Friday, 17 January 2025

3rd World Health Care at National Health Service in UK


The harrowing accounts of Third World scenes experienced by more than 5,000 NHS nursing staff across the UK


More than 5,000 nursing staff across the UK were quizzed on the state of the NHS in their area. 

These are just some of their harrowing responses:

Deaths that went unnoticed

In terrifying testimony to the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) study, one nurse in the South East of England said a patient had lain dead in a corridor 'for hours'.

Another nurse, in Yorkshire and the Humber, said departments were becoming 'overwhelmed' on a daily basis, adding: 'At its worst, (we are) asking someone to go round and make sure people are still alive.'

'Developing world' casualty

Patients dying in chairs and trolleys in corridors was now a familiar occurrence, according to one nurse in the South East.

The nurse added: 'All the fundamentals of care have broken down – we are no better than a developing world casualty.'

A nurse in London said: 'It's awful – it feels like we're living in a Third World country or worse. I dread going into work and wish I'd picked an alternative career.'

Another nurse in the South said: 'I really felt bad for the patients – most of whom were elderly and unable to express their feelings about being cared for in very inhumane and Third World conditions.'

In terrifying testimony to the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) study, one nurse in the South East of England said a patient had lain dead in a corridor 'for hours'. Pictured: File photo

In terrifying testimony to the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) study, one nurse in the South East of England said a patient had lain dead in a corridor 'for hours'. 

Patients dying in chairs and trolleys in corridors was now a familiar occurrence, according to one nurse in the South East. Pictured: File photo

Patients dying in chairs and trolleys in corridors was now a familiar occurrence, according to one nurse in the South East. 

'This is worse than Covid...'

A nurse in Scotland said: 'I worked throughout Covid-19 and... this lack of care in the broken system is worse. People are dying as a result of ambulances being held at hospitals and calls are eventually being responded to almost two days after 999 has been called. This has to end, now!'

Left in tears near the toilets

A cancer patient whose immunity was very low because of her treatment was left in a busy spot near a staff room and toilet in a hospital in the South West.

A nurse said: 'She should have been in a side room. She was very upset and crying. We put screens around her but it was constantly busy. That poor lady eventually passed away.'

A nurse in London said: 'The department is over-capacity on a daily basis, leaving patients being cared for in corridors, on chairs when they should be in beds, on ambulance trolleys, in relatives' rooms, in viewing rooms, anywhere there is a space.'

A nurse in the East of England said: 'Patients miscarrying and returning for treatment are being bedded in the busy waiting room which is used for emergency attenders and an outpatient department.'

A cancer patient whose immunity was very low because of her treatment was left in a busy spot near a staff room and toilet in a hospital in the South West. Pictured: File photo

A cancer patient whose immunity was very low because of her treatment was left in a busy spot near a staff room and toilet in a hospital in the South West. 

Beds in middle of ward bays

A nurse in Scotland said the hospital had started placing beds 'in the middle of bays in the wards in addition to corridor beds for more space'. 

They added: 'It is degrading, undignified, and at times unsafe for patients who are already angry due to the long waits, sometimes waiting in the emergency department for over 35 hours... just to be put in the corridor. The system is broken.'

Delays for heart attack victims

Corridor care also creates problems for patients lucky enough to find a cubicle.

One nurse told of the chaos of patients having cardiac arrests in the corridor, adding: 'Having to roll a trolley through a corridor and the whole department to re-sus straddling a patient doing CPR while everyone watches on. It just feels so undignified.'

Patients in the South East had cardiac arrests in the corridor or in cubicles blocked by patients on trolleys in front of them, delaying lifesaving CPR.

A nurse at a hospital in the area said: 'Despite these events, we still are obliged to deliver care in the corridor.'

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14289877/harrowing-accounts-scenes-experienced-NHS-nursing-staff-UK.html

Dead patients are lying undiscovered for hours in A&E because NHS staff are too overstretched to notice.

A severe shortage of beds means the sick are being left in 'animal-like' conditions in hospital car parks, cupboards and toilets.

Pregnant women are suffering miscarriages in corridors and the elderly are languishing unaided in soiled bedding.

Patients are cruelly 'stripped of their dignity' and routinely suffering avoidable deaths.

It has become 'normalised' for patients to be left for days at a time in chairs or trolleys in 'inappropriate settings'.

Demoralised nurses report caring for as many as 40 patients in a single corridor – some blocking fire exits or parked next to vending machines.

There, they have no access to a call bell, oxygen or lifesaving equipment and are often out of sight of the nursing station. Some are forced to go to the toilet in view of other patients.

Professor Nicola Ranger, RCN chief executive, described the report as 'harrowing', adding staff were leaving because they 'cannot do it any more'.

She said: 'This devastating testimony from frontline nursing staff shows patients are coming to harm every day, forced to endure unsafe treatment in corridors, toilets, and even rooms usually reserved for families to visit deceased relatives.

'Vulnerable people are being stripped of their dignity and nursing staff are being denied access to vital lifesaving equipment.

'We can now categorically say patients are dying in this situation.'

A survey of NHS nursing staff for the report found 67 per cent are delivering care every day in overcrowded or unsuitable places. Some 91 per cent said the care was unsafe.

One nurse revealed how patients were dying 'on trolleys and chairs in the corridor and waiting rooms'.

Another told how a 90-year-old dementia sufferer was left scared and crying because no one was able to help. 

She added: 'Seeing that lady, frightened and subjected to animal-like conditions is what broke me. At the end of that shift, I handed in my notice with no job to go to.'

Hospitals left a record 518,000 patients languishing on trolleys in A&E for 12 hours or more last year.

Long waits in A&E contributed to 14,000 deaths in 2023. 

'The normalisation of 'corridor care' is an affront in a civilised society and for the sake of the public and staff alike must cease.'

'It's hard to think of a more certain way of both undermining public trust in the NHS and the retention of skilled nurses than tolerating very sick older people being 'stacked up' in passages, as if they were lorries on a motorway.' 

Scotland's hospital wards are suffering a 'devastating collapse', a report has warned

Scotland's hospital wards are suffering a 'devastating collapse'

Patients sleep in beds lining a hospital corridor in overrun A&E department

Patients sleep in beds lining a hospital corridor in an overrun A&E department


Thursday, 16 January 2025

Iranian Vice President: Israel Planted Explosives in our Nuclear Equipment

Israel 'hid explosives inside Iranian nuclear equipment' in plot similar to deadly pager bomb attack that devastated Hezbollah


Israel reportedly hid explosives inside Iranian nuclear equipment in a plot similar to the deadly pager bomb attack that devastated Hezbollah.

Javad Zarif, Iran's former foreign minister and chief negotiator of the 2015 nuclear deal, revealed the allegations during a televised interview, claiming Iranian officials discovered the explosives embedded within a centrifuge platform.

'Our friends at the atomic energy organisation had bought a centrifuge platform, and it was discovered that explosives had been embedded inside it,' Mr Zarif stated.

This revelation comes against the backdrop of a series of sabotage attempts on Iran's nuclear facilities over recent years, including high-profile attacks and the assassination of prominent nuclear scientists. 

Iran's top nuclear scientist Mohsen Fakhrizadeh was killed by machine gun fire, which they blamed on Israel,  while travelling on a highway outside Tehran.

Centrifuges, critical to uranium enrichment, are a focal point of international concern due to their potential use in producing nuclear weapons

Mr Zarif admitted Israel's infiltration had succeeded and blamed international sanctions for Iran's vulnerability. 

The former foreign minister did not provide specific details about the uncovered explosives

The former foreign minister Javad Zarif

Javad Zarif said Iranian officials uncovered explosives embedded within a centrifuge platform

Javad Zarif said Iranian officials uncovered explosives embedded within a centrifuge platform

Iranian MPs urged the regime to develop nuclear weapons to establish a ¿power balance¿

Iranian MPs urged the regime to develop nuclear weapons

'These are the harms of sanctions,' he said. 

'Instead of being able to order equipment directly from the manufacturer, sanctions force you to rely on multiple intermediaries. 

'If the Zionist regime infiltrates even one intermediary, they can do anything and embed anything they want, which is exactly what happened.'

The allegations come as Israel's covert campaign against Iranian-linked groups continues to escalate. 

Last year, Mossad, Israel's spy agency, hired Iranian agents to plant bombs at a guesthouse near Tehran to assassinate former Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh. 

Additionally, a series of sabotage attacks on Hezbollah, the Lebanese militant group backed by Tehran, dealt significant blows to Iran's regional allies.

Among these attacks, thousands of handheld pagers and walkie-talkies used by Hezbollah militants exploded simultaneously last September, killing at least 42 people. 

Hezbollah's leader, Hassan Nasrallah, said more than 4,000 devices were detonated.

Nasrallah told his followers at the time: 'We have received a very hard hit."

Iran announced today it has started up advanced uranium enrichment centrifuges towards making more nuclear achievements nuclear program, days after talks on rescuing it got underway

Iran announced today it has started up advanced uranium enrichment centrifuges.

Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei views a model of a nuclear facility, in Tehran, Iran June 11, 2023

Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei views a model of a nuclear facility, in Tehran, Iran

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani and Head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran Ali Akbar Salehi visit an exhibition of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran (AEOI) achievements

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani and Head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran Ali Akbar Salehi visit an exhibition of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran (AEOI)

Nasrallah said the explosions had 'happened in hospitals, pharmacies, markets, shops, houses and in cars,' as well as in the streets.

This was followed by the Israeli airstrike that killed Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah, marking a major setback for the Iran-backed group.

Mr Zarif's remarks highlight a challenging moment for Iran's regime, which faces growing instability. 

The fall of key ally Bashar al-Assad in Syria, mounting setbacks in its regional campaigns, and the return of Donald Trump to the US presidency have placed Tehran on the defensive.

Israeli operations targeting Iran's nuclear and proxy activities are likely to intensify, adding further strain to a regime already weakened by sanctions and internal unrest. 

For now, Iran's nuclear ambitions remain a flashpoint for geopolitical tensions in the Middle East.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14288925/israel-explosives-iranian-nuclear-equipment-pager-attack-hezbollah.html

He is known for his statements against the US and Israel. In 2020, Zarif defended Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s use of a poster evoking Nazi Germany’s “Final Solution” to destroy Israel.

In the 1990s, Iran expanded its nuclear program, including secretly buying equipment from Pakistan's top nuclear scientist Abdul Qadeer Khan. Khan helped create Pakistan's nuclear weapons program and aided North Korea in obtaining the atomic bombs it has today. Khan's designs allowed Iran to build the IR-1 centrifuges that largely power its uranium enrichment.


Wednesday, 15 January 2025

Mugshots of Burglars and Looters arrested during LA Fires


LA's lowlifes: The 'looters, burglars and drug addicts' arrested during Los Angeles Fires


Dozens of those accused of looting homes and stores in the ritzy Pacific Palisades enclave of LA during the deadly fires have been pictured in police mugshots. 

Cops charged more than 40 detainees with various offenses including burglary and drug possession since the fires broke out on January 7. 

Remarkably, none of those arrested were actually living in the evacuation zone and seemingly travelled with the intention of taking advantage of the devastation. 

Santa Monica Police said each suspect was arrested within an evacuated area and most of them were in violation of the overnight curfew law from sunset to sunrise.

The fires have claimed at least 24 lives, with weary residents now preparing for another 24 hours of hellish weather conditions which are expected to propel the fires in new directions.

The four fires have destroyed more than 40,000 acres across the most affluent neighborhoods of LA, with A-list celebrity homes and restaurant hotspots among the 12,300 structures wiped out.

A gallery of shame shows the people accused of taking advantage of the destruction by thieving possessions from evacuated homes and by combing the rubble for hidden treasures. 

Santa Monica Police said officers detained ten burglary suspects within the Palisades Fire evacuation zone and six of those arrested were carrying 'burglary tools'. 

Three of the ten burglary suspects have been pictured, including Joshua Kaliel Love - who was found carrying a dagger, a window-breaking tool, a mask, gloves, narcotics and a gold window punch, cops said. 

A gallery of shame shows the people accused of taking advantage of the carnage, including Joshua Kaliel Love (second row, first column), Miguel Angel Dorantes (second row, third column), and Dominic Pacheco Magana (first row, third column)

A gallery of shame shows the people accused of taking advantage of the carnage, including Joshua Kaliel Love (second row, first column), Miguel Angel Dorantes (second row, third column), and Dominic Pacheco Magana (first row, third column)

Santa Monica Police said officers detained ten burglary suspects within the Palisades Fire evacuation zone and six of those arrested were carrying 'burglary tools'

Santa Monica Police said officers detained ten burglary suspects within the Palisades Fire evacuation zone and six of those arrested were carrying 'burglary tools'

Santa Monica Police said each suspect was detained within an evacuated area and most of them were in violation of the overnight curfew law

Santa Monica Police said each suspect was detained within an evacuated area and most of them were in violation of the overnight curfew law

Officers arrested Kaliel Love, who was on probation, in an alley behind the 600 block of the San Vicente Boulevard after he tried to evade police by running away. 

Dominic Pacheco Magana, 18, and Miguel Angel Dorantes, 22, are also accused of conspiring to burgle homes after they were pulled over driving a van displaying stolen registration stickers. 

Officers scoured the vehicle and found black Nike nylon gloves, a black ski mask and three large freight tote bags and black t-shirts. 

Pacheco's phone had the Watch Duty app open. The app monitors fire and evacuation zones. 

'Based on the items located inside the vehicle, the location of the vehicle stop, the ski mask, and the attempt to conceal their identity and avoid detection by removing the license plate, officers arrested the duo for being in the mandatory evacuation area with the specific intent to commit residential burglaries,' police said.

Santa Monica Police said two people were also arrested for being in possession of concealed handguns. 

The rest of the detainees were arrested for violations including drug possession, driving violations, outstanding warrants, parole and probation violations. 

Santa Monica Police said there was a 'significant increase in the normal number of arrests in the neighborhoods in the evacuation zones north of Montana and Wilmont'.

Police have charged more than 40 detainees with various offenses including burglary and drug possession since the fires broke out on January 7. The fires are ongoing across Los Angeles

Police have charged more than 40 detainees with various offenses including burglary and drug possession since the fires broke out on January 7. The fires are ongoing across Los Angeles

Some suspects were pulled over in vehicles displaying fake license plates (shown above)

Some suspects were pulled over in vehicles displaying fake license plates (shown above)

A firefighting helicopter drops water on the inferno as the Palisades Fire grows out of control

A firefighting helicopter drops water on the inferno as the Palisades Fire grows out of control

'Our dedicated team of officers did a phenomenal job saturating the evacuation areas and tamping down criminal activity,' the department said in a media release.

Two people have also been arrested for lighting fires, including Ruben Montes, 29, who was detained for arson on Sunday in Irwindale, roughly 16 miles away from Altadena, where the deadly Eaton Fire continues to rage.

Mexican national Juan Manuel Sierra-Leyva, was also taken into custody after allegedly being caught on video walking with a yellow blowtorch before he was confronted by residents in Calabasas, west of Beverly Hills.

Extreme dry weather conditions due to a prolonged drought, dry vegetation and powerful Santa Ana winds that reached up to 80 mph in some areas this week created the 'perfect storm' for the fires. 

National Weather Service meteorologist Todd Hall said dry winds reached speeds of 40mph  on Tuesday morning in coastal and valley areas and 50mph in the mountains. 

Gusts up to 65mph were forecast to continue through midday Wednesday as firefighters struggle to contain the infernos. 

The Palisades Fire, which had razed 23,700 acres as of 10am Tuesday, is only 17 percent contained. 

Just north of Pasadena, the Eaton Fire has burned through more than 14,000 acres, and was only 35 percent contained by 10am Tuesday. 

The Hurst Fire north of San Fernando is almost extinguished with a 97 percent containment after burning through 800 acres. 

A fourth major blaze - the Auto Fire - broke out on Tuesday in Ventura. The latest inferno has burned through 56 acres so far and is zero percent contained, per the Cal Fire heatmap.  

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14283461/los-angeles-fire-looters-burglars-arrested-share-common-trait.html

Jose Gerardo Escobar, 39, (pictured being arrested) has been charged with one count each of felony arson; arson during a state of emergency; and attempted arson, the Los Angeles County District Attorney announced today

Jose Gerardo Escobar, 39, (pictured being arrested) has been charged with one count each of felony arson; arson during a state of emergency; and attempted arson, the Los Angeles County District Attorney announced today 

At least 24 people have died and 12,000 buildings burned to the ground in multiple fires across Los Angeles this month

At least 24 people have died and 12,000 buildings burned to the ground in multiple fires across Los Angeles

Ruben Montes, 29, (pictured) was arrested for arson on Sunday in Irwindale, California, roughly 16 miles away from Altadena, where the Eaton Fire continues to rage

Ruben Montes, 29, (pictured) being arrested for arson 

A homeless arson suspect  was taken into custody near where one of the three Los Angeles wildfires broke out

Homeless arson suspect and illegal immigrant Juan Manuel Sierra-Leyva  was taken into custody near where one of the three Los Angeles wildfires broke out

Officials took Mexican national Juan Manuel Sierra-Leyva into custody but said they lacked probable cause to arrest him on arson charges, and instead arrested him on a probation violation

Officials took Mexican national Juan Manuel Sierra-Leyva into custody but said they lacked probable cause to arrest him on arson charges, and instead arrested him on a probation violation. He was carrying a yellow blowtorch.

Some 29 people have been arrested across Los Angeles accused of looting fire ravaged homes

Some 29 people have been arrested across Los Angeles accused of looting fire ravaged homes

Authorities have vowed to prosecute to the full extent of the law for anyone caught looting

Authorities have vowed to prosecute to the full extent of the law anyone caught looting

With tens of thousands of displaced LA residents who have lost all but the clothes they were wearing, plus a few select personal items, insurance companies will be on the hook for colossal payouts

With tens of thousands of displaced LA residents who have lost all but the clothes they were wearing, plus a few select personal items, insurance companies will be on the hook for colossal payouts

Pictured: A man on a motorbike passes a sign that reads 'Looters will be shot' in a mandatory evacuation zone at the Eaton Fire on January 12, 2025 in Altadena, California

Pictured: A man on a motorbike passes a sign that reads 'Looters will be shot' in a mandatory evacuation zone at the Eaton Fire on January 12, 2025 in Altadena, California

View of damaged structures and homes caused by the Palisades Wildfires in the Pacific Palisades neighborhood of Los Angeles on January 11, 2025

View of damaged structures and homes caused by the Palisades Wildfires in the Pacific Palisades neighborhood of Los Angeles

Bella Hadid over the weekend shared a heartbreaking photo of her childhood home in Malibu burning down amid the ongoing fires tearing through LA
She also shared another decimated snap of the home in the daytime

Bella Hadid over the weekend shared a photo of her childhood home in Malibu burning down amid the ongoing fires tearing through LA. Well, she can always move back to"Palestine".

The light of a fire fighting helicopter illuminates a smoldering hillside as the Palisades fire grows near the Mandeville Canyon neighborhood and Encino, California, on January 11, 2025

The light of a fire fighting helicopter illuminates a smoldering hillside

A helicopter drops water on the Palisades Fire, one of several simultaneous blazes that have ripped across Los Angeles County, along Mandeville Canyon, in the Encino neighborhood of Los Angeles on January 11, 2025

A helicopter drops water on the Palisades Fire

A fire fighting helicopter drops water as the Palisades fire grows

A fire fighting helicopter drops water at night

A plane is seen droppin fire retardant into Mandeville Canyon, one of the neighborhoods threatened by the Palisades Fire on Saturday

A plane is seen dropping fire retardant

Meteorologists warned residents in fire-ravaged evacuation zones that winds reaching 70mph will pick up on Sunday night and last to Wednesday, heightening the risk for fires to spread even further across southern California


It has emerged that faults along the Los Angeles power grid alarmingly soared in the same areas where major wildfires raged this week, sparking a new theory that they may have caused the devastating crisis

Damaged Los Angeles power grid

California Governor Gavin Newsom and Mayor Bass tour the downtown business district of Pacific Palisades after the devastating blaze on Tuesday. The Mayor has come under fire for her decision to cut around $17.5 million from the fire department budget this fiscal year

Mayor Bass laughing. The Mayor has come under fire for her decision to cut around $17.5 million from the fire department budget this fiscal year, among other things.

Actor James Wood blamed the fires on Karen Bass and Gavin Newsom

Actor James Wood blamed the fires on Karen Bass and Gavin Newsom 

Khloe posted a furious response to the Mayor's handling of the crisis earlier this week

Khloe Kardashian posted a furious response to the Mayor's handling of the crisis earlier this week

Hibbs also directed his anger at Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass, who was on a trip to Ghana when the fires broke out

Communist Mayor Karen Bass was on a trip to Ghana when the fires broke out

The Democrat, 57, has faced calls to resign for the devastating and incompetent response to the LA wildfires

The Democrat/Communist Mayor, 57, has faced calls to resign for the devastating and incompetent response to the LA wildfires

Bass was in Ghana on a diplomatic trip on Tuesday, when the first fire broke out in the ritzy celebrity enclave of Pacific Palisades (pictured) and spread rapidly up to Malibu and down toward Santa Monica

Bass was in Ghana on a diplomatic trip when the first fire broke out in the ritzy celebrity enclave of Pacific Palisades (pictured) and spread rapidly up to famous surf spot Malibu and down toward Santa Monica

The weather warning also prevents locals from returning home to inspect the damage. Pictured, scenes from Sunday

Local returning home to inspect the damage

With cadaver dogs now being brought in to locate human remains, Los Angeles County Sheriff Robert Luna has warned the death toll will likely continue to rise

Cadaver dog searching for human remains

The death toll is expected to grow as cadaver dogs gain access to the smoldering wreckages of entire neighborhoods which simply 'no longer exist'

The death toll is expected to grow as cadaver dogs gain access to the smoldering wreckages of entire neighborhoods which simply 'no longer exist'

Altadena was  reduced to rubble in the Eaton fire

Beloved Altadena was  reduced to rubble

Pictured: Flames from the wind-driven Eaton Fire engulf a house in Altadena, California, January 8

Pictured: Flames from the wind-driven Eaton Fire engulf a house in Altadena, California. Notice how the smoke affects the color of the Sun.

LA County Public Health issued a public health order, stating that the fires had 'severely degraded air quality...posing immediate and long-term risks to public health'

LA County Public Health issued a public health order, stating that the fires had 'severely degraded air quality...posing immediate and long-term risks to public health'