Tango Gives Dialysis Patients New Hope in Uruguay

Victor Ho Jon Cho (2nd L) and Adelina Yoon Woo Kim from South Korea, who are representing the city of Seoul, dance during the Salon style final round at the Tango World Championship in Buenos Aires August 26, 2015. (Photo by Marcos Brindicci/Reuters)
Victor Ho Jon Cho (2nd L) and Adelina Yoon Woo Kim from South Korea, who are representing the city of Seoul, dance during the Salon style final round at the Tango World Championship in Buenos Aires August 26, 2015. (Photo by Marcos Brindicci/Reuters)
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Tango Gives Dialysis Patients New Hope in Uruguay

Victor Ho Jon Cho (2nd L) and Adelina Yoon Woo Kim from South Korea, who are representing the city of Seoul, dance during the Salon style final round at the Tango World Championship in Buenos Aires August 26, 2015. (Photo by Marcos Brindicci/Reuters)
Victor Ho Jon Cho (2nd L) and Adelina Yoon Woo Kim from South Korea, who are representing the city of Seoul, dance during the Salon style final round at the Tango World Championship in Buenos Aires August 26, 2015. (Photo by Marcos Brindicci/Reuters)

At the age of 85, Uruguayan Olga Diaz's kidneys are failing, and she was beginning to despair at her bleak future. But at the clinic where she receives her treatment, Diaz has found a new “will to live” thanks to live tango and milonga performances.

“This is more than medicine,” Diaz told AFP from the Diaverum clinic in Montevideo.

Diaz is one of 20 patients sitting in armchairs, all connected to the “artificial kidneys” that purify their blood.

Suddenly the sound of the machines and chattering nurses are drowned out by bandoneon music and a voice singing the classic tango piece “Naranjo en flor.”

Smiles break out across the faces of patients, including Diaz, who visits the clinic three times a week to spend four hours connected to a machine.

“I had fallen into a routine. I did things but without my old enthusiasm. The music gave my soul life and gave me the will to live, joy, enthusiasm, those things that were fading,” she said.

Other patients agree that these mini concerts have improved their quality of life.

Rafael Gutierrez, 46, says music “makes time go faster” and makes the dialysis treatment “much more bearable.”

The show lasts 40 minutes and every patient has a front row seat.

Scientific research shows that listening to music reduces anxiety and stress and stabilizes the heartbeat and pulse. It also affects the areas of the brain related to pleasure by boosting dopamine.

Music's therapeutic benefits have been “amply demonstrated,” says nephrologist Gerardo Perez, adding that the World Health Organization (WHO) has “for years” recommended incorporating art and culture into health systems.

That is why he has spent two decades playing tango on his bandoneon to dialysis patients.

But last year, his personal initiative was transformed into the “Hospital Tango” project that puts on mini concerts in health centers and hospitals.

The idea is to temporarily take people away from their “worry, illness, uncertainty, suffering.”

Other bandoneon players, singers and guitarists have come on board to perform throughout Montevideo.

For now, the group focuses on tango, which Perez touts as “world cultural heritage,” but its mission could expand to include other forms of music or even theater.



Satellite Data Shows Earth is Getting Ever Brighter at Night

FILE PHOTO: A view of Earth taken by NASA astronaut and Artemis II Commander Reid Wiseman from one of the Orion spacecraft’s window after completing the translunar injection burn on April 2, 2026. NASA/Handout via REUTERS
FILE PHOTO: A view of Earth taken by NASA astronaut and Artemis II Commander Reid Wiseman from one of the Orion spacecraft’s window after completing the translunar injection burn on April 2, 2026. NASA/Handout via REUTERS
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Satellite Data Shows Earth is Getting Ever Brighter at Night

FILE PHOTO: A view of Earth taken by NASA astronaut and Artemis II Commander Reid Wiseman from one of the Orion spacecraft’s window after completing the translunar injection burn on April 2, 2026. NASA/Handout via REUTERS
FILE PHOTO: A view of Earth taken by NASA astronaut and Artemis II Commander Reid Wiseman from one of the Orion spacecraft’s window after completing the translunar injection burn on April 2, 2026. NASA/Handout via REUTERS

Daily satellite observations have revealed a continued nighttime brightening globally due to artificial lighting, with important regional variations including a surge in sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia alongside a deliberate dimming in Europe driven by concerns over energy conservation and light pollution.

Researchers documented a 16% net increase in global nighttime light from 2014 to 2022, but showed it was not a steady brightening but rather a patchwork of increasing and decreasing regional brightness shaped by numerous factors. The United States in 2022 had by far the highest total luminosity of any country, followed by China, India, Canada and Brazil, Reuters reported.

Brightening was found to be propelled mainly by rapid urbanization, infrastructure expansion and rural electrification.

Dimming, however, had two very different drivers. Abrupt dimming was usually caused by natural disasters, power grid failures and armed conflicts. Gradual dimming was often deliberate, guided by government regulations, transitions to energy-efficient LED lights and efforts to cut light pollution.

"For decades, we've held a simplified view that the Earth at night is just getting steadily brighter as human population and economies grow," ⁠said Zhe Zhu, ⁠a professor of remote sensing and director of the University of Connecticut's Global Environmental Remote Sensing Laboratory, senior author of the study published on Wednesday in the journal Nature.

"We discovered that the Earth's nightscape is actually highly volatile," Zhu said. "The planet's lighting footprint is constantly expanding, contracting and shifting."

The researchers used more than a million daily images obtained by a US government Earth-observation satellite and processed by NASA. Previous global studies relied mostly on annual or monthly composite satellite images.

The most dramatic brightening occurred in emerging economies, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia. It was led by Somalia, Burundi and Cambodia, followed by several African nations including Ghana, Guinea ⁠and Rwanda.

"This isn't just urbanization. It is a massive expansion of energy access," Zhu said. "These numbers represent a profound shift as entire regions transition from near-total darkness to becoming part of the global electric network."

Massive light loss occurred in countries such as Lebanon, Ukraine, Yemen and Afghanistan, where light was a casualty of armed conflict and infrastructure collapse. Similar declines were observed in Haiti and Venezuela, where dimming was more closely associated with prolonged economic crises and unreliable energy supply.

"In Ukraine, we observed a sharp, sustained decrease in light that aligned perfectly with the escalation of the conflict in February 2022," when Russia launched a large-scale invasion, Zhu said.

"We see similar abrupt darkness falling over regions in the Middle East during periods of conflict," Zhu said.

Europe experienced a 4% net decrease in nighttime light radiance, largely due to technological advances and environmental policies.

"It is driven by a widespread shift from older, less-efficient streetlights like high-pressure sodium lamps to newer, directional LED systems, as well as strict national energy-efficiency mandates and ⁠dark-sky conservation efforts," Zhu said. "Europe is ⁠fascinating because it presents a very structured dimming pattern."

Zhu called France a world leader in dark-sky conservation and energy-efficiency mandates.

Study co-author Christopher Kyba, a professor of nighttime light remote sensing at the Ruhr University Bochum in Germany, added: "The dimming in France that took place because of deliberate decisions to turn streetlights off late at night when there is no longer any activity on the streets is extraordinary. It will be very interesting to see how this develops over time, and whether this practice expands beyond France."

The United States registered a 6% net light increase during the study period.

"Geographically, the USA offers a microcosm of this global light complexity. The West Coast largely brightened, consistent with population growth and vibrant tech economies. However, much of the East Coast and Midwest actually dimmed. This was driven by de-densification in older urban cores, the decline of certain manufacturing sectors, and aggressive adoption of smart, energy-efficient city lighting programs like those in Washington, D.C., and Chicago," Zhu said.

Large-scale illumination began with gaslights in cities in the early 19th century, followed by electric lights later that century - and a relentless increase since. Cities and towns glow at night, obscuring most of the stars that once shone above.

"Light pollution has profound ecological consequences, disrupting nocturnal ecosystems, animal migrations and human circadian rhythms," Zhu said.


Man Fined $300 for Entering Hippo Moo Deng's Pen

(FILES) Moo Deng (R), a 1-year-old female pygmy hippo who became a viral internet sensation, eats birthday cake with her mother at Khao Kheow Open Zoo in Chonburi province on July 10, 2025. (Photo by Chanakarn Laosarakham / AFP)
(FILES) Moo Deng (R), a 1-year-old female pygmy hippo who became a viral internet sensation, eats birthday cake with her mother at Khao Kheow Open Zoo in Chonburi province on July 10, 2025. (Photo by Chanakarn Laosarakham / AFP)
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Man Fined $300 for Entering Hippo Moo Deng's Pen

(FILES) Moo Deng (R), a 1-year-old female pygmy hippo who became a viral internet sensation, eats birthday cake with her mother at Khao Kheow Open Zoo in Chonburi province on July 10, 2025. (Photo by Chanakarn Laosarakham / AFP)
(FILES) Moo Deng (R), a 1-year-old female pygmy hippo who became a viral internet sensation, eats birthday cake with her mother at Khao Kheow Open Zoo in Chonburi province on July 10, 2025. (Photo by Chanakarn Laosarakham / AFP)

A Thai court has fined a man $300 after he broke into the enclosure of Moo Deng, an endangered baby pygmy hippo and internet sensation, the zoo director said Wednesday.

Moo Deng -- whose name translates as "bouncy pork" -- has gained global attention thanks to social media videos showing her adorable antics, drawing tens of thousands of visitors and boosting zoo ticket sales.

Last month, a Thai man unlawfully entered Moo Deng's pen, which also houses her mother, at the Khao Kheow Open Zoo about a two-hour drive from the capital Bangkok.

Footage of the close encounter released by local media showed a man inside the enclosure and recording Moo Deng with a tablet.

Khao Kheow Open Zoo said at the time that Moo Deng was unharmed but "slightly startled", and it would pursue legal action against the intruder.

On Wednesday, zoo director Narongwit Chodchoy told AFP that a state prosecutor had informed him that the man was found guilty by a local court after his confession and fined 10,000 baht ($300).

AFP could not immediately reach a court official for comment.

"The decision shows that no one can violate animals' rights, no matter whether they are in an enclosure or in the wild," Narongwit said.

Since the incident in March, he said no similar security breaches had occurred and the zoo had increased security patrols to deter would-be intruders.

"We train staff on what to do if any animals escape, but from now on, we will have to train them on what to do if there are any intruders," Narongwit said.

"We learned from this lesson and will not allow it to happen again -- not to Moo Deng and not to other animals in the zoo."

The pygmy hippo calf, which marked its first birthday in July, has inspired merchandise and memes since first going viral online in 2024.


Escaped Wolf Forces School Closure in South Korea

This picture taken and released on April 8, 2026 by Daejeon Fire Headquarters via Yonhap shows a wolf that escaped from a zoo walking on a road in Daejeon. (Photo by YONHAP / AFP)
This picture taken and released on April 8, 2026 by Daejeon Fire Headquarters via Yonhap shows a wolf that escaped from a zoo walking on a road in Daejeon. (Photo by YONHAP / AFP)
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Escaped Wolf Forces School Closure in South Korea

This picture taken and released on April 8, 2026 by Daejeon Fire Headquarters via Yonhap shows a wolf that escaped from a zoo walking on a road in Daejeon. (Photo by YONHAP / AFP)
This picture taken and released on April 8, 2026 by Daejeon Fire Headquarters via Yonhap shows a wolf that escaped from a zoo walking on a road in Daejeon. (Photo by YONHAP / AFP)

A wolf that escaped from a zoo in South Korea remained at large Thursday, authorities said, prompting a local school to close over safety concerns as the search continued.

The male wolf -- born in 2024 and weighing about 30 kilograms - escaped from a zoo at a theme park in Daejeon, about 150 kilometers (93 miles) south of Seoul, on Wednesday, triggering a wide search in surrounding areas.

It remained at large Thursday, authorities said, with a nearby school closing for safety.

"Daejeon Sanseong Elementary School is closed today following the escape of a wolf from a zoo yesterday," a spokesperson for the Daejeon Metropolitan Office of Education told AFP.

More than 300 people -- including firefighters, police officers and military troops -- are taking part in the search operation, an official from the Daejeon Fire Headquarters said.

"We deployed drone cameras early in the morning but had to pull them back due to the ongoing rain," he told AFP.

The wolf dug into the ground and damaged the zoo's installed fence before escaping, according to the fire official.

Images released by local media showed it wandering in the middle of a road.

In 2023, a male zebra became a global sensation after escaping from a zoo in Seoul and was seen roaming through the streets.

The zebra - named Sero - was eventually cornered in a narrow alley, safely tranquilized and returned to his enclosure without any injuries.