Venezuela Says Oil Spill from Trinidad and Tobago Could Hurt Fishing, Environment

An Indian fisherman washes his hands in the waters of Ennore Creek covered with an oil spill after Cyclone Michaung, in Chennai, India, 11 December 2023. (EPA)
An Indian fisherman washes his hands in the waters of Ennore Creek covered with an oil spill after Cyclone Michaung, in Chennai, India, 11 December 2023. (EPA)
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Venezuela Says Oil Spill from Trinidad and Tobago Could Hurt Fishing, Environment

An Indian fisherman washes his hands in the waters of Ennore Creek covered with an oil spill after Cyclone Michaung, in Chennai, India, 11 December 2023. (EPA)
An Indian fisherman washes his hands in the waters of Ennore Creek covered with an oil spill after Cyclone Michaung, in Chennai, India, 11 December 2023. (EPA)

Venezuela's government said on Friday that an oil spill originating from Trinidad and Tobago is putting at risk fishing in the region, ‌as well ‌as the environment.

"This event ‌exceeds in ⁠magnitude the one ⁠that occurred in May and confirms the drift of pollutants toward Venezuelan waters," the government said in a statement, without providing further details ⁠on the extent of ‌the spill, ‌which it said was confirmed by ‌satellite imagery.

Trinidad and Tobago's government ‌did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

In the statement, Venezuela's foreign ministry asked Trinidad ‌and Tobago to take measures to “prevent further incidents”, adding ⁠that ⁠it "reserves the right to take appropriate action before the competent international bodies to determine liability."

In May, Foreign Minister Yvan Gil asked Trinidad and Tobago for compensation for another oil spill that had affected areas in the far east of the country.



Japan Space Probe Skims Asteroid in Test for Planetary Defense

Japan's Hayabusa2 probe (Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency)
Japan's Hayabusa2 probe (Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency)
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Japan Space Probe Skims Asteroid in Test for Planetary Defense

Japan's Hayabusa2 probe (Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency)
Japan's Hayabusa2 probe (Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency)

A Japanese space probe performed a flyby of a near-Earth asteroid on Sunday, in a test mission for technology that could help protect the planet from space rocks.

The fridge-sized Hayabusa2 was due to fly within 800 meters (0.5 miles) of asteroid Torifune, Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) scientists said earlier, a trial run to see whether such a probe could deflect a potentially dangerous space rock away from Earth.

The mission comes after NASA deliberately smashed a spacecraft into the 160-metre-wide Dimorphos asteroid in 2022, successfully altering its orbit around a larger space rock.

Moving at a speed of more than 18,000 kilometers (11,185 miles) per hour, Hayabusa2 was not intended to collide with Torifune.

Instead, scientists wanted to assess whether they could precisely control the trajectory of the probe, should it ever need to perform a deflection.

"At 6:35 pm (0935 GMT)... Hayabusa2 conducted a flyby of Torifune and the spacecraft is working normally," a JAXA spokeswoman told AFP, declining to give her name.

Online footage supplied by JAXA showed scientists applauding in a control room.

"I was nervous, I felt on edge the whole time... But I'm really glad we were able to see it through to the end," one of the scientists told the JAXA broadcast.

If it is confirmed that the space probe indeed came within 800 meters of Torifune, the mission would be one of closest flybys of a near-Earth asteroid ever.

"It's as difficult as trying to shoot through a one-yen coin somewhere within the area stretching from Okinawa to Hokkaido," Yuya Mimasu of JAXA said earlier, referring to Japan's southernmost and northernmost islands.

Cameras on board Hayabusa2 are also recording data from the asteroid's surface including geographical features, its texture and temperature -- vital information for a potential planetary defense mission.

"Is the surface consisting of bare rock, or cover(ed) by boulder fields or sand beaches? Only images taken by a spacecraft can reveal this information," Patrick Michel, project scientist at the European Space Agency, told AFP prior to the flyby.

"If we want to deflect an asteroid by an impact, the response is not the same if the asteroid is behaving like a sponge or if it behaves like a very solid material," he said.

The space probe's mission is not based on any actual threat to Earth from an asteroid.

Launched in 2014, Hayabusa2 has already thrilled scientists by landing on and gathering material from the asteroid Ryugu, some 300 million kilometers (185 million miles) from our planet.

Six years later, it returned to Earth precious samples from Ryugu -- "dragon palace" in Japanese -- providing scientists with clues about what the solar system was like at its birth some 4.6 billion years ago.

After the Torifune mission, the space probe is expected to attempt in 2031 a "rendezvous" -- a maneuver where it flies alongside or touches down on a space rock to gather detailed data -- with another asteroid, called 1998KY26.

Even after the success of NASA's Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART), Sunday's ambitious flyby is hugely worthwhile, European Space Agency scientist Michel said.

"Given the diversity of near-Earth asteroids in terms of size, shape, surface and internal properties, each new image makes us better prepared."


Jewellery Worth Millions Stolen in French Museum Burglary

 This photograph shows the logo of French luxury crystal manufacturer Lalique displayed on the facade of the group's factory in Wingen-sur-Moder, eastern France on December 5, 2007. (AFP)
This photograph shows the logo of French luxury crystal manufacturer Lalique displayed on the facade of the group's factory in Wingen-sur-Moder, eastern France on December 5, 2007. (AFP)
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Jewellery Worth Millions Stolen in French Museum Burglary

 This photograph shows the logo of French luxury crystal manufacturer Lalique displayed on the facade of the group's factory in Wingen-sur-Moder, eastern France on December 5, 2007. (AFP)
This photograph shows the logo of French luxury crystal manufacturer Lalique displayed on the facade of the group's factory in Wingen-sur-Moder, eastern France on December 5, 2007. (AFP)

Jewellery worth millions of euros was stolen in a burglary at the museum of French luxury glassmaker Lalique on Sunday, the company and an investigation source said.

The thief or thieves broke in to the museum in Wingen-sur-Moder in northeastern France around 5:30 am (0330 GMT) and headed straight for the jewellery room, the source close to the investigation told AFP.

"Around twenty pieces of jewellery were stolen. The loss is currently being assessed but could amount to several million euros, likely close to four million," the source said.

The museum said on its website that it will be closed for several days because of the burglary.

"An alarm went off, but by the time the security company had completed its checks, it was a cleaning lady who arrived first on the scene and called the police," the investigation source added.

The CCTV footage is currently being examined.

The museum, dedicated to the Art Nouveau and Art Deco jeweller and glassmaker Rene Lalique, was opened in 2011 near the company's factory.

A dramatic daytime jewel heist at the Louvre museum in Paris in October last year put security at French museums and galleries under the spotlight.

Thieves made off with $102 million worth of jewellery from the Louvre in a raid lasting less than eight minutes.


Security Forces Hospital in Riyadh Treats Premature Infant's Rare Brain Condition

The newborn was discharged after approximately six weeks in stable condition, showing encouraging signs of neurological growth and development. (SPA)
The newborn was discharged after approximately six weeks in stable condition, showing encouraging signs of neurological growth and development. (SPA)
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Security Forces Hospital in Riyadh Treats Premature Infant's Rare Brain Condition

The newborn was discharged after approximately six weeks in stable condition, showing encouraging signs of neurological growth and development. (SPA)
The newborn was discharged after approximately six weeks in stable condition, showing encouraging signs of neurological growth and development. (SPA)

The Security Forces Hospital in Riyadh successfully diagnosed and treated a premature infant with a large occipital encephalocele measuring more than 10 centimeters in diameter, a rare and complex congenital malformation of the nervous system, reported the Saudi Press Agency on Sunday.

The condition was diagnosed prenatally in the hospital's high-risk pregnancy clinic using advanced ultrasound imaging and fetal MRI.

The examinations revealed brain tissue and major blood vessels within the encephalocele, prompting the development of a comprehensive treatment plan involving specialists from the departments of obstetrics and gynecology, neurosurgery, the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU), and social services.

The mother underwent a safe cesarean section, after which the premature infant was admitted to the NICU. Following a comprehensive medical evaluation and consultation with the family regarding the treatment plan, the infant successfully underwent surgical repair of the occipital encephalocele.

The infant subsequently had a procedure to drain cerebrospinal fluid to treat hydrocephalus, without notable complications.

The newborn was discharged after approximately six weeks in stable condition, showing encouraging signs of neurological growth and development.

This achievement highlights the effective integration of multidisciplinary medical teams and the advanced capabilities of the Ministry of Interior's medical services, reinforcing the quality of healthcare and patient safety.