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Critics Say Indian Law on Teenage Sex 'Regressive'

India is raising the age of consent for sex to 18 under a new law seen by some children's rights activists as being out of step with social changes and open to abuse.

Under a provision in the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act approved by parliament last month, sex with a person under the age of 18 will be deemed as statutory rape and subject to prosecution.

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Bangladesh Arrest Warrant over 'Blasphemous' Book

A Bangladeshi court has issued an arrest warrant for the writer of a 2003 novel that allegedly contains insulting remarks against the Prophet Mohammed, a lawyer said Tuesday.

The court in Dhaka issued the order in response to a petition from a Muslim activist accusing author Salam Azad of hurting religious sentiment in his banned book "Bhanga Math" ("Broken Temple").

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Wine Lovers Race to Bordeaux Marathons and Bike Rides

Sporty wine lovers are exploring the vineyard paths and private forests of France's historic wine region in marathons and bike rides, complete with zany costumes, live music and wine tastings de rigueur.

In Bordeaux, the Medocaine mountain bike ride in May drew 6,500 pedaling wine enthusiasts for its 14th edition, organized by hundreds of local volunteers to promote tourism, nature and, of course, wine in a convivial setting.

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Balkan Nations Pledge to Use Cultural Heritage to Boost Ties

Eleven southeastern European countries pledged on Sunday at an UNESCO-organized summit in Bosnia to use their religious, cultural and historic heritage to boost ties, the FENA news agency reported.

In a joint declaration, adopted in Bosnia's historic southern town of Mostar, top officials from the 11 countries agreed to protect their cultural heritage as an "important basis for understanding and more intensive cooperation between our countries."

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Elizabeth's Jubilee Contrasts with Victoria's Empire Fest

Britain is celebrating its second-ever royal diamond jubilee, in marked contrast to that of queen Victoria more than a century ago, which doubled up as a triumphant festival of the empire.

In 1897, Joseph Chamberlain, the secretary of state for the colonies, convinced Victoria to kill two birds with one stone: mark the 60th year of her reign but also celebrate the British empire "at its zenith", said the historian Walter Arnstein.

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A New Lease on Life For Italy's Last Cowboys

A few dozen horsemen roam the hills and plains of central Italy as the last of the "butteri" cow herders, proudly holding onto a tradition that has survived for 500 years.

"There aren't many of us left," said Maurizio Magagnini, 46, as he sipped wine and carved a chunk of cheese under a tree in the Monterano reserve of the Lazio region, 50 kilometers (30 miles) north of Rome.

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Cardinals Split as Vatican Internal Rift Widens

Cardinals tasked with deciding the fate of the Vatican bank president amid financial scandals and a struggle for power in the Holy See are struggling to come to an agreement, media reports said Saturday.

The commission of cardinals must decide whether or not to uphold the board's decision to oust Ettore Gotti Tedeschi, who was fired for failing to clean up the institution's image amid accusations of corruption and money-laundering.

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Russia Marks Soviet Massacre of Strikers

Russia on Saturday quietly marked half a century since Soviet forces brutally suppressed a rare protest led by striking factory workers in one of the worst massacres of the USSR's postwar era.

Twenty-six people were killed on June 2, 1962 when Soviet troops fired on the mass protest against working conditions and rising prices in the southern city of Novocherkassk.

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International Film Festival Opens in Transylvanian City

The films of Japan's Daisuke Miyazaki and Norway's August Joachim Trier will be the first among 12 movies in competition to screen Saturday at the Transylvania International Film Festival.

Miyazaki's "End of the Night" and Trier's "Oslo, August 31" will be showcased on the second day of the 10-day Romanian festival, one of the biggest in the Balkans.

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New Media Deployed in Battle to Preserve History

It started with an inflatable pig.

Jeffrey Shaw has always been fascinated by interactivity; having in the 1960s created art he hoped would narrow the gap between viewer and image.

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