■ India
Pakistan `violates' ceasefire
The Indian army said yesterday that Pakistan had violated a 14-month-old ceasefire between the nuclear-armed rivals after mortar bombs were fired across the military line dividing Kashmir, wounding
a girl. Pakistan denied the charge, which is nevertheless the latest in a string of setbacks to a slow-moving peace process between the rivals. The Indian army said the wounded girl had to be treated in hospital after 15 mortar bombs were fired late on Tuesday from Pakistani territory into Poonch district, 250km north of Jammu, the winter capital of India's Jammu and Kashmir state.
■ Thailand
Elephants get toilet-training
Having taught Thailand's elephants to paint, dance and play musical instruments, their Thai handlers are now toilet-training the beasts, media reported yesterday. Handlers -- known as mahouts -- have installed giant human-style toilets at a camp in the northern city of Chiang Mai to try to rid the tourist attraction of unsightly droppings, according to the Nation newspaper. Some seven elephants at the privately run camp beside Chiang Mai Zoo are being trained to sit like a human on the giant white toilets, which can be flushed by pulling on a rope with a gentle tug of the trunk, the daily said.
■ Australia
Kids spill beans on `reality'
Australia children filming what's claimed to be the world's first reality television show for their age group yesterday spilled the beans on their supposed fly-on-the-wall survivor series. It's all staged, one of eight Camp Orange contestants blurted out. Twelve-year-old "Andrew" told Australia's AAP news agency that the "worst thing has been doing takes over and over for the camera again."
So much for reality. Camp Orange is the work of Australian pay TV channel Nickelodeon and is being filmed on Milson Island in Sydney. The premise is that four teams of two compete while they tackle giant swings and spooky paths during a week away from home. The show airs next month.
■ Japan
Court compensates Koreans
Japan's government must pay damages to a group of ageing South Koreans who were forced to labor in Japan during World War II, a court ruled yesterday. In a rare ruling for forced wartime laborers from the Korean peninsula, the Hiroshima High Court in western Japan overturned a March 1999 lower court ruling and ordered the government to pay the 40 plaintiffs ?1.2 million (US$11,740) each in compensation. The South Koreans had demanded a total of ?440 million from the government and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd for being forced to work at a Mitsubishi plant in Hiroshima and for being exposed to radiation from the atomic bomb dropped on the city.
■ Military Affairs
Fallon to head US forces
Admiral William Fallon has been selected by US Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld to be the next head of the US Pacific Command, officials said on Tuesday. Fallon, a former vice chief of naval operations who now heads the US navy's Fleet Forces Command, would replace Admiral Thomas Fargo, who will retire at the end of next month. Rumsfeld's choice is subject to the approval of US President George W. Bush and the Senate, but both steps are considered formalities. Fallon would have responsibility for planning and operations in two of the world's most serious potential flashpoints: the Korean Peninsula and the Taiwan Strait.
■ France
Strike nearly halts service
French railway workers severely reduced train traffic yesterday due to a strike over working conditions, and the country geared up for separate protests by energy workers and hospital surgeons. It was the second of three days of industrial unrest which put the spotlight on discontent with President Jacques Chirac's conservative government as it prepares to relax the 35-hour work week introduced by the previous Socialist-led government. Commuters were left with just one intercity train running in four, one high-speed TGV in three and only 16-30 percent of suburban trains in the Paris area, railway operator SNCF said.
■ Morocco
Desert film studio opens
Morroco can now boast one of the world's largest film studios. Veteran Italian producer Dino De Laurentiis and Rome's famed Cinecitta Studios have teamed up to create CLA Studios, which stretches over 150 hectares with two shooting stages of 1,800m2 each. Bigger than any studio in Hollywood or Europe, the site will be able to accommodate two major movies a year, said Ismail Farih, spokesman for Morocco's private Sanam Holding, the third partner in the US$8.3 million project. The area in southern Morocco has provided backdrops to classic films including Lawrence of Arabia, Cleopatra and more recently Gladiator, Oliver Stone's Alexander the Great and Ridley Scott's latest film, Kingdom of Heaven.
■ United Kingdom
Nursing home investigated
A coroner is to investigate the deaths of 16 elderly residents at a private nursing home after health British officials warned that events there raised "serious concern." The home came to the attention of officials after a resident choked to death. Officials then found that 28 of its residents had died in one year, 2002. In the previous two years, only nine deaths had occurred. The two doctors who run the home are both facing an investigation. The report of the initial inquiry into the home found that, while there was no suggestion that residents were harmed deliberately, some patients were not given "the appropriate drugs, at the appropriate dosage, at the appropriate times," and may have been overused as a method of restraint.
■ Saudi ArabiA
Stomach yields toothbrush
A medical team on Tuesday removed a toothbrush that had been in a man's stomach for 22 years, a medical official at the King Abdel Aziz Hospital in Taef, west of the Saudi kingdom, said. The 70-year-old unidentified man, had swallowed the toothbrush 22 years ago without realizing it, as he had not experienced any pain until a few days. A hospital official said the surgery for toothbrush removal was successful.
■ Italy
Pope gets a Ferrari
Pope John Paul got a flame red Ferrari from the Italian world championship racing team -- a model of one, that is -- for having what they said was the inside track on the roads of humanity. Formula One world champion Michael Schumacher and the rest of the Ferrari team met the Pope in the Vatican's frescoed Clementina Hall to give him the 1:5 scale model of the car that won both the championship and constructor titles last year. Ferrari President Luca di Montezemolo told the Pope Ferrari wanted to honor him.
■ Canada
Man chokes son's coach
A father, upset that his 9-year-old son was benched during a hockey game, allegedly choked the team's coach in a fit of rage, Toronto police said on Monday. The father, who cannot be identified due to a publication ban, allegedly grabbed the coach after the boy was kept on the bench during Sunday's game. "Several attempts were made by witnesses to stop the attack, but they were unable to before the victim collapsed to the floor," police said. The mother of an 11-year-old was banned from Toronto-area arenas last year after exposing her bra and shaking her breasts in an apparent attempt to intimidate the opposing team.
■ United States
Beer vendor fined US$60m
A jury awarded US$60 million to the family of a girl paralyzed in a car wreck caused by a drunken football fan. Ronald and Fazila Verni were headed home from a pumpkin-picking trip in 1999 with their 2-year-old daughter, Antonia, when their car was hit by a truck driven by Daniel Lanzaro, 34. Antonia was paralyzed from the neck down. Lanzaro, whose blood-alcohol level was more than twice the legal limit, is serving a five-year prison term for vehicular assault. The family sued Aramark, the Giants Stadium concessionaire, claiming vendors sold beers to Lanzaro even though he was clearly drunk and that Aramark fostered an atmosphere in which intoxicated patrons were served.
■ United States
Cop busted for perjury
An undercover agent, Tom Coleman, whose testimony sent dozens of black people to prison on bogus drug charges was ordered to serve 10 years of probation for a single perjury charge. The jury in Lubbock on Friday acquitted Coleman of testifying falsely in a 2003 hearing that as a sheriff's deputy he never stole gasoline from county pumps. Coleman arrested 46 people, most of them black, in a small, mostly white farming community. He worked alone and no drugs were ever found, but 38 defendants were convicted or reached plea deals. Governor Rick Perry pardoned 35 of the defendants in 2003, after an investigation into the drug cases was launched amid charges they were racially motivated.
■ United States
`Survivor' faces tax reality
Richard Hatch, the first winner of the US TV series Survivor, is facing his toughest challenge yet. Hatch failed to report the US$1 million he won on Survivor, federal prosecutors said as they charged him with filing false tax returns. The 43-year-old Hatch, whose brash strategizing propelled him to victory in 2000's Survivor series on CBS, is charged on two counts in a lawsuit filed in US District Court. Prosecutors said Hatch not only failed to report his US$1 million winnings in federal tax returns but also left off more than US$300,000 that a Boston radio station paid him to co-host a program in 2001.
■ United States
Evolution at issue
A school district in Pennsylvania and another in Georgia have pressed ahead with challenges to teaching evolution in their public schools, offering a different approach called Intelligent Design. Intelligent Design posits that life is so complex, a creator had to be behind it, a position that critics say has no basis in science. The American Civil Liberties Union and Americans United for Separation of Church and State are suing the school board on behalf of 11 parents to force it to rescind its decision.
As the sun sets on another scorching Yangon day, the hot and bothered descend on the Myanmar city’s parks, the coolest place to spend an evening during yet another power blackout. A wave of exceptionally hot weather has blasted Southeast Asia this week, sending the mercury to 45°C and prompting thousands of schools to suspend in-person classes. Even before the chaos and conflict unleashed by the military’s 2021 coup, Myanmar’s creaky and outdated electricity grid struggled to keep fans whirling and air conditioners humming during the hot season. Now, infrastructure attacks and dwindling offshore gas reserves mean those who cannot afford expensive diesel
Does Argentine President Javier Milei communicate with a ghost dog whose death he refuses to accept? Forced to respond to questions about his mental health, the president’s office has lashed out at “disrespectful” speculation. Twice this week, presidential spokesman Manuel Adorni was asked about Milei’s English Mastiff, Conan, said to have died seven years ago. Milei, 53, had Conan cloned, and today is believed to own four copies he refers to as “four-legged children.” Or is it five? In an interview with CNN this month, Milei referred to his five dogs, whose faces and names he had engraved on the presidential baton. Conan,
French singer Kendji Girac, who was seriously injured by a gunshot this week, wanted to “fake” his suicide to scare his partner who was threatening to leave him, prosecutors said on Thursday. The 27-year-old former winner of France’s version of The Voice was found wounded after police were called to a traveler camp in Biscarrosse on France’s southwestern coast. Girac told first responders he had accidentally shot himself while tinkering with a Colt .45 automatic pistol he had bought at a junk shop, a source said. On Thursday, regional prosecutor Olivier Janson said, citing the singer, that he wanted to “fake” his suicide
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi reaffirmed his pledge to replace India’s religion-based marriage and inheritance laws with a uniform civil code if he returns to office for a third term, a move that some minority groups have opposed. In an interview with the Times of India listing his agenda, Modi said his government would push for making the code a reality. “It is clear that separate laws for communities are detrimental to the health of society,” he said in the interview published yesterday. “We cannot be a nation where one community is progressing with the support of the Constitution while the other