Published on Taipei Times
http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/world/archives/2008/03/24/2003406954

World Business Quick Take


AGENCIES
Monday, Mar 24, 2008, Page 7

― INDIA

Autopsy says teen drowned

A fresh autopsy report on British teenager Scarlett Keeling says she was drowned by her killers, according to a document released on Saturday. The autopsy shows the 15-year-old girl was raped and then held under water for five to 10 minutes and that the cocktail of alcohol and drugs in her body was "not enough to cause coma and death," the report released in Goan state capital Panaji said. The report said her killers had covered her nostrils and mouth. "The findings in this case are consistent with exact [text] book picture for homicidal drowning in shallow water," the report said. Earlier police had said Scarlett was drugged, raped and left to die in the Arabian Sea last month by two men.



― INDIA

Mid-range missile tested

A medium-range nuclear-capable ballistic missile capable of hitting most targets in Pakistan was test fired yesterday, a defense official said. The Agni-1 missile, which has a range of more than 700km, was fired at 10:15am from an island off the coast of the eastern state of Orissa. "The user trial of the missile passed the requisite expectations," the official said. The Agni -- Sanskrit for "fire" -- is a 12m medium-range ballistic missile that can be fired from mobile launchers and can carry a 1 tonne warhead.



― JAPAN

Man stabs mall shoppers


One person was stabbed to death and at least seven others injured in a knifing spree at a shopping mall yesterday, police said. The attack occurred in the city of Tsuchiura, said Kiyoto Ogata, a police spokesman. At least seven shoppers were injured and an eighth -- a 27-year-old man -- died as he was rushed to a nearby hospital, Ogata said. Police arrested the alleged attacker, a 24-year-old jobless man who was already wanted for the earlier slaying of a 72-year-old man. The extent of the victims' injuries and the attacker's motive were not immediately known, Ogata said.



― MYANMAR

Protester sets self afire

A man set himself on fire at Yangon's most famous landmark in a political protest against the military junta, witnesses said yesterday. Thousands of pilgrims were gathered at the city's famed Shwedagon pagoda for a Buddhist holiday on Friday when a 26-year-old man shouted "Down with the military regime," doused himself with gasoline and set himself ablaze, witnesses said. The man remained in critical condition with severe burns at a hospital yesterday, a hospital official said. The incident was the first known case of self-immolation in the country since the military regime took over in 1962.

― TURKEY

Bird flu detected

Authorities detected bird flu in chickens at a village in the northwest and culled 1,000 birds, state-run media said on Saturday. It was not clear whether the virus found at Esetce, close to the border with Greece, was the H5N1 strain. Officials did not immediately confirm the report. Esetce Mayor Muazzibin Nekes was quoted by Anatolia news agency as saying the area was under quarantine.



― CROATIA

Man builds chocolate castle

A man claimed on Saturday that he has built the biggest castle made of chocolate after working for 24 hours on his candy construction in a central Zagreb square, national television reported. The 3m high construction with a 6m-by-2m base was made of chocolate bars from a local producer Kras. The candy castle builder, Krunoslav Budiselic, boasted that his effort deserved a place in the Guinness Book of World Records. Some 100,000 chocolate bars were used to build the castle, which weighs 10 tonnes. After the castle was built its "bricks" were being sold as part of an Easter-time charity event to help disabled athletes.



― ITALY

Pope busy over Easter

After presiding over two Good Friday ceremonies, Pope Benedict XVI's next public Holy Week ceremony was an Easter night vigil Mass in St Peter's Basilica. The vigil, which traditionally opens with candles lighting up a darkened basilica, was scheduled to start at 9pm on Saturday night. Yesterday morning, there were more Easter traditions awaiting the pontiff. Tens of thousands of faithful were expected to flock to St Peter's Square for a midmorning outdoor Mass led by Benedict on the steps of the basilica and to hear him read holiday greetings in many languages.



― GERMANY

Peace demonstrations held

Thousands demonstrated for peace on Saturday in traditional Easter marches around the country. Some 1,000 marched in both Stuttgart and Duesseldorf, and 40,000 to 50,000 people were expected to join 32 demonstrations around the country, said Willi van Ooyen, spokesman for the organizers. Demonstrations included signing a petition against extending the German military's mission in Afghanistan, which would later be presented to the German parliament, van Ooyen said. Since the 1970s, Germans have taken advantage of the country's four-day Easter weekend to stage a variety of protests calling attention to a host of international and national issues and urging peace.



― CONGO

Religious group banned


The government said on Saturday it has banned a religious sect after clashes between its members and police left at least 68 people dead. The Bundu Dia Kongo -- meaning "Kongo People," a group urging a return to traditional African values -- clashed with security forces from late last month after its leader accused police of bombing its temples. "The government has decided to remove the Bundu Dia Kongo's authorization to function," Minister of Information Emile Bongeli said. Bongeli said the government has ordered security forces to destroy "36 Birds," the name of a hallucinogenic drug plant used by the sect's followers. Nsemi Ne Mwanda, the spiritual leader of the sect and a member of the National Assembly, has refused to comment. 

― UNITED STATES

Cornflake sells for US$1,350

Two sisters sold their Illinois-shaped cornflake on eBay on Friday night for US$1,350. The winner of the auction is the owner of a trivia Web site who wants to add the cornflake to a traveling museum. "We're starting a collection of pop culture and Americana items," said Monty Kerr of Austin, Texas. "We thought this was a fantastic one." This is not the first cornflake Kerr has tried to buy. He said he bought a flake billed as the world's largest, but that by the time it arrived it had crumbled. McIntire and her sister Emily, 15, listed the cornflake last week, but eBay canceled the auction saying it violated its food policy. The sisters then advertised a coupon redeemable for their cornflake, instead of the cereal itself.



― UNITED STATES

Man brings horse to hospital

A man hoping to cheer up an ailing relative at Wilcox Memorial Hospital hadn't considered one of the visitation rules: No horses allowed. The man thought the patient would enjoy seeing his stallion, said Lani Yukimura, a spokeswoman at the Kauai, Hawaii, hospital. He and the horse entered the hospital earlier this month and rode an elevator up to the third floor, where they were met and stopped by security personnel. The hospital has a pet visitation policy, but it's for dogs and cats, not horses. The man's good intentions were further dashed when his relative was brought out to see the horse. "That's not my horse," the patient said to hospital staff.



― UNITED STATES

Body found after tornado

Workers found a body on Saturday while clearing rubble from a building damaged over a week ago when a tornado slammed into downtown Atlanta, police said. "We may have the first tornado victim in the city of Atlanta, but we won't know for sure until the medical examiner" returns with results, Officer James Polite said. The front of the damaged building had been a store while the rear had been rented out to a local church. Workers using a Bobcat to scoop up bricks and debris saw a hand sticking out of the rubble and called police, Polite said. Investigators brought in two cadaver dogs to search the rubble east of downtown, but no other bodies were found.



― UNITED STATES

Speeder blames Oreo

Police say a man's excuse for speeding through a small Connecticut town takes the cake -- or, at least, the cookie. A state trooper who stopped the 1993 BMW last fall says its driver, 28-year-old Justin Vonkummer of Millerton, New York, blamed his driving problems on an errant Oreo. Vonkummer told the trooper that an Oreo had slipped from his fingers as he dunked it in a cup of milk, and that he was trying to fish it out when he lost control of his car. Vonkummer was charged with speeding and driving under a suspended license. The case is pending.



― VENEZUELA

Nine dead in prison riot

A prison riot between rival gangs left nine inmates dead and 20 more wounded, media said on Saturday. The fighting began on Friday morning when gunfire broke out in the San Fernando de Apure lockup in the center of the country, according to the Caracas-based El Nacional daily. The uprising was controlled with the help of more than 100 national guard and police agents, it said. Of the country's nearly 20,000 inmates, about 500 were killed and more than 1,000 wounded last year in riots and other violence, according to the Venezuelan Observatory of Prisons watchdog group.