UPDATE ON POLICE-LED JOINT SECURITY PATROL OPERATION THAT LED TO THE NEUTRALISATION OF FOUR SUSPECTED ARMED GANG MEMBERS AND RECOVERY OF GPMG, AK-47 RIFLES, IEDs, AND OTHER EXHIBITS IN ANAMBRA. (PHOTO). #PRESS RELEASE.

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  UPDATE ON POLICE-LED JOINT SECURITY PATROL OPERATION THAT LED TO THE NEUTRALISATION OF FOUR SUSPECTED ARMED GANG MEMBERS AND RECOVERY OF GPMG, AK-47 RIFLES, IEDs, AND OTHER EXHIBITS IN ANAMBRA _*As the Command identifies and debriefs the owner of the recovered vehicle to gather further insights and strengthen operational strategies in the area*_ _*Commends the courage and professionalism of the Joint Security Team and notes that no single security agency can take sole credit for sustaining safety and security in the State*_ The Anambra State Police Command provides further updates on the successful Police-led Joint Security Patrol operation coordinated by the Commander, Forward Operating Base (FOB) Aguata, Chief Superintendent of Police (CSP) Austin Eligwe, which resulted in the neutralisation of four suspected armed secessionist gang members and the recovery of a cache of weapons and ammunition along the Ogboji–Ajalli Road, Orumba South Local Government Area. Following the opera...

AUSTRALIA’S LEADING FERTILITY CLINIC, MONASH IVF, HAS ADMITTED TO A SERIOUS MISTAKE INVOLVING THE ACCIDENTAL TRANSFER OF AN EMBRYO TO THE WRONG MOTHER.(PHOTO).


 Australia’s leading fertility clinic, Monash IVF, has admitted to a serious mistake involving the accidental transfer of an embryo to the wrong mother.

 The error, which the clinic attributed to “human error,” was discovered in February when the birth parents requested that their remaining embryos be transferred to another fertility clinic. During the process, an extra embryo—belonging to a different patient—was found in storage.


Monash IVF immediately launched an internal investigation, which confirmed that an embryo from another patient had mistakenly been thawed and transferred to the birth mother. The clinic said no other similar errors were uncovered. The identity of the patients involved and the custody details of the child have not been disclosed. However, the birth parents were informed about the mistake within a week of the discovery.


“All of us at Monash IVF are devastated and we apologise to everyone involved,” said CEO Michael Knaap in a public statement. He added that the clinic would continue to support the affected families through this extremely distressing situation. The incident has been reported to relevant authorities, including the Reproductive Technology Accreditation Committee and the newly formed Queensland assisted reproductive technology regulator.


This is not the first controversy Monash IVF has faced. In 2023, the clinic agreed to pay A$56 million to 700 former patients as part of a major class action lawsuit. That case revealed that about 35% of embryos had been wrongly labelled as abnormal due to faulty genetic testing, when in fact, they were normal.

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