Tag Archives: Survivors

Brain fog problem returns to haunt Covid-19 survivors

As the fast-moving third wave moves towards its peak, cases of a debilitating post-Covid complication, “brain fog,” are already being reported among survivors. The symptom, which was noted in the second wave, is being reported in rising frequency among Covid-19 survivors of the ongoing third wave.

Dr N K Venkataramana, founder chairman and chief neurosurgeon, Brains Neuro Spine Hospital, specified that 25 to 30 per cent of Covid-recovered patients go on to develop brain fog. The complication is marked by confusion and an inability to concentrate or make decisions, such as seeking medical care, which could have implications for disease severity.

“People are unable to focus, they feel lethargic and there is a sense of having lost their rhythm, which creates impediments to them getting back to work or taking action,” Dr Venkataramana said.

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According to one telemedicine consultant, incidents of people reporting symptoms resembling brain fog started to increase a week ago. “The problem appears to be manifesting earlier in the third wave because of the severe throat pain that many people experience which prevents hydration and food intake,” said Dr Haleema Yezdani of the official telemedicine consultancy collective, StepOne.

This was corroborated by Dr Venkataramana who stated that one of the ways out of brain fog is hydration and deep rest. “One of the first cases that I came across was a 50-year-old man in the city who said that his entire family, including children and adults, had symptoms of the disease although none had been tested,” Dr Yezdani explained.

“He kept asking the same questions over and over again – about whether he was infected. While it was conveyed to him that such a determination could not be made without a test, he had difficulty grasping this. The common factor among such cases is an inability to follow instruction, followed by rapid irritability,” she added.

Also Read | India’s R value shrinks despite Omicron’s spread into community

Fog during infection

This was certainly the experience of one person who suffered a debilitating mental block during the period of her infection. Anjali, 50, (name changed) was infected with Covid-19 in the second week of January. 

“It was a mild case of infection involving myalgia, fever and cough but on the second day of fever, my mind started to go blank. I had difficulty comprehending what people were telling me. I would quickly become irritable,” she said.

Dr Netravathi M, additional professor, department of neurology, Nimhans, specified if people experience this condition during the period of infection, the brain is directly involved in the terms of hypoxia setting in creating a metabolic disturbance. 

“This causes people to develop difficulty in processing information, impairment of memory – a mental block. If the condition takes place weeks after the person has recovered, an extreme immune response is likely responsible,” she said.

While Nimhans had seen a large number of such cases last year, she specified that cases from the third wave had not yet been reported at the institute.

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Ghana blast leaves survivors with cuts and questions

APIATE, Ghana, Jan 23 (Reuters) – Nancy Nyarko was preparing porridge at her roadside stall near the edge of the village of Apiate in Ghana’s western mining region when she heard a loud noise close by.

Looking up, she saw a motorbike had collided with a large truck and caught fire, Nyarko said, her right hand and left leg wrapped in bandages.

The crash happened at 13:25 on Jan 20. In less than an hour Apiate was reduced to a wasteland of rubble, timber and twisted metal, a 20m (65 ft) crater yawning at its core from an explosion. At least 13 people were dead and nearly 200 injured.

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What residents didn’t know was that the truck, owned by the Spanish company Maxam, contained 10 tons of explosives meant to blast rock in the Chirano gold mine, run by Toronto-based Kinross Gold Corporation (K.TO), around 140 km (87 miles) further north. read more

The explosion exposed the risk of transporting mining goods in poor areas with limited emergency response.

The truck was on fire for 45 minutes before the blast, in which time residents were allowed to walk to the scene to take photos and video without police or firemen holding them back, eight eye witnesses said.

Survivors were left with cuts and lingering questions about extent of safety precautions and the speed and effectiveness of the authorities’ response.

“The truck stopped and the driver got out and started waving,” Nyarko said.

“He ran into a shop and told the people to get out. I couldn’t hear him from where I was but I could see him gesturing for people to get away, so I also decided to leave,” Nyarko said.

Ghana Police spokesman Kwesi Ofori told Reuters the truck had been escorted by a Maxam car with a flashing security light in front, and a police car behind.

A police document, shared by Ofori, showed the escort was carrying 10 tons of explosive and signed off by the regional command in Tarkwa on Jan. 19. The truck driver and policeman told a nearby school to evacuate its pupils and a fuel station to shut down, Ofori said.

“When he saw what happened, the policeman quickly reversed far away and started alerting people to be careful about what was happening,” Ofori said.

“The escort police also alerted the fuel station and they shut. That also could have been a major disaster,” Ofori said.

Nancy and seven other witnesses of the accident said they did not recall seeing a police escort and a Maxam car with a flashing light, or that a policeman helped warn the villagers.

The manager of the GOIL fuel station, Fred Antwi, said he did not speak to any police officers, and police from the station in Bogosoro, around a mile away, didn’t arrive until after the blast.

“WE CALLED AND CALLED”

Maxam did not respond to a request for comment. A Kinross spokesperson said the vehicle was under the sole supervision of Maxam.

Kojo Oppong Nkrumah, Ghana’s minister of information, said police had initiated an inquiry into the sequence of events and facts surrounding the incident.

Many villagers fled but, as videos shared on social media show, curious spectators walked towards the flames.

At least eight witnesses said the truck was burning for 45 minutes before it exploded. Police said the interval between the crash and blast was 15-20 minutes.

“I spoke with the driver as he tried to call the fire service,” said Kwame Mensa, his face patched with plasters.

“He kept saying something was about to happen. We called and called, but by the time they came, the worst had already happened.”

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Reporting by Cooper Inveen and Francis Kokoroko; additional reporting Christian Akorlie and Hereward Holland; writing by Hereward Holland
Editing by Alistair Bell

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Syrian torture survivors finally came face to face with their tormentor. But the reckoning took place far from home

The court in Koblenz delivered this historic verdict on Thursday morning. And scores of Syrian activists — mostly relatives of people who have been forcibly disappeared or killed by the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad — poured into this tiny German city to witness it.

Outside the court on Thursday, a group of women held a vigil for their disappeared relatives as they waited for Raslan’s sentencing. News of the judgment then arrived through a German activist who read out a text message from inside the courthouse: The panel of judges had found that Raslan was complicit in at least 4,000 cases of torture, 27 murders and two cases of sexual violence.

A pregnant pause hung in the air as the news sank in. Some activists started to quietly weep.

“I cry because of my relationship with the survivors,” said Joumana Seif, a Syrian lawyer, human rights activist and part of the legal team that represented 17 plaintiffs at the trial. “The Syrians deserve justice. We deserve so much more than the situation we are in.”

The courthouse is perched on the banks of the junction where the Rhine and Moselle rivers meet. It’s a world away from the notorious Damascus detention facility at the center of the trial, where Raslan headed the intelligence division from 2011 to 2012.

Former prisoners of Branch 251, as it is known, recounted how they were in overcrowded cells and took turns sleeping because of the lack of space. They were deprived of adequate food and medicine, and were tortured. Some were raped and sexually assaulted. Many died.

It was part of the Assad regime’s labyrinth of prison systems where more than 100,000 are believed to have disappeared and tens of thousands have perished since 2011.

“I’m happy because this is a victory for justice,” said Anwar al-Bounni, a Syrian human rights lawyer and former political prisoner, outside the courthouse.

“I’m happy because it’s a victory for the victims sitting inside,” Bounni added, his booming voice choked with emotion as he gestured toward the courthouse. “I’m happy because it’s a victory for Syrians back home who couldn’t come here. It’s also a victory for Syrians who didn’t survive.”

At this bittersweet gathering in Germany, several Syrians repeatedly acknowledged that, for now, accountability could only be delivered far away from their homeland, where the justice system has been thoroughly undermined by the autocratic regime.

Not even the International Criminal Court at The Hague could try the Assad regime for the countless war crimes and crimes against humanity of which it is widely accused, because Syria is not a party to that court. Syria could be investigated by the ICC if the United Nations Security Council refers it, but Assad’s allies — Russia and China — have struck down previous motions to do so.

Closer to home, justice appears ever more remote. Assad’s regional foes — namely the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia — have repaired diplomatic ties with the regime, moves that are believed to mark the beginning of the end of the Syrian President’s isolation.

Yet in Koblenz, the torturer and the survivors have traded places. Raslan arrived at court shackled. His victims were free and now driving proceedings against their tormentor and — by extension — against the Assad regime. The court heard the survivors draw on their personal testimonies and copious amounts of incriminating evidence collected by activists and advocates since the start of Syria’s 2011 uprising.

In addition to finding Raslan personally guilty, the court also ruled that the Assad regime “systematically” committed crimes against humanity.

Yet it was a single legal mechanism that made this possible. The Principle of Universal Jurisdiction gives courts jurisdiction over grave violations of international law even if they happened outside of the state to which the court belongs to, and regardless of the nationalities of the parties involved.

As a result, survivors undertook what they said was the first step in a “long road to justice.” More trials are underway against Assad officers who sought refuge in Europe from Syria’s war. Some activists call it a “tactical war,” with the ultimate goal of bringing the Assad government to its knees.

Even if that ambitious goal isn’t met, Thursday’s judgment, they said, will at least let them sleep a little easier.

Branch 251

Wassim Mukdad’s apartment mirrors the way he describes his life in exile. Arab lutes — known as oud — line the walls of an office overlooking a quiet Berlin street. His library is a mix of Arabic and German books.

“One of the good things about living abroad is you can pick and choose what you want to take from Arab culture and from Western culture,” he quipped, his hands draped over his vintage three-piece suit.

Against the backdrop of his new life lurks Mukdad’s dark history in Syria, where he says he was imprisoned for his anti-regime activism three times, and jailed a fourth time by al Qaeda-linked fighters. His second stint in detention was in Branch 251, where he believes Raslan was in the room directing his interrogation sessions. Like all his fellow prisoners, Mukdad was blindfolded throughout his torture.

“(Raslan) ordered directly to a man next to me … ‘making him lay on his belly and raise his feet in the air,'” said Mukdad. “Once my answers didn’t suit (Raslan), the other man on command starts to hit until he says stop.”

Mukdad said he told his interrogator he was a doctor, fearing his torturers would break his fingers if he confessed to being a musician. Syrian cartoonist and dissident, Ali Farzat, had come to mind, Mukdad said. Farzat’s tormentors smashed his fingers. They said it was stop him from drawing political cartoons, Farzat later said.

“It was like hell,” Mukdad says of his imprisonment in Branch 251. “How did humanity come up with this?”

Throughout the trial in Koblenz, Raslan rarely spoke. His statements — in which he tried to present himself as a conscientious objector to the regime’s practices — were read out by his defense team. He spoke only when the judges asked him a question, which rarely happened. When it did, his answers were monosyllabic.

Some Syrian lawyers and plaintiffs speculated that he didn’t want his victims to recognize his voice from their interrogation sessions in detention. Several plaintiffs said they had seen his face previously but, except for one survivor, said they had only seen him in his office. Raslan and his defense team have not explained why the former colonel has refused to speak in the trial and the Raslan defense team has repeatedly declined CNN’s requests for comment.

“Every one of us was blindfolded. They didn’t want us to see, but they cannot prevent us from hearing (the interrogator),” said Mukdad. “But now he has prevented us from hearing him.”

Unlike his co-defendant Gharib, Raslan appeared to make no effort to hide his face during the hearings. “He stood tall and looked arrogant,” recalled Seif. “He would look each of the plaintiffs in the eye, one after the other, as if to say ‘who do you think you are?'”

“Over the past two years in court Raslan has been sitting in his chair doing nothing with his face and writing,” said Human Rights Watch Assistant Counsel Whitney-Martina Nosakhare, who attended all of the trial sessions. “When the judge read out the verdict, he had no reaction in his face.”

“This is an intense moment. Being sentenced to life in prison is a huge deal. It’s not something that you lightly brush off,” Nosakhare added. “But he made us believe it was something that he didn’t care about.”

‘Convicted in lieu of the Syrian regime’

Raslan’s lawyers said they will appeal his sentencing, and experts expect his case to remain in the courts for years to come. After the verdict was read, defense lawyer Yorck Fratzky continued to deny that Raslan was personally guilty of the charges.

“The defense does not make a secret of being discontent with the verdict,” Fratzky said in a press briefing after the trial concluded. “We see that Raslan has been convicted in lieu of the Syrian regime.”

This contention, that Raslan served as a scapegoat, resonates with some Syrians, even those actively opposed to the Assad regime. Some liken the Koblenz trial to crumbs offered by the international community in the absence of political change in Syria.

“My main concern is that politically these trials are used as an alternative for states in the international community to actually do something,” says Berlin-based activist Wafa Mustafa, who says her father — Ali Mustafa — was forcibly disappeared by the regime in 2013.

Wafa still supports the trial, though, and has gone to Koblenz several times, carrying her father’s framed photograph. “I carry him to places I know he would like to go to,” she said, flashing a wide smile of defiant optimism.

“But I fear that they are using this trial as an alternative to their failure to actually deal … with the fact that a war criminal like Assad is still in power after ten years.”

Similar concerns appear to have tempered celebrations in the aftermath of the verdict.

Asked how she feels about the sentencing, Yasmen Almashan gestures to a photo collage of five of her six brothers. All of them, she says, were disappeared or killed. “Wasn’t this the least we could do for them?” she asked.

One of the plaintiffs, Ruham Hawash, looked visibly shaken after she emerged from the hours-long judgment session. The court had read out each of the plaintiffs’ testimonies. Hawash doesn’t want to remember her experience in Branch 251, she said, let alone have it recited aloud.

“I don’t want to speak about my torture, I only want to speak about the trial,” she said.

“In the past I used to say that I was imprisoned and tortured and my freedom was taken away from me and the story had a sad ending,” said Hawash. “Today I can say that I was imprisoned, and tortured and my freedom was taken away from me but that I helped to bring those officials to this trial.

“There’s a big difference between these two stories. It’s no longer a sad story. There was closure.”

Asked what she plans to do now that the trial is over, she shrugged, her feet shifting as she spoke. “I don’t know what’s next. Probably a new phase in my life,” she said. “I’m ready to move on.”



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El Cajon: Airplane crashes near San Diego, California, authorities report no survivors

The plane was scheduled to land at a local airfield when it went down just after 7 p.m, according to the San Diego County Sheriff’s Department.

Firefighters found no survivors at the scene, authorities said in a news release, but they did not specify how many victims were found.

No one was hurt on the ground, the Sheriff’s Department confirmed. The medical examiner will investigate and identify the victims once family members have been notified, the release added.

The Sheriff’s Department said the plane was a Learjet, and authorities are uncertain how many people were on board, CNN affiliate KGTV reported.

“When firefighters arrived at the scene there was significant rain occurring and there was a large debris field that stretched about 200 feet,” Lakeside Fire Protection District Chief Don Butz told CNN.

“The firefighters observed a significant fireball and smoke from the fire station — the fire station is a half a mile away from the scene,” Butz said.

The chief said they are aware of a vehicle being damaged.

There was rain in the area with breezy conditions, CNN meteorologist Pedram Javaheri reported. The El Cajon observation site showed light winds of 10-15 mph near the time of the crash, but gusts were much higher in the nearby foothills, peaking at 40-45 mph, Javaheri added.

Weather observations from Gillespie Field, the local airport, showed visibility dropped below 1 mile about 6:50 p.m., with cloud ceilings below 500 feet, which would have required the pilot to follow Instrument Flight Rules, Javaheri noted. The conditions lasted until about 8 p.m. when visibility returned to 3-5 miles, he said.

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) and the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) have been notified, and will handle the plane crash investigation, the Sheriff’s Department said.

El Cajon is about 16 miles east of San Diego.

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Philippines Typhoon Rai death toll reaches 375 as desperate survivors plead for supplies | Philippines

The death toll from the strongest typhoon to hit the Philippines this year has surged to 375 , as desperate survivors pleaded for urgent supplies of drinking water and food.

The Philippine Red Cross reported “complete carnage” in coastal areas after Super Typhoon Rai left homes, hospitals and schools “ripped to shreds”.

The storm tore off roofs, uprooted trees, toppled concrete power poles, smashed wooden houses to pieces, wiped out crops and flooded villages – sparking comparisons to the damage caused by Super Typhoon Haiyan in 2013.

“Our situation is so desperate,” said Ferry Asuncion, a street vendor in the hard-hit seaside city of Surigao, which was devastated by the storm.

Residents urgently needed drinking water and food, he said.

Cars pass by a toppled electrical post due to Typhoon Rai in Surigao city, Surigao del Norte, Philippines. Photograph: Jilson Tiu/AP

At least 375 people were killed and 56 are missing in the latest disaster to hit the archipelago, with 500 more injured, the national police said.

More than 380,000 people fled their homes and beachfront resorts as Rai slammed into the country on Thursday.

One of the hardest-hit islands was Bohol – known for its beaches, “Chocolate Hills” and tiny tarsier primates – where at least 94 people have died, provincial Governor Arthur Yap said on Facebook.

Many wooden houses in Bohol’s coastal town of Ubay were flattened and small fishing boats destroyed on the island, where a state of calamity has been declared.

A senior official at the national disaster agency said he had not expected as many deaths.

“I was proven wrong as it appears now coming from the reports,” said Casiano Monilla, deputy administrator for operations.

Rai hit the Philippines late in the typhoon season: most cyclones develop between July and October.

Scientists have long warned that typhoons are becoming more powerful and strengthening more rapidly as the world becomes warmer because of human-driven climate change.

Surigao City was among the regions hardest hit by the typhoon. Photograph: Jilson Tiu/GREENPEACE HANDOUT/EPA

The Philippines, which is ranked among the most vulnerable nations to the impacts of climate change, is hit by an average of 20 storms every year, which typically wipe out harvests, homes and infrastructure in already impoverished areas.

In 2013, Typhoon Haiyan was the strongest storm ever to have made landfall, leaving over 7,300 people dead or missing. The death toll from Rai is not expected to get anywhere close to that number.

The Philippines has an established disaster management system that provides early warnings of approaching storms and moves vulnerable communities into evacuation centres.

But the storm has dealt a savage blow to the tourism sector, which was already struggling after Covid-19 restrictions decimated visitor numbers.

“SOS” has been painted on a road in the tourist town of General Luna on Siargao Island, where surfers and holidaymakers had flocked ahead of Christmas, as people struggled to find water and food.

“There’s no water any more, there’s a water shortage, on day one there was already looting in our neighbourhood,” Siargao resort owner Marja O’Donnell told CNN Philippines.

There has also been widespread destruction on Dinagat and Mindanao islands, which along with Siargao bore the brunt of the storm when it hit, packing wind speeds of 195 kilometres (120 miles) an hour.

Police reported 167 deaths in the Caraga region, which includes Dinagat, Siargao and the north-eastern part of Mindanao.

At least 14 people died on the Dinagat Islands, provincial information officer Jeffrey Crisostomo told broadcaster ABS-CBN, saying the area had been “levelled to the ground”.

Rai hit the Philippines late in the typhoon season – most cyclones typically develop between July and October. Photograph: Angeli Cantillana/GREENPEACE HANDOUT/EPA

With electricity knocked out in many areas, there was no signal or internet, hampering efforts to assess the storm’s damage.

Thousands of military, police, coast guard and fire personnel were deployed along with food, water and medical supplies, while heavy machinery – including backhoes and front-end loaders – were sent to clear roads.

President Rodrigo Duterte vowed to “look for another” two billion pesos ($40m) in aid, which would double his previous pledge.

But some expressed frustration at the government’s response.

“No one showed up, I don’t know where the politicians and (election) candidates are,” said a visibly angry Levi Lisondra, a resident in Surigao, on the northern tip of Mindanao.

“We paid big taxes when we were working and now they can’t help us.”

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Kentucky tornado – latest: Biden takes aerial tour of wreckage as survivors plead for more temporary housing

Watch live as Biden travels to Kentucky to survey tornado damage

President Joe Biden arrived in Kentucky on Wednesday morning to survey wreckage left in the wake of the tornadoes that wrought havoc in six states last weekend.

The death toll from the devastating tornado outbreak stands at 88 across Arkansas, Illinois, Kentucky, Missouri and Tennessee, including at least 13 children.

Seventy-four people have been confirmed dead in Kentucky alone after a massive twister roared across the landscape for at least 200 miles. Bowling Green sustained some of the worst damage, with 15 fatalities confirmed so far. Eleven of those – including seven children – were reported on a single street.

Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear has said the death toll will “undoubtedly” rise as more than 100 people remained unaccounted for in the central and south region as of midday Tuesday.

The governor appeared alongside Mr Biden at a press briefing after the pair took an aerial tour of Mayfield. Mr Biden told Kentuckians: “I’m here to listen.”

It comes as some of the thousands of Kentuckians who lost their homes in the storms are calling for the government to address a shortage of temporary housing across the state, with one lamenting: “We need places to go.”

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Seven children killed on same Kentucky street

Fourteen people were killed within just a few blocks, and 11 people, including seven children, died on just a single street in Bowling Green, Kentucky when the tornado struck.

Moss Creek Avenue was hit hard when the ferocious storms hit the western part of the state on Friday night.

Entire families passed away, with two of those who died being infants. Melinda Allen-Ray hadn’t slept much since early on Saturday when tornado warnings prompted her to take her grandchildren into the bathroom, holding on to them as the house was torn apart by the storm. Then she heard the screams of her neighbours.

“I heard them — it traumatised me. I think about that each night when I go to sleep, when I do sleep,” she said. “I just think about all those babies.”

The Independent’s Gustaf Kilander reports:

Megan Sheets15 December 2021 18:10

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Biden tells Kentuckians: ‘I’m here to listen’ after aerial tour

From a helicopter over the town of Mayfield, President Biden on Wednesday saw neighbourhoods pockmarked by piles of debris and homes without roofs and windows.

After his aerial tour, the president told local officials at an airport briefing: “I’m here to listen.”

Mr Biden pledged that federal aid would continue to flow and described the tornado damage as some of the worst he had ever seen. He said this kind of tragedy “either brings people together or it knocks them apart”.

“There’s no red tornadoes and blue tornadoes,” he said.

Watch live as Biden travels to Kentucky to survey tornado damage

Megan Sheets15 December 2021 17:40

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Survivors plead for aid

Some of the thousands of Kentuckians who lost their homes to tornadoes are calling for the government to address a shortage in temporary housing.

“People need places to go,” one man said in a video shared by The Weather Channel. “We need housing. We need food. We need clothes.”

Another man said: “We have no power, we have no water. I woke up this morning at three o’clock and thought I was frost-bit.”

Governor Andy Beshear has said state agencies are working tirelessly with federal officials to coordinate aid, including housing.

Megan Sheets15 December 2021 17:30

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Biden to visit hard-hit towns of Mayfield and Dawson Springs

President Biden’s visit to Kentucky marks the fifth time he’s taken on the grim task of touring an area ravaged by a natural disaster since taking office.

He landed at Fort Campbell for a storm briefing before heading to Mayfield and Dawson Springs to survey storm damage.

While Mr Biden is expected to speak, it’s not the focus of the trip. White House press secretary Jen Psaki said the president will meet with storm victims and local officials to provide federal support.

The president “wants to hear directly from people, and he wants to offer his support directly to them”, Ms Psaki said.

Megan Sheets15 December 2021 17:10

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WATCH: Biden tours wreckage

Watch live as Biden travels to Kentucky to survey tornado damage

Megan Sheets15 December 2021 16:50

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Biden arrives in Kentucky to survey tornado damage

President Joe Biden arrived in Kentucky on Wednesday morning to tour tornado damage with Governor Andy Beshear.

He was seen stepping off of Air Force One at Fort Campbell, where he was greeted by the governor, first lady Britainy Beshear and former governor Steve Beshear.

President Biden arrives in Kentucky to survey tornado damage

Megan Sheets15 December 2021 16:23

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Thirteen children confirmed dead

Thirteen children have been confirmed dead in the wake of last weekend’s storm, including 12 in Kentucky:

Bowling Green, Warren County

  • Nariah Cayshell Brown, 16
  • Nyles Brown, 4
  • Nolynn Brown, age not specified
  • Selmir Besic, age not specified
  • Elma Besic, age not specified
  • Samantha Besic, infant
  • Alma Besic, infant
  • Jha’lil Lee Dunbar, 3
  • Marilyn Gingerich, 7
  • Daniel Gingerich, 4

Dawson Springs, Hopkins/Caldwell counties

The 13th child killed was nine-year-old Annistyn Rackley of Caruthersville, Missouri.

Megan Sheets15 December 2021 16:20

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What we know about the tornado victims

Deaths have been confirmed in at least five of the six states hit by a number of tornadoes over the weekend. The death toll is feared to be more than 100 in Kentucky alone, but casualties have also been reported in Arkansas, Illinois, Mississippi, Missouri, and Tennessee, with fatalities confirmed in all but one of the states.

While at least eight of the victims remain unidentified, The Independent’s Gustaf Kilander explains what we know so far:

Megan Sheets15 December 2021 15:30

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Candle factory where eight workers died faces investigation

Governor Andy Beshear on Tuesday confirmed that Kentucky’s Occupational Health and Safety Administration (KY OSH) will investigate the Mayfield Consumer Products candle factory where eight workers were killed by a tornado.

At least four workers claimed they were told they would be fired if they tried to leave their shifts early as warning sirens began to wail.

Asked about a state investigation, Gov Beshear said: “After seeing a tornado like this, we all have to look back at protocols to see what we can do better. I haven’t seen any direct accounts from the candle factory, that’s obviously something people are going to look at.

“Hopefully they did everything right. If they didn’t, that will come out. Absolutely the state will look through it.”

The governor emphasised that KY OSH investigates all workplace fatalities, saying: “It shouldn’t suggest that there was any wrongdoing but it should give people confidence that we will get to the bottom of it.”

The Independent’s Io Dodds explains factory workers’ claims:

Megan Sheets15 December 2021 15:10

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MMA fighter rescues wife and sister-in-law from candle factory wreckage

An MMA fighter helped rescue his wife, sister-in-law and others from the wreckage of a Mayfield, Kentucky, candle factory that was destroyed by a tornado.

Brian Brooks said the tornado narrowly missed his home before he received a call from his wife, who was at the Mayfield Consumer Products facility.

“She calls and tells me she loves me, that she’s trapped, and they’re smashed. And she hung up,” he told Fox News.

Mr Brooks rushed to the factory to find it had been reduced to a pile of rubble. “It was like the worst war movie you see on TV. The people that were screaming that you could not see in the dark,” he said.

He sprang into action pulling workers to safety, including his wife and his sister.

“They didn’t think they were ever going to see us again,” Mr Brooks said. “I’m so grateful … I just want to say my prayers for everybody who wasn’t so lucky.”

Eight out of roughly 100 people at the factory were confirmed dead in the wake of the twister. The Independent’s Harriet Sinclair reports:

Megan Sheets15 December 2021 14:44

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Nassar Abuse Survivors Reach a $380 Million Settlement

In one hearing, the F.B.I.’s director, Christopher A. Wray, apologized for the agency’s mismanagement of the case. In heart-wrenching testimony in September, Biles, Maroney, Raisman and the former national team member Maggie Nichols described how the F.B.I. turned a blind eye to Nassar’s abuse while the investigation stalled and children suffered.

One legacy of the case will be how it empowered victims to speak about their sexual abuse and face their accusers. At Nassar’s sentencing hearings in early 2018, more than 100 girls and women he abused, including some of his patients at Michigan State University, stood in front of him and gave witness statements about how he had hurt them. Their statements were often defiant, and told of how they had persevered despite the abuse.

Because of the Nassar case, sports organizations became aware of their culpability when athletes were abused on their watch. Steve Penny, the former U.S.A. Gymnastics president and chief executive, was fired from the federation and faces a felony charge of evidence tampering in the case. Scott Blackmun resigned under pressure as chief executive of the U.S.O.P.C.

“The settlement shows that there was injustice absolutely going on here,” John C. Manly, a lawyer representing many of the victims, said. “But if you really want to stop people who enable child molesters, you have to start sending people to jail.”

Manly added that the only person in the case serving time in prison is Nassar, and said that Nassar’s enablers, including the sports, university and law enforcement officials who heard complaints about him but never followed up, should be in prison, too. Manly said he had mixed feelings about the settlement: It stings, he said, that it has been five years since he filed his first suit in the case.

“For the life of me, I don’t know why five years had to go by and hundreds of millions of dollars had to be spent on corporate lawyers for us to get to this point,” he said.

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USA Gymnastics, abuse survivors have deal for $380 million in ‘full settlement’ – USA TODAY

  1. USA Gymnastics, abuse survivors have deal for $380 million in ‘full settlement’ USA TODAY
  2. Nassar Abuse Survivors Reach a $380 Million Settlement The New York Times
  3. Nassar Victims Reach $380 Million Settlement With USA Gymnastics and U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee The Wall Street Journal
  4. Larry Nassar abuse survivors to receive $380m settlement BBC News
  5. USA Gymnastics and U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee agree to pay $380 million to survivors of former Olympic team doctor and convicted sexual predator Larry Nassar ESPN
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Kentucky tornadoes: Rescuers search for survivors after deadly severe weather tears through several states

More than 80 people are feared dead following reports of tornadoes late Friday and early Saturday in Arkansas, Illinois, Kentucky, Mississippi, Missouri and Tennessee.

In Kentucky alone, the death toll may be more than 70, Gov. Andy Beshear said Saturday, calling it “one of the toughest nights” in state history.

Destroyed buildings, downed power lines and wrecked vehicles lined the streets in hard-hit areas, making it harder for rescuers trying to reach communities with no phone or power lines after the twisters hit.

“This has been the most devastating tornado event in our state’s history,” Beshear said at a news conference. “The level of devastation is unlike anything I have ever seen.”

Arkansas officials have reported two weather-related deaths; Tennessee has confirmed four; Illinois has reported six; and Missouri two. Kentucky has not released an official death toll, but it’s believed to be one of the hardest-hit states.

Family members search for those unaccounted for

Tornadoes or strong winds collapsed an occupied candle factory in Kentucky, an Amazon warehouse in western Illinois, and a nursing home in Arkansas, killing people in each community and leaving responders scrambling to rescue others.
More than 30 tornadoes were reported in six states. CNN meteorologists said a stretch of more than 250 miles from Arkansas to Kentucky might have been hit by one violent, long-track twister.

Beshear visited some of the affected areas Saturday to assess the damage. In his father’s hometown of Dawson Springs, which has a population of about 2,700, some remain unaccounted for.

“One block from my grandparent’s house, there’s no house standing and we don’t know where all those people are,” Beshear said.

Video from Mayfield, a city of around 10,000 people, showed what remained of the factory there: a massive debris field full of twisted metal and rescuers using their hands and machines to dig through.

“There’s at least 15 feet of metal with cars on top of it, barrels of corrosive chemicals that are there. It will be a miracle if anybody else is found alive in it,” Beshear said. “Downtown is completely devastated.”

Some family members are still searching for relatives who worked at the candle factory.

Paige Tingle, who was looking for her mother-in-law, Jill Monroe, said time is of the essence. The last time the family spoke with her, she was in the bathroom in the safe shelter area,” Tingle said Saturday.

“She [Monroe] has lung problems, she has heart problems,” Tingle said. “We’ve got to get her.”

The family checked local hospitals but they haven’t found her. Calls to her phone have gone unanswered.

Ivy Williams was at the Mayfield site Saturday looking for his wife of 30-plus years, Janine Williams, who was at the factory.

“I hope she’s somewhere safe,” Williams said, through tears. “Please call me … I’m looking for you, baby.” He last heard from her before the tornado hit, and was shocked to find the building completely leveled when he arrived at the scene.

First responders have pulled people out of the rubble — some of them alive, storm chaser Michael Gordon told CNN Saturday from the scene.

“It’s kind of hard to talk about. … They’re digging in that rubble by hand right now,” Gordon said.

The state has deployed the National Guard to conduct door-to-door to searches, clear debris from roadways, and take generators to help power shelters and hospitals.

The governor urged people in affected communities that still have power to stay off the roads.

“Let our first responders get to everybody. Don’t go to these areas to see it. We need to make sure those who do this work can do it at the fastest possible speed,” he said.

He also implored those who can to donate blood.

“We were already pretty short with Covid out there. We’re going to have a lot of deaths, but we are also going to have a lot of injuries,” he said.

Kentucky State Police Lt. Dean Patterson said the destruction is unlike anything he’s seen before. And the rescue and recovery effort will come with challenges.

“It’s a very thorough and slow process, because you have to be careful when you are dealing with so much debris, and so many unknowns. One wrong move and you could actually cause more damage, so it’s a slow methodical process. Lots of people out there, working together to do everything they can to hopefully find some survivors in that devastating area.”

A hospital in Paducah, Kentucky, some 27 miles north of Mayfield, has been treating tornado victims. A majority of them had chemical burns, long bone injuries and crush injuries, Mercy Health Lourdes Hospital spokesperson Nanette Bentley said.

National Weather Service Chief Meteorologist John Gordon told a news conference in Kentucky that the tornado event was a “worst-case scenario.”

“Warm air in the cold season, middle of the night — this sickens me to see what has happened,” he said. “Look at the pictures on your screens. Homes, totally impaled, two-by-fours through cars, eighteen-wheelers thrown 30 feet moved in the northwesterly direction — that takes a lot of force.”

Deaths reported in several other states

In addition to Kentucky, deadly destruction was also reported in Illinois, Arkansas, Missouri and Tennessee.

At least six people died at the collapsed Amazon warehouse in the Illinois city of Edwardsville, Fire Chief James Whiteford said. The recovery phase is expected to take three more days and first responders will continue to search the site for evidence of life, he said.

In the northeastern Arkansas city of Monette, at least one person was killed at a nursing home damaged by a tornado, Mayor Bob Blankenship said. A second person died after the storm hit a Dollar General store in nearby Leachville, officials said.

“At this point, I have two confirmed deaths. One is in Monette at the nursing home and the other one was in Leachville at a store that was struck in deadly fashion,” Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson told CNN.

Officials confirmed two storm-related deaths in Missouri.

“In St. Charles County, a woman was killed at home and two others were hospitalized. In Pemiscot County, a young child was killed at home and at least nine people were transported to hospitals,” Gov. Mike Parson’s office said in a news release.

Tennessee is reporting a total of four weather-related deaths from the severe weather. Two were in Lake County, one in Obion County, and one in Shelby County, Tennessee Emergency Management spokesman Dean Flener said.

CNN’s Paul P. Murphy, Nadia Romero, Keith Allen, Brandon Miller, Joe Sutton, Dave Hennen, Haley Brink, Dave Alsup, Travis Caldwell, Laura Studley, DJ Judd, Andy Rose, Sharif Paget and Carma Hassan contributed to this report.

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‘Long’ COVID causes bad smells and tastes, depression for some survivors: ‘Hot water smells like rotting meat’

Katrina Haydon can’t eat, shower or brush her teeth the same way she used to six months ago because of parosmia, a smell disorder sometimes associated with COVID-19 “long-haulers,” or people whose COVID symptoms last long after they test positive for the virus.

Parosmia

Parosmia is a term used for any kind of distortion of one’s sense of smell — unlike anosmia, a term for one’s loss of their sense of smell.

For Haydon, 24, it started with anosmia. She believes she contracted COVID-19 in June of 2021, though she tested negative for the virus. She had mild cold-like symptoms and lost her sense of taste and smell, as many COVID patients do. The anosmia lasted for several weeks before about 70% to 80% of her taste and smell senses returned.

A healthcare worker inserts a Covid-19 rapid test into a machine at the CareNow Denver University urgent care center in Denver, Colorado, U.S., on Tuesday, Nov. 16, 2021. Photographer: Daniel Brenner/Bloomberg

Then, in September, the parosmia symptoms kicked in.

“Savory foods smell like rotting sewage. Hot water smells like rotting meat. Chemical cleaner and perfume smell like really sharp, overwhelming sulfur — like the smell of hair burning but concentrated and stronger. Sweets and dairy taste like perfume would taste if you sprayed it in your mouth,” she told Fox News.

COVID ‘LONG-HAULERS’ EXPERIENCING FISHY, SULFUR SMELLS

Haydon’s aversion to the smell of heat — such as the smell of a hot shower or radiator — is perhaps the strangest aspect of her condition.

“I used to take a shower more than twice a day regularly, but at least twice a day, and it has been really, really hard for me to make myself shower once a day. It’s so difficult,” she said. “And same thing with brushing my teeth. It’s really, really hard because even non-mint toothpastes cause a physical reaction because they just taste and smell so bad.”

Workers assemble a heater in an outdoor dining area at a restaurant in San Francisco, California, U.S., on Wednesday, Aug. 5, 2020. Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg
(Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty)

The experience has been isolating and even depressing.

If her neighbors cook, it smells bad. Public transportation smells bad (or at least worse than normal). CVS and Whole Foods smell bad. Restaurants smell terrible. It has driven her away from seeing friends in social settings.

“I think everybody believes me, but I don’t think they realize — I think a lot of people don’t realize — the severity of it,” Haydon said. “It seems like, oh, everything smells and tastes bad, that stinks, but I don’t think the extent to which it does change your day-to-day life is immediately evident to most people. I think it takes a little time to understand what that really does look like.”

How does it happen?

Dr. Andrew Lane, Director of the Sinus Center at Johns Hopkins and professor of otolaryngology — head and neck surgery — at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, told Fox News that parosmia not only appears in some COVID-19 survivors, but it can also occur after people catch other viral infections or suffer brain injuries, brain tumors and Multiple Sclerosis.

OMICRON: WHAT ARE THE VARIANT’S SYMPTOMS?

Lane, who is studying the phenomenon in COVID-19 survivors, says it all starts in membranes located in the upper part of a person’s nose. 

“Your whole nose is lined with mucous membranes … and in the upper part of the nose, there’s this very specialized mucous membrane, and that’s where you sense smells. And this is really a unique kind of tissue in the body,” he said. “First of all, it’s the only place in the body where a neuron that’s coming from the brain directly contacts the outside world … and the part that sticks out in the environment can is what actually can detect an [odor molecule]. … And then and then it sends a signal like straight to the brain.”

Dr. Andrew Lane (Johns Hopkins School of Medicine)

That unique tissue is called the olfactory epithelium. The membranes in that part of the nose remember what certain objects are supposed to smell like. 

But with anosmia and parosmia, those neurons, which are supposed to send signals to the brain after encountering an odor molecule and inform the brain of what it is, get lost along the way.

“COVID has this ability to infect the olfactory tissue and the olfactory epithelium … and you lose a lot of neurons, sort of all at once. And if you lose a lot of it, you know, maybe all of it, then you’re going to be anosmic,” Lane explained, adding that it’s “not exactly clear how this happens.”

THIRD OMICRON CASE DETECTED IN COLORADO

His recent study shows that COVID-19 cells, which latch onto and infect olfactory cells, are 700 times more prevalent in the upper part of the nose that send odor signals to the brain than they are in “the lining cells of the rest of the nose and windpipe that leads to the lungs.”

Usually, a person’s sense of smell returns quickly after contracting COVID-19, but sometimes it can take months; in rare cases, people can lose their smell indefinitely. 

Three days after testing positive for Covid-19, “everything tasted like cardboard,” recalls 38-year-old Elizabeth Medina, who lost her sense of taste and smell at the start of the pandemic. (Photo by ANGELA WEISS/AFP via Getty Images)

When a person experiences anosmia, sometimes they can gain their sense of smell back by smelling potent foods, like grapefruit, because the brain can remember how those foods are supposed to smell. 

But with parosmia, neurons send the “wrong” signals to the brain, which is why Haydon and others can’t eat or walk into restaurants — because everything smells too awful.

Lane says as devastating as this is for most people who experience it, it’s actually a good sign.

“That means that it’s coming,” the professor said, “it” meaning an accurate sense of smell. “It’s starting to work again, and that there may be some sorting out to do, but at least the elements are finding their way back together, getting to your brain, getting some signal when your nose is getting a smell, which is better than nothing. … The brain sorts it out, and over time, you get your sense of smell back.”

How is it treated?

Haydon has turned to online forums, TikTok, YouTube and Twitter to find answers because doctors haven’t given her much to work with.

WHITE HOUSE SAYS DOMESTIC TRAVEL VACCINE REQUIREMENTS ON THE TABLE DUE TO OMICRON VARIANT

There are a mix of people experiencing the issue: young people, older people, men, women, vaccinated, unvaccinated. Many say they experienced mild COVID-19 symptoms before suddenly experiencing parosmia weeks or months after contracting the virus. She’s read about parents who can’t cook for their families anymore or sit with them at the dinner table.

Yet for such a debilitating issue for potentially thousands of people, if not millions, globally, there is no confirmed solution.

Leah Holzel, 60, a food editor who had lost her sense of smell from 2016 to 2019, now coaches people who have lost their sense of smell due to Covid-19. (Photo by ANGELA WEISS/AFP via Getty Images)

Haydon has read about solutions ranging from alpha-lipoic, an antioxidant found naturally in human cells, to IV drips, zinc and even chiropractic methods.

“It’s pretty varied,” she said. “Mostly, it’s people saying, ‘Have you tried this? Have you tried this?’ But most of the people I see that say, ‘Oh, I did this, and it worked,’ is the alpha-lipoic.”

Lane said he’s heard of using alpha-lipoic acid as a solution, but “there’s not very good evidence that [it] works.”

“I mean, there’s a whole industry of different things that people give to people with olfactory loss, and mostly it’s snake oil kind of stuff, and there’s very kind of skimpy data about it,” he said. “But there is no medication that we have that restores a sense of smell.”

Ultimately, COVID-19 is too new. It’s only been around for about two years, so “long” COVID symptoms and long-term effects of the virus are still largely unknown.

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Most of the patients Lane sees who can’t taste food or experience a bad reaction to the smell of food have to force themselves to eat because they know they’re hungry even though the act of eating seems unappealing. 

“It’s a frustrating problem that we don’t have a treatment for,” he explained. “And I think we’re going to see more and more patients with this problem. The answer, ultimately, is going to be research. … We’ve been interested in this kind of general problem of how the sense of smell works and what can go wrong. But I think that ultimately the way out of this is to understand better and how the system works and develop treatments.”

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