Shockwaves are reverberating across Yorùbáland and the global Yorùbá diaspora following the sudden death of the Baba Ọba (King’s Father) of the famed Oyotunji African Village in South Carolina, USA. The late Baba Ọba, Lukman Arohunfale, a revered socialite and traditionalist, passed away under circumstances already sparking fierce controversy. His death comes just days after he publicly accused the newly installed Alaafin of Oyo, His Imperial Majesty Oba Akeem Adéyẹmọ Owoade, of allegedly ordering his courtiers to beat him mercilessly during a recent courtesy visit to the Oyo palace in Nigeria. In a widely circulated voice recording, the deceased recounted how what was meant to be a simple homage turned violent. Although the Baba Ọba had reportedly battled ill health in the past year, growing insinuations suggest that the alleged physical assault may have aggravated his condition, ultimately leading to his untimely death. The palace in Oyo recently denied that s...

The story has been told of a woman whose internal organs were ripped out accidentally by a doctor.
Alisa Tepikina died in 'excruciating pain' when the young female medic tried to remove her placenta that had not been delivered during the birth of her daughter.
Instead, the 22-year-old's uterus was pulled out completely, causing the new mother to go into a coma and 'die of shock' from a cardiac arrest in the Russian town of Nizhneserginskaya.
Ms Tepikina only had time to smile at her newborn daughter before the unnamed obstetrician tried to pull placenta from an inverted uterus.
A six-month probe has led to charges of causing death by negligence against the 27-year-old doctor, who could face jail or compulsory labour if convicted.
A claim by head doctor Elena Barannikova that there were no 'violent actions' by the doctor was rejected by medical experts after an exhaustive analysis, said the Russian Investigative Committee.
Barannikova claimed a 'spontaneous inversion of the uterus' - a rare medical event - had occurred. In Ms Tepikina's case, the placenta should have been detached manually by the doctor under anaesthetic, the investigation found.
'Non-controlled or improper pulling of the umbilical cord led to a full inversion of the uterus', a statement by medical experts said.' The female organs that were pulled out, then pushed back when it was too late.' Ms Tepikina's relatives heard her screams as they waited in the hospital.
Her father Dmitry Malyukov, 47, said: 'My daughter was suffering, she was screaming in pain. But the doctor paid no attention.'
A statement by the medical experts added that the doctor, 'tugged the umbilical cord with real force' and that it was, 'like something from the Middle Ages'.
A doctor faces up to three years in jail over the death of a woman patient soon after giving birth when her internal sexual organs were yanked out by mistake.
Alisa Tepikina died in 'excruciating pain' when the young female medic tried to remove her placenta that had not been delivered during the birth of her daughter.
Instead, the 22-year-old's uterus was pulled out completely, causing the new mother to go into a coma and 'die of shock' from a cardiac arrest in the Russian town of Nizhneserginskaya.
Ms Tepikina only had time to smile at her newborn daughter before the unnamed obstetrician tried to pull placenta from an inverted uterus.
A six-month probe has led to charges of causing death by negligence against the 27-year-old doctor, who could face jail or compulsory labour if convicted.
A claim by head doctor Elena Barannikova that there were no 'violent actions' by the doctor was rejected by medical experts after an exhaustive analysis, said the Russian Investigative Committee.
Barannikova claimed a 'spontaneous inversion of the uterus' - a rare medical event - had occurred. In Ms Tepikina's case, the placenta should have been detached manually by the doctor under anaesthetic, the investigation found.
'Non-controlled or improper pulling of the umbilical cord led to a full inversion of the uterus', a statement by medical experts said.' The female organs that were pulled out, then pushed back when it was too late.' Ms Tepikina's relatives heard her screams as they waited in the hospital.
Her father Dmitry Malyukov, 47, said: 'My daughter was suffering, she was screaming in pain. But the doctor paid no attention.'
A statement by the medical experts added that the doctor, 'tugged the umbilical cord with real force' and that it was, 'like something from the Middle Ages'.
'The doctor on duty did not recognise the life-threatening complication of birth.
'As a result, medical help was provided with an unacceptably huge delay.
'The uterus was re-positioned only four hours 15 minutes later when the massive bleeding and the irreversible shock had already developed, along with heart failure.'
The doctor's mistakes, 'worsened the situation and caused the massive loss of blood, irreversible [and] complicated shock, heart failure and death of the patient', the experts alleged. Svetlana Malyukova, 42, mother of Ms Tepikina, had called for the doctor to be prosecuted.
The 42-year-old said: 'There were no apologies, nor attempts to contact us.
'Soon after the tragedy I went to the clinic. I wanted to look into her [the doctor's] eyes. She asked: ''Why did you come?''
'As a result, medical help was provided with an unacceptably huge delay.
'The uterus was re-positioned only four hours 15 minutes later when the massive bleeding and the irreversible shock had already developed, along with heart failure.'
The doctor's mistakes, 'worsened the situation and caused the massive loss of blood, irreversible [and] complicated shock, heart failure and death of the patient', the experts alleged. Svetlana Malyukova, 42, mother of Ms Tepikina, had called for the doctor to be prosecuted.
The 42-year-old said: 'There were no apologies, nor attempts to contact us.
'Soon after the tragedy I went to the clinic. I wanted to look into her [the doctor's] eyes. She asked: ''Why did you come?''
'I did not notice a single sign of repentance…She killed my child.'
A travel ban has been imposed on the doctor who will face trial over Ms Tepikina's death. She has already faced disciplinary action, say reports. Ms Tepikina's baby, Anya, is now being raised by her mother and her husband Nikolay Tepikin, 22.
A travel ban has been imposed on the doctor who will face trial over Ms Tepikina's death. She has already faced disciplinary action, say reports. Ms Tepikina's baby, Anya, is now being raised by her mother and her husband Nikolay Tepikin, 22.
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