Explorers's Posts
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A relative reacts before the burial of the journalist Abdollah Zavieh, who passed away due to coronavirus, at Behesht Zahra cemetery in Tehran, Iran, March 24.
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Coffins of people who have died from coronavirus are seen in the church of the Serravalle Scrivia cemetery in Alessandria, Italy, March 23.
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A worker places flowers on a tomb of a person who died from coronavirus at the Chiguayante cemetery, in Concepcion, Chile, March 26.
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Gravediggers open new graves in advance as the number of dead rose after the coronavirus outbreak, at Vila Formosa cemetery, Brazil's biggest cemetery, in Sao Paulo, April 2.
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An aerial view shows graves, which according to local authorities were prepared in advance for potential victims of the coronavirus, at a cemetery in Dnipro, Ukraine, April 5.
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Ari Rusmawan, a 32-year-old coffins maker, rides a motorbike while leaving workshop for lunch as he takes a break on preparing coffins ordered to be donated for coronavirus victims inside a funeral complex in Jakarta, Indonesia, April 8.
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Gravediggers wearing protective clothing prepare to bury 78-year-old Lelito Jose Martins, who passed away due to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), at the Parque Taruma cemetery in Manaus, Brazil April 17. Gravediggers wearing protective suits gather at Vila Formosa, Brazil’s biggest cemetery, during the coronavirus outbreak, in São Paulo, Brazil, on April 2, 2020.
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A funeral van with three coffins of people who died of coronavirus is seen at the Spanish muslim military cemetery before a burial in Grinon, Spain, April 8.
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Drone pictures show bodies being buried on New York's Hart Island amid the coronavirus outbreak in New York City, April 9.
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Relatives wearing protective gear prepare to bury the body of a man who died from the coronavirus, at a graveyard in New Delhi, India, April 14.
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Gravediggers wearing protective gear prepare to bury 78-year-old Lelito Jose Martins, who passed away due to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), at the Parque Taruma cemetery in Manaus, Brazil April 17, 2020.
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People offer funeral prayers for a man who died due to coronavirus before his burial at a graveyard in Dhaka, Bangladesh, April 6.
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Biohazard warning signs are placed on coffins of people who died of the new coronavirus, at a mortuary near the city of Charleroi, Belgium, on April 7, 2020. A mortuary worker preparing a body for burial.
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Ismail Mohamed Abdulwahab, from Brixton, died alone in hospital, buried 3rd April, 2020.(mailonline)
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Late Abba Kyari(CoS) buried in Nigeria, 18th April, 2020.(Premiumtimes&Channelstv) https://www.reuters.com/news/picture/burying-the-victims-of-coronavirus-idUSRTS3817V
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Ishilove:He said the country failed. |
Knowing that the patient was most likely not going to recover once he was intubated, Smith and his colleagues called the man's wife to give them what may have been their last chance to say goodbye. Most Covid-19 patients will die after being placed on ventilators, with the mortality rate reaching up to 80% in intubated coronavirus patients, Smith said. Smith called the incident "by far the worst thing" he has witnessed in his 12 years of critical care and anesthesia and said the moment shed light on a health care system that he says has been and still is failing its people. "I was very sad and honestly, a little horrified. This demonstrates that we have a profound failure when one has to worry about their finances when they're dealing with much bigger issues that have to do with life or death." Looking at the bigger picture Smith did not have an answer to his patient's question and instead turned the conversation to getting the man to talk to his spouse one last time. Despite the tragic circumstances, the question was a valid concern. |
Certified registered nurse, anesthetist Derrick Smith is no stranger to the horrors of losing patients. But now, the coronavirus pandemic has pushed him into a completely different, "much more terrifying" reality. Smith, who is predominantly treating Covid-19 patients at a hospital in New York City, revealed the tragic last words of a dying man he was about to place on a ventilator: "Who's going to pay for it?" the coronavirus patient asked Smith in between labored breaths. "They were last words I'll never forget," Smith told CNN. "This patient was in severe respiratory distress, had difficulty speaking, and yet still, his main concern was who could pay for a procedure that would extend his life, but statistically he doesn't have a good likelihood of survival." https://amp.cnn.com/cnn/2020/04/11/health/nurse-last-words-coronavirus-patient-trnd/index.html?__twitter_impression=true
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Nice ride bro. Slex my level here o, fit hustle for this one. If i don hammer sa, i go show for your side. |
iomoge2:The statue. |
Plut01:They clean, the entrance was first blocked but later removed buy another buyer. I think 'touch' here means remove or move. Nothing has been moved. Just like a museum. |
The moth-eaten military jacket he wore is pictured above, still hanging where he left it 102 years ago. It is unclear whether, if the house is sold again, the items still in the room will be moved.
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When his heartbroken parents bequeathed the house in 1935 they bricked up the entrance to the room and stipulated to the new owner, French General Eugene Bridoux, that no item was to be moved from the room for 500 years. A pistol, knives and drawing remain on his desk. The house's owners have said they will not move any items from the room The pistol and pipe lying on the desk are pictured below. Pictured below are MR Rochereau's military boots still sitting underneath his bookshelf in his bedroom.
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A First World War soldier's bedroom has lain completely untouched in his former home since he died from injuries 102 years ago. Dragoons' Second Lieutenant Hubert Rochereau died in an English field ambulance after fighting in the village of Loker, Flanders, on 26 April 1918. His heartbroken parents, initially unable to locate their son's body, said they would turn his bedroom into a permanent shrine to his memory. Mr Rochereau was buried in a British cemetery and lay undiscovered by his family until four years after the war ended, in 1922. He was repatriated to a graveyard at his home village of Bélâbre, 44 miles from Poitiers, south-western France. His bedroom, where he was also born, remains untouched to this day as a permanent memorial.
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The video is disheartening, so unprofessional of NGPolice, flogging a lady like that, no matter what. I don't blame them anyway, when the head is bad, it affects the whole body.
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The lady
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According to the report, she was sitting outside her home with some women when men of the NGpolice came around. The question them for sitting outside and she replied if there's anything wrong for sitting outside her home. In the video, about 3-4 policemen were seen flogging her at the same time. See Video here:
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akunjohn:When you have your cash, above 18years, you can have any weapon (Military grade) |
Ebenezer2021:Not captured, maybe divorced/single mum. |
I think this the reason their cops don't take any chance, they pull their guns so fast. |
An undated photo provided by the Indianapolis Police Department shows Elliahs Dorsey. Elliahs Dorsey was charged on Tuesday with Leath's murder. He was also charged with four counts of attempted murder, as well as charges of criminal confinement and misdemeanor battery. Court records says Dorsey also shot his girlfriend in each of her thighs as well as twice to the stomach. She was transported to Methodist Hospital and was listed in stable condition. Police recovered a KelTec PLR-16 from the apartment where the shooting occurred.
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Breann Leath was shot and killed while responding to a domestic disturbance call at 1803 Edinburge Square shortly before 3pm. She is survived by one child and her parents, who both serve with the Marion County Sheriff's office. An officer places his carnation on the casket of officer Breann "Bre" Leath following a grave side service.
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