Ecuador Ecuador

Woman declared ‘dead’ found alive in coffin during her own wake

Reading now: 450
globalnews.ca

Ecuador when a 76-year-old woman was found breathing inside her coffin during her own wake.Bella Montoya, a retired nurse from Babahoyo, Ecuador, was previously declared dead by a doctor on duty at the Martín Icaza Hospital on Friday after she suffered a possible stroke and cardiac arrest, the Associated Press reported.

She was already unconscious when her family brought her to hospital, and she did not respond to resuscitation.On Friday, after 20 of Montoya’s friends and family spent about five hours standing around the coffin at her wake, they began to hear strange noises coming from inside, including knocking.In a since-viral video from the wake, mourners can be seen as they quickly opened the casket and found Montoya struggling to breathe inside.

When paramedics arrived, Montoya — who looked gaunt and pale — was lifted onto a stretcher and immediately rushed to the same hospital that pronounced her dead.The video also shows the hospital identification band around Montoya’s wrist.Montoya’s son, Gilberto Barbera, told the Associated Press the incident gave everyone present “a fright.”“My mom was wrapped in sheets and hitting the coffin, and when we approached we could see that she was breathing heavily,” he said.Barbera told several local media outlets on Monday that his mother was in the intensive care unit.

The Associated Press reported Montoya’s situation is “dire.”Though her current condition is not known, the Ministry of Public Health said Montoya is “unstable,” according to NBC News.Ecuador’s Ministry of Public Health has established a committee and launched an investigation into the incident.Alongside the country’s Health Services Quality Assurance Agency, the investigation will perform a “medical audit” to.

Read more on globalnews.ca
The website covid-19.rehab is an aggregator of news from open sources. The source is indicated at the beginning and at the end of the announcement. You can send a complaint on the news if you find it unreliable.

Related News

Canadian-owned company accused of supplying Syria’s chemical weapons program - globalnews.ca - China - Iran - Canada - Eu - Russia - city Vancouver - Bulgaria - Syria - city Beirut - city Miami - city Damascus
globalnews.ca
91%
279
Canadian-owned company accused of supplying Syria’s chemical weapons program
chemical weapons program.Working from Damascus and Beirut, the company is accused of importing materials used to produce “chemical weapons delivery systems.”According to the allegations, the firm purchases metals and alloys from foreign suppliers for the branch of Syria’s chemical warfare department that manufactures missiles.It also allegedly attempted to procure the aeronautical-grade aluminum and steel that goes into Fateh-110s, Iranian ballistic missiles used by the Syrian regime and that Russia reportedly wants.The allegations have landed the company and its owners, Chadi and Mohammad Houranieh, on European sanctions lists.Their shipments have been seized in three countries, their assets have been frozen, and they are banned from travelling to Europe.The Houraniehs are the only Canadian citizens sanctioned by the European Union, aside from a Hezbollah bomber from Vancouver who blew up a bus in Bulgaria.But in interviews with Global News, Chadi Houranieh called the allegations “absurd.”While he once did business with Syria, he said it was unrelated to weapons.“I have nothing to do with any chemical program.”Houranieh, 44, grew up in Mississauga, in a house near the Sheridan Mall. He went to Toronto Blue Jays games at what was then called SkyDome.“I personally love it,” he said of Canada.He wanted to stay, but after studying at the University of Miami, he returned to Damascus to help with the family business.Founded in 1949, Houranieh & Sons imports sheeting, piping and other metal products it purchases from Canada, Europe and China.
DMCA