Edward Nino Hernandez is in many ways a typical 24-year-old Colombian male. He loves to dance reggaeton, dreams of owning a car — preferably a Mercedes — and wants to see the world.
Top on his list of people he would like to meet are Jackie Chan, Sylvester Stallone and former Colombian president Alvaro Uribe.
What sets Nino apart is his size. He is slightly taller than a piece of carry-on luggage and weighs just 10kg.
Nino has just been officially certified as the world’s shortest living man by Guinness World Records, measuring 70cm.
“He hasn’t grown since he was two years old,” his mother, Noemi Hernandez, said of the oldest of her five living children.
The previous titleholder was He Pingping of China, who was 4cm taller and died on March 13. The Guinness people discovered Nino afterward.
They say Nino’s reign is not likely to last long, however.
Khagendra Thapa Magar of Nepal is expected to take over after he turns 18 on Oct. 14. He measures about 56cm and is currently recognized by Guinness as the shortest living teen.
Doctors never could explain why Nino is so small.
“They never gave us a diagnosis,” his mother said during an interview in the family’s sparely furnished apartment in Bosa, a mostly poor district of southern Bogota.
Hernandez, 43, said Nino weighed just 1.5kg at birth and was 38cm long.
She said doctors at the National University studied him until he was three, then lost interest. She and her husband, a security guard, lost a daughter who was similarly small in 1992 when she was about to complete a year of life.
The couple’s youngest child, 11-year-old Miguel Angel, stands 93cm tall and has facial features similar to Nino. The other three boys are of normal height and appearance.
“I feel happy because I’m unique,” Nino said in an interview on Friday.
He does, however, have his problems: cataracts in both of his eyes that blur his vision and, says his mother, require urgent surgery that the family can’t afford.
During an interview, Nino’s eyes water and he fidgets with the laces on his toddler-sized black dress shoes.
Other than his eyes, he has no medical complaints. He’s mentally sharp and laughs easily though it’s sometimes hard to understand his high-pitched speech and his stubby fingers make writing difficult.
Nino had to repeat several years of school before dropping out in the eighth grade. But he’s very sociable, loves to travel — though he hasn’t been outside Colombia — and likes to play dominoes and checkers.
Leafing through an advance copy of the Guinness World Records 2011 edition, which comes out on Sept. 15 in the US and the next day internationally, Hernandez shows Nino a picture of the world’s smallest woman, who is from India.
Nino is now acting in a film in which he plays a pint-sized drug thug. In his big scene, Nino gets into a shootout. He acts out the scene, mimicking a pistol with the index fingers of his entwined hands, then slumps over onto the chair’s arm. His character doesn’t survive the gunbattle.
Nino smiles broadly at the idea of more acting jobs and more life in the spotlight and he says he’s gotten used to all the picture-taking.
But being the world’s smallest man does have its drawbacks.
“It bothers me that people are [always] touching me and picking me up,” he said.
The pledge by Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi to “work, work, work, work and work” for her country has been named the catchphrase of the year, recognizing the effort Japan’s first female leader had to make to reach the top. Takaichi uttered the phrase in October when she was elected as head of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP). Many were initially as worried about her work ethic as supportive of her enthusiasm. In a country notorious for long working hours, especially for working women who are also burdened with homemaking and caregiving, overwork is a sensitive topic. The recognition triggered a
A plan by Switzerland’s right-wing People’s Party to cap the population at 10 million has the backing of almost half the country, according to a poll before an expected vote next year. The party, which has long campaigned against immigration, argues that too-fast population growth is overwhelming housing, transport and public services. The level of support comes despite the government urging voters to reject it, warning that strict curbs would damage the economy and prosperity, as Swiss companies depend on foreign workers. The poll by newspaper group Tamedia/20 Minuten and released yesterday showed that 48 percent of the population plan to vote
‘HEART IS ACHING’: Lee appeared to baffle many when he said he had never heard of six South Koreans being held in North Korea, drawing criticism from the families South Korean President Lee Jae-myung yesterday said he was weighing a possible apology to North Korea over suspicions that his ousted conservative predecessor intentionally sought to raise military tensions between the war-divided rivals in the buildup to his brief martial law declaration in December last year. Speaking to reporters on the first anniversary of imprisoned former South Korean president Yoon Suk-yeol’s ill-fated power grab, Lee — a liberal who won a snap presidential election following Yoon’s removal from office in April — stressed his desire to repair ties with Pyongyang. A special prosecutor last month indicted Yoon and two of his top
The Philippines deferred the awarding of a project that is part of a plan to build one of the world’s longest marine bridges after local opposition over the potential involvement of a Chinese company due to national security fears. The proposals are “undergoing thorough review” by the Asian Development Bank (ADB), which acts as a lender and an overseer of the project to ensure it meets international environmental and governance standards, the Philippine Department of Public Works and Highways said in a statement on Monday in response to queries from Bloomberg. The agency said it would announce the winning bidder once ADB