Nelson Mail

Girl, 3, chosen as latest living goddess

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NEPAL: A 3-year-old girl in Kathmandu was anointed yesterday as the city’s latest Kumari, or living goddess, in a lavish ceremony, despite calls for the tradition to be banned.

Trishna Shakya was taken from her family home and moved to a palace in the Nepalese capital, where she will be waited on until she reaches puberty.

The Kumari is not allowed to leave the residence except for 13 holy festivals each year. Her feet are never supposed to touch the ground. Even a glimpse of her is believed to bring good luck.

Some activists, however, have called for the practice to be banned, claiming that it amounts to child labour.

Although they receive a pension from the Nepalese government, former Kumari have spoken of the difficulty of making the transition back to normal life after they get their first period and are deemed no longer divine.

Nepal’s Supreme Court dismissed a petition for the Kumari to be disbanded in 2008, citing the cultural value of the ancient tradition.

Uddhav Man Karmachary­a, a Hindu priest who attends to the Kumari, said Trishna was chosen from four girls. The selection criteria are strict. Aspiring Kumaris must show 32 characteri­stics of perfection, including an unblemishe­d body, ‘‘thighs like a deer, chest like a lion and eyelashes like a cow’’.

In a final test, Trishna proved her worth by showing no fear when a buffalo was sacrificed in front of her. ‘‘She will take her place on the Kumari’s throne after we perform prayers and tantric rituals,’’ Karmachary­a said.

Like her predecesso­rs, Trishna is from the Newar community indigenous to the Kathmandu valley, where traditions incorporat­e elements of Buddhism and Hinduism. The previous Kumari, Matine Shakya, was anointed in 2008 at the age of 3 and will now start school.

After an earthquake killed more than 9000 people in Nepal in 2015, the Kumari became a figure of solace. Her rare public appearance­s were even more heavily attended as people sought consolatio­n amid the ruins of Kathmandu’s temples and palaces.

- The Times

No genocide, says Myanmar

Myanmar’s national security adviser has rejected allegation­s of a campaign of ethnic cleansing in the country, while United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres has called the Rohingya refugee crisis a ‘‘nightmare’’. Guterres briefed the UN Security Council yesterday in its first open session on Myanmar since an exodus of more than half a million minority Rohingya Muslims to Bangladesh began several weeks ago. Myanmar’s national security adviser U Thaung Tun told the council ‘‘there is no ethnic cleansing and no genocide in Myanmar’’ and ‘‘the situation we face today is due to terrorism and not religion’’.

Email investigat­ion begins

The White House has launched an internal investigat­ion into the use of private email by senior aides pulling batches of emails on the White House server to and from their private accounts, political news outlet Politico has reported. Citing four unnamed officials, Politico said the probe began this week after it reported that US President Donald Trump’s son-in-law and adviser, Jared Kushner, and other senior White House officials had used private email accounts to exchange messages for government business. During Trump’s 2016 election campaign, he attacked his Democratic rival Hillary Clinton for her use of a private email server for official correspond­ence when she was US secretary of state.

Helpers offered protection

Good samaritans in China will no longer face the threat of being sued. Civil law has been amended to encourage people to help each other, and is a response to the reluctance of citizens to help others in case they are being framed. Chinese media have reported numerous examples of elderly people, known as ‘‘porcelain-knockers’’, deliberate­ly falling over next to cars to frame the drivers. Passersby have also grown indifferen­t to those in need. In June in the city of Zhumadian, CCTV footage showed dozens of people standing by or walking past an injured woman who had been knocked over by a speeding car. Moments later, she was run over again and killed.

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