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Stars and ‘unscrupulous doctors’

US Attorney for the Central District of California, Martin Estrada, speaks during a press conference on August 15, 2024, announcing arrests in the death of "Friends" actor Matthew Perry, in Los Angeles. US investigators have charged five people in connection with Perry's death. "These defendants took advantage of Mr. Perry's addiction issues to enrich themselves. They knew what they were doing was wrong. They knew what they were doing was risking great danger to Mr. Perry, but they did it anyways," said Estrada. (Photo by Patrick T. Fallon / AFP)

LOS ANGELES (AFP) “Friends” actor Matthew Perry’s tragic death has highlighted the secretive and toxic relationship that has long existed between troubled celebrities and the doctors who service their addictions.

Perry, who had a long history of substance abuse, was found dead in the hot tub of his luxury Los Angeles home last year with extremely high levels of ketamine in his system.

Federal drug officials said the star had become addicted while seeking treatment for depression and “turned to unscrupulous doctors” when legal sources refused to increase his dosage.

“Instead of ‘do no harm,’ they did harm so that they could make more money,” Anne Milgram of the Drug Enforcement Administration told a press conference this week.

The allegations against doctors Salvador Plasencia, who has pleaded not guilty, and Mark Chavez, who agreed to plead guilty to conspiracy to distribute ketamine, appear eerily reminiscent of other celebrity cases.

Salvador Plasencia’s attorney Stefan Eric Sacks speaks with the press outside the Edward R. Roybal Center and Federal Building following a press conference announcing arrests in the death of “Friends” actor Matthew Perry, in Los Angeles, California on August 15, 2024. PHOTO: AFP

For instance, Michael Jackson’s doctor Conrad Murray was convicted in 2011 of involuntary manslaughter for administering a lethal dose of a powerful surgical anasthetic to the megastar.

The deaths of pop icons from Elvis Presley and Marilyn Monroe to Prince and Tom Petty have all been linked to the fatal consumption of controlled substances obtained from medical professionals.

“The rules go out the window with famous people, and it constantly leads to tragedy,” said Harry Nelson, a prominent Los Angeles-based healthcare attorney. “It’s crazy.”

‘ A trap’ 
 
Financial gain is often a key motive.
 
Plasencia is alleged to have sold vials worth USD12 for up to USD2,000 to Perry, even messaging Chavez “I wonder how much this moron will pay… Lets [sic] find out.”

But Nelson, who has been personally involved in more than a dozen “front-page, headline-news tragedies” involving famous actors, rock stars and athletes, said the full picture is often more complicated.

Celebrities have a genuine need for privacy. Going to a doctor for a prescription, followed by a pharmacy to collect the drugs, is not feasible for troubled A-listers who are frequently hounded by paparazzi.

Yet doctors can quickly become awed by the “romance and excitement” of proximity to world-famous stars, who are likely to display a higher “sense of entitlement” regarding their treatment demands than typical patients.

In order to “stay in the good graces of that person and continue to have this privileged role,” doctors can end up rationalising: “I’m gonna do what that person wants, even if it’s against better judgment,” said Nelson.

“But it’s a trap. It’s a trap for both the celebrity patient, and for the doctor,” he added.

‘Ketamine parties’ 

 

Ketamine’s use as a “party drug” due to its dissociative and hallucinatory effects exploded onto the scene in the 1990s.

During the mid-2000s, “ketamine parties” held at private homes around Los Angeles were frequently attended by major stars, according to Nelson.

“You had a handful of doctors around Los Angeles who facilitated these, literally, parties, where everybody would be doing infusions of ketamine in a celebrity home, in Malibu, on the beach,” he said.

The medical board cracked down on these doctors, disciplining or removing the licenses of several.

Today, the drug is increasingly used for legitimate treatment of depression and PTSD.

Southern California has become a hub for private rehab clinics that offer absolute privacy — for extravagant fees — to celebrities and the ultra-wealthy, said Nelson.

In the Perry case, Chavez previously operated a ketamine clinic.

‘Liberties’ 

 

But the drug, which can cause health effects including loss of consciousness and respiratory problems, should only be administered under supervision of a doctor, and patients are meant to be monitored closely.

Plasencia is alleged to have handed over vials of ketamine to Perry’s assistant — even meeting him on a street corner at midnight a few weeks before the actor’s death for a USD6,000 cash exchange, according to the indictment.

US Attorney for the Central District of California, Martin Estrada, speaks during a press conference on August 15, 2024, announcing arrests in the death of “Friends” actor Matthew Perry, in Los Angeles. PHOTO: AFP

“The idea that someone would be allowed to just take it at home and get in the hot tub while on this drug is criminal, it’s irresponsible,” said Nelson.

“The doctors who did this undoubtedly felt that they could take some liberties, because they were dealing with a famous person who had a need for greater privacy.”

WHO seeks mpox vaccine production surge

(FILES) This file photo taken on August 9, 2022 shows vials of the JYNNEOS Monkeypox vaccine are prepared at a pop-up vaccination clinic in Los Angeles, California. Shares of the pharmaceutical laboratories of Bavarian Nordic in Denmark, which manufactures a specific vaccine against the mpox, jumped up on August 15, 2024 following the decision of the World Organization of Health WHO to consider the resurgence of monkeypox cases together with an urgent need for health care in the world. A surging mpox outbreak in Africa, which was declared an emergency by the continent's health agency on August 13, is being driven by a new, more transmissible strain of the virus. The Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC) declared its first-ever Public Health Emergency of Continental Security (PHECS) for the deadly disease. (Photo by Patrick T. FALLON / AFP)

GENEVA (AFP)The World Health Organization on Friday urged manufacturers to ramp up production of mpox vaccines to rein in the spread of a more dangerous strain of the virus.

The WHO on Wednesday declared the mpox surge a public health emergency of international concern — its highest alert level — with Clade 1b cases soaring in the Democratic Republic of Congo and spreading beyond its borders.

“We do need the manufacturers to really scale up so that we’ve got access to many, many more vaccines,” WHO spokeswoman Margaret Harris told reporters.

The WHO is asking countries with mpox vaccine stockpiles to donate them to countries with ongoing outbreaks.

Two mpox vaccines have been used in recent years — MVA-BN, produced by Danish drugmaker Bavarian Nordic, and Japan’s LC16.

(FILES) This file photo taken on August 9, 2022 shows vials of the JYNNEOS Monkeypox vaccine are prepared at a pop-up vaccination clinic in Los Angeles, California. PHOTO: AFP

Harris said there were 500,000 MVA-BN doses in stock, while an additional 2.4 million doses could be produced quickly, if there was a commitment from buyers.

For 2025, an additional 10 million doses could be produced, upon a firm procurement request.

“LC16 is a vaccine that is not commercialised but produced on behalf of the government of Japan. There is a considerable stockpile of this vaccine,” Harris added, saying the WHO was working with Tokyo to facilitate donations.

‘Drop in the bucket’ 

 

The Doctors Without Borders charity said countries with vaccine stockpiles but no outbreaks “must donate as many doses as possible” to affected countries in Africa.

It urged Bavarian Nordic to lower its prices, saying MVA-BN was out of reach for most countries where mpox is a threat.

The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, the world’s largest humanitarian network, said it faced significant challenges tackling mpox.

TOPSHOT – Doctors take samples from a patient at the Mpox treatment centre in Nyiragongo general referral hospital, north of Goma in the Democratic Republic of Congo, on August 16, 2024. PHOTO: AFP

Bronwyn Nichol, IFRC senior public health emergencies officer, said most vaccine stocks were in wealthy nations, and those sent to Africa so far were “a drop in the bucket”.

“There is a critical shortage of testing, treatment, and vaccines across the continent. These shortages are severely hampering the ability to contain the outbreak,” she said.

‘Complex picture’ 

 

The WHO, headed by Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, is due to issue temporary recommendations to countries on handling the mpox surge.

There are two subtypes of the virus: the more virulent and deadlier Clade 1, endemic in the Congo Basin in central Africa; and Clade 2, endemic in West Africa.

The upsurge in the DRC is being driven by outbreaks of two different Clade 1 strains, Tedros told a meeting Thursday of the UN health agency’s Standing Committee on Health Emergency Prevention, Preparedness and Response.

The first is an outbreak in northwest DRC of what was previously known as Clade 1, now called Clade 1a. This outbreak is primarily affecting children and is spread through multiple modes of transmission, he said.

The second in northeastern DRC is a new offshoot of Clade 1 called Clade 1b, which was first detected in September last year and is spreading rapidly, mainly through sexual transmission among adults.

The spread of Clade 1b, and its detection in neighbouring countries, were the main reasons behind the WHO sounding its highest alarm.

“It’s a complex picture, and responding to each of these outbreaks, and bringing them under control, will require a complex, comprehensive and coordinated international response,” said Tedros.

Man Utd beat Fulham in Premier League opener

Joshua Zirkzee (R) celebrates his match-winning goal. (Photo by Darren Staples / AFP)

MANCHESTER (AFP) Joshua Zirkzee made himself a Manchester United hero on his debut with a late winner to beat Fulham 1-0 in the opening match of the Premier League season on Friday.

Zirkzee, lacking match fitness after his GBP36.5m (USD47 million) move from Bologna last month, came on only for the final half hour.

The Dutch international saved the Red Devils from a frustrating evening at Old Trafford when he poked in Alejandro Garnacho’s cross on 87 minutes.

“To win here in my first home game and to grab a goal, it couldn’t be better,” said Zirkzee.

“I’ve been told (scoring at the Stretford End) is one of the best feelings at Manchester United. I’m so thankful and blessed I could experience it in my first game. It’s an amazing feeling.”

Joshua Zirkzee (R) celebrates his match-winning goal. PHOTO: AFP

United boss Erik ten Hag survived at the end of last season, despite finishing eighth in the Premier League, thanks to winning the FA Cup.

Whether that shock victory over rivals and English champions Manchester City in May could be a springboard remains to be seen after a performance that was eerily reminiscent of many last season.

Ten Hag said on the eve of the game that his side were “not ready” for the new campaign with key players missing through injury or a lack of match fitness, and it showed.

A scarf showing new signing, Manchester United’s Dutch striker #11 Joshua Zirkzee is offered for sale near the stadium ahead of the opening game of the season, the English Premier League football match between Manchester United and Fulham at Old Trafford in Manchester, north west England, on August 16, 2024. PHOTO: AFP

Bruno Fernandes started in a centre-forward role in the absence of Rasmus Hojlund, while Zirkzee was on the bench after returning to pre-season late following Euro 2024.

Noussair Mazraoui was thrown straight into the starting line-up at left-back after joining from Bayern Munich this week.

But there was no place in the squad for Jadon Sancho even though the winger and Ten Hag appeared to have settled their differences.

Fulham won at Old Trafford last season for the first time in 20 years in February during a torrid campaign for United.

Little seemed to have changed in the opening 20 minutes as the visitors started confidently and Andre Onana did well to prevent Kenny Tete’s dipping effort finding the top corner.

But Fulham were nearly masters of their own downfall.

Casemiro pounced on Bernd Leno’s sloppy pass and teed up Fernandes, who could only fire straight at Fulham’s German goalkeeper.

Casemiro’s struggles played a large part in United’s problems last season, but the Brazilian started the new campaign more like his old self.

An incisive through ball from the former Real Madrid midfielder created another brilliant chance for Fernandes, who again could not beat Leno from close range.

United’s lack of a predatory striker continued to haunt them after the break as Leno spread himself brilliantly to this time deny Mason Mount a rare goal since his move from Chelsea just over a year ago.

Ten Hag turned to Garnacho and Zirkzee from the bench in the search of a winner.

In doing so United left themselves open and Fulham could have secured another famous three points at the Theatre of Dreams.

Andreas Pereira’s poor pass cost Alex Iwobi the chance to run clean through on goal.

Moments later Lisandro Martinez produced a goal-saving clearance from Pereira’s dangerous low cross.

Instead it was the home side that snatched all three points.

Garnacho’s ball from the right was not the best, but Zirkzee managed to get a toe on it to divert it beyond Leno into the far corner.

United should have had a second in stoppage time when Garnacho somehow skewed wide with an open goal to aim at from Marcus Rashford’s unselfish pass.

But United held on to give Ten Hag the winning start he badly needed.

New Boeing CEO pledges to ‘reset’ relations with machinists

ABOVE & BELOW: Kelly Ortberg; and a Boeing 777X airplane at the Paris Air Show in Le Bourget, north of Paris, France. PHOTO: AFP & AP

NEW YORK (AFP) Boeing’s new boss said Friday he was looking to “reset” relations with a key union representing tens of thousands of its workers, amid negotiations for a new labor contract.

“I met with the presidents of IAM 751 & W24 this week in Seattle for a productive conversation and the opportunity to listen,” Boeing chief executive Kelly Ortberg wrote in a message to the aerospace giant’s 170,000-plus employees, a week after taking office.

“I shared with them my commitment to reset our relationship and reach a new contract where we can come together to build a strong future for our employees in the region,” Ortberg said in the message, shared with AFP, adding that contract negotiations were in the “final phase.”

 Kelly Ortberg. PHOTO: AFP 

The two local branches of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers represent around 33,000 Boeing employees.

They are based in the Seattle area, home to factories for the company’s best-selling 737 and 777 aircraft.

The current 16-year-old agreement expires at midnight on September 12. Union members voted on July 17 to approve the possibility of strike action if there’s no agreement by then.

“Ortberg knows that we can’t rewrite the past, but we can work on a path forward in the future,” the IAM District 751 negotiating committee said in a statement Thursday after the meeting.

“Boeing cannot rebuild the trust it shattered over the last two decades unless it commits to securing these jobs right here, where they belong,” they added.

The union is demanding Boeing manufacture its next aircraft — expected in 2035 but not yet announced — in the region.

It is also demanding a pay hike of at least 40 per cent over three years, as well as better benefits, including in health insurance and pensions.

“While Ortberg may not be sitting at the bargaining table, his influence on the negotiation process is undeniable,” the committee said.

Ortberg, 64, took over as Boeing CEO on August 8 from Dave Calhoun, who announced he was stepping down earlier this year after four years at the helm of the embattled aviation giant following a series of quality control problems.

During his first week, Ortberg visited the 737 factory outside Seattle, toured Boeing’s main supplier Spirit Aerosystems and met executives from airline customers, he said in his message.

Woman killed in python attack in Indonesia

A file photo of a python in Indonesia. PHOTO: AFP

AFP – An elderly woman was found dead after being attacked by a python in central Indonesia, police and local officials said yesterday, the third such death in the province in as many months.

Maga, a 74-year-old woman who like many Indonesians had one name, raised concerns when she did not return home on Wednesday, prompting a search by relatives.

She was found dead presumably “because of being constricted and bitten by the snake”, said Supriadi, police spokesman in Palopo city in South Sulawesi province.

He told AFP the snake in question was a four-metre python.

The woman was found with bites on her head and legs near her family home after going to work in a field, said Awaluddin, head of Padang Lambe district in Palopo.

She was found in Padang Lambe by her daughter with the snake just metres from her body, Awaluddin told AFP.

Locals beat the snake to death and said the woman had been swallowed up to her shoulders and vomited out, he added.

Deaths by large constrictors are considered rare, but several people in Indonesia have been killed by pythons in recent years.

Last month, a woman was found dead inside the belly of a snake after it swallowed her whole in Siteba village, in South Sulawesi province. In June a woman was found dead inside the belly of a reticulated python in another district of South Sulawesi.

A file photo of a python in Indonesia. PHOTO: AFP

On target

Arshad Nadeem of Pakistan during the men's javelin throw final at the 2024 Summer Olympics in Saint-Denis, France. PHOTO: AP

ISLAMABAD (AP) – More than a decade after making a javelin from a bamboo stick in a small village in Pakistan’s Punjab province, Arshad Nadeem stunned the world with his Olympic gold medal-winning throw at the Paris Games.

“I made that javelin myself in 2012,” Nadeem told ARY News television as he recalled his early days in a sport which is nowhere near in popularity to what cricket is in Pakistan.

Nadeem has been a sensation in Pakistan since he won gold at Paris on August 8, beating Neeraj Chopra of India, who took silver.

The throw has earned Nadeem over USD1 million – Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has promised INR150 million (USD538,000) and Chief Minister Punjab Mariam Nawaz handed him a cheque for INR100 million (USD359,000) in his village last Tuesday.

Sindh Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah has also promised to give Nadeem INR50 million (USD179,500).

In a cricket-loving country of 250 million, it was no surprise that Nadeem took up the bat and ball sport at a young age. It was only after his elder brother and father suggested that he try his hand at javelin or shot put that Nadeem forgot about cricket.

“(They) told me ‘try shot put or javelin because there’s a chance you might excel in an individual sport rather than team game like cricket’,” Nadeem said.

Arshad Nadeem of Pakistan during the men’s javelin throw final at the 2024 Summer Olympics in Saint-Denis, France. PHOTO: AP
Nadeem hugs his mother outside his house in Mian Channu, the Pakistani district of Khanewal. PHOTO: AP
Nadeem waves to well-wishers outside his village. PHOTO: AP
Nadeem with his gold medal. PHOTO: AP

He hasn’t looked back since. Four years after he took up the javelin, Nadeem rose on the international scene when he won bronze at the South Asia Federation in the Indian city of Guwahati.

It was at that event when Nadeem first met Chopra, who won gold.

Chopra also won gold at the Tokyo Olympics where Nadeem threw a distance of 84.62 metres to finish fifth.

“I started to train for Paris soon after Tokyo Olympics because I knew it, I can do something special for Pakistan,” Nadeem said in the TV interview aired on Thursday.

Pakistan last won a gold medal at the Olympics in 1984 when its men’s field hockey team won in Los Angeles.

Pakistan was represented by only seven athletes at Paris, and after six of them failed to have any podium impact in swimming, track and shooting events, Nadeem said he was the sole hope of his country.

“I stopped watching social media two days before the qualifying round because I was the last hope of millions of Pakistanis back home,” Nadeem said.

He threw over 86 metres and qualified for the final round, but lost his run-up in the first throw and fouled. And then came his record-breaking throw of 92.97 metres in his second attempt.

“When he first came to me 12 years ago, I had a belief that one day he will go over the 90-metre mark,” said Nadeem’s initial coach Arshad Ahmed Saqi, who first sent Nadeem to a provincial level tournament in Lahore in 2012 from a small village of Mian Channu district in Punjab province.

Nadeem said he was “90 to 95 per cent” sure after his second throw that he would win gold, but he kept on trying to go further in his remaining four attempts.

“I knew it I could do it,” Nadeem said. “Even my last throw was over 90 metres because I believed in myself. Hopefully one day I will break the world record.”

Back home his family was up late at night and overnight – due to the time difference with Paris – watching Nadeem live on television.

His wife Ayesha was also praying. “I didn’t sleep for three nights,” said Ayesha. “I knew he could do it, and I didn’t stop praying for him.” – Rizwan Ali

41 Palestinians injured in Gaza war flown to Malaysia for treatment

PHOTO: AFP

SELANGOR (AFP) – Forty-one Palestinian civilians who suffered various injuries in the war in Gaza were flown to Malaysia yesterday for treatment, officials said.

The Palestinians, aged between eight months and 62 years, were flown from the Egyptian capital Cairo onboard two Malaysian air force transport aircraft.

“We carried out this mission purely on humanitarian considerations, and to show our solidarity against what is happening to the people of Palestine,” Malaysian Defence Minister Mohamed Khaled Nordin told a news conference after receiving the patients.

“It also shows our nation’s stand against this inhumane genocide.”

Nordin said the injured were selected after a “careful evaluation” to ensure they were fit for the 19-hour flight that made a stopover in Karachi, Pakistan.

The injured were accompanied by 86 family members or next of kin.

The war has displaced almost the entire population of Gaza and destroyed much of its housing and other infrastructure, leaving widespread shortages of food.

Gaza’s Health Ministry, which does not provide a breakdown of civilian and militant casualties, said on Thursday that the war has killed more than 40,000 people.

ABOVE & BELOW: Photos show Palestinians arrive at the Malaysian Air Force base in Subang, Malaysia. PHOTO: AFP
PHOTO: AFP

Farming resurgence

PHOTO: AFP

PALESTINIAN TERRITORIES (AFP) – Hussein Jamil held a permit to work in Israel for 22 years until the war in Gaza broke out. Now, after setting up a greenhouse in a West Bank village, he swears he’ll never go back.

Harvesting his tomatoes in the occupied West Bank, the 46-year-old said his former Israeli boss has already called several times to ask him to return.

“But I told him that I would never go back to work there,” he said in Bayt Dajan near Nablus, the northern West Bank’s commercial centre.

There, dozens of men have returned to the traditional pursuit of tilling the land, rather than board buses to queue at the heavily guarded checkpoints that lead into Israel.

“It’s a very useful job and above all safer” than working in Israel, said Jamil, as he tends to his plants with his sons.

Israel stopped issuing work permits for Palestinians after the October 7 attack by Hamas, which resulted in the deaths of 1,198 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP count based on official Israeli data.

Israeli reprisals in Gaza have so far left 39,790 dead, according to the Health Ministry of the Hamas-run territory, which does not give a breakdown of civilians and fighters killed.

Jamil was one of 200,000 Palestinians from the West Bank who were working in Israel legally or illegally, according to the Palestinian General Confederation of Labour, and who lost their livelihoods overnight.

ABOVE & BELOW: Greenhouses in the village of Beit Dajan: and a Palestinian farmer works in a tomato plantation in a greenhouse in Beit Dajan in east of Nablus in the occupied West Bank. PHOTO: AFP
PHOTO: AFP
ABOVE & BELOW: Palestinian youth pick tomatoes; and a boy shows off freshly picked tomatoes. PHOTO: AFP
PHOTO: AFP

Salaries in Israel are more than double what Palestinians can make in the occupied territories, according to the World Bank.

Many of those workers are now busy in the greenhouses that have sprouted up in recent months on the hillsides where, Palestinian elders said, their ancestors once grew wheat.

Working this way, “we are independent and peaceful”, said Jamil, adding: “It’s much better than working in Israel. Here we work on our land.”

Economic prospects have dived since the war, with West Bank unemployment leaping from 12.9 per cent to 32 per cent in the final three months of 2023.

Some 144,000 jobs have been lost in the territory, many because of rising violence that has prompted the army to block roads, strangling economic activity.

Since October 7, at least 617 Palestinians have been killed in the West Bank by the Israeli army or settlers, according to an AFP count based on official Palestinian data.

At least 18 Israelis, including soldiers, have died in Palestinian attacks in the same period, according to official Israeli data.

Every day, around USD22 million in income is lost in the West Bank, according to International Labor Organization (ILO) estimates.

In Bayt Dajan alone, 300-350 men worked in Israel out of a population of 5,000.

Mazen Abu Jaish, 43, who spent 10 years working in Israel, took his time before deciding to pick up his shovel and rake and set up a tomato greenhouse.

“We waited, thinking that we would get our jobs back again after the war,” he told AFP.

But unlike previous wars in Gaza, which never lasted more than a few weeks, the current conflict is fast approaching its first anniversary.

“So we ended up getting together with 35 other people from the village and we decided to start farming rather than keep waiting,” said Jaish.

Since October 7, 15 hectares of Bayt Dajan have been covered by greenhouses with tomatoes and cucumbers, grown by people who used to work in Israel, municipal officials said.

Mohammad Ridwan, a member of the municipal council, sees other advantages as well, as the greenhouses are in Area C – the West Bank land controlled solely by Israel, and vulnerable to being used for illegal Israeli settlements.

Area C makes up 59 per cent of the West Bank, and 63 per cent of its agricultural land.

The Norwegian Refugee Council also says that Israel had denied Palestinians access to 99 percent of the land in Area C, in many cases preventing them from growing their own fields there.

“Local unemployed people have found work and above all, we are preserving land in Area C,” said Ridwan.

Man boards plane without ticket – twice

PHOTO: ENVATO

FRANKFURT (AFP) – A Norwegian traveller managed to board a plane at Munich airport without a ticket two days in a row – and even flew to Sweden on the second occasion, police said on Tuesday.

The 39-year-old sneaked past security at Germany’s second-busiest airport for the first time on August 4.

Passengers are supposed to scan boarding passes at an automatic gate but he stood close to another traveller and got through without one, the Bild daily reported.

He then snuck past airline staff at the gate and boarded the plane.

But the aircraft was fully booked and his deception was discovered as he did not have a seat. The man was handed over to police, who charged him but let him go, the paper said.

Undeterred, the Norwegian returned a day later, used the same technique, and boarded a flight to Sweden that was not fully booked, said police spokesman Sebastian Pinta.

However on arrival in Stockholm, he attracted the attention of airport staff as he wanted to return to Munich immediately, and he was handed over to the police.

Pinta insisted the man did not pose any danger.

He is under investigation for unlawful entry and transport fraud, he added.

Munich airport said it was investigating how the man had bypassed security checks.

PHOTO: ENVATO

Congrats!

A photo of twin panda babies at Ocean Park Hong Kong marking the first-ever locally born panda cubs. PHOTO: AP

HONG KONG (AP) – Hong Kong welcomed the birth of its first locally born giant pandas on Thursday, with their mother becoming the world’s oldest first-time mother of its kind on record, the theme park that houses them announced.

Ying Ying, the mother, gave birth to the twins – one male and one female – at Ocean Park just a day before she turned 19 years old, the park said in a statement.

She and her partner Le Le are the second pair of pandas gifted by China to Hong Kong since Hong Kong returned to China’s rule in 1997.

Pandas are widely considered as Hong Kong’s unofficial national mascot. China’s giant panda loan programme with overseas zoos has long been known as a tool of Beijing’s soft-power diplomacy.

Ocean Park said in the statement that giant pandas have a “notoriously difficult time reproducing, especially as they age” and panda pregnancy is not readily detectable.

Although Ying Ying started showing symptoms including decreased appetite, increased need for rest time and changes in hormonal levels in late July, her pregnancy was only confirmed last Sunday. On Wednesday, her care team noticed Ying Ying’s labour symptoms and her amniotic fluid broke at night. After over five hours of labour, the babies were safely delivered on Thursday morning, the park said.

“Both cubs are currently very fragile and need time to stabilise, especially the female cub who has a lower body temperature, weaker cries, and lower food intake after birth,” the park said. Visitors will have to wait for a few months for their public debut.

Ocean Park Corp chairman Paulo Pong thanked the local animal care team, as well as experts from mainland China for their partnership and assistance over the years.

“The birth is a true rarity, especially considering Ying Ying is the oldest giant panda on record to have successfully given birth for the first time,” Pong said.

A photo of twin panda babies at Ocean Park Hong Kong marking the first-ever locally born panda cubs. PHOTO: AP