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Oba Adejuyigbe Adefunmi II of Oyotunji African village in Beaufort County, Southern Carolina, United State of America, was allegedly st@bbed to d£ath by his sister during a heated argument.

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Authorities say the deceased was st8bbed on Monday, July 29, 2024, WJCL reported.

According to the Beaufort County Sheriff’s Office, the BCSO communications center received a report of a st@bbing around 2:45 p.m. at the village, which is located on Bryant Lane.

 

The victim identified as a 47-year-old man, was taken to a nearby hospital where he d!ed from his wounds.

The suspect was identified as Akiba Kasale Meredith, 53, who had left the area on foot.

Meredith was found a short time later. She was charged with m¥rder and taken to the Beaufort County Detention Center.

The investigation is ongoing.

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Stop dragging our father’s name into public conversations- late Alaafin of Oyo’s children threaten legal action against Queen Dami

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Stop dragging our father’s name into public conversations- late Alaafin of Oyo’s children threaten legal action against Queen Dami

In a letter dated January 22, the children of the late monarch asked Dami to pursue her endeavours without dragging their late father. They warned that they would take legal action against her if she continues to make remarks that tarnish his memory or their family name.

Dami who was the last wife of the monarch, has been having online battles with her ex-lover, singer Portable.

 

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Nigerian Customs Service Warns of Fake Emails and Messages

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The Nigerian Customs Service (NCS) has issued a warning to the public about fraudulent emails and messages targeting applicants of the ongoing recruitment process. These fake communications are attempting to deceive individuals into divulging sensitive information or making payments.

Ekwutosblog gathered that  NCS emphasizes that it does not request payment, personal banking details, or confidential information from applicants through unofficial channels. All legitimate communications are conducted exclusively via the NCS’s authorized official platforms.

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Red Flags to Watch Out For:

– _Suspicious emails or messages_ claiming to be from the NCS
– _Requests for payment or personal banking details_
– _Unofficial channels or platforms_ being used for communication

What to Do:

– Disregard suspicious messages and do not respond
– Report fraudulent activities to the appropriate authorities
– Verify information through the NCS’s official channels:
– Help desk lines: 0201889889 or 0201889888
– Email: info@custom.gov.ng

– Website: www.custom.gov.ng
– Verified social media handles: Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and TikTok all official_customsng

Stay vigilant and protect yourself from these scams!

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Storm Eowyn 92mph winds shut schools and cancel trains in Britain

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Storm Eowyn caused extraordinary travel chaos across Britain today as 92mph winds cancelled 300 flights, shut hundreds of schools and halted all trains in Scotland.

Rare red warnings were issued for Scotland and Northern Ireland as the storm posed a danger to life – damaging buildings, uprooting trees and causing power cuts.

At least 334 flights have been axed at airports in Aberdeen, Belfast, Edinburgh and Glasgow due to the severe conditions, with about 50,000 passengers affected.

The top UK wind gust has been 93mph at Aberdaron in Wales, followed by 92mph at Killowen in County Down – while 114mph in Ireland was the country’s fastest ever.

Train operator ScotRail suspended all services across Scotland today, warning it ‘would not be safe to operate passenger services due to forecast weather conditions’.

Other train companies including LNER, Avanti West Coast, Lumo, CrossCountry and Grand Central told customers not to travel on routes across parts of North Wales, Scotland and northern England with no Anglo-Scots services running today.

Northern said many of its routes were shut because of severe weather, with lines blocked between Manchester Oxford Road and Warrington because of a fallen tree.

Services were also disrupted by the severe conditions between Bradford and Ilkley; Bradford and Skipton; Leeds and Bradford; Leeds and Ilkley; and Leeds and Skipton.

Glasgow Airport had 40 departures and 41 arrivals axed, as well as 74 departures and 72 arrivals cancelled at Glasgow. At Belfast International there were 16 departures and 16 arrivals suspended, along with 23 departures and 20 arrivals at Belfast City.

A person holding their hat on their head on a windswept Tynemouth Longsands beach today

 

People try to shelter from the wind as they walk through Central London this morning

 

Passengers at Edinburgh Airport today, where 74 departures and 72 arrivals have been axed

 

Scaffolding sheeting is damaged by the wind on North Finchley High Road in London today

 

Storm Eowyn 92mph winds shut schools and cancel trains in Britain

Storm Eowyn 92mph winds shut schools and cancel trains in Britain

Storm Eowyn 92mph winds shut schools and cancel trains in Britain

 

Aberdeen cancelled 25 departures and 25 arrivals, while Dublin Airport announced more than 110 scheduled departures and 110 arrivals have been cancelled today.

Calmac Ferries on Scotland’s west coast and Steam Packet Ferries between Heysham and the Isle of Man both said today’s planned sailings had been cancelled.

Met Office weather warnings in place today

Red – Wind: 7am-2pm

Northern Ireland

Red – Wind: 10am-5pm

Central, Tayside & Fife, SW Scotland, Lothian Borders, Strathclyde

Amber – Wind: 1pm-6am tomorrow

Central, Tayside & Fife, Grampian, Highlands & Eilean Siar, Orkney & Shetland, Strathclyde

Amber – Wind: 6am-9pm

Central, Tayside & Fife, East Midlands, Grampian, Highlands & Eilean Siar, North East England, North West England, Northern Ireland, SW Scotland, Lothian Borders, Strathclyde, Wales, Yorkshire & Humber

Yellow – Wind: 0am-11.59pm

Central, Tayside & Fife, East Midlands, Grampian, Highlands & Eilean Siar, London & South East England, North East England, North West England, Northern Ireland, Orkney & Shetland, SW Scotland, Lothian Borders, South West England, Strathclyde, Wales, West Midlands, Yorkshire & Humber

Yellow – Wind: 5am-3pm

East Midlands, East of England, London & South East England, South West England, West Midlands

Yellow – Snow: 6am-11.59pm

Central, Tayside & Fife, Grampian, Highlands & Eilean Siar, Strathclyde

Passengers and motorists in areas covered by red and amber weather warnings have been told to avoid travel ‘unless absolutely essential’ – with millions urged to stay at home in the worst-hit regions after receiving emergency alerts on their phones.

Hundreds of schools were shut today including 120 in Aberdeenshire, 43 in the Highlands, 42 in Northern Ireland, 30 in Northumberland and seven in Cumberland.

Glasgow City Council said all of its school and nurseries were closed, while Edinburgh Council shut all schools. Argyll and Bute and the Scottish Borders closed all schools – while in Wales, more than 30 in Anglesey and two in Gwynedd were shut.

Red warnings for wind were issued by the Met Office in Northern Ireland from 7am until 2pm today, and for western and central areas of Scotland between 10am and 5pm.

Gusts of 80 to 90mph are expected widely inland in the warning areas, with speeds of up to 100mph likely along coasts, the forecaster said. Additionally, a red warning is in place for the Isle of Man until 2pm.

Amber wind warnings are also in place for Northern Ireland, the southern half of Scotland, northern England and north Wales between 6am and 9pm today, and the northern half of Scotland from 1pm today to 6am tomorrow.

Winds reaching 60 to 70mph will be widespread in these warning areas.

There is a yellow wind warning covering most of the UK for the entirety today.

Smaller yellow warnings for snow in Scotland, from 6am to midnight, and rain in South West England and Wales until 9am.

Further amber and yellow weather warnings for wind and rain have also been issued across tomorrow and Sunday.

BBC Weather had previously warned that Eowyn would be the ‘storm of the century’ for Ireland.

National Highways said the A66 between the A1M in North Yorkshire and M6 in Cumbria, as well as the A628 Woodhead Pass in Derbyshire and South Yorkshire, were both closed overnight due to strong winds.

Further south, the M48 Severn Bridge was closed due to strong winds, while the Tamar Bridge on the A38 between Devon and Cornwall was closed to high-sided vehicles.

People walking their dogs at Tynemouth Longsands beach in North Tyneside this morning

 

A Tesco Express supermarket in Glasgow is closed at 8am today as the storm hits Scotland

 

The storm hits Portreath in Cornwall this morning, bringing high winds and rough seas

Thames Water roadworks fencing was blown over in Eltham, South East London, this morning

 

A woman holds onto an umbrella as it is blown inside out on Westminster Bridge this morning

 

Firefighters in Dublin remove a tree from Killiney Road this morning as Storm Eowyn hits

 

Edinburgh Waverley railway station is empty today with all trains cancelled by ScotRail

 

The storm hits Portreath in Cornwall this morning, bringing high winds and rough seas

 

Glasgow city centre at 8am today as Storm Eowyn hits and buses turn back on Argyle Street

 

People walking their dogs at Tynemouth Longsands beach in North Tyneside this morning

Thames Water roadworks fencing was blown over in Eltham, South East London, this morning

 

All flights at Edinburgh Airport have been cancelled this morning due to Storm Eowyn

 

Avon and Somerset reported a number of local roads had been blocked due to fallen trees, advising motorists to ‘take care when travelling’.

In Wales, Gwent Police confirmed emergency services were working to manage surface flooding on the B4598 Raglan Toward Abergavenny.

Scotland’s Deputy First Minister has urged Scots in the central belt to follow the advice not to travel.

Appearing on the BBC’s Good Morning Scotland programme, Kate Forbes said: ‘It is so important that people follow Police Scotland’s advice not to travel because if people stay at home and don’t travel then it means they don’t invite that risk to themselves.’

Ms Forbes also warned that recovery from Storm Eowyn could ‘take longer than we all hope’.

‘It is important our expectations are managed by how quickly things can return to normal and there may well be continuing disruption tomorrow,’ she said.

The Police Service of Northern Ireland described the storm as an ‘exceptional weather event’ and said it was expected to bring the strongest winds seen in the country since 1998.

More than 93,000 homes and businesses were without power in Northern Ireland this morning, NIE Networks has said.

A broken telegraph pole on Blaris Road in Country Antrim, Northern Ireland, this morning

 

The storm hits Portreath in Cornwall this morning, bringing high winds and rough seas

 

Passengers at Edinburgh Airport today, where 74 departures and 72 arrivals have been axed

 

Thames Water roadworks fencing was blown over in Eltham, South East London, this morning

 

Two men attend to a fallen tree on Malahide Road in Dublin today as Storm Eowyn hits Ireland

 

All flights at Edinburgh Airport have been cancelled this morning due to Storm Eowyn

 

Edinburgh Waverley railway station is empty today with all trains cancelled by ScotRail

 

Thames Water roadworks fencing was blown over in Eltham, South East London, this morning

 

A commuter shelters from the rain under an umbrella in London today during the storm

 

The storm hits Portreath in Cornwall this morning, bringing high winds and rough seas

 

People walking their dogs at Tynemouth Longsands beach in North Tyneside this morning

 

Two men attend to a fallen tree on Malahide Road in Dublin today as Storm Eowyn hits Ireland

 

All trains have been cancelled at Edinburgh Waverley railway station today as the storm hits

 

Thames Water roadworks fencing was blown over in Eltham, South East London, this morning

 

Edinburgh Waverley railway station is empty today with all trains cancelled by ScotRail

 

All trains have been cancelled at Edinburgh Waverley railway station today as the storm hits

 

Edinburgh Waverley railway station is empty today with all trains cancelled by ScotRail

 

The storm hits Portreath in Cornwall this morning, bringing high winds and rough seas

The provider said the storm was causing ‘widespread damage’ to the electricity network.

It warned that restoration efforts will take significant time as crews cannot begin work until it is safe to do so.

More than 300 flights cancelled today

Analysis of flight tracking website FlightRadar24 shows at least 334 flights have been cancelled across airports in Aberdeen, Belfast, Edinburgh and Glasgow.

This means around 50,000 passengers have been affected.

The number of cancellations for each airport is:

  • Belfast International: 16 departures and 16 arrivals
  • Belfast City: 23 departures and 20 arrivals
  • Edinburgh: 74 departures and 72 arrivals
  • Glasgow: 40 departures and 41 arrivals
  • Aberdeen: 25 departures and 25 arrivals

This breakdown includes 18 domestic flights that were scheduled to depart from one of the airports and arrive at another. These were only counted once in the total of 334.

A statement said: ‘We anticipate we will begin assessing the damage to the network after 2pm once the red weather warning has been lifted.’

Stormont deputy First Minister Emma Little-Pengelly urged people to stay at home.

‘The strong advice is to stay home,’ she told BBC Radio Ulster.

‘And that’s important, of course, because if people go out, the risk to life is from debris because of the high winds, if people go out and get into a situation, then that is calling out those essential workers that are there. We don’t want people to have to come out to deal with those. So we are advising everybody stays at home. There’s a significant outage on the electricity.’

Ms Little-Pengelly said it was a ‘very serious storm’.

‘The storm will blow over,’ she said. ‘The worst of it is here at the moment and over the next number of hours. But, of course, we will get through that.’

Northern Ireland’s First Minister Michelle O’Neill has warned there is a ‘genuine threat to life and property’, describing the region as currently being ‘in the eye of the storm’.

Ms O’Neill told BBC Radio Ulster: ‘We’re asking the public to be very safe, to be very cautious, to take every precaution to ensure that they don’t take any unnecessary travel, please just stay at home if you can.

‘We’re in the eye of the storm now. We are in the period of the red alert.

‘People can see for themselves, the wind has been very much picking up overnight. We’ve just been briefed by the Civil Contingencies Group, by the PSNI who are in the lead in terms of the storm response and they tell us that the situation is, as we have outlined yesterday, we’re still in a period of jeopardy in terms of the damage that potentially could be caused as a result of the storm.

‘I think the real message we want to get across to your listeners this morning is to please be ultra cautious, to please stay at home if you can and we will see how the storm will rage but the scale of the storm, the level of wind that we’ve experienced across the island, which is something that’s never been seen before.

Thames Water roadworks fencing was blown over in Eltham, South East London, this morning

 

Edinburgh Waverley railway station today as all trains are axed due to Storm Eowyn

 

Two men attend to a fallen tree on Malahide Road in Dublin today as Storm Eowyn hits Ireland

Thames Water roadworks fencing was blown over in Eltham, South East London, this morning

 

All trains have been cancelled at Edinburgh Waverley railway station today as the storm hits

 

A broken telegraph pole on Blaris Road in Country Antrim, Northern Ireland, this morning

 

Edinburgh Waverley railway station is empty today with all trains cancelled by ScotRail

 

Thames Water roadworks fencing was blown over in Eltham, South East London, this morning

 

Two men attend to a fallen tree on Malahide Road in Dublin today as Storm Eowyn hits Ireland

 

A sign advising customers of a shop closure on the door of a Lidl store in Finglas, Dublin, today

 

Thames Water roadworks fencing was blown over in Eltham, South East London, this morning

 

‘The threat is real, and we only can emphasise to people, please take every precaution that you absolutely can.’

Who needs Concorde? Storm Eowyn’s powerful jet stream sends flights hurtling from New York to London in just five hours 30 minutes

Flights from New York to London have been hurtling through the air in just five hours and 30 minutes thanks to Storm Eowyn’s powerful jet stream.

According to data from Flight Radar, a British Airways flight BA274 from Las Vegas to Heathrow reached a ground speed of 814mph – approximately 260mph faster than its typical top speed.

Storm Eowyn 92mph winds shut schools and cancel trains in Britain

The aircraft had capitalised on the monster tailwind to reach speeds of just 20mph under the subsonic speed record to reduce its flight time by over an hour.

A jet stream is a wind at about 30-40,000 feet that travels from west to east, meandering across the Atlantic with speeds of about 190 to 200mph.

Airline companies will use this to pick up speed and save on fuel as they travel across the Atlantic, which is why it takes longer to fly to New York from London then vice versa.

BBC weather forecaster Simon King said the jet stream this week had been ‘supercharged’ with winds speeds in excess of 260mph off the coast of America.

Because of this, a number of flights coming into the capital from New York, which normally take around seven hours to complete, were landing ahead of schedule because of the heavy gusts.

RAC Breakdown advised motorists in warnings areas to stay safe by parking away from trees, keep a firm grip on the steering wheel, avoid coastal routes and watch out for debris.

Some 4.5 million people received emergency alerts on their phones warning of the incoming storm in the ‘largest real life use of the tool to date’ yesterday.

In Ireland, a wind speed of 114mph (183kmh) brought by the storm has been recorded – the fastest since records began, Irish forecaster Met Eireann said.

Residents across Ireland have been urged to stay at home as the entire island braces for the arrival of the storm.

The top-level red warning for wind is in place in both Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland from early this morning.

Schools and colleges across Ireland are set to close and public transport come to a halt amid powerful gusts, with warnings of danger to life, fallen electric lines, damaged infrastructure and widespread power outages.

Met Eireann reported that a gust of 114mph had been recorded at Mace Head, Co Galway, at 5am, just above the previous record high of 113mph (182kmh) set in January 1945 in Foynes, Co Limerick.

It also reported the mean wind speed record of 81mph (131kmh) set in 1945 in Foynes has been broken during the storm, with up to 84mph (135kmh) at Mace Head at 4am.

The storm has caused extensive and widespread damage to the electricity network, with power outages affecting 715,000 homes, farms and businesses in the Republic of Ireland.

The Irish Electricity Supply Board (ESB) said there had been ‘unprecedented, widespread and extensive’ damage to electricity infrastructure nationwide.

ESB said it would take a ‘significant number of days’ to restore power to all affected customers.

Police in Northern Ireland have declared a major incident and said they expect the strongest winds in the region since the Boxing Day storm in 1998 which caused widespread disruption.

The chairman of Ireland’s National Emergency Co-ordination Group, Keith Leonard, said Storm Eowyn will be one of the most severe storms Ireland has seen.

‘It is going to be a damaging, dangerous and destructive weather event,’ he said in Dublin today.

A car parses an advertising display damaged during Storm Eowyn in Finglas, Dublin, today

Some 4.5 million people received emergency alerts on their phones warning of the storm

 

‘The forecasted winds will bring severe conditions which will constitute a risk to life and property.

‘Our most important message today is that everybody needs to shelter in place for the duration of all red warnings.

‘We are likely to see significant and widespread power outages, so I would encourage everyone to prepare ahead. Make sure phones, torches and laptops are fully charged.’

The coastal town of Donaghadee in Co Down was among those making preparations last night.

Some businesses placed sandbags at their doors, while others displayed signs to say they would be closed until after the red level alert expires this afternoon.

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