Fri, Feb 20, 2004 - Page 6 News List

World News Quick Take

AGENCIES

A London Routemaster bus passes through Piccadilly Circus.

PHOTO: AP

■ Singapore

Oral-sex sentence reduced

A Singapore judge reduced the sentence of a policeman charged with receiving oral sex after his case provoked a storm of protest, but he told the court that such a sex act did not conform to Asian values. Police coast guard sergeant Annis Abdullah's sentence was halved to a year in jail after the 27-year-old received consensual oral sex from a teenage girl in April. "In the Asian culture, certain offences are still not talked about though in some cultures you can go sucking away, and some important people had gotten away with it," 77-year-old Chief Justice Yong Pung How was quoted by state media as telling the court at Tuesday's sentencing.

■ Cambodia

Rat-meat sales boom

Bird flu may have decimated poultry businesses across Asia, but rat dealers have never had it so good. "I've got a constant stream of customers," Van Vath, a rat butcher in the western Cambodian town of Battambang, told Wednesday's edition of Cambodge Soir. With customers shying away from chicken for fear of catching the deadly flu virus that has killed millions of birds and at least 20 people, she has been selling more than 180kg of rodent meat every morning -- twice her normal turnover. In far-flung corners of the jungle-clad and impoverished Southeast Asian nation, rat -- fried, grilled or roasted with garlic and vegetables -- is a highly prized delicacy.

■ Singapore

Maids taught to avoid falls

Authorities have launched a safety course to teach new maids how to avoid falling from high-rise flats following an alarming rate of helpers plunging to their deaths, a report said yesterday. The lessons began last October and from April 1 will be compulsory for new maids seeking to obtain a work permit, the Straits Times reported. Nearly 100 Indonesian maids have fallen to their death here since 1999, usually while cleaning windows or hanging out the washing, according to Indonesian embassy figures quoted by the paper.

■ Australia

Memorial service for teen

Mourners recited Christian prayers, performed traditional dances and played the didgeridoo yesterday at a memorial service in a Sydney ghetto for a 17-year-old Aboriginal boy whose death sparked a riot earlier last weekend. Thomas Hickey died on Sunday, a day after falling from his bicycle and being impaled on a metal fence. Police, who Hickey's family and friends say chased the teenager to his death, denied any involvement in the accident. Hickey's mother, Gail, was handed a canvas with the handprints and signatures of his friends during the service that was attended by politicians and the community's elders. Hickey will be buried next week in his home town of Walgett in New South Wales state, Australian Associated Press reported.

■ Australia

Men face `masculinity crisis'

Once they were strong, silent types who conquered the Outback. Now young Australian males are the sad victims of a modern-day "crisis of masculinity," according to the man aiming to be the nation's next prime minister. Opposition Labor Party leader Mark Latham said Wednesday the latest generation of Aussie blokes are bewildered, uneducated and unhappy. They are fast dropping out of school with lower literacy levels. Too many overdose on drugs or commit suicide.

■ United States

Iconic red buses phased out

It's as recognizable as St. Paul's Cathedral and as British as cod and chips, but London's iconic red Routemaster bus is reaching the end of the road. The city's transport authority, which has been quietly taking the old buses out of circulation for months, says Route-masters will be withdrawn from half of their remaining routes by the end of the year, and almost all will be gone by 2005. The Routemaster's disappearance -- long rumored and often denied -- has saddened supporters of the bus, which first rolled onto London streets 50 years ago and has starred in countless postcards and holiday snapshots.

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