Your Ad Here

Wednesday 23 May 2012

Emanuela Orlandi Was 'Kidnapped For Vatican Sex Parties,' Claims Father Gabriele Amorth

An undated file photo showing Italian teenager Emanuela Orlandi, the daughter of a Vatican employee, believed to have been kidnapped after a music lesson in Rome on June 22, 1983, when she was 15-years-old. (AP Photo, File) The Holy See was directly involved in the disappearance of 15-year-old Emanuela Orlandi in 1983, according to a contentious accusation by the Catholic Church's leading exorcist. The Rev. Gabriele Amorth claimed that the girl's kidnapping was a "crime of a sexual nature." "Parties were organized, with a Vatican gendarme acting as the 'recruiter' of the girls," Amorth told La Stampa, according to a translation by The Telegraph. "The network involved diplomatic personnel from a foreign embassy to the Holy See. I believe Emanuela ended up a victim of this circle." Amorth, who was appointed by Pope John Paul II and has carried out more than 70,000 exorcisms, is no stranger to controversial public statements; according to The Sun, the exorcist has called Harry Potter the "work of the devil," and has claimed "the devil was at work in the Vatican" when discussing the Catholic Church's sex scandals. Clues to the missing girl's whereabouts had pointed in several directions, including toward a Turkish gunman who attempted to assassinate Pope John Paul II, The Telegraph reports. On May 14, one rumor led Italian police to exhume the grave of Enrico De Pedis, a member of Rome's Magliana mob who was killed in 1990, the Associated Press reports. A one-time girlfriend previously said De Pedis committed the kidnapping, and an anonymous call to a television show in 2005 suggested clues on Orlandi's fate lay in the dead mobster's tomb in Basilica of Sant’Apollinaire. A set of bones not belonging to De Pedis were found, but the identity of the remains has yet to be released. The Vatican insists it has done everything in its power to help solve the mystery of the missing girl. Source: Huff Post

Korea Naked News girl in Japanese Porn

Korea Naked News girl in Japanese Porn movie has Korean citizens outraged. Oh, not because she stared in an adult movie, I mean they didn’t care that she was an Naked News achor (알몸누스 ). The people of Korea were embarrassed that that this particular girl was wearing a Hanbok (한복). This is a big loosing of face for the nation as the film was distributed not only in Japan, but available worldwide through the companies website. How could someone wear a traditional costume, wrote some Koreans who felt disgraced by these actions. Written on the jacket of the video was the ‘best babes of Korea taking XXX’ or something like that (if you know let us know) and you can see how sweet and innocent she is looking with her hands on her lap. Netizens lost it as the image of the Korean hanbok being associated with adult movies. Come on, cut the girl of loose morals some slack. What was she to do after the naked news “owner” in Korea flew the coop with about W300,000,000 in cable subscriptions therefore leading to these hopeful to be nude Korean girls without a job. Naturally what does an announcer do after they loose one job reading the news, well porn of course. I think that is what Dan Rather has been doing since leaving his anchor position. Source: Korea Insider

World's rudest countries revealed

Travellers may love France for its towering Eiffel and romantic Louvre, but not the country's natives. A poll conducted by Skyscanner revealed that the French have been voted by 1,200 of its respondents as the rudest nation. The French took the biggest share of the pie - at 19 per cent - for being "abrupt and curt," it said in a press release. The Russians came a close second at 17 per cent, while the British were third at 10 per cent. China emerged fourth on the list, leading the pack in Asia. (Emm...we couldn't agree more) But the website attributed the rankings to differences in culture more than genuine rudeness. Case in point: "Russians can be more direct when talking, which may be misconstrued as being rude," explained Tatiana Danilova, Russian market manager for Skyscanner. "The Russian language is not as polite as English, so when Russians translate directly from Russian to English, it can sound rude to an English speaker even if they don’t mean it to. On the other hand, the "Russians tend to consider British people extremely polite due to their courteous way of speaking,” she said. Skyscanner marketing manager for China, Yi Bao, gave another example to back the cultural difference theory. He said, while queuing is a social norm in the West, it’s not a common behavior for Chinese people, “so (it) could be interpreted as being rude (by international travellers).” Source: www.asiaone.com

Loan sharks take out anger on family

KUALA LUMPUR: Two different families bore the brunt of angry Ah Long (loan sharks) who threw Molotov cocktails into their properties. Ong Hwa Cheong, 44, and his mother Low, 69, were shocked to find the front porch of their house in Taman Sentosa, Klang, on fire at 2am on May 20. Ong claimed that it was the work of groups of Ah Long searching for his brother-in-law and his wife who fled last February after failing to pay their debts. “The two never stayed here but my brother-in-law gave my address to the Ah Long as a collateral, and now we have to face the threats and harassment,” said Ong, who is a facility engineer. He added that he had no idea how many groups of Ah Long were involved and how much his brother-in-law had borrowed. While relating his ordeal at a press conference at the MCA Public Services and Complaints Department yesterday, Ong said: “A group of Ah Long came to my house on Feb 16 and asked for my brother-in-law. “When I told them that he never lived in my house, they got angry and started smashing my car,” he said, adding that they also splashed red paint all over his car on March 1. In the wee hours of May 20, the son of Ong's neighbour called him after hearing a loud explosion followed by fire spreading fast in front of the house. “Luckily, he (neighbour's son) informed us early, or else we could have died in the fire,” said Ong, adding that they managed to put out the fire and discovered fragments of the hand-made bomb. Both Ong and his mother are hoping that the harassment will stop as they are innocent victims. In another case, a bak kut teh restaurant owner, K.S. Chai, claimed that the two joint shoplots he owned in Klang were badly burnt by Molotov cocktails on May 20 at 12.30am by one of the 13 Ah Long he had borrowed from. He lodged a police report the next day, and the case is under investigation. Source: The Star

Extra services at JB massage parlours

More than 70 massage parlours in Johor Baru are providing extra services, including sex, China Press reported. Quoting a source, the daily said there were three types of massages available in the city the traditional massage, massage plus extra services like oral sex and massage plus sex. The report said these centres usually targeted retired men, who had money and were lonely, as they were usually willing to spend on the women. A technician known as Xu said his father had been frequenting a massage parlour in Skudai since four months ago. "My father goes there every week and spends over RM100 (S$40.94) for each visit. "I was curious and wanted to find out why he went there, so I went there, too. "After 30 minutes of massage, the foreign woman who was sexily dressed asked if I needed other services," said the 30-year-old. Xu said his father spent all his retirement savings and pocket money given by his children at the centre. Source: The Star

Teen caught in the act

A COUPLE hauled their daughter and her boyfriend to the Kajang police station to make a report after discovering that she has been sneaking her lover into their house to have sex, reported Harian Metro. Suspicions arose when the mother of the 17-year-old found a motorcycle belonging to her daughter's boyfriend parked outside their house at 10am last Friday. She reported it to her husband who searched his daughter's room to find his daughter's boyfriend hiding in a wardrobe. The girl admitted that this has happened more than twice. Source: Asiaone

Pictures show N. Korea rocket launch upgrade

WASHINGTON - North Korea has undertaken a major upgrade of a launch pad that could pave the way for longer-range missiles, a research group said Tuesday, amid mounting concern over Pyongyang's nuclear program. Satellite images show that North Korea has made "rapid progress" in the past year at its Musudan-ri site and has apparently razed a nearby village for a building to assemble larger rockets, according to the US-Korea Institute at Johns Hopkins University. The institute suspected that North Korea was looking at rockets larger than its Unha-3, which flopped during an April 13 test, and that may have intercontinental range - a longstanding concern of the United States. "The new construction is intended to support future launches of rockets larger than the recently tested Unha - more capable liquid fueled space launch vehicles or missiles with intercontinental ranges - that will also overfly Japan, further aggravating regional tensions," the institute said on its blog, 38north.org. The researchers estimated that the upgraded center would be operational by 2016-2017. The pictures showed a flame trench, foundations for buildings and a white circular structure whose purpose is unclear but will likely surround erected rockets. The institute said that the facility had similarities but also differences with a launch complex in Iran and said it was uncertain whether there was cooperation between the two countries, both nemeses of Washington. North Korea stunned the world in 1998 when it fired a rocket over Japan into the Pacific Ocean. Its recent tests have been less successful, with even North Korea's normally triumphant media acknowledging the latest launch was a failure. North Korea said that last month's launch - carried out from Sohae, a separate station - was a bid to put a satellite into orbit. But US and allied nations believe that North Korea was fine-tuning a long-range missile. The communist state has since hinted that it will carry out its third nuclear test. A foreign ministry spokesman on Tuesday threatened "counter-measures for self-defense" if the United States "persists in its moves to ratchet up sanctions and pressure upon us despite our peace-loving efforts." The spokesman was hitting back at a statement Saturday by the United States and other members of the Group of Eight major industrialized nations that said they would press for UN action in response to further launches or a nuclear test by North Korea. The United States already suspended a February 29 agreement to provide badly needed food assistance to North Korea in response to the rocket launch. Glyn Davies, the US special envoy on North Korea, played down the latest North Korean statement during a visit to Beijing, saying it did not represent a change of stance by Kim Jong-Un's regime. He called for North Korea to recommit to a six-nation 2005 agreement under which it agreed to end its nuclear program in return for aid and security guarantees. "What we're looking for now from North Korea is that they will now begin to take actions to demonstrate that they are serious about fulfilling their promises," Davies said. The US-Korea Institute, releasing analysis of separate satellite pictures taken last month, earlier said that North Korea also appeared to be making headway on a light-water reactor that could support its nuclear weapons program. Source: Asiaone

Alaskan ecologists see surge in Japan tsunami debris

ANCHORAGE - An "unprecedented" surge in debris from last year's Japanese tsunami is washing up on Alaska's coastline, environmentalists about to embark on a major cleanup operation said Tuesday. Floating material including buoys and Styrofoam has washed up on Montague Island, some 190 kilometers southeast of Anchorage, in volumes that clearly suggest a wave of debris from the March 11, 2011 killer tidal wave. "The debris found on initial surveys of the island showed an absolutely unprecedented amount of buoys, Styrofoam and other high floating debris," said Patrick Chandler of the Center for Alaskan Coastal Studies. He said debris from Asia has been washing up on Alaska shores for years, so "it is incredibly difficult to say with complete confidence that a given piece of debris is from the tsunami." "However, we have never seen the amount we see now. In the past we would find a few dozen large black buoys, used in Japanese aquaculture, on an outside beach cleanup. Now we see hundreds," he told AFP, before the start of a planned 12-day cleanup operation, set to start Thursday. "There is no other possible source for this increase besides the tsunami, so our conclusion is that is where it must be from." Millions of tonnes of debris are expected to wash up in the coming months and years from the Japanese quake. Researchers in Hawaii have developed computer models to forecast where and when it could come ashore. In early April, the US Coast Guard sunk a deserted Japanese trawler that had appeared off the coast of Alaska more than a year after being set adrift by the tsunami. Also last month, a Japanese schoolboy heard he was getting his ball back, after it was spotted by an observant beachcomber on Middleton Island in the Gulf of Alaska. Canadian media reported in early May that a Harley-Davidson, with Japanese plates from one of the hardest hit areas, was found by a beachcomber on the Haida Gwaii islands off the coast of British Columbia. Source: Asiaone

Oops, Pixie Lott picks the wrong bra

Here's some useful fashion advice from British pop star Pixie Lott - Don't wear the wrong bra with a white dress. But if like her, you were stuck at Topshop with no other options, throw on a cool, luminous yellow leather jacket to hide your fashion faux pas. Pixie was at the UK high street fashion label's outlet in Singapore to play stylist to two lucky fans picked by local radio station 91.3FM through an online contest which invited participants to submit their worst fashion disaster. She was down south for a showcase at nightspot Zirca early this week where she performed hits like Mama Do and Dancing On My Own and doled out autographs. The 21-year-old singer - who "loves fashion - which girl doesn't?" - was also keen on going through a rack of clothes picked out for her by Topshop's in-house stylists. When she finally put together her self-styled look of a flowing white dress with a babydoll waist and the yellow jacket, she admitted sheepishly: "I would (wear the dress without a jacket) but I'm wearing the wrong colour bra." She recently ended a four-collection partnership with UK brand Lipsy, designing, among other things, dresses, playsuits and waistcoasts. So what makes the blondie suited for the stylist role? The always well-dressed Pixie doesn't really rely on a stylist on a day-to-day basis - though she has one who helps pick out clothes for events - and she plays stylist to her friends back home. "They always wear all of my clothes, and we go shopping together, and I help them pick stuff out," she said, who describes her personal style as "casual, with a little bit of quirk". Source: The New Paper Published May 23 2012

Cherie Chung in jewellery ad

A French jewellery brand has invited Cherie Chung Chor-hung to be its spokesperson. In February, the ex-actress flew to the brand's headquarter in Paris for a commercial shooting. During her stay in Paris, the organiser also arranged for Cherie to meet her favourite pastry chef Pierre Hermes, who is dubbed "The Picasso of Pastry". And Hermes caught Cherie by surprise by making a new Valentine's Day dessert for her. "Knowing to cherish and be grateful are the source of happiness. "Finding the real me and understanding myself are the foundation of self-confidence," she said. Source and image: Hong Kong Daily News

Michelle Yeoh delighted with 'Datuk Seri' title

International movie star Michelle Yeoh was awarded the Darjah Seri Paduka Mahkota Perak, which carries the title 'Datuk Seri', during the investiture ceremony in conjunction with the Sultan of Perak Sultan Azlan Shah's 84th birthday on Tuesday. Yeoh said she was surprised when she heard the news and flew back from Bangkok, where she was shooting a film, to attend the ceremony at Istana Iskandariah in Kuala Kangsar. "I was filming in Thailand when I got a call from my mother (Datin Janet Yeoh). "She excitedly told me to be back today to receive the award," said the Ipoh-born actress when met at the ceremony. Michelle said she was delighted and honoured by the award. Recounting the moment as she walked up to receive the award from Sultan Azlan Shah, she said: "I was really nervous as I did not attend the rehearsals. "The palace official said to me 'Datuk, walk slowly' and that made me laugh," she said. Source: DailyChili

Thousands rush to marry billionaires

Thousands of women from all over China rushed for a matchmaking event with 11 billionaires in Guangzhou. Aged between 19 and 56, some of them came from as far as Singapore and Australia. Over 2,800 women had to pass 11 tests set by experts in various fields such as physiognomy (face reading) and psychology before they would be considered by the billionaires. Their family background, mental and body health conditions were also checked. A candidate, identified only as Ah Ling, who recently graduated with a double Masters from an Australian university said she came to register and get herself a billionaire husband. "I wish to find someone who is better than me in everything," said the 28-year-old who is currently attached to a research company. After the first round on Sunday, only 320 candidates were qualified for the next round. Source: Nanyang Siang Pau / Agencies

Three friends charged with kidnapping Nayati

Three friends were charged with kidnapping 12-year-old Dutch national Nayati Moodliar last month. The accused - clad in T-shirts, shorts and slippers - did not show much reaction when they were brought to the magistrate's court in Kuala Lumpur on Tuesday. Self-employed Chong Tat Siong, 23, handphone seller Foong Khar Fai, 19, unemployed Lee Phak Seng, 23, and another still at large, were accused with kidnapping the boy with the intent to get RM300,000 ransom. The offence was alleged to have been committed at Jalan Kiara 1, Mont Kiara here at about 7.30pm on April 27. The trio were charged under Section 3 of the Kidnapping Act 1961, which carries a death penalty or life imprisonment and possible whipping if spared the death penalty, upon conviction. Prosecuting was DPP Faizah Mohd Salleh while Rajinder Singh acted for Chong and Foong while Lee was unrepresented. The court has fixed July 20 for mention. Nayati was on his way to Mont' Kiara International school near his home when he was abducted by two men in a black car. He was released at the Sungai Buloh rest and recreation area on May 3. Source: DailyChili

Research ship finds the world's oceans are 'plasticized'

A marine expedition of environmentalists has confirmed the bad news it feared -- the "Great Pacific Garbage Patch" extends even further than previously known. Organized by two nonprofit groups -- the Algalita Marine Research Foundation and the 5 Gyres Institute -- the expedition is sailing from the Marshall Islands to Japan through a "synthetic soup" of plastic in the North Pacific Ocean on a 72-feet yacht called the Sea Dragon, provided by Pangaea Exploration. The area is part of one of the ocean's five tropical gyres -- regions where bodies of water converge, with currents delivering high concentrations of plastic debris. The Sea Dragon is visiting the previously unexplored western half of the North Pacific gyre -- situated below the 35th parallel, and home to a massive expanse of plastic particles known as the "Great Pacific Garbage Patch" -- to look for plastic pollution and study its effect on marine life. Leading the expedition is Marcus Eriksen, a former U.S. marine and Ph.D student from University of Southern California. "We've been finding lots of micro plastics, all the size of a grain of rice or a small marble," Eriksen said via satellite phone. "We drag our nets and come up with a small handful, like confetti -- 10, 20, 30 fragments at a time. That's how it's been, every trawl we've done for the last thousand miles." Eriksen, who has sailed through all five gyres, said this confirmed for him "that the world's oceans are 'plasticized.' Everywhere you go in the ocean, you're going to find this plastic waste." esides documenting the existence of plastic pollution, the expedition intends to study how long it takes for communities of barnacles, crabs and molluscs to establish, whether the plastic can serve as a raft for species to cross continents, and the prevalence of chemical pollutants. On a second leg from Tokyo to Hawaii departing May 30, the team expect to encounter material dislodged by the Japanese tsunami. "We'll be looking for debris that's sub-surface: overturned boats, refrigerators, things that wind is not affecting," Eriksen said. "We'll get an idea of how much is out there, what's going on and what it's carrying with it, in terms of toxins." Scripps Institute graduate Miriam Goldstein was chief scientist on a similar expedition to the Great Pacific Garbage Patch in 2009. According to her research, there has been a 100-fold increase in plastic garbage in the last 40 years, most of it broken down into tiny crumbs to form a concentrated soup. The particles are so small and profuse that they can't be dredged out. "You need a net with very fine mesh and then you're catching baby fish, baby squid -- everything," Goldstein says. "For every gram of plastic you're taking out, you probably take out more or less the equivalent of sea life." Scientists are worried that the marine organisms that adapt to the plastic could displace existing species. Goldstein said this was a major concern, as organisms that grow on hard surfaces tend to monopolize already scarce food, to the detriment of other species. "Things that can grow on the plastic are kind of weedy and low diversity -- a parallel of the things that grow on the sides of docks," she says. "We don't necessarily want an ocean stuffed with barnacles." Eriksen says the mood on the Sea Dragon has been upbeat, with crew members playing a ukulele and doing yoga, "but the sobering reality is that we're trawling through a synthetic soup." Also on board is Valerie Lecoeur, founder of a company that makes eco-friendly baby and children's products, including biodegradable beach toys made from corn, and Michael Brown from Packaging 2.0, a packaging consultancy. Eriksen says they have been discussing the concept of "extended producer responsibility". "As the manufacturer of any good in the world today, you really can't make your product without a plan for its entire use, because you could eventually have 7 billion customers buy your product," he said. "If one little button has no plan, the world now has a mountain of buttons to deal with. There is no room for waste, as a concept or a place -- there's just no place to put it anymore. That's the reality we need to face. We've got this plastic everywhere." Source: CNN

Is the Internet hurting children?

Amid the buzz over the Facebook IPO, the ever-evolving theories about how Twitter is reshaping our communications and speculation about where the next social media-enabled protest or revolution will occur, there is an important question we've largely ignored. What are the real effects of all this on the huge segment of the population most affected by social media themselves: our children and our teens? The explosive growth of social media, smartphones and digital devices is transforming our kids' lives, in school and at home. Research tells us that even the youngest of our children are migrating online, using tablets and smartphones, downloading apps. Consumer Reports reported last year that more than 7.5 million American kids under the age of 13 have joined Facebook, which technically requires users to be 13 years old to open an account. No one has any idea of what all of this media and technology use will mean for our kids as they grow up. By the time they're 2 years old, more than 90% of all American children have an online history. At 5, more than 50% regularly interact with a computer or tablet device, and by 7 or 8, many kids regularly play video games. Teenagers text an average of 3,400 times a month. The fact is, by middle school, our kids today are spending more time with media than with their parents or teachers, and the challenges are vast: from the millions of young people who regret by high school what they've already posted about themselves online to the widely documented rise in cyberbullying to the hypersexualization of female characters in video games. These challenges also include traditional media and the phenomenon of "ratings creep" in the movies that our kids consume. Movies today -- even G-rated ones -- contain significantly more sex and violence, on average, than movies with the same rating 10 or 20 years ago. The impact of heavy media and technology use on kids' social, emotional and cognitive development is only beginning to be studied, and the emergent results are serious. While the research is still in its early stages, it suggests that the Internet may actually be changing how our brains work. Too much hypertext and multimedia content has been linked in some kids to limited attention span, lower comprehension, poor focus, greater risk for depression and diminished long-term memory. Our new world of digital immersion and multitasking has affected virtually everything from our thought processes and work habits to our capacity for linear thinking and how we feel about ourselves, our friends and even strangers. And it has all happened virtually overnight. From PCs in school to online schooling Should you bet on Mark Zuckerberg? It goes without saying that digital media have also altered our fundamental notions of and respect for privacy. Young people now routinely post and share private, personal information and opinions on social media platforms without fully considering the potential consequences. The immediacy of social media platforms, coupled with vulnerable youngsters who are socially inexperienced and not fully developed emotionally, can create a combustible mix. Kids often self-reveal before they reflect, and millions of kids say and do things they later regret. The permanence of what anyone posts online and the absence of an "eraser" button mean that the embarrassment and potential damage can last forever. We urgently need a public conversation in our country among key stakeholders: parents, educators, technology innovators, policymakers and young people themselves. The dialogue must focus on the ways social media and technology enable our kids to give up their privacy before they fully understand what privacy is and why it's important to all of us. We should also discuss how social media can help empower kids to find their voice, find their purpose and potentially create the next technology revolution. All adults know that the teen years are a critical time for identity exploration and experimentation. Yet this important developmental phase can be dramatically twisted when that identity experimentation, however personal and private, appears permanently on one's digital record for all to see. In the 1990s, as a reaction to an explosion of television programming of increasingly questionable quality for kids, Congress passed the Children's Television Act. There was universal recognition that given all the time kids were spending in front of the television, the nation had a collective responsibility to offer positive, educational programming with limited commercials. We are at, arguably, an even more important crossroads when it comes to digital media and technology. Howard Gardner, a professor and researcher at the Harvard Graduate School of Education who developed the concept of multiple intelligences, calls kids' use of digital media and technology "epochal change." He compares the revolution in digital media to the invention of the printing press because of its extraordinary impact on the way we communicate, share information and interact with one another. As a society, we have no choice but to engage with this new reality and work to ensure that it affects our kids in healthy, responsible ways. The promise of digital media to transform our lives in positive ways is enormous. If managed well, technology can improve our schools and education, deepen social connectedness, expand civic engagement and even help advance our democracy. But for these positive outcomes to occur, we as a society must confront the challenges endemic in our 24/7 digital world. We need legislation, educational efforts and norms that reflect 21st-century realities to maximize the opportunities and minimize the risks for our kids. Only then will we be able to give them the safe, healthy childhood and adolescence they deserve. Source: CNN

A nuclear clash could starve the world

Recent ballistic missile tests by India, Pakistan and North Korea -- which has ominously threatened to "reduce to ashes" the South Korean military "in minutes" -- are once again focusing the world's attention on the dangers of nuclear war. This concern was dramatically underscored in a new report released at the Nobel Peace Laureates Summit in Chicago. Titled "Nuclear Famine: A Billion People at Risk" (PDF), the study shows that even a limited nuclear war, involving less than half of 1% of the world's nuclear arsenals, would cause climate disruption that could set off a global famine. The study, prepared by International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War and its U.S. affiliate, Physicians for Social Responsibility, used a scenario of 100 Hiroshima-sized bombs exploded in a war between India and Pakistan. If there were such a war, the study estimated that 1 billion people, one-sixth of the human race, could starve over the following decade. Along with recent events, these findings require a fundamental change in our thinking about nuclear weapons. The study, in positing a war between India and Pakistan, shows the importance of understanding that smaller nuclear powers, not just the United States and Russia, pose a threat to the whole world. But the greater lesson concerns the forces of the larger nuclear powers. Each U.S. Trident submarine can destroy 100 cities and produce the global famine described in the study. The United States has 14 of them, a fleet of land-based nuclear missiles, and an arsenal of nuclear weapons that can be delivered by bombers. The Russians possess the same grotesque overkill capacity. Even the most ambitious arms reductions under discussion would leave the United States and Russia with 300 warheads each, most of them 10 to 30 times larger than a Hiroshima sized bomb. This would be a massive arsenal capable of producing the global famine scenario many, many times over. These arsenals are an archaic, but lethal, holdover from the Cold War. Their continued existence poses an ongoing threat to all humanity. Steps can and should be taken immediately to lessen this danger. Substantial numbers of these weapons remain on what The New York Times has described as "hair-trigger alert." They can be fired in 15 minutes or less and destroy cities a continent away 30 minutes later. This alert posture creates the needless danger of an accidental or unintended launch, and the United States and Russia have had many close calls, preparing to launch a nuclear strike at the other under the mistaken belief they were under attack. The most recent of these near-misses that we know about took place in January 1995, well after the end of the Cold War. The United States and Russia should stand down their nuclear arsenals so that it takes longer to launch their missiles, lessening the danger of an accidental war. U.S. President Barack Obama and Russian President Vladamir Putin can take this step on their own without negotiating a formal treaty. Beyond this, it is time to begin urgent talks aimed at reducing the U.S. and Russian arsenals as the next essential step toward multilateral negotiations for a Nuclear Weapons Convention, a binding, verifiable, enforceable treaty that eliminates nuclear weapons altogether. As former Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev observed on reviewing the new "Nuclear Famine" study: "I am convinced that nuclear weapons must be abolished. Their use in a military conflict is unthinkable; using them to achieve political objectives is immoral. "Over 25 years ago, President Ronald Reagan and I ended our summit meeting in Geneva with a joint statement that 'Nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought,' and this new study underscores in stunning and disturbing detail why this is the case." Source: CNN

Was Columbus secretly a Jew?

oday marks the 508th anniversary of the death of Christopher Columbus. Everybody knows the story of Columbus, right? He was an Italian explorer from Genoa who set sail in 1492 to enrich the Spanish monarchs with gold and spices from the orient. Not quite. For too long, scholars have ignored Columbus's grand passion: the quest to liberate Jerusalem from the Muslims. During Columbus's lifetime, Jews became the target of fanatical religious persecution. On March 31, 1492, King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella proclaimed that all Jews were to be expelled from Spain. The edict especially targeted the 800,000 Jews who had never converted, and gave them four months to pack up and get out. The Jews who were forced to renounce Judaism and embrace Catholicism were known as "Conversos," or converts. There were also those who feigned conversion, practicing Catholicism outwardly while covertly practicing Judaism, the so-called "Marranos," or swine. Tens of thousands of Marranos were tortured by the Spanish Inquisition. They were pressured to offer names of friends and family members, who were ultimately paraded in front of crowds, tied to stakes and burned alive. Their land and personal possessions were then divvied up by the church and crown. Recently, a number of Spanish scholars, such as Jose Erugo, Celso Garcia de la Riega, Otero Sanchez and Nicholas Dias Perez, have concluded that Columbus was a Marrano, whose survival depended upon the suppression of all evidence of his Jewish background in face of the brutal, systematic ethnic cleansing. Columbus, who was known in Spain as Cristóbal Colón and didn't speak Italian, signed his last will and testament on May 19, 1506, and made five curious -- and revealing -- provisions. Two of his wishes -- tithe one-tenth of his income to the poor and provide an anonymous dowry for poor girls -- are part of Jewish customs. He also decreed to give money to a Jew who lived at the entrance of the Lisbon Jewish Quarter. On those documents, Columbus used a triangular signature of dots and letters that resembled inscriptions found on gravestones of Jewish cemeteries in Spain. He ordered his heirs to use the signature in perpetuity. According to British historian Cecil Roth's "The History of the Marranos," the anagram was a cryptic substitute for the Kaddish, a prayer recited in the synagogue by mourners after the death of a close relative. Thus, Columbus's subterfuge allowed his sons to say Kaddish for their crypto-Jewish father when he died. Finally, Columbus left money to support the crusade he hoped his successors would take up to liberate the Holy Land. Estelle Irizarry, a linguistics professor at Georgetown University, has analyzed the language and syntax of hundreds of handwritten letters, diaries and documents of Columbus and concluded that the explorer's primary written and spoken language was Castilian Spanish. Irizarry explains that 15th-century Castilian Spanish was the "Yiddish" of Spanish Jewry, known as "Ladino." At the top left-hand corner of all but one of the 13 letters written by Columbus to his son Diego contained the handwritten Hebrew letters bet-hei, meaning b'ezrat Hashem (with God's help). Observant Jews have for centuries customarily added this blessing to their letters. No letters to outsiders bear this mark, and the one letter to Diego in which this was omitted was one meant for King Ferdinand. In Simon Weisenthal's book, "Sails of Hope," he argues that Columbus's voyage was motivated by a desire to find a safe haven for the Jews in light of their expulsion from Spain. Likewise, Carol Delaney, a cultural anthropologist at Stanford University, concludes that Columbus was a deeply religious man whose purpose was to sail to Asia to obtain gold in order to finance a crusade to take back Jerusalem and rebuild the Jews' holy Temple. In Columbus's day, Jews widely believed that Jerusalem had to be liberated and the Temple rebuilt for the Messiah to return. Scholars point to the date on which Columbus set sail as further evidence of his true motives. He was originally going to sail on August 2, 1492, a day that happened to coincide with the Jewish holiday of Tisha B'Av, marking the destruction of the First and Second Holy Temples of Jerusalem. Columbus postponed this original sail date by one day to avoid embarking on the holiday, which would have been considered by Jews to be an unlucky day to set sail. (Coincidentally or significantly, the day he set forth was the very day that Jews were, by law, given the choice of converting, leaving Spain, or being killed.) Columbus's voyage was not, as is commonly believed, funded by the deep pockets of Queen Isabella, but rather by two Jewish Conversos and another prominent Jew. Louis de Santangel and Gabriel Sanchez advanced an interest free loan of 17,000 ducats from their own pockets to help pay for the voyage, as did Don Isaac Abrabanel, rabbi and Jewish statesman. Indeed, the first two letters Columbus sent back from his journey were not to Ferdinand and Isabella, but to Santangel and Sanchez, thanking them for their support and telling them what he had found. The evidence seem to bear out a far more complicated picture of the man for whom our nation now celebrates a national holiday and has named its capital. As we witness bloodshed the world over in the name of religious freedom, it is valuable to take another look at the man who sailed the seas in search of such freedoms -- landing in a place that would eventually come to hold such an ideal at its very core.

What does Iran want from nuclear talks?

When Iranian officials arrive at the next round of nuclear talks in Baghdad on May 23, they will seek to advance several of their own goals, while only making modest changes to their nuclear program. Tehran's goal is to engage with the United States. Although the meeting will involve six world powers -- Russia, China, France, the UK, Germany and the United States -- it is the only venue it has to speak to American officials. Any breakthrough in talks with Washington might help ease mounting tensions with America's allies in the Middle East, including the Gulf Arab States and even Israel. Furthermore, it will ease voices inside Iran that oppose talks with the United States, without whose consensus Iran will be unable to shift the direction of its nuclear program. Iran wants to get Washington to accept it is a player in Middle East politics. This grants it leverage to negotiate new terms of agreement over its nuclear activities. In return, Tehran will offer solutions to its conflicts with the United States in the region. Unlike the United States, Tehran currently supports the Syrian regime and will aim to ensure that a future Syrian government will protect Iranian regional interests. Iran supports Palestinian Hamas against the U.S.-backed Palestinian Authority. Iran supports Baghdad's Shia government, which makes Iraq the only Arab country in the Persian Gulf to have closer ties with Iran than with America's Arab allies. Iran also aims to keep Israel at arm's length. It likes to portray Israeli hostility as a case of simple regional rivalry rather than one based on the real threat of a nuclear Iran. Ongoing talks allows it to maintain just enough transparency over its nuclear program to make the case that it is not fear of a nuclear Iran which prompts Israeli hostility, but the fact that it is capable of counter-balancing Israeli power in the region. Iran will therefore insist in the talks what Israel refuses to accept, that all states must join the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, eliminate existing nuclear weapons stockpiles and have the right to develop peaceful nuclear energies. Another goal Tehran will pursue is to demand that the tightening sanctions regime be loosened. An Iran-based journal, Iranian Diplomacy, suggests that Iran could cap its uranium enrichment at 3.5 percent -- a grade that can be used for nuclear power but not for nuclear weapons -- in exchange for easing sanctions. Obama: G8 unified in approach to Iran Iran could also propose first to dispose of its extra 20 percent enriched uranium, which it claims is produced for medicinal purposes. That is presuming that the Iranian claim to have the capacity to produce in abundance the higher-grade fuel is correct. The article underscored a political reality that U.S. diplomats have already experienced: Iran will never agree to cease enrichment altogether or give its enriched uranium away. In fact, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad never said Iran would, but the message was lost in translation when it was told in New York. That was because the West refused to admit a hard dose of reality when it was injected by Ahamdinejad's controversial figure. Just as it refuses to accept that Iran's nuclear policy is not determined by its presidents but by a higher body of decision-makers, which means that regardless of who leads the country the nature of its nuclear program will not change unless its demands are met. Iran is buying time without altering its questionable behaviors over its nuclear and regional policies. But the signs are clear that Tehran is committed to engagement to meet its desired goals. Iran's goal is to use delay tactics to arrive at some "soft compromises" in the talks. These include getting the United States to convince Israel to cease threatening Iran over its nuclear program, which has created tensions inside Iran. It also includes convincing the United States to permanently recognize Iran's enrichment program and to agree to ease the sanctions. In short, Iran is in the mood for what it calls "resistance diplomacy." This means, in the process of talks, it will continue to exercise patience to wear out the U.S. resolve to confront it. In the best case, Iran hopes to leave the talks feeling assured that its immediate security concerns have been sufficiently addressed. That explains Iran's recent accommodating stance towards the talks, which, according to former Iranian deputy foreign minister Abbas Maleki, has the full blessing of the supreme leader. In the worst case, Iran will continue using its regional influence and enrichment program to obtain future concessions. Iran will then use the next presidential race in June 2013 to revamp the nuclear talks by instilling in the West the false hope that a new presidential figure might be able to alter the course of Iran's nuclear program, which will not happen, again, unless its security concerns are addressed. The best choice right now is to play the same game with Iran, by engaging it with the same patience. At the same time, Washington must recognize that any change Tehran will introduce will be measured against a host of demands that it will make to ensure regime security. Therefore, in the process of talks, threatening Tehran with military action is counter-productive. And while sanctions are useful tools, they must be adjusted to loosen to any constructive change Iran makes and tighten if Iran is unaccommodating. The alternative is risking entering into a protracted conflict with Iran. Tehran's choice to pick Baghdad as the next venue for the May talks reveals a final goal: to unnerve the world by reminding it that only a decade ago Iraq was invaded on charges of possessing weapons of mass destruction. The current threat of war against Iran for fear that it could possess nuclear weapons may risk repeating the consequences of the Iraqi invasion in 2003. The Iraqi invasion brought about civil strife in the country, and increased the Iranian influence in the region. Source: CNN

Tiger's ex flaunts sexy body in skimpy bikini

They say there’s no better revenge than looking good and living well, and somewhere out there, Tiger Woods must be kicking himself because his ex-wife Elin Nordegren’s is looking hot! The mother of two was spotted lounging in Miami’s South Beach in a teeny weeny blue and yellow bikini that shows off her mighty toned body. The photo was taken just days after it was confirmed that the 32-year-old former Swedish model ended her relationship with billionaire businessman’s son Jamie Dingman earlier this year after dating for a year. Dingman, who sometimes get referred to as her rebound guy after her messy divorce with Woods, was said to have met Nordegren in January 2011 at a Red Cross charity ball. Nordegren, who earned a whopping USD100mil (RM312mil) settlement, claims she is looking for a more stable father figure for her kids she shares with the golfer - Sam, four, and Charlie, three. “Jamie’s a great guy but it was too early (after her divorce) for her to get serious with anyone,” a friend told People magazine. Source: Agencies

City Hall rejects permits but traders to go ahead

Kuala Lumpur City Hall (DBKL) has denied permits to 60 petty traders to set up stalls on the road in front of the house of Coalition for Clean and Fair Elections (Bersih) co-chairperson Ambiga Sreenevasan on Thursday and Friday. Source: Malaysiakini

Check Out the Kardashian Ladies' New Lingerie Ad

Kim Kardashian knows how to market her brand! The 31-year-old reality star simultaneously built buzz for her line of lingerie with Sears, and Keeping Up with the Kardashians by tweeting a pic of her and sisters Khloe and Kourtney over the weekend. The image comes from the Kardashian Kollection and features Kim, Khloe and Kourtney in a variety of skin-baring outfits. Kim posted the image with the reminder that, "Season 7 of Keeping Up With the Kardashians" started Sunday. For those curious about the seventh season, the word is Kim's new boyfriend, Kanye West, will indeed be making multiple appearances. Most recently Kim and the family were spotted out shopping in London while filming the show, where Scott Disick modeled a coat that looked half Elizabethan costume and half Halloween party pimp. Source: Zimbio

Dead man found at Changi identified

SINGAPORE - The man who was found dead in the forested area off Changi Coast Road has been identified as Mr Jason Peter Quek. The 38-year-old, who was married to former national sailor, Tracey Tan, had a daughter and was a supplier of marine products here. To his friends and neighbours, he was known to be a cycling enthusiast who would often go on late night rides. Contrary to what was previously reported by The Straits Times (ST), he was not out cycling last Saturday night when the incident happened. According to Chinese evening daily Lianhe Wanbao, Mr Quek had been out riding his motorbike with his friends. His body was found 100m from his motorbike, reported ST. Mr Roger Krempl, manager of the Singapore Cycling Federation, told ST in a report on Monday that there are some dirt tracks inside the forested area. However, it is illegal to cycle on those dirt tracks. The cause of Mr Quek's death is still unknown and the police investigations are ongoing. Mr Quek's brother, who did not want to be named, said his brother was an 'outdoors person'. His wife, Madam Tan, who now works as a sailing coach, was away in Holland with a team at a sailing competition when news of his death broke. She returned to Singapore on Monday afternoon, according to the ST report. Mr Quek's family collected his body from the mortuary on Sunday morning. Source: Asiaone

Malaysian charged with bribery not allowed to leave Brunei

BANDAR SERI BEGAWAN - The Magistrate's Court yesterday has ordered for an inquiry to be conducted to whether a representative could make withdrawals from the Employees Provident Fund (EPF) on behalf of a defendant who has been charged with corruption and his passport impounded. The defendant, Puah Heng Yew, the E-Map project manager/SPC manager, was charged with four counts of bribing the surveyor general to a total of $7,155.31 as an inducement or reward to vary tender specifications for a government spatial mapping project and submitting SPC's progress payment claims to Ministry of Development between May 2007 and 2008 in respect to the tender. The offence under section 7(1) Prevention of Corruption Act, Cap 131 carries a fine of $30,000 and 10 years in jail upon conviction. During the proceedings yesterday, Puah's counsel, Mohd Shazale Salleh, told the court that the defendant should be allowed to return to Malaysia as Puah needed to make EPF withdrawals requiring him to be in Kuala Lumpur. Mohd Shazale's application before the presiding judge, Chief Magistrate Hj Abdullah Soefri POKSM DSP Hj Abidin, was a four-week adjournment to allow Puah to settle the matter. However the Deputy Public Prosecutor Aldila Hj Mohd Salleh, objected to the application as there is a flight risk on the grounds that Puah is a foreigner and the seriousness of the charge which is punishable up to 10 years in prison. The case will be for further mention on May 29, with the result of the inquiry. Source: The Brunei Times

Stars soaked as storms lash Cannes festival

Lashing wind and rain damaged the roof of a Cannes screening room, organisers said, after soaked stars were left shivering on the red-carpet by a freak storm at the Riviera film festival. The weather has also caused the cancellation of a string of the open-air parties that are usually a highlight of the glitzy event. Source: Asiaone

Nato to affirm exit plan for Afghanistan

CHICAGO - United States President Barack Obama and Nato allies were to focus yesterday on logistical aspects of ending the protracted Afghan war after President Hamid Karzai vowed his country will no longer be a "burden" for the international community. Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari's attendance at the summit here had raised hopes his government was ready to lift a blockade on Nato convoys, but talks on reopening the routes have stumbled over Islamabad's demand to charge steep fees for trucks crossing the border. Mr Zardari and leaders from some 30 other nations and international organisations joined the Nato allies for yesterday's second day of talks. Leaders of the 28 Nato nations stood in solemn silence as a bugler's lament recalled the heavy cost of a conflict that has killed over 3,000 coalition soldiers, maimed thousands more and left tens of thousands of Afghans dead. As thousands of anti-war protesters clashed with police near the Chicago summit site, the talks aimed to endorse a withdrawal strategy and seek firm commitments from allies to train and bankroll Afghan forces. Although the anti-war rallies have been largely peaceful, scuffles broke out on Sunday when some hardcore demonstrators refused police orders to disperse. Police said 45 people had been arrested and four police officers suffered minor injuries. Before the summit, Mr Obama held talks with Mr Karzai, three weeks after the former's dramatic trip to Kabul, where the two leaders inked a security pact for going forward after the last 130,000 international troops withdraw in late 2014. "We're confident that we are on the right track, and what this Nato summit reflects is that the world is behind the strategy that we've laid out," said Mr Obama, who faces a tough re-election in November. But in a sign of growing impatience within the alliance, new French President Francois Hollande refused to back down from his decision to pull troops out this year, a year earlier than planned. "I told everyone I spoke with that this was not negotiable because it was a question of French sovereignty and everyone understood," he said. Mr Karzai urged the international community to complete a security transition to his Afghan forces. Source: Asiaone

Controversial activist fights SEAsian sex trade

HANOI - Sold into a brothel as a child, Cambodian activist Somaly Mam has become one of the most recognisable, glamorous and controversial faces of the global anti-sex slavery movement. The quirky, energetic campaigner boasts a string of celebrity supporters and has been named a CNN hero of the year, but she is as divisive among anti-trafficking activists as she is beloved by the international press. Most recently, Mam kicked up a storm of controversy when she allowed her "old friend," New York Times correspondent Nicholas Kristof, to "live-tweet" a brothel raid in the northern Cambodian town of Anlong Veng in November. "Girls are rescued, but still very scared. Youngest looks about 13, trafficked from Vietnam," Kristof wrote to his more than one million followers on the Twitter microblogging website, in remarks that trafficking experts say raised questions of safety and consent. For Mam, who created the anti-trafficking organisation AFESIP and now runs an eponymous foundation, the benefit of the attention Kristof brings to trafficking issues outweighs the security concerns. "Even if you're not tweeting it is also dangerous... but if (Kristof) tweets it, it's better because more people get awareness and understanding," Mam told AFP in an interview during a visit to Vietnam. Tania DoCarmo of Chab Dai, an anti-trafficking group working in Cambodia, said the raid coverage was an "unethical" PR stunt which broke Cambodian anti-trafficking laws and which "sensationalises" a very complex issue. "Doing 'impromptu' coverage of children in highly traumatising situations would not be considered ethical or acceptable in the West...it is inappropriate and even voyeuristic to do this in developing nations such as Cambodia." "This is especially true with children and youth who are unable to provide legal consent anyway," she said. AFESIP says it has been involved in rescuing about 7,000 women and girls in Cambodia, Thailand, Laos and Vietnam since 1997. In Cambodia alone, there are more than 34,000 commercial sex workers, according to a 2009 government estimate. The line between "victim" and "trafficker" is often not always clear. Women who were tricked into working in a brothel may go on to recruit others in the same way. Mam, who is in her early-40s but does not know her exact year of birth, was sold into a brothel in her early teens by a man who she says was either her grandfather or an uncle and then repeatedly raped and abused until, after watching a friend be killed in front of her, she managed to escape. "I was completely broken," she said, adding that this experience of being a victim is something she cannot forget and is what drives her anti-trafficking campaigning. Within the anti-trafficking field, Mam takes a controversially hardline stance: all sex workers are victims, whether of trafficking or circumstance, as no woman would really choose to work in a brothel. "Sometimes a woman - she tells me she is choosing to be a prostitute (but if you ask) how about your daughter? You want her to be? She'll say: No, no, no'," said Mam. "(they) have no choice". This position, which underpins Mam's reliance on brothel raids as a tool to fight trafficking, enrages other activists, such as the Asia Pacific Sex Worker Network, which argues consenting adult sex workers need "rights not rescues." Sweeping raid-and-rescue operations and police round-ups of street-based sex workers are not only ineffective, experts say, but lead to "systematic violations of sex workers' human rights," New York-based Human Rights Watch said in 2010 report. Mam's organisation, AFESIP, has also been criticised for accepting sex workers picked up during Cambodian police round ups which HRW has said constitute "arbitrary arrests and detentions of innocent people". Mam dismissed HRW's assessment. "When a girl has been killed in the brothel does HRW go into the brothel? So who are you exactly? When I am in the brothel, one of my friend she has been killed. Did HRW go there? No," she said. Consenting, adult sex workers detained during the police raids - who say they were neither victims of trafficking nor wanting AFESIP's services - have also reported being held against their will at AFESIP shelters. "The first time (a sex worker) come to the shelter she don't want to stay ... because she don't know us," Mam said, adding that women are so "broken" by sex work they want to stay in the familiar surroundings of the brothel. "I always say: please, can you just stay one or two days, treat it like a holiday," she said, adding that if women chose to stay in the brothels she respected that decision. "I'm not going to force them, I have been forced my own life. It's up to them," she said, adding that this applied within the shelters, with no girl being forced to speak to the press or share her experiences with anyone. Mam says she tries to listen to and learn from criticism of her tactics and approach, adding that she has "made a lot of mistakes in my life," and has never claimed to have all the answers to how to end sex slavery. "What I know how to do is just helping the women," she said. Source: Asiaone

Asia's largest gaming expo opens in Macau

MACAU - Casino industry leaders gathered in the world's gambling capital of Macau on Tuesday for the Global Gaming Expo Asia, a three-day feast of gambling innovations at the glitzy Venetian hotel. No expense or kitschy extravagance has been spared for the largest gaming event in Asia, showcasing the industry's latest products, services and technologies. The casino business has boomed in Asia, and especially in the former Portuguese colony of Macau, over the past 10 years but this year's expo is taking place amid fears of a glut of gaming tables across the region. Gaming revenue growth in Macau has fallen from the stunning highs of the past two years, and the city's casino operators have watched their companies' shares tumble on the Hong Kong stock exchange since the end of April. Standard & Poor's ratings agency last week warned of "medium-term risks" for Asia-Pacific gaming companies, notably those in Macau and Singapore, from billions of dollars in new casino supply proposed over the next five years. It asked whether the Chinese gambling market could fill the huge integrated resorts - all-in-one playgrounds of casinos, hotels and luxury retail space - that are earmarked for construction from Macau to Manila Bay. Earnings growth would moderate over the next 12 months, while remaining "robust", the agency said. "Given this backdrop, and despite continuing global economic uncertainty, all rated casino operators operating in the region have a stable or positive outlook," it said. US gaming mogul Steve Wynn announced this month he had received the go-ahead to build a new casino in Macau, adding to the 265,000 square feet (24,619 square metres) of gaming space his local unit Wynn Macau already owns. In late April, Macau's Galaxy Entertainment Group announced its intention to build the HK$16 billion ($2.1 billion) second phase of its Galaxy Macau integrated resort, ramping up competition in the city. Source: Asiaone News

TV host shot to fame after kissing Agnelli heir

A relatively unknown Chinese celebrity, Zhu Zhu, has shot to stardom after being photographed kissing playboy Lapo Elkann. Nicknamed "Lapo the luxury", Lapo is one of the heirs to the sprawling Agnelli family empire that owns automobile giant Fiat and Italian soccer club Juventus. After kissing at Serie A championship match between Juventus and Atlanta last Sunday, the pair attended the premier of Madagascar 3:Europe's Most Wanted in France a few days later. The premier was held in conjunction with the Cannes International Film Festival. Wearing a black blouse with nothing inside and being by Lapo's side, Zhu Zhu has successfully captured the attentions of the media. It was reported that Lapo and Zhu Zhu met at an exhibition in Beijing, China last month. Zhu Zhu has hosted a variety of shows on MTV's international Chinese channel, according to Want China Times. An electronics and information engineering graduate from Beijing Technology and Business University, Zhu Zhu reportedly has a flair for English since junior high. She is also an aspiring singer and actress. Despite her talents, Zhu Zhu was not known in China until her name is linked to Lapo. Source: Agencies / What China Times Images: China Entertainment News

Toddler almost killed in dryer prank

A U.S. father’s prank on his child went wrong when the washing machine he’d placed his son in suddenly started to whir into action. CCTV footage at a launderette shows the man lifting the boy into the machine after seeing a sign reading “Junior wash $2.95.” The prank almost turned to disaster when the door locked automatically and the machine started to spin. The video shows the mother slamming her hands down on a table in desperation as the man fails to rescue his son. The toddler was eventually freed by a member of staff after more than a minute, having suffered minor injuries. Source: The Korea Herald