Thursday, 11 October 2012
Hulk Hogan confirms Heather Clem as the woman who had sex with him on tape
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Wednesday, 10 October 2012
World's fattest woman to face trial for murder
One of the fattest women on earth, Marya Rosales, is to face trial for the murder of a 2-yr-old boy.
In 2008, Rosales first claimed she killed her 2-year-old nephew Eliseo Jr. when she accidentally rolled over and crushed him under her 1,100 pound frame, but Valdez knew something else was going on.
In the special, Rosales now says she saw her sister use a brush to hit Eliseo repeatedly on his arms, legs and head, and Valdez said she took the blame so that her sister's other kids would still have a mom.
Valdez said that Rosales' excuse collapsed under her own massive weight, especially after doctors determined the child's cause of death came from being hit, not from being smothered.
side view of Marya Rosales
When Sergio Valdez saw his 1000-pound client, Marya Rosales, in bed for the first time, he almost mistook some of her folds of fat for pillows.
"We've all seen obese, heavyset people. You have not seen obesity at this level," Valdez said in "Half-Ton Killer?" a TLC special airing Oct. 10 about Rosales, a woman bedridden from obesity, who claimed she accidently crushed and killed her two-year-old nephew.
Rosales reportedly weighs nearly 1,100 pounds, enough to qualify her as one of the world's fattest women, but Valdez says even knowing she weighs more than five average men, doesn't prepare anyone for her sheer massiveness.
"When you first walk in, she's got a blanket covering her; there's pillows all around her and so you don't know whether it's pillows or whether it's her," he said. "If you reach back in again, you think this is all pillows. You make a circle and [you realize] that it's Mayra."
Culled from HUFF POST
Teenage blogger survives bullet wounds from Taliban attack
Malala Yousufzai, speaking from her hospital bed shortly after the surgery
Malala Yousufzai, the 14-year-old school girl sought out and shot by the Taliban for blogging against them, was slowly recuperating Wednesday morning from the brazen attack that almost snatched her young life.
Doctors successfully removed a bullet lodged in her neck after three hours of surgery, and said her condition was no longer critical.
"God willing, she will survive," said Dr. Mumtaz Ali, a neurosurgeon who worked on Malala with three colleagues.
Pakistan is a country numbed by the depressing regularity of extremist attacks. But the Tuesday morning attack stunned even the weariest.
Taliban militants stopped a school van carrying Malala and two other girls on their way home from school in northwest Pakistan's Swat Valley.One of them asked, who is Malala Yousufzai?
When the girls pointed Malala out, the men opened fire. The bullets struck all three girls.
For two of them, the injuries were not life-threatening.
For Malala, it was touch-and-go for a while.
Pakistan's Army Chief Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani paid a visit to her hospital bed, and delivered a simple message: "We refuse to bow before terror."
The chief minister of Punjab said he would bear the cost of Malala's treatment, calling her "the daughter of Pakistan."
14-year-old activist wounded by Taliban
Taliban gunmen shot teen activist
The head of PIA, the national airline, said he was putting a plane on standby to take Malala "anywhere in the world if needed" for treatment.
And two neurosurgeons, one in the United Stated and one in the United Kingdom, have offered to fly to Pakistan if needed, the interior minister said.
Throughout the country and around the world, Pakistanis, hurt and angry, prayed.
"Malala is what Taliban will never be," said Murtaza Haider, the associate dean of research and graduate programs at the Ted Rogers School of Management at Toronto's Ryerson University, in an opinion piece in the Dawn newspaper.
"She is fearless, enlightened, articulate, and a young Muslim woman who is the face of Pakistan and the hope for a faltering nation that can no longer protect its daughters."
Pakistan's picturesque Swat Valley was once one of Pakistan's biggest tourist destinations.
The valley, near the Afghanistan border and about 186 miles (300 km) from the capital city of Islamabad, boasted the country's only ski resort. It was a draw for trout-fishing enthusiasts and visitors to the ancient Buddhist ruins in the area.
But that was before, militants -- their faces covered with dark turbans -- unleashed a wave of violence.
They demanded veils for women, beards for men and a ban on music and television.
They allowed boys' schools to operate. But closed those for girls.
It was in this climate that Malala reached out to the outside world through her online blog posts.
She took a stand by writing about her daily battle with extremist militants who used fear and intimidation to force girls to stay at home.
Malala's online writing led to her being awarded Pakistan's first National Peace Prize in November.
"I was scared of being beheaded by the Taliban because of my passion for education," Yousufzai told CNN at the time. "During their rule, the Taliban used to march into our houses to check whether we were studying or watching television."
She said that she wanted to be a political leader, that her country "needs honest and true leaders."
The Taliban controlled Malala's valley for years until 2009, when the military cleared it in an operation that also evacuated thousands of families.
But pockets remain, and violence is never far behind.
"In attacking Malala, the terrorists have failed to grasp that she is not only an individual, but an icon of courage and hope, who vindicates the great sacrifices that the people of Swat and the nation gave, for wresting the valley from the scourge of terrorism," said Kayani, the army chief.
The Taliban has already claimed responsibility for the attack on Malala's life. And on Wednesday, as police took the van driver and the school guard into custody for questioning and said they have identified the culprits, they issued another ominous threat.
Responding to reports that Malala had survived the attack, a spokesman for the Pakistani Taliban said, ""if she survives this time, she won't next time.
We will certainly kill her."
Culled from CNN
Malala Yousufzai, the 14-year-old school girl sought out and shot by the Taliban for blogging against them, was slowly recuperating Wednesday morning from the brazen attack that almost snatched her young life.
Doctors successfully removed a bullet lodged in her neck after three hours of surgery, and said her condition was no longer critical.
"God willing, she will survive," said Dr. Mumtaz Ali, a neurosurgeon who worked on Malala with three colleagues.
Pakistan is a country numbed by the depressing regularity of extremist attacks. But the Tuesday morning attack stunned even the weariest.
Taliban militants stopped a school van carrying Malala and two other girls on their way home from school in northwest Pakistan's Swat Valley.One of them asked, who is Malala Yousufzai?
When the girls pointed Malala out, the men opened fire. The bullets struck all three girls.
For two of them, the injuries were not life-threatening.
For Malala, it was touch-and-go for a while.
Pakistan's Army Chief Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani paid a visit to her hospital bed, and delivered a simple message: "We refuse to bow before terror."
The chief minister of Punjab said he would bear the cost of Malala's treatment, calling her "the daughter of Pakistan."
14-year-old activist wounded by Taliban
Taliban gunmen shot teen activist
The head of PIA, the national airline, said he was putting a plane on standby to take Malala "anywhere in the world if needed" for treatment.
And two neurosurgeons, one in the United Stated and one in the United Kingdom, have offered to fly to Pakistan if needed, the interior minister said.
Throughout the country and around the world, Pakistanis, hurt and angry, prayed.
"Malala is what Taliban will never be," said Murtaza Haider, the associate dean of research and graduate programs at the Ted Rogers School of Management at Toronto's Ryerson University, in an opinion piece in the Dawn newspaper.
"She is fearless, enlightened, articulate, and a young Muslim woman who is the face of Pakistan and the hope for a faltering nation that can no longer protect its daughters."
Pakistan's picturesque Swat Valley was once one of Pakistan's biggest tourist destinations.
The valley, near the Afghanistan border and about 186 miles (300 km) from the capital city of Islamabad, boasted the country's only ski resort. It was a draw for trout-fishing enthusiasts and visitors to the ancient Buddhist ruins in the area.
But that was before, militants -- their faces covered with dark turbans -- unleashed a wave of violence.
They demanded veils for women, beards for men and a ban on music and television.
They allowed boys' schools to operate. But closed those for girls.
It was in this climate that Malala reached out to the outside world through her online blog posts.
She took a stand by writing about her daily battle with extremist militants who used fear and intimidation to force girls to stay at home.
Malala's online writing led to her being awarded Pakistan's first National Peace Prize in November.
"I was scared of being beheaded by the Taliban because of my passion for education," Yousufzai told CNN at the time. "During their rule, the Taliban used to march into our houses to check whether we were studying or watching television."
She said that she wanted to be a political leader, that her country "needs honest and true leaders."
The Taliban controlled Malala's valley for years until 2009, when the military cleared it in an operation that also evacuated thousands of families.
But pockets remain, and violence is never far behind.
"In attacking Malala, the terrorists have failed to grasp that she is not only an individual, but an icon of courage and hope, who vindicates the great sacrifices that the people of Swat and the nation gave, for wresting the valley from the scourge of terrorism," said Kayani, the army chief.
The Taliban has already claimed responsibility for the attack on Malala's life. And on Wednesday, as police took the van driver and the school guard into custody for questioning and said they have identified the culprits, they issued another ominous threat.
Responding to reports that Malala had survived the attack, a spokesman for the Pakistani Taliban said, ""if she survives this time, she won't next time.
We will certainly kill her."
Culled from CNN
Man slumps dead after winning live cockroach-eating contest
Archbold
A 32-year-old man collapsed and died after winning a snake in a cockroach-eating contest at the weekend.
Edward Archbold was taking part in the "Eat Bugs For Balls" competition held at the Ben Siegel Reptile Store in Deerfield Beach, Florida.
The event promised a female ivory ball python to the winner - which was announced as Archbold, who gamely chomped his way through "dozens" of worms and cockroaches. According to a statement released by Broward Sheriff's Office, Archbold became ill and collapsed in front of the store. He was taken to hospital where he was pronounced dead.
It added: "None of the other contestants presented any medical issues after the contest.
"Archbold’s body was transported to the Broward Medical Examiner’s Office for an autopsy. They are awaiting test results in order to determine a cause of death.""Unless the roaches were contaminated with some bacteria or other pathogens, I don't think that cockroaches would be unsafe to eat," Michael Adams, professor of entomology at the University of California at Riverside, told The Telegraph.
Edward Archbold declared winner of the contest
Professor Adams said he had never heard of someone dying after consuming roaches, and added: "Some people do have allergies to roaches, but there are no toxins in roaches or related insects."
A 32-year-old man collapsed and died after winning a snake in a cockroach-eating contest at the weekend.
Edward Archbold was taking part in the "Eat Bugs For Balls" competition held at the Ben Siegel Reptile Store in Deerfield Beach, Florida.
The event promised a female ivory ball python to the winner - which was announced as Archbold, who gamely chomped his way through "dozens" of worms and cockroaches. According to a statement released by Broward Sheriff's Office, Archbold became ill and collapsed in front of the store. He was taken to hospital where he was pronounced dead.
It added: "None of the other contestants presented any medical issues after the contest.
"Archbold’s body was transported to the Broward Medical Examiner’s Office for an autopsy. They are awaiting test results in order to determine a cause of death.""Unless the roaches were contaminated with some bacteria or other pathogens, I don't think that cockroaches would be unsafe to eat," Michael Adams, professor of entomology at the University of California at Riverside, told The Telegraph.
Edward Archbold declared winner of the contest
Professor Adams said he had never heard of someone dying after consuming roaches, and added: "Some people do have allergies to roaches, but there are no toxins in roaches or related insects."
Wednesday, 3 October 2012
34yr-old American woman bags 180 days in prison for aiding kids' truancy
Cuevas
A California mom was sentenced to 180 days in jail after she pleaded guilty to allowing her kids to miss more than 10 percent of the of the school last year , KMPH.com reported.
Lorraine Cuevas, 34, is one of the first parents in the state to be convicted under the state’s chronic truancy law, the report said.
"We take attendance very seriously, and we want our kids to be in school," Tim Bowers, the superintendent for Kings County Schools, said.
Bowers said Cuevas ignored phone calls and letters warning her about the possible consequences. He told the station, on average, the school will make 15 to 20 calls before it takes action.
Cuevas is the second mother in the district to be placed behind bars over truancy. She has a child in the second and third grade, and the two missed a total of 116 days of school last year, the report said.
Parents at the Monroe Elementary School in Hanford, Calif., appeared to have mixed reaction over the sentencing, the report said.
"Put her on the freeway to clean up the mess or something," Melissa Mooney, a parent at the school said. "Who's going to watch her kids? I think 180 days is extreme."
Adriana Castaneda, another parent at the school, said the mother got off with a light sentence.
"I would have given her a year," she said. "Honestly, I think that punishment is not enough because a kids' education is really important.
Culled from FOXNEWS
A California mom was sentenced to 180 days in jail after she pleaded guilty to allowing her kids to miss more than 10 percent of the of the school last year , KMPH.com reported.
Lorraine Cuevas, 34, is one of the first parents in the state to be convicted under the state’s chronic truancy law, the report said.
"We take attendance very seriously, and we want our kids to be in school," Tim Bowers, the superintendent for Kings County Schools, said.
Bowers said Cuevas ignored phone calls and letters warning her about the possible consequences. He told the station, on average, the school will make 15 to 20 calls before it takes action.
Cuevas is the second mother in the district to be placed behind bars over truancy. She has a child in the second and third grade, and the two missed a total of 116 days of school last year, the report said.
Parents at the Monroe Elementary School in Hanford, Calif., appeared to have mixed reaction over the sentencing, the report said.
"Put her on the freeway to clean up the mess or something," Melissa Mooney, a parent at the school said. "Who's going to watch her kids? I think 180 days is extreme."
Adriana Castaneda, another parent at the school, said the mother got off with a light sentence.
"I would have given her a year," she said. "Honestly, I think that punishment is not enough because a kids' education is really important.
Culled from FOXNEWS
Aftermath of Floods: Crocodiles, hippos and snakes sack residents in central Nigeria
Dangerous animals, including crocodiles, snakes and hippos, have found their way into homes and communities in central Nigeria after devastating flooding, residents say.
The creatures were carried along flood-swollen rivers, say the authorities.
"There is now a hippopotamus in [my] house," Benue state resident Wuese Jirake told the BBC. "I hope that when it is tired, it may leave my home."
Hundreds of thousands of people have been displaced by the flooding.
Hundreds also died in the worst flooding in decades.
Vast tracts of farmland have been completely destroyed.
'Hope it will leave'
Mr Jirake told the BBC he had returned to his home to find it occupied by the hippo.
"This morning I visited my house. It is still inundated with the flood waters above my waist. There is now a hippopotamus in the house," he said.
Map
He said he had reported the situation to the authorities.
"I hope that when it is tired, it may leave my home. If there is any other way of dealing with the problem, the authorities need to pursue that because it is beyond my abilities."
Similar situations have been reported in the towns of Makurdi, Agatu, Logo and Adoka, says the BBC's Is'haq Khalid.
Nigeria's National Emergency Management Agency says it is working hand in hand with the Benue state government and other relevant agencies to ensure the flood victims return to their homes.
The co-ordinator of the agency in north-central Nigeria, Abdussalam Muhammad, told the BBC that it was not safe for people to go back to their houses because of the presence of the dangerous animals.
"Presently there are crocodiles and snakes as well as other dangerous animals brought in by the floodwaters that are living in those houses, so, if the people return, it will be harmful to them and they will put their lives at risk," he said.
He said people should wait for instructions after the floodwaters have subsided.
Culled from BBC
89yr-old blind woman regains sight after surgeons implant pea-sized telescope into her eye
Dorothy Bane
An 89 year old woman who received a pioneering pea-sized telescope implant has spoken of her joy at being able to read for the first time in seven years.
Surgeons at UC Davis Medical Center successfully implanted a tiny telescope implant in the eye of Dorothy Bane in May.
A close up of 89 year old Dorothy Bane's eye, showing the tiny telescope
She has suffered from end-stage age-related macular degeneration (AMD), one of the leading causes of blindness.
I can see better than ever now,' she said.
'Colors are more vibrant, beautiful and natural, and I can read large print with my glasses.
Bane, who was a watercolour artist, said she hopes the implant will let her pick up a paintbrush again.
'I haven't been able to read for the past seven years, and I look forward to being able to paint again.'
The implant is able to focus images on the undamaged areas of the retina.
The groundbreaking operation could lead to the procedure becoming commonplace.
'Macular degeneration damages the retina and causes a blind spot in a person's central field of vision,' said Mark Mannis, professor and chair of ophthalmology and vision sciences and director of the Eye Center at UC Davis Health System.
'The telescopic implant restores vision by projecting images onto an undamaged portion of the retina, which makes it possible for patients to again see people's faces and the details of objects located directly in front of them.'
The exact cause of dry macular degeneration is unknown, but the condition develops as the eye ages.
Culled from MAILONLINE
An 89 year old woman who received a pioneering pea-sized telescope implant has spoken of her joy at being able to read for the first time in seven years.
Surgeons at UC Davis Medical Center successfully implanted a tiny telescope implant in the eye of Dorothy Bane in May.
A close up of 89 year old Dorothy Bane's eye, showing the tiny telescope
She has suffered from end-stage age-related macular degeneration (AMD), one of the leading causes of blindness.
I can see better than ever now,' she said.
'Colors are more vibrant, beautiful and natural, and I can read large print with my glasses.
Bane, who was a watercolour artist, said she hopes the implant will let her pick up a paintbrush again.
'I haven't been able to read for the past seven years, and I look forward to being able to paint again.'
The implant is able to focus images on the undamaged areas of the retina.
The groundbreaking operation could lead to the procedure becoming commonplace.
'Macular degeneration damages the retina and causes a blind spot in a person's central field of vision,' said Mark Mannis, professor and chair of ophthalmology and vision sciences and director of the Eye Center at UC Davis Health System.
'The telescopic implant restores vision by projecting images onto an undamaged portion of the retina, which makes it possible for patients to again see people's faces and the details of objects located directly in front of them.'
The exact cause of dry macular degeneration is unknown, but the condition develops as the eye ages.
Culled from MAILONLINE
Tuesday, 2 October 2012
Over 20 students shot by gunmen in Mubi
At least 20 students have been shot dead by unknown gunmen in Mubi, Adamawa State in Nigeria.
A witness who did not want his name published said that the attack happened on Monday night, between the hours of 10 and 11 at a student hostel away from the Federal Polytechnic, Mubi campus.
Although there has been no official comment, a lecturer who also did not want his name in print claimed that more than 40 students had been killed.
According to the lecturer, the students were rounded up, made to line up and then asked for their names. Some were killed, others were spared. It is not clear why some were spared, and some of those killed were Muslims.
According to him, most people are now staying indoors, while those leaving town are mostly students.
Only a few days ago, the Joint Task Force had conducted a major operation against insurgents in the town, killing a major Boko Haram figure, and arresting more than a hundred.
Update: Emergency workers said they have mobilised several agencies to the area to carry out search and rescue operations.
Culled from DAILYTIMES
Woman who bit off boyfriend's testicles, back in court
Topp
A mother who was jailed for biting off her partner's testicles has landed back in court after the pair rekindled their romance.
Martin Douglas required emergency surgery and 19 stitches to re-attach his scrotum after the drunken assault by then-girlfriend Maria Topp.
But after reviving their love Topp claims she was “stabbed in the back” by Douglas after he reported her to police for breaching her restraining order.
Topp, 45, admitted unlawfully and maliciously inflicting grievous bodily harm as her trial at Newcastle Crown Court was about to start last October.
The mother-of-four was handed a 12-month sentence, suspended for 18 months, plus a restraining order which banned her from contacting Douglas.
However, after a “chance” encounter in Newcastle in March this year, the pair got back together again.
The pair had a “friendly chat” after bumping into each other in Yates’ wine bar in the city centre.
Topp followed up the meeting by texting Douglas asking: “Do you still love me?”
The pair resumed their love affair, but it had fizzled out once more in June, at which point Douglas reported Topp's breach of her restraining order.
Appearing in Newcastle Magistrate's Court Topp pleaded guilty to breaching a restraining order.
Prosecuting, David Thompson said: "This is a breach of a restraining order where the relationship ended against a backdrop of domestic violence for which Ms Topp was convicted in November last year.
"She was made subject of an order that essentially forbade any contact with Mr Douglas.
"In March this year the parties had a chance encounter and following that there was contact on her part with him.
"It prompted them to meet, it was initially platonic but then developed into a resumption of the previous relationship.
"There appears to have been an attempt by Mr Douglas to lift the terms of the restraining order but that was not pursued.
"The relationship ended after a day out on June 28 this year.
"It is fair to say it did not end amicably. He then complained about the breach of the order."
Topp, of Washington, Tyne and Wear, was fined £150 and ordered to pay £15 a week surcharge from her £40.50 a week Jobseeker's Allowance.
Elizabeth Dunbar, defending, said that Topp had initially pleaded not guilty as the terms of the order meant she could not contact her former lover 'without reasonable excuse.
Culled fro HUFF POST
A mother who was jailed for biting off her partner's testicles has landed back in court after the pair rekindled their romance.
Martin Douglas required emergency surgery and 19 stitches to re-attach his scrotum after the drunken assault by then-girlfriend Maria Topp.
But after reviving their love Topp claims she was “stabbed in the back” by Douglas after he reported her to police for breaching her restraining order.
Topp, 45, admitted unlawfully and maliciously inflicting grievous bodily harm as her trial at Newcastle Crown Court was about to start last October.
The mother-of-four was handed a 12-month sentence, suspended for 18 months, plus a restraining order which banned her from contacting Douglas.
However, after a “chance” encounter in Newcastle in March this year, the pair got back together again.
The pair had a “friendly chat” after bumping into each other in Yates’ wine bar in the city centre.
Topp followed up the meeting by texting Douglas asking: “Do you still love me?”
The pair resumed their love affair, but it had fizzled out once more in June, at which point Douglas reported Topp's breach of her restraining order.
Appearing in Newcastle Magistrate's Court Topp pleaded guilty to breaching a restraining order.
Prosecuting, David Thompson said: "This is a breach of a restraining order where the relationship ended against a backdrop of domestic violence for which Ms Topp was convicted in November last year.
"She was made subject of an order that essentially forbade any contact with Mr Douglas.
"In March this year the parties had a chance encounter and following that there was contact on her part with him.
"It prompted them to meet, it was initially platonic but then developed into a resumption of the previous relationship.
"There appears to have been an attempt by Mr Douglas to lift the terms of the restraining order but that was not pursued.
"The relationship ended after a day out on June 28 this year.
"It is fair to say it did not end amicably. He then complained about the breach of the order."
Topp, of Washington, Tyne and Wear, was fined £150 and ordered to pay £15 a week surcharge from her £40.50 a week Jobseeker's Allowance.
Elizabeth Dunbar, defending, said that Topp had initially pleaded not guilty as the terms of the order meant she could not contact her former lover 'without reasonable excuse.
Culled fro HUFF POST
Saturday, 29 September 2012
Biafra: Chinua Achebe publishes memoir on Nigeria civil war
Renowned Nigerian author Chinua Achebe has published his long-awaited memoir, There Was a Country, about the brutal three-year Biafran war.
He acted as roving cultural ambassador for Biafra when the south-eastern area tried to split from Nigeria in 1967.
For more than 40 years he has remained silent about his war experiences.
One of Africa's best known authors, Mr Achebe's debut 1958 novel Things Fall Apart has sold more than 10 million copies.
It has been translated into more than 50 languages and focuses on the traditions of Igbo society and the clash between Western and traditional values.The prizing-winning 81-year-old author and academic has written more than 20 works - some fiercely critical of politicians and a failure of leadership in Nigeria.
But he has never addressed the atrocities of the Biafran war, in which he was caught up with his young family - except occasionally in his poetry.
More than one million people died during the conflict in fighting and from famine - photographs of starving children from Biafra became synonymous in the media with the conflict.
BBC Africa analyst Martin Plaut says Achebe's memoir is filled with sadness - sadness at the deaths of so many of his fellow countrymen and sadness too at the fate that has befallen Nigeria.
He portrays the Nigerian government as ruthless in its suppression of the rebellion, our correspondent says.
Mr Achebe's UK publisher Allen Lane says: "There Was a Country is a distillation of vivid observation and considered research and reflection."
"It relates Nigeria's birth pangs in the context of Achebe's own development as a man and a writer, and examines the role of the artist in times of war."
Achebe ends the book with a poem: 'After a war.'
"After a war life catches desperately at passing hints of normality like vines entwining a hollow twig; its famished roots close on rubble and every piece of broken glass."
Mr Achebe has lived in the US since he suffered a car accident in 1990, which left him paralysed and in a wheelchair.
The memoir is published in the UK on Thursday and is due to be released in Nigeria shortly and in the US on 11 October, AFP news agency reports
Culled from BBC
Friday, 28 September 2012
Hong Kong billionaire offers £40m marriage bounty for man who woos his lesbian daughter
Gigi and her father Cecil Chao Sze-tsung
A Hong Kong billionaire has announced a £40m “marriage bounty” to the man who successfully woos his lesbian daughter.
Cecil Chao Sze-tsung offered the sum amid reports 33-year-old Gigi Chau had married her long-time female lover in France.
Gigi, who attended Manchester University, is said to have eloped with her girlfriend of seven years, Sean Eav, in April.A picture apparently taken in the first class section on a plane on Gigi's Facebook page confirms the pair were Paris-bound in April. It shows Sean Ev holding up an iPad and is paired with the caption: "Going to Paris to buy a few businesses".
However her father has apparently rejected the “false reports” and insists his daughter is still single.
He told the South China Morning Post: “I don’t mind whether he is rich or poor. The important thing is that he is generous and kind-hearted.”
He denied he would force Gigi to marry against her will, adding the prize money was “an inducement to attract someone who has the talent but not the capital to start his own business.”
Gigi seems nonplussed by the attention, taking to Facebook to note: “I would like to announce that I suddenly received a whole bunch of followers on my twitter account which I never use.”
Hours later she updated her status to read: “No longer accepting Facebook friend requests… sorry.”
News.com.au points out same sex marriages are not recognised in Hong Kong, where homosexuality was decriminalised in 1991.
It adds Cecil, now 76, attends many public events with his “latest young girlfriend” and once claimed to have slept with 10,000 women.
Culled from HUFF POST
A Hong Kong billionaire has announced a £40m “marriage bounty” to the man who successfully woos his lesbian daughter.
Cecil Chao Sze-tsung offered the sum amid reports 33-year-old Gigi Chau had married her long-time female lover in France.
Gigi, who attended Manchester University, is said to have eloped with her girlfriend of seven years, Sean Eav, in April.A picture apparently taken in the first class section on a plane on Gigi's Facebook page confirms the pair were Paris-bound in April. It shows Sean Ev holding up an iPad and is paired with the caption: "Going to Paris to buy a few businesses".
However her father has apparently rejected the “false reports” and insists his daughter is still single.
He told the South China Morning Post: “I don’t mind whether he is rich or poor. The important thing is that he is generous and kind-hearted.”
He denied he would force Gigi to marry against her will, adding the prize money was “an inducement to attract someone who has the talent but not the capital to start his own business.”
Gigi seems nonplussed by the attention, taking to Facebook to note: “I would like to announce that I suddenly received a whole bunch of followers on my twitter account which I never use.”
Hours later she updated her status to read: “No longer accepting Facebook friend requests… sorry.”
News.com.au points out same sex marriages are not recognised in Hong Kong, where homosexuality was decriminalised in 1991.
It adds Cecil, now 76, attends many public events with his “latest young girlfriend” and once claimed to have slept with 10,000 women.
Culled from HUFF POST
Saudi Arabia deports 510 Nigerian women
SAUDI Arabia, in apparent defiance of Nigeria’s ultimatum, has deported 510 female pilgrims.
The deportees, mainly from Sokoto, Jigawa and Kano states, arrived at the Kano International Airport at about 8.30pm on Wednesday, aboard a Meridian Airline flight.
The female returnees were among the Nigerian women pilgrims for the 2012 hajj detained in Medina and Jeddah for not having male escorts while trying to enter Mecca.
Vice President Namadi Sambo had on Wednesday summoned the Saudi Ambassador to Nigeria, Khaled O.Y. Abdrabuh, to register the Federal Government’s displeasure over the incident. Sambo also gave Saudi Arabia a 24-hour ultimatum to redress the situation.
Spokesman of the National Hajj Commission of Nigeria, Mallam Uba Mana, said those brought back were a part of 1020 earlier detained by the Saudi officials at the King Fahd Airport.
Mana was however silent on the fate of others who were still detained in Saudi Arabia.
He said the commission hoped that the Federal Government at the Presidency level would soon settle the matter which is already threatening the diplomatic relationship between the two countries.
“We are awaiting a response from the King of Saudi Arabia so that a discussion can be opened between the two parties.
“We strongly believe that there is hope in sight, we hope that shortly the whole thing would be resolved,” Mana said.
Calif. man behind anti-Muslim film arrested by US police
Nakoula Basseley Nakoula, a 55-year-old Christian originally from Egypt who allegedly produced the 14-minute trailer for the film Innocence of Muslims has been arrested and detained by the Carlifonia Police. Nakoula was investigated for violating probation terms after he was released from prison in 2011 for bank fraud.
He has not been detained over the contents of the inflammatory video. He had been in hiding after the release of the video.
After his 2010 conviction, he was sentenced to 21 months in prison and, under the terms of his probation, he was banned from using computers or accessing the internet for five years without an officer's permission.
US Central District Chief Magistrate Judge Suzanne Segal said: "the court has a lack of trust in this defendant at this time".
Assistant Attorney Robert Dugdale said the court believed Nakoula was flight risk.
"He has every incentive to disappear," he said.
A clip from the US-made film was dubbed into Arabic, provoking widespread anger for its disrespectful portrayal of the Prophet Muhammad.
The film was made on a very low budget, with insults and offensive inferences to the Prophet Mohammad and Islam crudely dubbed on afterwards.
Earlier, the Obama administration had requested Google, the company that owns YouTube, to remove the clip. The technology firm refused, saying the film did not violate its rules.
The clip was uploaded to YouTube in July, but violence only broke out on 11 September, after Arabic TV stations broadcast it.
The clip has not broken any laws in the US, where freedom of speech is enshrined in the constitution's first amendment.
Four Americans, including US Ambassador Christopher Stevens, were killed in an attack on the US consulate in Benghazi, Libya earlier this month.
Meanwhile, some of the actors in the video have come forward to say they were misled. They said had been hired to appear in a film called Desert Warriors,which did not mention Islam or the Prophet Muhammad in the script.
Culled from BBC
Thursday, 27 September 2012
Cindy Garcia sues anti-Islam filmmaker, YouTube in federal court
Cindy Lee Garcia
An actress who said she was duped into appearing in an anti-Islam film that stoked violent protests across the Muslim world took her legal bid to federal court on Wednesday in a renewed effort to force it off YouTube.
The lawsuit filed by Cindy Lee Garcia names the popular online video site YouTube and its parent company Google Inc. as defendants, along with the Egyptian-American Coptic Christian from California believed to be behind the making of the film.
Last week, a Los Angeles Superior Court judge denied Garcia's request for a temporary restraining order that would have required YouTube to stop posting the crudely made 13-minute video, finding the actress was unlikely to prevail on the merits of her case in state court.
As in her previous lawsuit, Garcia accused the purported filmmaker of fraud, libel and unfair business practices. But her federal lawsuit also asserts a copyright claim to her performance in the video, titled "The Innocence of Muslims."
Garcia's case was the first known civil litigation stemming from the video, billed as a film trailer, which depicts the Prophet Mohammad as a fool and a sexual deviant. The clip sparked a torrent of anti-American unrest in Egypt, Libya and dozens of other Muslim countries over the past two weeks.
The outbreak of violence coincided with an attack on U.S. diplomatic facilities in Benghazi that killed four Americans, including the U.S. ambassador to Libya.
U.S. and other foreign embassies were also stormed in various cities across the Middle East, Asia and Africa. For many Muslims, any depiction of the prophet is considered blasphemous.
Google has refused to remove the film from YouTube, despite pressure from the White House and others to take it down, though the company has blocked the trailer in Egypt, Libya and other Muslim countries.
Garcia's lawyer argued in court last week that her client, who is from Bakersfield, California, has suffered harm similar to a person whose privacy is violated by the unauthorized release of a sex tape.
But Google's attorneys said that the rights of an actor do not protect that person from how a film is perceived.
In her latest lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court in Santa Clara, California, Garcia says that Google is infringing on the copyright she holds to her performance in the film by distributing the video without her approval via YouTube.
Garcia's lawsuit identifies Nakoula Basseley Nakoula, 55, a Los Angeles-area Coptic man who has served time in federal prison for bank fraud, as the film's producer.
On Saturday, a Pakistani cleric offered a $100,000 reward to anyone who killed the film's maker. Garcia said in her lawsuit that an Egyptian cleric had issued a fatwa, or religious edict, against anyone who served as a director, producer or actor in the video.
According to Garcia, Nakoula operated under the assumed name of Sam Bacile, misleading her and other actors into appearing in a film they believed was an adventure drama called "Desert Warrior."
After the fact, however, she learned that some of her lines spoken in the production had been dubbed over.
The alteration made it look like Garcia "voluntarily performed in a hateful, anti-Islamic production," the lawsuit says, adding that she has "been subjected to credible death threats and is in fear for her life and the life and safety of anyone associated with her."
Nakoula has been in hiding for much of the past two weeks after being questioned by federal authorities looking into whether he may have violated terms of his probation in the making or promotion of the video.
Culled from YAHOONEWS
An actress who said she was duped into appearing in an anti-Islam film that stoked violent protests across the Muslim world took her legal bid to federal court on Wednesday in a renewed effort to force it off YouTube.
The lawsuit filed by Cindy Lee Garcia names the popular online video site YouTube and its parent company Google Inc. as defendants, along with the Egyptian-American Coptic Christian from California believed to be behind the making of the film.
Last week, a Los Angeles Superior Court judge denied Garcia's request for a temporary restraining order that would have required YouTube to stop posting the crudely made 13-minute video, finding the actress was unlikely to prevail on the merits of her case in state court.
As in her previous lawsuit, Garcia accused the purported filmmaker of fraud, libel and unfair business practices. But her federal lawsuit also asserts a copyright claim to her performance in the video, titled "The Innocence of Muslims."
Garcia's case was the first known civil litigation stemming from the video, billed as a film trailer, which depicts the Prophet Mohammad as a fool and a sexual deviant. The clip sparked a torrent of anti-American unrest in Egypt, Libya and dozens of other Muslim countries over the past two weeks.
The outbreak of violence coincided with an attack on U.S. diplomatic facilities in Benghazi that killed four Americans, including the U.S. ambassador to Libya.
U.S. and other foreign embassies were also stormed in various cities across the Middle East, Asia and Africa. For many Muslims, any depiction of the prophet is considered blasphemous.
Google has refused to remove the film from YouTube, despite pressure from the White House and others to take it down, though the company has blocked the trailer in Egypt, Libya and other Muslim countries.
Garcia's lawyer argued in court last week that her client, who is from Bakersfield, California, has suffered harm similar to a person whose privacy is violated by the unauthorized release of a sex tape.
But Google's attorneys said that the rights of an actor do not protect that person from how a film is perceived.
In her latest lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court in Santa Clara, California, Garcia says that Google is infringing on the copyright she holds to her performance in the film by distributing the video without her approval via YouTube.
Garcia's lawsuit identifies Nakoula Basseley Nakoula, 55, a Los Angeles-area Coptic man who has served time in federal prison for bank fraud, as the film's producer.
On Saturday, a Pakistani cleric offered a $100,000 reward to anyone who killed the film's maker. Garcia said in her lawsuit that an Egyptian cleric had issued a fatwa, or religious edict, against anyone who served as a director, producer or actor in the video.
According to Garcia, Nakoula operated under the assumed name of Sam Bacile, misleading her and other actors into appearing in a film they believed was an adventure drama called "Desert Warrior."
After the fact, however, she learned that some of her lines spoken in the production had been dubbed over.
The alteration made it look like Garcia "voluntarily performed in a hateful, anti-Islamic production," the lawsuit says, adding that she has "been subjected to credible death threats and is in fear for her life and the life and safety of anyone associated with her."
Nakoula has been in hiding for much of the past two weeks after being questioned by federal authorities looking into whether he may have violated terms of his probation in the making or promotion of the video.
Culled from YAHOONEWS
Man disguised as car seat to enter Spain
An ingenious illegal immigrant who disguised as a car seat in order to gain entrance into Spain has been caught by Guardia Civil officers.
The 20-year-old man from Guinea was hidden inside a Renault 7's passenger seat, with the co-driver sat on top of him while attempting to sneak into the Spanish enclave of Melilla from Morocco over the Beni-Enzar crossing on Friday.
The insides of the seat had been discarded, leaving only the frame which he slid into. The security officers had to help the man out of his hiding place.
Although arrested, the security respected the Guinean's ingenuity describing his attempt to pass undetected as 'unique and innovative'.
The immigrant's accomplices, two Moroccan men, aged 21 and 23, who allegedly tried to smuggle him across the border were arrested and will appear before a court accused of people smuggling later this week.
The man was also detained and appeared before a judge. He has now been expelled from the enclave.
Culled from DAILY TIMES
Wednesday, 26 September 2012
Man hangs self live on webcam to prove love to a girl
Srivastava
A 25-year-old event manager tied a noose around his neck and allegedly killed himself by hanging from a ceiling fan at his Varanasi home as his girlfriend watched helplessly on a webcam that he had left on. Cyber cops, acting on a complaint by Ankit Srivastava's parents, confirmed he was on a webcam conversation just before he committed suicide that may have followed an argument.
According to family members, the mother found her son's body hanging on Saturday in his bedroom. The webcam on his personal computer was switched on and his broken mobile phone was on the floor. His parents suspect that Ankit smashed his cellphone in anger before taking the extreme step.
Relatives also told police Ankit chatted with the girl every night and was planning to marry her in the face of resistance from her family.
The incident occurred on Saturday but came to light on Monday when police filed an FIR against the girl under Section 306 of the IPC (abetting suicide). The police have engaged cyber crime experts to verify allegations of `live suicide'. It is also taking legal opinion before interrogating the girl. Varanasi's Senior Superintendent of Police B D Paulson said that the investigation was still on to find the reason for Ankit killing himself. It appeared that the youth was in love with the girl and there was evidence that he was chatting with the girl that night, he said.
Police also said Ankit, a resident of Vinayaka Kolhua area, had attempted suicide earlier as well and his mother described him as short-tempered. His mother is a schoolteacher and father a retired bank employee. His body has been sent for post-mortem.
The victim's mother Indubala said her son had sent a message to the girl that he will kill himself. "My heartbroken son thought that the girl will stop him from killing himself but she didn't," she told reporters. The mother confirmed that girl's family did not want her to marry Ankit.
Though the police has registered FIR against the girl, officers aren't contemplating acting on it. "Even it comes out that the incident occurred during live video chat, its hard to find out whether the girlfriend tried to stop Ankit from committing suicide or not. How can you punish a person for chatting with someone," said an officer.
Section 306 carries imprisonment for upto 10 years.
Culled from TIMES OF INDIA
A 25-year-old event manager tied a noose around his neck and allegedly killed himself by hanging from a ceiling fan at his Varanasi home as his girlfriend watched helplessly on a webcam that he had left on. Cyber cops, acting on a complaint by Ankit Srivastava's parents, confirmed he was on a webcam conversation just before he committed suicide that may have followed an argument.
According to family members, the mother found her son's body hanging on Saturday in his bedroom. The webcam on his personal computer was switched on and his broken mobile phone was on the floor. His parents suspect that Ankit smashed his cellphone in anger before taking the extreme step.
Relatives also told police Ankit chatted with the girl every night and was planning to marry her in the face of resistance from her family.
The incident occurred on Saturday but came to light on Monday when police filed an FIR against the girl under Section 306 of the IPC (abetting suicide). The police have engaged cyber crime experts to verify allegations of `live suicide'. It is also taking legal opinion before interrogating the girl. Varanasi's Senior Superintendent of Police B D Paulson said that the investigation was still on to find the reason for Ankit killing himself. It appeared that the youth was in love with the girl and there was evidence that he was chatting with the girl that night, he said.
Police also said Ankit, a resident of Vinayaka Kolhua area, had attempted suicide earlier as well and his mother described him as short-tempered. His mother is a schoolteacher and father a retired bank employee. His body has been sent for post-mortem.
The victim's mother Indubala said her son had sent a message to the girl that he will kill himself. "My heartbroken son thought that the girl will stop him from killing himself but she didn't," she told reporters. The mother confirmed that girl's family did not want her to marry Ankit.
Though the police has registered FIR against the girl, officers aren't contemplating acting on it. "Even it comes out that the incident occurred during live video chat, its hard to find out whether the girlfriend tried to stop Ankit from committing suicide or not. How can you punish a person for chatting with someone," said an officer.
Section 306 carries imprisonment for upto 10 years.
Culled from TIMES OF INDIA
Meet the world's tallest dog
Meet Zeus the Great Dane – officially the world’s tallest dog.
He’s three years old, measures 44 inches from paw to shoulder and when he stands on his back legs is an incredible 7ft 4in high.
He weighs 11 stone, munches his way through 15lb of food a week and when he’s lying on the sofa watching TV, owners Denise and Kevin Doorlag, and their son Nicholas have to sit elsewhere.
Denise, of Otsego, Michigan, said: “It’s fun to see people’s reactions, especially kids – they think that he really is a horse.”
Culled from MIRROR NEWS
Millionaire cocaine addict whose nose collapsed jailed for 5 years
A millionaire crook so addicted to cocaine that his nose COLLAPSED - has been jailed for five years.
Wealthy property developer James Brown, 45, retired at the age of just 36 after making his fortune - but ruined his life by becoming addicted to cocaine to fill his time.
Brown, from London, saw his nose collapse and his life at risk from his daily use of the party drug.
His fall was complete yesterday when he was jailed for five years after a haul of cocaine worth £177,000 was found hidden in the air vents and folding roof of his luxury Bentley.
He was also caught with a fearsome collection of illegal guns in the hotel he was staying in in South Wales.
Police stopped his £120,000 Bentley convertible in December 2011 near Cross Hands, Camarthenshire to find cocaine hidden in the car’s air vents and in its folding roof mechanism.
Detectives then went to Hurst House Hotel in Laugharne, Carmarthenshire, where Glasgow-born Brown was staying.
The hotel was once part-owned by TV star Neil Morrissey of Men Behaving Badly and Bob the Builder fame.
Officers found a 9mm semi-automatic Walther PP1 pistol - similar to the gun used by James Bond - and a Russian 9mm Tula Tokarev.
A rifle and ammunition was also discovered.
Swansea Crown Court heard how Brown used his “legitimate money” to fund his cocaine addiction.
Prosecutor Craig Jones said: “Brown, through property dealing, became very wealthy and at 36 retired to Portugal where he was introduced to cocaine.”
But he snorted so much cocaine on a daily basis it led to paranoia, heart problems and severe deformity of his nose at the drug ate away the cartillage of his septum in his nostrils.
He said Brown “became paranoid” about his own safety and acquired the haul of illegal handguns.
John Hipkin, defending Brown, said: “He developed a massive cocaine addiction funded by legitimate means.
“He has suffered health issues, some cosmetic and some, like his cardiac condition, threatening.
“He’ll never return to that form of lifestyle again.”
Brown, of London, admitted possessing banned handguns, cocaine and ammunition.
Culled from MIRROR NEWS
Monday, 24 September 2012
Iran blocks access to Gmail
Iran blocked access to Google's popular and relatively secure Gmail service Monday amid first steps by the Islamic republic to establish a walled-off national intranet separate from the worldwide Internet.
Access to Google's search page was also restricted to its unsecured version, web users in Iran found. Attempts to access it using a secure protocol were also blocked.
The curbs were announced in a mobile phone text message quoting Abdolsamad Khoramabadi, an adviser to Iran's public prosecutor's office and the secretary of an official group tasked with detecting Internet content deemed illegal.
"Due to the repeated demands of the people, Google and Gmail will be filtered nationwide. They will remain filtered until further notice," the message read.
Google's own website tracking country-by-country access to its services did not immediately reflect the blocks.
But several residents in Tehran told AFP they were unable to get into their Gmail accounts unless they used VPN (virtual private network) software.
VPNs are commonly used by tech-savvy Iranians to get around extensive online censorship, though bandwidth of connections through the software is routinely strangled and occasionally even cut entirely.
Gmail is used by many Iranian businessmen to communicate and exchange documents with foreign companies. Iran's economy is suffering under Western sanctions that have cut oil exports and made trade more difficult.
Iranian authorities previously and temporarily cut access to Google and Gmail in February, ahead of March parliamentary elections.
Google's popular YouTube video-sharing site has been continually censored since mid-2009, following protests and opposition claims of vote fraud in the wake of elections that returned President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to power.
Other social networking sites, such as Facebook and Twitter, are also routinely blocked.
Iran is working on rolling out its national intranet that it says will be clean of un-Islamic content. Officials claim it will be faster and more secure, even though users' data will be more easily subject to monitoring.
Despite fears by Iranians that the new intranet would supplant the Internet, Mohammad Soleimani, a lawmaker heading a parliamentary communication committee, was quoted this week by the ISNA news agency as saying that "the establishment of the 'National Internet' will not cut access to the Internet."
He added: "Cutting access to the Internet is not possible at all, because it would amount to imposing sanctions on ourselves, which would not be logical. However, the filtering will remain in place."
Culled from NDTV
Pakistani Govt denies complicity in the offer of reward by its minster to kill Anti-Islam film maker
Bilour
A government minister in Pakistan, Ghulam Ahmad Bilour, offered $100,000 reward at the weekend to anyone who will murder the maker of the 'Innocence of Muhammad' film, which has sparked riots and violence across the Muslim world.
But Pakistani Government said on Monday that the offer of $100,000 by its minister for anyone who kills the maker of an anti-Islam film does not represent official policy.
The minister belongs to the secular Awami National Party, an ally in the government of President Asif Ali Zardari. The ANP is also the ruling party in the northwestern province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.
The party is considered anti-Taliban and has lost several leaders in the fight against militancy.
The film, titled "Innocence of Muslims," has enraged many Muslims around the world for its vulgar portrayal of the Prophet Muhammad.
The film's producer, alleged to be Nakoula Basseley Nakoula, has been in hiding since the unrest began.
The Pakistani government had called for a "special day of love" for Muhammad ahead of Friday prayers but demonstrations in Karachi and Peshawar turned violent, following similar unrest in the capital Islamabad on Thursday
Produced in the US, the anti-Islam film, whose origins remains unclear, was posted onto YouTube two weeks ago, causing attacks on US embassies in Egypt and Libya. The riots quickly spread to other countries in the Middle East and North Africa, however, Friday's unrest in Pakistan was by far the bloodiest day of the riots so far.
In Bangladesh, 10,000 protesters took to the streets of Dhaka to burn French and American flags as well as a mock-up of Barack Obama's coffin.
Further demonstrations were reported in Rawalpindi and Lahore after religious organisations called for continued protests over the film.
On Thursday evening, Pakistani TV ran adverts featuring Barack Obama and Hilary Clinton condemning the film in an effort to distance the US from the amateur production. The adverts were broadcast in English with Urdu subtitles.
The US has warned its citizens to avoid all but essential travel to Pakistan, while Richard Hoagland, the US charge d'affaires, has reportedly received an official complaint from the Pakistani government.
Cartoons of Muhammad printed in the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo and reprinted by several news organisations in Europe, have exacerbated ill feeling towards the west. The French government closed 20 embassies last Friday following publication of the caricatures.
On Friday, the militia responsible for the attack on the US Embassy in Benghazi on 11 September were driven out of the Libyan city by a popular protest.
Ansar al-Sharia, the hard-line Islamist group responsible for the killing of four US diplomats, including the ambassador, Chris Stevens, were swept of their base on Friday evening.
The storming of the base left at least 10 dead, according to Reuters.
The violence started when a large crowd gathered outside Ansar al-Sharia's base, shouting "no to militias". Supporters of the militia fired warning shots at the crowd, but fled with their weapons when the protesters failed to disperse
Parts of the base and vehicles were set on fire. A weapons depot was looted, according to the AFP news agency.
Earlier, more than 30,000 protesters marched through the city demanding an end to the rule of armed gangs. Since the killing of the ambassador two weeks ago, part of the protests over the anti-Islam film that have spread throughout the Muslim world, residents of Benghazi have protested against the militias, and demanded a return to the rule of law.
Culled from FOX NEWS
A government minister in Pakistan, Ghulam Ahmad Bilour, offered $100,000 reward at the weekend to anyone who will murder the maker of the 'Innocence of Muhammad' film, which has sparked riots and violence across the Muslim world.
But Pakistani Government said on Monday that the offer of $100,000 by its minister for anyone who kills the maker of an anti-Islam film does not represent official policy.
The minister belongs to the secular Awami National Party, an ally in the government of President Asif Ali Zardari. The ANP is also the ruling party in the northwestern province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.
The party is considered anti-Taliban and has lost several leaders in the fight against militancy.
The film, titled "Innocence of Muslims," has enraged many Muslims around the world for its vulgar portrayal of the Prophet Muhammad.
The film's producer, alleged to be Nakoula Basseley Nakoula, has been in hiding since the unrest began.
The Pakistani government had called for a "special day of love" for Muhammad ahead of Friday prayers but demonstrations in Karachi and Peshawar turned violent, following similar unrest in the capital Islamabad on Thursday
Produced in the US, the anti-Islam film, whose origins remains unclear, was posted onto YouTube two weeks ago, causing attacks on US embassies in Egypt and Libya. The riots quickly spread to other countries in the Middle East and North Africa, however, Friday's unrest in Pakistan was by far the bloodiest day of the riots so far.
In Bangladesh, 10,000 protesters took to the streets of Dhaka to burn French and American flags as well as a mock-up of Barack Obama's coffin.
Further demonstrations were reported in Rawalpindi and Lahore after religious organisations called for continued protests over the film.
On Thursday evening, Pakistani TV ran adverts featuring Barack Obama and Hilary Clinton condemning the film in an effort to distance the US from the amateur production. The adverts were broadcast in English with Urdu subtitles.
The US has warned its citizens to avoid all but essential travel to Pakistan, while Richard Hoagland, the US charge d'affaires, has reportedly received an official complaint from the Pakistani government.
Cartoons of Muhammad printed in the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo and reprinted by several news organisations in Europe, have exacerbated ill feeling towards the west. The French government closed 20 embassies last Friday following publication of the caricatures.
On Friday, the militia responsible for the attack on the US Embassy in Benghazi on 11 September were driven out of the Libyan city by a popular protest.
Ansar al-Sharia, the hard-line Islamist group responsible for the killing of four US diplomats, including the ambassador, Chris Stevens, were swept of their base on Friday evening.
The storming of the base left at least 10 dead, according to Reuters.
The violence started when a large crowd gathered outside Ansar al-Sharia's base, shouting "no to militias". Supporters of the militia fired warning shots at the crowd, but fled with their weapons when the protesters failed to disperse
Parts of the base and vehicles were set on fire. A weapons depot was looted, according to the AFP news agency.
Earlier, more than 30,000 protesters marched through the city demanding an end to the rule of armed gangs. Since the killing of the ambassador two weeks ago, part of the protests over the anti-Islam film that have spread throughout the Muslim world, residents of Benghazi have protested against the militias, and demanded a return to the rule of law.
Culled from FOX NEWS
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