Friday, November 8, 2013

Worms in Hair Weaves




The Standard [Kenya]
28 October 2013


By Leah Gondi-Ogondi and Snopes.com

Kenya: Irene Myangoh, a personal assistant working at a law firm in Nairobi went to an upmarket hair salon along Kenyatta Avenue, and spent more than Sh3,000 on a human hair weave.

Two weeks later she started suffering from severe headache that would not go away. She would wake up with severe headache at night.

She went to a private doctor who gave her drugs for the relief of mild to moderate pain of inflamatory origin with or without fever; they would only work for a few hours and then the headache would be back worse than even before.

Desperate, she went to see a specialist who did blood tests and even a brain scan. All the tests were negative but the headache persisted, making her unable to concentrate at work and sleeping very poorly.

She went back to her doctor who decided to examine her scalp and under the beautiful weave he found worms! The worms were burrowing into her skull and after sending the samples to the lab they found that the hair had eggs from which the worms had hatched.

The doctor told her that the hair was probably from a corpse because those worms are usually found on dead bodies. […]


Independent Reporters TV Media [Nigeria]
28 October 2013


by Efe Tega

Nairobi, Kenya: Irene Myangoh, a personal assistant working at a law firm in Nairobi went to an upmarket hair salon along Kenyatta Avenue, and spent more than N5,500 on a human hair weave. […]


Nigerian Tribune
3 November 2013


Written by  Victory Oyeleke

[…] This tale of woe about a contaminated hair extension that infected its wearer with flesh eating maggots has been around for more than 3 years. It began circulating the Internet in September 2010 and so far, there are about four versions, with each changing the city she works in, the location of the hair salon, and her name but otherwise leaving the plot of the tale relatively untouched. […]


The Standard [Kenya]
7 November 2013


PETER KIMANI  seriously speaking

There is an interesting tale doing the rounds around the world and it apparently originated from this newspaper. It was partly appropriated from Snopes.com. It purports that a certain manzi (lady) of Nairobi, keen about her looks and all, picked up a hair weave from some unnamed shop in town. […]

The Huffington Post concludes The Standard piece was a hoax. I disagree. It was an urban legend, which is a respected genre in fiction. One of my teachers, Robert Boswell, actually has an essay on how such stories function. The essay appears in his book on the craft of fiction writing, The Half-Known World, which I highly recommend to our creative reporter. The measure of her talent can be adjudged from the international news networks that picked the story and distributed it further around the world.