The Louvre on Friday unveiled a newly-restored Leonardo Da Vinci masterpiece, the "Saint Anne", hoping to lay to rest an art world row that saw the Paris museum accused of endangering the precious oil.
"The Virgin and Child with Saint Anne", which the Renaissance master left unfinished when he died in 1519, goes on display on Thursday as the star of a major exhibit exploring the work's genesis, and its place in art history.

The coup against the Malian government was sparked by anger over its handling of an insurrection by Tuaregs, the impoverished Saharan nomads who were once known as the "masters of the desert."
Experts put the total number of Tuareg at between a million and 1.5 million, living on a territory nearly two million square kilometres (780,000 square miles) and comprising parts of Niger, Mali, Algeria, Libya and Burkina Faso.

French choreographer Angelin Preljocaj is hoping to cast a spell on U.S. audiences with his ballet "Snow White", an adaptation of what he calls the "thriller" fairytale by the Brothers Grimm.
The edgy dance master created the 2008 work -- which opens in California this week before moving to the East Coast -- as a tribute to the great 19th-century romantic ballets like Swan Lake, Cinderella or Sleeping Beauty.

A newly discovered Mozart piano piece composed when the child prodigy was 11 years old was presented and performed for the first time here Friday in his former family home.
Simply titled "Allegro Molto," the piece was found recently in a notebook in the attic of a private home in Austria's Tyrol province.

Spain's second largest city Barcelona on Wednesday said it would soon outlaw street prostitution, imposing fines on both prostitutes and their clients.
The city hall said the new rules were expected to come into play in May.

At least 943 Pakistani women and girls were murdered last year for allegedly defaming their family's honor, the country's leading human rights group said Thursday.
The statistics highlight the growing scale of violence suffered by many women in conservative Muslim Pakistan, where they are frequently treated as second-class citizens and there is no law against domestic violence.

Debt-laden Dubai will build an opera house and an modern art museum, the government said Wednesday, in the first such project since the Gulf emirate was hit by the global economic downturn in 2008.
The Dubai Modern Art Museum & Opera House District "aims to further strengthen UAE's emerging role as the cultural hub of the region," a statement said.

A Bangladesh court on Wednesday ordered authorities to shut down five Facebook pages and a website for blaspheming the Prophet Mohammed, the Koran and other religious subjects, a lawyer said.
Judges at the high court in Dhaka ordered the telecommunications regulator, home ministry officials and police to block the offending pages immediately.

A Japanese university will open a research centre near Peru's Nazca Lines to study the ancient geoglyphs which are designated a UNESCO world heritage site, Kyodo news agency said Wednesday.
The new facility set up by Yamagata University will operate for 15 years to study the large designs etched into the ground in Peru's southern plains, with Japanese and local researchers expected to take part in the project.

A Russian court has upheld a decision to permit the publication of a sacred Hindu text whose initial ban sparked protests in India and threatened to strain Moscow's close ties with New Delhi.
A district court in the Siberian city of Tomsk said in a statement it had decided "to leave unchanged" a December lower court ruling stating that the "Bhagavad Gita" did not contain extremist material.
