Category: World

  • Woman pours boiling water on husband for berating son

    Woman pours boiling water on husband for berating son

    A woman in Egypt poured boiling water on her husband allegedly for ill-treating their son.

    As per reports, the 43-year-old man was rushed to a nearby hospital with burns sustained in different parts of the body allegedly due to the woman’s attack.

    The husband who is a mechanic accused his 32-year-old wife of throwing boiling water at him from a teapot in their house because he had berated their son for playing late outdoors.

    Read More: Ukrainian army defends decision to make female soldiers march in high heels

    The woman confessed to the crime after she was arrested by the police.

    She said it was in reaction of her husband’s physical punishment to their son. Local prosecutions has ordered an inquiry into the incident.

  • Dubai enters Guinness Book of Records by setting up world’s deepest swimming pool

    Dubai enters Guinness Book of Records by setting up world’s deepest swimming pool

    Dubai has opened the world’s deepest swimming pool and has entered the Guinness book of records.

    The pool, Deep Dive Dubai is located at Nad Al Sheba with the depth of 60.02 metres and contains 14 million litres of water in it.

    As per reports, public bookings are expected to start in late July with different courses and experiences offered for scuba divers and freedivers..

    Deep Dive Dubai is also an underwater film studio with an editing room, a video wall, 56 underwater cameras, and the ability to create different moods with 164 lights positioned throughout the pool.

    Read More: China’s tourist attraction allows visitors to fly across the river

    Crown Prince of Dubai, Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum recently visited the place and dived into the pool. He posted a video on social media showing him in full diving gear. He is seen swimming back to the top of the pool from its dizzying depths.

    The Hollywood actor, Will Smith also posted a video on Instagram diving into the pool.

  • Muslim women for sale: Images uploaded to an auctioning app in India

    Muslim women for sale: Images uploaded to an auctioning app in India

    The Editors Guild of India on Wednesday said it was deeply concerned that images of Muslim women were put up “for auction” online and shared via social media in a derogatory manner, reports Scroll. in, a digital news platform in India.

    Images of hundreds of women were uploaded via an auctioning app called “Sulli Deals” on Sunday, The Quint reported.

    “Sulli” is a derogatory term used to refer to Muslim women in India.

    The app, which was uploaded on repository hosting service GitHub, has been taken down by the platform after outrage on social media.

    Journalist Fatima Khan, tweeted, “How is this acceptable? What will be the punishment, if any, meted out to the people who made this list?”

    “Muslim men are lynched, Muslim women are harassed and sold online. When will this end?” added Fatima.

    Meanwhile, Pilot Hana Mohsin Khan filed a first information report in the case for putting women “on-sale”.

    “I’m resolute and firm in getting these cowards to pay for what they have done,” she said in a tweet. “These repeat offenses will not be taken sitting down.”

    The Editors Guild raised concerns about the misuse of digital and social media platforms to harass women journalists. “This vile attack is symptomatic of underlying misogyny in some sections of the society, especially against Muslim women as well as those who have been outspoken critics of the current government,” it said.

  • China’s tourist attraction allows visitors to fly across the river

    A tourist attraction in China now allows visitors a chance to walk or fly over a river. 

    The Xiatianxia Tourist Area is a popular tourist spot in Fujian Province where people can wear different traditional costumes and enjoy an experience walking and flying across a river. 

    A video shared by South China Morning Post shows people flying in the air over a river and attempting stunts often seen in movies.

    As per details, tourists are lifted in the air using wires attached to their waists. They can either fly across the water, use prop weapons or even run on water. The wire is 600 meters long and 20 meters off the ground.

    Read More: World’s only man-made, heart-shaped lake is a new romantic destination in Dubai

    The experience costs 128 yuan (Rs3,186), which includes costume, props, make-up and hairstyling. 

  • Ukrainian army defends decision to make female soldiers march in high heels

    Ukrainian army defends decision to make female soldiers march in high heels

     Ukraine’s defense ministry is facing backlash for making its female cadets march in high heels at a parade to mark the 30th anniversary of independence from the Soviet Union on August 24.

    Photos published by the ministry on Facebook shows the women from the Military Institute at the Taras Shevchenko National University in the country’s capital, Kyiv, marching in high heels.

    As per reports, the cadets have been practicing twice daily, for an average of four hours a day, the ministry said in a social media post.

    Politicians of the country and social media users criticised the plan but the country’s ministry of defence has defended its decision.

    Read More: Video of Police Head Constable carrying differently-abled woman wins hearts

    Ivanna Medvid, a cadet at the Military Institute of the Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv, has been training for more than a month. “Today, for the first time, training takes place in high-heeled shoes,” she told Army Inform. “It’s a little harder than in boots, but we try.”


    Elena Kondratyuk, deputy chairman of the Ukrainian parliament joined other members of to call on Defence Minister Andrei Taran to reconsider the decision.

    According to CNN, following the criticism, Ukraine’s Ministry of Defence said on Saturday that it will issue “new, improved footwear” for female soldiers.

  • Man shocked after finding his father secretly married his ex-wife

    Man shocked after finding his father secretly married his ex-wife

     A young man in India’s Uttar Pradesh was shocked when he found that his ex-wife is now his stepmother and they even have a two-year-old child.

    As per reports, the son filed a Right To Information (RTI) at District Panchayati Raj Office to gather information about his father who had left the house and started living separately.

    The man had registered the RTI after his father who is a sanitation worker stopped giving him money.

    The son had got married to a girl when both were minors in 2016.

    The couple got separated after six months of marriage when the girl claimed that the boy was an alcoholic. The man then tried to reconcile but the wife refused.  

    When the son finally got to know that his father had actually married his ex-wife, he filed a complaint at Bisauli police station and both the parties were called for a meeting on Saturday.

    Read More: Irked elephant destroys wedding, forces groom to run away

    “We are trying for mediation though both, father and son were rather aggressive during the meeting on Saturday.

    “The complaint is under investigation and police are taking action as per the law,” a police official said.

    Meanwhile, the girl who is now the ‘mother’ of her ex-husband does not want to return to him and said that she was very happy with her second husband.

    “We have not been given any documents of the first marriage when both were minor. A case cannot be registered, as of now. Both the parties will receive notice for further sessions,” the officials said.

  • Woman claims she got eyesight back after getting first dose of Covid vaccine

    Woman claims she got eyesight back after getting first dose of Covid vaccine

    A 70-year-old woman, Mathurabai Bidve,  from Maharashtra, India claimed that she had regained her vision after taking the Covid-19 vaccine.

    As per reports, Mathurabai lost her eyesight nine years ago after cataract caused the iris to turn white. She claimed that she regained her vision after taking her first Covid jab last month.

    Photo Credits: Zee News

    Meanwhile, the elderly woman, who currently lives with her relatives, took her first dose of the Covishield vaccine on June 26. The very next day after taking the vaccine, she claimed that she gained 30 to 40 percent eyesight from one eye. It’s not yet confirmed by doctors if the woman’s claim is true.

  • Video: Ocean on fire

    Video: Ocean on fire

    A fire on the surface of the Gulf of Mexico erupted after a gas leak from an underwater pipeline sparked ablaze, according to Mexico’s state-owned Pemex petrol company.

    Footage of the fire – appearing to boil the ocean’s surface with bright orange flames – went viral on July 2 before the fire was extinguished roughly 150 yards from a drilling platform in Mexico’s Yucatan peninsula, the company reported.

    The company said that “no injuries or evacuations are reported”.

    In a statement, Greenpeace Mexico’s Gustavo Ampugnani said: “These are the risks we face on a daily basis and which call for a change in the energy model, as we have demanded.”

  • Study reveals Pakistanis prayed for India during Covid-19 crisis

    Study reveals Pakistanis prayed for India during Covid-19 crisis

    Most Pakistanis prayed for their Indian neighbours when India was going thorough a severe second Covid-19 wave, said an artificial intelligence (AI)-driven study.

    The research focused on tweets expressing kindness, empathy and solidarity showed that most tweets that were posted by Pakistani citizens between 21 April and 4 May were positive.

    Led by Ashique KhudaBukhsh, the team of researchers at Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) based their study on 300,000 tweets. The team considered only the tweets with the three biggest trending hashtags: #IndiaNeedsOxygen, #PakistanStandsWithIndia and #EndiaSaySorryToKashmir. Of them, 55,712 tweets came from Pakistan, 46,651 from India and the remaining were posted from the other countries of the world.

    With the help of an artificial intelligence tool, “hope speech classifier”, they found Pakistani tweets containing supportive hashtags were by far more than those containing non-supportive hashtags. The study found that these tweets received more likes and retweets as well.

    More than 85% of the tweets posted about the Covid crisis in India from Pakistan were supportive, the research found.

    “Our research showed that there’s a universality in how people express emotions. If you search randomly, you’ll find positive tweets a little over 44% of the time. Our method throws up positive tweets 83% of the time,” KhudaBukhsh said.

    At a time when Indians were panicked about the raging COVID-19 wave, they received support and solidarity from across the border. Some people justified Pakistan’s helpful outpouring as the country itself was also faced with an infectious outbreak.

    Read More: Indian couple gets married on plane to avoid Covid restrictions

    “The situation here was pretty bad too. Our hope was getting thinner and thinner. Our enemy was the same, our borders are so close and we get impacted by whatever happens,” said Prof Arifa Zehra, who teaches history in Lahore.

    “A pandemic doesn’t recognise borders, whether they are geographical or ideological. And when the dark cloud is sneering at you, there’s no harm in sharing a prayer.”

    Prof Zehra also termed these positive tweets as “the greatest reassurance that we are still human”.

    KhudaBukhsh hoped for better relations between communities and countries if this method of identifying and amplifying positive messages is used. “When a country is going through a national health crisis like a pandemic, words of hope can be a welcome medicine and the last thing you want to see is negativity,” he highlighted.

    “There are several studies that show that if you’re exposed to too much hate speech or negative content, you get influenced by it.”

    KhudaBukhsh suggested using this AI-driven method to curb hate speech. “When there’s a negative situation, such as in times of war or a health crisis, instead of blocking the content, an alternative approach can be to highlight the positive content,” he underscored.

    “It will help reinforce the belief that people on the other side of the aisle are kinder.”

    KhudaBukhsh also suggested building up a healthy system that highlights kindness in others before an opposite system is deployed that may censor empathetic content. 

  • Birthday cake helps two brothers escape leopard

    Birthday cake helps two brothers escape leopard

     Two brothers in India escaped from a leopard by throwing a birthday cake at the animal as it chased them while they were on a motorbike.

    “Your first instinct when you sense danger is to do whatever you can to save yourself. That’s what they did,” a forest official told AFP.

    “They had a cake with them and they threw it at the leopard.”

    As per reports, Firoz and Sabir Mansuri were going to a birthday party for Firoz’s son in Madhya Pradesh state when the leopard came out of a sugarcane field.

    They rode their bike faster but the big cat kept on chasing them. One of the brothers smacked the cake in the leopard’s face. Hit by the “weapon of sweet distraction”, the big cat gave up its chase and ran back into the fields.

    Read More: Apple Watch saves 78-year-old man’s life

    “The leopard followed us for over 500 metres (yards). We narrowly escaped death,” said Sabir.

    Leopard numbers in India grew more than 60 percent between 2014 and 2018 to almost 13,000, according to the government, with the highest numbers in Madhya Pradesh. They often enter villages and towns.