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The suicide of the famous
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Japanese film director Juzo Itami, who leapt to his death from an eighth-floor
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window this weekend, has been compared in newspapers around the world to the
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death of Princess Diana--to the extent that both have been seen as victims of
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the tabloid press. According to Asahi
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Shimbun, Japan's biggest-selling daily newspaper, a weekly gossip magazine
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called Flash had been about to publish a photograph of Itami in a
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restaurant in Kyoto with a 26-year-old woman with whom, it said, he had been
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having an affair for three years. Itami had denied this and stated in one of
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several suicide notes that "only through my death can I prove my
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innocence."
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By
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coincidence, the publication of such a photograph, taken inside a restaurant on
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a private occasion, would have been specifically forbidden in Britain under a
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tough new code of conduct agreed upon by all British newspapers last week in
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the wake of the princess's death. At the same time, the charge made most
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memorably by her brother, Earl Spencer, at her funeral in Westminster Abbey,
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that paparazzi were responsible for her death, has been implicitly
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rejected by her executors, who, according to the Sunday Times of London
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(quoting "senior royal sources"), are preparing to sue Mohamed al-Fayed's Ritz
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Hotel in Paris for at least $13 million for allowing the hotel security man
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Henri Paul to drive her when he had three times the legally permitted amount of
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alcohol in his blood.
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Other Diana news includes reports in the Times of London that,
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according to an opinion poll, Queen Elizabeth's annual Christmas Day broadcast
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is expected to have its largest-ever audience this week, despite years of
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declining interest; and that the names William and Harry, those of the
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princess's two sons, "rocketed in popularity" among Times readers naming
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their babies immediately after her death, while the popularity of the name
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Charles "dipped dramatically."
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Also on
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Sunday, the Sunday Times published another "princess scoop," which
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reverberated around the world to almost the same extent as the one about
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Diana's executors' lawsuit. This scoop was about the late Princess Grace of
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Monaco, who, it claimed, had been initiated into the sinister Order of the
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Solar Temple--which was engulfed by mass murder and suicide in France,
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Switzerland, and Canada in 1994--shortly before her own death in a car crash in
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the south of France 12 years earlier. According to the Sunday Times , the
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cult's leader, a con man called Joseph di Mambro, had made her a "high
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priestess" in a ghoulish quasireligious ceremony with strong sexual undertones,
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and got her to pay nearly $10 million into a Swiss bank. "There is no mercy for
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the dead," commented the Italian newspaper La Stampa about this story.
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The "chicken flu" epidemic, from which a third
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child has died in Hong Kong, continued to dominate the pages of the South China Morning Post, which by
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way of light relief reported on Monday that Hong Kong had "reclaimed part of
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its heritage" by setting the record for "the world's largest dancing dragon."
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It had lost this record to the Netherlands in 1992 but had got it back again by
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getting 3,760 people inside a 2,696-meter dragon to dance for the minimum two
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minutes required for inclusion in the Guinness Book of World Records .
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The event was inaugurated by the territory's chief executive, Tung Chee-hwa,
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who "dotted the dragon's eyes."
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Meanwhile, according to the
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Johannesburg
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Star, South Africa banned imports of Chinese poultry to keep out chicken flu,
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but was threatened with a European ban on its ostrich-meat exports unless it could wipe out a
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poultry disease of its own within six months. Eighty percent of Europe's
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ostrich-meat imports are from South Africa. In an editorial, the Star
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noted that police in the British city of Leeds had sent Christmas cards to
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convicted thieves warning them they were being kept under surveillance but said
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this couldn't happen in South Africa because "the overwhelming number of those
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qualified to receive such cards would make the cost prohibitive."
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The
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Star published another editorial about the 50 th African
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National Congress convention, at which President Nelson Mandela attacked the
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foot-dragging of South African whites in a speech. The paper said this speech
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would be taken by his critics as evidence that he was "hungry for power,
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self-serving and determined that the interests of his party should prevail."
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According to the Star , the ANC had supported the government's
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responsible economic policy; rejected Winnie Mandela and her followers;
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reaffirmed the principle of "non-racialism"; and, "unusually for Africa,"
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presided over a smooth transfer of power from Mandela to Thabo Mbeki. These, it
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said, were all "real advances."
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An investigation carried out by the Milan newspaper
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Corriere della
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Sera revealed that in Jalandhar, Punjab, little girls aged 10 to 12 were
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engaged in what is virtually slave labor, sewing leather footballs printed with
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the legend "Guaranteed produced without child labor" for export to Italy,
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France, and Britain.
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In Paris, Le Monde published an attack on
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Ireland, "the country of emigrants," for its reluctance to assimilate
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immigrants into its own territory. New Irish President Mary McAleese, it
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reported, had told her fellow citizens that they had a duty to give immigrants
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the same welcome that Irish emigrants had always received abroad, but despite
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this, their hostility to immigrants was increasing. The problem wasn't large,
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Le Monde said, for in 1997 only 4,000 foreign immigrants entered
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Ireland, one-third of them from Romania. But the number was still 100 times
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higher than that of only five years ago.
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