A 30 year old mother cut off her son's sex organ in Manengole, Nkongsamba, in Cameroon. The poor innocent 3 year old child named Njankep Alexandre is presently in a protestant hospital in Ndoungue under intensive care while the mother is in jail awaiting trial. She hasn't yet said why she did this to her own child. This is despicable! Unbelievable! See what the woman did to her son after the cut... *warning - it's graphic. Very graphic*
Monday, December 15, 2014
OMG! See what a woman did to her son. she cut off his genitals (Photos)
OMG! See what a woman did to her son. she cut off his genitals (Photos)
A 30 year old mother cut off her son's sex organ in Manengole, Nkongsamba, in Cameroon. The poor innocent 3 year old child named Njankep Alexandre is presently in a protestant hospital in Ndoungue under intensive care while the mother is in jail awaiting trial. She hasn't yet said why she did this to her own child. This is despicable! Unbelievable! See what the woman did to her son after the cut... *warning - it's graphic. Very graphic*
Saturday, December 13, 2014
Wednesday, December 10, 2014
[SHOCKING] Woman keeps husband’s corpse in bedroom for six months, find out why Read more at: [SHOCKING] Woman keeps husband’s corpse in bedroom for six months, find out why | LATEST NIGERIAN NEWS BREAKING HEADLINES NEWSPAPERS
A devoutly religious Hamilton woman who kept her husband’s decomposing corpse in a bedroom for six months because she was convinced he would come back to life has pleaded guilty to failing to notify authorities of his death from an illness he was not getting treatment for. Kaling Wald was originally facing criminal charges of neglect of duty regarding a dead body and offering an indignity to a body, which could have carried a sentence of up to five years in jail. Those charges were withdrawn and replaced by a charge under the Coroner’s Act. She received a suspended sentence and 18 months probation with counselling. A summary read in court for Monday’s plea says Wald told police her husband Peter suffered diabetes but refused to seek treatment when his foot became infected, believing God would cure him. Wald told them he went into a coma sometime in March and died before the end of the month. According to the summary, Wald said she and her five children — who are between 11 and 22-years-old — are devout Christians and “thought Peter would be resurrected and therefore kept the door locked and waited for him to come to life.” She, her children and their seven housemates prayed daily for him to live again. Wald “locked the door to keep the children out, as well as duct taped the door seams and vents throughout the house to keep the smell out,” the Crown’s summary reads. Authorities only learned what had happened in September when they came to evict the couple, who had defaulted on their mortgage, the document says. The sheriff then “discovered a body present on the bed in a state of decomposition and mummification,” it says. “The body was covered with two blankets, had a toque on its head and the feet were observed sticking out from the blankets.” The left foot was also wrapped in gauze, it says. Police interviewed two of the couple’s children and a few roommates and all said they believed Peter Wald would be resurrected.
[PHOTOS] Mum tries to EAT her own baby shortly after giving birth Read more at: [PHOTOS] Mum tries to EAT her own baby shortly after giving birth | LATEST NIGERIAN NEWS BREAKING HEADLINES NEWSPAPERS
Shocked medics have described the moment they found a mum apparently trying to EAT her baby days after he was born. A nurse found the woman, named locally as 24-year-old Li Zhenghua, with her jaws clamped firmly around the infant’s arm. She raised the alarm and tried to pull the baby free, but the mum refused to let go. Doctors were forced to use an implement to prize her off the child before administering a sedative. The shocking cannibalistic attack happened at a hospital in the city of Shenzhen in southern China’s Guangdong Province, where the woman had been discovered heavily pregnant and in labour on the street.
She had been taken into the hospital and had given birth, and then placed in a ward where attempts had been made to contact her family as she was left to nurse the child. However on the woman’s third day in hospital, nurse Liu Tianlun had gone into the bedroom to find the young mother biting her son on the arm.
A hospital spokesman said: “It was really shocking, the arm was badly damaged and suffered not only heavy bruising but bleeding as a result of the bite. “Fortunately, doctors managed to insert something to stop her closing her teeth and then levered her jaws apart. “After that they gave her a sedative and took the baby to a secure location.” Police said the woman had been identified as 24-year-old Li Zhenghua. They said enquiries had found that, despite being pregnant, her mother-in-law had thrown her out on the street after Li started behaving oddly. The family did not alert anybody that Li was pregnant and might be in need of help. She had apparently survived on the streets for at the very least several weeks and possibly longer before she was spotted in labour and the alarm was raised. An investigation is now going on to decide what prompted the woman’s actions and whether the child should be taken into the care of the authorities.
[PHOTO] Policeman Brutally Assaults Husband And Wife In Lagos Read more at: [PHOTO] Policeman Brutally Assaults Husband And Wife In Lagos | LATEST NIGERIAN NEWS BREAKING HEADLINES NEWSPAPERS
A 29-year-old photographer, Ejeh Smith, and his wife, Grace, 26, are in pains and receiving treatment at a Lagos hospital after a police officer, identified as Dada Ogunsanya, allegedly tortured them with his rifle. Ogunsanya is attached to the Ikoyi Police Division. The incident happened at the Lekki Roundabout on Wednesday, last week, while the couple was in a taxi en route to their home at Parkview Estate. PUNCH Metro learnt that the police officer was among a seven-man team, patrolling the area around 10pm. The police team was said to have stopped the taxi driver and demanded that he opened his boot for a routine check. The taxi driver, Ndubuisi Iheaka, told our correspondent that after he opened his boot which contained scaffolding belts, the policeman demanded to see his driving licence. “I was about getting the driving licence when he started flashing his torchlight on my passengers who were sitting at the back. “The wife told the officer not to flash the torch on them since the inner light of the vehicle was on. “Because of what she said, the policeman asked them to come down from the cab. This started an argument. The next thing I saw was that the policeman pulled my passenger (Ejeh) by his trousers, and his wife went to plead with him to stop. “But instead, he slapped her and punched her husband. He was wearing a ring, which inflicted a deep cut on Ejeh’s face. After that, he used the butt of his gun to hit him in his eye and face. He also dragged his wife on the road.” Grace said the policeman, apart from slapping her, stepped on her tummy. “If I was pregnant that night, I would have lost my pregnancy. I was only trying to pet him to leave my husband since he did not have business with us. I told him to face the cab driver and leave us alone. “The other policemen were just looking at him while he dragged me on the ground. A man riding a tricycle at the time was the one who rescued me. He said the policemen must call their Divisional Police Officer or else he would not leave the scene,” she said. The Ikoyi DPO, Mrs. Aisha Haruna, was said to have arrived at the scene. Ejeh claimed he could barely see because blood was dripping from his eyes, while his wife was vomiting blood. He added that the DPO ordered that they be taken to the station to make statements. He said, “But we told her that we needed to first treat ourselves before we could make statements. That was when we were given forms and referred to the Falomo Police Hospital. We paid for the treatment and we also went to the eye clinic for treatment.” His wife claimed that the DPO seized her phone and asked an inspector at the station to delete all the pictures and video recording she did of the incident. “Even my personal data were deleted. And when I asked the DPO why she did that, she said we deserved the treatment we got. She said she would have locked us up in the cell if not for our injuries. She said we did not know how to talk,” she added. The family lawyer of the victims, Mr. Sunday Agbinya, said his office would write a petition to the Inspector General of Police to redress the wrong done to his clients. “This is a case of assault occasioning harm and we intend to challenge it. We will send a petition to the IG. We want the police to conduct a full investigation into this,” he said. The legal officer of a non-governmental organisation, Project Alert on Violence Against Women, Mr. Ben Odeh, said the police officer responsible for the act should be disciplined for torturing the couple. He said, “It is a breach of their constitutional rights. The policeman went too far.” The Police Public Relations Officer, DSP Kenneth Nwosu, confirmed the incident. He said, “Yes, the incident happened in the Ikoyi division. Inquiries are on as well as disciplinary procedures.”
2015 Women’s World Cup: Super Falcons Drawn In ‘Group of Death’ Read more at: 2015 Women’s World Cup: Super Falcons Drawn In ‘Group of Death’ | LATEST NIGERIAN NEWS BREAKING HEADLINES NEWSPAPERS
The draw for the 2015 Women’s World Cup took place in Canada on Saturday and it saw the Super Falcons of Nigeria placed in maybe the toughest group along with Sweden, Australia and the United States. The ceremony which was held at the Canadian Museum of History in Ottawa, saw the seven-time African Women’s Championship winners drawn in the ”Group Of Death”. The other 20 teams in the tournament are drawn into five groups of four teams each. Hosts, Canada were the seeded team in Group A and would play its first two matches in Edmonton. The hosts now know that they will lock horns with China PR in the opening match on 6 June, before taking on New Zealand and the Netherlands. Former champions Germany head into Group B along with Norway, Thailand and Cote D’Ivoire. Reigning champions Japan were placed in Group C and will get their campaign underway in Vancouver, as will section rivals Switzerland, Cameroon and Ecuador. Group E is a tricky one with Brazil, Spain, Korea Republic and Costa Rica all contesting for second round slot. Group F features France, England, Colombia and Mexico.
Monday, December 8, 2014
R.I.P Nasa Valentine - by Nigerians in Malaysia
His name is Nasa Valentine, he is a Nigerian based in Malaysia, he was a strong piller to so many nigerians, he was a talent hunter, he felt sick and went into comma to death few hours ago.
On behalf of myself and fellow Nigerians in Malaysia, we say R.I.P
Nigerian billionaire pledges $100 million to help grow 10,000 African startups
He may have worked with world leaders, but now Nigerian billionaire investor Tony Elumelu is focusing on those yet to turn their business dream into reality. The chairman of pan-African investment company Heirs Holdings Limited has pledged $100 million to find and support 10,000 entrepreneurs throughout Africa.
Launched earlier this week, the Tony Elumelu Foundation Entrepreneurship Program (TEEP) wants to help find and grow businesses who will contribute $10 billion in revenue across Africa over the next 10 years.
"I have always sought ways to help inspire a generation across our continent," said Elumelu. "[It is] my fundamental belief that entrepreneurs -- women and men across Africa -- will lead Africa's development and transform our futures."
Nigerian economist's bold investments How Elumelu's father inspired him Can 'Africapitalism' transform Africa?
Driving entrepreneurship
It is this belief that led Elumelu to coin the term "Africapitalism" -- an economic philosophy "that the African private sector has the power to transform the continent through long-term investments, creating both economic prosperity and social wealth."
Entries are open to entrepreneurs from all 54 African countries and applications will be accepted in English, French and Portuguese. These will be reviewed by a panel of judges, tasked with selecting the 1,000 most promising startups each year. The chosen entrepreneurs will be given seed funding and 12 weeks of business skills training. They will also be put through their paces at an entrepreneurship "boot camp."
Among the judges are Ayodeji Adewunmi, the co-founder of the popular Nigerian job search site Jobberman, Opunimi Akinkugbe, CEO of African board game company Bestman Games, and Monica Musonda, chief executive Zambia-based Java Food.
As well as these business names, the initiative is also collaborating with big hitters from other sectors, like Vera Songwe, the World Bank country director for Senegal, Cape Verde, the Gambia, Guinea-Bissau and Mauritania. "We must strive for entrepreneurial innovation in Africa," says Songwe, "and my participation in this program further promotes the World Bank Group's push for entrepreneur-led global development."
Africa brimming with entrepreneurs
The initiative's goal to nurture 1,000 entrepreneurs every year for a decade may sound ambitious, but research reveals Africa is a hotbed of entrepreneurial spirit. According to research conducted in 2012 by the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor, over 80% of people in Nigeria and Uganda see opportunities for starting businesses.
How Ebola broke Sierra Leone's heart
(CNN) -- "Blood, sweat, and tears" on the football pitch used to mean a very different thing in Sierra Leone.
In a country where Ebola is spreading faster than anywhere else on the planet -- with around 7,000 reported cases so far -- each droplet of bodily fluid evokes suspicion.
Here, even a post-match handshake is an uneasy encounter.
In this fearful new climate, football has been banned. And to sports-obsessed Sierra Leoneans, the embargo is tantamount to forbidding God.
"Football is like a second religion in Sierra Leone," explained the country's Football Association president Isha Johansen.
Isha Johansen, President of the Sierra Leone Football Association.
Isha Johansen, President of the Sierra Leone Football Association.
"Bearing in mind this is a poor country, you would have situations where people would rather go without food, just so they could buy tickets to a big football match."
On Sundays, the long stretch of sand at Lumley Beach, outside the capital of Freetown, would usually be filled with thousands of people playing the national sport.
That was before the outbreak which has had over 1,400 new cases in the last three weeks alone, making Sierra Leone set to eclipse Liberia as the worst-affected country on the globe, according to the World Health Organisation.
Now the national premier league has been suspended. Casual kick-abouts in the community have dried up. Even watching the game in halls and cinemas has come to a standstill.
"This virus is about sweat, blood, and interaction," said 50-year-old Johansen, when I meet her in an inner-city London café, a world away from the devastation back home.
"And that's football. There's a lot of interaction, there's a lot of sweat and blood."
Don't touch
Beyond the deadly virus itself, are the psychological effects on a naturally "touchy, feely people who love to hug and hold hands," said Johansen.
"It's a very strained and difficult place to be in mentally. You have to reprogram yourself. So you find that when people reach out to you, it's kind of like 'argh,' she says, screwing up her elegant face and holding up her hands.
Football is like a second religion in Sierra Leone
Isha Johansen
"I think one of the vital things we've failed to adhere to as a people, is not to touch a sick person," she says of a disease in which 20% of transmissions happen during burials.
"And that is such basic humanity, isn't it? When someone you love is sick, you want to hold that person, you want to carry them," says the mother-of-one.
"But you can't."
Invisible enemy
Just over a decade after the civil war which left more than 50,000 people dead, the country is now facing a new, invisible enemy.
"It's not like the war that we've been through whereby you saw the rebels coming," said Johansen, who as a little girl never owned a doll, instead playing football with her brothers and their friends.
"But with Ebola, you wake up one morning and it's hit a town, it's hit another town. For a long time we didn't know the signs, we didn't know the symptoms to look out for."
Morocco's call
Indeed, what initially appears to be a common cold, can quickly escalate into vomiting, diarrhea, and bleeding -- both internally and externally.
Transmission through bodily fluids makes football a ripe setting for infection, and last month Morocco reneged on hosting the 2015 African Nations Cup due to fears over the spread of the disease.
"Let's just say I wasn't surprised," said Johansen, who is also owner of a premier league club called -- FC Johansen.
"I think if I was in Morocco's position, I would be focusing on saving lives and wanting to contain the Ebola virus," she says with a resigned sigh.
When someone you love is sick, you want to hold that person, you want to carry them
Isha Johansen
Coming from Sierra Leone, Johansen knows full well what it's like having to "beg to play in other countries."
Her country's players have reportedly suffered "humiliating" prejudice at away games, with opponents refusing to their shake hands and crowds chanting "Ebola" at matches.
Women's work
Personally, Johansen also suffered "the most humiliating attacks I have ever endured" -- though rather than Ebola, she says they related to her gender.
As one of only two women to head a national football association in the world, Johansen says she came under fire in a country where "women are still perceived to know their place."
"In Sierra Leone, football is their all. And you don't see women playing it, you don't see women telling them how to do it, and you certainly don't see women organizing it," says the daughter of one of the founding members of the country's East End Lions Football Club, who as a child grew up with footballers constantly walking in and out of her family home.
"Yes, horrible things were said about me that I wouldn't want to repeat. Very, very degrading things and cartoons. Bearing in mind, that I am a mother, and I am somebody's wife, and I am somebody's daughter," she says about slurs during her campaign for the top job in 2012.
Her coping method has been to switch off from local media and social networks.
"I don't see it, I don't read it," she says. "I kind of disconnect from that and just stay focused."
If I was in Morocco's position, I would be focusing on saving lives and wanting to contain the Ebola virus
Isha Johansen
Cleaning up
She believes part of the vitriol has come from her hardline stance on corruption.
"The FA was in total tatters before I came in," she says.
"We had a bad reputation internally and externally. We had no structures. Integrity was at an all time low. There was no discipline."
And in a country where football and gambling go hand-in-hand, Johansen's zero tolerance was a hard pill to swallow.
"If people choose to gamble as a recreational pastime, well that's up to them," she says, hands clasped around a mug of mint tea.
"But you cannot have people in high administrative offices participating in gambling or betting. It's a no-no."
When it comes to corruption allegations at the highest levels of football's international governing body, FIFA, Johansen is less willing to talk tough.
"All these things that are swimming around, these controversies, is something that I really wouldn't like to get involved in," she says.
"It's really unfortunate, and I'm really hoping that FIFA can rise above it much sooner than later," she says of the organization which this year gave Sierra Leone's Football Association $750,000 plus another $50,000 towards social projects used for tackling Ebola.
Does that mean Johansen will be voting for FIFA president Sepp Blatter in next year's election?
"Sepp Blatter has been very supportive of African nations and trying to build up our football development," she says, choosing her words carefully.
The FA was in total tatters before I came in
Isha Johansen
"And in that respect I think, not just myself, but I most African countries will recognize that."
For now, her main focus is on the virus which has so far claimed over 1,400 lives across the country, and silenced its beloved football fields.
"We're just waiting for that day when they tell us -- boom! -- the vaccine is out, go and take your jabs," she says.
"Every morning we wake up waiting to hear that message.
"And it'll come."
Insight: 'Criminal' twist in World Cup scandal
Investigation: Why women weren't good enough for FIFA report
Read: Platini was 'gifted' Picasso
In Ghana, what you do defines you in life... and death
Every week, African Start-Up follows entrepreneurs in various countries across the continent to see how they are working to make their business dreams become reality.
(CNN) -- You can rest when you're dead, as the saying goes. And in Ghana, your eternal slumber is done in style.
Burying your loved ones in intricate, beautifully crafted -- and, at times a little surreal -- caskets is a common tradition in some parts of the the West African nation. Based in Awutu, a small town in Ghana's central region, self-taught carpenter Kudjoe Affutu has made a name for himself with his eye-catching style of coffins.
"I love playing with the wood," he says. "I didn't study it in the school -- I just love carving."
The plucky, young artisan has always had a passion for woodwork and inspired by artists before him such as Kane Kwei and Paa Joe, his startup began to take shape.
Wood lover designs coffins with a twist Bicycles transformed into trendy furniture Bamboo transforms lives in Malawi
"I saw a designed coffin somewhere and I said: 'No, I have to do this' and I forced my parents to push me into it."
By 2007, Affutu had opened the New Generation Woodwork Shop. Seven years on, and the craftsman has found big success thanks to his fantastical funerary boxes.
From chickens to sewing machines
Burial rites in Ghana are incredibly important in honoring ancestry. In a country where the passing of a loved one is often celebrated with a party-like fervor, the elaborate coffin art allows mourning family members and friends to send their dearly departed off to the afterlife in style.
Affutu adds: "It's a special coffin that talks a lot about the deceased. But also for the family who sees it to as a last gift to the deceased."
Often designs for these figurative coffins reflect the deceased's vocation or personality. Perhaps if you worked as a farmer, a chicken casket could be for you. What about a fashion designer? Well, a sewing machine, what else?
Prices for a custom-made coffin from Affutu vary due to design request, size and where the casket needs to be shipped to.
"When it's local, it could be around 1,000 Ghanaian cedi (around $300) and above. Exported ones are $1000 or more."
Eye-catching and strange creations
Over the years, Affutu has heard some weird, wonderful and downright bizarre requests for casket creations. Yet, whatever the request, he doesn't judge a family's choice -- he just sees it as a challenge.
"I just think of it and am done. I always see my orders as normal no matter how weird it is," explains the artisan coffin maker.
I came up with a pregnant woman who is about to deliver and it was a fantastic piece.
Kudjoe Affutu, New Generation Woodwork Shop owner
He adds: "A family came here some two years ago, and they said our late mother used to be a midwife and we want a designed coffin, something that can talk about her work -- and I came up with a pregnant woman who is about to deliver and it was a fantastic piece."
Affutu has also constructed a variety of fisherman-inspired pieces for departed sea workers including canoes, fishing boats, nets and of course, a variety of fish.
Today Affutu employs six full-time staff. But with an increased workforce, other problems arise.
"Like today, for example, we have a lot of work here and I don't have a big shop..."
He adds: "Sometimes the materials we use -- it can be scarce for a while and we don't have enough money to gather or to store materials for many years."
However, Affutu is optimistic about the future, "In the next five years I want to extend my shop and even the workers or apprentices I have, so that when somebody orders something you can deliver days before its time."
Abia Governor, Orji emerges PDP candidate for Abia central senatorial distict.
Abia state Governor, Chief Theodore Orji has emerged the PDP flagbearer for the Abia central senatorial district.
He polled in votes from ALL 220 accredited delegates in the primaries.
The results :
All 36 votes from Umuahia North delegates
All 30 votes from Umuahia South delegates
All 30 votes from Ikwuano LGA delegates
All 30 votes from Isiala North LGA delegates
All 30 votes from Isiala South LGA delegates
All 30 votes from Osisioma Ngwa LGA delegates.
Votes from all the 34 statutory delegates were sprinkled icing on his landslide victory.
It will be recalled that the incumbent Senator representing Abia Central , Chief (Mrs) Nkechi Nwaogu yesterday announced her resolve not to participate in the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) National Assembly primaries.
Meet Actress Ini Edo Lovely Sister
I was amazed at how they look alike but i think her sister is more beautiful..Just few days ago..Actress ini Edo attended her younger sister’s traditional marriage in her hometown. Which She shared some of photos of her parents with the caption: “My two favorite people in the world #mum$dad#”….The actress also shared photos of the bride, her younger sister. I think her sister look more beautiful than her..Check out the photo below before wedding:
Creamy Mashed Potatoes for Babies / How to Make Potato Puree for Babies / Potato for Babies - Baby Food Recipes / 6 Month Baby Foods / Weight Gaining Baby Food Recipes
Creamy Mashed Potatoes for Babies / How to Make Potato Puree for Babies / Potato for Babies - Baby Food Recipes / 6 Month Baby Foods / Weight Gaining Baby Food Recipes
FOR MORE BABY FOOD RECIPES, CHECK THIS LINK
As maha has started her 6 month, I decided to start introducing starchy foods and foods rich in carbohydrates in her diet. During my last visit to pediatrician, i consulted with him. He recommened me to start on foods like potato and rice..These foods helps in healthy weight gaining on babies..I didn't start rice yet, because as per our custom we will take that as a big function and feed the first rice to maha infront of god in a temple.
YOU CAN CHECK OUT MY OTHER PUREE RECIPES TOO
The other food which is rich in carbohydrates are potatoes and sweet potatoes..Potatoes are really good for your babies. They have few vitamins in them but they are mainly rich in carbohydrates and starch. I added some formula milk in this mash to make it more creamy, but you could simply leave it out and add warm water. But never add cow's milk until your baby is 1 year old. This is what my pediatrician told me.
You can even add carrots in this and make it as a double veggie mash. Carrots give a lovely sweetness to the mash and it will be a different food for your baby.
Things to remember:
1)Texture of the puree depends upon you, i would recommend you to make the puree smooth.
2)Your baby wont empty the whole bowl all at once, start with few spoons then increase it gradually as days pass by.
3)In my opinion & experience potatoes wont cause any constipation in babies. But it may cause gas in some babies. Any how i wont feed this puree daily, i give it two times a week.
4) I dont prefer freezing potato purees. I make it fresh everyday. But if you are busy or find difficult to get time, then freeze it in individual containers and thaw it overnight in fridge.
5)When choosing potatoes, get firm, white variety.
6)Potato are less likely to have any allergenic reactions.
Tips from Viewer Comment:
You may add 3-4 jeera while boiling the potatoes...u may either grind it and feed the baby or else take it off before feeding as the essence would be taken in it...this helps the baby from getting any gas problems.
How to introduce solid food to your baby:
Read this
How to sterilize baby feeding bowls:
Start by sterilizing the bowls and spoons which you are going to feed your baby. Take the bowl and spoon in a large saucepan, cover it with water and bring them to a boil. Boil it rapidly for 5 mins. Now you can turn the heat off and leave them stay in the hot water till use.
How to make Potato Puree:
Ingredients:
Potato - 1 medium size (fresh & white variety)
Formula Milk Powder - 1 scoop ( I use lactogen )
Water - 3 to 4 tblspn + for boiling potatoes
Method:
Take a firm, fresh, white potato. Peel it and cube them. Wash it well in cold water.
Add it to a sauce pan, cover it with clean water. Put it on stove and bring it to boil.
Simmer the flame and cook till the potatoes are tender. This will take around 15 mins.
Now drain it and put it in a bowl. Mash it up.
Now to make the puree creamy, make some formula milk. Dissolve some formula milk powder which you are using for your baby in some warm water. Pour this over the mashed potato and mash it more to make it creamy.
Transfer this to a bowl and feed your baby with a spoon.
MAHA TIME :
Totally love her dimple chin |
Love this pics |
so cute.. |
Pictorial:
Lets start to make some potato puree |
Peel a firm, fresh potato |
cube them |
Wash them well |
Add it to a sauce pan |
cover it with water |
Put the pot on stove |
Bring it to boil |
Cover and Simmer |
Cook till the potatoes are done |
Drain it and add it to a bowl |
Mash it up |
Now make some formula milk |
dissolve milk powder with some warm water |
Add the milk to mashed potato |
Mix it up, till it gets creamy |
Now feed your baby.. |
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