13 of the largest abandoned cities and ghost towns around the world, and the eerie stories behind them

Ashgabat, Turkmenistan
Ashgabat, Turkmenistan

Ghost towns aren’t only found in movies. All across the world, there are mysteriousabandoned cities that stand as ominous time capsules capturing the imaginations and vacation days of thousands of tourists.

If you’ve got a sense of adventure and a camera, you may want to pack your bags and head out to explore some of the most fascinating abandoned cities around the world.

Ordos Kangbashi, China, is the world’s largest ghost town

South China Morning Post/ Getty

Located in Inner Mongolia, Ordos Kangbashi was built to be a modern citywith state-of-the-art architecture, large stadiums, and gorgeous public spaces. The city achieved all that in just under 10 years, but it failed to attract people.

It was built to house 300,000 people, but only 70,000 people moved into the city . Eventually, those people started to trickle out as well. The city stopped building and went bankrupt. Today, it is largely a ghost town, with most of the buildings completely empty.

A journalist in 2009 stumbled upon Ordos Kangbashi and exposed China’s problem with “ghost cities.”

Ashgabat, Turkmenistan, is another large ghost town that’s known for its marble buildings.

Stanislav Krasilnikov/ Getty

Turkmenistan is a former Soviet Union country with a leader that has been compared to North Korea’s Kim Jong-Un. President Saparmurat Niyazov planned to create a “golden era of Turkmenistan” in 1991 with the building of Ashgabat. He did so by erecting buildings that broke records, like becoming the city with the most marble buildings in the world.

In fact, the city which is 4.5 million square meters has 543 buildings made of the luxury material . Ashgabat also has the world’s largest Ferris wheel.

Today, the city is largely a ghost town because of the country’s isolated culture, which Niyazov implemented. Turkmenistan is the seventh least visited country in the world .

Wittenoom, Australia, was overrun by asbestos.

Wikimedia Commons

Founded in 1946, Wittenoom was born as a mining town in Western Australia. The nearby gorge was brimming with blue asbestos, an important raw building material in the early 20th century. By the early 1950s, Wittenoom was the largest town in Pilbara region.

Amid growing health concerns, the declining demand for asbestos led to themine closing in 1966 with most of the residents moving away to find other work, according to ABC. Wittenoom was officially closed in 2007 and the Australian government took steps to limit access to the former mining town and removed it from all official maps

Due to the nature of the mining that took place there, asbestos fibers are still found in the topsoil and air around Wittenoom making it dangerous to spend too much time in the town.

As of 2018, there are only three permanent residents of Wittenoom who defy the Australian government.

Ruby, Arizona, is an abandoned mining town.

Wikimedia Commons

Standing as one of the best-preserved ghost towns in the American Southwest,Ruby, Arizona remains as a reminder of the wild west. With a mine founded in the 1870s that produced gold, silver, lead, zinc, and copper, Ruby officially became a town when it opened its first post office in 1910.

Wild West history buffs aren’t the only people interested in Ruby, true crime aficionados and nature lovers should be fascinated with Ruby as well.

The town and the surrounding area were the sites of three horrific double homicides known as the Ruby Murders. These led to one of the largest manhunts in Southwest history , according to Legends of America.

Of the crime, the judge at the time, Judge W.A. O’Connor reportedly said, “The crimes of which you have been convicted are perhaps the cruelest ever committed in Arizona. Let the punishment that awaits you serve as a warning to others who may contemplate the commission of similar crimes.

The mines are now home to an enormous colony of Mexican free-tail bats . The giant cloud of bats can be seen rushing from the mine entrances at sundown during the summer.

Officially abandoned in 1940 , the remains of Ruby now reside on private land, but it is open to the public for a small fee. It remains one of the best preserved western towns in the US.

Varosha, Cyprus, was once a popular tourist destination.

Wikimedia Commons/Ballantyne108

It isn’t often that a tourist destination frequented by the likes of Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, Raquel Welch, and Brigitte Bardot becomes a ghost town. But that’s exactly what happened to the Varosha section of Famagusta in Cyprus.

Throughout the early 1970s, Varosha was one of the most popular tourist destinations in the world, according to BBC. In 1974, Turkey invaded Cyprus. As the opposing Turkish and Greek armies descended on the area around Varosha, the residents fled for their lives.

According to BBC, Varosha has remained abandoned and under the control of the Turkish Military since 1974. It has been fenced off, and nobody but military and UN personnel are allowed into the once beautiful tourist destination. There have been numerous attempts to broker a deal that will once again open up Varosha, but nothing has been agreed upon.

While visiting Famagusta, you can view the high rises and beaches of Varosha that are slowly being retaken by nature from the far side of the military fence.

Craco, Italy, is the backdrop to many movies.

Flickr/Martin de Lusenet

Located in the arch of Italy’s boot, Craco dates back to well before 1060 . Throughout its thousand-year history, Craco saw many conflicts between monarchs, armies, and political ideologies. In 1963, the last 1,800 residents were forced to leave Craco for their own safety and were relocated to Craco Peschiera, a new town in the valley below, according to Ancient Origins.

Films such as “ Quantum of Solace ” and “The Passion of the Christ ” have used the Italian ghost town to provide a spectacular and authentic setting to their stories.

Despite being abandoned, Craco remains one of Italy’s popular tourist destinations and was added to the World Monuments Fund watch list in 2010.

Residents of Centralia, Pennsylvania, feared carbon monoxide poisoning.

Flickr/Lyndi & Jason

Like something out of a nightmare, the coal fire under the town of Centralia, Pennsylvania has been raging since 1962 and may burn for another 250 years .

An attempt to clean up the local landfill lit the coal seams under the surface of this small Pennsylvania town. In the years the fire has burned, residents have slowly abandoned their homes fearing not only the fire beneath their feet but sudden sinkholes and carbon monoxide poisoning.

Eminent domain was used to take control over most of the homes in Centralia and the dozen or so remaining residents agreed to give their property over to the government when they pass away. The state government condemned Centralia in 1992.

Adventurous tourists still venture to Centralia looking to walk along the cracked, graffitied road that leads into town.

Tianducheng, China, is a replica of Paris.

Reuters/Aly Song

Built as an enormous luxury housing development, Tianducheng emulates the famous French city of lights in everything from the period correct architecture to the300-foot tall miniature Eiffel Tower . It even has a replica fountain from the Luxembourg Gardens.

With the capacity for over 10,000 residents , the city has remained mostly abandoned except for the employees of a nearby French themed amusement park, according to City Lab.

Pripyat, Ukraine, remains the site of the most devastating nuclear power disaster in history.

Tatyana Vyc/Shutterstock

Founded in 1970 as a “nuclear city ,” a city specifically built to house the workers at a nearby nuclear power plant, Pripyat had more than 13,000 apartments , schools for 5,000 children, two dozen stores and cafes, a cinema, sports hall, cultural center, several factories and a hospital when disaster struck at the Chernobyl power plant, according to USA Today.

After the reactor blew on April 26, 1986 , releasing toxic radiation into the surrounding area, the entire city was evacuated.The people from Pripyat were relocated and the city of Slavutych was built as their new home.

Since the radiation levels have decreased considerably in the years since the disaster and the reactor has been capped, people have been allowed back into the”Nuclear Exclusion Zone.”

Hashima Island, Japan, was once a bustling community.

Flickr/ajari

Hashima Island, colloquially known as Gunkanjima (meaning Battleship Island), is an abandoned island located off the coast of Nagasaki, Japan.

Originally developed as a residence for people working in the undersea coal mines in 1887 , Hashima Island quickly expanded into an island of concrete high-rise buildings housing over 5,000 people. In addition to the usual community buildings, this island fortress featured a clubhouse, movie theater, communal bath, swimming pool, rooftop gardens, stores, and even a pachinko parlor.

The mine eventually closed in 1974 when Japan moved away from coal power and with the jobs went the residents. As interest in the island grew because of its interesting history and striking architecture, travel to the island was resumed in 2009. Hashima Island was also featured as a villain’s lair in the James Bond movie “ Skyfall.

Even though only a small portion of the island is open to the public, it remains a unique look at the rapid industrialization of Japan and is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Oradour-sur-Glane, France, has a sinister past.

Wikimedia Commons

Oradour-sur-Glane was a small farming village located in the German-occupied section of France during World War II.

On June 10, 1944, The French village of Oradour-sur-Glane was destroyed by the Nazi’s SS organization . Soldiers killed 642 individuals and left few survivors. Post-war, the village became symbolic of German crimes against civilians and was declared a memorial and museum .

It remains preserved in its ruined state and every year on June 10, a commemoration ceremony is held to mark the anniversary of the massacre.

Bodie, California, has become a ghost town.

Flickr/Nick

In the late 1800s, Bodie was a mining town packed with people trying to get in on the success of the California Gold Rush.

For 17 years, it was a small mining campthat was filled with a variety of people. Rough winters, disease, and mining accidents led to the death of many of Bodie’s inhabitants and Bodie’s high crime levels earned the town a reputation for lawlessness .

By 1882, the population declined as mining companies became bankrupt and people sought out better opportunities. Over the next few decades, Bodie was built up anddestroyed again by multiple fires . But, by 1940, Bodie was a ghost town.

In 1962, the California State Parks system took over Bodie in order to turn it into a State Historic Park.

Kayaky, Turkey, was once thriving.

Flickr/Christine McIntosh

Kayaky, Turkey was formerly a bustling community with around 2,000 Greek residents . In 1923, the Greco-Turkish War forced the individuals out of their homes, and they fled to Greece in a population exchange with Turkey, according to Atlas Obscura.

An estimated 350 homes and two Greek Orthodox churches remain abandoned in Kayaky. They sit empty and damaged from the weather

13 of the largest abandoned cities and ghost towns around the world, and the eerie stories behind them

Ashgabat, Turkmenistan
Ashgabat, Turkmenistan

Ghost towns aren’t only found in movies. All across the world, there are mysteriousabandoned cities that stand as ominous time capsules capturing the imaginations and vacation days of thousands of tourists.

If you’ve got a sense of adventure and a camera, you may want to pack your bags and head out to explore some of the most fascinating abandoned cities around the world.

Ordos Kangbashi, China, is the world’s largest ghost town

South China Morning Post/ Getty

Located in Inner Mongolia, Ordos Kangbashi was built to be a modern citywith state-of-the-art architecture, large stadiums, and gorgeous public spaces. The city achieved all that in just under 10 years, but it failed to attract people.

It was built to house 300,000 people, but only 70,000 people moved into the city . Eventually, those people started to trickle out as well. The city stopped building and went bankrupt. Today, it is largely a ghost town, with most of the buildings completely empty.

A journalist in 2009 stumbled upon Ordos Kangbashi and exposed China’s problem with “ghost cities.”

Ashgabat, Turkmenistan, is another large ghost town that’s known for its marble buildings.

Stanislav Krasilnikov/ Getty

Turkmenistan is a former Soviet Union country with a leader that has been compared to North Korea’s Kim Jong-Un. President Saparmurat Niyazov planned to create a “golden era of Turkmenistan” in 1991 with the building of Ashgabat. He did so by erecting buildings that broke records, like becoming the city with the most marble buildings in the world.

In fact, the city which is 4.5 million square meters has 543 buildings made of the luxury material . Ashgabat also has the world’s largest Ferris wheel.

Today, the city is largely a ghost town because of the country’s isolated culture, which Niyazov implemented. Turkmenistan is the seventh least visited country in the world .

Wittenoom, Australia, was overrun by asbestos.

Wikimedia Commons

Founded in 1946, Wittenoom was born as a mining town in Western Australia. The nearby gorge was brimming with blue asbestos, an important raw building material in the early 20th century. By the early 1950s, Wittenoom was the largest town in Pilbara region.

Amid growing health concerns, the declining demand for asbestos led to themine closing in 1966 with most of the residents moving away to find other work, according to ABC. Wittenoom was officially closed in 2007 and the Australian government took steps to limit access to the former mining town and removed it from all official maps

Due to the nature of the mining that took place there, asbestos fibers are still found in the topsoil and air around Wittenoom making it dangerous to spend too much time in the town.

As of 2018, there are only three permanent residents of Wittenoom who defy the Australian government.

Ruby, Arizona, is an abandoned mining town.

Wikimedia Commons

Standing as one of the best-preserved ghost towns in the American Southwest,Ruby, Arizona remains as a reminder of the wild west. With a mine founded in the 1870s that produced gold, silver, lead, zinc, and copper, Ruby officially became a town when it opened its first post office in 1910.

Wild West history buffs aren’t the only people interested in Ruby, true crime aficionados and nature lovers should be fascinated with Ruby as well.

The town and the surrounding area were the sites of three horrific double homicides known as the Ruby Murders. These led to one of the largest manhunts in Southwest history , according to Legends of America.

Of the crime, the judge at the time, Judge W.A. O’Connor reportedly said, “The crimes of which you have been convicted are perhaps the cruelest ever committed in Arizona. Let the punishment that awaits you serve as a warning to others who may contemplate the commission of similar crimes.

The mines are now home to an enormous colony of Mexican free-tail bats . The giant cloud of bats can be seen rushing from the mine entrances at sundown during the summer.

Officially abandoned in 1940 , the remains of Ruby now reside on private land, but it is open to the public for a small fee. It remains one of the best preserved western towns in the US.

Varosha, Cyprus, was once a popular tourist destination.

Wikimedia Commons/Ballantyne108

It isn’t often that a tourist destination frequented by the likes of Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, Raquel Welch, and Brigitte Bardot becomes a ghost town. But that’s exactly what happened to the Varosha section of Famagusta in Cyprus.

Throughout the early 1970s, Varosha was one of the most popular tourist destinations in the world, according to BBC. In 1974, Turkey invaded Cyprus. As the opposing Turkish and Greek armies descended on the area around Varosha, the residents fled for their lives.

According to BBC, Varosha has remained abandoned and under the control of the Turkish Military since 1974. It has been fenced off, and nobody but military and UN personnel are allowed into the once beautiful tourist destination. There have been numerous attempts to broker a deal that will once again open up Varosha, but nothing has been agreed upon.

While visiting Famagusta, you can view the high rises and beaches of Varosha that are slowly being retaken by nature from the far side of the military fence.

Craco, Italy, is the backdrop to many movies.

Flickr/Martin de Lusenet

Located in the arch of Italy’s boot, Craco dates back to well before 1060 . Throughout its thousand-year history, Craco saw many conflicts between monarchs, armies, and political ideologies. In 1963, the last 1,800 residents were forced to leave Craco for their own safety and were relocated to Craco Peschiera, a new town in the valley below, according to Ancient Origins.

Films such as “ Quantum of Solace ” and “The Passion of the Christ ” have used the Italian ghost town to provide a spectacular and authentic setting to their stories.

Despite being abandoned, Craco remains one of Italy’s popular tourist destinations and was added to the World Monuments Fund watch list in 2010.

Residents of Centralia, Pennsylvania, feared carbon monoxide poisoning.

Flickr/Lyndi & Jason

Like something out of a nightmare, the coal fire under the town of Centralia, Pennsylvania has been raging since 1962 and may burn for another 250 years .

An attempt to clean up the local landfill lit the coal seams under the surface of this small Pennsylvania town. In the years the fire has burned, residents have slowly abandoned their homes fearing not only the fire beneath their feet but sudden sinkholes and carbon monoxide poisoning.

Eminent domain was used to take control over most of the homes in Centralia and the dozen or so remaining residents agreed to give their property over to the government when they pass away. The state government condemned Centralia in 1992.

Adventurous tourists still venture to Centralia looking to walk along the cracked, graffitied road that leads into town.

Tianducheng, China, is a replica of Paris.

Reuters/Aly Song

Built as an enormous luxury housing development, Tianducheng emulates the famous French city of lights in everything from the period correct architecture to the300-foot tall miniature Eiffel Tower . It even has a replica fountain from the Luxembourg Gardens.

With the capacity for over 10,000 residents , the city has remained mostly abandoned except for the employees of a nearby French themed amusement park, according to City Lab.

Pripyat, Ukraine, remains the site of the most devastating nuclear power disaster in history.

Tatyana Vyc/Shutterstock

Founded in 1970 as a “nuclear city ,” a city specifically built to house the workers at a nearby nuclear power plant, Pripyat had more than 13,000 apartments , schools for 5,000 children, two dozen stores and cafes, a cinema, sports hall, cultural center, several factories and a hospital when disaster struck at the Chernobyl power plant, according to USA Today.

After the reactor blew on April 26, 1986 , releasing toxic radiation into the surrounding area, the entire city was evacuated.The people from Pripyat were relocated and the city of Slavutych was built as their new home.

Since the radiation levels have decreased considerably in the years since the disaster and the reactor has been capped, people have been allowed back into the”Nuclear Exclusion Zone.”

Hashima Island, Japan, was once a bustling community.

Flickr/ajari

Hashima Island, colloquially known as Gunkanjima (meaning Battleship Island), is an abandoned island located off the coast of Nagasaki, Japan.

Originally developed as a residence for people working in the undersea coal mines in 1887 , Hashima Island quickly expanded into an island of concrete high-rise buildings housing over 5,000 people. In addition to the usual community buildings, this island fortress featured a clubhouse, movie theater, communal bath, swimming pool, rooftop gardens, stores, and even a pachinko parlor.

The mine eventually closed in 1974 when Japan moved away from coal power and with the jobs went the residents. As interest in the island grew because of its interesting history and striking architecture, travel to the island was resumed in 2009. Hashima Island was also featured as a villain’s lair in the James Bond movie “ Skyfall.

Even though only a small portion of the island is open to the public, it remains a unique look at the rapid industrialization of Japan and is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Oradour-sur-Glane, France, has a sinister past.

Wikimedia Commons

Oradour-sur-Glane was a small farming village located in the German-occupied section of France during World War II.

On June 10, 1944, The French village of Oradour-sur-Glane was destroyed by the Nazi’s SS organization . Soldiers killed 642 individuals and left few survivors. Post-war, the village became symbolic of German crimes against civilians and was declared a memorial and museum .

It remains preserved in its ruined state and every year on June 10, a commemoration ceremony is held to mark the anniversary of the massacre.

Bodie, California, has become a ghost town.

Flickr/Nick

In the late 1800s, Bodie was a mining town packed with people trying to get in on the success of the California Gold Rush.

For 17 years, it was a small mining campthat was filled with a variety of people. Rough winters, disease, and mining accidents led to the death of many of Bodie’s inhabitants and Bodie’s high crime levels earned the town a reputation for lawlessness .

By 1882, the population declined as mining companies became bankrupt and people sought out better opportunities. Over the next few decades, Bodie was built up anddestroyed again by multiple fires . But, by 1940, Bodie was a ghost town.

In 1962, the California State Parks system took over Bodie in order to turn it into a State Historic Park.

Kayaky, Turkey, was once thriving.

Flickr/Christine McIntosh

Kayaky, Turkey was formerly a bustling community with around 2,000 Greek residents . In 1923, the Greco-Turkish War forced the individuals out of their homes, and they fled to Greece in a population exchange with Turkey, according to Atlas Obscura.

An estimated 350 homes and two Greek Orthodox churches remain abandoned in Kayaky. They sit empty and damaged from the weather

FAKE NEWS! Kai Greene is Not Making a Comeback at the 2018 Olympia

Kai Greene competing at the 2018 Olympia?!

With many of the major Olympia qualifying competitions already out of the way, many have now set their sights and attention on the 2018 Olympia. With major turn of events now changing proceedings, mainly the introduction of a People’s Olympia Champion, speculation as to who may be competing has been spreading like wild fire.

Many fans have been calling for Kai Greene to make a return to action as they seem to think that he would at least be able to secure a People’s Olympia Champion victory. In fact, some sources are going so far as the confirm that Kai Greene will be making a return to action at the 2018 Olympia.

While an Olympia return would be a pleasant surprise at this year’s show, we can confirm that Kai Greene won’t be competing at this year’s show. Does that mean we shouldn’t be expecting Kai to make a return to action period? For now only time will tell, but as always “The Predator” remains in some pretty serious condition and looks like he could step on stage at any time.

FG: To Further Indebt Nigeria As It Discuss $1bn Power Sector Loan With World Bank

FG To Further Indebt Nigeria As It Discuss $1bn Power Sector Loan With World Bank

Global News NG

The Federal Government and the World Bank Power Sector team yesterday met on the possibility of Nigeria accessing a $1 billion Performance Based Loan (PBL) from multilateral institutions.

Finance Minister Mrs. Zainab Ahmed dropped the hint at a joint news conference with Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor Godwin Emefiele at the end of the 2019 World Bank/International Monetary Fund (IMF) Spring Meetings in the United States.

The minister cleared the air on fuel subsidy, saying removing it is not on the cards. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has been advocating the removal of fuel subsidy to free more money for infrastructural development. The Federal Government believes doing so will increase the burden of the poor.

Mrs. Ahmed said: “We met with the World Bank Power Sector team and discussed the way forward on the proposed $1 billion PBL. We agreed to bring relevant MDAs together to ensure that we advance this operation in a timely manner. We will also discuss the Country Portfolio Performance of Nigeria, which currently stands at $9.8 billion, with the Nigerian Country team at the World Bank and how we could manage the portfolio for optimum results.”

She spoke of plans by the Debt Management Office (DMO) to issue N15 billion Green Bond to fund agriculture, power, health and water amenities to make life better for the people, saying the Green Bond will be the second one and would be used to finance agriculture, power sector – mostly solar projects – as well as some projects in the water sector.

She pointed out that the projects for which the funds will be applied “must be green. They must be projects that are not contributing to carbon dioxide emissions to the society. The first green bond issuance was successful and all the projects that were scheduled to have been financed have been done and the projects are at various levels of completion.”

On fuel subsidy, Mrs Ahmed said there was no plan by the government to remove fossil fuel subsidies. “We are here to discuss with the global community on various policy issues. One of the issues that always come up, especially in the IMF Article IV is how we handle fuel subsidy.

“So, in principle, the IMF would say fuel subsidies are better removed so that you can use the resources for other important sectors, which is good advice, but in Nigeria, we do not have any plans to remove fuel subsidies at this time because we have not yet designed buffers that will enable us remove the subsidy and provide cushions for our people.

READ ALSO: REVEALED: How FG Borrowed N6.1trn From N8.49 Pension Assets

“So, there is no plan to remove fuel subsidy. We will be working with various groups to find out the best approach, if we have to. We discussed this very frequently at the Economic Management Team but what is the alternative? We haven’t yet found viable alternatives. So, we are not yet at the point of removing fuel subsidies.”

By Moakinley
REPORT

4 Impressive Things Nobody Has Told You About Chief Odumegu Ojukwu

4 Impressive Things Nobody Has Told You About Chief Odumegwu Ojukwu

Global News NG

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Chief Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu was a Nigerian military leader, politician, and first military governor of the Igbo Eastern region.

He was most known for his role in the Nigeria civil war which broke on May 30, 1967.

Ojukwu was seen as a hero and villain depending on how he is looked at based on the frame of reference.

Scooper has put together what seems like an exclusive list of things you might not know about Chief Odumegwu Ojukwu.

He Was Multilingual

Did you know that Ojukwu was multilingual, I guess not. Ojukwu was born in Zungeru in Kaduna state to Igbo parents. He later moved to Lagos where he learned Yoruba and since he was a graduate in a university in England he learned English and French. Therefore Ojukwu was fluent in five languages, Hausa, Igbo, Yoruba, French, and English.

He Was Humble

Ojukwu was an heir to businesses and fortune. His father’s plan for him was to become the head of the family businesses when he came back from England in 1955. When Ojukwu came back, he joined the civil service, which his father wasn’t pleased about. To further disobey his father, he joined the army and started from the grassroots level to the top.

One Nigeria

Many think that Ojukwu was dead set on dividing the country. It would shock you to know that the opposite is the case. Ojukwu was a strong believer in the unification of Nigeria. He once said “When we were British subjects, we saw ourselves as one but as soon as Britain granted us independence and left, everything unraveled fast, everybody suddenly remembered that they were Hausa, Yoruba, Igbo, etc. We could never see ourselves as Nigerians and it became increasingly clear to the discerning mind the one Nigeria was a mirage”.

Escaping After War

Contrary to popular believe, Ojukwu didn’t escape the war dressed like a woman nor desert his people. Actually, after the fall of Owerri, he was advised to leave. He had a meeting where it was discussed that all the heads and their families leave Biafra. On that day, he passed authority over to his second in command General Effiong, who waved the white flag two days later after the defeat of Biafra.

As a bonus point, Ojukwu once said that there are three things a soldier never loses are his sense of purpose, his weapons, and his boot. Because of this he always slept with his boots so that he can always be at alert in times of war.

Odemegwu Ojukwu, the man behind the story of Biafra, he was brilliant, respected. He may be gone but he shall never be forgotten.

If there are any facts we missed out, let us know in the comment section and Share this article.

By Maokinley
REPORT

UPDATE: Sudanese Military Arrest President Al-Bashir

UPDATE: Sudanese Military Arrest President Al-Bashir

Global News

Emerging reports indicate that President Omar Al-Bashir of Sudan has been arrested by the country’s militrary after a coup Thursday morning.

The Sudanese Defence Minister, Awad Ibn Ouf said on the state TV that the army had decided to oversee a two-year transitional period followed by elections, BBC reports.

According to him, a three-month state of emergency was being put in place.

Protests against Mr Bashir who had been in power for 30 years since he took over in 1989, have been under way for several months.

Mr Ibn Ouf said the “regime” was being removed and Mr Bashir would be kept in a safe place.

He said Sudan’s constitution was being suspended, border crossings were being closed until further notice and airspace was being closed for 24 hours.

Mr Bashir is the subject of an international arrest warrant issued by the International Criminal Court (ICC), which accuses him of organising war crimes and crimes against humanity in Sudan’s western Darfur region.

However it is unclear what will happen to him following his arrest.

What happened?

In the early hours of Thursday, military vehicles were seen entering the large compound in Khartoum that houses the defence ministry, the army headquarters and Mr Bashir’s personal residence, AFP news agency reported.

State TV and radio later interrupted their programming with a message that the army would be making a statement.

Meanwhile, tens of thousands of demonstrators marched through central Khartoum, some chanting “It has fallen, we won”, Reuters reported.

What’s behind the protests?

They were originally sparked by a rise in the cost of living, but demonstrators then began calling for the president to resign and his government to go.

Media captionA woman dubbed ‘Kandaka’, which means Nubian queen, has become a symbol for protesters

Omar el-Digeir, a senior protest member, told AFP news agency last week that the group were seeking a path “that represents the wish of the revolution”.

Police had ordered officers not to intervene against the protests but the government was criticised by rights groups for a heavy-handed response to the unrest.

Government officials say 38 people have died since the unrest began in December, but the pressure group Human Rights Watch said the number was higher.

In February, it looked as though the president might step down at that point, but instead Mr Bashir declared a state of national emergency.

By Maokinley
REPORT

Millionaire, 26, looking for a ‘personal assistant’ to travel the world with him for FREE on a $52k salary reveals he’s had 40,000 applications – and most are from young women in Australia

An Australian millionaire who is searching for a ‘personal assistant’ to travel the world with him as he grows his online businesses has received a staggering 40,000 job applications.

Matthew Lepre, who makes $120,000 a month from four successful e-commerce stores, wants to hire someone to oversee his companies while enjoying luxurious travel arrangements for $52,000 (base rate) a year.

And there have been no shortage of applications from men and women hoping to be chosen for what the 26-year-old from Sydney has dubbed ‘the coolest job in the world’.

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Matthew Lepre (pictured), who makes $120,000 a month from four successful e-commerce stores, wants to hire someone to oversee his companies
Matthew Lepre (pictured), who makes $120,000 a month from four successful e-commerce stores, wants to hire someone to oversee his companies
And there have been no shortage of young Australian women wanting to be chosen for what the 26-year-old from Sydney has dubbed 'the coolest job in the world'
And there have been no shortage of young Australian women wanting to be chosen for what the 26-year-old from Sydney has dubbed ‘the coolest job in the world’

‘I have received over 40,000 applications from people all around the world. I have definitely received far more applications from women (75 per cent) than men (25 per cent) and even a few marriage proposals too,’ he told FEMAIL from his private villa in Koh Samui, Thailand.

From what he can tell many of the job hunters are millennials (aged between 23 and 37), with the majority being women from Australia, followed by the United States, UK, Italy, South America and Asia.

‘A lot of people who are applying say in their application that they are working the 9-5 rat race and want to escape corporate life and are ready to bring the skills they have learnt to this role, while travelling the world with me,’ he said.

From what he can tell many of the job hunters are millennials (aged between 23 and 37), with the majority being women from Australia
From what he can tell many of the job hunters are millennials (aged between 23 and 37), with the majority being women from Australia

What will set the lucky winner apart from the rest?

* A down to earth person that wants the job to learn and not so much for the lifestyle.

* This isn’t a 9-5 job. I am not looking for someone who wants regular office hours. The role involves a lot of travelling and therefore normal office hours don’t really apply. However, there are the perks of days off in amazing countries.

* Great at thinking on their feet while on the go. Often days when we are travelling require lots of tasks to be done at once – from confirming travel arrangements to finalising coaching meetings that I have with my clients via Skype – life on the road never stops.

Since the start of April Mr Lepre has been living a dreamy existence in a three-story beach villa in Thailand.

He starts each day with a meditation watching the sun rise, then reads through his vision journal that outlines photos of his dreams and aspirations – with living in Koh Samui for a month being one of the goals he set for himself two years ago.

Then it’s time for a gym workout, beach swim and breakfast at a nearby wholefoods cafe.

But it’s not all infinity pools and personalised cocktails in Thailand, with Mr Lepre spending a few hours each day, thanks to Skype, showing clients how they can achieve the same level of freedom with their e-commerce stores.

The end of the day will follow with a massage and then dinner and bedtime, ready to repeat again the next day.

But it's not all infinity pools and personalised cocktails in Thailand, with Mr Lepre spending a few hours each day, thanks to Skype, showing clients how they can achieve the same level of freedom with their e-commerce stores
But it’s not all infinity pools and personalised cocktails in Thailand, with Mr Lepre spending a few hours each day, thanks to Skype, showing clients how they can achieve the same level of freedom with their e-commerce stores
Mr Lepre has been sharing Vlogs on his YouTube channel that show his prospective work colleague what their life might be like in his company
Mr Lepre has been sharing Vlogs on his YouTube channel that show his prospective work colleague what their life might be like in his company

Mr Lepre has been sharing Vlogs on his YouTube channel that show his prospective work colleague what their life might be like in his company.

But the self-made man will never forget where he came from, explaining that being raised by a single mother in Sydney’s Western suburbs meant he grew up relying on meal drops from The Salvation Army in his youth.

‘Life is always about giving back to those less fortunate than you and I am always thankful to those who supported my mum and I during the dark days when times were tough financially,’ he said.

Previously, Mr Lepre explained how the $52,000 salary his personal assistant would receive was just the beginning.

His lifestyle allows him to travel the world and he's now advertising for what might arguably be the coolest job in the world
His lifestyle allows him to travel the world and he’s now advertising for what might arguably be the coolest job in the world
Mr Lepre is an e-commerce mastermind - who makes a cool $120,000 a month - and he says business couldn't be better
Mr Lepre is an e-commerce mastermind – who makes a cool $120,000 a month – and he says business couldn’t be better

‘Salary will be based on the person’s experience but the base rate is in addition to travel and accommodation expenses. Health insurance benefits are paid for by me separately,’ he said.

He said his new employee could expect to travel to a different country every few months so they’d need a valid passport for the next year.

The opportunity would allow the lucky applicant to experience the cultures of all these places as well as help him spread the word on how it’s possible to live your dream life.

‘Travelling while I work has allowed me to live my ideal life, and I want to give someone the opportunity to do the same alongside me,’ Mr Lepre said.

One of the benefits of running a internet-based business is your office can literally be anywhere in the world
One of the benefits of running a internet-based business is your office can literally be anywhere in the world

He said the sort of person that would be perfect for the job needs to not only love travelling but be able to carry out a host of other duties.

‘They should be computer savvy, have proven social media capabilities, organised, willing to learn and ambitious.’

He added the sort of person he really needs by his side should be someone who is willing to step outside their comfort zone.

The businessman is proof that taking risks can pay off; at 23 he dropped out of uni because he wanted to make it on his own.

In the past year, Matthew Lepre has spent his time exploring Japan, Dubai, Hawaii
In the past year, Matthew Lepre has spent his time exploring Japan, Dubai, Hawaii

His success was built on his determination to learn as much as he could from the best professionals.

Mr Lepre lives the life many dream about but recognises that life at the top is busy – which is why having the right person at his side is a must.

‘I’m looking for someone to join in all of my adventures. I love what I do, and I love exploring new places,’ he said.

‘But life is now definitely getting busy and I’m looking for a reliable person to assist me with my day to day business activities, while we are on the go.’

While it might sound like a job that doesn’t require all that much effort, it’s worth bearing in mind Mr Lepre is at the top of his game because of his incredible work ethic.

‘I do a lot of work every day, but I operate on a philosophy of work hard, play harder,’ he said.

‘They would have to be someone who works hard but is also fun and spontaneous.’

The entrepreneur says potential applicants should subscribe to his YouTube channel in order to get a handle on what he does and what they'd need to do
The entrepreneur says potential applicants should subscribe to his YouTube channel in order to get a handle on what he does and what they’d need to do

Those wanting to make sure they’ve got what it takes will need to subscribe to Mr Lepre’s YouTube channel.

He said doing this will give a prospective applicant a good understanding of what he does and they can see if their temperament and skills might be a match.

‘Applicants need to have a good understanding on what I do which they can see through my YouTube channel.’

To apply for this position, please visitecomwarrior.com. You can also follow Mr Lepre’s travels

13 of the largest abandoned cities and ghost towns around the world, and the eerie stories behind them

Ashgabat, Turkmenistan
Ashgabat, Turkmenistan

Ghost towns aren’t only found in movies. All across the world, there are mysteriousabandoned cities that stand as ominous time capsules capturing the imaginations and vacation days of thousands of tourists.

If you’ve got a sense of adventure and a camera, you may want to pack your bags and head out to explore some of the most fascinating abandoned cities around the world.

Ordos Kangbashi, China, is the world’s largest ghost town

South China Morning Post/ Getty

Located in Inner Mongolia, Ordos Kangbashi was built to be a modern citywith state-of-the-art architecture, large stadiums, and gorgeous public spaces. The city achieved all that in just under 10 years, but it failed to attract people.

It was built to house 300,000 people, but only 70,000 people moved into the city . Eventually, those people started to trickle out as well. The city stopped building and went bankrupt. Today, it is largely a ghost town, with most of the buildings completely empty.

A journalist in 2009 stumbled upon Ordos Kangbashi and exposed China’s problem with “ghost cities.”

Ashgabat, Turkmenistan, is another large ghost town that’s known for its marble buildings.

Stanislav Krasilnikov/ Getty

Turkmenistan is a former Soviet Union country with a leader that has been compared to North Korea’s Kim Jong-Un. President Saparmurat Niyazov planned to create a “golden era of Turkmenistan” in 1991 with the building of Ashgabat. He did so by erecting buildings that broke records, like becoming the city with the most marble buildings in the world.

In fact, the city which is 4.5 million square meters has 543 buildings made of the luxury material . Ashgabat also has the world’s largest Ferris wheel.

Today, the city is largely a ghost town because of the country’s isolated culture, which Niyazov implemented. Turkmenistan is the seventh least visited country in the world .

Wittenoom, Australia, was overrun by asbestos.

Wikimedia Commons

Founded in 1946, Wittenoom was born as a mining town in Western Australia. The nearby gorge was brimming with blue asbestos, an important raw building material in the early 20th century. By the early 1950s, Wittenoom was the largest town in Pilbara region.

Amid growing health concerns, the declining demand for asbestos led to themine closing in 1966 with most of the residents moving away to find other work, according to ABC. Wittenoom was officially closed in 2007 and the Australian government took steps to limit access to the former mining town and removed it from all official maps

Due to the nature of the mining that took place there, asbestos fibers are still found in the topsoil and air around Wittenoom making it dangerous to spend too much time in the town.

As of 2018, there are only three permanent residents of Wittenoom who defy the Australian government.

Ruby, Arizona, is an abandoned mining town.

Wikimedia Commons

Standing as one of the best-preserved ghost towns in the American Southwest,Ruby, Arizona remains as a reminder of the wild west. With a mine founded in the 1870s that produced gold, silver, lead, zinc, and copper, Ruby officially became a town when it opened its first post office in 1910.

Wild West history buffs aren’t the only people interested in Ruby, true crime aficionados and nature lovers should be fascinated with Ruby as well.

The town and the surrounding area were the sites of three horrific double homicides known as the Ruby Murders. These led to one of the largest manhunts in Southwest history , according to Legends of America.

Of the crime, the judge at the time, Judge W.A. O’Connor reportedly said, “The crimes of which you have been convicted are perhaps the cruelest ever committed in Arizona. Let the punishment that awaits you serve as a warning to others who may contemplate the commission of similar crimes.

The mines are now home to an enormous colony of Mexican free-tail bats . The giant cloud of bats can be seen rushing from the mine entrances at sundown during the summer.

Officially abandoned in 1940 , the remains of Ruby now reside on private land, but it is open to the public for a small fee. It remains one of the best preserved western towns in the US.

Varosha, Cyprus, was once a popular tourist destination.

Wikimedia Commons/Ballantyne108

It isn’t often that a tourist destination frequented by the likes of Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, Raquel Welch, and Brigitte Bardot becomes a ghost town. But that’s exactly what happened to the Varosha section of Famagusta in Cyprus.

Throughout the early 1970s, Varosha was one of the most popular tourist destinations in the world, according to BBC. In 1974, Turkey invaded Cyprus. As the opposing Turkish and Greek armies descended on the area around Varosha, the residents fled for their lives.

According to BBC, Varosha has remained abandoned and under the control of the Turkish Military since 1974. It has been fenced off, and nobody but military and UN personnel are allowed into the once beautiful tourist destination. There have been numerous attempts to broker a deal that will once again open up Varosha, but nothing has been agreed upon.

While visiting Famagusta, you can view the high rises and beaches of Varosha that are slowly being retaken by nature from the far side of the military fence.

Craco, Italy, is the backdrop to many movies.

Flickr/Martin de Lusenet

Located in the arch of Italy’s boot, Craco dates back to well before 1060 . Throughout its thousand-year history, Craco saw many conflicts between monarchs, armies, and political ideologies. In 1963, the last 1,800 residents were forced to leave Craco for their own safety and were relocated to Craco Peschiera, a new town in the valley below, according to Ancient Origins.

Films such as “ Quantum of Solace ” and “The Passion of the Christ ” have used the Italian ghost town to provide a spectacular and authentic setting to their stories.

Despite being abandoned, Craco remains one of Italy’s popular tourist destinations and was added to the World Monuments Fund watch list in 2010.

Residents of Centralia, Pennsylvania, feared carbon monoxide poisoning.

Flickr/Lyndi & Jason

Like something out of a nightmare, the coal fire under the town of Centralia, Pennsylvania has been raging since 1962 and may burn for another 250 years .

An attempt to clean up the local landfill lit the coal seams under the surface of this small Pennsylvania town. In the years the fire has burned, residents have slowly abandoned their homes fearing not only the fire beneath their feet but sudden sinkholes and carbon monoxide poisoning.

Eminent domain was used to take control over most of the homes in Centralia and the dozen or so remaining residents agreed to give their property over to the government when they pass away. The state government condemned Centralia in 1992.

Adventurous tourists still venture to Centralia looking to walk along the cracked, graffitied road that leads into town.

Tianducheng, China, is a replica of Paris.

Reuters/Aly Song

Built as an enormous luxury housing development, Tianducheng emulates the famous French city of lights in everything from the period correct architecture to the300-foot tall miniature Eiffel Tower . It even has a replica fountain from the Luxembourg Gardens.

With the capacity for over 10,000 residents , the city has remained mostly abandoned except for the employees of a nearby French themed amusement park, according to City Lab.

Pripyat, Ukraine, remains the site of the most devastating nuclear power disaster in history.

Tatyana Vyc/Shutterstock

Founded in 1970 as a “nuclear city ,” a city specifically built to house the workers at a nearby nuclear power plant, Pripyat had more than 13,000 apartments , schools for 5,000 children, two dozen stores and cafes, a cinema, sports hall, cultural center, several factories and a hospital when disaster struck at the Chernobyl power plant, according to USA Today.

After the reactor blew on April 26, 1986 , releasing toxic radiation into the surrounding area, the entire city was evacuated.The people from Pripyat were relocated and the city of Slavutych was built as their new home.

Since the radiation levels have decreased considerably in the years since the disaster and the reactor has been capped, people have been allowed back into the”Nuclear Exclusion Zone.”

Hashima Island, Japan, was once a bustling community.

Flickr/ajari

Hashima Island, colloquially known as Gunkanjima (meaning Battleship Island), is an abandoned island located off the coast of Nagasaki, Japan.

Originally developed as a residence for people working in the undersea coal mines in 1887 , Hashima Island quickly expanded into an island of concrete high-rise buildings housing over 5,000 people. In addition to the usual community buildings, this island fortress featured a clubhouse, movie theater, communal bath, swimming pool, rooftop gardens, stores, and even a pachinko parlor.

The mine eventually closed in 1974 when Japan moved away from coal power and with the jobs went the residents. As interest in the island grew because of its interesting history and striking architecture, travel to the island was resumed in 2009. Hashima Island was also featured as a villain’s lair in the James Bond movie “ Skyfall.

Even though only a small portion of the island is open to the public, it remains a unique look at the rapid industrialization of Japan and is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Oradour-sur-Glane, France, has a sinister past.

Wikimedia Commons

Oradour-sur-Glane was a small farming village located in the German-occupied section of France during World War II.

On June 10, 1944, The French village of Oradour-sur-Glane was destroyed by the Nazi’s SS organization . Soldiers killed 642 individuals and left few survivors. Post-war, the village became symbolic of German crimes against civilians and was declared a memorial and museum .

It remains preserved in its ruined state and every year on June 10, a commemoration ceremony is held to mark the anniversary of the massacre.

Bodie, California, has become a ghost town.

Flickr/Nick

In the late 1800s, Bodie was a mining town packed with people trying to get in on the success of the California Gold Rush.

For 17 years, it was a small mining campthat was filled with a variety of people. Rough winters, disease, and mining accidents led to the death of many of Bodie’s inhabitants and Bodie’s high crime levels earned the town a reputation for lawlessness .

By 1882, the population declined as mining companies became bankrupt and people sought out better opportunities. Over the next few decades, Bodie was built up anddestroyed again by multiple fires . But, by 1940, Bodie was a ghost town.

In 1962, the California State Parks system took over Bodie in order to turn it into a State Historic Park.

Kayaky, Turkey, was once thriving.

Flickr/Christine McIntosh

Kayaky, Turkey was formerly a bustling community with around 2,000 Greek residents . In 1923, the Greco-Turkish War forced the individuals out of their homes, and they fled to Greece in a population exchange with Turkey, according to Atlas Obscura.

An estimated 350 homes and two Greek Orthodox churches remain abandoned in Kayaky. They sit empty and damaged from the weather.

Summer House Designed With A Pool On Its Roof Can Be As Open Or As Closed As The Homeowner Desires

Many of us dream about a summer house by the sea; a place where we can while away the long, sun-kissed days in comfort while reestablishing a much-needed connection with nature. Anti Reality, an imaginative page which blurs the lines between art and architecture, has visualized a perfect concept of just such a place.

The standout feature of the aptly named ‘Summer House’ is the roof. Inverted into a concave form, it creates a basin that is just perfect for a pool, so you can relax with a glass of something and watch the sunset over the sea.

The pool is accessed by a ladder on the exterior of the house, which is designed to be perched on the edge of a cliff.

“My goal was to create a reverse version of a roof that can be adapted as a swimming pool,” Anti Reality explained. “The roof structure is supported by 3 cores, two of them are kitchen and bathroom, and this is where I was planning to adapt drainage pipes. It’s very idealistic but this is a logic behind the concept.”

The panoramic windows wrap around the cores, creating a light and bright interior that lets the outside world in. This was one of the most important points behind the concept. The ‘cores’ can be opened or closed depending on the level of privacy the occupants desire at any particular time.

“One of the key design intents was to create a building that would be completely open to the surroundings, providing the possibility to observe and engage in direct contact with nature,” Anti Reality explained.
“The Summer House has been designed with seasonal recreation and weekends outside the city in mind.”

Anti Reality has several futuristic and imaginative designs, visualizing a world of limitless opportunities for architecture. We can only hope that some ambitious engineers begin to take note!

Summer House Designed With A Pool On Its Roof Can Be As Open Or As Closed As The Homeowner Desires

Many of us dream about a summer house by the sea; a place where we can while away the long, sun-kissed days in comfort while reestablishing a much-needed connection with nature. Anti Reality, an imaginative page which blurs the lines between art and architecture, has visualized a perfect concept of just such a place.

The standout feature of the aptly named ‘Summer House’ is the roof. Inverted into a concave form, it creates a basin that is just perfect for a pool, so you can relax with a glass of something and watch the sunset over the sea.

The pool is accessed by a ladder on the exterior of the house, which is designed to be perched on the edge of a cliff.

“My goal was to create a reverse version of a roof that can be adapted as a swimming pool,” Anti Reality explained. “The roof structure is supported by 3 cores, two of them are kitchen and bathroom, and this is where I was planning to adapt drainage pipes. It’s very idealistic but this is a logic behind the concept.”

The panoramic windows wrap around the cores, creating a light and bright interior that lets the outside world in. This was one of the most important points behind the concept. The ‘cores’ can be opened or closed depending on the level of privacy the occupants desire at any particular time.

“One of the key design intents was to create a building that would be completely open to the surroundings, providing the possibility to observe and engage in direct contact with nature,” Anti Reality explained.
“The Summer House has been designed with seasonal recreation and weekends outside the city in mind.”

Anti Reality has several futuristic and imaginative designs, visualizing a world of limitless opportunities for architecture. We can only hope that some ambitious engineers begin to take note!

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