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Friday, May 4, 2012

The Walking Dead Live in Indonesia

If you are a fan of the hit TV series The Walking Dead, then I’ve got news for you.

There is a place in Indonesia where certain people can make the dead walk again. The village of Toraja has a bizarre ritual in which the dead are supposedly resurrected as zombies.


The villagers believe that the dead must be buried where they were born. Unfortunately for the people in this part of Indonesia, the villages are quite far from each other.

When people die away from their villages, they must be woken up so they can “walk” back to their place of birth. However, it is said that if you talk to the dead directly, they will just collapse to the ground and go back to being lifeless.

Thursday, May 3, 2012

Pictures: Glowing Blue Waves Explained


Pinpricks of light on the shore seem to mirror stars above in an undated picture taken on Vaadhoo Island in the Maldives.

The biological light, or bioluminescence, in the waves is the product of marine microbes called phytoplankton—and now scientists think they know how some of these life-forms create their brilliant blue glow.



Various species of phytoplankton are known to bioluminesce, and their lights can be seen in oceans all around the world, said marine biologist and bioluminescence expert Woodland Hastings of Harvard University. (Also see "Glowing Sea Beasts: Photos Shed Light on Bioluminescence.")

"I've been across the Atlantic and Pacific, and I've never seen a spot that wasn't bioluminescent or a night that [bioluminescence] couldn't be seen," Hastings said.

The most common type of marine bioluminescence is generated by phytoplankton known as dinoflagellates. A recent study co-authored by Hastings has for the first time identified a special channel in the dinoflagellate cell membrane that responds to electrical signals—offering a potential mechanism for how the algae create their unique illumination.

Al Jazeera to Astro: Explain the ‘breach’


KUALA LUMPUR: Satellite broadcasting station, Astro, which recently won the Putra Award for Best Brand, has just earned itself a slew of public insults over its high-handed “editing” of British Broadcasting Corporation’s (BBC) and Al Jazeera stations’ news coverage of the Bersih 3.0 rally last Saturday.
While public comments running on the worldwide web have been spewing venom at Astro’s stand to “bow before Umno-BN policies”, Middle East-owned television station, Al Jazeera, is not going to take this “intrusion” into its “editorial process” lying down.
On the back of World Press Freedom Day celebrations today, Al Jazeera in a statement said: “Our news report was a factual account of events that day, and intrusion in our editorial process is unwarranted.


“We have not been censored in this way by another distribution platform anywhere in the world.”
Astro had allegedly snipped off parts of Al Jazeera’s news coverage of the Bersih rally by its onground reporter Harry Fawcett.
Al Jazeera said they will be “asking Astro for an explanation” as to why Fawcett’s report of the rally was allegedly censored.
“If Astro is indeed saying that it breached local content regulations, it would need to outline exactly what these alleged breaches were and how it arrived at its decision,” the statement said.
It also noted that the “censoring was not made clear to viewers when it happened” and that Al Jazeera was not notified of the incident by Astro.
Earlier, BBC had demanded that Astro explain itself after it was reported that the Malaysian station had edited out 30 seconds of BBC senior reporter Emily Buchanan’s two-minute news clip of the rally which turned violent after Bersih had called for the crowd to disperse.
Three frames sequences were taken off from the BBC clip in the doctored version. Among them were one sequence showing a policeman allegedly firing at demonstrators.
The other two sequences were interviews with demonstrators who gave first-hand accounts of why they took to the streets demanding for clean and fair elections.
In a terse demand note to Astro, BBC “strongly” condemned “any blocking of the trusted news that we broadcast around the world including via distribution partners”.
However, BBC’s affront which was articulated on Sarawak Report (SR) was trivialised by Astro and Malaysia’s Information, Communications and Culture Minister Rais Yatim.
Rais, who incidentally described the Bersih rally as “kotor” (dirty), defended Astro’s right, saying it was the satellite television’s prerogative to air the “best parts” of the poll reforms rally.
Said Rais: “(Astro) has to be given credit for knowing which part of the news is newsworthy and therefore they should exercise that within their rights as a broadcasting firm.”
Astro, meanwhile, simply said they had to “comply with local content regulations”.
Said Astro’s senior vice-president for Broadcast Operations, Rohaizad Mohamad: “As a licensed broadcaster, Astro is required to comply with the national content regulations.
“When it comes to international content providers, Astro reserves the right to edit its international channels for the purposes of complying with the content regulations.”
Astro’s comment was in response to BBC’s demand letter which “condemned” Astro’s censorship of its news clip.
Astro’s response will no doubt put it on a warpath with BBC, which is already smarting with embarrassment over an earlier issue involving London-based FBC Media Ltd and several paid-for public relations spins on Malaysia and its leadership, which were passed off as genuine documentaries and aired over BBC’s World News.
BBC had publicly apologised in February for breaking “rules aimed at protecting our editorial integrity” following an expose by online investigative portal, Sarawak Report.
Two months before the extraordinary apology, the BBC admitted that there had been 15 breaches of editorial guidelines, eight of them in documentaries about Malaysia that were produced by FBC, a company that has done public relations work for foreign governments, including the regime of Hosni Mubarak during the Egyptian uprising.
BBC said FBC had failed to declare to them that the Malaysian government had paid the PR company RM85 million for “global strategic communications” campaign.
While Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Nazri Aziz admitted in Parliament last November that the government had indeed engaged FBC to improve Malaysia’s image, Prime Minister Najib Tun Tun Razak however recently said otherwise.
In a written reply to opposition MP Mahfuz Omar, Najib told Parliament last month: “We (government) have never contracted a foreign news company to make ourselves look good.”

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Chinese Man Caged for 20 Years


Is mental illness enough reason for someone to get locked up?
Wei Yun, a 23 year-old-man who has suffered from mental illness since he was young for many years, comes from a rural Chinese village.

When he was nearly three years old, he knocked over a pot of boiling water and almost died. As a result, his parents decided to lock him up in a wooden cage.
Apparently, there is no one to look after Wei as his father works away from home and his stepmother also works during the day.
People who live near him say that Wei can’t walk. Instead, he just crawls on the ground whenever he is let out of the cage–a result of being locked up in a very small cage.
Neighbors do not find fault with the stepmother for doing this to Wei: “It’s a hard choice for her as she, on one hand, has to take care of Wei Yun, but on the other, she has to do field work and other odd jobs to support the family.”

Monday, April 30, 2012

A mother’s reason for taking part in Bersih 3.0


FMT LETTER: From a Mother for a better tomorrow, via e-mail

Why would a mother attend the Bersih’s Duduk Bantah on 28.4? Simple, if Rosa Parks did not sit and Martin Luther King did not walk, Obama could never have run for Presidency. I knew that even one more person would make a difference and so I attended Bersih 3.0 and sat down for a better Malaysia. A better Malaysia for my children and yours so that the voice of our next generation would be heard, that their vote would count.

It all starts with us and we can make that difference, yes my friend, you, me and all other Malaysians hand in hand, we can do it! For beneath our differently coloured skin and despite our ethnicity, the diversity in our ways, in our religions, we all share one thing in common, the Spirit, Heart and Soul of Malaysia, it lives within each Malaysian.

I walked at Berish 1, because one man (RPK) said, don’t talk if you don’t walk!! I was afraid that if I did not walk, I could not do what I loved so much.. talk! It was an eye opener for me, from far away Kelantan, I met many silver haired makciks and pakciks, who came at their own expense as they heeded the call of their Tok Guru. And I, a KLite would have missed an important lesson of standing up and voicing out for what is right.  It was also a lesson on how the news media turned around an event and made it look unsavoury.

When Bersih 2.0 came around, I was overcome by the fear that was created, however better sense prevailed.  Not known to be one to succumb to cowardice, I made my way, though somewhat late into KL.  There I met some young college students who came all the way from Perlis, they admonished me, Auntie you are from KL and you are late! I queried this group of young college going Malay students, how much they were paid to attend the rally?

Angrily they said even the drinks in their hands was paid by their own money.  I continued to query them that they got a good education more easily than our kids and told me, they had no problems and would love to study with Malaysians of all races.  They said they dreamed of a clean Malaysia, free from corruption, a Malaysia where their vote would count and their voice heard, so they came to support the cause of a free and fair election.  A lesson well learned from my young friends.

Come Bersih 3.0, I started checking with friends, as I did not want to walk alone this time and wanted more people to feel the true Spirit of Malaysia.  So a few friends decided to meet up in KL.. Voila.. we must have made for some pretty odd company!! One staid Human Resource Professional, another very conformist office goer, yours truly, a mom of two, before long, were joined by two soon to be priests from East Malaysia.

My two other friends who I was originally to meet, one a lecturer and the other a fitness trainer, joined the rally at Brickfields, however we did not manage to meet up, as the mobile phone service seemed to be jammed.  Did we care that we were, Indian, Chinese, Eurasian or East Malaysian? Wow we are just a great fruit salad of Malaysian friendship!

With our cars parked in the vicinity of Taman Jaya LRT station, we took the LRT to Central Market, the train was bustling with excitement and people updating and getting news of the rally, it was a festive atmosphere.  On the LRT, I met two young college girls who said that their parents were bringing them to the rally. Bravo to such parents! I told these girls, that one day they could proudly tell their kids that they made a stand for a better electoral system and for a better Malaysia.  Though we were apprehensive if the doors of the train would open at Central Market, they did and all the Bersihers eagerly made a beeline for the exit.

At Central Market, we just could not believe what we were seeing, thousands upon thousands of Yellow and Green attired Bersihers.  It looked like a huge carnival of happy Malaysians. Despite the heat and the blazing sun, we joined the long and winding queue of cheerful and happy people.  These were Malaysians with a Mission, who were out there to be counted and make a difference for the country. As we all walked in an orderly fashion, the crowds surged from Menara MayBank on Tun Perak until Dataran Merdeka, even the side lanes had huge spillovers, Lebuh Ampang, Hang Leiku, Tun HS Lee, were just teaming with happy Malaysians.

Sunday, April 29, 2012

North Koreans Punished for Not Mourning Enough


When mourning for a dead leader, make sure that you cry and look genuinely sad, especially when you are in North Korea.

North Korean authorities rounded up people who had not shown enough sadness during the death of and mourning period for Kim Jong-Il last December.



Citizens who were suspected of “not mourning enough” were sent to labor-training camps for at least six months. Others were sent to re-education camps.

Those truly unfortunate were sent to remote areas with their families for unspecified punishment.

Hong Kong Bus Driver Performs Miracle Multitasking Feat


They say that only women can truly multitask.

That statement was easily proven false, however, when this bus driver in Hong Kong skillfully amazed netizens by reading a newspaper, listening to the radio, eating his breakfast and taking calls at the same time.

Most impressive was that he did all of this while successfully driving the bus in heavy traffic!

Saturday, April 28, 2012

Sex With Dogs, Horses, Calves & More: What in the World Is Going On These Days?


This has been a banner month for zoophilia as people accused of sex with just about every animal in the zoo are popping up in courtrooms across the nation.

One of the strangest cases involves a doctor accused of having sex with a patient.

In most cases, that would be merely unethical.



In this case, however, Thomas Barret Lyle Wilson isn't a regular doc -- he's a veterinarian, and his "patient" was a horse.

Actually, it was a horse in a training center, and the owners allegedly caught him in the act by watching a live video feed.

"I'm glad you caught me. I need help," he said, according to an affidavit quoted by the The Daily O'Collegian.

But 28-year-old Wilson isn't the only one making headlines for bestiality. There's a cop accused of doing it with calves... a mayor's sun who's "into" German shepherds and even a guy with an affinity for rottweilers.

I won't even pet a rottweiler.

Friday, April 13, 2012

Spiny, Venomous New Sea Snake Discovered—"Something Special"


A new species of venomous sea snake mysteriously covered head to tail in spiny scales has been discovered in treacherous seas off northern Australia, a new study says.

Though some other sea snakes have spiky scales on their bellies, "no other [known] sea snake has this curious feature," study leader Kanishka Ukuwela, an ecologist at the University of Adelaide, said by email.

Normally snakes have smooth scales, but each of the newly named Hydrophis donaldi's scales has a spiny projection, he said.



Scientists cruising shallow seagrass beds in the Gulf of Carpentaria (map) recently captured nine of the rough-scaled reptiles.

"The minute the first one landed on the deck, I knew we had something special," study co-author Bryan Fry of the University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia, said by email. "It was quite unlike any of the sea snakes I have seen."

Each of the specimens was found on the rocky seafloor, a habitat that could explain the new species' uniquely strong scales, Fry noted.

Overall, though, "we don't know why this interesting feature evolved in this species, or what they are used for," study leader Ukuwela said.

Monday, April 2, 2012

New Amphibians Without Arms or Legs Discovered


They aren't worms or even snakes. They're soil-burrowing, limblessamphibians, and they're completely new to science, a new study suggests.
Pictured guarding a brood of eggs in its native northeastern India, the animal above is one of about six potentially new species belonging to a mysterious group of animals called caecilians. What's more, the newfound critters represent an entirely new family of amphibians—family being the next major level up from genus and species in scientific naming conventions—according to findings announced today by the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

Christened Chikilidae ("Chikila" being a local tribal name for caecilians), the family's closest relatives live more than 7,000 miles (11,265 kilometers) away in tropical Africa, the study team reported.