■ Ecuador
Inmates crucify themselves
Thirteen inmates, among them a Brazilian, a Chilean and a Colombian, have crucified themselves in Ecuadoran prisons as part of a protest to demand reduced sentences. The crucifixions in two penitentiaries in the port city of Guayaquil were part of a protest involving 10,000 inmates. Other gruesome forms of protest included bloodletting, hunger strikes, stitching up of prisoners' lips, and partial burials. "We have initiated a series of crucifixions in all the prisons to demand from Congress a structural change in the penal system," the inmates' spokesperson said. The three foreign inmates all were accused of drug trafficking and had been imprisoned for more than a year without being formally sentenced.
■ Spain
Due process denied
The Bush administration has refused to allow the Spanish authorities to interview a man accused of being an operative of al-Qaeda whose testimony could be crucial to the prosecution of two men on trial charged with helping to plan the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. With little more than a month left in the trial, the chief prosecutor in the case said he was still pressing the request to interview the accused man, Ramzi bin al-Shibh, who is suspected of playing a central role in organizing the attacks in New York and at the Pentagon. The two defendants, Imad Eddin Barakat Yarkas and Driss Chebli, are charged with arranging a meeting in Spain for one of the Sept. 11 hijackers.
■ Brazil
AIDS drug patent challenged
Brazilian Health Minister Humberto Costa signalled his government was set to move to break the patent on Abbott Laboratories' Kaletra AIDS drug because it would reduce treatment costs. Citing "public interest," Costa said the US group Abbott had 10 days in which to respond and seek a negotiated agreement. "The discovery and development of innovative new treatments depends on the reasonable return on investment for existing treatments," Abbott, the drug-maker argued.
■ United States
Grassy knoll fence for sale
An online casino has bought a white picket fence from the grassy knoll in Dallas, Texas that overlooked US president John F. Kennedy's motorcade when he was assassinated in 1963. The gambling website, which has made a name for itself with outrageous stunts and acquisitions, paid US$32,664.47 dollars for the weathered picket fence which has handwritten markings include names, symbols, dates, Biblical passages, simple tributes like "RIP, JFK" and opinions like "Oswald Was Framed" and "Blame the Government."



