Tag: Death

  • Ali died days before he could challenge BP’s CEO on the dangers of gas flaring. Don’t let his death be in vain | Jess Kelly

    Ali died days before he could challenge BP’s CEO on the dangers of gas flaring. Don’t let his death be in vain | Jess Kelly

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    Ali Hussein Jaloud, a 21-year-old Iraqi who lives next to one of BP’s biggest oilfields, was meant to ask a question at the company’s annual shareholder meeting today. He was going to challenge the CEO on why his company continues to poison his neighbourhood with cancer-causing pollution. But, just a few days ago, Ali died of a form of leukaemia that has been linked to chemicals released by the burning of fossil fuels. His grieving father will ask why BP did not use its vast profits to help save his life.

    Over the past two years, my fellow investigator Owen Pinnell and I got to know Ali while making a documentary for BBC News Arabic, Under Poisoned Skies, which revealed the deadly impact of gas flaring in southern Iraq, including at BP’s Rumaila oilfield where Ali lives, surrounded by oil company-patrolled checkpoints. We also found out that Rumaila has more gas flaring than any other oilfield in the world.

    Routine gas flaring is a wasteful and avoidable practice used by oil companies to burn off the natural gas expelled during drilling. The process releases both greenhouse gases and dangerous air pollution. The gas could be captured instead and used to power people’s homes, saving them from dangerous emissions. But for more than a decade, BP and its partners have failed to build the necessary infrastructure. Since the Iraq war, BP has extracted oil worth £15.4bn from the country. BP said it was “extremely concerned” by the issues raised by our film (and in February said it was working to reduce flaring and emissions at Rumaila) but announced record profits from the oilfield in the year we launched the film.

    A keen footballer, Ali was diagnosed with leukaemia at 15. He had to drop out of school and his football team, and embark on two painful years of treatment. His family had to sell their furniture and take donations from their community to pay for it. “Sometimes I wished I would die so that I could stop torturing my parents,” he told us. But, miraculously, Ali survived. He was too old to return to school, so he set up a small mobile phone shop.

    Ali had been told by doctors that pollution had probably caused his cancer, and he quietly started advocating for a greener Iraq, one where children could breathe clean air. In his last Instagram post, just days before his death, Ali called for the oil companies to stop routine gas flaring and “save the youth of the country from kidney failure and cancer”.

    Excess gas is burned off near workers at the Rumaila oil field, south of Basra
    ‘In Iraq, the law states that gas flaring shouldn’t be closer than 10km (6 miles) from people’s homes.’ Excess gas is burned off near workers at the Rumaila oil field, south of Basra. Photograph: Atef Hassan/REUTERS

    Rumaila, the town where Ali was living, is heavily guarded and journalists are denied access, so we asked Ali to record video diaries documenting his daily life. In the first scene of our film, he opens his front gate to reveal a towering black cloud of smoke, just a few hundred metres away, beneath which children play hopscotch. In Iraq, the law states that gas flaring shouldn’t be closer than 10km (6 miles) from people’s homes.

    “These children are happily playing, they’re not aware of the poison that is coursing through their veins,” he says over the video. In the next shot, he loads his cute five-year-old nephew, Abyas, on to the front of his motorbike and they scoot off, passing the primary school, which is also engulfed in thick black smoke, before arriving at a spot by the canal where gas flares punctuate the skyline in every direction.

    When we showed that footage to David Boyd, the UN’s special rapporteur on human rights and the environment, he called it “a textbook example of a modern sacrifice zone, where profit is put above human life and the environment”.

    Ali helped us uncover high levels of the cancer-causing chemical, benzene, produced by gas flaring, in the air and bodies of children living in his community. Benzene is known to cause acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) – the cancer from which Ali and many other children we met were suffering. After our documentary appeared, the Iraqi government acknowledged, for the first time, the link between the oil industry’s pollution and the local population’s health problems.

    In December 2022, we found out Ali’s leukaemia had returned. His doctor in Iraq said that his only option was palliative care. But his father, who described Ali as his best friend, refused to accept this. He found a doctor at Columbia University who said that Ali could be eligible for experimental T-cell therapy. A supporter of the film, Callum Grieve, began a fundraising campaign to try to raise the £70,000 needed to send him to India. The donations were steady, but relied on the generosity of ordinary people with only small sums to give.

    I began to notice in our calls with Ali that his face looked bloated, and his cheekbones hidden because of the effects of steroids. But I had no idea we would lose him so soon. On Friday 21 April, the first night of Eid, we received the terrible news that Ali had died. We had already lost to cancer three of the children we got to know while making this film.

    A Guardian investigation found that nine million people a year die as a result of air pollution. Getting to know Ali helped to make that feel like much more than a statistic.

    Despite the barren and apocalyptic landscape Ali grew up in, he was a keen gardener. He used to send us videos of him watering the tiny, sparse patch in his front yard where he grew a handful of small palms and some unusual species like the “bambara” or white mulberry tree. When we showed him pictures of the countryside in England, he marvelled at the greenery and the clear skies. It contrasted so starkly with the constantly orange and acrid sky he was used to.

    Companies like BP are still breaking Iraq’s law by gas flaring illegally close to people’s homes. If you are looking down on us now, Ali, please know that your death will not be in vain. Britain’s biggest pension fund, Nest, and other investors are launching a shareholder rebellion against BP for rolling back on its climate targets. They told us their actions were partly inspired by our film. And this story could help secure justice for the thousands of lives put at risk by pollution from fossil fuel companies.

    • Jess Kelly is a documentary film-maker and journalist. Owen Pinnell also contributed to this piece.

    • Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.



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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Infant tied up, smothered to death inside plastic box in Patna

    Infant tied up, smothered to death inside plastic box in Patna

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    Patna: In a grisly case, a two-and-half-month-old infant was killed here by being placed inside a plastic box with her hands and legs were tied, police said on Wednesday.

    The gruesome murder was reported from in Ghazipur locality under Kadamkuan police station on Wednesday afternoon. .

    “The victim’s father came to our police station at 1 p.m. on Wednesday and informed us about his missing infant. We immediately went to his house and searched the entire area. We scanned CCTV cameras of the area but did not find any clue about the infant being taken away by someone. When we thoroughly checked the entire house, a plastic box was found in the kitchen. When we opened box, the infant was found dead with her hands and legs tied with cloth,” said SI Lal Bahadur Yadav of the Kadamkuan police station.

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    “We are investigating the case with all angles and called the FSL team for technical analysis to collect the fingerprints of the plastic box. It looks like the infant was suffocated inside the box. It is a brutal act of the accused,” he said.

    The deceased was identified as Anshi and his father is a painter and also runs a tea stall in Ghazipur locality.

    “We are scanning the CCTV cameras in the vicinity to find clues in the house of the victim. The case will be solved soon,” the SI said.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • UAE: Boat operator charged with negligence after Indian expat’s death

    UAE: Boat operator charged with negligence after Indian expat’s death

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    Abu Dhabi: Following the death of a 38-year-old expat from Kerala in a vessel capsizing incident, police in Sharjah have charged the management of the tourist boat company for negligence and arrested onboard staff members on duty, a media report said.

    According to Khaleej Times, authorities in Sharjah have also launched a crackdown on several other tourist boat operators violating security and safety procedures.

    Abhilash had gone boating with his colleagues when the accident took place off Khor Fakkan beach last week, killing him and injuring four others, including a seven-year-old child.

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    “The management of the tourist boat company behind the fatal accident has been charged with negligence and referred to the public prosecution,” the Khaleej Times reported, citing Sharjah Police.

    Maj-Gen Saif Al Zari Al Shamsi, Commander-in-Chief of the Sharjah Police, said that following the incident, an emergency response team was dispatched to the site, and a probe by them revealed that overloading was the cause of the accident.

    There were 16 passengers on the boat when the accident took place, whereas the vessel could accommodate a maximum of 10 people.

    Multiple rescue teams, including the police and paramedics, rushed to the spot.

    The investigation showed that the company took in more people to make higher profits, the Khaleej Times reported.

    Following the probe’s outcome, the boat’s management and all staff on duty were arrested.

    Police, meanwhile, have issued a warning to all other boat operators in the Emirate to carry out safety checks.

    Maj-Gen Al Shamsi ordered the boat operators to strictly follow safety and security guidelines.

    Abhilash’s body is presently being kept at the mortuary in Khor Fakkan Hospital.

    He is survived by his wife and daughter.

    (Except for the headline, the story has not been edited by Siasat staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Kenya ‘cult’ investigation widens as death toll reaches 90

    Kenya ‘cult’ investigation widens as death toll reaches 90

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    The death toll at a ranch in Kenya owned by a pastor who is accused of leading a religious cult and ordering his followers to starve themselves in order to “meet Jesus” has reached 90, as the country’s interior minister announced an expanded operation at the site.

    The new figure came after police exhumed 17 more bodies. The total number of those rescued while starving at the ranch now stands at 34. The Kenya Red Cross Society’s latest figure on the number of missing is 213.

    Pastor Paul Mackenzie Nthenge, who heads the Good News International church, is accused of luring his followers to the ranch near the coastal town of Malindi. He allegedly told them to fast until death in order to meet Jesus before burying them in shallow graves spread across his land. He was arrested after police raided the property earlier this month, and he remains in police custody pending a court appearance.

    Interior minister Kithure Kindiki said the security team will “upscale search and rescue missions to save as many lives as possible”. “The entire 800-acre (320-hectare) parcel of land that is part of the Shakahola ranch is hereby declared a disturbed area and an operation zone,” Kindiki said while visiting the area.

    The minister said there would be a turning point on how the country handles threats caused by religious extremism and was looking into another suspected cult in the same county.

    “We have cast the net wider to another religious organisation here in Kilifi. We have opened a formal inquiry on this religious group and we are getting crucial leads that perhaps [this] is a tip of the iceberg,” Kindiki said.

    The teams digging at the site have found decomposed bodies buried in mass and single graves marked with a cross.

    Some living in mudwalled houses inside the ranch have fled ahead of rescue teams, and it is mostly those who cannot walk or talk who have been rescued so far.

    A rescued follower (R) from the forest is supported by a volunteer
    A rescued follower (R) from the forest is supported by a volunteer Photograph: Yasuyoshi Chiba/AFP/Getty Images

    The Mombasa-based Muslims for Human Rights Group called on the government “to consider the option of using aerial surveillance by use of helicopters to rescue more people and make the process quicker”.

    The autopsies on the bodies are set to begin on Thursday with local media reporting that government morgues in Kilifi are filled to capacity.

    It is Kenya’s worst recorded case of alleged “cult” deaths.

    The pastor had been arrested twice before – in 2019 and March this year – in relation to the deaths of children. Each time, he was released on bond, and both cases are still proceeding through the court system.

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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Mob sets police station on fire protesting teen girl’s death in Bengal

    Mob sets police station on fire protesting teen girl’s death in Bengal

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    Kaliaganj: Miscreants set fire to Kaliaganj police station in West Bengal’s Uttar Dinajpur district on Tuesday protesting the death of a teenage girl whose body was found in a canal last week.

    People allegedly from the Adivasi and Rajbangshi communities organised a “Thana gherao” programme on Tuesday afternoon protesting against alleged “police inaction” in the case and claiming that the girl had been raped and murdered.

    Preliminary post-mortem of the girl’s body, however, indicated she had not been raped.

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    The mob broke barricades and pelted the police station with stones, an officer said.

    The police personnel started a baton charge but could not stop the mob from entering the police station and setting it on fire, he said.

    One vehicle was also set ablaze.

    “We are trying to bring the situation under control,” the police officer told PTI.

    On April 21, the body of the 17-year-old girl was found floating in a canal in Kaliaganj. Alleging that she was raped and killed, locals had put up road blockades by burning tyres and set several shops on fire.

    The incident triggered a war of words between the ruling Trinamool Congress and the opposition BJP ahead of the panchayat election in the state.

    The TMC accused the saffron party of trying to “politicise and communalise” the matter, as BJP demanded a CBI probe and promised legal aid to the girl’s family.

    Four police officers, all in the rank of Assistant Sub Inspectors, were Monday suspended for allegedly dragging the body of the girl on the road while removing it from the spot where it was found, amid protests by people.

    A video purportedly showing the incident has gone viral.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Telangana youth bludgeoned to death for harassing woman

    Telangana youth bludgeoned to death for harassing woman

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    Hyderabad: A youth was bludgeoned to death with boulders by family members of a woman he was harassing, in Telangana’s Mancherial district on Tuesday.

    Mahesh (24) was killed in broad daylight by three persons at Indaram village in Jaipur mandal of the district.

    Mahesh was allegedly harassing a woman of the same village by uploading her private videos on social media.

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    The deceased was also responsible for the suicide of the woman’s husband.

    According to villagers, Mahesh and the woman had an affair in the past. About six months ago, her family married her to another man.

    To apparently take revenge, Mahesh uploaded some videos and pictures of intimate moments with the woman. Upset over this, the woman’s husband committed suicide.

    After her husband’s death, the woman returned to her parents’ house. However, Mahesh again started harassing her by sharing the videos with others.

    Unable to bear this any further, the woman’s family members killed him.

    Police rushed to the village and launched a hunt for the assailants, who were absconding.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • NHRC issues notices to Haryana govt, Gurugram municipality over sewer death

    NHRC issues notices to Haryana govt, Gurugram municipality over sewer death

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    New Delhi: The National Human Rights Commission has issued notices to the Haryana government, the Gurugram Police and the Municipal Corporation of Gurugram after the decomposed body of a man was pulled out from an open sewer.

    Taking suo motu cognisance of a media report, the commission said it is issuing the notices “over the reported death of the man after falling into a open sewer in Gurugram”.

    The National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) said Badshahpur police personnel received information on April 20 that foul smell was coming out from an open sewer manhole near the Vatika Chowk area on Sohna Road. When a police team reached there, they spotted a body inside the sewer, it said.

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    The decomposed body was taken out by a fire brigade team from the 10-feet-deep sewer, it said and added that a laptop bag, a mobile phone and a power bank were also recovered.

    Reportedly, the documents in the bag suggested that he belonged to Mathura in Uttar Pradesh, the commission said.

    SHO Badshahpur police station Inspector Madan Lal had said, “The body was decomposed. Laptop bag was found in the hand of the deceased. Apart from a laptop, a mobile and a power bank have been found in it.”

    “According to a document found in the laptop bag, the deceased may be about 30 years old Dinesh Kumar, a resident of Mathura in Uttar Pradesh, but it is not appropriate to say this before identification. We kept the body in the mortuary and tried to identify it,” he had said.

    The NHRC has issued notices to the Haryana chief secretary, the Gurugram Commissioner of Police and the Commissioner, Gurugram Municipal Corporation, calling for a detailed report in the matter, including action taken against the guilty after a thorough enquiry into the matter, within four weeks.

    The commission has also sought details about the compensation granted to the next of kin of the deceased and the steps taken or proposed to be taken to ensure that such unfortunate incidents do not recur and precious human lives are not lost in the future.

    The report must contain the status of the investigation being conducted by the police as well as the department concerned, in the matter, it said.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • UP: 2 kids mauled to death by dogs in separate incidents

    UP: 2 kids mauled to death by dogs in separate incidents

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    Aligarh: Two children were mauled to death by dogs in separate incidents that occurred in Uttar Pradesh’s Aligarh and Moradabad districts.

    In Aligarh, a three-month-old infant was mauled to death by a stray dog on Sunday when her family was attending a wedding near their house while she slept unattended.

    The incident took place under Quarsi police station limits.

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    The infant’s father, Pawan Kumar, a daily wager, said: “My two sisters were getting married and we had stepped out to attend the function. The baby was asleep unattended. In our absence, a dog took away our child and mauled her to death. When I returned, I could not find my daughter. When I looked for her, I saw the stray tearing into her in a nearby plot.”

    SHO Arvind Rathi said: “The family cremated the body without informing us. A police team later inspected the spot, and higher officials have been informed about the incident.”

    In the second incident, a seven-year-old boy was mauled to death by a pack of stray dogs in Moradabad’s Bilari area also on Sunday.

    The boy, Savendra Kumar, had gone out with his sister to serve tea to his father when they were surrounded by the strays.

    The local SP MLA met the aggrieved family and said he would raise the matter in the state Assembly.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Man beaten to death in Delhi’s Shadipur; 2 held

    Man beaten to death in Delhi’s Shadipur; 2 held

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    New Delhi: A 39-year-old man has been beaten to death by two persons in Delhi’s Shadipur area in an incident of road rage, the police said on Sunday.

    The accused individuals — identified as Manish Kumar, 19, and Lalchand a.k.a. Pramod, 20, have been arrested.

    The incident took place on Saturday. The police received a call about the incident at around 11.30 p.m.

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    The caller said that a man with injuries was lying on the street.

    “Manish and Lalchand were moving in a cab. The deceased, who was moving on his scooty, was on the road. All three had first argument over giving a passage, which led to a scuffle between them. Thereafter, the accused pushed him off his scooty and then thrashed him,” a police officer said.

    A police team that later reached the spot learnt that the injured individual was taken to a nearby government hospital by the local residents.

    The deceased, who was later identified as Pankaj Thakur, was declared dead on arrival by the doctors.

    “On the basis of inspection of the scene of crime, local intelligence and scanning of CCTV footage, two alleged persons were identified,” said the police.

    An initial probe into the matter revealed that the deceased was kicked and punched by the accused.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Non Local Electrocuted To Death

    Non Local Electrocuted To Death

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    SRINAGAR: A non-local labourer died due to electrocution in main town Kulgam area in South Kashmir’s Kulgam district on Sunday, officials said.

    An official said that a labourer identified as Mosaud Alam, a resident of Bihar was plastering a wall at GDC Kulgam when he came in contact with an electric line that was close to the building and received a fatal shock.

    “He was immediately rushed to nearby DH Kulgam facility where doctors declared him dead on arrival,” he added.

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    Meanwhile police have taken cognizance of the incident and started investigation.(KS)

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )