■CANADA
Minister defends seal hunt
Officials defended the start of the annual seal hunt on Monday as a financial necessity for isolated communities as sealers faced pressure from a possible EU ban. Animal rights groups say the hunt is cruel, difficult to monitor and ravages the seal population. But sealers and Canada’s Fisheries Department says the hunt is sustainable and humane, and earns money for isolated fishing communities in Atlantic Canada. “The picture that has been painted in people’s minds is that we have small white coat baby seals that are being clubbed over the head and skinned while they are alive. It’s just so not true,” Minister of Fisheries and Oceans Gail Shea said in a telephone interview.
■UNITED STATES
Plath’s son commits suicide
The son of the poets Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes has committed suicide 46 years after his mother gassed herself, his sister and police said on Monday. Nicholas Hughes, 47, hanged himself at his home in Alaska, Frieda Hughes, who is also a poet, told Britain’s Times newspaper. Plath, an American famous for her autobiographical novel The Bell Jar and the poetry collection Ariel, has been at the center of a literary cult since she committed suicide in 1963 at the age of 30 while her children, one-year-old Nicholas and two-year-old Frieda, slept. Ted Hughes’ lover Assia Wevill also committed suicide in 1969, at the same time killing her young daughter from her relationship with the poet.
■UNITED STATES
Obama meets Gorbachev
The White House said on Monday that President Barack Obama met former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev last week as the US and Russia intensify efforts to “reset” strained relations. Gorbachev was at a White House meeting with Vice President Joe Biden on Friday when Obama informally dropped by, his spokesman Robert Gibbs said. The announcement comes just over a week before Obama meets Russian President Dmitry Medvedev in London. “The president tends to roam around the larger house and sometimes walks into meetings that weren’t previously on his schedule,” Gibbs said.
■UNITED STATES
Court debates ‘Hillary’ movie
Was Hillary: The Movie an anti-Hillary Clinton documentary or a 90-minute attack ad? The Supreme Court was trying to figure it out yesterday as it heard arguments over whether a political movie and its accompanying advertisements should be regulated the same way as political ads during election seasons. Citizens United, a conservative group, wanted to pay for Hillary — a documentary filled with negative criticism of the former New York senator — to be shown on home video-on-demand while she was competing against Barack Obama for the Democratic presidential nomination. But federal judges said the movie was equivalent to a political ad.
■UNITED STATES
‘Jane Doe’ finally identified
A mute elderly woman known only as “Jane Doe” since she was found wandering in a mall in New Jersey 15 years ago has finally been identified. Lieutenant Eduardo Ojeda of the New Jersey Department of Human Services police discovered recently that the woman is Colombian-born Elba Leonor Diaz Soccarras, who turns 75 on March 28. She has Alzheimer’s disease and has been bedridden in a New Jersey psychiatric hospital for years. Her identity, partly obscured because she and her daughter had a falling out, was established thanks to tips from the public and Colombian officials.



