Sinda baby girl dies after step-father sticks burning wood in her private parts

2080
23790

A 19-MONTH-OLD baby girl of Sinda has died after her cruel step-father stuck a piece of burning firewood in her private parts.

Police in Sinda of Eastern Province have since arrested Cosmas Sakala of Nkestro Farm for his demonic act on the child.

According to Eastern Province Police Commissioner Luckson Sakala, the matter had been reported to Sinda Police by Sakala’s wife, Tikambe Tembo who is also the mother of the late child.

Commissioner Sakala has been quoted by Radio Phoenix saying Tikambe told police that her daughter, Catherine was burnt on her private parts by her step father Cosmas Sakala using a log of burning firewood.

Commissioner Sakala said Catherine was rushed to Sinda clinic for treatment and later referred to Nyanje Mission Hospital where she died.

Commissioner Sakala explained that Tembo had left the child sitting near the fire where she was cooking when her husband came and burnt her private parts and left leg.

© Kalemba May 1, 2020

Advert

2080 COMMENTS

  1. Hi there to every one, the contents present at this
    web page are truly remarkable for people experience, well,
    keep up the nice work fellows.

  2. Having read this I believed it was really enlightening.
    I appreciate you spending some time and energy to put this content together.
    I once again find myself personally spending
    a significant amount of time both reading and leaving comments.
    But so what, it was still worth it!

  3. Between me and my husband we’ve owned more MP3 players over the years than I can count, including Sansas, iRivers, iPods (classic & touch), the Ibiza Rhapsody, etc. But, the last few years I’ve settled down to one line of players. Why? Because I was happy to discover how well-designed and fun to use the underappreciated (and widely mocked) Zunes are.
    I’ll gear this review to 2 types of people: current Zune owners who are considering an upgrade, and people trying to decide between a Zune and an iPod. (There are other players worth considering out there, like the Sony Walkman X, but I hope this gives you enough info to make an informed decision of the Zune vs players other than the iPod line as well.)
    Zune and iPod: Most people compare the Zune to the Touch, but after seeing how slim and surprisingly small and light it is, I consider it to be a rather unique hybrid that combines qualities of both the Touch and the Nano. It’s very colorful and lovely OLED screen is slightly smaller than the touch screen, but the player itself feels quite a bit smaller and lighter. It weighs about 2/3 as much, and is noticeably smaller in width and height, while being just a hair thicker.

    Apple now has Rhapsody as an app, which is a great start, but it is currently hampered by the inability to store locally on your iPod, and has a dismal 64kbps bit rate. If this changes, then it will somewhat negate this advantage for the Zune, but the 10 songs per month will still be a big plus in Zune Pass’ favor.

    The new Zune browser is surprisingly good, but not as good as the iPod’s. It works well, but isn’t as fast as Safari, and has a clunkier interface. If you occasionally plan on using the web browser that’s not an issue, but if you’re planning to browse the web alot from your PMP then the iPod’s larger screen and better browser may be important.
    Hands down, Apple’s app store wins by a mile. It’s a huge selection of all sorts of apps vs a rather sad selection of a handful for Zune. Microsoft has plans, especially in the realm of games, but I’m not sure I’d want to bet on the future if this aspect is important to you. The iPod is a much better choice in that case.
    This is getting a bit more subjective, but I much prefer the Zune Marketplace. The interface is colorful, has more flair, and some cool features like ‘Mixview’ that let you quickly see related albums, songs, or other users related to what you’re listening to. Clicking on one of those will center on that item, and another set of “neighbors” will come into view, allowing you to navigate around exploring by similar artists, songs, or users. Speaking of users, the Zune “Social” is also great fun, letting you find others with shared tastes and becoming friends with them. You then can listen to a playlist created based on an amalgamation of what all your friends are listening to, which is also enjoyable. Those concerned with privacy will be relieved to know you can prevent the public from seeing your personal listening habits if you so choose.

    The Zune concentrates on being a Portable Media Player. Not a web browser. Not a game machine. Maybe in the future it’ll do even better in those areas, but for now it’s a fantastic way to organize and listen to your music and videos, and is without peer in that regard. The iPod’s strengths are its web browsing and apps. If those sound more compelling, perhaps it is your best choice.
    If you’re still on the fence: grab your favorite earphones, head down to a Best Buy and ask to plug them into a Zune then an iPod and see which one sounds better to you, and which interface makes you smile more. Then you’ll know which is right for you.
    Sorry for the huge review, but I’m really loving the new Zune, and hope this, as well as the excellent reviews some other people have written, will help you decide if it’s the right choice for you.

  4. Thanks on your marvelous posting! I definitely enjoyed
    reading it, you happen to be a great author.I will be
    sure to bookmark your blog and will come back later on. I want to encourage
    that you continue your great posts, have a nice morning!

    https://sogogo.com/

  5. … [Trackback]

    […] Read More: kalemba.news/local/2020/05/02/sinda-baby-girl-dies-after-step-father-sticks-burning-wood-in-her-private-parts/trackback/ […]

  6. Солидное приобретение для уверенных в себе и предприимчивых персон,
    если они выбирают изысканный
    облик, в сочетании с отменной безопасностью и долговечностью.

  7. I absolutely love this! Graduation is such an iconic album, and this really does justice to that vibe.

    The colors and artwork are so vibrant and expressive.
    Takashi Murakami’s influence on the Graduation visuals is legendary.

    This is a must-have for any Kanye fan. This was such a cool
    find!

    Hoping for even more Kanye-inspired designs.

    Take care,
    A Graduation enthusiast

  8. Goߋd day! Tһis is my 1st cοmment here so I ϳust wanted to gіve a quick shout οut and say I rеally enjoy reading through
    your blog posts. Can you suggeѕt any otheг blogs/websitеs/forums that cover the
    same topics? Τhɑnks!

    Feel free to surf to my website :: uniform embroidery

  9. Разнообразие фурнитуры для плинтуса, найдите идеальный вариант.
    Прочные материалы для плинтуса, долговечные и надежные в использовании.
    Простота установки элементов плинтуса, сэкономьте время и силы.
    Модные элементы для украшения плинтуса, выделитесь из общей массы.
    Эко-варианты элементов для плинтуса, экологичный выбор для вашего дома.
    Модные цвета для элементов плинтуса, создайте гармонию в доме.
    Уникальные элементы для стильного плинтуса, выразите свою индивидуальность через дизайн.
    Рекомендации по заботе о фурнитуре для плинтуса, для долгосрочного использования.
    Стильные детали для украшения плинтуса, выдержите общий стиль в каждой детали.
    Изысканные решения для отделки плинтуса, сделайте свой дом роскошным и элегантным.
    купить плинтуса [url=https://furnituradlyaplintusamsk.ru/]https://furnituradlyaplintusamsk.ru/[/url] .

  10. Unqᥙestionably believe that which you said. Your fɑvorite reason appeared tо be on the web the easiest thing to be aware of.
    I say to you, I definitely get annoyed while people think aboᥙt worries that they plainly don’t know abоut.

    You managed to hit the nail upon the top and also defined out the whole thing without
    having sіde-effects , people couⅼd take a
    signal. Ꮃill likely be back tо get more. Thanks

    Here is my web-sitе: Women Uniforms

  11. El fichaje de Ronaldo por Al Nassr fue un momento clave en su carrera | El contrato de Ronaldo con su club actual es uno de los mas lucrativos cristiano ronaldo wife | Los jerseys de Cristiano Ronaldo son de los mas vendidos en todo el mundo | La camiseta de CR7 con el numero 7 es un icono mundial | La carrera de CR7 ha estado llena de momentos iconicos y emocionantes [url=https://cristiano-ronaldo.com.mx/]Estadisticas de Cristiano Ronaldo[/url].

  12. ___

    Kashiwa Reysol 0, Urawa Reds 3

    Yokohama FC 1, Avispa Fukuoka 1

    Albirex Niigata 1, Nagoya Grampus 3

    Kyoto Sanga F.C. 0, Vissel Kobe 3

    Kashima Antlers 1, Sanfrecce Hiroshima 2

    Shonan Bellmare 4, Gamba Osaka 1

    Sagan Tosu 1, FC Tokyo 0

    Cerezo Osaka 2, Yokohama F. Marinos 1

    Consadole Sapporo vs. Kawasaki Frontale, 6 a.m.

    Yokohama F. Marinos vs. Yokohama FC, 6 a.m.

    Cerezo Osaka vs. Consadole Sapporo, 1 a.m.

    Vissel Kobe vs. Albirex Niigata, 1 a.m.

    Sanfrecce Hiroshima vs. Sagan Tosu, 1 a.m.

    FC Tokyo vs. Shonan Bellmare, 2 a.m.

    Nagoya Grampus vs. Urawa Reds, 2 a.m.

    Gamba Osaka vs. Kawasaki Frontale, 2 a.m.

    Avispa Fukuoka vs. Kyoto Sanga F.C., 2 a.m.

    Kashiwa Reysol vs. Kashima Antlers, 6 a.m.

  13. An affair with Olivier, accused of murdering her toyboy… now the craziest twist yet for Sarah Miles as she opens spiritual
    healing clinic

    By DAVID JONES FOR THE DAILY MAIL

    Published: 01:13 GMT, 8 June 2013 | Updated: 01:
    13 GMT, 8 June 2013

    e-mail

    10

    View
    comments

    The solid oak door of England’s smallest manor house creaks open and
    a fey little woman beckons me into the low-beamed kitchen built around the time of the Norman Conquest.

    ‘Fancy a cuppa? Earl Grey or PG Tips?’
    smiles the pixie-like figure, who wears a ragged peach cardigan and a grubby linen skirt (from a local charity shop; the source
    of all her clothes, she later informs me proudly) and nothing on her veiny feet.

    I am then invited to choose a mug from the rack. If this is some cleverly staged game designed to remind me of my septuagenarian host’s former glories, it
    works.

    Back in the Sixties, doe-eyed, pouting Sarah Miles (above) vied with Julie Christie and Susannah York as our most beguiling big-screen seductress

    Now aged 71, Sarah has renamed her Sussex home as the Chithurst Manor Healing Centre,
    and – partnered by her youthful lodger, Ian Delves – officially opened for business as an alternative healer and therapist

    For my eyes are drawn to the one decorated with a face both beautiful and —
    to those of us of a certain age — instantly recognisable:
    that of actress Sarah Miles as she looked during the Sixties and Seventies, in a string of daring film roles
    that pushed the barriers of sexual candour.

    Back then the doe-eyed, pouting Miss Miles vied with Julie Christie and Susannah York as our most beguiling big-screen seductress.

    And she embarked on a series of very public affairs, some with her much older leading men.

    RELATED ARTICLES

    Previous

    1

    Next

    Romancing Pedro! Kathleen Turner makes a rare public… Hollywood’s biggest names flock to honour Mel
    Brooks at…

    Share this article

    Share

    Among them were Laurence Olivier, opposite
    whom she starred in Term Of Trial, the debut movie that brought her to fame in 1962,
    when she was 21 (he was a troubled headmaster, she was his not-so-naïve pupil); and Robert Mitchum, the brooding husband
    she betrayed in the 1970 blockbuster Ryan’s Daughter, for
    which she received an Oscar nomination.

    In ‘a very dark period’ of her life, Miss
    Miles also became fatefully involved with a young American writer who was mysteriously found dead in her hotel room after
    they had quarrelled — prompting accusations
    that she had murdered him.

    Sarah Miles embarked on a series of very public affairs, some with
    her much older leading men. Among them were Laurence
    Olivier, opposite whom she starred in Term Of Trial (above), the debut movie
    that brought her to fame in 1962, when she was 21

    However, her true ‘soul-mate’ was the brilliant screenwriter and playwright Robert Bolt, whom she twice married (having once
    divorced) and nursed with selfless devotion as he suffered
    a series of strokes.

    When Bolt died in 1995, she adhered to his irreverent funeral plans, meditating beside his body for two days with friends, staging a joyful wake with champagne
    and musicians, and burying him in a huge scarlet gown and pink scarf, in a cardboard coffin sunk
    beyond the croquet lawn in the grounds of their home.

    Every day she trips down the garden to perch on a log
    beside her late husband’s mossy memorial stone — inscribed with the title of
    his most famous play, A Man For All Seasons — to ‘share my problems with
    him and tell him what’s going on’.

    Recently, she has been seeking his guidance on a daunting new venture.

    Two weeks ago, having pondered the idea for the best part
    of three decades, she renamed her Sussex home as the Chithurst Manor Healing Centre,
    and — partnered by her youthful lodger, Ian Delves — officially opened for
    business as an alternative healer and therapist.

    Romance: Sarah was previously married twice to late screenwriter Robert Bolt, by
    whom she has son Tom (pictured together in 1985)

    Perhaps ‘business’ wouldn’t be the word she would choose — for, as she tells me when we settle in the
    sun-bathed conservatory that will serve as her
    consulting room, they won’t charge for the various treatments on offer (from massage to spiritual
    healing), they will just ask for donations and rely on their clients’ good will.

    Though hardly on her uppers, she could plainly
    use their generosity. She earned surprisingly little from her films, and she and Bolt
    were divorced when he made his will.

    ‘I must have taken a vow of poverty or something!’ she exclaims,
    confiding that she can’t afford to turn on the draughty
    manor’s central heating in winter.

    Miss Miles is given to making rather melodramatic declamations such as this;
    but then hers has been a melodramatic life.

    One of four siblings who still address one another with their childhood
    nicknames —- Pooker, Chuzzer, Jules and Puss Cat (Sarah) —
    she was born into a well-heeled Essex family who sent her to the top girls’ public school, Roedean.

    Always rebellious, she was quickly expelled but found her calling
    when her mother, having been impressed by her performance in a play, got her into RADA.

    She tells me earnestly that her ambition was to be a
    comedian, and it was only after her agent insisted she
    should audition for the sexually awakened schoolgirl part in Term Of Trial that she was acclaimed as
    England’s latest sex siren. 

    The actress had an affair with Robert Mitchum, the brooding husband she betrayed in the 1970 blockbuster Ryan’s Daughter, for which she received an Oscar nomination

    It was during the movie shoot, in a Parisian hotel, that she and
    Olivier, then in his mid-50s and recently married to his second wife, the actress Joan Plowright, embarked on their first affair.

    It lasted two years, but although she had other lovers, such as the hell-raising actor Nicol Williamson and Steven Spielberg, she returned to Olivier
    more than once, and they remained close until his death, 24 years ago next month.

    She met the Manchester-born, Left-wing Bolt at a party and within 18 months, dazzled by his towering intellect, they were married.

    They were travelling in India, where he was researching
    an abortive screenplay for the film Gandhi, when her fascination with alternative
    therapies was stirred —- albeit by a practice which
    would make many people retch.

    ‘Drinking your own urine is wonderful for your skin, fantastic for your hair,
    your immune system — it’s fantastic for everything!’

     
    Visiting Gandhi’s ashram, she recalls, she met one of his followers and was astonished
    to learn the woman was 85 years old, when she looked
    60 at most.

    Asked how she retained her youthful complexion, the woman said it was down to drinking a daily dose
    of her own urine: something Gandhi strongly advocated.

    ‘When she told me this, I thought “Euugh!” I was disgusted — just like everybody else,’ she laughs.

    But a few years later, when she consulted a therapist about her recurring nasal allergies and he, too, recommended ‘urine therapy’, she followed his advice.

    The effects were ‘like wow!’ she exclaims, and so she has been drinking it
    ever since. When I tell her about my arthritic knees she urges
    me to give it a go.

    ‘Listen to me — what you smell has nothing do with the taste,’ she chides.

    ‘It’s like a nice gentle beer!

    ‘It’s wonderful for your skin, fantastic for your hair, your immune system — it’s fantastic for
    everything!

    ‘It gives you an immediate high. Just try it!’ Thanks, but I think I’ll stick with
    the PG Tips.

    Whether or not it’s down to her daily tot, she certainly looks younger than her
    71 years. Though she was hit by a bus while crossing Trafalgar Square two years ago and has had two hip replacements and a pin in her shoulder, she is also a picture of health — the perfect advertisement for the new
    centre.

    Sarah’s son Tom Bolt, a heroin addict in his mid-teens, has turned his life around and is
    now a millionaire expert on antique watches, as well as
    a judge on the Channel 4 antiques show Four Rooms

    Still, from the night the late Robert Mitchum recklessly unveiled her then secret habit — during a talk at the National Theatre many years ago, she vaguely recalls
    — she was exposed to lifelong ridicule and, she is convinced, her career was damaged.

    ‘People are very, very strange about it. When it first came into the Press, people used to pass by me as
    if I was a smelly bag-lady. It was really terrible. I had
    letters calling me an evil witch.’

    But the episode which dealt a near-mortal blow to her
    reputation was the mysterious death in 1973 of the American writer David Whiting,
    24.

    Quite why Miss Miles, then at the height of her fame and married to Bolt,
    succumbed to the sexual advances of the nerdish, obsessive Whiting, who styled himself on the Great Gatsby, right down to the wide-lapelled,
    pin-striped suits, is a matter she declines to discuss.

    When she ended their affair while filming in Arizona, Whiting (by then employed
    as her business manager) beat her up in the cast’s hotel.
    Miss Miles escaped, and when she returned she found him dead.

    Protected by the Hollywood establishment,
    she was spared police questioning and testifying at the inquest, where it was ruled that Whiting had taken an overdose, even though he had swallowed just a couple
    of Mandrax tablets and had wounds on his body.

    As the scandal unfolded her parents were hounded out of their Essex village,
    she was branded a femme fatale, and, she says, one British
    paper even accused her outright of murder. ‘I was the scapegoat and the only thing that kept me sane was my innocence,’ she declares,
    suddenly fixing me with that familiar, wild-eyed gaze.

    Does she now think it was foul play? ‘I’m afraid — yes,’ she replies knowingly, then stops.
    ‘It was a dark period. I don’t really want to delve into the darkness.’

    Comfortably back in the light again, she remembers how her gift for healing was discovered by chance, by a
    famous American spiritual healer, Kathryn Kuhlman, who felt the energy coming
    from her as they stood side by side in a lift during the early
    Seventies.

    Sarah’s gift for healing was discovered by chance,
    by a famous American spiritual healer, Kathryn Kuhlman, who felt the energy coming from her as they stood side by side
    in a lift during the early Seventies

    Kuhlman, who had her own TV show called Believe In Miracles, and a massive
    U.S. following, had immediately sensed her special gift and said: ‘You’ve got it!
    Just do it!’

    At first the actress thought she was ‘a nutter’.
    But she gradually came to realise she could channel healing energy by laying her hands
    directly on someone, or by holding them slightly away and curing
    them with her ‘etheric aura’.

    She has been healing family members and close friends for years (Robert
    Bolt was given only two years to live after his stroke, yet under
    her care he survived for 14, she says). But now she will offer her services to all-comers at the centre.

    It will also provide meditation and retreat sessions, and other holistic therapies.

    The realisation that she had a higher purpose than acting
    — the moment she calls her ‘epiphany’ — came a few years
    later, when she was filming The Sailor Who Fell From Grace With The Sea and was required to
    play an emotionally gruelling erotic scene. 

    Drawing on all her powers, she managed it, but afterwards, as she walked home, she says she was stricken by a life-changing experience: an ‘inner
    echo’ which seemed to expose the very workings of the
    universe to her.

    People can mock her, and frequently have, she smiles, but she has reached the stage where she no longer cares what people think of her, and she feels that
    after almost 30 years she is ready to use her ‘gifts’ for
    the common good.

    And why not, I say. After an entertaining afternoon in her company I certainly felt much better, a
    touch daffy though some of her homespun philosophy
    might be.

    Particularly amusing was her description of the moment she glanced at Tony Blair’s upturned hands (as they chatted during David Frost’s annual midsummer party) and saw, to her horror, that the ‘head’ and ‘heart’ lines on both his palms
    were joined together.

    People who have these so-called ‘simian lines’ on just one hand are often geniuses, it is said.
    But those rare people who have them on both can be megalomaniacs or
    worse.

    ‘Blair hadn’t yet become Prime Minister and everyone was still in love
    with him,’ she recalls. ‘It sent a shiver down my spine.’

    It was also uplifting to hear how her son, Tom Bolt, now 45, has turned his life around.
    In his mid-teens he became a heroin addict and, after he attempted to sell his parents’ acting trophies and forge their
    cheques to feed his habit, they resorted to ‘tough love’ by shopping him to the police.

    Now the father of her adored 12-year-old grandson, Billy,
    he has since become a millionaire expert on antique watches, and is also a judge on the Channel 4 antiques show Four Rooms.

    She’s clearly proud of his success, but equally happy she is now following what she feels is her true calling.

    Beneath his mossy headstone, Sarah Miles believes her Man For
    All Seasons will be smiling.

    For healing and therapy, visit chithurstmanorhealing.com or call
    07586 923079.

  14. Bet365 uses a simple Yes/No questionnaire in seeking
    to identify problem gamblers – but campaigners warned that addicts can easily lie their
    way through it.

    Players who hit certain triggers, such as excessive lengths of
    time spent gambling, are called up and asked eight questions.

    They include: ‘Do you gamble to escape a boring or
    unhappy life?’, ‘Do you feel depressed or even suicidal because of your gambling?’, ‘Have you lost interest in your family,
    friends or hobbies because of your gambling?’ and ‘After
    losing do you feel you must try and win back your losses as
    soon as possible?’

    The Bet365 training officer said the minimum time-playing threshold used to be
    six out of seven days of playing for more than eight hours,
    but that the limit ‘changes all the time’. The biggest trigger is time spent playing,
    the Mail’s reporter was told during our investigation

    If punters reply yes to any of the questions,
    trainee staff were told their accounts are suspended.
    But if they say no, their accounts remain active and they are allowed to carry on playing.

    RELATED ARTICLES

    Previous

    1

    Next

    Gamblers paid to keep betting: UK’s top online betting firm…
    Bookmakers dodge live sports ban: Watchdog accused
    of…

    Share this article

    Share

    The biggest trigger is time spent playing, the Mail’s reporter
    was told during our investigation.

    Pictured: One of Bet365’s live casino games available on their website. .
    A login account is required to play these games. If
    punters reply yes to any of the questions, trainee staff were
    told their accounts are suspended

    The Bet365 training officer said the minimum time-playing threshold
    used to be six out of seven days of playing for more than eight hours, but that the limit ‘changes all the
    time’. 

    Bet365’s Gibraltar headquarters is pictured above.
    The company uses a simple Yes/No questionnaire in seeking to
    identify problem gamblers – but campaigners warned that addicts can easily lie their
    way through it [File photo]

    Asked by the Mail’s reporter what measures were in place to prevent customers lying through the simple test, the trainer said: ‘There aren’t.’

    She then agreed with another trainee when she said:
    ‘We’ve done our job to check them.’

    Length of time spent playing is not the only trigger used
    to identify problem gamblers. 

    Other triggers include when a customer changes a deposit limit,
    when they return from self-exclusion, or when their account is suspended for any responsible gambling concern.

    Matt Zarb-Cousin, of the Campaign for Fairer Gambling, said:
    ‘It’s an inadequate test. Gambling addicts lie and they delude themselves, it’s all part of the problem.
    They could easily lie their way through the
    test. If a time-playing threshold is eight hours on six out of seven days
    then that is too high. People could spend half that time
    playing and still have a serious problem.’

  15. id=”firstHeading” class=”firstHeading mw-first-heading”>Search results

    Help

    English

    Tools

    Tools
    move to sidebar hide

    Actions

    General

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here