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Sage The Gemini put on blast by ex, she released a recording of him calling Jordin Spark 'stupid' & said he wanted to 'stab' her


Last week, Sage The Gemini took to social media to beg singer Jordin Spark to give him another chance. Well, he may not be as in love with her as he wanted us to believe. His ex-GF Currium (left) took to social media to expose him. She released some audio conversations she had with him earlier this month, where he said extremely disrespectful things about Jordin Sparks. He called her 'dump', 'stupid', and said their relationship was fake. Listen to the audio after the cut..


The ex claims she and Sage, real name Dominic Wynn Woods, were working on rebuilding their relationship last year when Sage started seeing Jordin. She claims through out the time he was with Jordin, he was always begging her to give them another chance.

She claims this conversation occurred while Sage and Jordin were still together.
"Those are pictures. [In our relationship] everything was f*cking horrible. That b*tch was f*cking dumb. She got on my nerves. I wanted to stab her. Don't get me wrong, she's cool, I mean she's level headed. But she's not no regular person. You know. . . .
In the convo, Sage said his relationship with Jordin was fake and that they were unhappy and he got involved with her to boost up her album sales...and he swore with his daughter. Start listening from the 12.00mark



source: lindaikejisblog.com

Nigerian-born doctor left critically injured and fighting for life after being hit by lorry in Las Vegas


Dr Sebastian Kola-Bankole, from Camden, UK is fighting for his life after he was knocked down by a lorry as he crossed a road off the Sunset Strip on February 15. The 35-year-old doctor, from the Royal London Hospital, had flown out to Los Angeles before the accident for a friend’s wedding. 
 

But his family, who have travelled out to be at his bedside, cannot find a record of him taking out travel insurance so they are faced with paying for his mounting medical bills. They have launched a £250,000 appeal for treatment and to bring him home to the UK.

Dr Kola-Bankole, who specialises in infectious diseases, has three broken vertebrae in his neck and has already had emergency operations to his spine, ears and arteries. He is in an induced coma in intensive care at the Sunrise Hospital in Las Vegas and it will be at least two weeks before he is stable enough to be repatriated.

The cost of the treatment and of bringing him back to the UK on a  specialist medical flight is estimated to be £250,000. The online fund had today reached £100k just 48 hours after it was launched.

A close friend, Dr Pawandeep Sarai, who spoke to the Standard described the young doctor as the most selfless and giving person"
"He is still in a  critical condition. We are all doing everything we can for Seb to get him the treatment he needs and back to the UK. His family are obviously devastated by what has happened. 
"Seb is just the most selfless, giving person, everyone who has met him will know what a huge personality he has. 
"He volunteers for charities, he is always giving to others. He’s a very dear friend and a very caring doctor and he needs our help to get home."

Dr Kola-Bankole is believed to have been hit outside the Hard Rock Hotel and Casino. The collision is currently being investigated by Las Vegas police.
His friends, many of whom are  doctors, are now looking for a suitable hospital in London that will agree to take him. It is thought St Mary’s in Paddington could provide treatment.

Nigerian-born Dr Kola-Bankole  graduated from University College London in 2008 and was based until recently in the infectious diseases department at the Royal London, but had taken time off for the US trip.

"Seb is usually incredibly organised, but we can’t find any insurance for this trip... we’ve been on his email and looked in his flat. We are working on the assumption there is no insurance." said Dr Sarai.

source: lindaikejisblog.com

Buhari meets with King Al-Saud of Saudi Arabia


President Buhari this afternoon met with King Salman Bin Abdulaziz Al-Saud, the King of Saudi Arabia. The meeting held at the Royal Protocol, Riyadh, KSA. Buhari is currently in Saudi Arabia to discuss the falling price of crude oil and also sought for investors. Continue to see more photos... 









source: lindaikejisblog.com

US singer Ginuwine accuses Nigerians of scamming people using his name


Ginuwine shared this screen shot and wrote "I'm being told someone is using my name to trick people into giving money. This is not me! It's a Nigerian scam going on so if anyone on any page that has my name ask for money curse they ass out people will do anything for a dollar it's crazy"

source: lindaikejisblog.com

The Rich Kids of Russia flaunt their wealth on Instagram


An anonymous Instagram account dedicated to documenting the lavish lifestyles of the progeny of Russian society's rich and famous has become an internet sensation... More pics after the cut!






























source: lindaikejisblog.com

Apple tells employees why it won’t help hack shooter’s phone

CEO Tim Cook acknowledged to employees Monday that “it does not feel right” to refuse to help the FBI hack a locked iPhone used by a gunman in the San Bernardino mass shootings. But he said that to do so would threaten data security for millions and “everyone’s civil liberties.”
“We have no tolerance or sympathy for terrorists,” Cook wrote in an early morning email addressed to the Apple “Team.” “When they commit unspeakable acts like the tragic attacks in San Bernardino, we work to help the authorities pursue justice for the victims.”

But he reiterated the company’s position that to hack the San Bernardino gunman’s phone would ultimately risk “security of hundreds of millions of law-abiding people.”
Cook’s email came just hours after FBI director James Comey said in an online post that Apple owes it to the San Bernardino victims to cooperate and said the dispute wasn’t about creating legal precedent.
The FBI “can’t look the survivors in the eye, or ourselves in the mirror, if we don’t follow this lead,” Comey said.
The iPhone used by Syed Farook, who along with his wife killed 14 people in the Dec. 2 rampage, was locked. At the government’s request, a Federal magistrate judge has ordered Apple to help the FBI hack into the password-protected phone.
The case has sparked nationwide debate over digital privacy and national security. Apple, in its message to employees, appeared to be sensitive to criticism that the company is simply trying to protect its proprietary business.
“Apple is a uniquely American company,” Cook wrote. “It does not feel right to be on the opposite side of the government in a case centering on the freedoms and liberties that government is meant to protect.” But he said, “this case is about much more than a single phone or a single investigation, so when we received the government’s order we knew we had to speak out.”
Comey, in a statement posted on the Lawfare blog, sought to defend the FBI demand for access to the iPhone as well as counter Apple’s arguments that the request risks threatening the digital privacy of Apple customers all over the world.
“We simply want the chance, with a search warrant, to try to guess the terrorist’s passcode without the phone essentially self-destructing and without it taking a decade to guess correctly. That’s it,” Comey wrote in a four-paragraph statement. “We don’t want to break anyone’s encryption or set a master key loose on the land.”
Cook’s message to employees had “Thank you for your support,” in the subject line. He told employees that the company believes abiding by the judge’s order would set a dangerous precedent that would essentially create a backdoor to the encrypted iPhone. That would set “a dangerous precedent that threatens everyone’s civil liberties,” he said.
An accompanying question-and-answer posting for customers acknowledges that while it is technically possible for Apple to do what the judge ordered, that it’s “something we believe is too dangerous to do.”
Apple also points to the difficulty of keeping such a “master key” safe once it has been created. The government has said that Apple could keep the specialized technology it would create to help officials hack the phone — bypassing a security time delay and feature that erases all data after 10 consecutive, unsuccessful attempts to guess the unlocking passcode. This would allow the FBI to use technology to rapidly and repeatedly test numbers.
Cook said that if the company’s engineers were to do as ordered, Apple would do its best to protect the technology, but that the company “would be relentlessly attacked by hackers and cybercriminals.”
“The only way to guarantee such a powerful tool isn’t abused and doesn’t fall into the wrong hands is to never create it,” Apple said. The company has until Friday to formally protest the ruling in court.
The case would not have existed if the county government that owned the iPhone had installed a feature on it that would have allowed the FBI to easily and immediately unlock the phone. San Bernardino County had bought the technology, known as mobile device management from MobileIron Inc., but never installed it on any of the inspectors’ phones, including Farook’s, said county spokesman David Wert said.
There is no countywide policy on the matter and departments make their own decisions, he said.
The service costs $4 per month per phone.

source: http://www.pbs.org

Dozens Killed In Blasts In 2 Syrian Cities; ISIS Claims Responsibility

The Islamic State has claimed responsibility for multiple bombings on Sunday, which left at least 140 people dead in the Syrian cities of Damascus and Homs.

Syrian state media reported least 83 people were killed and at least 170 wounded in at least four blasts in the Damascus suburb of Sayyida Zeinab, according to the BBC.
Earlier in Homs, two car bombs exploded in an area that's home to many Alawites, the minority sect of Syrian President Bashar Assad. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the bombs killed 57 people. Syria's Foreign Ministry said at least 46 people died.
The blasts wrecked cars in a central district of Homs, where rescue crews have worked to help victims of the attack. The force of the explosion destroyed windows and walls on nearby buildings and left a crater in the street.
NPR's Alison Meuse reports for our Newscast unit:
"The twin car bombs targeted Zahraa neighborhood of Homs, where pro-regime militias hold sway. Last month, ISIS claimed a similar double suicide attack on the area.
"Homs was once known as the capital of the Syrian revolution. The mass protests of 2011 were met with fire and steadily morphed into an armed rebellion. In the years that followed, government warplanes reduced much of the city to rubble — and the rebels to one besieged enclave. But the city remains vulnerable to suicide attacks."
The attack comes on the same day negotiators are reporting progress in talks about reaching a ceasefire in Syria.
Secretary of State John Kerry says a "provisional agreement" has been reached on a ceasefire — but the AP notes that as Kerry described a productive talk with Russian Foreign minister Sergei Lavrov, he also reiterated that the U.S. will not enter into a military alliance with Assad.
It's now up to Russia to speak to Assad, Kerry said. On Saturday, Assad told Spanish newspaper El Pais that he will "definitely" accept a cessation of hostilities.
But Assad also said that a truce can't be used by terrorists to improve their positions, and he listed other concerns about how a ceasefire is implemented. From the interview transcript:
"Q. So, there will be still some fighting even though there's this ceasefire, at least against some of the armed groups?
A. Yes, of course, like ISIS, like Al-Nusra, and other organizations or terrorist groups that belong to Al Qaeda. Now, Syria and Russia have announced four names: Ahrar al-Sham and Jaysh al-Islam [Army of Islam] and Al-Nusra and ISIS."
As NPR's Alice Fordham reminds us, in her report for Newscast:
"A group of international leaders earlier this month made a statement of a provisional agreement for a ceasefire but it was not implemented, although there has been some improvement in aid access. An amped-up Syrian government and Russian air campaign in northern Syria has displaced tens of thousands in recent weeks. Rebel commanders tell NPR they will not stop fighting as long as airstrikes continue."

Russia vows to ensure Damascus observes ceasefire: Putin

Moscow (AFP) - Russia will do "whatever is necessary" to ensure that Damascus respects a Syrian ceasefire agreement that Moscow and Washington say will take effect on February 27, President Vladimir Putin said Monday.
"We will do whatever is necessary with Damascus, with the legitimate Syrian authorities," Putin said during a televised address after speaking by phone with US President Barack Obama.
"We are counting on the United States to do the same with its allies and the groups that it supports."
Putin said the United States and Russia were "ready to put in place an effective control mechanism" to ensure respect of the ceasefire, adding that a "direct line of communication will be created as well as, if necessary, a working group to exchange information".
"Finally a real chance to bring an end to the years of bloodshed and violence is emerging," Putin said.

The Russian president said the ceasefire agreement had come out of "intense work by teams of Russian and American experts", made easier by the "positive experience" of a US-Russian deal on the dismantling of Syria's chemical weapons arsenal, signed in September 2013.
"All fighting groups should confirm to us, or to the United States, their commitment to this truce," Putin said of the deal signed between Moscow and Washington on Monday.
"The Russian and American militaries, together, will define the territories on which these groups are operating. There will be no military operations against them."
But "with regard to the Al-Nusra Front, the Islamic State and other terrorist groups recognised as such by the UN, a ceasefire is totally excluded. The strikes against them will continue," he added.
Russia and the United States said in a joint statement that the partial truce would come into force at midnight Damascus time on Saturday (2200 GMT Friday).


Obama, Putin huddle on Syria ceasefire

President Obama phoned Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday to discuss a ceasefire agreement in Syria, the White House said.
White House spokesman Josh Earnest said the call came at the request of Putin, who has often butted heads with Obama about Moscow's efforts to prop up Syrian President Bashar Assad, whom the U.S. president has called on to step aside.  
After weeks of talks, the U.S. and Russia agreed to a ceasefire in the Middle Eastern nation, which has been torn apart for five years by civil war. 

“We recognize … that this is going to be difficult to implement," said Earnest. "We know that there are a lot of obstacles and there are sure to be some setbacks. But this is a moment of opportunity.” 
Under the agreement, which is set to take effect Saturday, Russian and Assad’s forces would agree to stop airstrikes against opposition fighters who are verified by both the U.S. and Russia to be party to the pact.
Both sides would also agree to stop efforts to take territory and only use force in self-defense.
The Syrian regime and opposition groups have until midday Friday to agree to the pact, which is designed to bring an end to the civil war and ensure that humanitarian aid is delivered to millions of displaced civilians.
The agreement does not apply to strikes against Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS), al Qaeda’s affiliate in Syria (known as al Nusra) or any other United Nations-designated terrorist group.
The cessation of hostilities will be enforced by a United Nations task force. A previous ceasefire agreement broke down earlier this month when Russian forces continued to bomb rebel-held strongholds in northern Syria.
source:http://thehill.com

POLITICS: Vladimir Putin should be in charge of Europe, says F1’s Bernie Ecclestone

Bernie Ecclestone believes Vladimir Putin should run Europe. The Formula One chief executive, who says he does not like democracy, also thinks the Russian president will “sort out this other business” in Syria and Great Britain should leave the European Union.


In an interview with the Daily Mail, Ecclestone said F1 is the “worst it has ever been” and the billionaire would not “spend money to take my family to watch a race”.

The 85-year-old’s admiration of Putin, however, was striking. “He’s the guy who should run Europe,” Ecclestone said. “He will sort out this other business that is going on in Syria. The good thing is that he does what he believes to be right and he stands by it. It’s hard to talk him out of anything.
“I’ve said before that I don’t much like democracy. Nothing gets done. I do quite like David Cameron. I didn’t think I would, but he has done what he thinks is best for Britain in the EU negotiations.
“I respect that, but I want us to leave Europe. It doesn’t make any difference to my business. It doesn’t make any difference to anyone here. I know what we give the EU, but not what it gives us back.”

SOURCE: http://www.theguardian.com