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Mauritania, Haiti Top New Global Slavery Index

Mauritania, Haiti and Pakistan rank among the countries with the highest prevalence of modern slavery, according to a new global index released Thursday by an anti-slavery charity.

The "Global Slavery Index" report by the Walk Free Foundation ranked 162 countries by estimating the number of people in each nation affected by a range of practices including forced and bonded labor, human trafficking, forced marriages, and the use of children in the military.

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Opera House at 40 is Australia's Top Icon

Sydney's celebrated Opera House was Thursday declared Australia's best-known icon ahead of its 40th birthday this weekend, in a report that said it was worth Aus$775 million to the economy every year.

The Opera House is more highly esteemed abroad than "national brand Australia itself", accounting firm Deloitte said in a report prepared to coincide with the 40th anniversary of the building's opening Sunday.

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Chinese Family Seeks to Return Books in 70-Year Vow

A Chinese family is seeking a former Jewish refugee in Shanghai to return 2,000 of his books they kept safe for 70 years, media reports said Thursday.

Shanghai was home to tens of thousands of Jewish refugees who fled Nazi persecution in Europe from the 1930s.

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Taiwan to Loan Prized Jade Cabbage to Japan

Taiwan is set to send hundreds of artifacts to Japan next year including a jade cabbage, its most treasured masterpiece, in the island's first ever loan to its former wartime enemy.

The Taipei-based National Palace Museum said it will lend 231 pieces and sets ranging from paintings and calligraphy to bronze, china, jade and embroidery to the Tokyo National Museum and Kyushu National Museum from June to November 2014.

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Pilgrims Stone Devil as Hajj Nears End

Hundreds of thousands of Muslim pilgrims took part in the symbolic stoning of the devil ritual for a second day Wednesday in Saudi Arabia's Mina valley, as the annual hajj neared its end.

Men, women and children from 188 countries pelted three huge concrete structures representing the devil with pebbles, in an event that seemed better organized than in previous years.

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Berlin Museum Seeks Return of Ancient Gold Tablet

A Holocaust survivor's family urged New York's highest court Tuesday to let them keep an ancient gold tablet that their late father somehow obtained in Germany after World War II.

Attorney Steven Schlesinger argued that the estate of Riven Flamenbaum has a legal claim, whether the native of Poland bought the relic from a Russian soldier or simply took it to compensate for losing his family at Auschwitz, the concentration camp where he spent several years.

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Eleanor Catton Wins Fiction's Booker Prize 

Youth and heft triumphed at Britain's Booker Prize on Tuesday, as 28-year-old New Zealander Eleanor Catton won the fiction award for "The Luminaries," an ambitious 832-page murder mystery set during a 19th-century gold rush.

The choice should give heart to young authors of oversized tales. Catton is the youngest writer and only the second New Zealander to win the prestigious award — and her epic novel is easily the longest Booker champion.

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Suleiman Says Lebanon to Annually Commemorate Wadih al-Safi

President Michel Suleiman on Tuesday announced that Lebanon will annually commemorate singing legend Wadih al-Safi, who passed away on Friday evening.

"No one can do justice to the late artist. Lebanon has its national anthem but the country of cedars also has several anthems performed by the late legend," Suleiman said, as he offered condolences at the St. George Church on Tuesday afternoon.

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Muslim Pilgrims Stone Devil in Final Hajj Ritual

Hundreds of thousands of Muslims converged on the Mina valley in Saudi Arabia Tuesday to participate in a symbolic stoning of the devil, the final stage of the annual hajj pilgrimage.

As Muslims around the world celebrated the first day of Eid al-Adha, the feast of sacrifice, the pilgrims, dressed in the ihram, a two-piece seamless white garment, angrily hurled stones at concrete pillars representing the devil.

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Pedro Almodóvar: Spanish Government Wants to Exterminate Cinema

Pedro Almodóvar, the leading Spanish film director, has accused the government in Madrid of carrying out a rigorous plan to exterminate Spanish cinema, joining an increasingly angry battle between film-makers and the rightwing governing People's party (PP).

In an article published on the website infoLibre, Almodóvar criticized the finance minister, Cristobal Montoro, for a hike in VAT on tickets which has been widely blamed for causing many cinemas to shut, with the loss of hundreds of jobs. Last week, Montoro said the problems faced by the industry, which include cuts to government funding for domestic films, were nothing to do with taxes or funding, but instead to do with the poor quality of the films.

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