Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Fury after Musk calls diver a ‘pedo’

- Agence Francepres­se

BANGKOK: A British caver who helped rescue 12 boys from a Thai cave said on Monday he may take legal action against Elon Musk after the entreprene­ur called him a “pedo”.

Tesla CEO Musk launched the extraordin­ary tirade against Vernon Unsworth without providing any justificat­ion or explanatio­n, after the cave expert slammed his offer of a miniature submarine to extract the footballer­s from the Tham Luang cave as a “PR stunt”.

The Wild Boar team were rescued last week by an internatio­nal team of divers through a narrow network of twisting, flooded tunnels.

Unsworth, who provided mapping knowledge of the cave to rescuers, said Musk’s prototype would have had “absolutely no chance of working”.

Musk responded on Sunday in a bizarre series of tweets referring to Unsworth, without using his name, as a “pedo guy”. “Pedo” is short for paedophile.

The entreprene­ur doubled down on his claim, tweeting from his official account to more than 22 million followers: “Bet ya a signed dollar it’s true”.

Musk later deleted the tweets and did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment through Tesla.

Unsworth told AFP on Monday he had not reviewed the tweets in full and had only heard about them. But asked if he would take legal action against Musk over the allegation, Unsworth said: “If it’s what I think it is yes.”

The caver said he would make a decision when he flies back to the UK this week, but added that the episode with Musk “ain’t finished”.

AUSTRALIA DIVERS GOT DIPLOMATIC IMMUNITY

Reports emerged on Monday that two Australian divers who took part in the rescue had obtained diplomatic immunity before the operation in case it failed.

Anaestheti­st Richard Harris and diver Craig Challen were protected from prosecutio­n if anything went awry following negotiatio­ns between Australian and Thai authoritie­s, according to Australian broadcaste­r ABC. ISLAMABAD: Former premier Nawaz Sharif, his daughter and son-in-law on Monday appealed against their conviction in a corruption case in the Islamabad high court even as authoritie­s in Punjab province booked his brother Shehbaz Sharif and top Pml-nleaderson­terrorchar­ges.

Seven separate appeals were filed related to the corruption cases against Sharif, his daughter Maryam Nawaz and her husband Muhammad Safdar. One appeal urged the court to set aside the anti-graft court’s verdict in the case related to the acquisitio­n of luxury apartments in London, in which the trio was given prison terms.

Some of the appeals sought the suspension of their conviction till the high court adjudicate­d the main appeal, and some requested the court to transfer two more corruption cases against Sharif from the anti-graft court of Judge Mohammad Bashir to another court in Islamabad.

The appeals said Judge Bashir had passed the verdict in the Avenfield apartments case on the basis of presumptio­ns and assumption­s, and without fulfilling the “requiremen­ts of justice”. They argued that until the high court decides on the appeals, the convicts should be released on bail. In a separate developmen­t, PML-N president Shehbaz Sharif, his son Hamza Shahbaz, former premier Shahid Khaqan Abbasi and 50 leaders of the PML-N party have been booked on terrorism and other charges for “inciting” crowds to violate the law in Lahore on Friday at the

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