Brother Gets His Sister Pregnant

Brother Gets His Sister Pregnant




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Brother Gets His Sister Pregnant
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On May 29, 2010
Last updated May 30, 2010
21,689 42 Comments

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A twenty-three year old brother got his nineteen year old sister pregnant after they decided to have sex on Christmas Eve last year. Yeukai Semeni Nyamhanza, a Form 4 dropout and his sister Rumbidzai who is now five months pregnant are now performing community service after being charged with engaging in an incestuous relationship.
Both siblings from Dotito are performing community service at Dotito Clinic and Kadohwata Primary School respectively. Its reported by newspapers that they are staying with an uncle in Dotito following the death of their father while their mother is in Guruve. Narrating what happened Yeukai said;
“It was on Christmas Eve when I proposed love to her. The two of us were in the kitchen hut chatting when I suddenly decided to propose love to her. I just told her I loved her and she accepted my proposal,” Yeukai said.
Asked why he proposed love to his sister instead of courting other village girls, Yeukai said he had never planned it that way. “It just happened. I never had a girlfriend before. I believe this was the work of evil spirits. There are so many girls in this village, but it never came to my mind to propose love to any of them. I still cannot believe I did this,” he said.
He further admitted he would sneak to his sister’s bedroom hut to sleep with her. “We were intimate on three occasions,” he said. Asked if he was going to call the baby his son/daughter or nephew/niece, Yeukai could not answer.
“Inga ndataura wani? Ndinzwirei tsitsi varume ndiri kupazama nayo nyaya iyi. (Haven’t I told you enough? Feel pity for me, I am tormented),” he said. Yeukai said his uncle was furious when he found out what was happening. “He said the whole family was now a disgrace in the community. Truly, I do not understand how I ended myself in this mess,” he said.
Rumbidzai, who dropped out of school in Grade Six, said she accepted her brother’s proposal.
“On Christmas Day at around 9pm my younger sister stormed into my bedroom hut. She caught us pants down and reported the matter to our uncle. “Our uncle informed our aunt but she never confronted me about it. The relationship only came to light after uncle noticed I was pregnant,” she said. She said the uncle quizzed her over the pregnancy and she confessed to the incestuous relationship.
Chief Dotito said he believed intermittent natural disasters befalling the community were a result of such behaviour. “Only recently a hailstorm swept across villages,” he said. Chief Dotito said incest normally angered the ancestors who would punish them with natural disasters.
“They should be brought before the chief’s court and pay two beasts and two goats, which are used to appease the ancestors,” he said.
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Boy, 14, Impregnates 11-Year-Old Sister But Unlikely To Face Charges
By Benjamin Fearnow @BFearnow21 02/07/18 AT 5:45 PM
© Copyright IBTimes 2022. All rights reserved.
Get up to Speed with IBT’s Fast Start Stay up to date with our daily newsletter Sign Up Now
Ants Could Help Humans Fight Antibiotic Resistance With Their Bacteria-Killing Exoskeletons

By
Elana Glowatz
@ElanaGlow

02/07/18 AT 5:19 PM


© Copyright IBTimes 2022. All rights reserved.
© Copyright 2022 IBTimes LLC. All Rights Reserved.
An 11-year-old girl in Murcia, Spain, gave birth to a child fathered by her 14-year-old brother Friday, law enforcement officials say. 
The girl was rushed to Murcia, Spain's Virgen de la Arrixaca hospital Friday due to complications from "stomach cramps," with the parents calling the ambulance and telling hospital officials she was suffering from intestinal pain.  But the pregnancy as a result of a sexual relationship between the brother and sister was uncovered when police were informed the teen boy is the likely father, The Local ES in Spain reports .
The 11-year-old sister gave birth to a healthy baby boy, and hospital sources told local news outlets that both she and the newborn are "doing well."
Police are awaiting the results of a DNA test to confirm that the boy was 13 years old when he impregnated his sister. In addition, police are questioning the parents of the girl who denied knowing that she was pregnant and to find any indications that the girl was abused by either her brother or parents. Should the boy be confirmed as 13 he is not likely to face criminal prosecution under Spanish law because he would have been below the age of criminal responsibility at the time of conception. 
Regional health authority chief Manuel Villegas described the Yahoo News UK case between the young siblings as "absolutely exceptional."
“We have to wait now. An investigation is still ongoing and when everything has been clarified, we’ll see what has happened and if we can help in some way," he added. 
In 2013, Spain's age of consent was moved from 13 up to 16 but legal exceptions are made if two people -- including incestuous couples -- are of similar age at the time of sexual contact. 
Ants might be carrying the medicines of the future, according to an analysis of antibiotics the insects are naturally producing.
A study in the journal Royal Society Open Science suggests that many ant species have antimicrobial substances on their exoskeletons, including ants that have not been previously studied for their bacteria-fighting skills. The finding comes from an investigation into the ants’ power , in which scientists measured how much bacteria grew in the presence of the exoskeleton substances, as compared to the bacterial growth in their absence.
The researchers tested the antimicrobial properties of 20 diverse ant species.
They did not see any effect in about 40 percent of the species, the study said, highlighting the need for additional research into which ants are worth pursuing for their medicinal value.
“One species we looked at, the thief ant ( Solenopsis molesta ), had the most powerful antibiotic effect of any species we tested — and until now, no one had even shown that they made use of antimicrobials,” study co-author Adrian Smith said in a statement from North Carolina State University . “Finding a species that carries a powerful antimicrobial agent is good news for those interested in finding new antibiotic agents that can help humans.”











Many ants carry antimicrobial substances on their exoskeletons that can be used to fight human diseases.
Photo: CC0 Creative Commons



According to the study, the test on the thief ant showed that its antimicrobial power prevented any bacteria from growing at all.
The researchers also reported that the discovery of so many ant species whose exoskeleton substances don’t fight off microbes contradicts previous ideas that all ants have some sort of antibiotic agent on their bodies.
“We thought every ant species would produce at least some type of antimicrobial,” lead study author Clint Penick said in the statement. “Instead, it seems like many species have found alternative ways to prevent infection that do not rely on antimicrobial chemicals.”
The team is now looking to better understand what different kinds of bacteria the different ants can fight off and what those alternative antimicrobial defenses may be.
“In light of the rise in antibiotic resistant pathogens that infect an estimated 2 million people in the United States each year, research on pathogen control in social insects could provide future insights for dealing with antibiotic resistance,” the study said.

Boy, 14, Impregnates 11-Year-Old Sister But Unlikely To Face Charges
By Benjamin Fearnow @BFearnow21 02/07/18 AT 5:45 PM
© Copyright IBTimes 2022. All rights reserved.
Get up to Speed with IBT’s Fast Start Stay up to date with our daily newsletter Sign Up Now
Ants Could Help Humans Fight Antibiotic Resistance With Their Bacteria-Killing Exoskeletons

By
Elana Glowatz
@ElanaGlow

02/07/18 AT 5:19 PM


© Copyright IBTimes 2022. All rights reserved.
© Copyright 2022 IBTimes LLC. All Rights Reserved.
An 11-year-old girl in Murcia, Spain, gave birth to a child fathered by her 14-year-old brother Friday, law enforcement officials say. 
The girl was rushed to Murcia, Spain's Virgen de la Arrixaca hospital Friday due to complications from "stomach cramps," with the parents calling the ambulance and telling hospital officials she was suffering from intestinal pain.  But the pregnancy as a result of a sexual relationship between the brother and sister was uncovered when police were informed the teen boy is the likely father, The Local ES in Spain reports .
The 11-year-old sister gave birth to a healthy baby boy, and hospital sources told local news outlets that both she and the newborn are "doing well."
Police are awaiting the results of a DNA test to confirm that the boy was 13 years old when he impregnated his sister. In addition, police are questioning the parents of the girl who denied knowing that she was pregnant and to find any indications that the girl was abused by either her brother or parents. Should the boy be confirmed as 13 he is not likely to face criminal prosecution under Spanish law because he would have been below the age of criminal responsibility at the time of conception. 
Regional health authority chief Manuel Villegas described the Yahoo News UK case between the young siblings as "absolutely exceptional."
“We have to wait now. An investigation is still ongoing and when everything has been clarified, we’ll see what has happened and if we can help in some way," he added. 
In 2013, Spain's age of consent was moved from 13 up to 16 but legal exceptions are made if two people -- including incestuous couples -- are of similar age at the time of sexual contact. 
Ants might be carrying the medicines of the future, according to an analysis of antibiotics the insects are naturally producing.
A study in the journal Royal Society Open Science suggests that many ant species have antimicrobial substances on their exoskeletons, including ants that have not been previously studied for their bacteria-fighting skills. The finding comes from an investigation into the ants’ power , in which scientists measured how much bacteria grew in the presence of the exoskeleton substances, as compared to the bacterial growth in their absence.
The researchers tested the antimicrobial properties of 20 diverse ant species.
They did not see any effect in about 40 percent of the species, the study said, highlighting the need for additional research into which ants are worth pursuing for their medicinal value.
“One species we looked at, the thief ant ( Solenopsis molesta ), had the most powerful antibiotic effect of any species we tested — and until now, no one had even shown that they made use of antimicrobials,” study co-author Adrian Smith said in a statement from North Carolina State University . “Finding a species that carries a powerful antimicrobial agent is good news for those interested in finding new antibiotic agents that can help humans.”











Many ants carry antimicrobial substances on their exoskeletons that can be used to fight human diseases.
Photo: CC0 Creative Commons



According to the study, the test on the thief ant showed that its antimicrobial power prevented any bacteria from growing at all.
The researchers also reported that the discovery of so many ant species whose exoskeleton substances don’t fight off microbes contradicts previous ideas that all ants have some sort of antibiotic agent on their bodies.
“We thought every ant species would produce at least some type of antimicrobial,” lead study author Clint Penick said in the statement. “Instead, it seems like many species have found alternative ways to prevent infection that do not rely on antimicrobial chemicals.”
The team is now looking to better understand what different kinds of bacteria the different ants can fight off and what those alternative antimicrobial defenses may be.
“In light of the rise in antibiotic resistant pathogens that infect an estimated 2 million people in the United States each year, research on pathogen control in social insects could provide future insights for dealing with antibiotic resistance,” the study said.

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