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Film 3 Days to Kill Tayang di Bioskop Trans TV Besok Malam Pukul 21.00 WIB, Berikut Sinopsisnya


akan tayang dalam bioskop Trans TV malam ini. Film ini disutradarai McG ini tayang di Trans TV, Rabu (27/11/2019) pukul 21.00 WIB.McG sendiri adalah seorang sutradara kelahiran Amerika Serikat (AS) yang dikenal lewat film-film seperti Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle (2003), Terminator Salvation (2009), dan We Are Marshall (2006).Film ini mendapat rating IMDb 6,2 dari 10. Dalam review yang ditulis Geoff Berkshire di Variety , disebutkan Luc Besson, produser film dan penulis naskah, merekrut McG dan Kevin Costner untuk "kisah fatal mata-mata Amerika Serikat (AS) di Paris".Menurut Berkshire, film ini kurang mampu menyeimbangkan cerita antara pekerjaan dan kehidupan keluarga seorang agen mata-mata. Tujuan film ini secara lebih luas sebenarnya untuk menyalakan kembali karier Costner. Namun, rasanya Besson kurang berhasil sebab ia membuat adegan perkelahian yang terlalu mudah dan drama keluarga yang "salah kaprah".Film ini mengisahkan seorang agen CIA bernama Ethan Renner (Kevin Costner) yang mengetahui dirinya sedang sekarat karena kanker.Dalam kondisi tersebut, ia memutuskan untuk pergi ke Paris, tempat mantan istri dan anaknya yang telah lama diasingkan. Ia ingin berkumpul kembali dengan mereka.


Three Days to Kill (2014)

TRIBUNNEWS.COM - Film aksi Three Days to Kill akan tayang di Bioskop TransTV, Rabu (27/11/2019) pukul 21.00 WIB.

Arahan sutradara McG ini bercerita tentang penangkapan teroris yang dilakukan oleh seorang agen Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).

Film Three Days to Kill diperankan oleh Kevin Costner, Amber Heard, Hailee Steinfeld, Connie Nielsen, dan masih banyak lainnya.

Berdurasi 117 menit, naskah film Three Days to Kill ditulis oleh Luc Besson bersama Adi Hasak.

Produksi Relativity Media ini mendapatkan skor di IMDb sebanyak 6,2 dari 10.

Sementara di Rotten Tomatoes, film Three Days to Kill mendapatkan nilai sebanyak 27 persen.

Baca: FILM - Need for Speed (2014)

Baca: FILM – Begin Again (2014)

Poster film Three Days to Kill (2014) (imdb.com)

Pembuatan film Three Days to Kill diperkirakan menghabiskan dana mencapai 28 juta dolar AS.

Film Three Days to Kill tayang perdana di Amerika pada 21 Februari 2014 silam.

Sinopsis

Film Three Days to Kill bercerita tentang seorang agen CIA bernama Ethan Renner (Kevin Costner) yang ditugaskan untuk menangkap teroris.

BACA SELENGKAPNYA >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>


TRIBUNNEWS.COM - Simak sinopsis film 3 Days to Kill yang akan tayang  Rabu (27/11/2019) di Bioskop Trans TV pukul 21.00 WIB.

Film 3 Days to Kill merupakan film Amerika bergenre aksi, drama, dan thriller.

Mengutip dari laman Imdb.com, 3 Days to Kill merupakan film keluaran tahun 2014 dan mendapat rating 6.2/10.

Disutradarai oleh McGd, cerita film 3 Days to Kill ditulis oleh Luc Besson dan Adi Hasak.

Film yang dirilis pada 21 Februari 2014 ini, dibintangi oleh Kevin Costner, Amber Heard, Hailee Steinfeld, Connie Nielsen, Richard Sammel, dan Eriq Ebouaney.

Sinopsis film 3 Days to Kill dikutip oleh Tribunnews.com (26/11/2019) dari wikipedia.org :

Ethan Runner (Kevin Costner) seorang mata-mata internasional berbahaya, ia bertekad menyerahkan hidupnya untuk istri dan putrinya, dan tetap merahasiakan siapa dia yang sebenarnya agar keluarganya terhindar dari bahaya.

Ada satu misi terakhir yang harus diselesaikannya bahkan menjadi dua tugas terberat dalam perjalanan hidupnya yaitu memburu teroris paling kejam di dunia dan merawat putrinya.

Renner menangkap Albino, letnan seorang penyelundup senjata bernama Wolf, ketika ia menjual bom kotor ke beberapa teroris di sebuah hotel di Beograd.

Renner mengejar Albino tetapi ia hanya berhasil menembak kakinya, dan Albino melarikan diri.




Simak jadwal acara TV dan jadwal film hari ini Rabu 27 November 2019 di Trans TV , RCTI , SCTV , GTV , Indosiar dan TV One , ada film 3 DAYS TO KILL .

TRIBUNPADANG.COM - Rabu 27 November 2019, ada banyak tayangan menarik di layar kaca televisi Anda.

Antara lain di stasiun televisi Trans TV , RCTI , SCTV , GTV , Indosiar dan TV One .

Di Trans TV misalnya, akan tayang film 3 DAYS TO KILL dan film WIND CHILL di malam hari.

Sedangkan di Indosiar , ada tayangan siaran langsung D'Academy Asia 5.

Sementara di SCTV, hadir sejumlah film FTV yang bakal membuat Anda baper.

• JADWAL Acara TV Selasa 26 November 2019 Trans TV RCTI SCTV GTV Indosiar TV One, Ada Film FOCUS

• LIVE STREAMING DAcademy Asia 5 Grup 3 Top 16 Malam Ini di Indosiar, Siapakah yang Tersenggol?

Banyak lagi tayangan menarik lainnya di rans TV, RCTI , SCTV , GTV , Indosiar dan TV One .

Berikut jadwal acara TV dan jadwal film hari ini Rabu 27 November 2019 yang dilansir dari Suryamalang.com:

01:00 CNN Night News 01:30 CNN Sports 02:30 Sinema Indonesia 05:00 Islam Itu Indah




SUNNY SUNDAY: A civic volunteer of the city police clicks a selfie with Sunil Gavaskar in front of the Eden Gardens on Sunday. Picture by Sanat Kumar Sinha

The family from Salt Lake Picture by Sanat Kumar Sinha

From Eden to Taj

A family of seven from Salt Lake went to Taj Bengal from the stadium in the evening, hoping to catch a glimpse of the Indian players.

Anurag Chowdhari, Anne Chowdhari, Rohit Jhunjhunwala, Ivyan Chowdhari, Veer Chowdhari, Sparsh Jhunjhunwala and Nishika Jhunjhunwala entered Eden around 12.45pm.

“We could manage a break only on Sunday. As the match ended early, we spent some time at the stadium,” said Anurag.

For Ivyan, Veer, Sparsh and Nishika — all school students — this was their first visit to Eden. “We went to the hotel in the evening but could not see any cricketer,” said Anurag.

Kamal Hossein Sabuj Picture by Sanat Kumar Sinha

Rebooking flight ticket

Kamal Hossein Sabuj, a businessman from Barishal in Bangladesh, was about to enter Eden through Gate 4 at 1.48pm when the last wicket of Bangladesh fell.

Sabuj, who is staying at a friend’s home in Barasat, had booked his return flight ticket on Tuesday. “But now there is no need to stay here anymore. So, I have rebooked my flight ticket on Monday,” he said.

The businessman was keen on witnessing the fighting spirit of Mushfiqur Rahim, who had stood up to the Indian pace battery and remained unbeaten on 59 when the play ended on Day 2.

“I had expected the match to continue for some time because of the way Mushfiqur was batting. But it did not even last an hour,” said Sabuj.

He still entered the stadium. “I cannot miss the chance of seeing the iconic stadium up close. I am upset by the scale of our team’s defeat but I liked the ambience,” said Sabuj.

Mrinal Deyati and Ayush Picture by Sanat Kumar Sinha

Too late for early finish

Mrinal Deyati and son Ayush had come from Amta in Howrah to witness India’s victory from the stands. But the wish remained unfulfilled as the Bangladesh innings ended even before they could enter the ground.

Mrinal was seen consoling Ayush, a

student of Class IV. “We entered the ground to see the prize distribution ceremony. I wanted him (Ayush) to experience the carnivalesque atmosphere first-hand,” said Mrinal.

Why were they late? “I had to complete my studies,” said Ayush.

After the match, the father and the son went to watch Pagalpanti, a Hindi movie.

Four students from DPS Ruby Park Picture by Sanat Kumar Sinha

Lunch after cricket

Four students from DPS Ruby Park — Manann Sanghvi, Kavya Jain, Suhani Desai and Vineet Sanghvi — were at a loss how to spend the day as the match ended so early. They decided to have lunch together.

“We are trying to figure out what to do now,” said Vineet Sanghvi, a student of Class XI, while the group stood outside Gate 3.

The four have been to Eden before to watch IPL matches. “This is our first brush with Test. We wanted the match to go on for some more time,” said Suhani Desai.

Sumit Pant and Divyangi Picture by Sanat Kumar Sinha

Father-daughter duo

Sumit Pant and daughter Divyangi were at Eden on all three days of the Test. “The match ended even before we could settle down at the stadium,” said Sumit.

The two had a back-up plan. “We knew the match would end early. Bangladesh had lost six wickets by Saturday. So we went for lunch,” said Sumit.

Saket Suman (right) Picture by Sanat Kumar Sinha

From Eden to tuition class

A first-year student of a college in Howrah had thought he would bunk his coaching class on Sunday afternoon to catch the Test. But he did not have to because of the early end. “Now that the game is over, there is no point skipping the class. I called my friends from the ground and convinced them to attend the class,” said Saket Suman.


FAA Will Take Over Final Approval of Boeing 737 Max Jets, Slowing the Roll Out of New Planes


There are millions of wild hogs in Texas, though they are rarely violent toward humans. Texans mostly encounter them when the animals have uprooted a flower bed or damaged crops. Unlike domesticated pigs, feral hogs can become aggressive if they feel trapped, or if a female hog is defending her offspring. Most weigh about 200 pounds, though they can grow to more than 500.

“Feral pigs will lunge at you and attack you” if they perceive a threat, said John J. McGlone, a professor of animal behavior at Texas Tech University who has studied feral and domestic hogs.

There were about 100 documented attacks by feral hogs on humans in the United States between 1825 and 2012, four of which were fatal, according to a 2013 study. The most recent of those was also in Texas, in 1996.

Three of the four fatal attacks were by pigs wounded by hunters. But feral hog attacks in urban and suburban areas have increased since the mid-1990s, said John J. Mayer, the study’s author. He warned that many attacks likely go unreported, especially in rural regions.

Sheriff Hawthorne said the tragedy was one of the worst he had seen in his 35-year career. He said that as developers build houses in rural areas, more wild hogs are coming into contact with people. But the only other hog attack he had worked on was when one had attacked a pet cat.

“Feral hogs are just that: They’re feral, they’re wild and they roam,” he said. “One minute they’re tearing up the land on one ranch, the next minute they’re tearing up the ranch in the town over.”

Feral hogs descended from European wild boars, which were first brought to Texas in the 1500s and sometimes bred with domesticated pigs, Professor McGlone said. They mostly eat vegetation but are omnivorous, and can briefly run at speeds up to 30 m.p.h.


Last year the warning from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention came on Nov. 20, two days before Thanksgiving, and was unusually sweeping, declaring that no romaine in the United States could be assumed safe to eat — and all of it should be discarded. This year the warning came Nov. 22, six days before the holiday. It said 40 people in 16 states had been sickened, most of them hospitalized after consuming romaine grown in or near Salinas, Calif., and contaminated with a Shiga-toxin-producing E. coli strain called O157:H7 that can lead to kidney failure and is potentially lethal.

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The numbers jumped again Tuesday, when the CDC reported that 67 people in 19 states have been sickened.

“It’s heartbreaking and frustrating,” said Dan Sutton, a lettuce grower in San Luis Obispo, Calif. “We will have to change how we farm leafy greens.”

The bulk of the romaine sold in the United States comes from just two growing areas: the Salinas Valley of California (harvested in late spring, summer and fall) and the Yuma, Ariz., growing region that includes the Imperial and Coachella valleys of Southern California (winter and early spring).

Contaminated agricultural water is a prime suspect in these outbreaks. The Trump administration delayed implementation of new agricultural water testing rules, developed during the Obama administration, that were set to take effect last year.

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The rules would require farmers to test four times per growing season for generic E. coli in agricultural water. Some farmers pushed back against the new rule, calling it confusing and unwieldy. The FDA decided to delay implementation. Now, large farms will be required to meet the requirements in January 2022, with small farms following in 2023 and very small farms in 2024.

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But leafy greens industry officials say the delay in the rule isn’t to blame for the romaine lettuce outbreak, because the industry already performs the water tests on a monthly basis.

Still, the growers said they are frustrated that their own standards to prevent contamination — codified in the California Leafy Greens Marketing Agreement — have not resolved the problem.

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“They are the most stringent and most scientifically based requirements on how to grow leafy greens,” said Sutton, who is also chairman of the marketing agreement.

After last year’s outbreak, the FDA determined the E. coli strain that sickened people across the country came from surface water rather than ground water pumped from an aquifer. As a result, the coalition of leafy green growers decided to ban the use of surface water unless it is treated with anti-bacterial chemicals 21 days before harvest.

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Scott Horsfall, CEO of the marketing agreement, said that gives the chemicals plenty of time to kill off E. coli and other pathogens.

“The FDA believes [the bacteria] dies off after four or five days,” Horsfall said. “We went to 21 days to be conservative.”

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The coalition created its first industry standards to prevent pathogen contamination in 2007, a year after nearly 200 people became ill after eating spinach contaminated with E. coli. Nearly half were hospitalized, 31 developed kidney failure and three people died.

With outbreaks continuing, the industry took further measures, requiring farther setbacks of septic tanks from agricultural fields, and tripling the buffer between livestock, which can carry E. coli, and leafy greens operations from 400 to 1,200 feet.

But whatever has been done so far has not fixed the problem — and the experts are still searching for a theory of the case.

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“This has been devastating for the growers. They have investigated so many resources and made so many changes to keep this from happening,” said Sonia Salas, assistant vice president for food safety for Western Growers, a trade group for produce growers in four western states.

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Investigators are looking at other variables that might make romaine particularly vulnerable, including whether the very structure of the funnel-shaped lettuce is playing a role in harboring the pathogen.

The timing of the E.coli outbreaks is striking: They have often occurred late in the growing season for a given region, when crops are being rotated. That has drawn attention of experts who are searching for some common environmental explanation for the recurring outbreaks.

Trevor Suslow, vice president of produce safety for the Produce Marketing Association, said the season for romaine lettuce ends in the fall in the Salinas Valley. That’s just weeks after neighboring fields are often prepped with manure or composting materials for spring crops.

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The possibility of E.coli drifting to the lettuce fields — through water or wind or other means — is an “absolute current focus right now to determine why these seasonal outbreaks have been happening.”

Suslow said the weather can exacerbate problems with the contamination. “This is all happening at a time when water temperatures and humidity is high,” he said. “Those things are shown to favor survival and persistence of bacteria.”

There are other seasonal factors that could be contributing to the problem. Michele Jay-Russell, a microbiologist and manager of the Western Center for Food Safety at the University of California at Davis, said cattle, deer, goats and feral pigs carry E. coli O157:H7.

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“It’s just a natural bacteria for them; they pass it through their feces,” she said. “In cattle we tend to see a particular seasonality to it. In the fall some can become super shedders. We aren’t sure why there are these seasonal spikes.”

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An outbreak in the spring of 2018, which sickened 210 people and killed five, may have involved contaminated irrigation water from a canal that ran adjacent to a sprawling feedlot for cattle near Yuma, although investigators never definitively proved the chain of contamination. A 2017 outbreak that killed one person and sickened 25 in the United States and Canada has been loosely linked to California and Arizona growing areas.

After the November 2018 outbreak, the FDA traced the contamination to three counties in California. The investigation found the outbreak strain of E. coli in sediments in an open reservoir on one farm in Santa Barbara County, but the FDA said there was “insufficient evidence to conclude that this farm was the sole source of the outbreak.”

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The farm did have a system in place for testing water for E. coli and sanitizing it before use, but the FDA investigation showed it was not foolproof.

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“Inspection of water tank sanitizer treatment systems used in harvest/postharvest handling revealed that some units had undissolved sanitizer cakes and that some tank systems were constructed in a manner that likely did not allow for optimal sanitizer treatment of the agricultural water before use,” the FDA reported. “Additionally, untreated water from the contaminated reservoir was used to fill tank trucks which broadly sprayed water on roads for dust abatement and these roads were traveled on by harvest equipment prior to commencing harvest operations.”

“E. coli can live in water sediments for years,” said Frederick M. Cohan, a microbial ecologist at Wesleyan University. “What you want to do is keep it from getting in there in the first place.”

The virulent strain of E. coli at the center of this latest leafy green outbreak is the same pathogen that in 1993 killed four children and left 171 people with permanent injuries, including brain damage and kidney failure. The infamous outbreak was linked to undercooked Jack in the Box hamburgers.

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With meat, grilling, baking or frying it at high temperatures typically kills the pathogens. High heat is typically not used to make salads.

“Most people don’t cook lettuce,” CDC spokesman Brian Katzowitz said. “There’s no kill step for that. That safety net of cooking is not there.”

The FDA said consumers can still safely eat romaine from outside four Salinas-area counties — Monterey, Santa Clara, Santa Cruz and San Benito — as well as hydroponically grown lettuce. In a statement on Friday, Frank Yiannas, the FDA deputy commissioner for food policy and response, said improvements in labeling and tracking made it possible to trace the contamination back to a single region — in contrast with what happened last year, when the FDA told consumers to throw away any and all romaine regardless of its source.


Mothers in Kenya feed their babies Coca Cola to kill them because they're unable to get abortions, according to human rights activists.

The African country is in the grip of an infanticide 'crisis', as mothers seek ways to cope with or get rid of unwanted children.

Some have turned to using Coca Cola, ginger beer or other fizzy drinks, which they feed them instead of breast milk.

Newborns get all their nutrients from milk and, without it, can starve to death within days.

Significant numbers of babies are also left to die in rubbish dumps or rivers, later retrieved by workers as part of daily life.

Others choose backstreet abortionists who may deliver the babies early and then murder them. These procedures often have devastating or deadly consequences for the mothers, too.

The stories highlight the desperation of women who cannot afford to raise a family in a country where abortion is illegal.

Mothers in Kenya feed their babies Coca Cola to kill them because they're unable to get abortions, according to human rights activists. (Stock of a foetus)

Unsafe abortions are a leading cause of maternal morbidity and mortality in Kenya, statistics show.

However, the scale of infanticide has not been officially measured. Anecdotal stories were shared with The Telegraph.

Vincent Odhiambo, a human rights activist in Kibera, a city slum, said: 'Some women are not in a position to have a family. It is known that if you give a baby Coca-Cola, it will die.

'You can imagine giving a small baby Coca-Cola instead of breast milk – it can't last more than three days.'

In February, Kibera Community Justice Centre, where Mr Odhiambo works, received reports of a woman who had seen her neighbour giving a fatal overdose of Coca-Cola's local ginger beer brand to her newborn daughter.

WHERE IS ABORTION ILLEGAL? Fourteen countries fall within laws which generally permit abortion under a broad range of circumstances. Six countries — El Salvador, Malta, the Vatican, Chile, the Dominican Republic, and Nicaragua — refuse abortions to women under any circumstances, even if it's to save her life. Malta is the only country in the European Union where abortion is illegal. In England, Scotland and Wales, you can legally have an abortion at up to 23 weeks and 6 days of pregnancy, in line with the Abortion Act 1967. Women in Northern Ireland, or anywhere else where abortion care may be restricted, can legally travel to receive treatment. Generally Australia allows abortion up to 22 weeks. It was decriminalised across the whole country this year after the last remaining state where it was illegal, New South Wales, voted to reform its laws. Various anti-abortion laws have been in force in each state of the US since at least 1900. Alabama’s new law bans all abortion from the time a 'woman [is] known to be pregnant' – with no exceptions. Five states - Georgia, Ohio, Kentucky, Mississippi and Louisiana - have passed bills which prohibit abortion after about six weeks.

Florence, a government midwife, shared a series of pictures on her mobile phone of dead babies found on rubbish dumps.

One image is of a tiny girl hunched in the foetal position. Residents allege the mother had fed her Coca Cola.

Wilson Cheptoo, a rubbish sorter, reckons he alone finds 15 dead infants a year on the dump where he plies his trade. It's not unusual among his colleagues, he said.

Over a single week in May, the corpses of eight infants were pulled from the Nairobi River's waters which are bursting with rubbish.

More common than infanticide and abandonment, activists say, is backstreet abortions carried out by unqualified medics.

There is a shortfall in maternal health clinics since funding from the US has plummeted under Donald Trump administration.

In 2017, under pressure from the American 'pro-life' lobby, a 'global gag rule' meant any organisation that so much as offers as advice on abortion will be barred from American aid.

As a result, Family Health Options Kenya, just one organisation, had to eliminate free outreach services and close two clinics.

Abortion is illegal in Kenya unless a mother's health is in danger. A 14-year prison sentence threatens anyone who carries out an 'unauthorised' abortions.

In 2014, a Kenyan nurse was sentenced to death after being found guilty of carrying out an abortion on a woman who later bled to death.

This means doctors are unwilling to take the risk, amid religious and political pressures, too.

With a lack of safe, cheap and legal abortions, women are often left with no choice but to save money to pay a quack for an abortion, charities warn.

Horror stories of unethical abortions are rife - one clinic which delivered babies before killing them with a hammer blow to the head was reportedly shut down earlier this year.

The abortions are risky for the woman too - seven women die every day as a result, according to Marie Stopes International, a leading women's health charity.

As many as 350,000 Kenyan women a year will risk having an unsafe abortion and 21,000 women a year are admitted to hospital as a result.

An anonymous doctors recalled turning away a six-month pregnant woman, telling her it was too late to perform an abortion and offering counselling instead.

Later that night, as the doctor was closing the clinic, the woman returned, covered in blood.

'Someone had torn open her womb,' the doctor told The Telegraph. 'Everything was pouring out. Her gut was spilling out.

'I got her into theatre but her intestines were perforated and her womb chopped up. We transfused seven pints of blood, but she passed away six hours later.'

For those who cannot raise the sum for a backstreet abortion at all, a small minority will give birth to their child and are driven to murder.

Activists have urged for a change in law to allow for safer abortions, as well as better sex education, to stop infanticide and unsafe abortions from rising.

A Coca-Cola spokesperson said: 'The recent reports of newborn deaths in Kenya are deeply distressing and our deepest sympathies go out to the women and children who face such desperate situations.

'We know soft drinks are safe and can be enjoyed by many people around the world. However, it is widely recognized that milk is all that newborns need.'


A man who launched a frenzied knife attack at Manchester Victoria train station last New Year's Eve has pleaded guilty to a terrorism offence and three counts of attempted murder.

Mahdi Mohamud, 26, shouted "Allahu Akbar!" and "Long live the Caliphate!" as he stabbed and slashed at Anna Charlton and James Knox, a couple in their 50s who were walking to a tram platform.

He raised the fillet knife and walked up behind unsuspecting James Knox, stabbed his victim repeatedly in the back, shoulders and head. Mr Knox suffered 13 injuries including a skull fracture.

Then he turned the knife on Mr Knox's companion, Anna Charlton, puncturing her lung and slashing her across the face, cutting her forehead down to the bone.

British Transport Police officers heard a blood-curdling scream and dashed to the scene.

Pcs Ashleigh Williams, 27, and her colleague Marsha Selby, 28, along with two tram staff confronted Mohamud, who "like an animal" was "fixated" on stabbing and slashing, witnesses said.

The suspect was pepper sprayed before seconds later Pc Tom Wright, 27, arrived along with Sergeant Lee Valentine, 31, who shot Mohamud with his Taser.

But the barbs of the 50,000 volt shock gun got stuck in the knifeman's thick coat and failed to paralyse him.

Before he could reload the knifeman ran along the blood-spattered platform charging at the officers with the weapon.

Sgt Valentine was stabbed in the shoulder before the suspect was wrestled to the ground and arrested.

A second kitchen knife was found in his waistband.

​The Dutch national from a Somali family, who moved to the UK aged nine, was later found to be in possession of a terror publication titled, "the seven most lethal ways to strike with a knife", the police said.

Detained under the Mental Health Act the day after the attack he was later found fit to stand trial.

The defendant, from Cheetham Hill, pleaded guilty at Manchester Crown Court on Tuesday to three counts of attempted murder.

He also admitted one count of the possession of a document or record likely to be useful to a person committing or preparing an act of terrorism, a manual titled, "the seven most lethal ways to strike with a knife".

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