Ntfo Photos of the week
The family
stanley cup of a 13-year-old boy who was shot and killed by police in central New York on Friday is demanding justice and accountability.New York Attorney General Letitia James office is investigating the shooting of Nyah Mway, who was born in Myanmar and is a member of its Karen ethnic minorit
stanley cup y. Utica police said officers tackled the teenager to the ground and then shot him after a foot chase on Friday.Police, who are conducting their own probe, released body camera video that showed a youth appearing
stanley cup to aim an object at them before they took him to the ground. The object was a BB gun that looked like an actual firearm, police said. While the official investigations proceeded, Nyah Mway s family and outraged community members demanded accountability for the death of the teen. The mother of the 13-year-old boy who was shot and killed by Utica Police cries after listening to a translator inside City Hall in Utica, New York, U.S. June 29, 2024. Daniel DeLoach/Utica Observer-Dispatch/USA Today Network via REUTERS We came to the United States, finally, to get the education and to get the good jobs here, hoping for a peaceful life after decades of strife and violence in Myanmar, Lay Htoo, who identified himself as one of Nyah s cousins, told the Associated Press in a phone interview. The teen s parents were waiting for medical e Ifqk Judge refuses to ban group from watching Arizona polling places
The death toll from Ebola in West Africa now tops 4,500, and the spread of the deadly virus shows little sign of slowing.But among those fighting the
jordan disease is a Boston doctor who cared for Ebola patients in the region, and is now training other doctors, reports CBS News correspondent Elaine Quijano. Suiting up for safety in Ebola protective gear 05:14
af1 At the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention s mock Ebola ward in Anniston, Alabama, Dr. Nahid Bhadelia showed medical clinicians how to get in and out of their personal protective equipment. Dr. Bhadelia knows first-hand that these suits and important training, can save doctors lives from the Ebola virus. The first time you do anything, when walk into this environment or anywhere else, you are going to be scared, she said. I had never seen patients with Ebola. In August, Dr. Bhadelia, director of infection control at the National Emerging Infectious Diseases Laboratories at Boston University and infectious disease doctor at Boston Medical Center, worked inside this ramshackle Kenema government hospital in Sierra Leone. Fl
stanley cup ooded with as many as 100 Ebola patients and lacking basic resources, the facility was forced to turn away patients each day. Your time in the unit is limited because of