N.Korea says U.S. military drills pose ‘danger’ to region

July 22 (Reuters) – U.S. and South Korean plans to start large-scale joint military drills this month pose a major danger to the region, a North Korean diplomat said on Thursday.

“The decision to hold military drills is a major danger for the security of the region,” North Korean official Ri Tong-il, a member of Pyongyang’s delegation at a regional security forum in Hanoi, told reporters.

South Korea and the United States say the exercises scheduled from July 25 aim to deter North Korea from any future attack, after Seoul blamed Pyongyang for the sinking of a South Korean warship in March.

(Reporting by John Ruwitch; Editing by Jason Szep)

Malaysian man becomes first amputee to climb Mount Kinabalu

Petaling Jaya (Malaysia), May 20(ANI): A 25-year-old Malaysian man has got into the Malaysia Book of Records for becoming the first amputee to climb Mount Kinabalu.

Melvin Tong, who lost his right leg to a cancerous tumour eight years ago, climbed Mount Kinabalu from April 18 to 22 to raise awareness of child abuse.

A certificate honouring Tong’s mountain-climbing milestone was presented to him by Malaysia Book of Records’ founder and Managing Director, Danny Ooi.

“He made the country proud by being the first amputee to climb Mount Kinabalu,” The Star quoted Ooi, as saying.

Meanwhile, Tong said he was honoured to receive the award and hoped his achievement would inspire other people to achieve their dream.

“We all can do something to bring about change,” Tong said.

Mount Kinabalu is the fourth tallest mountain in the Malay Archipelago after Indonesian Papua’s Puncak Jaya, Puncak Trikora and Puncak Mandala. (ANI)

China Olympic judo champion Tong banned for two years

Chinese Olympic judo champion Tong Wen has been banned for two years and stripped of her world title after failing a doping test at the world championships in the Netherlands last year.

Tong, who claimed the women’s 78kg title at the 2008 Beijing Games and won a fourth world championship at Rotterdam, had tested positive for banned substance Clenbuterol, Chinese state media reported late on Saturday.

The International Judo Federation issued the ban at a council meeting in Tunis on Friday, Xinhua news agency said, citing a Chinese judo official.

Ma Wenguang, the director of China’s weightlifting, wrestling and judo administration centre, told Xinhua the sport’s governing body “would seriously deal with it”.

The International Judo Federation was unavailable for comment.

Clenbuterol is often used to treat breathing disorders, rising blood pressure and for oxygen transportation.

“(It) can boost muscle, like an anabolic steroid,” Zhao Jian, deputy director of the China Anti-Doping Agency, told Xinhua.

“We had tested Tong last year before she went to the Netherlands but found nothing at that moment,” he added.

Tong, China’s most successful judoka, won three world titles in the 78kg class between 2005-2009 and one in the open category in 2003.

(Reporting by Ian Ransom in Melbourne, Editing by Greg Stutchbury; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

Malaysian state civil service has only 10 Chinese and 116 Indians

Johor Baru (Malaysia), Mar.30 (ANI): The 8,372-strong civil service of the Malaysian state of Johor Baru has only 10 Chinese and 116 Indians, The Star has quoted an assemblyman, as saying.

Bentayan assemblyman Gwee Tong Hian said in terms of percentage, Indians and Chinese made up 1.39 percent and 0.12 percent of the state civil service respectively.

Gwee said the statistics were given to him in a written reply from Minister Abdul Ghani Othman.

Abdul Ghani revealed that in 2007, only five Indians applied for jobs in the civil service, with only two being short-listed and appointed.

There were no Chinese applicants that year.

In 2008, there were seven Indian applicants. Only four were appointed. As for Chinese applicants, only five applied, two were short-listed and appointed.

Abdul Ghani said the Johor Public Services Commission had received many applications that were now in the vetting and interview stages.

He said the commission had also taken initiatives to encourage non-Malays to join the civil service with programmes initiated by the state’s Economic Planning Unit and Jobstreet.com. (ANI)

Chinese boy, 2, is world’s youngest smoker

Melbourne, June 25 (ANI): A two-year-old Chinese boy is the world’s youngest smoker.

And it was Tong Liangliang’s dad who taught him how to spark up between tantrums and milky vomits.

Liangliang’s dad said his son was born with a hernia, and being too young for an operation, has taken up smoking to help him deal with the pain.

“The father wasn’t aware how serious the toddler’s habit had become until the child began to increase the number of cigarettes he smoked per day,” News.com.au quoted news agency CRI as saying.

However, The Guinness Book of World Records may not accept the feat, as it has refused such requests before on the grounds that it “promoted a harmful habit”. (ANI)

Chinese computer technician gets over 8 months in jail for Chen sex scandal

New Delhi, May 14 (ANI): A Chinese computer technician involved in the stealing of sexually explicit photos of Canto pop star Edison Chen Koon-hei has been sentenced to eight-and-a-half months in jail.

The Kowloon City Magistrate Court found Dicky Sze Ho-chun, 24, guilty of dishonestly obtaining access to the intimate photos showing Chen in sex acts with female celebrities, including Gillian Chung, Cecilia Cheung and Bobo Chan.

But his defence counsel has declared that he would file an appeal, reports the China Daily.

Sze has been accused of stealing the pictures while Chen’s computer was being repaired at Elite Multimedia Limited, where he was an employee, and he is said to have shown the photos to two female staff at a household store.

He also burnt a compact disc containing 1,300 sex images for one of them.

Pleading for leniency before Chief Magistrate Tong Man, defence counsel Kevin Tang said that Sze was only 21 when he committed the crime and was ignorant of the law.

“The defendant had no malicious intention in showing the nude images to others. He was an innocent boy willing to share his experience with people who asked him to do so. He regrets what he did,” said Tang, adding Sze accepts responsibility for the incident.

However, Magistrate Tong ruled out suspending the sentence owing to the seriousness of the crime.

“Though the defendant realized no monetary gain, he gravely invaded the privacy of others and breached the trust of his employer,” he said.

Although there was no evidence to prove Sze was responsible for touching off the high-profile scandal by distributing the photos on the Internet, he did expose private information of others in an extremely dangerous situation, he added.

The magistrate refused to grant bail pending appeal, and ordered that Sze be jailed immediately.

Chief Inspector of Police Kenny Wong Tak-cheung said that the judgment served as a warning to the public that it is a serious offence to use a computer dishonestly.

“Hong Kong Police is determined and capable of combating technological crimes,” he added. (ANI)

Brit Muslim catering manager claims discrimination in pork handling row

London, May 12 (ANI): A Muslim catering manager, Hasanali Khoja, who refused to cook sausages and bacon because it was against his religion, has claimed that he was religiously discriminated against.

Khoja, 60, told a tribunal here that he feared he would be splashed with fat from the pork products and that even wearing gloves and using tongs to cook would not protect him.

Islam forbids Muslims to eat or handle pork products.

According to The Telegraph, Khoja alleges he was discriminated against due to his religion and that, during a meeting to resolve the situation, a human resources manager pulled faces and made racist gestures.

He said he had raised the issue of pork handling at his interview in 2004 for a senior catering manager job with the Metropolitan Police Service and was told no food handling would be involved as it was a supervisory role.

Khoja was successful and started the job at Hendon police training centre on March 7, 2005 but was found to have inadequate IT skills and in August that year accepted a job as higher catering manager at the same site.

His objections to touching pork products were respected and, during training assessments, a colleague cooked sausages and bacon for a so-called 999 breakfast while he cooked toast and eggs, he said.

On February 1, 2007 Mr Khoja said he was told he was being transferred to a kitchen at Heathrow Airport.

When he reported to Heathrow he was told he was expected to prepare, cook and serve all food and immediately voiced his objections to touching pork products.

A meeting was arranged to discuss the problem on February 12, which continued on February 13.

During the second day, Khoja said the human resources manager, Paul Bell, told him his job was at risk if he did not follow instructions. Bell then pulled faces and made racist gestures, Khoja said.

Khoja told the tribunal in Watford, Hertfordshire, that he had refused to handle pork products even if gloves and tongs were provided. (ANI)

Seoul shares may rise, but gains seen limited

SEOUL, April 13 (Reuters) – Seoul shares may rise on Monday
but gains could be limited following their latest rally and as a
long weekend on Wall Street gives the market little direction,
with auto issues likely to be in the spotlight on government
support measures.

“I’d say shares still have upward momentum, though caution
about corporate results exists. Investors are waiting in
particular for U.S. bank results, which Wells Fargo (WFC.N)
kicked off on a positive note,” said Lee Jae-mahn, a market
analyst at Tong Yang Securities.

“Stocks have risen too much and too fast, and gains may be
limited in that regard,” Lee added.

The Korea Composite Stock Price Index (KOSPI) ended
up 1.50 percent at 1,336.04 points on Friday, posting its fifth
consecutive week of gains, the longest weekly winning streak
since June, 2007.

Auto issues including Hyundai Motor (005380.KS) may be in the
spotlight after news South Korea plans to spend 500 billion won
($376.5 million) to help the country’s car industry through the
global downturn. [ID:nSEO26773]
———————-MARKET SNAPSHOT @ 2243 GMT ————

INSTRUMENT LAST PCT CHG NET CHG
S and P 500 .SPX 856.56 3.81% 31.400
USD/JPY JPY 100.34 -0.04% -0.040
10-YR US TSY YLD US10YT=RR 2.9225 — 0.000
SPOT GOLD XAU 884.15 0.40% 3.500
US CRUDE CLc1 52.02 -0.42% -0.220
DOW JONES .DJI 8083.38 3.14% 246.27
ASIA ADRS .BKAS 98.99 4.59% 4.34
————————————————————-

MARKET SUMMARY
*Asia stocks push towards 6-mth highs [ID:nT1655]
*World fuel use to dive by 2.4 million bpd-IEA [ID:nLA70157]
*Japan’s record borrowing plan ups pressure on BOJ [ID:nT12543]
*Treasuries fall, rising stocks sap safe-haven bid
[ID:nN09298439]

STOCKS TO WATCH

POSCO (005490.KS)

The world’s No.4 steelmaker posted a sharp drop in quarterly
profit to the lowest level in seven years on crumbling global
steel demand, and cut its 2009 output and sales targets by nearly
a fifth. [ID:nSEO193919]

POSCO also said it was in a preliminary deal with Rio Tinto
(RIO.AX) for a 20 percent discount in iron ore term prices, but
was looking for prices to go down even further. [ID:nSEO11216]

(Reporting by Jungyoun Park; Editing by Jonathan Hopfner)

Redfaces after Taiwan museum translates “adulthood” as “adultery”

Taipei – A museum in Taiwan has apologised and recalled 3,000 copies of a visitor brochure after a string of mistranslations – including referring to “adultery” when it meant “adulthood.”

The National Museum of Prehistory, in Taitung, southeast Taiwan, made the apology on Tuesday after a lawmaker pointed out several mistakes in the English brochure for the museum’s exhibition on aborigines.

The brochure says that facial tattoo is the symbol of adultery for aborigines, when it in fact means adulthood.

After the lawmaker pointed out the translation mistakes on Monday in parliament, Tong Chun-fa, director of the museum, admitted that the translation was done in December by a staff member who had studied in the United States.

“We printed the English brochures without having the translation proof-read because we were in a hurry,” he said.

The museum has corrected the mistakes in the online edition of the brochure. dpa news

Diamond loses title of “world’s hardest material”

London, Feb 17 (ANI): A material known as lonsdaleite has displaced diamond as the “world’s hardest material”.

Though diamond lost its title of the “world’s hardest material” some time ago, to man-made nanomaterials of slightly greater toughness, now, a rare natural substance looks likely to leave them all far behind – at 58 percent harder than diamond.

According to a report in New Scientist, Zicheng Pan at Shanghai Jiao Tong University and colleagues simulated how atoms in two substances believed to have promise as very hard materials would respond to the stress of a finely tipped probe pushing down on them.

The first, wurtzite boron nitride has a similar structure to diamond, but is made up of different atoms.

The second, the mineral lonsdaleite, or hexagonal diamond is made from carbon atoms just like diamond, but they are arranged in a different shape.

Only small amounts of wurtzite boron nitride and lonsdaleite exist naturally or have been made in the lab so until now no one had realised their superior strength.

The simulation showed that wurtzide boron nitride would withstand 18 percent more stress than diamond, and lonsdaleite 58 percent more.

If the results are confirmed with physical experiments, both materials would be far harder than any substance ever measured.

Rare mineral lonsdaleite is sometimes formed when meteorites containing graphite hit Earth, while wurtzite boron nitride is formed during volcanic eruptions that produce very high temperatures and pressures.

If confirmed, however, wurtzite boron nitride may turn out most useful of the two, because it is stable in oxygen at higher temperatures than diamond.

This makes it ideal to place on the tips of cutting and drilling tools operating at high temperatures, or as corrosion resistant films – on the surface of a space vehicle, for example.

Paradoxically, wurtzite boron nitride’s hardness appears to come from the flexibility of the bonds between the atoms that make it up. When the material is stressed some bonds re-orientate themselves by about 90 degrees to relieve the tension.

Although diamond undergoes a similar process, something about the structure of wurtzite boron nitride makes it nearly 80 percent stronger after the process takes place, according to study co-author Changfeng Chen at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, an ability diamond does not have. (ANI)

Hong Kong policeman jailed for seven years for raping teenager

Hong Kong – A Hong Kong police detective was Tuesday beginning a seven-year jail term after being convicted of raping an 18-year-old girl.

Crime squad officer Choi Chai-him, 33, met the teenager over the internet and lured her to his home with the promise of downloading games onto her portable PlayStation games console.

The court was told the married policeman began molesting her and when she resisted, took her to his bedroom and raped her, Hong Kong’s High Court was told.

A jury on Monday found Choi guilty of rape by a majority verdict despite his claims that the teenager consented to sex when she went to his home in February last year.

Sentencing him, Judge Louis Tong said the teenager visited Choi alone at his home only because she trusted him as a police officer.

In a separate case, a 29-year-old detective constable in Hong Kong has been accused of sex attacks on four young women inside a police station. He was arrested in December and the case is ongoing. (dpa)