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Orang Utan to have cataract operation
Fri, June 01 2007
A team of veterinarians are due to perform the first ever cataract surgery on an orangutan living in Malaysia’s wildlife centre in the eastern state of Sarawak on Borneo island. A team of three vets - two from South Africa and one Malaysian - will be conducting the operation on both eyes of Aman, a 19-year-old male orangutan, the New Straits Times daily said. “It will be the world’s first cataract surgery on an orangutan.” Tourists urged to work Singapore is to allow young foreign holidaymakers to work in the city-state as part of efforts to attract skilled migrants. Singapore, which wants to raise its population from 4.5 million to 6.5 million, will allow undergraduates and graduates from seven countries - including France, Germany, Britain and the United States - and the region of Hong Kong to look for employment while on holiday in the country. The government hopes these students, aged between 17 and 30, will return to Singapore after an initial working holiday of up to six months. Israel bank's base Israel’s largest bank has picked Singapore as a base to serve both Israeli and international clients doing business in Asia. It is the first Far East branch for the Bank Hapoalim group, said chief executive Zvi Ziv. Its Zurich-based private banking arm, BHI Switzerland, has also opened a Singapore branch to serve both Israeli and international clientsvdoing business in Asia. Bank Hapoalim has a one-third share of the Israeli banking market, said Rami Lador, BHI Switzerland’s executive vice-president. Mahathir in hospital Malaysia’s former prime minister Mahathir Mohamad has been admitted to a hospital after suffering breathing difficulties while in the northern resort island of Langkawi, reports said. Last year, the 82-year old former premier suffered a heart attack and was admitted to hospital. Mahathir stepped down as one of Asia’s longest serving PM leaders in October 2003. However, he has remained vocal in politics, often slamming the government of his successor Abdullah Ahmad Badawi with a string of criticisms he says are aimed at improving the service of the country’s leaders. Woman in hijack bid An Indian woman was detained after she threatened to hijack a Malaysia Airlines flight during a domestic flight from Kuala Lumpur. The 35-year-old woman boarded the plane with two children, aged one and three. In the middle of the one-hour flight, which was headed for the northern Penang state, the woman went to the cockpit and demanded to be let in. The suspect threatened to “take over the plane” but was later convinced to return to her seat by aircrew. |