Sudanese-born British Taghreed Elsanhouri, whose documentary about last year's partition of Sudan premiered in her homeland on Thursday night, is making footsteps.
The award-winning film-maker said she wanted Sudanese to have "ownership" of their history -- and by doing so to take responsibility for what happened.

As part of its yearly art exhibitions and fairs’ program, and following a successful launch of the Beirut Photo Fair, Artheum is pleased to introduce the Beirut Furniture Expo, for contemporary and vintage designs.
The Beirut Furniture Expo will take place from December 12-22, from 4 p.m. until 9 p.m. at Artheum venue for arts and entertainment.

Who said porn was a man's thing? A study released on Friday challenges the myth, showing that four fifths of French women have watched a porn movie before -- one in two of them without their partners.
Fully 82 percent of women questioned said they had watched an X-rated film at least once before, compared to 99 percent of men, according to the study of 579 women carried out by the IFOP polling institute in September.

Singaporeans have reacted to a survey depicting them as the world's most emotionless people with many saying the city state's competitive culture leaves them no room for feelings.
"Singaporeans are the least likely in the world to report experiencing emotions of any kind on a daily basis," U.S.-based pollster Gallup said in a report on a three-year study conducted in more than 150 countries.

At a colorful temple next to the turquoise sea off Ly Son Island, weather-beaten Vietnamese fishermen offer up their prayers to an unusual god -- "Ca Ong" or Mr. Whale.
Before setting sail on a month-long voyage, Nguyen Hoang Loi makes a pilgrimage to the ornately decorated Tan Temple, which houses the remains of two sacred giant whales.

American troops are celebrating Thanksgiving Day with food and football at a U.S.-led coalition base in the Afghan capital.
Huge hunks of beef greeted the estimated 2,500 diners on Thursday as soldiers lined up at the base in Kabul. Red-white-and-blue decorations filled the room while brochures about combat stress served as table centerpieces.

The Roman Catholic Church in Angola on Wednesday demanded new laws to outlaw witchcraft, claiming the practice had reached "chronic" proportions.
"It is affecting more and more followers, it destroys family ties and affects relations among people," said Francisco Viti, the archbishop of the central city of Huambo.

A gun used by the brother of notorious Australian outlaw Ned Kelly during their gang's infamous last stand against police in 1880 has sold for Aus$122,000 (U.S.$126,000) at a Melbourne auction.
The East India Company cavalry pistol, which belonged to Kelly's younger brother Dan and has his name and the year 1876 engraved on the walnut stock, was bought by a private collector Wednesday evening.

Discarded oxygen cylinders, ropes, tents, beer cans and even the remains of a helicopter have been turned into sculpture to highlight waste littering the slopes of Mount Everest.
Artists worked with tonnes of debris collected from the world's highest mountain to create an exhibition of 75 pieces commissioned for the "Everest 8848 Art Project" and currently on display in the Nepalese capital Kathmandu.

The Church of England has much explaining to do following its failure to vote to allow women to serve as bishops, its leader said Wednesday — and politicians from the prime minister downward are already demanding action or answers.
One legislator even suggested there might be an issue under anti-discrimination laws.
