Friday, March 23, 2007

Christian Teacher Murdered By Muslim Students In Nigeria

March 22, 2007 4:46 p.m. EST

Ihuoma Ezeh - All Headline News


Nigeria (AHN) - A Christian teacher was attacked and killed after some high school students in Gombe, northeastern Nigeria, accused her of desecrating the Koran Wednesday, a police official said.

Oluwatoyin Olushekan was murdered by her students while conducting an Islamic Religious Knowledge exam. Authorities said the students accused her of tearing a portion of the Koran she seized from a female student during the exam.

The angry students also burned her car and set three blocks of classrooms ablaze.

Bashir Dikko, Gombe State police spokesman said their intervention had prevented the incident from turning into a bloody riot.

"The school principal, who is a Muslim sustained minor injuries as he was also beaten by the students when he tried to shield the woman from her assailants," Dikko told the Middle Eastern Times. "We are still investigating the cause of the incident and we have embarked on a 24-hour patrol to ensure the maintenance of law and order."

Since 1999, about 15,000 people have been killed in religious, communal and political clashes in Nigeria.

In February 2006, at least five people were killed and several churches burned down in a Christian-Muslim infuriated conflict.

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Elizabeth Edwards and Her Cancer: A Controllable Disease

By Katherine Hobson.
US News & World Report

Although the breast cancer diagnosed and treated more than two years ago in Elizabeth Edwards has spread and can no longer be eradicated completely, its progression can often be managed, much as is done with other chronic diseases.

The cancer that has afflicted the wife of Democratic presidential candidate John Edwards is now lodged in a right rib bone.

"I always remind my patients that diabetes is not curable and hypertension is not curable," says Aman Buzdar, deputy chairman of the department of breast medical oncology at the M. D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, who isn't familiar with the specifics of Edwards's case. "But we can keep those diseases under control for a long period of time."

Edwards said at a press conference in North Carolina that she sought medical treatment for pain on her left side. That turned out to be a cracked rib she suffered while moving furniture in her new house, but the same X-ray that revealed the break also showed a suspicious spot on the opposite side of her ribcage. A bone study and other follow-up tests confirmed that there was cancer in a rib bone.

That's clearly disappointing but not surprising. When breast cancer does escape the confines of the breast and spreads to other organs, the bone is the most common site for it to take root. Because the cancer has spread to another organ, it is automatically classified as late stage, or stage IV.

Survival will hinge on many factors, including the number of areas affected by cancer and how big the tumors are, doctors say. Edwards's tumor is small, and a CT scan showed very little presence of the disease in soft tissues beyond the bone.

Treatment options for breast cancer that has spread to bone break down into two categories, says Harold Burstein, medical oncologist at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston and an assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School. A group of drugs called bisphosphonates are used to strengthen and heal the bone. The drugs, Zometa and Aredia, are similar to drugs taken to combat osteoporosis but are more powerful and are given intravenously rather than orally.

"Doctors may also start specific treatment against the tumor," says Burstein. That may include drugs that block estrogen, if the tumor is fueled by that hormone, or chemotherapy. (Looking to the future, a monoclonal antibody called denosumab is currently in clinical trials for use against both bone metastasis and osteoporosis.)

True, the treatments now available can only delay the progression of the cancer and alleviate symptoms; the tumor may become resistant to one treatment over time, forcing a switch to something else. But Buzdar says this can extend the life of even a late-stage cancer patient for years.

"There is hope," he says. "A recurrence of cancer does not mean there's no hope, and people can live a very productive, comfortable life."

Related News
Defying Reports, John Edwards Stays In.
In-Depth Breast Cancer Information & Resources.
Video: Edwardses' Press Conference.
Cancer Prevention Tips.
Living Beyond Cancer.
More From Politics.
More From Health.

I would just like to add my own two cents right here. I pray for Elizabeth and her family as she continues in her struggles and hopes. I pray she is well taken of by her husband, her doctors and our Lord. Hang in there, Mrs. Edwards. We are praying for your health and you...all politics aside.

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Elizabeth Edwards' metastasized breast cancer should be treatable

Experts say she could have a good quality of life for many more years with medication. (LA Times)

By Thomas H. Maugh II, Times Staff Writer.

The recurrence of Elizabeth Edwards' breast cancer years after treatment is a serious setback, but probably one she can live with for five to 10 years, perhaps even longer, experts said Thursday.

Still, she will have to take medications for the cancer for the rest of her life.

Such recurrences are not unusual. About a third of breast cancer patients have a disease that has metastasized, or spread from the original location, typically to bones.

If the disease has spread, "we do not feel that it is curable, but it is treatable," said Dr. Linnea Chap, a breast cancer specialist at Premier Oncology in Santa Monica, which is affiliated with St. John's Health Center.

"We have very good treatments that can allow patients to live with breast cancer for many years with a good quality of life."

Cancer metastases are so difficult to cure because surgery is no longer an option once the disease has spread beyond its original confined location, said Dr. Marisa Weiss, president of breastcancer.org and a cancer specialist at Lankenau Hospital in the Philadelphia area. Drugs also become less effective because the metastasized cells "get into hiding spots that the drugs can't get into as easily."

Experts cautioned that it was difficult to predict treatment and outcome for Edwards because the details of her tumor had not been made public.

The treatment is individualized, depending on the characteristics of a patient's cancer. The approach can be as minimal as a pill to block estrogen, which contributes to the growth of many breast cancers. "That is taken daily and is very well tolerated," Chap said.

If the cancer has spread more widely, her physician will probably be more aggressive, using drugs such as Xeloda — an oral drug that blocks an enzyme needed by tumors — or one of the taxane drugs, such as paclitaxel or docetaxel. Those drugs must be given intravenously, and have stronger side effects.

Either might be given in combination with Avastin, which blocks the growth of blood vessels supplying nutrients to the tumors.

The patient also is typically given monthly doses of one of the bisphosphonate drugs, such as Actonel or Fosamax. These drugs do not attack the tumor directly, but strengthen the bone, making it more resistant to fractures. They have also been shown to reduce bone pain in the metastases.

If the cancer has spread to organs other than the bones, as Edwards' physician has hinted, then the initial therapy would be more aggressive, using the strongest of those drugs.

"If it is just in the bones, then the outlook is more favorable than for cancer that has gone to the liver," Weiss said.

Send comments and questions to Thomas Maugh.

I would just like to add my own two cents right here. I pray for Elizabeth and her family as she continues in her struggles and hopes. I pray she is well taken of by her husband, her doctors and our Lord. Hang in there, Mrs. Edwards. We are praying for your health and you...all politics aside.

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Monday, March 19, 2007

Reporter's Notebook: Afghanistan's House of History Restored

By David Piper

It's just one of many bomb-damaged villas on the outskirts of Kabul. But it is, perhaps, the most important building in Afghanistan, as it houses the rich history of this war-torn country. The museum in Kabul houses what’s left of the artifacts that have survived the fighting.

I was on assignment with FOX News in Kabul in 2005 and the one place I wanted to visit was its museum.

I wasn’t really sure if there was going to be anything left as I’d seen a documentary a couple of years before that showed that the museum had been pillaged by looters over several years and had been heavily bombed.

It once held an amazing collection of artifacts as befits a country that often has been a crossroads for cultures including from Egypt, Greece, Rome and India.

Many of the priceless items that once were on display at the museum have been sent around the world by smugglers and are more likely to be found in private collections in London, New York or Tokyo.

But worse was yet to come for the museum.

The Taliban announced an edict in 2001 to destroy all pre-Islamic statues and objects in Afghanistan.

The video that was seen around the world of the Taliban blowing up the enormous Buddah statues of Bamiyan six years ago was etched in my memory as Akbar, the FOX News fixer in Afghanistan, drove me there.

He insisted, despite my concerns, that the museum was open again and, perhaps more importantly, there was something left to see inside it.

As we pulled up in the car, armed guards appeared from a roadblock outside the museum.

They checked our papers carefully before allowing us inside the building.

And I wasn’t disappointed.

Afghan and Italian experts have painstakingly put back together hundreds of priceless statues, carvings and other artifacts that had been damaged or even smashed to pieces by thieves and the Taliban.

Hardly anybody was in the museum and as a good journalist does, I looked around upstairs and opened a door or two.

In one room people were working hard to restore a number of stone statues.

It looked like the world’s most difficult jigsaw puzzles in that they didn’t know if all the pieces were there and if they all came from the same statue.

I learned later that many of the statues had been found in pieces in the storeroom of the museum, which had been ransacked many times but still gave up such priceless artifacts when the experts managed to work their way through the debris.

Others had been left in pieccs in the grounds of the museum.

When I walked outside I could see parts of what seemed to be Greek temples strewn around a lawn, some just protruding from the earth.

I met an Afghan woman who worked at the museum and insisted on showing me around, as is the culture of Afghanistan.

She showed me into a large room where the wooden animist sculptures from Nuristan now fill.

When the Taliban came here and smashed everything to bits, she said, the curator of the museum had refused to allow them to burn the remains of these wooden sculptures because he told them they had the power to break them but not the right to destroy forever the history of the Afghan people.

The Taliban decided to leave them in broken pieces and, thanks to the laborious work that has been done, these beautiful sculptures can be seen again.

This past weekend 1,400 artifacts protected from looters and the Taliban in far-off Switzerland have been returned to the Kabul museum.

News reports say one of the first items to be placed in the museum was a small Buddah statue from Bamiyan, where the Taliban had blown up the giant statues.

The Afghan authorities say the artifacts have been returned because they believe the country is now safe enough for them to be returned.

But with the ongoing fighting in Afghanistan I feel sure the well-armed guards at Kabul museum will have to remain there to protect the priceless artifacts for years to come.

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