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Cyrus Cylinder, ancient decree of religious freedom, starts U.S. tour

miercuri, 22 mai 2013

The Cyrus Cylinder, a 539-530 B.C. artefact, is seen on display at the National Museum of Iran in Tehran September 12, 2010. REUTERS/Caren Firouz

1 of 8. The Cyrus Cylinder, a 539-530 B.C. artefact, is seen on display at the National Museum of Iran in Tehran September 12, 2010.

Credit: Reuters/Caren Firouz

By Ian Simpson

WASHINGTON | Thu Mar 7, 2013 12:34pm EST

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Cyrus Cylinder of ancient Persia, a landmark in religious freedom and a potent symbol of Iranian national identity, will begin its first U.S. tour with an exhibit that opens Saturday in Washington.

The barrel-shaped clay artifact, 2,500 years old and only 9 inches long, has been described as the first declaration of human rights and an influence on leaders from Alexander the Great to Thomas Jefferson.

It has been celebrated by the shah of Iran and that country's post-revolutionary leaders, as well as by the ancient Hebrews and the founders of modern Israel.

"The Cyrus Cylinder and Ancient Persia" exhibit, opening at the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, "is about understanding the way Iranians see themselves in the world, and that's obviously important at the moment," said Neil MacGregor, director of the British Museum, which loaned the piece.

The artifact bears inscriptions proclaiming the victory of Persian ruler Cyrus over Babylon in the sixth century B.C. It records the Persian emperor's restoration of shrines dedicated to different gods and his intention to allow freedom of worship to people displaced by defeated ruler Nabonidus.

Such declarations of religious tolerance were not uncommon at the time, but Cyrus' was unique in its nature and scope.

"The cylinder has acquired a special resonance, and is valued by people all around the world as a symbol of tolerance and respect for different peoples and different faiths," the British Museum says on its website.

More than a million people flocked to see the cylinder when the museum lent it to Iran in 2010, in one of the most-viewed exhibits in the country's history.

Cyrus' proclamation was written in spiky Babylonian cuneiform on the soft clay cylinder, which was buried in Babylon, now in modern-day Iraq. It was dug up in 1879 and has since been in the British Museum.

The exhibit runs through April 28 at the Sackler, which is part of the Smithsonian Institution, then travels to Houston, New York, San Francisco and Los Angeles.

TOLERACE, JUSTICE

Cyrus' declarations of tolerance, justice and religious freedom inspired philosophers and policymakers for centuries.

Scholars say it shows that Cyrus allowed displaced Jews to return to Jerusalem from exile in Babylon and to rebuild the Temple.

In the fourth century B.C., the Greek historian and soldier Xenophon wrote "Cyropedia," a text that portrays Cyrus as the ideal ruler and that greatly influenced Alexander the Great.

Xenophon's portrayal also carried weight with Renaissance and Enlightenment thinkers. Thomas Jefferson owned two copies of the cylinder and it influenced his writing of the U.S. Declaration of Independence.

The United Nations building in New York also has a copy.

The shah of Iran used Cyrus and the Cylinder, which he called a "charter of human rights," to bolster his prestige before he was overthrown by the 1979 Islamic revolution.

"This is a great statement about how a society thought about running itself. And to that extent it's like the Magna Carta," MacGregor told Reuters.

Julian Raby, the Sackler's director, said the show was small in terms of numbers of objects but had a big potential impact.

"We're at a very, very tough moment in terms of how we view Iran and how we view Israeli-Iranian relationships. Anything that gets us to reflect on these things is, I think, a good thing," he said.

The Sackler show includes lectures, other artifacts, a workshop on how to tweet in cuneiform, concerts and a showing of the 1916 silent film "Intolerance," directed by D.W. Griffith.

(Editing by Doina Chiacu)


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Venezuela's Chavez exalted as "father" and "martyr" by followers

Supporters of Venezuela's late President Hugo Chavez unfurl a large national flag as they gather to see his coffin driven through the streets of Caracas, March 6, 2013. REUTERS/Jorge Dan Lopez

1 of 2. Supporters of Venezuela's late President Hugo Chavez unfurl a large national flag as they gather to see his coffin driven through the streets of Caracas, March 6, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Jorge Dan Lopez

By Terry Wade

CARACAS | Wed Mar 6, 2013 4:12pm EST

CARACAS (Reuters) - Deceased Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez was hailed by weeping supporters on Wednesday as a spiritual father figure who sacrificed his life for his country.

The 58-year-old socialist president succumbed to cancer on Tuesday after 14 years in power that polarized a country with vast oil reserves by sidelining traditional elites in favor of millions mired in poverty.

Supporters say Chavez, a larger-than-life persona in Venezuela, helped them throw off the shackles of capitalism and foreign interference, and that he fell ill because he devoted all his energy to a peaceful "revolution."

"He was like a father to us. He taught us how to love our country, our culture and our sovereignty," said Madeleine Gutierrez, 29, an architect. Tears streamed down her cheeks as she hugged friends in a plaza named for Chavez's hero Simon Bolivar, who liberated much of Latin America from Spanish colonial rule.

"Chavez lives! The fight goes on!" people chanted. Clad in red, the color of the Socialist Party, they thronged the balmy streets of Caracas, creating rivers of crimson in homage to the departed president. Bands of motorcyclists honked their horns in impromptu motorcades.

Critics say Chavez squandered the wealth from an oil price bonanza by spending too much on inefficient social welfare programs, lost control of inflation, allowed violent crime to surge and insulted U.S. and European leaders for sport.

But with his African and indigenous heritage, Chavez was the face of the masses in the South American country who say their needs were ignored for decades by lighter-skinned rulers until he arrived.

"He gave his life for us. You could call him a martyr," said Jose Rondon, 48, wearing a beret like one used by Chavez, at the hospital where the president died.

Rondon works for a union group affiliated with the Chavez government and, like many of the people on the streets interviewed by Reuters, has ties to his party.

Still, Wednesday's outpouring looked far more spontaneous than normal pro-government events, where party cadres marshal turnout. It was on a scale rarely seen anywhere for an elected official.

Many supporters channeled their grief into raucous shouts of support and militant vows to continue his policies. Some, though, stood silently or cried.

RELIGIOUS OVERTONES

"Everyone has benefited under Chavez. He included everybody. Like him or not, all have benefited," said Marixa Carrion, who works as a secretary at the foreign ministry.

Chavez's personality cult at times bore religious overtones. People were already comparing him on Wednesday to former Argentine leader Eva Peron, who is cherished in her country half a century after her death.

Hundreds of posters of a smiling Chavez catching raindrops in his hand hang from lampposts across Caracas. The posters are emblazoned with a slogan that alludes to him as a creator: "Life rains down from your hands. We love you."

In contrast with the euphoria on the street, some of Chavez's detractors were quietly celebrating his demise. Though opposition supporters were largely staying indoors, some posted messages on Twitter toasting the end of the Chavez era.

Many Venezuelans saw Chavez's nationalistic streak as an example they must strive to live up to.

"I love Chavez and will continue loving him," said Hugo Bolivar, 60, who works as a security guard for the city of Caracas. "I have Bolivar's last name and the president's first name. He cared a lot about his country - just like me."

Marchers strained to see or even touch Chavez's coffin as it wound its way through crowded streets. Many people carried banners reading "I am Chavez" and waved red, yellow and blue Venezuelan flags.

At various points, recordings of Chavez singing songs or making impassioned speeches blared through loudspeakers, reducing many to tears.

Chavez's imprint may endure for years. His preferred successor, acting President Nicolas Maduro, is favored to win an election that is expected to be called in the next 30 days.

Fans of Chavez hope that Maduro, who for now lacks the charisma and zeal of his former boss, could grow into his new role.

Maduro was surrounded by a sea of people on Wednesday as he walked with Chavez's coffin toward a monumental esplanade among probably one of the largest crowds of his political life.

"Charisma is like a seed that you must plant to harvest later. Chavez wasn't all that charismatic when he started out. Maduro could learn by doing," said Manuel Montanez, 48.

(Reporting by Terry Wade; Editing by Kieran Murray and Eric Beech)


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Furious with Europe, British fishermen lament demise of trade

Small fishing boats dry out in the morning sun by the quayside in Whitby, northern England February 27, 2013. REUTERS/Dylan Martinez

1 of 24. Small fishing boats dry out in the morning sun by the quayside in Whitby, northern England February 27, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Dylan Martinez

By Maria Golovnina

ABOARD THE WHITBY ROSE, North Sea | Thu Mar 7, 2013 4:50pm EST

ABOARD THE WHITBY ROSE, North Sea (Reuters) - His eyes fixed on the North Sea horizon, British skipper Howard Locker steers his boat far out to sea where he hopes to stumble on enough fish to save the day.

But things are not looking good for Locker - one of the last remaining trawler men in the northeastern town of Whitby where fishing quotas, climate change and decades of overfishing have crushed the local fishing industry.

"The market has collapsed," said Locker, who has been fishing out of the harbor for more than 40 years. "When I was 16, I couldn't believe I'd be scraping a living like this."

"We are the last of the great hunters. A lifetime at sea. For what?" Locker added, as gusts of icy wind lashed his face.

Like Locker, most residents of this traditional fishing town are angry. And the focus of that anger is the European Union.

Negotiating fishing quotas with Brussels has long been a source of friction for Britain. The European Union sets limits on how much fish EU member states can catch every year, saying it helps conserve stocks and protect the health of the seas.

But in places like Whitby, home of centuries of seafaring, people blame the EU for destroying their livelihoods.

In the debate on whether Britain should leave the club altogether in a possible referendum by 2017, for many living off the sea, the answer is clear.

"Out. Definitely. I would want to be out of the EU," said Malcolm Ward, 56, a fisherman from the nearby fishing port of Scarborough, as he gulped down beer in a pub called The Newcastle Packet where fishermen have drank for generations.

"I don't know anyone who would vote to be in it," he added, as other fishermen, their arms adorned with faded tattoos of fish and anchors, nodded and repeated: "Out, out".

In this windswept part of Britain, where people have lived off fishing at least since Roman times, the shoreline is dotted with centuries-old fishing villages and towns.

The trade has gone though much turmoil over the centuries, including an 80-year-long obsession with whaling which dominated local fisheries in the 18th and 19th centuries.

The British fishing fleet is now one of Europe's biggest, employing more than 10,000 people - which makes the country one of the EU's top three producers along with Denmark and Spain.

But the future looks bleak, and the mood is dark.

Fish stocks are being depleted rapidly all over the planet and maritime economies are suffering across the globe because of over-fishing and climate change - unpredictable factors which, unlike EU quotas, cannot be resolved through negotiations.

"The change has been very dramatic. It's quotas and conditions that aren't making it worthwhile to do fishing here anymore," said Richard Lawton, Whitby assistant harbormaster.

"Whitby fishermen might be the one group of people who would vote to come out of the EU," he added, speaking in his office cluttered with nautical almanacs and maps of the harbor.

Locals agree. "Years ago, that quayside was full of boats. It's a miserable fishing atmosphere now," said Steve Boocock, 32, a fish retailer. "People will vote to come out (of the EU)."

DECLINE

Once a bustling port, Whitby is now a shadow of its former self in terms of fishing. The harbor is empty and quiet. Flocks of seagulls swoop over a small fleet of rusty fishing boats. Only 200 people are left employed in fishing.

Landings of valuable white fish such as cod are down to about 10 percent of the total, as local fishermen try to diversify into prawn and crab fishing to make ends meet.

Ian Havelock, chair of the local town council's harbor committee, estimated the industry has shrunk by 85-90 percent from its heyday in the 1980s - which is when the EU started to impose quotas to help replenish North Sea stocks.

"I was brought up in the heart of the fishing area. It was so very, very different," said Havelock. "There were fishing families in just about every house. It was prosperous."

The town's survival now largely depends on crowds of tourists coming down to see the ruin of an imposing Gothic abbey perched on a steep cliff top - a moody place said to have inspired Bram Stoker's 1897 horror novel, Dracula.

The fishermen say climate change has also been a big factor. Global warming has expanded fish habitat northwards, with stocks sometimes disappearing from the waters off the Yorkshire coast for weeks on end. Boats return at dawn with largely empty nets.

Often schools of fish reappear unpredictably, resulting in bumper catches and much jubilation - but then EU quotas kick in, forcing skippers to dump the excess catch in the sea to avoid hefty EU fines.

Unable to make money from fishing, many fishermen rely on jobs guarding offshore oil and gas pipelines. Ironically for a town which blames the EU for everything, this has attracted intrepid job seekers from the EU itself.

"Oil is better money than fish," said Sergei Bartulans, 33, a captain from Latvia who operates a former fishing trawler called the Maggie M to assist North Sea oil drilling research.

"Before, they used to go out on ships like this to fish. But now people like me are taking over. The industry here is dying."

The EU may be an easy scapegoat, but some fishermen do concede it is probably decades of unrestrained over-fishing, climate change and other factors that are to blame.

"Five or seven years ago we had about 28 trawlers around here. There is about two now," said Joe Storr, 58, whose family has been in fishing for generations. He recently gave up white fishing, making ends meet by catching lobsters off the coast.

"At the end of the day, a lot of it is self-harmed. I think they've slaughtered it really. ... The fish isn't there now."

EU WATCHING

Back onshore in Whitby harbor, an old metal box with the gold stars of the EU flag greets fishermen coming back from sea - this is where log notes detailing their daily catch levels are collected by maritime authorities enforcing EU rules.

Many scoff at the sight. "I am not European. I am British," said Locker the skipper as he steered his boat into the harbor.

He showed a crumpled piece of paper where he had scrawled his monthly quotas: 881.8 pounds of monkfish, 1.37 tons of cod, 2.2 tons of haddock. As he spoke, a lone seal played in the wake of his boat, hoping for a share of Locker's catch.

The EC says it is aware of the plight of local communities.

It has proposed to reform its quota system to introduce a new concept known as "maximum sustainable yield" which replaces annual quotas with multi-year plans that would help conserve stocks while giving fishermen more opportunity to make money.

"By bringing fish stocks back to sustainable levels, the reformed policy will bring new prosperity to the fishing sector and end its dependence on subsidies," said a spokesman for EU fisheries commissioner Maria Damanaki.

Officials say decades of overfishing have cut the profitability of up to 40 percent of EU fleets, and a lull in fishing for a few years would allow stocks to recover.

The EU also says if stocks were exploited sustainably according to long-term advice, sizes would increase by about 70 percent. Catches would increase by around 17 percent and incomes could increase by 24 percent for fishermen - or by the equivalent of about 1.8 billion euros ($2.4 billion) - per year.

But for men like Locker, business is barely profitable. "It's just not viable. For the last 20 years all the government and the EU have done was, cut, cut, cut, cut quotas," he said.

For now, he is worried about his son who wants to make a career out of fishing. There is no future in it, Locker said.

"He said he wanted to go fishing. I could've killed him. Honestly. And he loves it," Locker said with joking frustration as he looked at his son from the window of the skipper's cabin.

"I have a little grandson, two-year-old. If he ever thinks of buying a (fishing) rod, I am going to hit him with it. I am."

(Additional reporting by Charlie Dunmore in Brussels, Writing by Maria Golovnina; Editing by Guy Faulconbridge)


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Medical tourism offers travel firms untapped growth

A woman lies on an operating table during a facelift surgery at a private plastic surgery clinic in Budapest, March 1, 2012. REUTERS/Bernadett Szabo

A woman lies on an operating table during a facelift surgery at a private plastic surgery clinic in Budapest, March 1, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Bernadett Szabo

By Maria Sheahan and Andreas Kroener

FRANKFURT | Thu Mar 7, 2013 10:22am EST

FRANKFURT (Reuters) - A dentist's office may not be everyone's idea of a perfect holiday destination.

But a growing number of Europeans are travelling abroad for medical treatment to save money, or maybe to combine a visit to the doctor with some sightseeing, creating a fast-growing market that is still largely untapped by traditional tour operators.

"It was simply cheaper for me to go to a dentist in Hungary," said a 42-year-old physical therapist from Berlin, who did not want to give his name.

He chose the clinic near Budapest from an Internet advertisement, enticed by hundreds of euros in savings compared with the same treatment in Germany. He was happy to find when he got there that the clinic was clean, the staff competent and the work thorough.

Greater efforts by clinics to lure customers from abroad for routine procedures are creating new opportunities for tour operators looking to expand into faster-growing markets.

Helmut Wachowiak, a professor at the International University of Applied Sciences at Bad Honnef in Germany, says the global medical tourism market is worth $40 billion to $60 billion and is growing at about 20 percent per year.

"The medical tourism market is still very much passing by traditional tourism, though it is increasingly recognized as an opportunity for the travel industry," said Wachowiak, an expert on tourism management.

People travel abroad for medical treatment for various reasons: it's cheaper, they face a long wait at home, or the treatment they want is not available in their own country.

Robert MacLaren, professor of ophthalmology at the University of Oxford, said some patients who have immigrated may prefer to return to be close to their families when they undergo surgery.

"People will want to take the opportunity to seek treatment in places where it might be cheaper and where they have relatives who might be able to look after them. I'm seeing that especially with younger people from eastern Europe," he said.

The British-based Medical Tourist Company refers about 100 patients a year to hospitals in India for treatments including cardiac surgery, knee and hip replacement, in-vitro fertilization and dental work.

Chief Executive Premhar Shah reports rapid growth in demand from customers in Africa, where it can be harder to find well-equipped medical facilities for complex surgeries.

Shah, a medical doctor by training, said he competes with hospitals that market directly to prospective patients as well as companies trying to expand into medical tourism.

"It's a very competitive market because everybody wants to jump into it," he told Reuters.

HOCKEY-STICK CURVE

Some countries such as Germany market themselves as a destination for medical tourism.

According to the German National Tourist Board, about 77,000 foreign patients were treated in the country in 2010, spending 930 million euros ($1.24 billion). They came mostly from other European countries, Russia, Gulf states or the United States.

Hospital operator Helios helps organize visas, hotels and sight-seeing trips for patients coming to Germany for treatment, mostly from Russian-speaking countries and the Middle East.

"Many patients specifically opt for a city where they can enjoy what the place has to offer alongside the treatment," Helios manager Stefan Boeckle said. "Provided their medical condition allows for it, of course."

He cited the example of a Kuwaiti businessman who came to Berlin for a check-up in December and booked a hotel and theatre tickets for himself and his son, plus a limousine to take him to hospital during the two-day stay.

Boeckle says patients from the Middle East have tailed off slightly now that countries such as the United Arab Emirates have started building more hospitals to attract medical tourists themselves.

A survey by consultancy IPK International has shown that 3-4 percent of the world's population travels to foreign countries for medical treatment, and as many as 52 percent of Europeans say they could imagine doing so.

"I think booking numbers (in health-related tourism) could rise on a hockey stick-shaped curve in coming years," said Claudia Staedele, a board member of German medical tourism company Dr. Holiday. "There is still incredible room to grow."

Dr. Holiday, part of Germany's second-biggest tour operator Rewe, focuses on vacations that have health-related elements such as exercise classes, but also offers trips to Hungary for dental treatment and to Turkey for laser eye surgery.

Between 2003 and 2007, the number of trips Dr. Holiday has sold sky-rocketed from 300 to 30,000. Since then, growth rates have been double-digit and Staedele said she sees an 18 percent rise this year.

By comparison, overall international tourism grew by 4 percent in 2012, according to the U.N. World Tourism Organisation.

Staedele said the combination of an ageing population and growing acceptance of medical treatments abroad will bolster growth in coming years.

DIALYSIS CRUISES

Companies can also help those with chronic conditions enjoy a holiday like everybody else.

Chiara Frattini works for Holiday Dialysis International, part of Germany's Fresenius Medical Care, which arranges dialysis for people on holiday.

The service started in 1996 and has seen growth of around 6 percent a year, she said. Around 2,000 people contact the service each year, with customers mostly from the United States and Japan, where people tend to travel in large tour groups.

She has organized dialysis in destinations such as the Philippines, Senegal, Kenya and Thailand.

"But in the Saharan countries, it can be very difficult due to lack of good water and treatment facilities, and some places are just not politically advisable," she said.

The company sets up dialysis wards on cruise ships with nurses and a specialist doctor on board.

After a lull for the European financial crisis, Frattini is more confident. "If the patient is facing money problems, the first thing they decide to cancel is their vacation. But I expect that this year will be much better," she said.

For some, there is the attraction of free treatment abroad, at which point politics comes into the equation.

In Britain, where most medical care is funded by general taxation and delivered free within the National Health Service, health tourism has become a contentious issue.

Legislators have called for tighter checks on patients arriving for treatment, amid concerns that foreign citizens are travelling to Britain to take advantage of the free service.

($1 = 0.7490 euros)

(Additional reporting by Victoria Bryan, Andreas Cremer and Tim Castle; Editing by Giles Elgood)


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One woman's quest to redeem the king under the car park

Philippa Langley, originator of the ''Looking for Richard'' project, poses with a facial reconstruction of King Richard III at a news conference in central London February 5, 2013. REUTERS/Andrew Winning

Philippa Langley, originator of the ''Looking for Richard'' project, poses with a facial reconstruction of King Richard III at a news conference in central London February 5, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Andrew Winning

By Michael Holden

LONDON | Fri Feb 8, 2013 2:04am EST

LONDON (Reuters) - "It was a warm day but I suddenly felt cold," was how Philippa Langley described the powerful sensation she experienced when she walked over the unmarked grave of her hero King Richard III beneath a car park in central England.

One of the greatest archaeological discoveries of recent English history has been driven by one woman's obsession with overturning Shakespeare's portrayal of Richard as a twisted tyrant who murdered two young princes in the Tower of London.

The extraordinary tale of the discovery of the bones of the last English monarch to die in battle combined passion, sleuthing and scholarship with carbon dating, DNA testing and a search for funding worthy of a best-selling detective yarn.

The skeleton allowed Richard's face to be reconstructed -- fleshy with thick, dark eyebrows and rather bland features -- and also revealed the fatal wounds inflicted at the Battle of Bosworth Field in 1485.

Now Langley, a 50-year-old screenwriter, wants to rehabilitate Richard III as an enlightened monarch who made important strides in the areas of law and printing.

Historians had pursued several trails to track down where the defeated Richard had been ignominiously buried by the victor at Bosworth, the future King Henry VII who paraded Richard's naked corpse before handing it to friars to dispose of.

When Langley began reading a biography of Richard 15 years ago, she had no idea it was to be the start of a quest that would eventually solve the 500-year-old mystery about the last resting place of one of England's most reviled monarchs.

Against all odds, archaeologists announced this week they had found Richard's skeleton buried beneath a car park in the city of Leicester.

"I knew I was going to find him," Langley said in an interview with Reuters.

POWER-CRAZED

Her compulsion to find Richard -- at one point she almost re-mortgaged her home to fund her mission -- began in 1998 when she began researching a screenplay about the king who ruled England for just two years until his death at the age of 32.

Until then, like most Britons, she knew him as the villain of one of Shakespeare's most famous plays, a man also demonized by other writers who took the side of Richard's conqueror, Henry Tudor, and his descendants.

To them, Richard was a power-crazed hunchback with a withered arm who stooped to any level to seize the crown after the death of his brother Edward IV. He was said to have murdered the "Princes in the Tower", one of them the rightful king Edward V, aged just 12.

Among the more outlandish traits attached to him were claims he was born with teeth and shoulder-length hair, and that he had spent two years in his mother's womb.

Perhaps not the sort of person whose remains you would spend years trying to find. However, Langley said a biography by American historian Paul Murray Kendall, which presented the king as a man of justice and honor, changed her view.

"That blew me away because I had no inkling of this other possible Richard, I'd always had this sort of Shakespearian child-killing (figure)," said Langley, who hails from northern England, where Richard was popular.

"What did it for me was Shakespeare's Richard III has been done time and time again. But nobody's told Richard's real story on screen, not ever."

A HORSE! A HORSE!

Richard's reign came to a bloody end at the Battle of Bosworth Field, where even his enemies said he fought bravely until he was cut down. Shakespeare declares his last words to have been: "A horse! a horse! my kingdom for a horse!".

His body was stripped, taken by horse to Leicester and put on display for two days before being buried at the Grey Friars' friary. Grand sepulchres house the remains of most English monarchs, but Henry Tudor, by now Henry VII, paid just 10 pounds for a memorial to Richard.

Local legend in Leicester held that the body was dug up during the reign of Henry VIII when he dissolved the monasteries following his break with the pope in Rome.

Stories that Richard's remains were thrown in the nearby River Soar and his stone coffin turned into a drinking-trough for horses outside a pub became the established version of events. One riverside street is even named Richard III Road.

However, some 25 years ago, David Baldwin, a history tutor from the University of Leicester, challenged these accounts.

"They (stone coffins) had really passed out of use a century before Richard III's day," Baldwin told Reuters.

"All the visitors who came to Leicester who showed an interest in Richard went to look at this horse trough rather than go to the place of his burial."

Baldwin thought it possible, but unlikely, the body might one day be found in an area of the city where Grey Friars once stood, part of which formed a car park for Leicester council's social services department.

"I suppose as far as most people were concerned it simply wasn't very likely that anything would be found. I think most of the archaeologists were slightly skeptical," he said.

But Langley, who began writing her screenplay about Richard in 2005, was not deterred. Her research into places in England where he had been culminated in a trip to the car park in Leicester, about 100 miles north of London.

"I decided just before I got that first draft out it was time to go to Bosworth and Leicester ... This was going to be my final journey for Richard, to walk through Leicester where he died."

"R MARKS THE SPOT"

It was as she roamed through the uninspiring concrete municipal car park that she said she felt a sudden chill.

"It was the strangest experience, it was some kind of intuitive feeling, and I absolutely felt I was walking on his grave," she recounts. "I went back a year later because I had to find out if it really was something, and I had the same feeling again in the same spot.

"Just a couple of feet to my left someone had painted the letter R onto the tarmac, a white handpainted letter R. I had exactly the same feeling - R marks the spot and I was on a mission."

Her initial attempts to get support for the dig proved fruitless. The local archaeological society insisted the body had been thrown into the River Soar.

Her theory would probably have come to nothing had it not chimed with research by historian John Ashdown-Hill. He had found evidence of the location of the Grey Friars site, and had also traced the descendants of Richard's sister, Anne of York, giving them a DNA link.

"With that, everybody knew if we found him, no matter what, we had the chance to identify him," Langley said. "In every pitch I did, people would be rolling their eyes, but the minute you mentioned that, they were on board."

By Spring 2011, she had persuaded the local council and the University of Leicester's archaeological department that the dig was worthwhile.

"I wouldn't say that I was going there just to find Richard III because I never thought we would anyway," said Richard Buckley, the lead archaeologist. "Finding the Grey Friars would have been pretty good on its own."

A year later, the project was set to go when backers pulled the 35,000 pounds ($55,000) of funding they needed.

DARK MOMENT

"It was a really dark moment, because I really thought it was over," said Langley, who considered re-mortgaging her home to raise funds.

"At one point I was so desperate. But I've got two (teenage) children and I couldn't go that far," she said.

Instead, help came from the University of Leicester and the Richard III Society, an organization formed 90 years ago and now comprising several thousand devotees known as "Ricardians".

Then, at the last minute, they lost 10,000 pounds of funding again. This time Ricardians from around the world -- Australia, Belgium, Germany and Canada -- raised 13,000 pounds.

Two individuals, one from the United States and one from Britain, donated 1,000 pounds apiece. Annette Carson, a biographer of Richard III who organized the international appeal, told Reuters Ricardians were people "with a mission".

"Find another monarch who has been trashed like Richard has been," she explained of the huge interest, sternly rejecting any historical criticism put to her. "When you look at the contemporary records, he was actually a caring king."

With funding secured, work began in August last year, providing a last chance to see if Langley was right.

"What funding body would come to you and say 'well OK you've not found him this time, dig another six trenches and have another go'," Buckley said.

But not far from where the car park was marked with an R, they almost immediately found a grave just 68cm (2 feet) beneath present ground level, housing a skeleton with a hugely curved spine corresponding to accounts of Richard and 10 battle wounds.

DNA matched that of Canadian-born Michael Ibsen, a London-based furniture maker and direct descendant of Richard's sister, proving to a team of academics and scientists that the bones were indeed those of England's last Plantagenet king. Carbon dating provided more convincing evidence.

"For the first trench to have actually hit, in the first five meters, the burial ... was amazingly lucky," Buckley said. "What are the chances of that happening?"

LOVING RICHARD III

So why are people, particularly some women, still so fascinated by a king who died 528 years ago?

Unveiling a bust based on a computer reconstruction or Richard this week, Phil Stone, the chairman of the Richard III Society, said many of his female members would be envious of the woman who painted the face as "for over a week she spent her time with the head of Richard III in her lap".

Langley said that for her Richard had the appeal of a brooding hero from a romantic novel.

"There is something about the noble, tragic end, the final act of bravery, the all or nothing. I think we connect with something like that," she said. "It was the end of an era when Richard died. He was the last warrior king."

However, the discovery of Richard's skeleton is unlikely to transform the assessment of historians overnight.

"It can't really tell us anything about his personality or anything about his actions as king or whether he was guilty of any of the charges laid against him," said Baldwin.

"The only hope really, I think, is that there's now so much interest in him that it will encourage people to delve more deeply into the archives and perhaps in the future more evidence will come to light. His bones can only tell us so much."

($1 = 0.6389 British pounds)

(Editing by Guy Faulconbridge, Stephen Addison, Peter Millership and Giles Elgood)


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Tito's pet film studio at risk of Yugoslav fate

A man passes ''Avala Film'' in Belgrade February 26, 2013. On a forested hill above the Serbian capital, stray dogs nose through plywood film sets, the remnants of what was once one of the world's most prolific movie studios. REUTERS/Marko Djurica

A man passes ''Avala Film'' in Belgrade February 26, 2013. On a forested hill above the Serbian capital, stray dogs nose through plywood film sets, the remnants of what was once one of the world's most prolific movie studios.

Credit: Reuters/Marko Djurica

By Matt Robinson

BELGRADE | Thu Mar 7, 2013 7:49am EST

BELGRADE (Reuters) - On a forested hill above the Serbian capital, stray dogs nose through plywood film sets, the remnants of what was once one of the world's most prolific movie studios.

Founded in the wake of World War Two by Yugoslav leader Josip Broz Tito, Avala Film fed his socialist federation on a diet of rousing war epics extolling a vision of 'Brotherhood and Unity' between its peoples.

Richard Burton, Yul Brynner and Orson Welles brought the glamour of Hollywood, while Tito's army supplied the extras.

But mirroring the fate of the country it once promoted, the long-since bankrupt studios now face being dismembered, picked apart and sold off to settle a debt.

Filmmakers and cinema buffs in Serbia fear the loss of a national treasure, and with it a rich catalogue of hundreds of films spanning half a century.

"The cinema of any country is a central component of its heritage," said Mila Turajlic, director of Cinema Komunisto, a 2010 documentary that looked at Tito's legendary love of cinema and the film industry he bankrolled.

Avala's creations, she said, "represent the cultural history of not only Serbia but Yugoslavia, and they will end up in the private hands of local businessmen, who'll be free to exploit them or even deny access to them in any way they see fit."

Avala Film's demise mirrored that of Tito's Yugoslav vision.

As the socialist federation he ruled imploded in war a decade after his death in 1980, the studios were left to rot, reels of film in flimsy cardboard boxes scattered on the floor of a leaking warehouse.

Sub-tenants, including a car mechanic and an Italian TV production company, moved in. A film set of Rome still stands.

"It looked like a nuclear winter," Vladislav Cvetkovic, the director of Serbia's Privatisation Agency, said of the day the receivers moved in last year. "No one had dealt with it for 10, 15 years, except to declare how important Avala Film is for Serbia."

The sell-off to settle a debt of $11.72 million could begin this month, with some 36 acres of prime real estate, film rights, costumes, props and studios potentially up for grabs.

Cvetkovic defends the privatization, saying that for the first time in years the archive is now secure and being cataloged for eventual sale, while the land will be put at the disposal of the state.

The debt stems from import-export company Yugoexport, which took a majority stake in Avala Film during Yugoslavia's demise and then went bust. Once it is paid, Cvetkovic told Reuters, the government or the Serbian film industry is welcome to offer "a vision of how to restore Avala's shine".

CULTURE NEGLECTED

Cultural heritage in the former Yugoslavia, however, can be a prickly subject for governments, which often prefer to forget certain periods while lauding others. Tito's legacy is still fiercely disputed.

In Serbia, culture struggles for the attention and resources of a state still emerging from the disastrous rule of late strongman Slobodan Milosevic until 2000, when war, guns and gangsters dominated society and independent thinkers were deemed subversive.

Now gripped by recession and a jobless rate of 25 percent, the country trails most of its Eastern European peers in the money it sets aside to support cultural life - just 0.6 percent of the state budget.

Among Belgrade's most important cultural landmarks, the National Museum and the Museum of Contemporary Art have been shuttered for years, having run out of funds for renovation work.

The heirs of Milosevic are now in power in Serbia. While their nationalism is tempered by a desire to join the European Union, they have little interest in burnishing Tito's Yugoslav legacy.

Culture Minister Bratislav Petkovic said this week that his office was "following closely, trying to help and give our opinion". The ministry declined to answer questions.

With corruption blighting much of Serbia's privatization process since Milosevic's ouster, filmmakers fear Avala Film could suffer a similar fate to Belgrade Film, which ran 14 Art Deco and Bauhaus cinemas in the capital dating back to before World War Two.

The much-loved movie houses were sold in 2007 for 9 million euros to a London-based Serb businessman who pledged to restore some of them to their former glory. All have since been boarded up or taken over by squatters, prompting campaigners at this week's closing night of the Belgrade film festival to erect 14 wooden crosses bearing the name of each cinema.

"RICH HISTORY"

"Practice has shown that cinematography is the biggest loser from the transition (from socialism)," said Radoslav Zelenovic, director of the Yugoslav Film Archive, where an overstretched staff is carrying out the painstaking work of repairing and archiving thousands of reels of film found in Avala's premises.

"Avala Film is an integral part of Serbian culture," he said. "Such a space should be made into a museum, where the public can watch the films, see the sets and how the stuntmen worked."

Instead, he said, "someone's going to buy the rights to those films, come to the Yugoslav Film Archive like it's a warehouse and say, 'Hand over the negatives'."

Some in the Serbian film industry have proposed following the example of other countries in the region by selling off a part of Avala Film and re-investing the proceeds to create a new, state-of-the-art film studio.

Private production keeps the film industry in Serbia alive, part of an emerging eastern European offering of cheap locations and crews that attracted Ralph Fiennes to film his directorial debut Coriolanus here in 2010.

"The most urgent concern is to preserve public access to the films," said director Turajlic. "The second question is the Avala Film site, which if sold as plain real estate will be razed to the ground, leaving no trace of its rich history."

Unfortunately, she said, in the grab for assets after the fall of Communism in Eastern Europe, cash-strapped governments frequently bow to the interests of big business, and Serbia has proved no different.

"The issue of Avala Film's privatization has been settled privately between the Serbian oligarchs, and despite various attempts to reform the process to benefit the Serbian film industry, successive culture ministers have in the end bowed to their 'vision'," Turajlic said.

"This is obvious in the fact that they let Avala go bankrupt."

(Additional reporting by Jaksa Scekic; Editing by Will Waterman)


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Sex abuse: the scandal the Catholic Church cannot shake

Colm O'Gorman, executive director of Amnesty International in Ireland, poses for a photograph in Temple Bar, Dublin March 6, 2013. REUTERS/Cathal McNaughton

1 of 5. Colm O'Gorman, executive director of Amnesty International in Ireland, poses for a photograph in Temple Bar, Dublin March 6, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Cathal McNaughton

By Naomi O'Leary

VATICAN CITY | Thu Mar 7, 2013 1:11pm EST

VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - Colm O'Gorman was 14 years old when Father Sean Fortune arrived unannounced at his parents' house in a small town in southern Ireland. The priest was given tea and a seat by the fire, and asked the teenager to help set up a youth group.

"I was 14, and very eager and hungry to be out in the world, involved in things, doing things, making a difference. And that's what he exploited," said O'Gorman, now 46 and the executive director of Amnesty International in Ireland.

The abuse that followed, culminating in Fortune's repeated rape of the boy, was part of one of the greatest scandals ever to hit the Catholic Church, damaging the curtailed papacy of Pope Benedict and posing a huge challenge to whoever succeeds him.

O'Gorman's story is just one in a worldwide scandal that destroyed lives, bankrupted dioceses, and in many cases cost the Church its most precious asset: faith.

No questions were asked when Fortune took O'Gorman to his isolated house for the weekend. Such was the Church's power in Ireland at that time, no one would question a priest.

That was the first time Fortune sexually assaulted O'Gorman. Driving him back to his parents the next day, the priest stopped the car around the corner from the teenager's home.

"There were no words that I had that could explain what had happened, and I was terrified," O'Gorman recalls. "He said to me: ‘I'm worried about you, you have a problem. Either I can tell your parents, or you can come back down to me again.'"

"He kept coming and taking me away, for nearly three years."

Fortune's attacks became increasingly violent and escalated to rape. O'Gorman, depressed and suicidal, finally fled his hometown. He became homeless on the streets of Dublin.

It took a decade for O'Gorman to re-establish contact with his family and explain what had happened. With their support, he made a report to the Irish police in 1995.

"Within weeks, I heard back from the detective who had started the case that they had found another five victims," O'Gorman said.

RECURRING PATTERN

The investigation revealed a bully priest who manipulated and abused people wherever he went, and a Church hierarchy that, after receiving complaints about him, moved him on to places where he found new victims: a pattern that recurred in its handling of abuse cases worldwide.

Fortune killed himself in 1999 while on trial for 66 accounts of assault and rape of boys.

Though there was little legal precedent, O'Gorman took a civil suit against the Diocese of Ferns and Pope John Paul in 1998, in which he cited evidence that Fortune's crimes were well known but that the Church did nothing to limit his access to children.

The diocese apologized in 2003 and paid O'Gorman 300,000 euros ($389,500) in compensation.

In a dramatic illustration of the loss of faith in the Church across the developed world, Ireland - where Catholicism was written into the constitution and had enormous influence throughout the 20th century - closed its embassy to the Holy See in 2011 as relations hit an all-time low.

The sexual abuse crisis and its continuing repercussions on the Church was likely one of the difficulties Benedict referred to when he became the first pontiff in centuries to abdicate, saying he no longer had the strength to continue.

For 20 years before becoming pope, the then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger was the man in charge of coordinating the Church's response to abuse cases, as prefect of the Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. A meticulous scholar, he spent years reading the details of case after case of abuse.

"There was no one in the Church hierarchy who was better positioned to make a real difference than Pope Benedict," David Clohessy, director of the U.S.-based Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests said last week. "He had both the power and the knowledge."

FILTH IN THE CHURCH

Shortly before his election in 2005, Ratzinger gave a now-famous address in which he lamented "filth" in the Church, seen as an indicator he would take a tougher line if made pope.

After his election, as the scandal was gaining more publicity, Benedict met abuse victims in Germany, the United States, Australia, Malta and Britain, and barred two high-profile former Vatican favorites suspected of abuse from office.

The barring from public ministry of charismatic Italian priest Gino Burresi and Marcial Maciel, the Mexican founder of the Legionaries of Christ religious order, marked a watershed, showing the Church was finally acting against abuse.

Victims groups say that the Vatican had a policy of not reporting abusive priests to secular authorities, citing evidence such as a letter sent by its head of clergy to a French bishop in 2001, commending him for not denouncing a pedophile priest who had been given 18 years jail for abusing young boys.

They are demanding a comprehensive Church policy for protecting the millions of children still in its care in schools, hospitals and youth groups worldwide, and the demotion of clergy who hid abuse in the past.

The Benedict papacy's response, O'Gorman said, "falls at the first and most important hurdle. That is to simply acknowledge the truth of what happened, and the truth of its role in the cover up of crimes by priests across the world."

With the victims still far from satisfied, the abuse crisis still hangs over the Vatican as the its cardinals - the "princes of the Church" - gather to elect Benedict's successor.

SIN OF A PRIEST

Cardinal Roger Mahony, who as archbishop of Los Angeles worked to shield pedophile priests from prosecution, according to files unsealed by court order in January, has expressed incomprehension about accusations leveled against the clergy over their handling of cases in the past.

"People say: ‘Well, why didn't you call the police?' In those days no one reported these things to the police, usually at the request of families," he told the Catholic News Service on arrival in Rome.

The Vatican's chief prosecutor of sex abuse under Benedict, Monsignor Charles Scicluna, said in an Italian television interview last week: "This disease affects all places and all society, but unfortunately our sin makes the news. Why does the sin of a priest create more fuss?"

The Vatican emphasized last week that it was the duty of cardinals to attend the conclave unless there was a serious impediment such as health. Britain's most senior cardinal Keith O'Brien excluded himself from the conclave after allegations he had behaved inappropriately with other priests.

He admitted his sexual conduct was not that expected of a priest. No allegations suggest this involved children.

Some cardinals have been suggested as "clean hands" candidates for the papacy, notably U.S. Cardinal Sean O'Malley, who published a list of clergy accused of abuse on the Boston Archdiocese website and established a system for mandatory reporting of allegations to civil authorities.

Whoever the next pontiff is, he will have to face a scandal that caused two million Catholics to leave the Church in the United States alone, according to one University of Notre Dame study.

"It doesn't just damage the body, but the soul, and the faith of believers," said Scicluna.

"This is a battle that we cannot afford to lose."

($1 = 0.7702 euros)

(Editing by Philip Pullella and Robin Pomeroy)


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