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Reuters
Two Policemen Rewarded for 'Integrity'

Wed Feb 23,11:40 AM ET

KAMPALA (Reuters) - In an effort to boost morale among Uganda's ill-paid and often corrupt police force, the government has rewarded two officers who declined bribes and fought off robbers trying to steal exam papers.

 

Education Minister Namirembe Bitamazire gave the two constables 500,000 shillings (about $300) for standing up to the thieves, who targeted a store holding secondary school papers in central Luweero district, newspapers reported Wednesday.

The state-owned New Vision said the four robbers first tried to bribe the policemen guarding the store, but when that failed produced weapons and tried to steal the tests at gunpoint.

The policemen arrested one of the robbers at the scene and the others fled -- but were later arrested.

"These officers showed a high caliber of integrity. They refused a bribe and stood up to the thieves," an official from the Uganda National Examination Board told the New Vision.

Uganda's police force is poorly paid, and junior officers often demand bribes to overlook minor traffic offences.

The robbery attempt took place in November, days before students were due to sit their exams, the paper said, and the policemen received their reward Tuesday.

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=573&ncid=757&e=3&u=/nm/20050223/od_nm/uganda_police_dc

 

Bobbit 2:

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=573&e=4&u=/nm/crime_penis_dc

 

Elephants can paint!

Elephants paint on the canvas during new Guinness record attemp of most expensive paint by elephants at Maesa elephant camp in Chiang Mai province northern Thailand.(AFP/File)
Sun Feb 20, 6:17 PM ET
AFP

Elephants paint on the canvas during new Guinness record attemp of most expensive paint by elephants at Maesa elephant camp in Chiang Mai province http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/050220/photos_lf_afp/050220231915_tbnczihh_photo0northern Thailand.(AFP/File)

 

A new record of the most expensive painting by elephants is on display at Maesa elephant camp in Chiang Mai province, northern Thailand.(AFP/File)
Sun Feb 20, 6:19 PM ET
AFP

A new record of the most expensive painting by elephants is on display at Maesa elephant camp in Chiang Mai province, northern Thailand.(AFP/File)

http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/050220/photos_sc_afp/050220231955_9qgaulru_photo1

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Visions of 'Tuskany': elephant art fetches jumbo price in Thailand


Sun Feb 20, 6:19 PM ET

BANGKOK (AFP) - It's rare enough when living artists fetch outrageous fortune for their work. When those modern-day Matisses are Thai elephants, however, they charge into the record books.

Photo
AFP/File Photo

 

Eight elephants in northern Thailand have painted their way into the Guinness Book of World Records after an art lover living in the United States shelled out a jumbo 1.5 million baht (39,000 dollars) for their canvas creation -- the highest price ever paid for elephant art.

The four-legged artists in residence, four males and four females, trained for years at the Mae Sa Elephant Camp near the northern city of Chiang Mai under the tutelage of prominent painters before setting to work on their masterpiece, the camp's director of operations said.

"At first we didn't aim to sell this picture but we had a deep desire to show the world what Thai elephants can do," Anchalee Kalmapijit told AFP.

"They can draw abstract or realistic paintings. They are the only elephant group in the world who can do this," she added.

When a Thai businesswoman and elephant lover in the United States offered to buy it sight unseen, the Guinness officials expressed interest and their staff were on hand at Mae Sa to confirm the new record, Anchalee said.

With their mahouts, or handlers, on their backs or at their sides, the beasts held brushes with their trunks and gently applied dollops of acrylic paint on the huge canvas measuring six by 2.4 metres (20 by eight feet).

Human artists drafted the large painting first and advised the mahouts and their charges on colour schemes and style.

The elephants remained tight-trunked about their artistic inspirations. But one glance at their record-breaking work, a pastoral landscape evocatively named "Cold Wind, Swirling Mist, Charming Lanna Number One," suggests impressionism, pointillism -- and a hint of the surreal.

Anchalee says the profits from the sale will be spent on care for the 78 elephants currently living at the camp.

More exhibits are planned, she said. After all, the pachyderm painters are in debt since the camp has spent more than nine million baht over four years of artistic training.

Thailand's total elephant herd population is nearly 5,000, with up to 2,000 of them in the wild. Experts warned last year that the wild population could be wiped out within 15 years if no action is taken.

 

 

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