Author: AFP

  • Indian state plans law for Muslim marriages and divorces

    Indian state plans law for Muslim marriages and divorces

    Indian authorities in Assam state have introduced a bill that would require Muslims to register their marriages and divorces, with the chief minister claiming the measure will help stop child marriage.

    The bill is seen as a state-level step towards the government’s proposed common civil code of law, which Muslim activists bitterly oppose as an attack on their faith.

    India’s 1.4 billion people are subject to a common criminal law. Still, personal matters such as marriage, divorce and inheritance are governed by varying rules based on the traditions of different communities and faiths.

    In Assam, it is already mandatory for other religions to register marriages with civil authorities.

    Assam’s state government, led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), said the bill would be tabled during the next state assembly.

    “Our basic intention is to stop child marriages,” Himanta Biswa Sarma, chief minister of the northeastern state, told reporters Wednesday.

    Sarma said the Assam Compulsory Registration of Muslim Marriages and Divorces Bill would not restrict religious rituals, but only ensure marriages and divorces were registered.

    The bill will “provide safeguards and benefits… especially to women and prevent the menace of child marriages,” he said.

    Modi said this month he wanted to press ahead with a Uniform Civil Code (UCC) to standardise laws for personal matters across faiths and religious communities.

    Many communities, particularly Muslims, fear a UCC would encroach on their religious laws.

    Modi maintains it would serve as an equaliser.

    “Those laws that divide the country on the basis of religion, that become reason for inequality, should have no place in a modern society,” Modi said during an Independence Day address on August 15.

    “That is why I say: the times demand that there is a secular civil code in the country.”

    Modi won a third successive term in office in June but was forced into a coalition government for the first time in a decade.

    The BJP’s Hindu nationalist rhetoric has left India’s Muslim population of more than 220 million increasingly anxious about their future.

  • British tech tycoon ‘beat the odds’ till yacht tragedy

    British tech tycoon ‘beat the odds’ till yacht tragedy

    Once dubbed Britain’s “Bill Gates”, tech entrepreneur Mike Lynch, whose body has been recovered from his sunken superyacht off Sicily, had only recently been cleared of fraud charges in the US.

    The 59-year-old businessman was acquitted in June by a San Francisco court after a decade-long legal battle with US firm Hewlett-Packard, but the allegations tarnished his image as a UK tech success story.

    Since returning home, Lynch — an advisor to two British prime ministers — had criticised the government for allowing his extradition to the US in the first place.

    “I am looking forward to returning to the UK and getting back to what I love most: my family and innovating in my field,” he said following his acquittal.

    But in a tragic twist, he would perish on the Mediterranean celebrating his victory on a cruise with his family and the friends who had helped him through the ordeal.

    ‘Second life’

    Born to working-class Irish parents in Essex, east of London, in 1965, the academically bright Lynch won a scholarship to a private school.

    He went on to study natural sciences at Cambridge University, where he got a doctorate.

    Lynch had described the fraud trial in the United States as a life-altering moment for him in an interview with the Times newspaper last month.

    “It’s bizarre, but now you have a second life. The question is, what do you want to do with it?” he said.

    Lynch and his family were aboard his luxury yacht Bayesian near Palermo with friends and colleagues when it was struck by a sudden storm in the early hours of Monday.

    His wife, Angela Bacares, was among the 15 people rescued, but his daughter Hannah, 18, is still missing.

    Italian rescuers have now recovered five bodies, and her fate remains unconfirmed.

    Rise and fall

    Lynch and his wife, who also had an older daughter aged 21, had a combined fortune of £500 million ($648 million) according to the latest Sunday Times “Rich List”.

    He owed much of that wealth to his software firm Autonomy, which he founded in 1996 in Cambridge and turned into a leading British tech company.

    Autonomy’s search software was informed by Bayesian learning frameworks, inspiring the name of the ill-fated yacht.

    Lynch sold Autonomy to HP for $11 billion in 2011 in a mega-deal which raised eyebrows at the time.

    Just one year later, HP reported a write-down of $8.8 billion — including more than $5 billion it attributed to alleged inflated data from Autonomy — plunging Lynch into the fraud case he spent over a decade fighting.

    Scapegoat?

    US prosecutors accused him of taking part in a massive scheme as Autonomy’s chief executive to deceive HP by pumping the value of the company.

    Lynch was extradited last year and spent a year under house arrest before being cleared.

    He could have faced two decades in jail, an ordeal the entrepreneur said he would not have survived due to various medical conditions.

    Lynch — who made around $815 million from the Autonomy sale — always denied the fraud charges, accusing HP of making him a scapegoat for its own failings.

    A dog lover, he owned two dachshunds and four sheepdogs, and had homes in both London and Suffolk where he had a farm.

    He was honoured by Queen Elizabeth II in 2006 with an Order of the British Empire (OBE) for his services to enterprise and appointed to the board of the BBC the same year.

    ‘Beating the odds’

    After the Autonomy sale, he founded venture capital firm Invoke Capital, which was an early investor in cyber security firm Darktrace.

    However, despite the US acquittal this year, the legal saga was not over for Lynch.

    In 2022, London’s High Court ruled in a civil fraud case that HP had been duped and had overpaid for Autonomy.

    The court has yet to rule on the billions of dollars in damages claimed by the US group.

    David Yelland, a reputation management advisor who described Lynch as a client and friend, said in an X post it was “devastating” to think he had lost his life just as he had began to rebuild it.

    “His entire life is one of beating the odds in the most extraordinary of situations,” Yelland added.

  • Swift says filled with ‘fear’, ‘guilt’ after Vienna terror threat

    Swift says filled with ‘fear’, ‘guilt’ after Vienna terror threat

    Pop megastar Taylor Swift on Wednesday broke her silence about the cancellation of three Vienna concerts over an alleged suicide attack plot, saying the incident filled her with “fear” and “guilt.”

    “Having our Vienna shows cancelled was devastating. The reason for the cancellations filled me with a new sense of fear, and a tremendous amount of guilt because so many had planned on coming to those shows,” the American said in a post on social media platform Instagram.

    The Vienna shows, part of the European leg of Swift’s record-breaking “Eras” tour, were cancelled after authorities warned of a terror plot by sympathizers of the Islamic State armed group.

    Police have detained three suspects over the alleged attack threat, with the United States saying it shared intelligence to assist in the investigation.

    The main suspect, a 19-year-old Austrian with North Macedonian roots, had allegedly confessed, saying he “intended to carry out an attack using explosives and knives,” according to Austrian domestic intelligence agency (DSN) head Omar Haijawi-Pirchner.

    In the social media post Wednesday, Swift thanked the authorities.

    “I was also so grateful to the authorities because thanks to them, we were grieving concerts and not lives. I was heartened by the love and unity I saw in the fans who banded together,” she said.

    The European leg of Swift’s sold-out tour began in Paris in May and has taken in Sweden, Portugal, Spain, Britain, Ireland, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Italy, Germany and Poland.

    It concluded on Tuesday with five shows at London’s Wembley stadium.

  • Iran executes fortune-teller over rapes

    Iran executes fortune-teller over rapes

    Authorities in central Iran executed a male fortune-teller for raping and sexually assaulting his clients, the judiciary said on Wednesday.

    “A fortune-teller, who assaulted women and girls was executed in Yazd prison,” said Hossein Tahmasebi, chief justice of the central province, according to the Iranian judiciary’s Mizan Online website.

    “The sentence of this rapist fortune-teller was carried out after being issued by the Revolutionary Court of Yazd and confirmed by the supreme judicial authority”.

    According to Tahmasebi, the man had “assaulted and raped women and girls under false pretences”, using his fortune-telling services to deceive his clients.

    Mizan reported that the convict was arrested sometime between March 2020 and March 2021 and that his request for amnesty was rejected because of “the number of complaints” against him.

    The Islamic republic maintains the death penalty for several crimes, including rape and sexual assault.

    In July 2023, Iran executed three men after they were convicted of raping women they had lured to a fake cosmetic surgery clinic and injected with anaesthetic drugs.

    They were found guilty of conspiring in 12 cases of sexual assault in late 2021 in the southern province of Hormozgan.

    Iran executes more people per year than any other nation except China, according to human rights groups including Amnesty.

    It generally carries out executions by hanging.

  • 28 killed as bus carrying Pakistan pilgrims crashes in Iran: State media

    28 killed as bus carrying Pakistan pilgrims crashes in Iran: State media

    At least 28 Pakistani pilgrims travelling to Iraq for a Shiite Muslim ritual were killed as their bus crashed in central Iran, state media reported early Wednesday.

    “A bus carrying 51 Pakistani pilgrims overturned and caught fire in front of Dehshir-Taft checkpoint in the central province of Yazd on Tuesday night,” state television reported.

    “28 people have been killed and 23 injured so far with the possibility of the death toll increasing,” it added.

    Yazd province crisis management chief Ali Malek-zadeh told the broadcaster that some of the injured were in critical condition.

    “Of the 23 injured, six have already been discharged from hospital, while the condition of seven others is critical,” Malek-zadeh said.

    “The dead consisted of 11 women and 17 men,” he added.

    The Pakistani pilgrims were headed through Iran to Iraq to attend the Arbaeen commemoration, one of the biggest events of the Shiite calendar which marks the 40th day of mourning for Imam Hussein, the grandson of the Prophet Mohammed.

    Last year, some 22 million pilgrims attended the commemoration in the Iraqi shrine city of Karbala, where Hussein and his brother Abbas are buried, according to official figures.

  • Biden says ‘I gave my best’ as he passes torch to Harris

    Biden says ‘I gave my best’ as he passes torch to Harris

    An emotional US President Joe Biden passed the torch to Democratic nominee Kamala Harris with a hug on Monday, saying he gave everything for his country in a bittersweet farewell speech at the party’s convention in Chicago.

    “America, America, I gave my best to you,” the 81-year-old Biden said, quoting a patriotic hymn during a nearly hour-long address that ran through his achievements while urging voters to back his vice president against Donald Trump in November.

    Harris joined him on stage after the speech and the pair embraced, as the crowd gave Biden a rapturous reception following his stunning decision less than a month ago to drop out of the 2024 White House race.

    In a remarkable turnaround, Harris has reenergized the party and wiped out Republican rival Trump’s lead in the polls, but Biden insisted that he was not bitter about stepping aside.

    Instead, as he contemplates the imminent end of a five-decade political career, he said that he had done what he thought best to ensure that his nemesis, Trump, does not return to the Oval Office.

    “I love the job, but I love my country more. I love my country more,” said Biden. “And all this talk about how I’m angry at all those people who said I should step down — that’s not true.”

    Both Biden and Harris appeared to wipe away a tear as the US leader won a huge four-minute ovation when he first took to the stage, following an introduction by First Lady Jill Biden and his daughter Ashley.

    Several members of the audience were also in tears as Biden made his farewell speech, before leaving the stage to the strains of the song “Higher Love.”

    And Harris had earlier made a surprise appearance — Democratic nominees don’t normally speak until the final day of the convention — to heap lavish tribute on her boss.

    “I want to kick us off by celebrating our incredible president Joe Biden,” said Harris, who was wearing a tan suit and took to the stage to Beyonce’s “Freedom.”

    It was undoubtedly a difficult swan song for Biden, but he insisted he would be the “best volunteer” for Harris’s campaign — knowing perhaps that his legacy depends on her beating Trump.

    But he couldn’t quite let go of the presidency, with his speech focusing more on his own record in office than the future under a President Harris.

    Biden listed his proudest achievements including on the economy and health care, but above all for healing the “soul of America” after Trump’s time in office and the pro-Trump January 6, 2021 Capitol riot.

    “Donald Trump calls America a failing nation… He says we’re losing. He’s the loser,” he said, also referring to Trump as a “convicted felon” after the Republican was found guilty of doctoring business records to cover up hush money payments to a porn star.

    Despite his low popularity ratings and the debate debacle against Trump that led him to step aside, Biden again insisted he’d given his all.

    “I made a lot of mistakes in my career, but I gave my best to you,” he said.

    As he has been so often in his five-decade-long political journey, Biden was surrounded by family at the end of his speech.

    “Joe and I have been together for almost 50 years. And still, there are moments when I fall in love with him all over again,” the first lady said in a speech introducing him.

    Monday’s first night of the convention was an emotional one on many levels, and for many of the key players.

    Hillary Clinton, who lost against Trump in 2016 in her own bid to become America’s first woman president, backed Harris to finally break the glass ceiling.

    “Something is happening in America, you can feel it — something we’ve worked for and dreamed of for a long time,” the former secretary of state and first lady said.

    Biden addressed pro-Palestine protestors

    US President Joe Biden said Monday that protesters against Israel’s war in Gaza who demonstrated outside the Democratic National Convention in Chicago “have a point”.

    “Those protesters out in the street, they have a point. A lot of innocent people are being killed, on both sides,” Biden said in his farewell speech to the convention, adding that it was time to “end this war.”

    Earlier, protests against Israel’s genocide in Gaza had shadowed the opening of the convention, underscoring what remains a potential vote-loser for Democrats among left-wingers and Arab Americans.

    A group of demonstrators broke through the outer security fence of the convention after splitting off from a larger protest of thousands of people.

    Police in blue helmets with shields and carrying black batons prevented them from getting to the inner cordon.

    Trump, meanwhile, has been sent into a tailspin by the sudden change at the top of the Democratic ticket.

    While Democrats are in Chicago, the Republicans will spend the week crisscrossing the country.

    In the battleground state of Pennsylvania on Monday, he highlighted what he called Harris’s “craziness” and said she “has no idea what the hell she’s doing” on the economy.

  • France bids farewell to screen legend Alain Delon

    France bids farewell to screen legend Alain Delon

    As tributes for film legend Alain Delon poured in from around the globe following his death at 88, France was preparing on Monday its farewell to one of its greatest stars.

    No national tribute has been planned, as Delon had made it clear he did not want one. He said he wanted to be buried near his dogs on his property in Douchy in central France where he died.He had already started sounding out the local authorities there, Christophe Hurault, the sub-prefect of Loiret, told AFP. The prefecture “had given its agreement in principle”.His three children, Anthony, Anouchka and Alain-Fabien, having squabbled bitterly for months over his medical treatment, spoke in a unified voice Sunday when they announced their father’s death.Now they have to manage the funeral of the screen icon, deciding whether to limit it to close family or extend it to the cinema world.Delon, naturally, dominated the front pages of France’s newspapers Monday, many of them featuring full-page portraits of the actor in his prime.”The Last Samurai”, wrote Le Figaro for its front-page headline, a reference to one of his most famous roles, as the enigmatic assassin in Jean-Pierre Melville’s 1967 thriller “Le Samourai”.

    – End of an era –

    Delon’s performances in some of the greatest films of the 1960s and 70s were widely praised, his charisma on screen impossible to ignore.He was one of the last living legends of a golden era for French cinema in the 1960s.Fellow 60s star Brigitte Bardot, 89, told AFP Delon “leaves a huge void that nothing, nobody, can fill”.French President Emmanuel Macron called him a “French monument” who “played legendary roles and made the world dream”.His death was covered by newspapers around the world, with the New York Times, Washington Post and New York Post all publishing lengthy obituaries.The Washington Post described him as the “angel-faced tough guy of international cinema”, while The Hollywood Reporter said he was the “seductive star of European cinema”.”Mesmeric and beautiful, Alain Delon was one of cinema’s most mysterious stars,” The Guardian critic Peter Bradshaw wrote.Germany’s Spiegel called him “Europe’s James Dean”, while Sueddeutsche Zeitung said the “aura of the handsome angel of death made him a legend”.Italy, where he spent much of his career, also gave extensive coverage to his passing. “There will never be another actor like Delon, unique and immortal”, wrote Il Corriere della Sera.La Stampa and La Repubblica bid “adieu to the legend of French cinema”.”For me, he was a legend,” 26-year-old moviegoer Victor Roussel told AFP before a showing of his 1963 film “The Leopard” at a Paris cinema Sunday.”Alain Delon really represents French cinema with a capital ‘C’”.

    – Controversial views –

    While he had legions of fans around the world, his personal life and political opinions divided opinion.Delon’s relationship with women caused controversy. His sons accused him of domestic violence, which Delon denied while admitting slapping women during quarrels.Delon also drew criticism for supporting Jean-Marie Le Pen, leader of the far-right National Front, who was in favour of the death penalty and spoke against same-sex relationships.Feminists were also appalled by the lifetime achievement award the Cannes Film Festival gave him in 2019.He lived his later years largely as a recluse, though his personal life kept him in the headlines.In 2023, his three children filed a complaint against his live-in assistant Hiromi Rollin, accusing her of harassment and threatening behaviour.The siblings went on to wage a public battle in the media and the courts, arguing over his health, which worsened after a stroke in 2019.Delon lived out his final years in the small village of Douchy, surrounded by high walls, where he planned to be buried not far from his dogs.Outside the entrance to his home, dozens of fans placed flowers to pay their respects.”In our minds we believe that these icons are eternal,” said Marie Arnold, laying white flowers with her sister Michele.”It’s a part of our youth that is gone, it’s very sad.”

  • Sindh floods push low-income families to marry off daughters for financial help

    Sindh floods push low-income families to marry off daughters for financial help

    As monsoon rains were about to break over Pakistan, 14-year-old Shamila and her 13-year-old sister Amina were married off in exchange for money, a decision their parents made to help the family survive the threat of floods.

    “I was happy to hear I was getting married… I thought my life would become easier,” Shamila told AFP after her wedding to a man twice her age in hope of a more prosperous life.

    “But I have nothing more. And with the rain, I fear I will have even less, if that is possible.”

    Pakistan’s high rate of marriages for underage girls had been inching lower in recent years, but after unprecedented floods in 2022, rights workers warn such weddings are now on the rise due to climate-driven economic insecurity.

    The summer monsoon between July and September is vital for the livelihoods of millions of farmers and food security, but scientists say climate change is making them heavier and longer, raising the risk of landslides, floods and long-term crop damage.

    Many villages in the agricultural belt of Sindh have not recovered from the 2022 floods, which plunged a third of the country underwater, displaced millions and ruined harvests.

    “This has led to a new trend of ‘monsoon brides’,” said Mashooque Birhmani, the founder of the NGO Sujag Sansar, which works with religious scholars to combat child marriage.

    “Families will find any means of survival. The first and most obvious way is to give their daughters away in marriage in exchange for money.”

    Birhmani said since the 2022 floods, child marriage has spiked in villages in Dadu district, one of the worst-hit areas that for months resembled a lake.

    In Khan Mohammad Mallah village, where Shamila and Amina were married in a joint ceremony in June, 45 underage girls have become wives since the last monsoon — 15 of them in May and June this year.

    “Before the 2022 rains, there was no such need to get girls married so young in our area,” said village elder Mai Hajani, 65.

    “They would work on the land, make rope for wooden beds, the men would be busy with fishing and agriculture. There was always work to be done”.

    Parents told AFP that they hurried the marriage of their daughters to save them from poverty, usually in exchange for money.

    Shamila’s mother-in-law, Bibi Sachal, said they gave 200,000 Pakistan Rupees ($720) to the young bride’s parents –- a major sum in a region where most families survive on around one dollar a day.

    – ‘I thought I would get lipstick’ –

    Najma Ali was initially swept up in the excitement of becoming a wife when she married at 14 in 2022 and began living with her in-laws, as is tradition in Pakistan.

    “My husband gave my parents 250,000 rupees for our wedding. But it was on loan (from a third party) that he has no way of paying back now,” she said.

    “I thought I would get lipstick, makeup, clothes and crockery,” she told AFP, cradling her six-month-old baby.

    “Now I am back home with a husband and a baby because we have nothing to eat.”

    Their village, which lies on the banks of a canal in the Main Nara Valley, is barren and there are no fish left in the polluted water — its stench overwhelms the area.

    “We had lush rice fields where girls used to work,” said Hakim Zaadi, 58, the village matron and Najma’s mother.

    “They would grow many vegetables, which are all dead now because the water in the ground is poisonous. This has happened especially after 2022,” she added.

    “The girls were not a burden on us before then. At the age girls used to get married, they now have five children, and they come back to live with their parents because their husbands are jobless.”

    – ‘I want to study’ –

    Child marriages are common in parts of Pakistan, which has the sixth-highest number of girls married before the age of 18 in the world, according to government data published in December.

    The legal age for marriage varies from 16 to 18 in different regions, but the law is rarely enforced.

    UNICEF has reported “significant strides” in reducing child marriage, but evidence shows that extreme weather events put girls at risk.

    “We would expect to see an 18 percent increase in the prevalence of child marriage, equivalent to erasing five years of progress,” it said in a report after the 2022 floods.

    Dildar Ali Sheikh, 31, had planned to marry off his eldest daughter Mehtab while living in an aid camp after being displaced by the floods.

    “When I was there, I thought to myself ‘we should get our daughter married so at least she can eat and have basic facilities’,” the daily wage labourer told AFP.

    Mehtab was just 10 years old.

    “The night I decided to get her married, I couldn’t sleep,” said her mother, Sumbal Ali Sheikh, who was 18 when she married.

    An intervention from the NGO Sujag Sansar led to the wedding being postponed, and Mehtab was enrolled in a sewing workshop, allowing her to earn a small income while continuing her education.

    But when the monsoon rains fall, she is overcome by dread that her promised wedding will also arrive.

    “I have told my father I want to study,” she said. “I see married girls around me who have very challenging lives and I don’t want this for myself.”

  • Five charged over ketamine death of ‘Friends’ star Matthew Perry

    Five charged over ketamine death of ‘Friends’ star Matthew Perry

    Five people who allegedly supplied ketamine to “Friends” star Matthew Perry in a bid to exploit his drug addiction for profit have been charged in relation to his overdose death, US officials said Thursday.

    The actor died at his luxury Los Angeles home last year, sparking an outpouring of grief from fans around the world.

    “These defendants took advantage of Mr Perry’s addiction issues to enrich themselves. They knew what they were doing was wrong. They knew what they were doing was risking great danger to Mr Perry, but they did it anyway,” said federal prosecutor Martin Estrada.

    “These defendants were more interested in profiting off Mr Perry than caring for his well-being,” said Estrada, the US attorney for the central district of California.

    Charges were levied against two doctors, Perry’s live-in assistant, a broker and a North Hollywood dealer known as “the Ketamine Queen,” who has been linked to the overdose death of another man.

    Perry, who played Chandler Bing on the hit TV sitcom from 1994 to 2004, was found unresponsive in his swimming pool in October. He was 54.

    An autopsy found the cause of his death was “the acute effects of ketamine,” a controlled drug the recovering addict was taking as part of supervised therapy.

    – ‘Drug-selling emporium’ –

    Estrada said Perry had fallen back into addiction in the autumn of 2023, when he began to be supplied by Salvador Plasencia and Mark Chavez, both doctors.

    Over two months, they sold him 20 vials of the drug for $55,000. Each one cost them as little as $12, said Estrada.

    In one text message, Plasencia, 42, wrote: “I wonder how much this moron will pay… Lets [sic] find out.”

    Plasencia, who reportedly works in the tony Calabasas neighborhood outside Los Angeles, knew Perry was spiralling out of control, but carried on.

    “On one occasion, he injected Mr. Perry with ketamine, and he saw Mr. Perry freeze up and his blood pressure spike,” Estrada said.

    “Despite that, he left additional vials of ketamine for (Perry’s assistant Kenneth) Iwamasa to administer.”

    Perry also obtained the drug from Jasveen Sangha, a woman nicknamed “the Ketamine Queen,” through broker Eric Fleming, including the batch that would ultimately kill him.

    Her home was “a drug-selling emporium” containing methamphetamine, cocaine and prescription drugs like Xanax, officials said.

    Plasencia, whose ankles were chained when he appeared in court, denied one count of conspiracy to distribute ketamine, as well as a raft of other charges.

    He was released on $100,000 bail and ordered to inform his patients of the charges he faces. He was ordered to stand trial on October 8 and could be imprisoned for up to 120 years.

    Sangha, a dual British- and American citizen, wore a green “Nirvana” sweater when she entered not guilty pleas to one count of conspiracy to distribute ketamine, and other charges.

    She was denied bail after the judge heard of a jet-set lifestyle that included a trip to Tokyo just two weeks after Perry’s death.

    She was ordered to stand trial on October 15, and could face life behind bars.

    The other defendants have either pleaded guilty or agreed to do so in relation to their charges. They face between 10 and 25 years in prison.

    – ‘Exploitation’ –

    Doctors and veterinarians use ketamine as an anesthetic, and researchers have explored its use as a treatment for depression.

    Underground users take it for its hallucinogenic effects, though it can be addictive and dangerous for people with underlying health problems.

    “Friends” (1994-2004), which followed the lives of six New Yorkers navigating adulthood, dating and careers, drew a massive global following and made megastars of previously unknown actors.

    Perry’s role as the sarcastic man-child Chandler brought him fabulous wealth, but hid a dark struggle with addiction to painkillers and alcohol.

    In 2018, he suffered a drug-related burst colon, and underwent multiple surgeries.

    In his 2022 memoir “Friends, Lovers and the Big Terrible Thing,” Perry described going through detox dozens of times.

    “I have mostly been sober since 2001,” he wrote, “save for about sixty or seventy little mishaps.”

    Drug Enforcement Administration chief Anne Milgram told reporters Perry’s re-entry into destructive drug use began with “unscrupulous doctors who abused their position of trust because they saw him as a payday, and it ended with street dealers who sold him ketamine in unmarked vials.”

    “The desperation that led Perry to these individuals was not met with help… but instead it was met with exploitation.”

  • ‘The Notebook’ star Gena Rowlands dead at 94

    ‘The Notebook’ star Gena Rowlands dead at 94

    Gena Rowlands, an award-winning US actress best known for starring in the films of her first husband, director John Cassavetes, died Wednesday at age 94, according to US media reports.

    Rowlands died surrounded by family at her home in Indian Wells, California, US entertainment publication TMZ reported.

    No official cause of death was immediately given, but Rowlands’s son Nick Cassavetes said in June she had suffered from Alzheimer’s disease for the past five years, according to the New York Times.

    Rowlands starred in 10 films by John Cassavetes, and was married to him for nearly 35 years until his death in 1989.

    Starting in the 1960s, the couple formed an enchanting and explosive on-screen partnership over three decades that explored themes of passion and self-destruction against a backdrop of alcohol and infidelity.

    In what many consider her finest role, Rowlands captured to devastating effect the descent of a housewife into mental illness in “A Woman Under the Influence” (1974), bringing her the first of two Oscar nominations.

    “Incapable of an unreal moment,” said Woody Allen of the actress, whom he cast in his 1988 film “Another Woman.”

    “Whatever I say about Gena isn’t enough because she’s so incredible,” said Winona Ryder, quoted in the LA Times in 1992 when the two co-starred in Jim Jarmusch’s “Night on Earth.”

    – A storied career –

    Rowlands was born on June 19, 1930, in Cambria, Wisconsin, into a cultured middle-class family. Her father was a state senator and her mother was a painter and occasional actress.

    She enrolled in New York’s American Academy of Drama and in 1953 met Cassavetes, a fast-talking and exuberant Greek-American. A year later they were married.

    It was their collaboration that generated her stand-out performances, the highlight arguably being “A Woman Under the Influence” which also brought an Oscar nomination for Cassavetes as director.

    Rowlands was captivating as housewife Mabel who descends into madness after years of quiet, complicated dominance by her hardworking, silent husband, played by Peter Falk.

    In 1989, Cassavetes died from liver failure after years of alcoholism. Rowlands continued to make films and also worked for television, winning four Emmys.

    She and Cassavetes had three children, all of whom have gone on to work in film and television. Her son Nick directed her in “The Notebook” alongside Ryan Gosling and Rachel McAdams in 2004.

    In 2012, she married retired businessman Robert Forrest and in 2015 was awarded an honorary Academy Award, the same year she retired from acting.