaccines so quickly The world’s experts doubted it could be done by the end of 2020 The work ahead isn’t the same in this respect Thanks to groups like Gavi and the Global Fund the world has known how to deliver vaccines and other supplies around the world for a long time 2020 was a year that saw COVID-19 on the march We can be confident that 2021 will play out in the opposite way But how fast will “better” happen The shape of our recovery—whether it looks like a “V” or “U” or a line that drags far too low far too long—depends on how generous and committed world leaders are to this principle: That everywhere deserves to benefit from the science developed in 2020 Legit.ng Hausa ta bude tasha a manhajar Whatsapp. Kasance tare da mu don samun rahotanni da dumi-dumi! kwararren edita ne a Legit Hausa da ya shafe tsawon shekaru yana kawo muku rahotannin siyasa Abuja - Wasu daga cikin ƙanann yaran da ƴan sanda suka cafke lokacin zanga-zangar yunwa sun sume a gaban Alkalin babbar kotun tarayya mai zama a Abuja Rahotanni sun nuna cewa lamarin ya afku ne a lokacin da ƴan sanda suka kawo waɗanda ake tuhumar gaban Mai Shari'a Obiora Egwuatu. Kara karanta wannan Pantami da mutane sun fusata da maka kananan yara a Kotu saboda zanga zanga Tashar Channels tv ta ce yaran da jami'an tsaron suka kama su 75 ba su wuce shekara 12 zuwa 15 ba kuma ana zarginsu da ta'addanci da yunkurin kifar da gwamnati da sunan zanga-zanga LURA: Shin kana son bamu labari da tattaunawa da marubutanmu Jami'an tsaro sun kama su ne ranar 3 ga watan Agusta, 2024 kuma tun wannan lokaci su na tsare a hannun ƴan sanda. Ana zargin dai su na daga cikin waɗanda suka shiga zanga-zangar yunwa, inda suka rika rera waƙoƙin adawa da gwamnati da ɗaga tutar Rasha a jihar Kano. Ɗaya daga cikin lauyoyin waɗanda ake kara, Marshall Abubakar ya ce an gurfanar da yaran kashi biyu; kashi na farko su 76 da kashi na biyu su 49. Bayan an kira na farko, sun taso da nufin zuwa wurin da aka warewa waɗanda ake tuhuma, kwatsam wasu daga cikinsu akalla yara biyar suka faɗi ƙasa sumammu. Kara karanta wannan Muguntar T pain: Atiku ya caccaki gwamnatin Tinubu kan kai yara kotu Lamarin dai ya haifar da ruɗani da tashin hankali a kotun, wanda ya sa alkali ya sanar da ɗage zaman nan take Tuni dai aka kira malaman lafiya na asibitin kotun domin su duba waɗanda suka yanke jiki suka faɗi Marshall Abubakar ya ce abin da ya faru alama ce ta yunwa da rashin lafiya inda ya ce kusan dukkannsu yara ne da ba su wuce shekara 12 ba A wani rahoton, kun ji cewa masu zanga-zanga sun mamaye Lekki Toll Gate da ke Legas domin tunawa da ranar da aka yi zanga-zangar EndSARS karo na hudu. Kara karanta wannan Zanga zanga: Amnesty ta bukaci Tinubu ya gaggauta sakin yaran da aka kai kotu An ce sun yi taron ne domin sake nuna takaicin su kan zaluncin ‘yan sanda da kuma kashe matasan da aka yi shekaru hudu baya babban edita a sashen Hausa na Legit ya duba labarin The last time I spoke with Steve Bousquet was in February just prior to his annual Ice Fishing Derby at the Thompson Rod and Gun Club It was pretty clear that Bousquet was not himself then He spoke in an abnormally raspy voice and his answers were short Although you could tell he was not feeling well little did I expect to be writing this just about three months later Bousquet was the kind of man that you grew quickly to rely upon but for solid insight on a wide range of issues If there was something that you wanted to move forward and it needed help in the fundraising department but he was ready to help raise the money if he believed the cause was just Instead of listing the multitude of awards he earned or his high school athletics accomplishments much of which has already been well-documented there was talk of either ending or revitalizing the Killingly-Brooklyn Springtime Festival I was one of those pushing for the event to grow in size and importance (I was in the minority Bousquet and I sat down several times discussing a golf component to the New Springtime Festival He started the Steve Bousquet’s Appliances and TV tournament that eventually became the Day Kimball Hospital tournament (a fundraiser for the hospital still played to this day) a Northeastern Connecticut golf championship how we would have volunteer marshals out with the groups keeping score to keep it accurate and fair We felt that was necessary because actual cash prizes would be awarded to the field in descending order different flights may not have been necessary and you would have to qualify to play in this multi-round event We didn’t discuss a charitable component to the proceedings there would likely have been money available for that it’s one of the few things Bousquet discussed that never got off the ground maybe this idea could fly as the Steve Bousquet Memorial Golf Championship with the charitable component being a scholarship fund available for students throughout Northeastern Connecticut unlike the all-too-common ABCD scramble events It would be a fitting tribute to a man who loved and gave so much to the area he called home The Norwich Sports Hall of Fame will honor eight new inductees June 12 at its annual Awards Night Banquet but they will not be the only people recognized The Hall of Fame will name Anthony Facchini as the Sports Person of the Year The senior at Norwich Free Academy was one of the captains of the Wildcats football team which completed an undefeated regular season with a win over New London on Thanksgiving NFA went on to win a Class LL quarterfinal game before being ousted in the state semifinals Facchini was named an All-Eastern Connecticut Conference performer and was an All-Bulletin selection in both football and indoor track where he finished second individually in Class LL in the shot put and long jump Facchini will continue his football career at Central Connecticut State University The Hall of Fame will also present Todd Guertin with the Joseph Kapteina Service Award Guertin has been involved with the Norwich Police Athletic League since 1993 when he coached basketball He was elected league director and executive board member in 2000 and has served as the president since 2004 Guertin is also an associate board member with Norwich Youth Lacrosse and has served as a coach for Norwich Recreation basketball and the Norwich Youth Soccer Club Marie Bianca Saint Sume and Brian Duggan will be announced as the recipients of the Peter Doroshevich-William Lubszewicz scholarships Saint Sume is a Norwich Tech volleyball and basketball player She was the captain of the Constitution State Conference Eastern Division co-champion and CSC tournament runner-up volleyball team She also played varsity basketball for two years receiving the Most Improved award as a freshman Duggan was a four-year football player and wrestler at NFA and has played lacrosse for the last three years Jonathan Gruber and Chris Portelance into its ranks which will be held at the Holiday Inn on 10 Laura Blvd contact Sarah Jane Shearer at (860) 642-6294 The annual Killingly High School Project Graduation golf tournament was held May 14 at the Harrisville Golf Course in Woodstock which raised $2,000 for project graduation Killingly High School will use the money to sponsor an all-night get-together for its graduating class following graduation The students are taken to an undisclosed location where they spend their final night together as a group involved in fun and safe activities Twenty-nine sponsors helped with the event which included a luncheon at the CountryView Restaurant in Brooklyn following the 18 holes of golf that was played The foursome of Mike and Pam Hill and Christine and Rob Gosselin won the tournament with a nine-under par total Dan Fitzgerald and Steve Gilbert finished as runners-up at seven-under par If you have results from a golf tournament that you would like to see in the column this summer email them to me at mallard@norwichbulletin.com but the Woodstock Memorial Day Road Race continues on May 30 on the Commons outside of Woodstock Academy who got the 10K (6.2-mile) road race off the ground and ran it for its first 30 years That left the task of running it to the Woodstock Recreation Commission and its part-time director “It’s been a little rough,” Fitzpatrick said of the transition N.M.) has been in touch by email but all the volunteers who used to work the race are not coming back either Fitzpatrick said she is slowly gathering a new core group who will provide help during the actual race including Angela Missino and Recreation Commission chairperson Laura Burke Fitzpatrick said 65 runners have pre-registered for the holiday event which has traditionally had a strong walk-up registration runners wait to see what the weather will bring The cost to enter is $15 and you can register on race day between 7:30 and 8:30 a.m T-shirts will be given to the first 150 registrants The race is being dedicated to Doug Zimmerman a Woodstock resident who ran many Memorial Day races just days after suffering a heart attack while running Charles Fenick will also be honored at the starting line The 70-year-old runner from Niantic has run in every Woodstock race since its inception “We want to keep it going,” Fitzpatrick said even though we’re the second largest town in Connecticut (area-wise) Sports editor Marc Allard’s column appears every Sunday He can be reached at mallard@norwichbulletin.com or (860) 425-4212 broadly considered to be the nation’s very first rock band Greenland was still a colony of the Danish Empire where locals had grappled with the cultural suppression typical of such occupations for two and a half centuries a group of young Greenlandic musicians gathered under the name Sumé the name posed a challenge to the establishment and indicated the band’s revolutionist standpoint proudly adorned their vibrations with themes of identity the jaw-dropping beauty of the Greenlandic landscape As proud nationalists seeking independence a language that had long been suppressed in favour of Danish Sumé tapped into contemporary American rock styles with a globally resonant blend of rock As the voice of an unsettled and ambitious youth the band began to force an effective oar into Greenland’s concurrent mire of political upheaval With American and British rock music as a template Sumé wrote pertinent messages of freedom in their national tongue After securing a deal with the label Danish Demos which translates to “Where to?” The record was purchased by 20% of the Greenlandic population corralling impetus for the cultural independence movement The debut album’s cover art recreated a 19th-century woodcut by Aron of Kangeq depicting an Inuit hunter killing a Norseman by tearing him limb from limb boasted one of the band’s most overtly persuasive lyrics which translates as: “It is time to live again as Inuit and not as Westerners” Two years after Sumé’s initial disbandment Greenland was granted independence as the Danish government green-lit home rule who descended from the Thule people of prehistoric North America and later Norse settlers but Denmark retained control in several major factions Sumé have periodically reunited for live performances and released a fourth album a majority of the Greenlandic population strove for a higher degree of autonomy even at the cost of economically beneficial trade links the Greenlandic self-government referendum turned out a 75% vote in favour of independence The vote allowed the local population to assume complete control of law enforcement the 300th anniversary of Danish colonial rule as a date for potential independence; however the pursuit of all-out independence remains unsated A 2019 poll found that 67.8% of Greenlanders still support independence from Denmark While it’s uncertain whether this majority will attain their wish for full autonomy Sumé’s role in redefining Greenlandic culture and soundtracking several essential steps in the challenge to Danish rule will never be forgotten Watch the trailer for Sumé: The Sound of a Revolution isn't much more than a two-hour drive from Palm Springs if you are one who believes the early bird catches the worm and whatnot But if you're one who prefers to sip some coffee read the news or watch a little television—that is take your time getting out the door as I did—the majority of daylight will be spent traveling south of the border My companions and I arrived in Mexicali just as the sun began to set Our three-day excursion was designed to coincide with a brand new craft beer festival What follows is a glimpse at a burgeoning beer scene that is riding the coattails of breakthrough legislation a trip to Mexicali is for the culture hound and the adventuresome enthusiast And sometimes for making friends you'll never forget Just over the boarder from Calexico is a place where cultures collide Unlike Baja California Sur to the southwest where tradition prevails Its cities are natural culture sponges with so many traveling back and forth into and out of California the city of Mexicali is a safe place to visit "Mexicali is one of the safest border cities in the whole country," said Mexicali Tourism Director Omar Dipp Nuñez when we caught up toward the end of my trip But people have their own opinions and despite statistics one of the growing fears of traveling south is the drug cartels the "drug trade" in Mexicali centers mainly around aging boomers seeking lower-cost prescriptions Along with a small club scene (best suited to the college crowd) and abundant options for Chinese cuisine (the city is home to a century-old Chinese community) Mexicali has one of the largest collections of murals in the country While Mexicali-brewed Tecate and Corona are the long-time kings at most of the city's bars at El Sume the list is long on brews from around the world including a number of regional craft beers El Sume opened its doors in 2011 and quickly became a premier stop for beer lovers and connoisseurs visiting the city It's not surprising that this border city so close in proximity to San Diego would soak up the craft brew culture the second best tourism product is micro breweries after the beach," Nuñez explains "There just was a national contest in Mexico City called Cervezas Mexico where all of Mexico brought their craft beers There were 26 winners in different categories Baja is the leader just like San Diego when it comes to craft beer." And it was during our weekend stay in early November that Mexicali was hosting its first Mexicali BeerFest Artesanal complete with an official beer competition It is said that the idea for the event—organized by Rodrigo Hernández and Rafael González of Mexicali's Big Bad Brewing Company in coordination with Héctor Corella of Amante Cerveza Artesanal brewery—was first conceived of at El Sume one of them said something to the effect of "Let's throw a beer festival," and that they did "This specific event we have 25 craft brewers from all of Baja and a couple from Pablo and a couple from Monterey played host during our first night in town located in a residential area beside a big-box retail store and is fronted by one of the city's many brightly painted and eye-catching murals On our way to El Sume excitement grew in the car as talk turned to local brews Urbana's Crossover IPA (India Pale Ale) became a leading subject and luckily the brewers had a bottle of it to share we learned the story behind the Crossover IPA Urbana had thrown all of its resources and time into this one brew and the big breweries of Grupo Modelo and Cuauhtémoc-Moctezuma held exclusivity contracts over the majority of bars and retailers in the city It was nearly impossible to imbibe anything other than these brands it saw breakthrough legislation that began turning the tide Mexican federal officials opened up the tightly controlled beer market by placing a limit on how many exclusivity contracts big breweries could hold And as the big guys began pulling their contracts some bars and retailers went out of business El Sume will be joined by other up and coming spots to snag a handcrafted brew Enthusiasm was in the air on the second evening of our trip as we ventured to Pasaje Reforma Centro Historico and passed through the gates of the Mexicali BeerFest Artesanal Our first stop was none other than Urbana for a fresh pour of the Crossover IPA We checked in with our friends over at Tres B tried some samples from a neighboring booth featuring Cerveza Zombie from Ensenada and headed into a scene enhanced by live music and lectures while tasting brews from Veintidos (22) Craft Beer We ran into festival organizers Hernández and Corella along with the then-mayor Francisco Perez Tejada and it was at the festival that I met Nuñez Late in the evening we were tipped that the award winners were about to announced we debated whether we should call a cab or stick it out a little longer It wasn't until the next day when we were homeward bound that we learned about the winners of the competition The Artesanales Beer Judge Certification Program awarded first place to Urbana for their IPA Tres B took second for their ESB (Extra Special Bitter) and Cerveza Fauna The people's choice was awarded to Funes Cerveza Artesenal of Tijuana and Agua Mala of Ensenada and Hellixer of Tijuana took second and third I couldn't help but smile thinking about all the friends we made in Mexicali Special thanks go to beer writer and friend Sarah Bennett For a taste of craft brews south of the border visit the Ensenada Beer Fest on March 21 and 22 The festival will feature lectures and tastings for the serious craft beer aficionado on the 21st and an open-air festival for the more casual enthusiast on the 22nd Included will be breweries from Baja California Mexico; (646) 156-5036; www.ensenadabeerfest.com For detailed information on traveling to Ensenada and Mexicali including where to eat and stay visit the website www.discoverbajacalifornia.com The official craft beer festival website for Mexicali can be found at www.bajabeerfest.mx The Norwich Sports Hall of Fame inducted eight members on Sunday at a banquet at the Holiday Inn in Norwich Kapteina Service Award recipient Todd Guertin Jonathan Gruber and Christopher Portelance and Marie Bianca Saint Sume earned scholarships and Norwich Free Academy senior Anthony Facchini was named the Sportsperson of the Year The third SUME Festival held in Tallinn's Kadriorg Park kicked off on Saturday The two-day festival's first night saw performances by Elderbrook (UK) The Sunday concert will feature Tom Odell (UK) The culinary side of the celebration falls to the festival's head chef Joel Ostrat The SUME Festival is a symbiosis of beautiful scenery and art soothing sounds and exciting flavors as it aims to offer quality free time and activities for the whole family Follow ERR News on Facebook and Twitter and never miss an update! 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TV companies have paid more than $4bn to screen the 19-day festival of sport while the eleven global sponsors bankrolling the event have a combined market value of over $1.5 trn I would like to be emailed about offers, events and updates from The Independent. Read our Privacy notice By almost any measure, Rio 2016 will be the richest games in 120 years of Olympic history. While the modern Games began as a celebration of non-professional sport, the movement has long-since thrown off any facade of amateurism and is now more flush with corporate cash than ever before. This year, TV companies have paid more than $4 billion to screen the 19-day festival of sport, while the eleven global sponsors bankrolling Rio 2016 have a combined market value of over $1.5 trillion and are using that financial might to lavish more money on the event than ever with the Games being expected to bring in a total of $9.3 billion in marketing revenues. With regard to the athletes themselves, the top ten best paid sportsmen and women competing collectively earned $388 million in 2015, according to Forbes. And the International Olympic Committee, which takes ten per cent of all of the money generated by the games, stands to earn more than ever in this Olympic cycle. Multinational sponsors were quick to jump on the Rio 2016 bandwagon. As far back as 2011, Mexican media mogul Carlos Slim reportedly paid Rio’s organising committee $320 million to secure sponsorship for his firm, America Movil, dwarfing the sums paid by brands for London. Banco Bradesco, one of Brazil’s biggest banks coughed up a similar sum. At the time, Slim was the richest person in the world and Brazil’s economy was growing at 7.5 per cent a year. Fast forward five years and the host nation’s economy is in freefall, the companies and politicians delivering the games are embroiled in the biggest corruption case in Brazil’s history. The Zika virus, pollution, unfinished venues and industrial-scale doping have taken their toll. In a recent poll, nearly six out of ten people from countries around the world said doping has had a negative effect on the level of attention they will pay the Games. There have been far fewer social media conversations about the Olympics in the run-up to Rio 2016 than before London 2012, and of those, much less are expressing a positive sentiment, according to social media analysis by media agency, Mindshare. But many sports marketing experts don't see this having a significant impact on sponsors bottom lines. "These issues are nothing new for the Olympic Movement or sport in general and athletes can continually command year-on-year above inflation endorsement fees," says Ben Bradley, business director at MEC Wavemeker. "The true test will be in four years time at Tokyo 2020." Companies big and small are seemingly undeterred. “The prospect of live sport on a global scale is enough to ensure the variety of IOC, team and athlete sponsors will get a good return on investment,” says Rupert Pratt, director of Mongoose, which negotiates sponsorship deals for sporting events. Smaller businesses are looking to Rio 2016 as the number one sporting event to boost sales according to Barclays figures. Rio’s organising committee says it has been able to hit its target of $1.3 billion from sponsorship rights, though exact figures for individual deals are confidential. The IOC also grants sponsorship rights to global “partners” like Samsung and Coca-Cola. They have each paid up to $120 million to be associated with the Olympic ideals of faster, higher, stronger. This is before they have spent a penny plastering billboards, banner ads and television screens with their logos. Companies will each spend around four times their sponsorship fee to ensure a return, says Alex Kelham, head of the sports media group at law firm Lewis Silkin and a Commonwealth swimming gold medalist. This brings the total spend for the biggest partners close to half a billion. The so-called “activation budget” is higher for the Olympics than for the World Cup because the Olympics does not allow sponsors to advertise where they are most likely to be seen: the venues themselves. The IOC says that this is to protect the “purity and uniqueness” of the games. The Olympics still offer unmatched exposure,however. Rio 2016 sponsor ads were watched for a total of 400 years by the end of June, over a month before the games have begun. London 2012 is, by some margin, the most searched for event ever, according to Google. These eye-watering sums, and an estimated 3.6 billion global audience, have unsurprisingly made the nineteen days of TV coverage immensely valuable. TV rights account for the largest chunk of games revenue and the $4.1 billion collected by the IOC for Rio coverage is again the highest amount on record. NBCUniversal, paid a record $1.23 billion to screen Rio 2016, far higher than the $900m it spent on Beijing in 2008. Advertisers in the US, comfortably the world’s biggest TV market, spent £1.33bn on ad slots during London 2012. “We will break revenue records here, there's no doubt about that,” said Seth Winter, head of advertising at the channel when it sailed past $1bn in ad sales in March. It only met that milestone four days before the opening ceremony at the last games. The BBC, which has had unbroken coverage of all Olympic games since 1960, paid a relatively paltry £60m for London 2012 coverage and is understood to have paid close to £100m for Rio 2016. Australian network Seven said interest in advertising had been unprecedented and it too was on target to smash the AUD100 million advertising record set during the Sydney games in 2000, reportedly netting AUD150 - 170 million (£85 - £97 million). That this flow of cash has enriched top athletes is obvious. Olympic superstars such as Usain Bolt, have raised millions from endorsements. Bolt’s deal with Puma is worth $10 million per year, about a third of his total corporate endorsements, but very few are sharing in the bonanza. The Olympics' top earners are taken almost entirely from the ranks of basketball, tennis and golf where prize money is many multiples of what even Bolt can command. Despite the billions flowing into the games, Bolt is the only Olympian from outside of those three sports on Forbes' top 100 sports rich list, and the only one who derives their fame first and foremost from the Games. The Jamaican sprinter earned $2.5 million in prize money last year, barely a tenth of Novak Djokovic’s winnings. The reality for the average US athlete is a salary of $16,533 according to figures collected by The Washington Post. Those from many other countries receive less. In 2014 Canada found that the country's elite athletes spent $13,900 per year more than they earn. Team GB does not publish similar statistics. The IOC says it ploughs ninety per cent of revenues back into supporting athletes via the national Olympic bodies of each country, but many say the crumbs that eventually fall from the top table are not enough to support them through the gruelling training regimes required to compete. A recent study showed that just 6 per cent of the money generated by the Olympics goes back to athletes as salaries. The rest is spent by the IOC and national bodies as they see fit. In contrast, Premier League players pocket well over half of their club’s revenues. The reality is that the billions flooding in may make Rio 2016 the richest Olympics ever, but most of the athletes will see almost none of it. Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies New French Black Health Primer Provides Anti-​Racism Education for Francophone Health Professionals The French Black Health Primer aims to build on the success of the Black Health Primer and reach the Francophone health community Onye Nnorom (DLSPH) and OmiSoore Dryden (Dalhousie) Francophone health professionals across Canada will have access to the French Black Health Primer an online course designed to address Black health and the effects of anti-Black racism in Canadian healthcare The English Black Health Primer an online course covering Black health and anti-Black racism in medicine and public health the founders are now releasing the course in French enabling Francophone medical and health learners educators and healthcare practitioners to improve care for Black patients Quebec is home to more than one quarter of Canada’s Black population, and 20 percent of Canada’s Black population identifies French as their first language Quebec is also home to three French-language medical schools “We wanted to ensure that people could access this in the language in which they are the most comfortable. And we know that folks who have French as a first language are often accessing resources and materials in English,” says DLSPH Assistant Professor Sume Ndumbe-Eyoh Ndumbe-Eyoh created the Black Health Primer alongside family physician and DLSPH Assistant Professor Onye Nnorom and OmiSoore Dryden a Professor in the Faculty of Medicine at Dalhousie University and the former James R The founders note that offering the Black Health Primer in both of Canada’s official languages has always been part of the plan — and based on the response the English version received in its first year The Black Health Primer was designed to address gaps in medicine public health and other health fields and improve the care experienced by Black patients and communities While there are some resources and programs to learn about Black health in Canada the Black Health Primer’s founders emphasize that this online course is the only national resource available in English and French that is tailored for and accessible to health professionals and health learners across Canada “The impact has been spectacular,” says Dryden who uses the Primer with her medical students at Dalhousie University “Both learners and practitioners have found the Primer to be insightful and inspiring as they make commitments to actively address medical racism.” the Black Health Primer has been accredited by the College of Family Physicians of Canada and the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada and endorsed by the Association of Faculties of Medicine of Canada more than 1,000 individuals from more than 80 different universities community health centres and public health units signed up for the course was particularly meaningful for Ndumbe-Eyoh because when we interact with the health system we do so with a whole range of professionals,” says Ndumbe-Eyoh Executive Director of the Black Health Education Collaborative explaining that it is essential that this knowledge reaches people across all spaces that impact Black health Introducing the new French Black Health Primer  The French version of this Black health education tool was unveiled on March 21 but the experience of French-speaking healthcare providers and Black patients shaped the Black Health Primer since its inception “When we were doing the development and piloting the course we made sure we had folks who were Francophone and who are based in Quebec as part of the work,” says Ndumbe-Eyoh “Francophones have always informed what this course looks like and the intention had always been to have a French language version available.” The curriculum is identical in both versions covering topics like Canada’s history of anti-Black racism the structural and social determinants of Black health and ways to disrupt anti-Black racism through individual practice But having this program available in French makes these lessons available to a greater population of healthcare providers and learners “It is always important to have accessible information and this includes the Primer available in French,” says Dryden Having seen the impact of the English version of the Black Health Primer the founders note that there is potential for the French version to promote important conversations and systemic change within Francophone health systems having the Black Health Primer available in both English and now French is a crucial step towards “ensuring that all Black people in Canada ©2025 / Dalla Lana School of Public Health / The University of Toronto Torrential rains unleashed a deluge of boulders mud and water down Mount Elgon near the border with Kenya pulverizing homes and burying residents in the town of Bukalasi and some nearby villages Landslides have become more common in mountainous parts of the East African country in recent years because of expanding settlement and cultivation that have denuded mountainsides of forest cover and other vegetation A government statement put the final death toll at 43 and said a further 21 people were injured with around 800 left homeless It said the cabinet had "directed resettlement of persons at risk of (further) landslides to begin immediately" Around 32.7 billion shillings ($8.66 million) had been allocated to finance emergency relocations of the most vulnerable people A 2,800-acre plot had been procured for relocations with a further 5,500 people also vulnerable to landslides to follow the initial 800 some 100,000 people deemed to be living in the likely path of landslides will be resettled in coming years A 2010 avalanche on Mount Elgon killed 150 people (Reporting by Elias Biryabarema; Editing by George Obulutsa and Mark Heinrich) A cadre of prominent Canadian Black Health researchers is coming together as The Black Health Education Collaborative (BHEC) to provide black health education for all health professionals and students The collaborative’s first module will be available to students next year The resource serves as a foundation for all health professionals on critical information about Black Health in Canada “Due to the racial disparities amplified in this pandemic and the murder of George Floyd there is a greater awareness of anti-black racism and its impacts on health The increase in public consciousness has been a silver lining in a very terrible storm that has been all of our lives for the last 18 months or more,” says Prof Onye Nnorom a prominent researcher within the collaborative Dalla Lana School of Public Health (DLSPH) Asst Prof Nnorom initiated the project with other prominent black health leaders in Canada a few years after she became the Black Health lead at the Faculty of Medicine’s MD Programme She was eager to develop a health primer but was short on resources “I needed to know what the standards are otherwise I’m kind of just decoration here,” said Nnorom And while the black student population in both medicine and DLSPH has grown in recent years the curricula still missed critical inclusions of black health Nnorom says Canadian medical education still uses data from the United States with no Canadian context and often focuses primarily on chronic disease prevalence among black people “Or they’re taught that the disparities in our community are biologically based Either you’re not taught about black populations or you’re just talking about it through American data,” she says “Students are giving the impression that there is something cultural or some knowledge lacking or some other deficit with the marginalised community as to why they have disparities as opposed to understanding that these are rooted in structural racism and oppression.” She teamed up with Associate Professor Dr OmiSoore Dryden Johnston Chair in Black Canadian Studies in the Faculty of Medicine at Dalhousie University to provide insights into social determinants of health and their impact on black health and academic critical race theory they formed a national group to consult on health primers and consultations followed a year later with medical and public health students and scholars The group built enough material to make its case Members met sporadically to solidify their pitch Black Lives Matter demonstrations following George Floyd’s death spurred a renewed demand for a primer “Working with my colleagues allowed us to pool our resources and our expertise in black studies Working together during the renewed Black Lives Matter protests and the impact the pandemic has had on our communities allowed us to minimise our isolation while sharing resources,” says Dryden The collaborative welcomed its first executive director Her new role is a continuation of her decade-long journey on social determinants of health across Canada she can examine black health exclusively on a national scope “Focusing on health equity and social determinants of health just felt like a natural space to be in because I’ve always understood health as something which exists beyond disease and which has really shaped me,” Ndumbe-Eyoh says “If you’re going to medical school right now that should be part of what you’re learning If you’re going through a school of public health that should be included as part of what you’ll learn We should not have folks graduating who do not understand that racism affects health and who don’t have the skills to address anti-black racism,” says Ndumbe-Eyoh she noticed the disconnect between public health messaging and the realities she and her friends were living through in Cameroon A popular campaign in her home country got her interested in public health programmes and interventions she studied the social dimensions of HIV/AIDS in public health mainstream media finally took notice of an issue activists like herself have been pushing for I say ‘appears’ because I have many question marks around that I think for those of us who’ve been doing this work for a while What I’ve seen shift is that more mainstream organisations are probably making space for black-led work on anti-black racism,” says Ndumbe-Eyoh With the understanding of the heterogeneity in the black community Ndumbe-Eyoh hopes that health professionals will also be given some insights into the complexities community members face with duelling social backgrounds Ndumbe-Eyoh is eager to lay out the foundations of Black Health to medical students The collaborative is also developing a continuing professional development programme for clinicians and health practitioners soon “We will be developing resources to support faculty development a lot of folks are being pulled into teaching about anti-racism and black health who need a community of practice,” says Ndumbe-Eyoh Her office will develop some resources to support faculty with the assistance of researchers in the community who can offer some research and practical perspectives in teaching anti-racism The programme began with seed funding of $1.7 million with support from the Dalla Lana School of Public Health the Temerty Faculty of Medicine and Dalhousie University Faculty of Medicine The collaborative is seeking more funding to expand the work to include mentorship a community of practice for scholars and educators publications and providing research and training “It is my hope that our work influences the culture of medical education through new structures that specifically address black health and wellness I hope that health learners will develop the skills necessary to provide appropriate care to black and African Nova Scotian communities across the country And it is my hope that health educators will develop and update their skills to better equip our health learners,” says Dryden is communications officer at Dalla Lana School of Public Health View the discussion thread. a day after it burst its banks in the eastern village of Nanyinza At least 34 people were killed after the river in eastern Uganda burst its banks sending thick sludge and rocks barrelling into homes Photo license  Purchase photo (AFP) - At least 41 people were killed after a river in eastern Uganda burst its banks sending a torrent of mud and rocks barrelling into homes disaster officials and survivors said Friday Rescue teams continued picking through the rubble late Friday searching for survivors and victims of the disaster which took place the previous day in the eastern Bududa district An unknown number of people remained missing "41 lives have been lost but they're still going ahead digging trying to look for whether there are other bodies in the riverbed somewhere," said Hilary Onek "There are casualties up in the hills," he added referring to higher ground where the river burst its banks before washing away homes lower down as well as dismembered limbs believed to belong to three more individuals Survivors spoke of panic and horror as water cascaded down the hillside the Sume river rushed past the ruins of a concrete bridge swept away by the heavy rainfall "The moment we saw the water coming we ran and climbed a hill," said John Makimpi a 28-year-old fish trader from Nanyinza who got involved in the ad hoc rescue effort "We dragged seven bodies from the river," he said adding that four of the bodies had been smashed beyond recognition by falling rocks watched as a solitary mechanical digger struggled to clear huge tree trunks and boulders from the road "We found three dead people at one bridge and another three further down the river," she said "Some didn't have arms or legs because the water and stones hit them so hard." Government meteorologist Godfrey Mujuni said it was the River Sume "It's a mountainous region and because of the high altitude and steep slopes even a small amount of rain can trigger landslides There is no early warning system in that particular area hit yesterday." "The rains are still coming and the government and NGOs need to keep their preparedness levels high," he warned director of an organisation that helps communities recover from natural disasters and conflict told AFP that "four to five villages" had been affected Bududa district in the foothills of Mount Elgon which lies on the border between Uganda and Kenya At least 100 people were reported killed in a landslide in Bududa in March 2010 and in 2012 landslides destroyed three villages a small crowd gathered round the bodies of a girl and her grandmother swept away as they returned from a hospital appointment Lacking a child's coffin mourners simply wrapped the body of the five-year-old in a yellow scarf and laid her on a woven sack next to her grandmother's white coffin Relief workers expect to bury more in the days to come DUBA NAN: Danna “See First” karkashin karkashin "Following “ don samun labaran Legit.ng a shafinka na Facebook akai-akai Jihar Ondo - Rundunar yan sandan jihar Ondo a ranar Asabar ta ce ta fara bincike kan mutuwar wata mata da jinjirinta cikin dakinsu a Owo, hedkwatar karamar hukumar Owo na jihar. An tattara cewa an gano matar yar shekara 29 mai suna Tawa, da mijinta a sume yayin da jinjirinsu dan wata biyar ya riga ya mutu a dakin a ranar Juma'a. Kara karanta wannan Tashin Hankali Yayin Da Yan Ta'adda Suka Tafi Har Gida Suka Kashe Ɗan Malamin Addini An tsinci mata da miji da jinjirinsu sume a cikin daki DUBA: Bibiyemu a Instagram don samun labarai masu muhimmanci kai tsaye cikin manhajar An rahoto cewa cewa su ukun sun kwanta lafiya kalau a daren ranar Alhamis, The Punch ta rahoto. Wata majiya ta ce mata da mijin sun siyo sabon janareto yan kwanaki kafin afkuwar lamarin, kuma sun kunna janaretan a daren ranar Alhamis kafin barci, ana zargin hayakin janaretan ya kashe su. A cewar majiyar, an same iyalan cikin mawuyacin halin a ranar Juma'a. Jinjirin su ya riga ya rasu, mata da mijin suna sume kuma an garzaya da su Cibiyar Lafiya Ta Tarayya, Owo, inda matar ta rasu, yayin da likitoci na kokarin ceto ran mijin. Kara karanta wannan Mun kadu: Atiku da Tinubu sun yi gamin baki mai magana da yawun rundunar yan sanda na jihar sun tabbatar da afkuwar lamarin amma ta ce ba a san sanadin mutuwar ba kuma an fara bincike Jihar Jigawa - Hukumar tsaro ta Civil Defense, NSCDC, a ranar Litinin ta gano wani mutum a sume a karamar hukumar Kiyawa, Daily Trust ta rahoto Mai magana da yawun hukumar NSCDC na Jigawa CSC Adamu Shehu ya tabbatar da hakan cikin wata sanarwa da ya fitar Mutumin da wasu suka shake a tasi suka masa fashin N97,000 a Jigawa Kara karanta wannan Kotun Ƙoli Ta Ayyana Halastaccen Ɗan Takarar Gwamnan APC a Jiha 1 Ya ce da isarsu wurin da abin ya faru, tawagar ma'aikatan lafiya na NSCDC sun gano akwai kebur a wuyan wanda abin ya faru da shi da aka yi amfani da shi don shake shi kuma jini na fita daga bakinsa. An garzaya da shi babban asibitin Dutse don masa magani. Bayan ya farfado, mutumin da aka sace ya ce ya shiga tasi ne daga Takur Addua Quaters a birnin Dutse tare da wasu fasinjoji uku. Kara karanta wannan IWD2023: Mata 2 da Suka Shiga Jerin ‘Yan siyasa 109 da Za su Zama Sanatocin Najeriya a 2023 Ya kara da cewa yana dauke da tsabar kudi N97,000 wanda ya ke son amfani da shi don siyayya a kasuwa Bai san abin da ya faru da shi ba sai da ya tsinci kansa a gadon asibiti ya yi kira ga al'umma su dena shiga tasi a wajen tasha don kare kansu daga irin hakan Ya kuma yi alkawarin aiki tare da sauran hukumomin tsaro don gano wadanda suka aikata laifin A wani rahoton kun ji cewa yan sandan jihar Ondo ta kama wata matashiya yar shekara 16 kan zargin halaka wata yar shekara 52 sakamakon bangaje ta yayin rikici kan rijiya It looks like nothing was found at this location The page you were looking for does not exist or was loading incorrectly Uganda | AFP – Michael O’HAGAN |  On a muddy outcrop on the banks of the Sume river grief-stricken families gaze at enormous boulders that stand testimony to the force of the deluge which engulfed their homes litter the riverbanks after Thursday’s landslide which killed 42 people and swept away nearly 150 homes two colossal boulders match the size of the houses they smashed as the torrent propelled them down the mountain Evelyn Wantsema was at home in the riverbank village of Nyehe with her two boys when she heard unsettling noise approaching “I looked out and saw this catastrophe coming with a lot of rocks and trees,” she said I ran with Joseph and had to leave Muhammad,” sobbed this young mother of 20 “I thought I’d lost him.” As soon as the worst of the waters subsided Wantsema rushed back to her home and found Muhammad buried in mud grabbed it and pulled him out alive.” Thursday was market day in Wanjenwa and although it had been raining for a couple of days witnesses said it was not unusually heavy and people were walking around meeting friends the Sume was like a stream — even children could play in it,” said Amos Wabianga a 45-year-old farmer “The first sign something was wrong was soil in the water which made it dark,” said Michael Namutambo “People didn’t think it was a problem and didn’t run Then what followed was the real calamity — rocks People couldn’t manage the speed of the mudslide — it was so fast,” the 33-year-old said “Whoever took this direction survived somehow,” he said gesturing to the right “Those who took the other direction died” The official death toll stands at 42 with 858 people displaced and an unknown number missing The government agency in charge of relief said a landslide in the forest high above the villages blocked the Sume river causing it to burst its banks and sending a cascade of huge rocks tumbling down the hillside “The Bukalasi landslide-triggered disaster is the 67th registered between May and October this year,” said a statement by Martin Owor He said there had been 67 landslides this year but only this one had resulted in deaths whereas in previous years attributing the improved preparedness to a community-based Landslide Risk Monitoring System But Godfrey Mujuni a government meteorologist told AFP there was no early warning system in the area with local people confirming that other than the standard seasonal advice they did not receive any additional warnings The government says families at risk of landslides across the country will be resettled elsewhere but villagers say the land offered them is unsuitable and promises remain unfulfilled – ‘Where should we go?’ – director of an organisation which helps communities recover from natural disasters and conflict told AFP that although several households had been resettled under a government programme “People were being moved from mountainous land which is so fertile you could just throw a seed in the soil and it will grow to areas which are extremely flat and where the conditions for farming are extremely different.” Those living in vulnerable areas were hesitant to leave their ancestral homes and “felt a great psychological attachment to the mountains,” he said at least 100 people were killed in the same mountainous region which lies on the border between Uganda and Kenya and is a high-risk area for landslides was also caught up in that disaster and recalled how government officials turned up to register people for resettlement but took no further action “They came and took our photos but then disappeared and never came back,” he told AFP “The place they told us to go in 2010 is land that floods and no one can farm,” he said “We have always been warned we should move but the question is Tags Your email address will not be published. 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Sume is the best Video Chat app for meeting new people. 1 ContributorEqqissineq Sapiinnarama LyricsEqqissineq sapiinnaramaSialleqisoq aniinnarpungaIsersimaneq sapiinnaramaMasannaqisoq aniinnarpungaQimallugitMakku illorsuitAamma inussuitSussa saluitAkornutiginagitAngakkuusuuguma ilimmareerpungaQimaasareerpunga asiareerpungaA'ja ja ai a'ja aaA’ja ja ai a’ja aaA’ja ja rraa ja aaA’ja ja rraa ja aaNguakkuluk iggunnguaqEqqissineq sapiinnaramaTarnigami imaarutilermatMasannaqisoq aniinnarpunga masannaqisoq aniinnarpunga)Eqqissineq sapiinnaramaUroYou might also likeUroligGår jeg ud selvom det øsregnerDa jeg ikke kan holde ud at være indeGår jeg ud i regnenVæk fraDisse store huseOg de mærkelige menneskerRegnenEr ingen forhindringHvis jeg var åndemaner var jeg taget vækAjjaai ja aii ajjaa aaAjjaai ja aii ajjaa aaAjjaa iarraa ajjaa aaAjjaa iarraa ajjaa aaSkønneJeg er uroligMit sind er snart tomtJeg går snart ud i regnenRestlessnessRestlessI go outside even though it’s pouring rainSince I can’t stand being insideI go outside the rainAway fromThese big housesAnd the strange peopleNever mind the rainIt doesn't bother meIf I was a shaman I would have flown awayI would have fled I would have been goneAjjaai ja aii ajjaa aaAjjaai ja aii ajjaa aaAjjaa iarraa ajjaa aaAjjaa iarraa ajjaa aaDarlingI am restlessMy mind will be empty soonI'll be out in the rain soonEmbedCancelHow to Format Lyrics: To learn more, check out our transcription guide or visit our transcribers forum Find answers to frequently asked questions about the song and explore its deeper meaning Jami’an rundunar ‘yansandan Babban Birnin Tarayya Abuja sun ceto wata mata ‘yar shekara 25 mai suna Promise Eze bayan da wani mutum da ta hadu da shi a wani dandalin sada zumunta na intanet ya daure ta ya bar ta a sume Wanda ake zargin da aka bayyana sunansa da Michael Prince amma daga baya ya bayyana sunansa na gaskiya da Emmanuel Okoro kuma ‘yansanda sun kaddamar da farautarsa domin tabbatar da cafke shi cikin gaggawa Wata sanarwa da kakakin rundunar ‘yansandan ta ce ‘yansandan sun samu kiran gaggawa daga wani otal da ke unguwar Wuse a cikin Babban Birnin Tarayya Abuja bayan sun lura da wasu abubuwa da ake zargi a daya daga cikin dakinta Adeh ta ce da isowar jami’anta ne suka gano Eze daure a kan wata karamar kujera da bakinta a manne da filasta Ta lura cewa nan take aka garzaya da Eze asibitin gundumar Wuse “Da sauri jami’an ‘yansanda suka isa wurin inda suka gano wata mata ‘yar shekara 25 mai suna Promise Eze daure a wata karamar kujera an rufe bakinta da filasta Jami’an ‘yan sanda sun dauki matakin gaggawa inda suka kubutar da ita daga hannun wadanda aka yi garkuwa da su sannan suka garzaya da ita asibitin gundumar Wuse Adeh ta ce binciken farko da aka yi ya nuna cewa Eze ta leka otal din a safiyar ranar 30 ga watan Janairu tare da Okoro wanda ake zargin ya gabatar da kansa a matsayin ma’aikacin kamfanin mai da ke Jihar Delta Adeh ta bayyana cewa tun da farko wanda ake zargin ya gayyaci Eze ta ziyarce shi a Jihar Delta amma ta ki amincewa da hakan amma ta amince ta same shi a Abuja a maimakon haka “Bincike na farko ya nuna wani yanayi na yaudara da tashin hankali tare da wani mutum da ya bayyana sunansa da Emmanuel Okoro daga Jihar Legas “Sai dai yayin da ‘yansanda ke mata tambayoyi matar da aka cutar ta bayyana cewa ta hadu da wanda ake zargin a intanet inda ya gabatar da kansa ga Michael Prince inda ya ce shi ma’aikacin kamfanin mai ne da ke Jihar Delta.” Adeh ta kara da cewa Eze ya ce Okoro ya fid da wuka don yi mata barazana kafin ya daure ta ya manne bakinta a cikin bandakin otal din Adeh ta ce kwamishinan ‘yansandan Babban Birnin Tarayya Abuja ya yi Allah wadai da faruwar lamarin tare da shawartar ‘yanmata kan illar haduwa da baki ta intanet ba tare da taka tsantsan ba © 2025 Leadership Media Group - All Right Reserved Please enter your username or email address to reset your password © 2025 Leadership Media Group - All Right Reserved.