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Northern Ireland Pinning Hopes on Titanic Resurgence

A century after the Titanic sank on its maiden voyage; Belfast is counting on a new visitor attraction about the iconic ship to put the city that built it back on the tourist map.

The Northern Irish capital hopes the Titanic Belfast complex will entice holidaymakers to spend time -- and, crucially, money -- in the British province.

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Gandhi Statue Attacked, Sri Lanka Opens Probe

Sri Lanka ordered a probe Saturday into the attacks on the statues of Indian independence icon Mahatma Gandhi and Britain's founder of the Scout movement Robert Baden-Powell, the foreign ministry said.

There had been no claim of responsibility for Friday's destruction, which occurred amid anti-Western protests after the UN human rights council adopted a US-led resolution urging Sri Lanka to probe alleged war crimes by its troops.

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Christians in Holy Land Pray on Easter Saturday

Thousands of Christians gathered near Jerusalem's Church of the Holy Sepulcher for Easter Saturday and marched in processions brimming with tradition, taking turns to pray in the site where they believe Jesus was slain and buried.

Easter Saturday is a day of reflection and waiting for many Christians, who believe Jesus was crucified on Friday and rose from the dead on Sunday.

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Iran Minister Hails Gunter Grass Israel Poem

The Iranian deputy culture minister on Saturday hailed German Nobel literature laureate Gunter Grass's poem in which he accused Iran's nemesis Israel of plotting its annihilation, local media reported.

In a letter addressed to "Distinguished author Dr. Gunter Grass," Deputy Culture Minister Javad Shamaqdari was quoted as saying: "I read your literary work of human and historical responsibility, and it warns beautifully."

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Cherry Blossom in Japan Back in Full Bloom

Millions across Japan this weekend are flocking to the best spots for viewing cherry blossoms, in a tradition that last year was overshadowed by the natural disasters that struck the nation.

The national weather service announced Friday that blooming had officially started in Tokyo on March 31, using the city's central Yasukuni Shrine as a barometer -- an explosion of colors that will last only about a week.

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Russian Expedition 'Goes Missing' in Antarctic

A Russian-Ukrainian crew that set sail in September on a historic sailing expedition around the South and North Poles has gone missing in the Antarctic, its spokeswoman said on Friday.

The eight-person crew on board the 29-metre (97-foot) Scorpius sailboat has made no radio or other contact since Monday night, Anna Subbotina, spokeswoman of the Russian Polar Sailing Expedition, told the Interfax news agency.

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Philippines Stages Bloody Easter Crucifixions

Roman Catholic fanatics in the Philippines had themselves nailed to the cross Friday in a bloody display of religious frenzy as the Christian world marked the day Jesus was crucified.

The gruesome real-life reenactments of the crucifixion, which are held every Good Friday in the Philippines, are frowned upon by the Catholic Church but have become freak tourist draws.

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Slow French Sculptures Head to Hectic Hong Kong

Time and how it shapes us is key to the work of French sculptress Nathalie Decoster, including the giant bronzes she has just shipped off to Hong Kong -- quiet meditations for a hectic-paced city.

Forty monumental human figures of bronze and steel, from two to six meters high (six to 20 feet), are currently making the month-long boat journey to Asia, where 15 of them will hang for two months in the streets of the vertical city.

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Wreck of Titanic Falls Under UNESCO Protection

The wreck of the Atlantic liner Titanic will this month come under UNESCO protection, as it has now lain at the bottom of the Atlantic for 100 years, the United Nations cultural body said Thursday.

The British liner sank in international waters and so comes under no state's protection but, after a century, wrecks fall under the jurisdiction of a 2009 UN Convention on the Protection of Underwater Cultural Heritage.

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Experts Sound Alarm Over Syria Archaeological Treasures

Syria's year-long revolt has exposed to looting and destruction the country's archaeological treasures, including the ancient city of Palmyra and the Greco-Roman ruins of Apamea, experts warned Thursday.

Most vulnerable are strife-torn areas that have fallen outside the full control of the regime where looters have already targeted museums, excavation sites and monuments, they said.

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