Cannibal mum tries to eat her own baby shortly after giving birth

    

A 24 year old woman named Li Zhenghua, was discovered by a shocked nurse trying to eat her baby days after he was born at a local hospital in China. The nurse saw her eating the infant’s arm and as she made to rescue the infant, the crazed mum refused to let the baby go. The nurse immediately raised an alarm and called other hospital staff who helped to rescue the baby.

A local media reports that the attack happened at a hospital in the city of Shenzhen in China’s Guangdong Province. The woman had been found on the streets heavily pregnant and in labour.

The homeless woman, suspected to be mentally unstable, was taken to the hospital where she gave birth and attempted to eat her baby.

A hospital spokesman spoke to Chinese media;

“It was really shocking, the arm was badly damaged and suffered not only heavy bruising but bleeding as a result of the bite. Fortunately, doctors managed to insert something to stop her closing her teeth and then levered her jaws apart. After that they gave her a sedative and took the baby to a secure location.”

Authorities said the woman’s mother-in-law had thrown her out on the streets despite being pregnant after she started acting mental at home.

They say they are trying to find out why the new mum tried to eat her baby. The baby has since been taken into the care of the government.

Manny Pacquiao badly whooped Chris Algieri

Boxing fans were denied the drama of an upset and the fans of Pac man weren’t disappointed at all on Saturday when Manny Pacquiao picked apart the little-known Chris Algieri on his way to a lopsided decision win in their 12-round melee in Macau, China.

Algieri, now 20-1 with 8 KOs, came into the battle undefeated and exuding confidence about his ability to use his speed and timing to defeat the Filipino
legend Pac man.

But in the end, the mighty Pacquiao’s power, skill, and experience proved to be too much for the lanky Long Islander, as Manny, now 57-5-2, 38 KOs, handily
piled up the points and punishment from the opening bell until the final round.

You go Pac man !

Source: Heavy

Busted ! Woman stripped to the waist after being caught stealing by store owner

Some shop owners are tougher and meaner than the police when it comes to securing there shop. A female shoplifter was stripped to her waist by a merciless store owner after she was caught stealing in her store.

The shoplifter, 28 year old Yu Chung,
went into the store in China’s Zhejiang province to buy clothes and smartly stuffed some into her bag without paying for them but she was outsmarted by the shop owner.

The angry store owner, 39 year old Mei Hsueh, who caught her red handed, descended on her, removed her top clothings to prevent her from running away, then removed her bra and pushed her outside of her store “how embarrassing”. As expected a crowd gathered to watch, some took photos and shared them online, hmm a typical 21th century people…

The shop owner said while being questioned by the police……

“This thief was trying to steal my clothes to I took off some of hers. She’ll think twice before she does that again. It was meant to be a warning to all those thieves out there to show them that not all shops are a pushover.”

The police was eventually took Yu away. She has been charged with theft but no action was taken against the shop owner.

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See moment Chinese stepmother whips & kicks a toddler for wetting herself

Omg this is gross ! What a callous woman she is ?

This is so shocking, a Chinese stepmother whipped, beat, kicked and stamped on a girl less than 2 years old just because she wet herself and unfortunately for her the brutal child abuse, which lasted 5 minutes, was caught on tape.

The daredevil stepmother whipped the young girl 87 times with a branch, kicked her 14 times and gave her eight slaps to the face. The more the young girl cried, the more the woman screamed and continued beating her. At one time, the woman kicked the toddler in the leg until
she fell. Then grabbed her by the ear, threw her to the floor, slapped her again and used a branch to beat her.

Someone filmed the assault from a widow above the compound and posted it online. Hours after it was posted online, thousands called for the woman’s
arrest, but the police refused to arrest her, saying there was nothing they could do. Gush this is so unbelievable, the woman should be locked up in the zoo. Look at how the woman scared the hell out of the poor child, making the child to use the wall as the only shield.

Photo credit: UK Daily Mail

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WoW ! Hong Kong warns democracy protesters of firm response

Hong Kong authorities on Thursday urged thousands of pro-democracy protesters to immediately end their blockade of the city centre and said any attempt to occupy administrative buildings would be met with a resolute
and firm response.

The mostly young protesters have demanded Hong Kong’s leader, Leung Chun-ying, step down by the end of Thursday, threatening to occupy government buildings if he fails to do so

They have also called on China to introduce full democracy so the city can freely choose its own leader.
Leung, appointed by Beijing, has refused to stand down, leaving the two sides far apart in a dispute over how much political control China should have over
Hong Kong.

Steve Hui, senior superintendent of the Hong Kong police force, said police would take action in accordance with the law if the protesters tried to enter government buildings.

“Whenever there are violent and major incidents and crimes such as fighting and any other situation that jeopardises safety and public order, police will take
resolute and firm action to restore public order,” Hui said, when asked how police would respond should the students carry through with their threat.

“We assure that police will have enough manpower to deal with every single situation.”

Riot police used tear gas, pepper spray and baton charges last weekend to quell unrest, the worst inHong Kong since China resumed its rule of the former
British colony in 1997. The “Occupy Central” movement presents one of the
biggest political challenges for Beijing since it violently crushed pro-democracy protests in Tiananmen Square in 1989.

Protesters across the city have dug in, setting up supply stations with water bottles, fruit, raincoats, towels, goggles, face masks, tents and umbrellas.
The Hong Kong Federation of Students, one of the protest organisers, has urged people to surround more government buildings from Friday unless the authorities accepted their demands.

Protest leaders addressed supporters camped near the government headquarters, preparing them for a
potentially tense night ahead including the possibility of police using tear gas.

“In the coming days we will team up to support the movement and provide resources. We will fight until the very end,” student leader Joshua Wong said from atop a ladder, to huge cheers.

The three main protest groups have started to work more closely together, trying to give a show of unity after some disagreements on tactics over the past
several days.

The Hong Kong government said the protests, now in their sixth day, were affecting public order and public
services.

“About 3,000 government officials will try their best tomorrow to return to work as (much) as possible. To maintain public service, the government headquarters
must operate as usual,” the government said in a statement.

“We urge the Occupy Central leaders and organizers to stop the movement immediately.”

While the number of protesters on the streets fell on Thursday, the second of two-day public holiday, tension remained high and the demonstrations appeared far from over.

Outside Leung’s office in the Central business district, protesters surrounded a police van that tried to enter the compound, prompting police to call
reinforcements. Some protesters donned goggles and gas masks.

Earlier, about 100 protesters blocked the main road leading to Leung’s office, some chanting, “Leung Chun-
ying, Step Down!” READY FOR THE LONG-GAME China has dismissed the pro-democracy protests as illegal, but it faces a dilemma.

Cracking down too hard could shake confidence in market-driven Hong Kong, which has a separate legal system from the rest of China. Not reacting firmly
enough, however, could embolden dissidents on the mainland.

A government source with ties to Leung said the Hong Kong leader was prepared to play a long-game, intervening only if there was looting or violence.

“Unless there’s some chaotic situation, we won’t send in riot police … We hope this doesn’t happen,” the source said. “We have to deal with it peacefully, even
if it lasts weeks or months.” Leung could not be reached for comment.

A front-page editorial in the People’s Daily, the Communist Party mouthpiece, lauded Leung’s leadership and the police response to the protests.

“The central government fully trusts Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying and is very satisfied with his work,” it said on Thursday. A pro-Beijing group told a news conference in Hong Kong their supporters would take to the streets to
show support for Leung’s administration, raising the prospect of clashes between the two sides.

The crowded suburbs of Kowloon and the
neighbouring New Territories are home to an extensive network of pro-Beijing groups, some of which boast close ties to mainland companies and officials and have grown active in street counter-protests in recent months.

REPUTATION UNDER THREAT
A top Chinese envoy has warned that the protests could tarnish the city’s reputation as one of the world’s leading financial hubs if they continued for a
prolonged period. China’s ambassador to Germany, Shi Mingde, told Reuters that the city’s reputation as a financial hub
was not under threat for now. “But if shares fall, if the unrest continues, then the social order and (Hong Kong’s) role as a financial centre will be in danger,” he said in an interview in Berlin.

“This is neither in Hong Kong’s nor China’s interest.”
The city’s benchmark index, closed on Thursday for a holiday, plunged 7.3 percent in September. Spooked by the protests, which turned violent at the
weekend when tens of thousands took to the streets, some banks and other financial firms have begun moving staff to back-up premises on the outskirts of
the city.

U.S. President Barack Obama told visiting Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi, who earlier met Secretary of State John Kerry, that Washington was watching the protests closely and urged a peaceful solution.

“The United States has consistently supported the open system that is essential to Hong Kong’s stability
and prosperity, universal suffrage, and the aspiration of the Hong Kong people,” the White House said in a statement about the meeting, also attended by
national security adviser Susan Rice.
Universal suffrage is an eventual goal under the “one country, two systems” formula by which China rules Hong Kong.
Under that formula, China accords Hong
Kong some autonomy and freedoms not enjoyed in mainland China. However, protesters calling for free elections reacted angrily when Beijing decreed on Aug. 31 that it would vet candidates wishing to run in Hong Kong’s 2017
election.

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WoW ! Hong Kong protesters stockpile supplies, fear fresh police advance

Tens of thousands of pro- democracy protesters extended a blockade of Hong
Kong streets on Tuesday, stockpiling supplies and erecting makeshift barricades ahead of what some fear may be a push by police to clear the roads before Chinese National Day.

Riot police shot pepper spray and tear gas at protesters at the weekend, but by Tuesday evening they had almost completely withdrawn from the downtown Admiralty district except for an area around the government headquarters

On the eve of Wednesday’s anniversary of the Communist Party’s foundation of the People’s Republic of China in 1949, crowds poured into central districts of the Asian financial hub, near where National Day festivities are scheduled to take place.

Rumours have rippled through crowds of protesters that police could be preparing to move in again, as the government has vowed to go ahead with celebrations.

“Many powerful people from the mainland will come to Hong Kong. The Hong Kong government won’t want
them to see this, so the police must do something,”

Sui-ying Cheng, 18, a freshman at Hong Kong University’s School of Professional and Continuing Education, said of the National Day holiday.

“We are not scared. We will stay here tonight. Tonight is the most important,” she said.

Student leaders have given Hong Kong leader Leung Chun-ying an ultimatum to come out and address the protesters before midnight on Tuesday, threatening to escalate action in the next few days to occupy more government facilities, buildings and public roads if he fails to do so.

The protesters, mostly students, are demanding full democracy and have called on Leung to step down after Beijing ruled a month ago that it would vet candidates wishing to run for Hong Kong’s leadership in 2017. While Leung has said Beijing would not back down in
the face of protests it has branded illegal, he also said Hong Kong police would be able to maintain security without help from People’s Liberation Army (PLA) troops from the mainland.

“When a problem arises in Hong Kong, our police force should be able to solve it. We don’t need to ask to deploy the PLA,” Beijing-backed Leung told
reporters at a briefing on Tuesday.

DEMONSTRATIONS COULD ESCALATE

The protests are widely expected to escalate on Wednesday to coincide with National Day celebrations.
“I don’t know what the police or government will do to me, but I am 100 percent sure I need to come out
(tonight),” said Ken To, the 35-year-old manager of a restaurant in the densely packed Mong Kok residential district.

“We (Hong Kongers) don’t only want money. We want our kids, our future, our education,” he said. China rules Hong Kong under a “one country, two systems” formula that accords the former British
colony a degree of autonomy and freedoms not enjoyed in mainland China, with universal suffrage set as an eventual goal. Protesters massed in at least four of Hong Kong’s busiest areas, including Admiralty, the Central business district, the bustling shopping district of
Causeway Bay and Mong Kok in Kowloon.

“We hope all the people can hold the three main occupation points; Admiralty, Causeway Bay and Mong Kok. We will call these places ‘Democracy Square,” said Chan Kin-man, a co-founder of protest
movement Occupy Central. Organisers said as many as 80,000 people thronged
the streets after demonstrations flared on Friday night, and many have slept out for the past four nights blocking usually busy roads. No independent estimate
of crowd numbers was available.

STOCKPILING SUPPLIES

Alex Chow, leader of the Hong Kong Federation of Students, said the protests, which began as a gathering of students and the “Occupy Central”
movement, had become much broader and attracted Hong Kongers of all walks of life.
“It has evolved into a civil movement,” he said.
“We can see the Beijing and Hong Kong governments already feel pressure, so the ‘Occupy’ movement must continue,”

Chow told protesters in Admiralty.
People set up supply stations with water bottles, fruit, crackers, disposable raincoats, towels, goggles, face masks and tents, indicating they were in for the long haul. Some lugged metal road barricades into positions on the edge of crowds, presumably to slow a police advance.

In at least one location, several minivans and a truck were parked in rows in an apparent effort to block a road. At one Mong Kok intersection, six abandoned double-decker buses have been turned into makeshift noticeboards, their windows papered with messages of support such as “Please don’t give up” and “CY Leung step down”.

Some protesters nearby clapped and cheered while others played the guitar and drums.

“Even though I may get arrested, I will stay until the last minute,” said 16-year-old protester John Choi.

“We are fighting for our futures.”
Protest organisers urged citizens to donate more yellow ribbons, another symbol of the protests, and goggles to protect against tear gas and pepper spray.

Communist Party leaders in Beijing worry that calls for democracy could spread to the mainland, and have been aggressively censoring news and social
media comments about the Hong Kong
demonstrations. The protests are the worst in Hong Kong since China resumed its rule in 1997. They also represent one of the biggest political challenges for Beijing since it violently crushed pro-democracy protests in Tiananmen Square in 1989.

The movement presents Beijing’s Communist Party with a difficult challenge. Cracking down too hard
could shake confidence in market-driven Hong Kong, which has a separate legal system from the rest of China. Not reacting firmly enough, however, could
embolden dissidents on the mainland.

The deputy director of China’s National People’s Congress Internal and Judicial Affairs Committee, Li Shenming, wrote in the People’s Daily: “In today’s China, engaging in an election system of one-man- one-vote is bound to quickly lead to turmoil, unrest and even a situation of civil war.”

FINANCIAL FALLOUT

Financial fallout from the turmoil has been limited so far as investors gauge how severe Beijing’s response might be. Still, Hong Kong shares fell to a three-month low on Tuesday, registering their biggest monthly fall since May 2012. The city’s benchmark index has plunged 7.3 percent this month. Chinese shares were less troubled, perhaps because news of the protests in Hong Kong was hard to come by on the mainland.

The Hong Kong Monetary Authority, the de facto central bank, said 37 branches or offices of 21 different banks had been temporarily closed because of the protests. Some businesses have been directly affected, including luxury retailers in the Causeway Bay shopping mecca where protesters hunkered down.
The outside world has looked on warily, concerned that the clashes could spread and trigger a much harsher crackdown.

Washington has urged the Hong Kong authorities “to exercise restraint and for protesters to express their views peacefully”. The protests have also been watched closely in Taiwan, which has full democracy but is considered by Beijing as a renegade province that must one day be reunited with the mainland.

Taiwan President Ma Ying-jeou said Beijing needed “to listen carefully to the demands of the Hong Kong people”.
British Prime Minister David Cameron expressed concern about the clashes between protesters and police.

The United States, Australia and Singapore have issued travel alerts.

Source: Reuters

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WoW ! Hong Kong’s daisy chain protesters

“Over 100,000 people in Hong Kong have flocked to a social network that doesn’t need the internet, or a cellular network, to function.”

In Hong Kong, pro-democracy demonstrators are looking for new ways to communicate. News about the thousands of people demonstrating
in Hong Kong has been suppressed on the internet across the border in mainland China. The picture sharing site Instagram has been blocked there.

Messages posted to Sina Weibo, a Chinese microblogging site similar to Twitter, are being suppressed in far greater numbers than normal. So
far these blocks do not seem to have extended to Hong Kong, but on Sunday, rumours reportedly circulated that the authorities in Hong Kong might shut down the city’s cellular networks.

In response, a different type of social network has come to the fore. The Firechat app allows smartphone users to talk to one another “off-the- grid”, in the absence of a mobile signal or access to
the internet. By making use of the Bluetooth and Wi- Fi transmitters inside each individual phone, messages are spread in a daisy chain fashion, jumping from one user to the next.

The system is particularly effective when large numbers of people are congregated together – like at a music festival, or a political protest. Micha Benoliel, CEO of Open Garden, the firm that makes the app, tells BBC Trending there has been a huge surge in downloads from Hong Kong, as more
than 100,000 new accounts have been created in less than 24 hours. Usage spiked during protests in Taiwan and Iran earlier this year, but never before on
this scale, says Benoliel.

Inside the app you can post anonymously to discussions which are arranged according to theme, or how close you are to other users. At one point on Sunday 33,000 people in Hong Kong were using the app at the same time.

Source : BBC

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WoW ! Hong Kong democracy protesters defy tear gas, baton charge in historic tandoff

Riot police advanced on Hong Kong democracy protesters in the early hours of Monday, firing volleys of tear gas after launching a baton-charge in the worst unrest there since China took back control of the former British colony two
decades ago.

Some protesters erected barricades to block security forces amid chaotic scenes still unfolding just hours before one of the world’s major financial centers was due to open for business. Many roads leading to the Central business district remained sealed off as thousands defied police calls to retreat.

Earlier, police baton-charged a crowd blocking a key road in the government district in defiance of official warnings that the demonstrations were illegal.
Several scuffles broke out between police in helmets, gas masks and riot gear, with demonstrators angered by the firing of tear gas, last used in Hong Kong in 2005.

“If today I don’t stand up, I will hate myself in future,” said taxi driver Edward Yeung, 55, as he swore at police on the frontline. “Even if I get a criminal record
it will be a glorious one.”

White clouds of gas wafting between some of the world’s most valuable office towers and shopping malls underscored the struggle that China’s Communist Party faces in stamping its will on Hong
Kong’s more than 7 million people.
China took back control of Hong Kong from Britain in 1997.

Eight years earlier, Beijing’s bloody crackdown on pro- democracy students in Tiananmen Square in 1989 had sent shockwaves through Hong Kong as people saw how far China’s rulers would go to maintain their grip on power.

Thousands of protesters were still milling around the main Hong Kong government building, ignoring messages from student and pro-democracy leaders to
retreat for fear that the police might fire rubber bullets. Australia and Italy issued travel warnings for Hong Kong, urging their citizens to avoid protest sites.

Some financial firms in the business district advised staff to work from home or from another location. The U.S. State Department said in a statement on Sunday that Washington supported Hong Kong’s well- established traditions and fundamental freedoms, such as peaceful assembly and expression.

PEPPER SPRAY, TEAR GAS
The protests fanned out to the busy shopping district of Causeway Bay and across the harbor to Mong Kok, posing a greater challenge for authorities to contain, local media reported. The protesters brought traffic to a halt and called on Hong Kong leader Leung Chun-
ying to step down.

Police, in lines five deep in places, earlier used pepper spray against activists and shot tear gas into the air. The crowds fled several hundred yards (meters), scattering their umbrellas and hurling abuse at police they called “cowards”.

Britain returned Hong Kong to Chinese rule under a formula known as “one country, two systems” that guaranteed a high degree of autonomy and freedoms
not enjoyed in mainland China. Universal suffrage was set as an eventual goal.

But Beijing last month rejected demands for people to freely choose the city’s next leader, prompting threats from activists to shut down the Central business district. China wants to limit elections to a handful of candidates loyal to Beijing.

Communist Party leaders in Beijing are concerned that calls for democracy could spread to cities on the mainland. In a move certain to unnerve authorities in Beijing, media in Taiwan reported that student leaders there had occupied the lobby of Hong Kong’s representative
office on the island in a show of support for the democracy protesters.

Hong Kong leader Leung had earlier pledged “resolute” action against the protest movement, known as Occupy Central with Love and Peace.

“The police are determined to handle the situation appropriately in accordance with the law,” Leung said, less than two hours before the police charge began.
“NEVER GIVE UP”

Police had not used tear gas in Hong Kong since breaking up protests by South Korean farmers against the World Trade Organisation in 2005.

“We will fight until the end … we will never give up,”

said Peter Poon, a protester in his 20s, adding that he may have to retreat temporarily during the night.
Police denied rumors that they had used rubber bullets. A spokesperson for China’s Hong Kong and Macau Affairs Office said the central government fully
supported Hong Kong’s handling of the situation “in accordance with the law”.

Such dissent would never be tolerated on the mainland, where the phrase “Occupy Central” was blocked on Sunday on Weibo, China’s version of Twitter. It had been allowed earlier in the day.
A tearful Occupy organizer, Benny Tai, said he was proud of people’s determination to fight for “genuine”
universal suffrage, but that the situation was getting out of control, local broadcaster RTHK reported.

He said he believed he would face heavy punishment for initiating the movement.
Protesters huddled in plastic capes, masks and goggles as they braced for a fresh police attempt to clear them from the financial district before Hong Kong re-opens for business. The city’s financial
markets are expected to open as usual on Monday.

“WE WILL WIN WITH LOVE AND PEACE”

Publishing tycoon Jimmy Lai, a key backer of the democracy movement, joined the protesters.

“The more Hong Kong citizens come, the more unlikely the police can clear up the place,” said Lai,

also wearing a plastic cape and protective glasses.

“Even if we get beaten up, we cannot fight back. We will win this war with love and peace.”

Pro-democracy Hong Kong lawmaker Lee Cheuk-yan said three fellow legislators were among a small group of activists detained by police, including democratic leaders Albert Ho and Emily Lau.
Organizers said as many as 80,000 people thronged the streets in Admiralty district, galvanized by the arrests of student activists on Friday. No independent estimate of the crowd numbers was available.

A week of protests escalated into violence when student-led demonstrators broke through a cordon
late on Friday and scaled a fence to invade the city’s main government compound. Police used pepper spray to disperse the crowd. The Hong Kong Federation of Students has extended class boycotts indefinitely and called on the city’s leader to step down.

Police have so far arrested 78 people, including Joshua Wong, the 17-year-old leader of student group Scholarism, who was dragged away after calling on protesters to charge the government premises. Wong was released without charge on Sunday night.

He told reporters he planned to return to the protest site after resting. Student leaders Alex Chow and Lester Shum have also been released.

Source: Reuters

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WoW ! Boy has chopstick removed from brain after shoving it up his nose

A 2 year old Chinese boy named Huang Zicheng had to have a chopstick removed from deep within his brain after he accidentally shoved it up his nose.

The chopstick penetrated three inches into his brain and doctors who spent four hours carefully taking it out of the little boy’s skull said if it had gone any further,
it would have caused brain injury.

Fortunately, the chopstick did not damage any major nerves and arteries and Huang expected to make a full recovery.

Speaking about the incident, the father told a Chinese newspaper that he knew his child was in trouble when he screamed like he’d never screamed before

“I turned around and was shocked to find that the long stick had gone into his head from his nose.”

The boy’s parents rushed him to the hospital where the chopstick was carefully removed, poor child.

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