And it's not just Doctor Who but the entire Who-niverse which has made an impression on the LGBT community.
Ms Sulaiman said: "When I woke up for prayers, I opened the door and looked outside and didn't see any water. Moments later, I started hearing people screaming. We don't know where it came from. Its source is a mystery.""For people that said the flood was as a result of the rain, they are lying. The rain had stopped before the flood started. Nobody knows the cause of this flood, it's just from God," Mr Adamu said.
Mokwa Deputy Local Chairman, Musa Alhaji Aliyu Kimboku, also dismissed that rain caused the flood.The National Emergency Management Agency said those injured are receiving treatment, while displaced victims have been taken to resettlement camps and relief materials distributed.The country's Meteorological Agency has projected that the rainy season will last up to 200 days in central Nigeria this year, while it could linger for a longer period in mostly southern states.
At the beginning of May, the federal government launched a flood awareness campaign, to educate citizens on flood risks.Thirty of the West African nation's 36 states are at risk of flooding, and Niger state is one of them.
As victims salvage what they can from the ruins of their homes to start a new life, those that lost their loved ones like Mr Adamu said that they will never be able to heal, although they have accepted their fate.
The EU has said it "strongly" regrets Donald Trump's surprise plan to double US tariffs on steel and aluminium in a move that risks throwing bilateral trade talks into chaos., with the US and China agreeing to roll-back tariffs earlier this month.
Burgundy is one of the most prestigious wine regions in France, and the US is its biggest export market. But now Donald Trump's tariffs are threatening to price European wine out of the American marketplace.Crouched in cold mud under a thin Spring rain, vineyard employee Élodie Bonet snaps off unwanted vine shoots with her fingers and pruning clippers.
"We want the vine to put all its energy into the shoots that have the flowers where the grapes are going to grow," she explains.I leave Élodie working her way down the rows of vines, and walk up to the house and winery in the Burgundy village of Morey-Saint-Denis, where I meet owner and winemaker Cécile Tremblay.