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Reuters

  • Coalition attacks Yemen capital after UAE, Saudi soldiers killed

    Medical sources at hospitals in the capital Sanaa, which has been under effective control of the Iranian-allied Houthi militia for almost a year, said about 24 civilians were killed in the city as a result of the attacks.

    WAM said the UAE air force struck a mine-making plant in the Houthi-dominated Saada province in northern Yemen, as well as military camps and weapon stores in the central Ibb province, causing “heavy damage”.

    Apart from 45 Emiratis and five Bahrainis, Saudi state-run Al Ekhbariya TV reported on Saturday that 10 Saudi soldiers were also killed in the attack in Marib province on Friday, quoting Brigadier-General Ahmed al-Asiri, the coalition spokesman.

    Asiri told Al Arabiya TV that four Yemeni soldiers were also killed in the attack on the coalition base in Marib.

    Friday’s death toll was the highest for the coalition since it began its assault on the Houthis in March, and is one of the worst losses of life in the history of the UAE military.

    The UAE has played a key role in a Saudi-led Arab coalition fighting the Houthis after they pushed Yemen’s President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi into exile and took over much of the country.

    UAE forces assisted fighters loyal to Hadi in driving out Houthis and their allies from the southern port city of Aden, in a key victory for the coalition.

    In Aden, a government official said the police resumed their duties on Saturday with the help of the UAE after their work was suspended for more than five months due to the war.

    In Sanaa, residents said the Houthi-controled Defence Ministry building and the command of the special security forces were among the targets hit in further strikes by Saudi-led forces overnight.

    The bodies of the Emirati soldiers killed in the attack on their base in Marib were taken to Abu Dhabi aboard an air force transport plane. Funerals were being held on Saturday. The UAE government has announced a three-day mourning period.

    Bahraini officials said the five soldiers killed in the attack were also being buried on Saturday.

    UAE Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Anwar Gargash told Al Arabiya that the troops were killed when a surface-to-surface missile struck a weapons storage facility at the Marib base.

    Saudi Arabia and the UAE have reported several deaths of soldiers in Yemen since March, but the total death toll for the coalition was not clear.

    “HORRIFIC EXPLOSIONS”

    More than 4,000 Yemenis have died in the same period.

    Abu Dhabi shares Riyadh’s view that the Houthis are proxies of Shi’ite power Iran, accusing it of trying to expand its influence in Arab lands in Yemen, Syria and Iraq. The Houthis, who belong to the Zaydi branch of Shi’ite Islam, deny acting on behalf of Tehran and say they revolted against corruption.

    Hadi loyalists, backed by the Saudi-led coalition, had been massing troops and weapons in Marib in preparation for an assault on the capital, which the Houthis seized in September last year.

    “The incident itself does not change the balance that is there,” Gargash said in an interview with Al Arabiya TV. “Marib will fall to the coalition,” he added.

    Residents in Sanaa fear the coalition will step up its raids even further to retaliate for the attack.

    “I was close to the raid that hit the command of the special security forces, the explosions were horrific, I felt that the ground was shaking beneath me and people were running away out of fear,” said Shawqi, a taxi driver.

  • For diabetes in obesity, weight-loss surgery beats medication

    Half of the patients treated with weight-loss surgery in the study were diabetes-free at five years, said Dr. Francesco Rubino of Kings College London in the UK and colleagues in a report in The Lancet.

    “The five-year mark is an important mark in many diseases,” Dr. Rubino told Reuters Health by phone. “The fact that some patients at five years are basically disease-free is a remarkable finding.”

    In 2009, he and his colleagues randomly assigned 20 obese patients with type 2 diabetes to receive medical treatment, 20 to receive a type of weight-loss surgery called a gastric bypass, and another 20 to undergo a weight-loss operation called a biliopancreatic diversion.

    Eighty percent of patients who had surgery had their blood sugar under good long-term control, versus about 25 percent of patients treated with drugs only.

    All of the study groups had a reduction in cardiovascular risk. But the surgery-treated patients had a 50 percent lower risk of heart and blood vessel disease than those treated with drugs only, and they needed fewer drugs for treating high blood pressure or high cholesterol.

    The improvements in blood sugar control and heart disease risk weren’t related to how much weight patients lost.

    “What really is causing the remission of diabetes after surgery remains mysterious,” Dr. Rubino said. What is known, he added, is that the intestines produce a host of hormones involved in regulating metabolism. Reconstructing the gastrointestinal tract so that food bypasses the stomach and small intestine may help restore normal metabolic control, he explained.

    Like any surgery, weight loss operations carry risks. An international study published earlier this, for example, found that after two years, people randomized to have gastric bypass surgery had better control of their type 2 diabetes than people assigned to a medication group, but they also had a higher risk for infections and bone fractures. (See Reuters Health story of May 21, 2015.)

    And some patients may gain back some of the weight they lost.

    Still, doctors are increasingly referring to this type of surgery as “diabetes surgery,” rather than obesity surgery, said Dr. Philip Schauer, the director of the Cleveland Clinic Bariatric and Metabolic Institute and a bariatric surgeon, in a telephone interview with Reuters Health. Dr. Schauer did not participate in the new study.

    “There are some people, this study shows, that can go into remission for up to five years or more,” he said. “We hesitate to use the word ‘cure,’ but it’s pretty darn close to a cure, about as close to a cure as you can get.’”

    Dr. Schauer pointed out that about half of patients with type 2 diabetes are unable to control their blood sugar with medication and lifestyle measures. Based on the new findings, he said, bariatric surgery should be offered to these patients if they are moderately obese, for example with a body mass index (BMI) of 35. (BMI is a measure of weight in relation to height.)

    Currently the National Institutes of Health states that patients should have a BMI of 40, or a BMI of 35 with obesity-related illness, such as type 2 diabetes, in order to be eligible for weight loss surgery.

    “There are still many insurance companies today that will not pay for this surgery for any reason,  fat burner whether it’s for obesity or diabetes. It means that they are denying people effective treatment,” Dr. Schauer said. “This study is going to make insurance carriers and third party payers rethink their coverage policies regarding bariatric or diabetes surgery, as we prefer to call it.”

  • Justin Bieber shows vulnerable side as comeback gets under way

    The approach appears to be working. His new single “What Do You Mean?” on Thursday notched up more than 21 million streams on Spotify globally in just five days, setting a new record for the music app.

    Bieber, now 21, broke down in tears at Sunday’s MTV Video Music Awards show after singing the song. The sobs, he told Jimmy Fallon on “The Tonight Show,” were authentic.

    “Honestly, I just wasn’t expecting them to support me in the way they did. Last time I was at an award show I was booed,” Bieber told Fallon on Wednesday.

    Bieber is back on the promotional trail before the November release of his first album of new material in three years, most of which were marked by bad behaviour off stage and a string of court cases that risked damaging his image as a family-friendly teen heartthrob.

    Bieber found fame as a 13-year-old and went on to become a global pop phenomenon with hits like “Baby” and “Believe.”

    He said in January that he wanted to shed the “arrogant” and “conceited” attitude that led to arrests for careless driving, pelting a neighbour’s home with eggs, assaulting a photographer, and abandoning a pet monkey at a German airport.

    “I just had a bunch of knuckleheads around me,” he told Fallon of his wild child period. “That was pretty much it. You have to figure out what you are OK with, and what you’re not OK with, but you have to test the waters. I just happen to be in front of a spotlight and they caught all those moments.”

    In the first of a week long promotion on NBC’s “Today” show on Thursday, Bieber’s work with the Make a Wish Foundation was highlighted in interviews with two young female fans who got to meet him when they were seriously ill. He will perform a free “Today” show concert in New York City on Sept. 10.

    The 21 million streams for “What Do You Mean?” broke Spotify’s record for the biggest first week streams for a single. The previous record holder was One Direction’s “Drag Me Down,” Spotify said.

  • G20 promises transparency on rate moves as global economy disappoints

    Many emerging market economies are concerned that when the U.S. Federal Reserve raises borrowing costs, investors will withdraw from other markets and buy dollar assets, weakening other currencies and creating turbulence as capital flees.

    Officials from emerging markets wanted the communique from finance ministers and central bank governors of the Group of 20 biggest economies, meeting in Turkey, to say that a U.S. rate rise now would be a risk to growth.

    But the draft avoids such wording.

    “We note that in line with the improving economic outlook, monetary policy tightening is more likely in some advanced economies,” the draft communique, seen by Reuters, said.

    “We will carefully calibrate and clearly communicate our actions to minimize negative spillovers, mitigate uncertainty and promote transparency,” said the draft, which may yet change before it is finally agreed on Saturday.

    An earlier version of the text said policy tightening in developed economies “may remain one of the main sources of uncertainty in financial markets”.

    “In one of the wild formulations it said that this was the biggest threat to the world economy. This was killed immediately and forever,” a Russian source said earlier.

    The text welcomed strengthening activity in some economies but said that global growth fell short of expectations, although it expressed confidence a recovery would gain speed.

    It also indirectly addressed Chinese moves that weakened its yuan currency in August, in a sign these were not seen as a competitive devaluation to prop up Chinese exports.

    “We reiterate our commitment to move toward more market determined exchange rate systems and exchange rate flexibility to reflect underlying fundamentals, and avoid persistent exchange rate misalignments,” it said.

    “We will refrain from competitive devaluations and resist all forms of protectionism.”

    Slower growth in China and rising market volatility have boosted the risks to the global economy, the International Monetary Fund warned ahead of the G20 meeting, citing a mix of potential dangers such as depreciating emerging market currencies and tumbling commodity prices.

    But the G20 had been seen as unlikely to come up with any concrete new measures to address the spillover from instability in the world’s second-largest economy, or to call directly on Beijing to address structural issues such as rising bad debts.

    EASY MONEY

    Luxembourg Finance Minister Pierre Gramegna, whose country holds the rotating presidency of the European Union, shrugged off the prospect of U.S. interest rate hikes.

    “We cannot live all the time on easy money … One has to be realistic that at one point in time the curve of interest rates will have to change,” he told Reuters.

    “This G20 comes at a very good time because it gives the Fed an opportunity to gauge all the elements at stake.”

    Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda said any Fed rate rise would be a positive sign for the global economy, despite the unease in some emerging markets that such moves could cause capital outflows and currency volatility.

    “If the U.S. were to raise rates, that would speak to the underlying firmness and growth in the U.S. economy, and that would actually be a plus for the global economy,” he said.

    One specific idea being examined at the Ankara meetings is a proposal from a group of financial stability experts to adopt a two-stage approach for introducing Total Loss Absorption Capacity (TLAC) buffers for big banks, a G20 source said.

    The buffer is a new layer of debt big banks like Goldman Sachs and Deutsche Bank AG must issue to write down in a crisis and bolster their capital.

    The proposal would introduce a buffer of 16 percent of a bank’s risk-weighted assets from 2019 and 20 percent from 2022, the source said.

    The United States had pushed for 20 percent, while some in Europe had been arguing for 16 percent on the grounds that their banks were still recapitalising after the financial crisis.

    The draft pencilled in that a deal should be ready for the endorsement of G20 leaders at their summit in southern Turkey in November, but some countries were concerned there would not be enough time to reach a final agreement by then.

    There was no clear pronouncement on China’s desire to have the yuan included in the International Monetary Fund’s Special Drawing Rights basket of currencies, but the draft said G20 finance chiefs expected progress in November, when the IMF has a board meeting on the issue.

    “China has moved in the direction in currency and monetary policy … that is necessary if they want to achieve the goal of getting China into the IMF currency basket,” German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble told reporters, welcoming Beijing’s near 2 percent yuan devaluation last month.

    China is keen for the symbolic boost it would get from the yuan’s inclusion.

    Bundesbank chief Jens Weidmann said he is open to discussion on including the yuan in the IMF basket, and said recent financial turmoil in China should not pose a lasting danger to the global economy.

    “The currency basket should in principle reflect relative global economic strengths,” he told Reuters, but added China must fulfil the conditions for inclusion.

    One delegate said it was possible that the likely failure of the U.S. Congress to approve an IMF quota reform that would give China and other emerging markets more say could work in Beijing’s favour on the SDR issue.

    The reasoning goes that benefiting the leading emerging economy, China, could help offset the perennial failure to boost emerging market quotas.

    However, IMF members will also be examining whether China’s heavy intervention in the yuan market was befitting of a freely convertible reserve currency, the delegate said.

    One option being floated was the idea of giving China a more limited share of the SDR basket at first until its convertibility and market orientation improved.

  • Family jokes and school struggles, film shows private side of Malala

    According to Pashtun tradition, Malalai of Maiwand spurred her countrymen to victory against British troops in 1880, taking to the battlefield to rally a demoralised Afghan force with a verse about martyrdom. She was later struck down and killed.

    The legend is recounted in “He Named Me Malala”, a new documentary about Yousafzai, now 18, whose attack while riding a school bus shocked the world.

    “You named her after a girl who spoke out and was killed. It’s almost as if you said she’d be different,” director Davis Guggenheim tells Yousafzai’s father, Ziauddin, in the film.

     “You’re right,” he replies.

    Filmed over 18 months, the intimate portrait shows a teenager more at ease on the world stage – speaking at U.N. headquarters in New York – or addressing students in Syrian refugee camps than with classmates in Britain where she was flown for surgery.

    “In this new school, it’s hard,” she says, admitting a lack of shared experiences with the other girls.

    While much is known about Yousafzai’s advocacy work, the documentary lifts the lid on her family life in central England with much humour generated by her two brothers.

    “She’s a little bit naughty,” says Yousafzai’s youngest brother, who she introduces as “a good boy” in contrast to her other brother who she calls “the laziest one”.

    She giggles when asked if she would ever ask a boy on a date.

    BE SILENT OR STAND UP

    Using archive footage and voice recordings of Islamist leader Fazlullah, the documentary captures the steady crackdown on freedoms in Yousafzai’s native Swat Valley, including schools destroyed by bombs and music CDs burned.

    Encouraged by her teacher father, Yousafzai began blogging for the BBC at the age of 11. Writing anonymously, she described life under the harsh edicts of the Taliban, bombed-out schools, executions under the cover of dark and girls’ education limited to reading the Koran.

    She later made public appearances in Swat Valley, calling for girls’ right to an education.

    “My father and my mother both inspired me to believe in myself. In a society where women’s rights are not respected, my parents gave me examples,” Yousafzai said at a screening of the documentary in Washington DC this week.

    “There’s a moment where you have to choose to be silent or to stand up,” she says in the film. “My father only gave me the name Malala, he didn’t make me Malala. I chose this life and now I must continue it.”

    Ziauddin Yousafzai said the film was not the story of one family but millions suffering because of war and conflict, adding that millions of Syrian children had been deprived of an education.

    “When you meet these girls, their passion and taste for education it is remarkable. They want to learn,” he said in Washington.

    “In the global south, in developing countries, most of the children fight every day to get educated. Many families have sold their whole property – their cows, their farm and everything to get their children educated.”

    Yousafzai’s Malala Fund, which support girls’ secondary education, wants the film to be shown in schools to inspire students to stand against bullying, racism and human rights violations.

    The movie opens in theatres in the United States from Oct. 2 before it is released in Britain later in the month.

  • At least 14 killed as boat overloaded with migrants capsizes off Malaysia

    The boat, which maritime officials estimated had about 70 people aboard, had left Sabak Bernam in Malaysia’s western state of Selangor for Sumatra in neighboring Indonesia when the accident happened.

    Initial conversations with survivors led officials to believe the passengers were Indonesian, said Muhammad Aliyas Hamdan, an official of the Malaysian Maritime Enforcement Agency (MMEA).

    “If they are legal, they would not leave (the country) that way,” Muhammad said, when asked if the people were illegal migrants. The boat sank due to overloading and bad weather, he added.

    Thousands of migrants from Indonesia work at construction sites, on palm plantations, in factories and domestic service across Malaysia, some without legal employment documents.

    The number of survivors stood at 19, the agency’s director of search and rescue operations, Captain Robert Teh Geok Chuan, told Reuters, including 15 rescued by fishermen earlier, though the death toll could rise.

    “We fear the casualty numbers will rise as it’s been several hours since the boat sank,” he added.

    Search operations would continue through the night, Teh said, with ships, boats and a helicopter deployed in the hunt for survivors. Indonesia’s search and rescue agency said it was on standby to assist its Malaysian counterpart.

    Southeast Asia faced a huge migrant crisis after Thailand cracked down on people-smuggling gangs in May, with more than 4,000 people landing in Bangladesh, Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar, and Thailand. Hundreds are believed to have drowned.

    A fresh surge of refugees and migrants from Myanmar and Bangladesh is expected to set out in boats for southeast Asia when the monsoon season ends in about a month, the United Nations has said.

    Thursday’s accident happened as Europe faces its biggest refugee crisis since World War Two, and has yet to find a common response. Thousands of people from the Middle East, Asia and Africa have died making the journey across the Mediterranean and on land in Europe.

  • Iran's Khamenei backs parliamentary vote on nuclear deal with powers: state TV

    President Hassan Rouhani, a pragmatist whose 2013 election paved the way to a diplomatic thaw with the West, and his allies have opposed such a parliamentary vote, arguing this would create legal obligations complicating the deal’s implementation.

    “Parliament should not be sidelined on the nuclear deal issue … I am not saying lawmakers should ratify or reject the deal. It is up to them to decide,” said Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has the final say on all state policy in Iran.

    “I have told the president that it is not in our interest to not let our lawmakers review the deal,” the top Shi’ite Muslim cleric said in remarks broadcast live on state TV.

    Khamenei himself has not publicly endorsed or voiced opposition to the Vienna accord, having only praised the work of the Islamic Republic’s negotiating team.

    A special committee of parliament, where conservative hardliners close to Khamenei are predominant, have begun reviewing the deal before putting it to a vote. But Rouhani’s government has not prepared a bill for parliament to vote on.

    The landmark deal, clinched on July 14 between Iran and the United States, Germany, France, Russia, China and Britain, is aimed at curbing Iran’s nuclear activities to help ensure they remain peaceful in exchange for a removal of economic sanctions.

    U.S. President Barack Obama appeared to secure enough Senate votes on Wednesday to see the nuclear deal through Congress — a vote must be taken by Sept. 19 — but hardline Republicans vowed to pursue their fight to scuttle it by passing new sanctions.

    Khamenei said that without a cancellation of sanctions that have hobbled Iran’s economy, the deal would be jeopardized.

    “Should the sanctions be suspended, then there would be no deal either. So this issue must be resolved. If they only suspend the sanctions, then we will only suspend our nuclear activities,” he said. Iran and the Western powers have appeared to differ since the accord was struck on precisely how and when sanctions are to be dismantled.

    “Then we could go on and triple the number of centrifuges to 60,000, keep a 20 percent level of uranium enrichment and also accelerate our Research and Development (R&D) activities,” the Supreme Leader added.

    The Vienna agreement puts strict limits in all three sensitive areas of Iran’s nuclear program, seen as crucial to creating confidence that Tehran will not covertly seek to develop atomic bombs from enriched uranium.

    Iran has said it wants only peaceful nuclear energy.

    HOSTILITY TO CONTINUE

    Khamenei also criticized the United States’ Middle East policy, suggesting that antagonism prevailing between Iran and Washington since the 1979 Islamic Revolution in Tehran will not abate because of the nuclear deal.

    “Our officials have been banned from holding talks with Americans except on the nuclear issue. This is because our policies differ with America,” he said.

    “One of America’s regional policies is to fully destroy the forces of resistance and wants to retake full control of Iraq and Syria … America expects Iran to be part of this framework,” Khamenei told a session of the Assembly of Experts which has the power both to dismiss a Supreme Leader and to choose one. “But this will never happen.”

    By “forces of resistance”, Khamenei was alluding to Islamist militant groups such as Hezbollah, a close ally — like Iran — of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in his war with rebels trying to overthrow him.

    Rouhani has made it clear in his speeches that he favors greater engagement with the world, seeming open to cooperating with the United States to reduce conflict in the Middle East.

    But Khamenei and his hardline loyalists remain deeply suspicious of U.S. intentions. Relations with Washington were severed in 1979 and hostility towards the United States remains a central rallying point of influential hardliners in Tehran.

    Sunni Muslim Gulf Arab neighbors accuse Shi’ite-dominated Iran of trying to extend its influence in the region by backing groups like Lebanon’s Hezbollah, Islamist Hamas in Gaza, Houthi rebels in Yemen and Assad’s government in Syria.

  • Indonesian politician threatens ban on teen dating after dark

    If a new regulation goes ahead as planned on October 1, teenagers in Purwakarta, a local district about 100 kilometres from the Indonesian capital Jakarta, will be banned from visiting each other after 9pm.

    To enforce the regulation Dedi Mulyadi, the head of Purwakarta district, said local patrols and new CCTV cameras would keep a watchful eye out for canoodling teenagers breaking the rules.

    “Those who violate the rules will be summoned by the village cultural council for counselling,” he told AFP.

    “If they break the rules three times, the village council may ask for the parents to marry them.”

    It’s not clear how the measure will be enforced — Indonesians under 16 cannot legally marry — but underage ceremonies do still occur.

    Mulyadi claimed the regulation — which will only apply to youths under 17 — would help return his hometown to its rural roots.

    This new provision would ensure teenagers were home in bed early and living a more traditional life, he added.

    “I come from a village and back in the day, you could not visit a neighbour after 9pm because villagers would be in bed, preparing to wake up at dawn to till their paddy fields,” he said.

    Mulyadi said this new provision would also help enforce another of his schemes: banning underage, unlicensed drivers from zipping around on motorcycles.

    Parents had “thanked” him for reigning in their wayward children after they were caught on motorbikes, he said.

  • Selfie madness: Too many dying to get the picture

    The act of taking a picture of oneself with a mobile phone, placing the subject center-stage, has exploded in popularity in recent years, with everyone from Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II to U.S. President Barack Obama joining in.

    But the selfie has also inspired a spate of risk taking and offensive public behavior, pushing the boundaries of safety and decorum, whether by dangling from a skyscraper or posing with live explosives.

    Several governments and regulatory bodies have now begun treating the selfie as a serious threat to public safety, leading them to launch public education campaigns reminiscent of those against smoking and binge drinking.

    Dozens of grisly selfie-related deaths and injuries in early 2015 led Russia’s Interior Ministry to launch a campaign warning avid mobile phone snappers about the danger of, among other things, posing for a selfie with a lion.

    In June, two men in the Ural Mountains died after posing pulling the pin from a hand grenade; in May a woman survived shooting herself in the head in her Moscow office; a month later a 21-year-old university graduate plunged 40 feet (12 meters) to her death while posing hanging from a Moscow bridge.

    “A cool selfie could cost you your life,” reads a poster from the campaign, which includes safety videos and information booklets.

    Despite Russia’s diplomatic isolation over its support for separatist rebels in Ukraine, on the issue of dangerous selfies the Kremlin finds itself in accord with the European Union and the United States.

    In Texas on Wednesday, a 19-year-old father of two died after shooting himself in the neck during a selfie. In Yellowstone National Park exasperated officials issued warnings after five separate selfie takers were gored this summer while standing too near bison.

    The European Union in June proposed a law to criminalize social media posts containing pictures of landmarks such as the Eiffel Tower in Paris or Rome’s Trevi Fountain. And in India this week officials said they were implementing a “no selfie zone” at the Hindu Kumbh Mela festival over fears they may cause stampedes.

    ALL ABOUT ME

    Yet despite the risks, selfies are more popular than ever, according to data from Google Trends. Searches for the term were up eight times in 2014 over the previous year, leading the Internet search giant to dub it “The Year of the Selfie”.

    Selfies tend to attract a type of person already more likely to push the boundaries of normal behavior, says Jesse Fox, an assistant professor of communications at Ohio State University.

    Her research says people exhibiting the so-called Dark Triad of personality traits – narcissism, Machiavellianism and psychopathy – are likely to pursue selfie glory regardless of who gets hurt in the process.

    “It’s all about me. It’s putting me in the frame. I’m getting attention and when I post that to social media, I’m getting the confirmation that I need from other people that I’m awesome,” Fox told Reuters.

    “You don’t care about the tourist attraction you’re destroying; you don’t care about annoying people in your social media feed … you’re not even thinking about the consequences of your actions, so who cares if you’re dangling off the side of the Eiffel Tower?”

    That has not stopped some countries trying to capitalize on the trend’s popularity.

    Tourism Australia this week launched a campaign promising an opportunity to take the “World’s Largest Selfie”, aimed at selfie-mad Japan.

    They have installed several so-called GigaSelfie platforms in some of the country’s most breathtaking environs from which, with an associated app, visitors can capture an ultra hi-resolution shot taken by a far away camera.

  • Indian village council denies ordering rape of sisters

    Now, members of the village council in the Baghpat region of northern India have told Reuters they passed no such order. Family members of the two sisters also told Reuters they are unsure if the ruling was made. And local police deny any such directive was given.

    When the accusations first emerged last month, they spread like wildfire. An online petition by Amnesty International seeking justice and protection for the low-caste sisters gathered over 260,000 signatures, mostly in Britain.

    But family members said in interviews with Reuters the information that the council made such an order may have just been gossip. “It is all hearsay, we don’t know if this actually happened,” said Dharam Pal Singh, 55, the women’s father and a retired soldier. “We heard it from other villagers.”

    He identified one of the villagers, a man who also said he had heard it from others.The incendiary allegations were contained in a petition to the Supreme Court filed last month by a lawyer for the Singh family seeking protection for the sisters. It said one of Singh’s sons fell in love with a married woman of a higher caste, leading to a row between the two families.

    Meenakshi Kumari, 23, one of the two sisters allegedly threatened with rape by a village council in the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, leaves her lawyer’s chamber in New Delhi, India, September 1, 2015. – Reuters

    In its most sensational claim, the court filing said Meenakshi Kumari, 23, and her 15-year-old sister fled their home after being told they would be stripped naked and paraded with their faces blackened before being raped to atone for their brother’s transgression.

    “THESE THINGS CAN HAPPEN”

    Rahul Tyagi, the lawyer who brought the case to the Supreme Court, was hired by the family when the row over the affair started some months ago.

    Tyagi said he stood by the petition, which the family filed because of fears for the safety of the sisters, and denied failing to check the facts. However, he said he had never visited the village, nor spoken to any members of the council who supposedly issued the rape order. “We have documentary evidence for nine out of 10 things in the case,” he said. “The other things people will not come out with unless there is an independent investigation.”Kumari, the elder sister, admitted she didn’t know if the council had issued a ruling but said she took the threat seriously because women are often punished in India for things they have not done. “It is very tough life for women,” Kumari said in an interview at Tyagi’s office in the relative security of the capital. “These things can happen.”

    She said she had heard of the threat to rape her from her father.

    Unelected village councils like the one in Baghpat do mete out rough justice in many parts of rural India, ruling on matters of marriage, property and how women should dress. In rare instances the councils have ordered rape as a punishment.

    However, it typically is difficult to confirm such rulings because village councils usually only issue verbal orders, and no record is kept of proceedings.This case appeared to fit a familiar narrative. It combined some of rural India’s most tenacious problems: entrenched hierarchies built on prejudice and the ancient Hindu caste system colliding with more modern values, a history of weak governance and increasing violence towards women.

    NO PROOF

    Reuters interviewed more than 20 people involved in the incident in the village of Sankrod, in Baghpat district, an hour’s drive away from the capital New Delhi, where closely packed concrete homes are surrounded by corn and cane fields.

    The veiled mother of Meenakshi Kumari, 23, one of the two sisters allegedly threatened with rape by a village council in the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, stands inside her house at Sankrod village in Baghpat district, India, September 1, 2015. – Reuters

    There were many discrepancies in the accounts offered by the families of the sisters and the married woman, members of the village council, the lawyer who drew up the Supreme Court petition, and police officials.But no one said they had any evidence that the council had handed down the rape punishment, as alleged in the court petition. The petition said the council was comprised of upper caste men.         The village council is actually more than 80 percent female and headed by a woman who, like the sisters, is from the bottom of the caste hierarchy.    “How many times do I have to tell you that there was no meeting?” said Bala Devi, 55, who has run the council for the last five years. “We spend our time discussing mundane things like fixing the roads or water pumps.”

    Sharad Sachan, a police superintendent, concluded after interviewing council leaders and other villagers that no such order had been issued. “The Supreme Court asked us to investigate and we plan to tell them our findings later this month,” Sachan said.

    The Supreme Court is not due to rule on the case until later this month.Amnesty said it did not investigate the case or visit the village, and instead relied on the court submission. Gopika Bashi, women’s rights campaigner at Amnesty International India, said that despite the doubts cast over the story there were no plans to withdraw its petition.”We will continue to push for protection for the family,” she said.