An 11-year-old grade six pupil of Ndola in neighboring Zambia is in a critical condition at Arthur Davies hospital after a goods train ran over when when he fell off a wagon.
The boy failed to hold on to the wagon and fell, in the process, a goods train ran over him, crushing his hands.
Copperbelt Police Commissioner Elias Chushi has confirmed the accident and said the boy, who is a pupil at Kaunga Primary School, wanted to ride on the train to reach him near home on Wednesday around 12:00 hours.
He said victim sustained crushed hands and his condition is critical and is admitted to Arthur Davison Hospital in Ndola.
Former Nkana star striker Musole Sakulanda has warned that Power Dynamos’ low form in recent matches will not be a factor when the two teams meet in the Kitwe derby on Saturday at Nkana Stadium.
Eleventh placed Power are winless in their last six matches in which they have recorded two losses and four draws.
In an interview from Kitwe, Sakulanda, a regular scorer in his hey days, believes Power will give Nkana a tough match. “Even during our time Power used to wake up against Nkana even if they have been off form in other matches. Power wants to be seen that they have played well against Nkana. Each player wants to be seen that they have shined against Nkana,” Sakulanda said.
Burgate Acres development in Fordingbridge moves ahead salisburyjournal.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from salisburyjournal.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
GREENSBORO â Newspaper photographer Jack Moebes captured the first image of the Greensboro Four, striding down the sidewalk outside the Woolworth store on the first day of the 1960 sit-ins.
His iconic photo from the civil rights protest has appeared in textbooks, documentaries, websites, murals, the Smithsonian, International Civil Rights Center & Museum and several times on the TV quiz show Jeopardy. It also inspired the February One Monument, a larger-than-life bronze representation of the four N.C. A&T freshmen.
Scott Dinsmore from Operation Understanding-DC helped lead a group of students taking in sights from local civil rights sites, including the future International Civil Rights Center and Museum, in 2005 in Greensboro.