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  • June 27, 2017 - London, UK - London, UK. ''Colour Catchers'', 2017.  Preview of ''Breathing Colour'', an exhibition by acclaimed designer Hella Jongerius, at the Design Museum, Kensington which comprises a series of newly commissioned installations exploring humans perceptions and connections to colour.  The exhibition runs from 28 June to 24 September 2017. (Credit Image: © Stephen Chung/London News Pictures via ZUMA Wire)
    20170627_zaf_l94_001.jpg
  • By Dinesh Dubey in India A newborn baby weighing just 400 grams has survived after her premature birth and gained normalcy after completing a six-month-long clinical course, with her parents and doctors having struggled hard to keep her alive and healthy. The girl was discharged from the hospital in Udaipur on Thursday. Neonatologist Sunil Janged, who led a team of doctors and nursing staff for ensuring the girl's incredible survival, claimed that she was the smallest newborn baby to survive in India and South Asia. The last reported such survival was a baby, Rajni, weighing 450 grams, at Mohali in 2012. The girl, named Manushi by the nursing staff of Vivanta Children's Hospital, was born to a couple married for 35 years. When her mother’s blood pressure became uncontrollable halfway through her pregnancy and the ultrasonography revealed absence of blood flow to the foetus, a caesarean section was conducted on her on June 15, 2017. Baby Seeta is the smallest baby ever to survive not in India but also in South Asia. Doctors calls her "our miracle baby", saying: "She’s just fought and fought and fought against all the odds. But she’s made it." Born to a couple married for 35 years, when her blood pressure was uncontrollable halfway through her pregnancy and the ultrasonography revealed fetoplacental insufficiency [ absent blood flow to fetus. So she was taken up for emergency caesarean section on June 15,2017. Baby Seeta weighed just 400 grams and measured just 8.6 inches when she was born, her minuscule feet only slightly bigger than a fingernail. She was not breathing when she was born. But the couple decided to fight to keep her alive. “When the baby was born, we were uncertain of what could happen,” Dr Sunil Janged, Chief Neonatologist said. The baby required artificial breathing support to regularize her breathing and then she was quickly transferred to Jivanta neonatal ICU. The baby was managed & looked after at Jivanta Neonatal ICU under precise care
    MEGA144195_003.jpg
  • By Dinesh Dubey in India A newborn baby weighing just 400 grams has survived after her premature birth and gained normalcy after completing a six-month-long clinical course, with her parents and doctors having struggled hard to keep her alive and healthy. The girl was discharged from the hospital in Udaipur on Thursday. Neonatologist Sunil Janged, who led a team of doctors and nursing staff for ensuring the girl's incredible survival, claimed that she was the smallest newborn baby to survive in India and South Asia. The last reported such survival was a baby, Rajni, weighing 450 grams, at Mohali in 2012. The girl, named Manushi by the nursing staff of Vivanta Children's Hospital, was born to a couple married for 35 years. When her mother’s blood pressure became uncontrollable halfway through her pregnancy and the ultrasonography revealed absence of blood flow to the foetus, a caesarean section was conducted on her on June 15, 2017. Baby Seeta is the smallest baby ever to survive not in India but also in South Asia. Doctors calls her "our miracle baby", saying: "She’s just fought and fought and fought against all the odds. But she’s made it." Born to a couple married for 35 years, when her blood pressure was uncontrollable halfway through her pregnancy and the ultrasonography revealed fetoplacental insufficiency [ absent blood flow to fetus. So she was taken up for emergency caesarean section on June 15,2017. Baby Seeta weighed just 400 grams and measured just 8.6 inches when she was born, her minuscule feet only slightly bigger than a fingernail. She was not breathing when she was born. But the couple decided to fight to keep her alive. “When the baby was born, we were uncertain of what could happen,” Dr Sunil Janged, Chief Neonatologist said. The baby required artificial breathing support to regularize her breathing and then she was quickly transferred to Jivanta neonatal ICU. The baby was managed & looked after at Jivanta Neonatal ICU under precise care
    MEGA144195_005.jpg
  • By Dinesh Dubey in India A newborn baby weighing just 400 grams has survived after her premature birth and gained normalcy after completing a six-month-long clinical course, with her parents and doctors having struggled hard to keep her alive and healthy. The girl was discharged from the hospital in Udaipur on Thursday. Neonatologist Sunil Janged, who led a team of doctors and nursing staff for ensuring the girl's incredible survival, claimed that she was the smallest newborn baby to survive in India and South Asia. The last reported such survival was a baby, Rajni, weighing 450 grams, at Mohali in 2012. The girl, named Manushi by the nursing staff of Vivanta Children's Hospital, was born to a couple married for 35 years. When her mother’s blood pressure became uncontrollable halfway through her pregnancy and the ultrasonography revealed absence of blood flow to the foetus, a caesarean section was conducted on her on June 15, 2017. Baby Seeta is the smallest baby ever to survive not in India but also in South Asia. Doctors calls her "our miracle baby", saying: "She’s just fought and fought and fought against all the odds. But she’s made it." Born to a couple married for 35 years, when her blood pressure was uncontrollable halfway through her pregnancy and the ultrasonography revealed fetoplacental insufficiency [ absent blood flow to fetus. So she was taken up for emergency caesarean section on June 15,2017. Baby Seeta weighed just 400 grams and measured just 8.6 inches when she was born, her minuscule feet only slightly bigger than a fingernail. She was not breathing when she was born. But the couple decided to fight to keep her alive. “When the baby was born, we were uncertain of what could happen,” Dr Sunil Janged, Chief Neonatologist said. The baby required artificial breathing support to regularize her breathing and then she was quickly transferred to Jivanta neonatal ICU. The baby was managed & looked after at Jivanta Neonatal ICU under precise care
    MEGA144195_001.jpg
  • By Dinesh Dubey in India A newborn baby weighing just 400 grams has survived after her premature birth and gained normalcy after completing a six-month-long clinical course, with her parents and doctors having struggled hard to keep her alive and healthy. The girl was discharged from the hospital in Udaipur on Thursday. Neonatologist Sunil Janged, who led a team of doctors and nursing staff for ensuring the girl's incredible survival, claimed that she was the smallest newborn baby to survive in India and South Asia. The last reported such survival was a baby, Rajni, weighing 450 grams, at Mohali in 2012. The girl, named Manushi by the nursing staff of Vivanta Children's Hospital, was born to a couple married for 35 years. When her mother’s blood pressure became uncontrollable halfway through her pregnancy and the ultrasonography revealed absence of blood flow to the foetus, a caesarean section was conducted on her on June 15, 2017. Baby Seeta is the smallest baby ever to survive not in India but also in South Asia. Doctors calls her "our miracle baby", saying: "She’s just fought and fought and fought against all the odds. But she’s made it." Born to a couple married for 35 years, when her blood pressure was uncontrollable halfway through her pregnancy and the ultrasonography revealed fetoplacental insufficiency [ absent blood flow to fetus. So she was taken up for emergency caesarean section on June 15,2017. Baby Seeta weighed just 400 grams and measured just 8.6 inches when she was born, her minuscule feet only slightly bigger than a fingernail. She was not breathing when she was born. But the couple decided to fight to keep her alive. “When the baby was born, we were uncertain of what could happen,” Dr Sunil Janged, Chief Neonatologist said. The baby required artificial breathing support to regularize her breathing and then she was quickly transferred to Jivanta neonatal ICU. The baby was managed & looked after at Jivanta Neonatal ICU under precise care
    MEGA144195_002.jpg
  • By Dinesh Dubey in India A newborn baby weighing just 400 grams has survived after her premature birth and gained normalcy after completing a six-month-long clinical course, with her parents and doctors having struggled hard to keep her alive and healthy. The girl was discharged from the hospital in Udaipur on Thursday. Neonatologist Sunil Janged, who led a team of doctors and nursing staff for ensuring the girl's incredible survival, claimed that she was the smallest newborn baby to survive in India and South Asia. The last reported such survival was a baby, Rajni, weighing 450 grams, at Mohali in 2012. The girl, named Manushi by the nursing staff of Vivanta Children's Hospital, was born to a couple married for 35 years. When her mother’s blood pressure became uncontrollable halfway through her pregnancy and the ultrasonography revealed absence of blood flow to the foetus, a caesarean section was conducted on her on June 15, 2017. Baby Seeta is the smallest baby ever to survive not in India but also in South Asia. Doctors calls her "our miracle baby", saying: "She’s just fought and fought and fought against all the odds. But she’s made it." Born to a couple married for 35 years, when her blood pressure was uncontrollable halfway through her pregnancy and the ultrasonography revealed fetoplacental insufficiency [ absent blood flow to fetus. So she was taken up for emergency caesarean section on June 15,2017. Baby Seeta weighed just 400 grams and measured just 8.6 inches when she was born, her minuscule feet only slightly bigger than a fingernail. She was not breathing when she was born. But the couple decided to fight to keep her alive. “When the baby was born, we were uncertain of what could happen,” Dr Sunil Janged, Chief Neonatologist said. The baby required artificial breathing support to regularize her breathing and then she was quickly transferred to Jivanta neonatal ICU. The baby was managed & looked after at Jivanta Neonatal ICU under precise care
    MEGA144195_004.jpg
  • By Dinesh Dubey in India A newborn baby weighing just 400 grams has survived after her premature birth and gained normalcy after completing a six-month-long clinical course, with her parents and doctors having struggled hard to keep her alive and healthy. The girl was discharged from the hospital in Udaipur on Thursday. Neonatologist Sunil Janged, who led a team of doctors and nursing staff for ensuring the girl's incredible survival, claimed that she was the smallest newborn baby to survive in India and South Asia. The last reported such survival was a baby, Rajni, weighing 450 grams, at Mohali in 2012. The girl, named Manushi by the nursing staff of Vivanta Children's Hospital, was born to a couple married for 35 years. When her mother’s blood pressure became uncontrollable halfway through her pregnancy and the ultrasonography revealed absence of blood flow to the foetus, a caesarean section was conducted on her on June 15, 2017. Baby Seeta is the smallest baby ever to survive not in India but also in South Asia. Doctors calls her "our miracle baby", saying: "She’s just fought and fought and fought against all the odds. But she’s made it." Born to a couple married for 35 years, when her blood pressure was uncontrollable halfway through her pregnancy and the ultrasonography revealed fetoplacental insufficiency [ absent blood flow to fetus. So she was taken up for emergency caesarean section on June 15,2017. Baby Seeta weighed just 400 grams and measured just 8.6 inches when she was born, her minuscule feet only slightly bigger than a fingernail. She was not breathing when she was born. But the couple decided to fight to keep her alive. “When the baby was born, we were uncertain of what could happen,” Dr Sunil Janged, Chief Neonatologist said. The baby required artificial breathing support to regularize her breathing and then she was quickly transferred to Jivanta neonatal ICU. The baby was managed & looked after at Jivanta Neonatal ICU under precise care
    MEGA144195_007.jpg
  • By Dinesh Dubey in India A newborn baby weighing just 400 grams has survived after her premature birth and gained normalcy after completing a six-month-long clinical course, with her parents and doctors having struggled hard to keep her alive and healthy. The girl was discharged from the hospital in Udaipur on Thursday. Neonatologist Sunil Janged, who led a team of doctors and nursing staff for ensuring the girl's incredible survival, claimed that she was the smallest newborn baby to survive in India and South Asia. The last reported such survival was a baby, Rajni, weighing 450 grams, at Mohali in 2012. The girl, named Manushi by the nursing staff of Vivanta Children's Hospital, was born to a couple married for 35 years. When her mother’s blood pressure became uncontrollable halfway through her pregnancy and the ultrasonography revealed absence of blood flow to the foetus, a caesarean section was conducted on her on June 15, 2017. Baby Seeta is the smallest baby ever to survive not in India but also in South Asia. Doctors calls her "our miracle baby", saying: "She’s just fought and fought and fought against all the odds. But she’s made it." Born to a couple married for 35 years, when her blood pressure was uncontrollable halfway through her pregnancy and the ultrasonography revealed fetoplacental insufficiency [ absent blood flow to fetus. So she was taken up for emergency caesarean section on June 15,2017. Baby Seeta weighed just 400 grams and measured just 8.6 inches when she was born, her minuscule feet only slightly bigger than a fingernail. She was not breathing when she was born. But the couple decided to fight to keep her alive. “When the baby was born, we were uncertain of what could happen,” Dr Sunil Janged, Chief Neonatologist said. The baby required artificial breathing support to regularize her breathing and then she was quickly transferred to Jivanta neonatal ICU. The baby was managed & looked after at Jivanta Neonatal ICU under precise care
    MEGA144195_009.jpg
  • By Dinesh Dubey in India A newborn baby weighing just 400 grams has survived after her premature birth and gained normalcy after completing a six-month-long clinical course, with her parents and doctors having struggled hard to keep her alive and healthy. The girl was discharged from the hospital in Udaipur on Thursday. Neonatologist Sunil Janged, who led a team of doctors and nursing staff for ensuring the girl's incredible survival, claimed that she was the smallest newborn baby to survive in India and South Asia. The last reported such survival was a baby, Rajni, weighing 450 grams, at Mohali in 2012. The girl, named Manushi by the nursing staff of Vivanta Children's Hospital, was born to a couple married for 35 years. When her mother’s blood pressure became uncontrollable halfway through her pregnancy and the ultrasonography revealed absence of blood flow to the foetus, a caesarean section was conducted on her on June 15, 2017. Baby Seeta is the smallest baby ever to survive not in India but also in South Asia. Doctors calls her "our miracle baby", saying: "She’s just fought and fought and fought against all the odds. But she’s made it." Born to a couple married for 35 years, when her blood pressure was uncontrollable halfway through her pregnancy and the ultrasonography revealed fetoplacental insufficiency [ absent blood flow to fetus. So she was taken up for emergency caesarean section on June 15,2017. Baby Seeta weighed just 400 grams and measured just 8.6 inches when she was born, her minuscule feet only slightly bigger than a fingernail. She was not breathing when she was born. But the couple decided to fight to keep her alive. “When the baby was born, we were uncertain of what could happen,” Dr Sunil Janged, Chief Neonatologist said. The baby required artificial breathing support to regularize her breathing and then she was quickly transferred to Jivanta neonatal ICU. The baby was managed & looked after at Jivanta Neonatal ICU under precise care
    MEGA144195_006.jpg
  • By Dinesh Dubey in India A newborn baby weighing just 400 grams has survived after her premature birth and gained normalcy after completing a six-month-long clinical course, with her parents and doctors having struggled hard to keep her alive and healthy. The girl was discharged from the hospital in Udaipur on Thursday. Neonatologist Sunil Janged, who led a team of doctors and nursing staff for ensuring the girl's incredible survival, claimed that she was the smallest newborn baby to survive in India and South Asia. The last reported such survival was a baby, Rajni, weighing 450 grams, at Mohali in 2012. The girl, named Manushi by the nursing staff of Vivanta Children's Hospital, was born to a couple married for 35 years. When her mother’s blood pressure became uncontrollable halfway through her pregnancy and the ultrasonography revealed absence of blood flow to the foetus, a caesarean section was conducted on her on June 15, 2017. Baby Seeta is the smallest baby ever to survive not in India but also in South Asia. Doctors calls her "our miracle baby", saying: "She’s just fought and fought and fought against all the odds. But she’s made it." Born to a couple married for 35 years, when her blood pressure was uncontrollable halfway through her pregnancy and the ultrasonography revealed fetoplacental insufficiency [ absent blood flow to fetus. So she was taken up for emergency caesarean section on June 15,2017. Baby Seeta weighed just 400 grams and measured just 8.6 inches when she was born, her minuscule feet only slightly bigger than a fingernail. She was not breathing when she was born. But the couple decided to fight to keep her alive. “When the baby was born, we were uncertain of what could happen,” Dr Sunil Janged, Chief Neonatologist said. The baby required artificial breathing support to regularize her breathing and then she was quickly transferred to Jivanta neonatal ICU. The baby was managed & looked after at Jivanta Neonatal ICU under precise care
    MEGA144195_008.jpg
  • Dec. 04, 2012 - Slogans on public wall in Cochin, Kerala (Credit Image: © Image Source/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20121204_baf_i19_11407.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: An epic clash of the titans has been caught on camera which saw one angry rhino mum scare off 15 ELEPHANTS Carpenter Martin Meyer was visiting a national park in South Africa when he spotted a rhino mum with her young calf. Martin has been visiting the park for 20 years on and off and often drives there for a ‘builder’s break’ between jobs. But never in all the years he’s been visiting had he seen anything like this before, when one rhino mum faced-off against a whole herd of elephants. Martin’s amazing images were taken around 4.20pm when he came across the brewing confrontation. Martin, who is not naming the park to protect the rhino mother, said: “Armed with an incredibly beautiful horn and her motherly instinct the mother rhino stood her ground and protected the calf, although she was completely outnumbered by the elephants. “A herd of about 15 elephants consisting of a matriarch and a few youngsters and a few sub adult bulls were approaching and going to cross the path of the mum and the calf. “The rhino mum looked intently in their direction and the ellies seemed oblivious to her and the calf and kept encroaching on her personal space. “When they were around 20 metres away from her position she exploded into a sprint with the baby following and ran directly towards the elephants sending them scattering in all directions, with a massive cloud of dust as a result. “After recovering from the initial shock the elephant herd regrouped and aligned themselves next to one another to slowly move closer to the rhino mum, almost taunting her. Some of the young bulls even moved around and circled them from behind.” More than three minutes of stand-off followed as the stare down continued between the rhino mother and the matriarch of the ellies. Martin said: “My adrenaline was pumping and I was holding my breath for what might happen next, my wife always jokes with me that I stop breathing when I see special stuff in the bush. “As the d
    MEGA190269_001.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: An epic clash of the titans has been caught on camera which saw one angry rhino mum scare off 15 ELEPHANTS Carpenter Martin Meyer was visiting a national park in South Africa when he spotted a rhino mum with her young calf. Martin has been visiting the park for 20 years on and off and often drives there for a ‘builder’s break’ between jobs. But never in all the years he’s been visiting had he seen anything like this before, when one rhino mum faced-off against a whole herd of elephants. Martin’s amazing images were taken around 4.20pm when he came across the brewing confrontation. Martin, who is not naming the park to protect the rhino mother, said: “Armed with an incredibly beautiful horn and her motherly instinct the mother rhino stood her ground and protected the calf, although she was completely outnumbered by the elephants. “A herd of about 15 elephants consisting of a matriarch and a few youngsters and a few sub adult bulls were approaching and going to cross the path of the mum and the calf. “The rhino mum looked intently in their direction and the ellies seemed oblivious to her and the calf and kept encroaching on her personal space. “When they were around 20 metres away from her position she exploded into a sprint with the baby following and ran directly towards the elephants sending them scattering in all directions, with a massive cloud of dust as a result. “After recovering from the initial shock the elephant herd regrouped and aligned themselves next to one another to slowly move closer to the rhino mum, almost taunting her. Some of the young bulls even moved around and circled them from behind.” More than three minutes of stand-off followed as the stare down continued between the rhino mother and the matriarch of the ellies. Martin said: “My adrenaline was pumping and I was holding my breath for what might happen next, my wife always jokes with me that I stop breathing when I see special stuff in the bush. “As the d
    MEGA190269_008.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: An epic clash of the titans has been caught on camera which saw one angry rhino mum scare off 15 ELEPHANTS Carpenter Martin Meyer was visiting a national park in South Africa when he spotted a rhino mum with her young calf. Martin has been visiting the park for 20 years on and off and often drives there for a ‘builder’s break’ between jobs. But never in all the years he’s been visiting had he seen anything like this before, when one rhino mum faced-off against a whole herd of elephants. Martin’s amazing images were taken around 4.20pm when he came across the brewing confrontation. Martin, who is not naming the park to protect the rhino mother, said: “Armed with an incredibly beautiful horn and her motherly instinct the mother rhino stood her ground and protected the calf, although she was completely outnumbered by the elephants. “A herd of about 15 elephants consisting of a matriarch and a few youngsters and a few sub adult bulls were approaching and going to cross the path of the mum and the calf. “The rhino mum looked intently in their direction and the ellies seemed oblivious to her and the calf and kept encroaching on her personal space. “When they were around 20 metres away from her position she exploded into a sprint with the baby following and ran directly towards the elephants sending them scattering in all directions, with a massive cloud of dust as a result. “After recovering from the initial shock the elephant herd regrouped and aligned themselves next to one another to slowly move closer to the rhino mum, almost taunting her. Some of the young bulls even moved around and circled them from behind.” More than three minutes of stand-off followed as the stare down continued between the rhino mother and the matriarch of the ellies. Martin said: “My adrenaline was pumping and I was holding my breath for what might happen next, my wife always jokes with me that I stop breathing when I see special stuff in the bush. “As the d
    MEGA190269_007.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: An epic clash of the titans has been caught on camera which saw one angry rhino mum scare off 15 ELEPHANTS Carpenter Martin Meyer was visiting a national park in South Africa when he spotted a rhino mum with her young calf. Martin has been visiting the park for 20 years on and off and often drives there for a ‘builder’s break’ between jobs. But never in all the years he’s been visiting had he seen anything like this before, when one rhino mum faced-off against a whole herd of elephants. Martin’s amazing images were taken around 4.20pm when he came across the brewing confrontation. Martin, who is not naming the park to protect the rhino mother, said: “Armed with an incredibly beautiful horn and her motherly instinct the mother rhino stood her ground and protected the calf, although she was completely outnumbered by the elephants. “A herd of about 15 elephants consisting of a matriarch and a few youngsters and a few sub adult bulls were approaching and going to cross the path of the mum and the calf. “The rhino mum looked intently in their direction and the ellies seemed oblivious to her and the calf and kept encroaching on her personal space. “When they were around 20 metres away from her position she exploded into a sprint with the baby following and ran directly towards the elephants sending them scattering in all directions, with a massive cloud of dust as a result. “After recovering from the initial shock the elephant herd regrouped and aligned themselves next to one another to slowly move closer to the rhino mum, almost taunting her. Some of the young bulls even moved around and circled them from behind.” More than three minutes of stand-off followed as the stare down continued between the rhino mother and the matriarch of the ellies. Martin said: “My adrenaline was pumping and I was holding my breath for what might happen next, my wife always jokes with me that I stop breathing when I see special stuff in the bush. “As the d
    MEGA190269_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: An epic clash of the titans has been caught on camera which saw one angry rhino mum scare off 15 ELEPHANTS Carpenter Martin Meyer was visiting a national park in South Africa when he spotted a rhino mum with her young calf. Martin has been visiting the park for 20 years on and off and often drives there for a ‘builder’s break’ between jobs. But never in all the years he’s been visiting had he seen anything like this before, when one rhino mum faced-off against a whole herd of elephants. Martin’s amazing images were taken around 4.20pm when he came across the brewing confrontation. Martin, who is not naming the park to protect the rhino mother, said: “Armed with an incredibly beautiful horn and her motherly instinct the mother rhino stood her ground and protected the calf, although she was completely outnumbered by the elephants. “A herd of about 15 elephants consisting of a matriarch and a few youngsters and a few sub adult bulls were approaching and going to cross the path of the mum and the calf. “The rhino mum looked intently in their direction and the ellies seemed oblivious to her and the calf and kept encroaching on her personal space. “When they were around 20 metres away from her position she exploded into a sprint with the baby following and ran directly towards the elephants sending them scattering in all directions, with a massive cloud of dust as a result. “After recovering from the initial shock the elephant herd regrouped and aligned themselves next to one another to slowly move closer to the rhino mum, almost taunting her. Some of the young bulls even moved around and circled them from behind.” More than three minutes of stand-off followed as the stare down continued between the rhino mother and the matriarch of the ellies. Martin said: “My adrenaline was pumping and I was holding my breath for what might happen next, my wife always jokes with me that I stop breathing when I see special stuff in the bush. “As the d
    MEGA190269_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: An epic clash of the titans has been caught on camera which saw one angry rhino mum scare off 15 ELEPHANTS Carpenter Martin Meyer was visiting a national park in South Africa when he spotted a rhino mum with her young calf. Martin has been visiting the park for 20 years on and off and often drives there for a ‘builder’s break’ between jobs. But never in all the years he’s been visiting had he seen anything like this before, when one rhino mum faced-off against a whole herd of elephants. Martin’s amazing images were taken around 4.20pm when he came across the brewing confrontation. Martin, who is not naming the park to protect the rhino mother, said: “Armed with an incredibly beautiful horn and her motherly instinct the mother rhino stood her ground and protected the calf, although she was completely outnumbered by the elephants. “A herd of about 15 elephants consisting of a matriarch and a few youngsters and a few sub adult bulls were approaching and going to cross the path of the mum and the calf. “The rhino mum looked intently in their direction and the ellies seemed oblivious to her and the calf and kept encroaching on her personal space. “When they were around 20 metres away from her position she exploded into a sprint with the baby following and ran directly towards the elephants sending them scattering in all directions, with a massive cloud of dust as a result. “After recovering from the initial shock the elephant herd regrouped and aligned themselves next to one another to slowly move closer to the rhino mum, almost taunting her. Some of the young bulls even moved around and circled them from behind.” More than three minutes of stand-off followed as the stare down continued between the rhino mother and the matriarch of the ellies. Martin said: “My adrenaline was pumping and I was holding my breath for what might happen next, my wife always jokes with me that I stop breathing when I see special stuff in the bush. “As the d
    MEGA190269_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: An epic clash of the titans has been caught on camera which saw one angry rhino mum scare off 15 ELEPHANTS Carpenter Martin Meyer was visiting a national park in South Africa when he spotted a rhino mum with her young calf. Martin has been visiting the park for 20 years on and off and often drives there for a ‘builder’s break’ between jobs. But never in all the years he’s been visiting had he seen anything like this before, when one rhino mum faced-off against a whole herd of elephants. Martin’s amazing images were taken around 4.20pm when he came across the brewing confrontation. Martin, who is not naming the park to protect the rhino mother, said: “Armed with an incredibly beautiful horn and her motherly instinct the mother rhino stood her ground and protected the calf, although she was completely outnumbered by the elephants. “A herd of about 15 elephants consisting of a matriarch and a few youngsters and a few sub adult bulls were approaching and going to cross the path of the mum and the calf. “The rhino mum looked intently in their direction and the ellies seemed oblivious to her and the calf and kept encroaching on her personal space. “When they were around 20 metres away from her position she exploded into a sprint with the baby following and ran directly towards the elephants sending them scattering in all directions, with a massive cloud of dust as a result. “After recovering from the initial shock the elephant herd regrouped and aligned themselves next to one another to slowly move closer to the rhino mum, almost taunting her. Some of the young bulls even moved around and circled them from behind.” More than three minutes of stand-off followed as the stare down continued between the rhino mother and the matriarch of the ellies. Martin said: “My adrenaline was pumping and I was holding my breath for what might happen next, my wife always jokes with me that I stop breathing when I see special stuff in the bush. “As the d
    MEGA190269_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: An epic clash of the titans has been caught on camera which saw one angry rhino mum scare off 15 ELEPHANTS Carpenter Martin Meyer was visiting a national park in South Africa when he spotted a rhino mum with her young calf. Martin has been visiting the park for 20 years on and off and often drives there for a ‘builder’s break’ between jobs. But never in all the years he’s been visiting had he seen anything like this before, when one rhino mum faced-off against a whole herd of elephants. Martin’s amazing images were taken around 4.20pm when he came across the brewing confrontation. Martin, who is not naming the park to protect the rhino mother, said: “Armed with an incredibly beautiful horn and her motherly instinct the mother rhino stood her ground and protected the calf, although she was completely outnumbered by the elephants. “A herd of about 15 elephants consisting of a matriarch and a few youngsters and a few sub adult bulls were approaching and going to cross the path of the mum and the calf. “The rhino mum looked intently in their direction and the ellies seemed oblivious to her and the calf and kept encroaching on her personal space. “When they were around 20 metres away from her position she exploded into a sprint with the baby following and ran directly towards the elephants sending them scattering in all directions, with a massive cloud of dust as a result. “After recovering from the initial shock the elephant herd regrouped and aligned themselves next to one another to slowly move closer to the rhino mum, almost taunting her. Some of the young bulls even moved around and circled them from behind.” More than three minutes of stand-off followed as the stare down continued between the rhino mother and the matriarch of the ellies. Martin said: “My adrenaline was pumping and I was holding my breath for what might happen next, my wife always jokes with me that I stop breathing when I see special stuff in the bush. “As the d
    MEGA190269_005.jpg
  • Stars walk the red carpet for the movie Breath at The Ritz Cinema in Sydney. Breath is a new movie directed by Australia's Simon Baker, Simon also stars in the movie. 26 Apr 2018 Pictured: Simon Baker. Photo credit: SPEED MEDIA / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA209207_004.jpg
  • Stars walk the red carpet for the movie Breath at The Ritz Cinema in Sydney. Breath is a new movie directed by Australia's Simon Baker, Simon also stars in the movie. 26 Apr 2018 Pictured: Simon Baker, Ben Spence. Photo credit: SPEED MEDIA / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA209207_006.jpg
  • Stars walk the red carpet for the movie Breath at The Ritz Cinema in Sydney. Breath is a new movie directed by Australia's Simon Baker, Simon also stars in the movie. 26 Apr 2018 Pictured: Simon Baker, Tim Winton, Elizabeth Debicki, Samson Coulter, Ben Spence. Photo credit: SPEED MEDIA / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA209207_008.jpg
  • Stars walk the red carpet for the movie Breath at The Ritz Cinema in Sydney. Breath is a new movie directed by Australia's Simon Baker, Simon also stars in the movie. 26 Apr 2018 Pictured: Simon Baker, Tim Winton, Elizabeth Debicki, Samson Coulter, Ben Spence. Photo credit: SPEED MEDIA / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA209207_015.jpg
  • By Sanjay Pandey in India for MailOnline This 40-year-old gritty man not only survived 12 hours with a 5ft long and tree branch lodged in his neck and head, but also managed to travel 60km with the (wood) staff to a private hospital in Bangalore, India. Farm labourer Nanjesha HN, who hails from Amruthur in Tumkur district of south Indian state of Karnataka, had met with a road accident and got himself impaled on the branch (3cm in diameter) on December 22. The staff pierced through his neck - entering from the left of the neck and exiting on the right side behind the ear. A team of doctors from Sparsh Hospital, Yeshwantpur, successfully removed the branch and saved his life. Four months on, the patient has recovered well and is able to narrate his own story. “On December 22, I was riding a two-wheeler from my house and was heading toward Kunigal to attend the funeral of a relative. I veered to my left to avoid an oncoming truck. But I lost my balance and impaled myself on a dried up branch lying on the ground,” said Nanjesha, still struggling to speak clearly. “It pierced through my neck and emerged on the other side from behind my ear. I was bleeding profusely and had to keep my mouth wide open, gasping for breath. At that time, I didn’t know whether I would live to see the next morning. But I never gave up and kept fighting for survival,” he added. Luckily for Nanjesha, a passersby spotted him and called an ambulance. Though the vehicle reached in 20 minutes and he was taken to the nearby Kunigal government hospital, the doctors refused to take his case. “The doctor didn’t even touch me. I was still on the ambulance, so they decided to take me to another nearby hospital in Belluru Cross,” Nanjesha recalled. From there, he was taken to a private medical college where doctors administered first aid. Since the patient’s airways were obstructed, the doctors had to do a tracheostomy near his throat to provide an air passage to help him breathe. “I w
    MEGA419759_002.jpg
  • By Sanjay Pandey in India for MailOnline This 40-year-old gritty man not only survived 12 hours with a 5ft long and tree branch lodged in his neck and head, but also managed to travel 60km with the (wood) staff to a private hospital in Bangalore, India. Farm labourer Nanjesha HN, who hails from Amruthur in Tumkur district of south Indian state of Karnataka, had met with a road accident and got himself impaled on the branch (3cm in diameter) on December 22. The staff pierced through his neck - entering from the left of the neck and exiting on the right side behind the ear. A team of doctors from Sparsh Hospital, Yeshwantpur, successfully removed the branch and saved his life. Four months on, the patient has recovered well and is able to narrate his own story. “On December 22, I was riding a two-wheeler from my house and was heading toward Kunigal to attend the funeral of a relative. I veered to my left to avoid an oncoming truck. But I lost my balance and impaled myself on a dried up branch lying on the ground,” said Nanjesha, still struggling to speak clearly. “It pierced through my neck and emerged on the other side from behind my ear. I was bleeding profusely and had to keep my mouth wide open, gasping for breath. At that time, I didn’t know whether I would live to see the next morning. But I never gave up and kept fighting for survival,” he added. Luckily for Nanjesha, a passersby spotted him and called an ambulance. Though the vehicle reached in 20 minutes and he was taken to the nearby Kunigal government hospital, the doctors refused to take his case. “The doctor didn’t even touch me. I was still on the ambulance, so they decided to take me to another nearby hospital in Belluru Cross,” Nanjesha recalled. From there, he was taken to a private medical college where doctors administered first aid. Since the patient’s airways were obstructed, the doctors had to do a tracheostomy near his throat to provide an air passage to help him breathe. “I w
    MEGA419759_005.jpg
  • By Sanjay Pandey in India for MailOnline This 40-year-old gritty man not only survived 12 hours with a 5ft long and tree branch lodged in his neck and head, but also managed to travel 60km with the (wood) staff to a private hospital in Bangalore, India. Farm labourer Nanjesha HN, who hails from Amruthur in Tumkur district of south Indian state of Karnataka, had met with a road accident and got himself impaled on the branch (3cm in diameter) on December 22. The staff pierced through his neck - entering from the left of the neck and exiting on the right side behind the ear. A team of doctors from Sparsh Hospital, Yeshwantpur, successfully removed the branch and saved his life. Four months on, the patient has recovered well and is able to narrate his own story. “On December 22, I was riding a two-wheeler from my house and was heading toward Kunigal to attend the funeral of a relative. I veered to my left to avoid an oncoming truck. But I lost my balance and impaled myself on a dried up branch lying on the ground,” said Nanjesha, still struggling to speak clearly. “It pierced through my neck and emerged on the other side from behind my ear. I was bleeding profusely and had to keep my mouth wide open, gasping for breath. At that time, I didn’t know whether I would live to see the next morning. But I never gave up and kept fighting for survival,” he added. Luckily for Nanjesha, a passersby spotted him and called an ambulance. Though the vehicle reached in 20 minutes and he was taken to the nearby Kunigal government hospital, the doctors refused to take his case. “The doctor didn’t even touch me. I was still on the ambulance, so they decided to take me to another nearby hospital in Belluru Cross,” Nanjesha recalled. From there, he was taken to a private medical college where doctors administered first aid. Since the patient’s airways were obstructed, the doctors had to do a tracheostomy near his throat to provide an air passage to help him breathe. “I w
    MEGA419759_007.jpg
  • By Sanjay Pandey in India for MailOnline This 40-year-old gritty man not only survived 12 hours with a 5ft long and tree branch lodged in his neck and head, but also managed to travel 60km with the (wood) staff to a private hospital in Bangalore, India. Farm labourer Nanjesha HN, who hails from Amruthur in Tumkur district of south Indian state of Karnataka, had met with a road accident and got himself impaled on the branch (3cm in diameter) on December 22. The staff pierced through his neck - entering from the left of the neck and exiting on the right side behind the ear. A team of doctors from Sparsh Hospital, Yeshwantpur, successfully removed the branch and saved his life. Four months on, the patient has recovered well and is able to narrate his own story. “On December 22, I was riding a two-wheeler from my house and was heading toward Kunigal to attend the funeral of a relative. I veered to my left to avoid an oncoming truck. But I lost my balance and impaled myself on a dried up branch lying on the ground,” said Nanjesha, still struggling to speak clearly. “It pierced through my neck and emerged on the other side from behind my ear. I was bleeding profusely and had to keep my mouth wide open, gasping for breath. At that time, I didn’t know whether I would live to see the next morning. But I never gave up and kept fighting for survival,” he added. Luckily for Nanjesha, a passersby spotted him and called an ambulance. Though the vehicle reached in 20 minutes and he was taken to the nearby Kunigal government hospital, the doctors refused to take his case. “The doctor didn’t even touch me. I was still on the ambulance, so they decided to take me to another nearby hospital in Belluru Cross,” Nanjesha recalled. From there, he was taken to a private medical college where doctors administered first aid. Since the patient’s airways were obstructed, the doctors had to do a tracheostomy near his throat to provide an air passage to help him breathe. “I w
    MEGA419759_004.jpg
  • By Sanjay Pandey in India for MailOnline This 40-year-old gritty man not only survived 12 hours with a 5ft long and tree branch lodged in his neck and head, but also managed to travel 60km with the (wood) staff to a private hospital in Bangalore, India. Farm labourer Nanjesha HN, who hails from Amruthur in Tumkur district of south Indian state of Karnataka, had met with a road accident and got himself impaled on the branch (3cm in diameter) on December 22. The staff pierced through his neck - entering from the left of the neck and exiting on the right side behind the ear. A team of doctors from Sparsh Hospital, Yeshwantpur, successfully removed the branch and saved his life. Four months on, the patient has recovered well and is able to narrate his own story. “On December 22, I was riding a two-wheeler from my house and was heading toward Kunigal to attend the funeral of a relative. I veered to my left to avoid an oncoming truck. But I lost my balance and impaled myself on a dried up branch lying on the ground,” said Nanjesha, still struggling to speak clearly. “It pierced through my neck and emerged on the other side from behind my ear. I was bleeding profusely and had to keep my mouth wide open, gasping for breath. At that time, I didn’t know whether I would live to see the next morning. But I never gave up and kept fighting for survival,” he added. Luckily for Nanjesha, a passersby spotted him and called an ambulance. Though the vehicle reached in 20 minutes and he was taken to the nearby Kunigal government hospital, the doctors refused to take his case. “The doctor didn’t even touch me. I was still on the ambulance, so they decided to take me to another nearby hospital in Belluru Cross,” Nanjesha recalled. From there, he was taken to a private medical college where doctors administered first aid. Since the patient’s airways were obstructed, the doctors had to do a tracheostomy near his throat to provide an air passage to help him breathe. “I w
    MEGA419759_009.jpg
  • By Sanjay Pandey in India for MailOnline This 40-year-old gritty man not only survived 12 hours with a 5ft long and tree branch lodged in his neck and head, but also managed to travel 60km with the (wood) staff to a private hospital in Bangalore, India. Farm labourer Nanjesha HN, who hails from Amruthur in Tumkur district of south Indian state of Karnataka, had met with a road accident and got himself impaled on the branch (3cm in diameter) on December 22. The staff pierced through his neck - entering from the left of the neck and exiting on the right side behind the ear. A team of doctors from Sparsh Hospital, Yeshwantpur, successfully removed the branch and saved his life. Four months on, the patient has recovered well and is able to narrate his own story. “On December 22, I was riding a two-wheeler from my house and was heading toward Kunigal to attend the funeral of a relative. I veered to my left to avoid an oncoming truck. But I lost my balance and impaled myself on a dried up branch lying on the ground,” said Nanjesha, still struggling to speak clearly. “It pierced through my neck and emerged on the other side from behind my ear. I was bleeding profusely and had to keep my mouth wide open, gasping for breath. At that time, I didn’t know whether I would live to see the next morning. But I never gave up and kept fighting for survival,” he added. Luckily for Nanjesha, a passersby spotted him and called an ambulance. Though the vehicle reached in 20 minutes and he was taken to the nearby Kunigal government hospital, the doctors refused to take his case. “The doctor didn’t even touch me. I was still on the ambulance, so they decided to take me to another nearby hospital in Belluru Cross,” Nanjesha recalled. From there, he was taken to a private medical college where doctors administered first aid. Since the patient’s airways were obstructed, the doctors had to do a tracheostomy near his throat to provide an air passage to help him breathe. “I w
    MEGA419759_008.jpg
  • By Sanjay Pandey in India for MailOnline This 40-year-old gritty man not only survived 12 hours with a 5ft long and tree branch lodged in his neck and head, but also managed to travel 60km with the (wood) staff to a private hospital in Bangalore, India. Farm labourer Nanjesha HN, who hails from Amruthur in Tumkur district of south Indian state of Karnataka, had met with a road accident and got himself impaled on the branch (3cm in diameter) on December 22. The staff pierced through his neck - entering from the left of the neck and exiting on the right side behind the ear. A team of doctors from Sparsh Hospital, Yeshwantpur, successfully removed the branch and saved his life. Four months on, the patient has recovered well and is able to narrate his own story. “On December 22, I was riding a two-wheeler from my house and was heading toward Kunigal to attend the funeral of a relative. I veered to my left to avoid an oncoming truck. But I lost my balance and impaled myself on a dried up branch lying on the ground,” said Nanjesha, still struggling to speak clearly. “It pierced through my neck and emerged on the other side from behind my ear. I was bleeding profusely and had to keep my mouth wide open, gasping for breath. At that time, I didn’t know whether I would live to see the next morning. But I never gave up and kept fighting for survival,” he added. Luckily for Nanjesha, a passersby spotted him and called an ambulance. Though the vehicle reached in 20 minutes and he was taken to the nearby Kunigal government hospital, the doctors refused to take his case. “The doctor didn’t even touch me. I was still on the ambulance, so they decided to take me to another nearby hospital in Belluru Cross,” Nanjesha recalled. From there, he was taken to a private medical college where doctors administered first aid. Since the patient’s airways were obstructed, the doctors had to do a tracheostomy near his throat to provide an air passage to help him breathe. “I w
    MEGA419759_010.jpg
  • By Sanjay Pandey in India for MailOnline This 40-year-old gritty man not only survived 12 hours with a 5ft long and tree branch lodged in his neck and head, but also managed to travel 60km with the (wood) staff to a private hospital in Bangalore, India. Farm labourer Nanjesha HN, who hails from Amruthur in Tumkur district of south Indian state of Karnataka, had met with a road accident and got himself impaled on the branch (3cm in diameter) on December 22. The staff pierced through his neck - entering from the left of the neck and exiting on the right side behind the ear. A team of doctors from Sparsh Hospital, Yeshwantpur, successfully removed the branch and saved his life. Four months on, the patient has recovered well and is able to narrate his own story. “On December 22, I was riding a two-wheeler from my house and was heading toward Kunigal to attend the funeral of a relative. I veered to my left to avoid an oncoming truck. But I lost my balance and impaled myself on a dried up branch lying on the ground,” said Nanjesha, still struggling to speak clearly. “It pierced through my neck and emerged on the other side from behind my ear. I was bleeding profusely and had to keep my mouth wide open, gasping for breath. At that time, I didn’t know whether I would live to see the next morning. But I never gave up and kept fighting for survival,” he added. Luckily for Nanjesha, a passersby spotted him and called an ambulance. Though the vehicle reached in 20 minutes and he was taken to the nearby Kunigal government hospital, the doctors refused to take his case. “The doctor didn’t even touch me. I was still on the ambulance, so they decided to take me to another nearby hospital in Belluru Cross,” Nanjesha recalled. From there, he was taken to a private medical college where doctors administered first aid. Since the patient’s airways were obstructed, the doctors had to do a tracheostomy near his throat to provide an air passage to help him breathe. “I w
    MEGA419759_003.jpg
  • By Sanjay Pandey in India for MailOnline This 40-year-old gritty man not only survived 12 hours with a 5ft long and tree branch lodged in his neck and head, but also managed to travel 60km with the (wood) staff to a private hospital in Bangalore, India. Farm labourer Nanjesha HN, who hails from Amruthur in Tumkur district of south Indian state of Karnataka, had met with a road accident and got himself impaled on the branch (3cm in diameter) on December 22. The staff pierced through his neck - entering from the left of the neck and exiting on the right side behind the ear. A team of doctors from Sparsh Hospital, Yeshwantpur, successfully removed the branch and saved his life. Four months on, the patient has recovered well and is able to narrate his own story. “On December 22, I was riding a two-wheeler from my house and was heading toward Kunigal to attend the funeral of a relative. I veered to my left to avoid an oncoming truck. But I lost my balance and impaled myself on a dried up branch lying on the ground,” said Nanjesha, still struggling to speak clearly. “It pierced through my neck and emerged on the other side from behind my ear. I was bleeding profusely and had to keep my mouth wide open, gasping for breath. At that time, I didn’t know whether I would live to see the next morning. But I never gave up and kept fighting for survival,” he added. Luckily for Nanjesha, a passersby spotted him and called an ambulance. Though the vehicle reached in 20 minutes and he was taken to the nearby Kunigal government hospital, the doctors refused to take his case. “The doctor didn’t even touch me. I was still on the ambulance, so they decided to take me to another nearby hospital in Belluru Cross,” Nanjesha recalled. From there, he was taken to a private medical college where doctors administered first aid. Since the patient’s airways were obstructed, the doctors had to do a tracheostomy near his throat to provide an air passage to help him breathe. “I w
    MEGA419759_001.jpg
  • By Sanjay Pandey in India for MailOnline This 40-year-old gritty man not only survived 12 hours with a 5ft long and tree branch lodged in his neck and head, but also managed to travel 60km with the (wood) staff to a private hospital in Bangalore, India. Farm labourer Nanjesha HN, who hails from Amruthur in Tumkur district of south Indian state of Karnataka, had met with a road accident and got himself impaled on the branch (3cm in diameter) on December 22. The staff pierced through his neck - entering from the left of the neck and exiting on the right side behind the ear. A team of doctors from Sparsh Hospital, Yeshwantpur, successfully removed the branch and saved his life. Four months on, the patient has recovered well and is able to narrate his own story. “On December 22, I was riding a two-wheeler from my house and was heading toward Kunigal to attend the funeral of a relative. I veered to my left to avoid an oncoming truck. But I lost my balance and impaled myself on a dried up branch lying on the ground,” said Nanjesha, still struggling to speak clearly. “It pierced through my neck and emerged on the other side from behind my ear. I was bleeding profusely and had to keep my mouth wide open, gasping for breath. At that time, I didn’t know whether I would live to see the next morning. But I never gave up and kept fighting for survival,” he added. Luckily for Nanjesha, a passersby spotted him and called an ambulance. Though the vehicle reached in 20 minutes and he was taken to the nearby Kunigal government hospital, the doctors refused to take his case. “The doctor didn’t even touch me. I was still on the ambulance, so they decided to take me to another nearby hospital in Belluru Cross,” Nanjesha recalled. From there, he was taken to a private medical college where doctors administered first aid. Since the patient’s airways were obstructed, the doctors had to do a tracheostomy near his throat to provide an air passage to help him breathe. “I w
    MEGA419759_006.jpg
  • September 18, 2016 - Odessa, Ukraine - 5 years boy in a swimming goggles learning to swim underwater in the pool (Credit Image: © Andrey Nekrasov/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
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  • A "Justice For Breonna Taylor" demonstration protesting police brutality and racial inequality on September 23, 2020 in midtown Manhattan, New York City. Demonstrators are demanding further action against the Louisville, Kentucky Metro Police Department officers involved in the killing of Breonna Taylor following a Kentucky grand jury indictment of former Louisville police officer Brett Hankison who was charged today with three counts of "wanton endangerment".  This protest was also in support of the Black Lives Matter movement during the worldwide coronavirus pandemic amid an atmosphere of protests, demonstrations, riots, vandalism and destruction of property in response to the death of George Floyd who died while being arrested by police officers in Minneapolis, Minnesota on May 25th.  Cyclists blocked automobile traffic at intersections to allow protesters to march on city streets.  It appeared that a majority of the protesters wore face masks or protective face coverings.<br />
(NYC)
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  • Yoga and Natural Movement on Trappieskop, Clovelly, Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa, RSA
    JMMsonya7r3-93072020.jpg
  • Yoga and Natural Movement on Trappieskop, Clovelly, Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa, RSA
    JMMsonya7r3-92342020.jpg
  • Yoga and Natural Movement on Trappieskop, Clovelly, Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa, RSA
    JMMsonya7r3-90502020.jpg
  • Anthony Joshua (right) in action against Andy Ruiz Jr in the WBA, IBF, WBO and IBO Heavyweight World Championships title fight at Madison Square Garden, New York.
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  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey and Supito Maity in Sao Paulo A 28-year-old Brazilian woman crippled by sheer weight and disproportionate size of tumours in her lower limbs is pleading for help from the netizens. Karina Rodini, who was fired from her job and is forced stay unmarried due to her medical condition, says the disease took a heavy toll on her personal and professional life. Karina has spent most of her adult life hiding it in public. But after last year’s botched up surgery in a state-run hospital, her ‘legs have become double the size and no clothes fit her’, making her a pariah in the locality. Karina suffers from type one neurofibromatosis, a genetic condition marked by changes in skin colour and the growth of non-cancerous cysts in different parts. The disease affects one in 4000 people globally. According to the US National Library of Medicine, patient with type one neufibromatosis are born with one mutated copy of the NF1 gene in each cell. It said, "In about half of cases, the altered gene is inherited from an affected parent. The remaining cases result from new mutations in the NF1 gene and occur in people with no history of the disorder in their family." Karina, from Sao Paulo, was just two when ‘coffee milk’ patches started to appear on her skin. She said due to the lack of formation of lumps, the doctors could barely make out what ailed her. “I was diagnosed with neurofibromatosis when I was only two years old, at first it was only ‘coffee milk’ patches so the doctor couldn’t do anything because there were no lumps or tumours,” she said. The cysts started to show up almost nine years later. One year later, when she was 12, Karina underwent a surgical procedure to remove a cyst, weighing around nine kilograms, from her uterus. According to her, the cavity gave her a semblance of a pregnant woman. Being the oldest child among three, Karina has always received love from her mother, Fatima M. Abou Ali, 58, a single woman, who raised
    MEGA348608_008.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey and Supito Maity in Sao Paulo A 28-year-old Brazilian woman crippled by sheer weight and disproportionate size of tumours in her lower limbs is pleading for help from the netizens. Karina Rodini, who was fired from her job and is forced stay unmarried due to her medical condition, says the disease took a heavy toll on her personal and professional life. Karina has spent most of her adult life hiding it in public. But after last year’s botched up surgery in a state-run hospital, her ‘legs have become double the size and no clothes fit her’, making her a pariah in the locality. Karina suffers from type one neurofibromatosis, a genetic condition marked by changes in skin colour and the growth of non-cancerous cysts in different parts. The disease affects one in 4000 people globally. According to the US National Library of Medicine, patient with type one neufibromatosis are born with one mutated copy of the NF1 gene in each cell. It said, "In about half of cases, the altered gene is inherited from an affected parent. The remaining cases result from new mutations in the NF1 gene and occur in people with no history of the disorder in their family." Karina, from Sao Paulo, was just two when ‘coffee milk’ patches started to appear on her skin. She said due to the lack of formation of lumps, the doctors could barely make out what ailed her. “I was diagnosed with neurofibromatosis when I was only two years old, at first it was only ‘coffee milk’ patches so the doctor couldn’t do anything because there were no lumps or tumours,” she said. The cysts started to show up almost nine years later. One year later, when she was 12, Karina underwent a surgical procedure to remove a cyst, weighing around nine kilograms, from her uterus. According to her, the cavity gave her a semblance of a pregnant woman. Being the oldest child among three, Karina has always received love from her mother, Fatima M. Abou Ali, 58, a single woman, who raised
    MEGA348608_009.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey and Supito Maity in Sao Paulo A 28-year-old Brazilian woman crippled by sheer weight and disproportionate size of tumours in her lower limbs is pleading for help from the netizens. Karina Rodini, who was fired from her job and is forced stay unmarried due to her medical condition, says the disease took a heavy toll on her personal and professional life. Karina has spent most of her adult life hiding it in public. But after last year’s botched up surgery in a state-run hospital, her ‘legs have become double the size and no clothes fit her’, making her a pariah in the locality. Karina suffers from type one neurofibromatosis, a genetic condition marked by changes in skin colour and the growth of non-cancerous cysts in different parts. The disease affects one in 4000 people globally. According to the US National Library of Medicine, patient with type one neufibromatosis are born with one mutated copy of the NF1 gene in each cell. It said, "In about half of cases, the altered gene is inherited from an affected parent. The remaining cases result from new mutations in the NF1 gene and occur in people with no history of the disorder in their family." Karina, from Sao Paulo, was just two when ‘coffee milk’ patches started to appear on her skin. She said due to the lack of formation of lumps, the doctors could barely make out what ailed her. “I was diagnosed with neurofibromatosis when I was only two years old, at first it was only ‘coffee milk’ patches so the doctor couldn’t do anything because there were no lumps or tumours,” she said. The cysts started to show up almost nine years later. One year later, when she was 12, Karina underwent a surgical procedure to remove a cyst, weighing around nine kilograms, from her uterus. According to her, the cavity gave her a semblance of a pregnant woman. Being the oldest child among three, Karina has always received love from her mother, Fatima M. Abou Ali, 58, a single woman, who raised
    MEGA348608_010.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey and Supito Maity in Sao Paulo A 28-year-old Brazilian woman crippled by sheer weight and disproportionate size of tumours in her lower limbs is pleading for help from the netizens. Karina Rodini, who was fired from her job and is forced stay unmarried due to her medical condition, says the disease took a heavy toll on her personal and professional life. Karina has spent most of her adult life hiding it in public. But after last year’s botched up surgery in a state-run hospital, her ‘legs have become double the size and no clothes fit her’, making her a pariah in the locality. Karina suffers from type one neurofibromatosis, a genetic condition marked by changes in skin colour and the growth of non-cancerous cysts in different parts. The disease affects one in 4000 people globally. According to the US National Library of Medicine, patient with type one neufibromatosis are born with one mutated copy of the NF1 gene in each cell. It said, "In about half of cases, the altered gene is inherited from an affected parent. The remaining cases result from new mutations in the NF1 gene and occur in people with no history of the disorder in their family." Karina, from Sao Paulo, was just two when ‘coffee milk’ patches started to appear on her skin. She said due to the lack of formation of lumps, the doctors could barely make out what ailed her. “I was diagnosed with neurofibromatosis when I was only two years old, at first it was only ‘coffee milk’ patches so the doctor couldn’t do anything because there were no lumps or tumours,” she said. The cysts started to show up almost nine years later. One year later, when she was 12, Karina underwent a surgical procedure to remove a cyst, weighing around nine kilograms, from her uterus. According to her, the cavity gave her a semblance of a pregnant woman. Being the oldest child among three, Karina has always received love from her mother, Fatima M. Abou Ali, 58, a single woman, who raised
    MEGA348608_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey and Supito Maity in Sao Paulo A 28-year-old Brazilian woman crippled by sheer weight and disproportionate size of tumours in her lower limbs is pleading for help from the netizens. Karina Rodini, who was fired from her job and is forced stay unmarried due to her medical condition, says the disease took a heavy toll on her personal and professional life. Karina has spent most of her adult life hiding it in public. But after last year’s botched up surgery in a state-run hospital, her ‘legs have become double the size and no clothes fit her’, making her a pariah in the locality. Karina suffers from type one neurofibromatosis, a genetic condition marked by changes in skin colour and the growth of non-cancerous cysts in different parts. The disease affects one in 4000 people globally. According to the US National Library of Medicine, patient with type one neufibromatosis are born with one mutated copy of the NF1 gene in each cell. It said, "In about half of cases, the altered gene is inherited from an affected parent. The remaining cases result from new mutations in the NF1 gene and occur in people with no history of the disorder in their family." Karina, from Sao Paulo, was just two when ‘coffee milk’ patches started to appear on her skin. She said due to the lack of formation of lumps, the doctors could barely make out what ailed her. “I was diagnosed with neurofibromatosis when I was only two years old, at first it was only ‘coffee milk’ patches so the doctor couldn’t do anything because there were no lumps or tumours,” she said. The cysts started to show up almost nine years later. One year later, when she was 12, Karina underwent a surgical procedure to remove a cyst, weighing around nine kilograms, from her uterus. According to her, the cavity gave her a semblance of a pregnant woman. Being the oldest child among three, Karina has always received love from her mother, Fatima M. Abou Ali, 58, a single woman, who raised
    MEGA348608_011.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey and Supito Maity in Sao Paulo A 28-year-old Brazilian woman crippled by sheer weight and disproportionate size of tumours in her lower limbs is pleading for help from the netizens. Karina Rodini, who was fired from her job and is forced stay unmarried due to her medical condition, says the disease took a heavy toll on her personal and professional life. Karina has spent most of her adult life hiding it in public. But after last year’s botched up surgery in a state-run hospital, her ‘legs have become double the size and no clothes fit her’, making her a pariah in the locality. Karina suffers from type one neurofibromatosis, a genetic condition marked by changes in skin colour and the growth of non-cancerous cysts in different parts. The disease affects one in 4000 people globally. According to the US National Library of Medicine, patient with type one neufibromatosis are born with one mutated copy of the NF1 gene in each cell. It said, "In about half of cases, the altered gene is inherited from an affected parent. The remaining cases result from new mutations in the NF1 gene and occur in people with no history of the disorder in their family." Karina, from Sao Paulo, was just two when ‘coffee milk’ patches started to appear on her skin. She said due to the lack of formation of lumps, the doctors could barely make out what ailed her. “I was diagnosed with neurofibromatosis when I was only two years old, at first it was only ‘coffee milk’ patches so the doctor couldn’t do anything because there were no lumps or tumours,” she said. The cysts started to show up almost nine years later. One year later, when she was 12, Karina underwent a surgical procedure to remove a cyst, weighing around nine kilograms, from her uterus. According to her, the cavity gave her a semblance of a pregnant woman. Being the oldest child among three, Karina has always received love from her mother, Fatima M. Abou Ali, 58, a single woman, who raised
    MEGA348608_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey and Supito Maity in Sao Paulo A 28-year-old Brazilian woman crippled by sheer weight and disproportionate size of tumours in her lower limbs is pleading for help from the netizens. Karina Rodini, who was fired from her job and is forced stay unmarried due to her medical condition, says the disease took a heavy toll on her personal and professional life. Karina has spent most of her adult life hiding it in public. But after last year’s botched up surgery in a state-run hospital, her ‘legs have become double the size and no clothes fit her’, making her a pariah in the locality. Karina suffers from type one neurofibromatosis, a genetic condition marked by changes in skin colour and the growth of non-cancerous cysts in different parts. The disease affects one in 4000 people globally. According to the US National Library of Medicine, patient with type one neufibromatosis are born with one mutated copy of the NF1 gene in each cell. It said, "In about half of cases, the altered gene is inherited from an affected parent. The remaining cases result from new mutations in the NF1 gene and occur in people with no history of the disorder in their family." Karina, from Sao Paulo, was just two when ‘coffee milk’ patches started to appear on her skin. She said due to the lack of formation of lumps, the doctors could barely make out what ailed her. “I was diagnosed with neurofibromatosis when I was only two years old, at first it was only ‘coffee milk’ patches so the doctor couldn’t do anything because there were no lumps or tumours,” she said. The cysts started to show up almost nine years later. One year later, when she was 12, Karina underwent a surgical procedure to remove a cyst, weighing around nine kilograms, from her uterus. According to her, the cavity gave her a semblance of a pregnant woman. Being the oldest child among three, Karina has always received love from her mother, Fatima M. Abou Ali, 58, a single woman, who raised
    MEGA348608_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey and Supito Maity in Sao Paulo A 28-year-old Brazilian woman crippled by sheer weight and disproportionate size of tumours in her lower limbs is pleading for help from the netizens. Karina Rodini, who was fired from her job and is forced stay unmarried due to her medical condition, says the disease took a heavy toll on her personal and professional life. Karina has spent most of her adult life hiding it in public. But after last year’s botched up surgery in a state-run hospital, her ‘legs have become double the size and no clothes fit her’, making her a pariah in the locality. Karina suffers from type one neurofibromatosis, a genetic condition marked by changes in skin colour and the growth of non-cancerous cysts in different parts. The disease affects one in 4000 people globally. According to the US National Library of Medicine, patient with type one neufibromatosis are born with one mutated copy of the NF1 gene in each cell. It said, "In about half of cases, the altered gene is inherited from an affected parent. The remaining cases result from new mutations in the NF1 gene and occur in people with no history of the disorder in their family." Karina, from Sao Paulo, was just two when ‘coffee milk’ patches started to appear on her skin. She said due to the lack of formation of lumps, the doctors could barely make out what ailed her. “I was diagnosed with neurofibromatosis when I was only two years old, at first it was only ‘coffee milk’ patches so the doctor couldn’t do anything because there were no lumps or tumours,” she said. The cysts started to show up almost nine years later. One year later, when she was 12, Karina underwent a surgical procedure to remove a cyst, weighing around nine kilograms, from her uterus. According to her, the cavity gave her a semblance of a pregnant woman. Being the oldest child among three, Karina has always received love from her mother, Fatima M. Abou Ali, 58, a single woman, who raised
    MEGA348608_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey and Supito Maity in Sao Paulo A 28-year-old Brazilian woman crippled by sheer weight and disproportionate size of tumours in her lower limbs is pleading for help from the netizens. Karina Rodini, who was fired from her job and is forced stay unmarried due to her medical condition, says the disease took a heavy toll on her personal and professional life. Karina has spent most of her adult life hiding it in public. But after last year’s botched up surgery in a state-run hospital, her ‘legs have become double the size and no clothes fit her’, making her a pariah in the locality. Karina suffers from type one neurofibromatosis, a genetic condition marked by changes in skin colour and the growth of non-cancerous cysts in different parts. The disease affects one in 4000 people globally. According to the US National Library of Medicine, patient with type one neufibromatosis are born with one mutated copy of the NF1 gene in each cell. It said, "In about half of cases, the altered gene is inherited from an affected parent. The remaining cases result from new mutations in the NF1 gene and occur in people with no history of the disorder in their family." Karina, from Sao Paulo, was just two when ‘coffee milk’ patches started to appear on her skin. She said due to the lack of formation of lumps, the doctors could barely make out what ailed her. “I was diagnosed with neurofibromatosis when I was only two years old, at first it was only ‘coffee milk’ patches so the doctor couldn’t do anything because there were no lumps or tumours,” she said. The cysts started to show up almost nine years later. One year later, when she was 12, Karina underwent a surgical procedure to remove a cyst, weighing around nine kilograms, from her uterus. According to her, the cavity gave her a semblance of a pregnant woman. Being the oldest child among three, Karina has always received love from her mother, Fatima M. Abou Ali, 58, a single woman, who raised
    MEGA348608_007.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey and Supito Maity in Sao Paulo A 28-year-old Brazilian woman crippled by sheer weight and disproportionate size of tumours in her lower limbs is pleading for help from the netizens. Karina Rodini, who was fired from her job and is forced stay unmarried due to her medical condition, says the disease took a heavy toll on her personal and professional life. Karina has spent most of her adult life hiding it in public. But after last year’s botched up surgery in a state-run hospital, her ‘legs have become double the size and no clothes fit her’, making her a pariah in the locality. Karina suffers from type one neurofibromatosis, a genetic condition marked by changes in skin colour and the growth of non-cancerous cysts in different parts. The disease affects one in 4000 people globally. According to the US National Library of Medicine, patient with type one neufibromatosis are born with one mutated copy of the NF1 gene in each cell. It said, "In about half of cases, the altered gene is inherited from an affected parent. The remaining cases result from new mutations in the NF1 gene and occur in people with no history of the disorder in their family." Karina, from Sao Paulo, was just two when ‘coffee milk’ patches started to appear on her skin. She said due to the lack of formation of lumps, the doctors could barely make out what ailed her. “I was diagnosed with neurofibromatosis when I was only two years old, at first it was only ‘coffee milk’ patches so the doctor couldn’t do anything because there were no lumps or tumours,” she said. The cysts started to show up almost nine years later. One year later, when she was 12, Karina underwent a surgical procedure to remove a cyst, weighing around nine kilograms, from her uterus. According to her, the cavity gave her a semblance of a pregnant woman. Being the oldest child among three, Karina has always received love from her mother, Fatima M. Abou Ali, 58, a single woman, who raised
    MEGA348608_001.jpg
  • September 6, 2016 - Odessa, Ukraine - 4 months infant girl learning to swim underwater in waterbaby class in the pool (Credit Image: © Andrey Nekrasov/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160906_zap_n281_002.jpg
  • September 6, 2016 - Odessa, Ukraine - 4 months infant girl learning to swim underwater in waterbaby class in the pool (Credit Image: © Andrey Nekrasov/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160906_zap_n281_007.jpg
  • September 6, 2016 - Odessa, Ukraine - 4 months infant girl learning to swim underwater in waterbaby class in the pool (Credit Image: © Andrey Nekrasov/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160906_zap_n281_008.jpg
  • September 6, 2016 - Odessa, Ukraine - 4 months infant girl learning to swim underwater in waterbaby class in the pool (Credit Image: © Andrey Nekrasov/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160906_zap_n281_006.jpg
  • September 6, 2016 - Odessa, Ukraine - 4 months infant girl learning to swim underwater in waterbaby class in the pool (Credit Image: © Andrey Nekrasov/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160906_zap_n281_004.jpg
  • September 6, 2016 - Odessa, Ukraine - 4 months infant girl learning to swim underwater in waterbaby class in the pool (Credit Image: © Andrey Nekrasov/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160906_zap_n281_005.jpg
  • September 6, 2016 - Odessa, Ukraine - 4 months infant girl learning to swim underwater in waterbaby class in the pool (Credit Image: © Andrey Nekrasov/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160906_zap_n281_001.jpg
  • September 18, 2016 - Odessa, Ukraine - 5 years boy in a swimming goggles jumping into swimming pool (Credit Image: © Andrey Nekrasov/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160918_zap_n281_016.jpg
  • September 18, 2016 - Odessa, Ukraine - 5 years boy in a swimming goggles learning to swim underwater in the pool (Credit Image: © Andrey Nekrasov/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160918_zap_n281_015.jpg
  • September 18, 2016 - Odessa, Ukraine - 5 years boy in a swimming goggles learning to swim underwater in the pool (Credit Image: © Andrey Nekrasov/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160918_zap_n281_014.jpg
  • September 18, 2016 - Odessa, Ukraine - 5 years boy in a swimming goggles learning to swim underwater in the pool (Credit Image: © Andrey Nekrasov/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160918_zap_n281_013.jpg
  • September 18, 2016 - Odessa, Ukraine - 5 years boy in a swimming goggles learning to swim underwater in the pool (Credit Image: © Andrey Nekrasov/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160918_zap_n281_012.jpg
  • September 18, 2016 - Odessa, Ukraine - 5 years boy in a swimming goggles learning to swim underwater in the pool (Credit Image: © Andrey Nekrasov/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160918_zap_n281_010.jpg
  • September 18, 2016 - Odessa, Ukraine - 5 years boy in a swimming goggles learning to swim underwater in the pool (Credit Image: © Andrey Nekrasov/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160918_zap_n281_008.jpg
  • September 18, 2016 - Odessa, Ukraine - 5 years boy in a swimming goggles learning to swim underwater in the pool (Credit Image: © Andrey Nekrasov/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160918_zap_n281_007.jpg
  • September 18, 2016 - Odessa, Ukraine - 5 years boy in a swimming goggles learning to swim underwater in the pool and looking on a floating lemon (Credit Image: © Andrey Nekrasov/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160918_zap_n281_006.jpg
  • September 18, 2016 - Odessa, Ukraine - 5 years boy in a swimming goggles jumping into swimming pool (Credit Image: © Andrey Nekrasov/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160918_zap_n281_005.jpg
  • September 18, 2016 - Odessa, Ukraine - 5 years boy in a swimming goggles learning to swim underwater in the pool (Credit Image: © Andrey Nekrasov/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160918_zap_n281_004.jpg
  • September 18, 2016 - Odessa, Ukraine - 5 years boy in a swimming goggles jumping into swimming pool (Credit Image: © Andrey Nekrasov/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160918_zap_n281_003.jpg
  • Yoga and Natural Movement on Trappieskop, Clovelly, Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa, RSA
    JMMsonya7r3-92562020.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: By Sanjay Pandey and Supito Maity in Sao Paulo A 28-year-old Brazilian woman crippled by sheer weight and disproportionate size of tumours in her lower limbs is pleading for help from the netizens. Karina Rodini, who was fired from her job and is forced stay unmarried due to her medical condition, says the disease took a heavy toll on her personal and professional life. Karina has spent most of her adult life hiding it in public. But after last year’s botched up surgery in a state-run hospital, her ‘legs have become double the size and no clothes fit her’, making her a pariah in the locality. Karina suffers from type one neurofibromatosis, a genetic condition marked by changes in skin colour and the growth of non-cancerous cysts in different parts. The disease affects one in 4000 people globally. According to the US National Library of Medicine, patient with type one neufibromatosis are born with one mutated copy of the NF1 gene in each cell. It said, "In about half of cases, the altered gene is inherited from an affected parent. The remaining cases result from new mutations in the NF1 gene and occur in people with no history of the disorder in their family." Karina, from Sao Paulo, was just two when ‘coffee milk’ patches started to appear on her skin. She said due to the lack of formation of lumps, the doctors could barely make out what ailed her. “I was diagnosed with neurofibromatosis when I was only two years old, at first it was only ‘coffee milk’ patches so the doctor couldn’t do anything because there were no lumps or tumours,” she said. The cysts started to show up almost nine years later. One year later, when she was 12, Karina underwent a surgical procedure to remove a cyst, weighing around nine kilograms, from her uterus. According to her, the cavity gave her a semblance of a pregnant woman. Being the oldest child among three, Karina has always received love from her mother, Fatima M. Abou Ali, 58, a single woman, who raised
    MEGA348608_004.jpg
  • September 18, 2016 - Odessa, Ukraine - 5 years boy in a swimming goggles learning to swim underwater in the pool (Credit Image: © Andrey Nekrasov/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160918_zap_n281_011.jpg
  • April 4, 2017 - Hatay, Hatay Province, Turkey - A young man on a gurney, getting help after being a part of a supposed nerve gas attack (possibly the powerful and lethal sarin nerve gas) in north-western Syria. First reports place the death toll at 70 to 100, many childern. Several reported that airstrikes had targeted clinics treating the wounded. Khan Sheikhoun, Idhib Province is a rebel-held town of 165,000. Around 30 Turkish ambulances gathered at the border in Hatay Province for medical evacuation of victims after the Syrian toxic gas attack, to be brought to Turkey for immediate medical aid. (Credit Image: © Ferhat Dervisoglu/Depo Photos via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170404_zaa_d118_007.jpg
  • April 4, 2017 - Khan Sheikhoun, Idhib Province, Syria - Syrian Civil Defense aka the White Helmets, helping victims after morning attack of a suspected serious lethal gas (most likely sarin nerve gas), in rebel-held Idlib Province in northwestern Syria, near Turkey (population 165,000). A score wounded and over dozen already dead, others might die shortly as a after effect of exposure to deadly gases. The inhabitants are overwhelmingly Sunni Muslims, although there is a significant Christian minority. (Credit Image: © Syria Civil Defense via ZUMA Wire).
    RTI20170404_jlr_z03_001.jpg
  • April 4, 2017 - Hatay, Hatay Province, Turkey - A young boy being rushed on a gurney, to get help after being a part of a supposed nerve gas attack (possibly the powerful and lethal sarin nerve gas) in north-western Syria. First reports place the death toll at 70 to 100, many childern. Several reported that airstrikes had targeted clinics treating the wounded. Khan Sheikhoun, Idhib Province is a rebel-held town of 165,000. Around 30 Turkish ambulances gathered at the border in Hatay Province for medical evacuation of victims after the Syrian toxic gas attack, to be brought to Turkey for immediate medical aid. (Credit Image: © Ferhat Dervisoglu/Depo Photos via ZUMA Wire)
    20170404_zaa_d118_011.jpg
  • April 4, 2017 - Khan Sheikhoun, Syria - A victim lying on the ground, wounded and some dead, hurt and killed by what rescue workers described as a suspected gas attack (most likely sarin never gas), in rebel-held Idlib, Syria. Idlib is a city in northwestern Syria, capital of the Idlib Governorate, near Turkey and 59 kilometers south west of Aleppo. It has an elevation of nearly 500 meters above sea level, population around 165,000. The inhabitants are overwhelmingly Sunni Muslims, although there is a significant Christian minority. (Credit Image: © Edlib Media Center via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170404_zba_r01_654.jpg
  • April 4, 2017 - Khan Sheikhoun, Syria - Medics spray down a victim lying on the ground, hurt  by what rescue workers described as a suspected gas attack (most likely sarin never gas), in rebel-held Idlib, Syria. Idlib is a city in northwestern Syria, capital of the Idlib Governorate, near Turkey and 59 kilometers south west of Aleppo. It has an elevation of nearly 500 meters above sea level, population around 165,000. The inhabitants are overwhelmingly Sunni Muslims, although there is a significant Christian minority. (Credit Image: © Edlib Media Center via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170404_zba_r01_646.jpg
  • April 4, 2017 - Hatay, Hatay Province, Turkey - A young man being rushed on a gurney, to get help after being a part of a supposed nerve gas attack (possibly the powerful and lethal sarin nerve gas) in north-western Syria. First reports place the death toll at 70 to 100, many childern. Several reported that airstrikes had targeted clinics treating the wounded. Khan Sheikhoun, Idhib Province is a rebel-held town of 165,000. Around 30 Turkish ambulances gathered at the border in Hatay Province for medical evacuation of victims after the Syrian toxic gas attack, to be brought to Turkey for immediate medical aid. (Credit Image: © Ferhat Dervisoglu/Depo Photos via ZUMA Wire
    RTI20170404_zaa_d118_010.jpg
  • April 4, 2017 - Hatay, Hatay Province, Turkey - A young boy being rushed on a gurney, to get help after being a part of a supposed nerve gas attack (possibly the powerful and lethal sarin nerve gas) in north-western Syria. First reports place the death toll at 70 to 100, many childern. Several reported that airstrikes had targeted clinics treating the wounded. Khan Sheikhoun, Idhib Province is a rebel-held town of 165,000. Around 30 Turkish ambulances gathered at the border in Hatay Province for medical evacuation of victims after the Syrian toxic gas attack, to be brought to Turkey for immediate medical aid. (Credit Image: © Ferhat Dervisoglu/Depo Photos via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170404_zaa_d118_011.jpg
  • April 4, 2017 - Khan Sheikhoun, Syria - A young boy lying on the ground, hurt by what rescue workers described as a suspected gas attack (most likely sarin never gas), in rebel-held Idlib, Syria. Idlib is a city in northwestern Syria, capital of the Idlib Governorate, near Turkey and 59 kilometers south west of Aleppo. It has an elevation of nearly 500 meters above sea level, population around 165,000. The inhabitants are overwhelmingly Sunni Muslims, although there is a significant Christian minority. (Credit Image: © Edlib Media Center via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170404_zba_r01_644.jpg
  • April 4, 2017 - Hatay, Hatay Province, Turkey - Men in masks and hazmat suits push a boy to the hospital on a gurney. The young victim, was a part of a supposed nerve gas attack (possibly the powerful and lethal sarin nerve gas) in north-western Syria. Death toll at 70 and rising, many childern. The airstrikes appear to have targeted clinics treating the wounded in Khan Sheikhoun, Idhib Province it is a rebel-held town of 165,000. Around 30 Turkish ambulances gathered at the border in Hatay Province for medical evacuation of victims after the Syrian toxic gas attack, to be brought to Turkey for immediate medical aid. (Credit Image: © Ferhat Dervisoglu/Depo Photos via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170404_zaa_d118_012.jpg
  • April 4, 2017 - Hatay, Hatay Province, Turkey - A medic helps a victim of nerve gas attack (possibly the powerful and lethal sarin nerve gas) in north-western Syria. First reports place the death toll at 70 to 100, many childern. Several reported that airstrikes had targeted clinics treating the wounded. Khan Sheikhoun, Idhib Province is a rebel-held town of 165,000. Around 30 Turkish ambulances came to the border in Hatay Province, Turkey for medical evacuation of victims after the Syrian toxic gas attack, then to be brought to Turkish medical aid. (Credit Image: © Ferhat Dervisoglu/Depo Photos via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170404_zaa_d118_006.jpg
  • April 4, 2017 - Hatay, Hatay Province, Turkey - Ambulance rushes to help victims of a deadly nerve gas attack (possibly the powerful and lethal sarin nerve gas) in north-western Syria. First reports place the death toll at 70 to 100, many childern. Several reported that airstrikes had targeted clinics treating the wounded. Khan Sheikhoun, Idhib Province is a rebel-held town of 165,000. Around 30 Turkish ambulances came to the border in Hatay Province, Turkey for medical evacuation of victims after the Syrian toxic gas attack, then to be brought to Turkish medical aid. (Credit Image: © Ferhat Dervisoglu/Depo Photos via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170404_zaa_d118_009.jpg
  • April 4, 2017 - Hatay, Hatay Province, Turkey - ACIL Emergency facility and ambulances wait for  victims of a supposed nerve gas attack (possibly the powerful and lethal sarin nerve gas) in north-western Syria. First reports place the death toll at 70 to 100, many childern. Several reported that airstrikes had targeted clinics treating the wounded. Khan Sheikhoun, Idhib Province is a rebel-held town of 165,000. Around 30 Turkish ambulances came to the border in Hatay Province, Turkey for medical evacuation of victims after the Syrian toxic gas attack, then to be brought to Turkish medical aid. (Credit Image: © Ferhat Dervisoglu/Depo Photos via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170404_zaa_d118_005.jpg
  • April 4, 2017 - Hatay, Hatay Province, Turkey - A baby getting help after being a part of a supposed nerve gas attack (possibly the powerful and lethal sarin nerve gas) in north-western Syria. First reports place the death toll at 70 to 100, many childern. Several reported that airstrikes had targeted clinics treating the wounded. Khan Sheikhoun, Idhib Province is a rebel-held town of 165,000. Around 30 Turkish ambulances gathered at the border in Hatay Province for medical evacuation of victims after the Syrian toxic gas attack, to be brought to Turkey for immediate medical aid. (Credit Image: © Ferhat Dervisoglu/Depo Photos via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170404_zaa_d118_003.jpg
  • April 4, 2017 - Hatay, Hatay Province, Turkey - Ambulances gather to help victims of a nerve gas attack (possibly the powerful and lethal sarin nerve gas) in north-western Syria. First reports place the death toll at 70 to 100, many childern. Several reported that airstrikes had targeted clinics treating the wounded. Khan Sheikhoun, Idhib Province is a rebel-held town of 165,000. Around 30 Turkish ambulances came to the border in Hatay Province, Turkey for medical evacuation of victims after the Syrian toxic gas attack, then to be brought to Turkish medical aid. (Credit Image: © Ferhat Dervisoglu/Depo Photos via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170404_zaa_d118_004.jpg
  • April 4, 2017 - Hatay, Hatay Province, Turkey - A young man getting help in a ambulance, after being a part of a supposed nerve gas attack (possibly the powerful and lethal sarin nerve gas) in north-western Syria. First reports place the death toll at 70 to 100, many childern. Several reported that airstrikes had targeted clinics treating the wounded. Khan Sheikhoun, Idhib Province is a rebel-held town of 165,000. Around 30 Turkish ambulances gathered at the border in Hatay Province for medical evacuation of victims after the Syrian toxic gas attack, to be brought to Turkey for immediate medical aid. (Credit Image: © Ferhat Dervisoglu/Depo Photos via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170404_zaa_d118_002.jpg
  • April 4, 2017 - Khan Sheikhoun, Idhib Province, Syria - Syrian Civil Defense aka the White Helmets, helping young child victim, after morning attack of a suspected serious lethal gas (most likely sarin nerve gas), in rebel-held Idlib Province in northwestern Syria, near Turkey (population 165,000). A score wounded and over dozen already dead, others might die shortly as a after effect of exposure to deadly gases. The inhabitants are overwhelmingly Sunni Muslims, although there is a significant Christian minority. (Credit Image: © Syria Civil Defense via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170404_jlr_z03_005.jpg
  • April 4, 2017 - AlHabeet, Idhib Province, Syria - Children victims from a result of shelling with chemical materials of the town of AlHabeet are wrapped in a blanket. Syrian Civil Defense aka the White Helmets, helped these young victims, after morning attack of a suspected serious lethal gas (most likely sarin nerve gas), in rebel-held Idlib Province in northwestern Syria, near Turkey (population 165,000). A score wounded and over dozen already dead, others might die shortly as a after effect of exposure to deadly gases. The inhabitants are overwhelmingly Sunni Muslims, although there is a significant Christian minority. (Credit Image: © Syria Civil Defense via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170404_jlr_z03_002.jpg
  • April 4, 2017 - AlHabeet, Idhib Province, Syria - Children victims from a result of shelling with chemical materials of the town of AlHabeet are wrapped in a blanket. Syrian Civil Defense aka the White Helmets, helped these young victims, after morning attack of a suspected serious lethal gas (most likely sarin nerve gas), in rebel-held Idlib Province in northwestern Syria, near Turkey (population 165,000). A score wounded and over dozen already dead, others might die shortly as a after effect of exposure to deadly gases. The inhabitants are overwhelmingly Sunni Muslims, although there is a significant Christian minority. (Credit Image: © Syria Civil Defense via ZUMA Wire)
    20170404_jlr_z03_002.jpg
  • April 4, 2017 - Hatay, Hatay Province, Turkey - A baby getting help after being a part of a supposed nerve gas attack (possibly the powerful and lethal sarin nerve gas) in north-western Syria. First reports place the death toll at 70 to 100, many childern. Several reported that airstrikes had targeted clinics treating the wounded. Khan Sheikhoun, Idhib Province is a rebel-held town of 165,000. Around 30 Turkish ambulances gathered at the border in Hatay Province for medical evacuation of victims after the Syrian toxic gas attack, to be brought to Turkey for immediate medical aid. (Credit Image: © Ferhat Dervisoglu/Depo Photos via ZUMA Wire)
    20170404_zaa_d118_003.jpg
  • April 4, 2017 - Hatay, Hatay Province, Turkey - A young boy being rushed on a gurney, to get help after being a part of a supposed nerve gas attack (possibly the powerful and lethal sarin nerve gas) in north-western Syria. First reports place the death toll at 70 to 100, many childern. Several reported that airstrikes had targeted clinics treating the wounded. Khan Sheikhoun, Idhib Province is a rebel-held town of 165,000. Around 30 Turkish ambulances gathered at the border in Hatay Province for medical evacuation of victims after the Syrian toxic gas attack, to be brought to Turkey for immediate medical aid. (Credit Image: © Ferhat Dervisoglu/Depo Photos via ZUMA Wire)
    20170404_zaa_d118_011.jpg
  • April 4, 2017 - Khan Sheikhoun, Idhib Province, Syria - Syrian Civil Defense aka the White Helmets, helping victims after morning attack of a suspected serious lethal gas (most likely sarin nerve gas), in rebel-held Idlib Province in northwestern Syria, near Turkey (population 165,000). A score wounded and over dozen already dead, others might die shortly as a after effect of exposure to deadly gases. The inhabitants are overwhelmingly Sunni Muslims, although there is a significant Christian minority. (Credit Image: © Syria Civil Defence via ZUMA Wire).
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  • April 4, 2017 - Khan Sheikhoun, Idhib Province, Syria - Syrian Civil Defense aka the White Helmets, helping a victim, after morning attack of a suspected serious lethal gas (most likely sarin nerve gas), in rebel-held Idlib Province in northwestern Syria, near Turkey (population 165,000). A score wounded and over dozen already dead, others might die shortly as a after effect of exposure to deadly gases. The inhabitants are overwhelmingly Sunni Muslims, although there is a significant Christian minority. (Credit Image: © Syria Civil Defense via ZUMA Wire)
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  • June 8, 2017 - Inconnu, inconnu - 07/06/2017 - A patch could help improve sleep and even save lives by detecting a sleep disorder that usually requires hospital Sleep apnea is a serious condition that happens when a person’s breathing in interrupted during sleep.Left untreated it sufferers stop breathing repeatedly , sometimes hundreds of times a night.This means the brain and the rest of the body may not get enough oxygen.It can lead to high blood pressure, a stroke, heart attack, diabetes depression and headaches.People who are suspected of having the condition are often sent for a sleep study known as polysomnography.This involves their spending the night sleeping at a clinic, with numerous electrodes hard-wired to their head. The new SomnaPatch is simple and – according to the recently-released results of a study – almost as accurate.Made by California-based Somnarus, the SomnaPatch weighs less than 28 grams / one ounce.It consists of a forehead-worn disposable adhesive patch connected to a nosepiece. It is worn while the patient sleeps in their own bed, and uses integrated sensors to measure and record factors such as nasal pressure, blood oxygen saturation, heart rate, respiratory effort, sleep duration and changes in body position.As part of its efforts to obtain US Food and Drug Administration approval, Somnarus conducted a study of the device at three US sleep clinics last year. This involved having 174 test subjects undergo standard polysomnography while also using the SomnaPatch.When the readings obtained by the two approaches were compared, they were found to be in agreement 87.4 percent of the time.Additionally, a separate home usability study found that 38 out of 39 users were able to use the device to record at least four hours of sleep, guided by nothing but the included instructions.A spokesman said:’ SomnaPatch records respiratory patterns, pulse oximetry data and estimates sleep time based on proprietary algorithms and
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  • Jan. 14, 2013 - Bodh Gaya, Bihar, India - TIBETAN BUDDHISM IN EXILE..Thousands of Tibetan Buddhist Monks line up for a mid day meal during a break while on pilgrimage in Bodh Gaya, India. A religious site, Mahabodhi Temple Complex is a UNESCO World Heritage Site in Gaya district in the Indian state of Bihar., where Gautama Buddha was enlightened under the Bodi tree...Story Summary: Tibetan Buddhism is alive and well, outside of Tibet. The religion and culture of the Tibetan people is flourishing in communities around the world as exiled Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama has indicated ‰Û÷would not have happened this way if China had not scattered his people to the wind.‰Ûª After the Chinese communists invaded Tibet and severely oppressed the its people, thousands of refugees, including the Dalai Lama, fled their homeland for places such as Dharamsala, India, where many live with the Tibetan Government in exile along with, Bodhgaya, India and Kathmandu, Nepal. The culture is strong with new refugees breathing life into the old ways. Northern India is where the Buddha began his journey of enlightenment and is where much of this form of Buddhist teachings have taken hold. (Credit Image: © Eric Reed/ZUMAPRESS.com)
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  • Apr 20, 2004; Buenos Aires, ARGENTINA; DIEGO MARADONA was in critical condition Monday, breathing with the help of a respirator but showing signs of improvement after heart and blood pressure problems. The former Argentine soccer star was hospitalized in the intensive care unit Sunday April 18, 2004, hours after watching his former team Boca Juniors play in the domestic league. It was the second time in recent years that the 43-year-old soccer great, who led Argentina to the 1986 World Cup title in Mexico, has been hospitalized. (FILE PHOTO).  (Credit Image: © FEP/Panoramic/ZUMAPRESS.com)
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  • Jan. 14, 2013 - Bodh Gaya, Bihar, India - TIBETAN BUDDHISM IN EXILE..Tibetan Buddhist monks share a moment to look at a cell phone while on pilgrimage in Bodh Gaya, India. A religious site, Mahabodhi Temple Complex is a UNESCO World Heritage Site in Gaya district in the Indian state of Bihar., where Gautama Buddha was enlightened under the Bodi tree...Story Summary: Tibetan Buddhism is alive and well, outside of Tibet. The religion and culture of the Tibetan people is flourishing in communities around the world as exiled Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama has indicated ‰Û÷would not have happened this way if China had not scattered his people to the wind.‰Ûª After the Chinese communists invaded Tibet and severely oppressed the its people, thousands of refugees, including the Dalai Lama, fled their homeland for places such as Dharamsala, India, where many live with the Tibetan Government in exile along with, Bodhgaya, India and Kathmandu, Nepal. The culture is strong with new refugees breathing life into the old ways. Northern India is where the Buddha began his journey of enlightenment and is where much of this form of Buddhist teachings have taken hold. (Credit Image: © Eric Reed/ZUMAPRESS.com)
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  • Apr 20, 2004; Buenos Aires, ARGENTINA; DIEGO MARADONA was in critical condition Monday, breathing with the help of a respirator but showing signs of improvement after heart and blood pressure problems. The former Argentine soccer star was hospitalized in the intensive care unit Sunday April 18, 2004, hours after watching his former team Boca Juniors play in the domestic league. It was the second time in recent years that the 43-year-old soccer great, who led Argentina to the 1986 World Cup title in Mexico, has been hospitalized. (FILE PHOTO).  (Credit Image: © FEP/Panoramic/ZUMAPRESS.com)
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  • Apr 20, 2004; Buenos Aires, ARGENTINA; DIEGO MARADONA was in critical condition Monday, breathing with the help of a respirator but showing signs of improvement after heart and blood pressure problems. The former Argentine soccer star was hospitalized in the intensive care unit Sunday April 18, 2004, hours after watching his former team Boca Juniors play in the domestic league. It was the second time in recent years that the 43-year-old soccer great, who led Argentina to the 1986 World Cup title in Mexico, has been hospitalized. (FILE PHOTO).  (Credit Image: © FEP/Panoramic/ZUMAPRESS.com)
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  • People queue outside London City Airport which has reopened after dozens of passengers were treated for breathing difficulties after a suspected chemical incident at the airport.
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