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Thursday 30 December 2010

You couldn't make it up: offbeat stories from 2010

30 December 2010 - 07H06

Paul the octopus swims through his aquarium decorated with a football at the Sea Life aquarium in Oberhausen, western Germany. Paul shot to fame during 2010's football World Cup in South Africa for correctly predicting the outcome of games. He died October 26, 2010.
Paul the octopus swims through his aquarium decorated with a football at the Sea Life aquarium in Oberhausen, western Germany. Paul shot to fame during 2010's football World Cup in South Africa for correctly predicting the outcome of games. He died October 26, 2010.
Laptops, mobile phones and blackberrys are pictured on the altar before a church service at St Lawrence Jewry church, in London. A British church held an unusual ceremony -- a blessing for the mobile phones, laptops and blackberrys of workers in the City of London financial district. The special service at the St Lawrence Jewry church, which dates back to 1136, was attended by around 80 people.
Laptops, mobile phones and blackberrys are pictured on the altar before a church service at St Lawrence Jewry church, in London. A British church held an unusual ceremony -- a blessing for the mobile phones, laptops and blackberrys of workers in the City of London financial district. The special service at the St Lawrence Jewry church, which dates back to 1136, was attended by around 80 people.
A bus in Copenhagen shows special red covered love-seats, or special seats for people ready for flirting. The seats with the special red cover with the Danish word, Kaerlighedssæde, love-seat, is a new offer from the bus company Arriva, to its younger passengers or any passenger with heart set for romance.
A bus in Copenhagen shows special red covered love-seats, or special seats for people ready for flirting. The seats with the special red cover with the Danish word, Kaerlighedssæde, love-seat, is a new offer from the bus company Arriva, to its younger passengers or any passenger with heart set for romance.

AFP - Some weird, wild and wonderful stories coloured the news in 2010:

- A Copenhagen bus company has put "love seats" on 103 of its vehicles for people looking for a partner. "Even love at first sight is possible on the bus," said a spokesman for the British owned Arriva company to explain the two seats on each bus that are covered in red cloth and a "love seat" sign.

- Shoppers at an international luxury fair in Verona, Italy, found a cell-phone-equipped golden coffin among the items on display. The phones will help "the deceased" contact relatives if they have been buried alive by mistake.

- Inmates at an infamous Moscow prison where a lawyer died last year in a case that sparked global anger will get a full suite of new creature comforts including sunbeds. "Is Butyrka turning into a sanatorium?" a sceptical mass-circulated Komsomolskaya Pravda daily asked in a headline.

- Paul the octopus, who shot to fame during this year's football World Cup for his flawless record in predicting game results, died peacefully in his sleep in an aquarium.

- Delhi authorities deployed a contingent of langurs -- a large type of monkey -- at Commonwealth Games venues to help chase away smaller simians from the sporting extravaganza.

- A Mozambican prisoner who had been released on parole broke back into jail after discovering he didn't like life on the outside.

- A British church held an unusual ceremony when a vicar blessed the mobile phones of 80 workers in the City of London financial district. The idea came from a historic tradition where workers would bring the tools of their trade, like ploughs, to be blessed on the first Monday after people return to work after Christmas.

- A robber in New York came up with a disarming way to pull off his latest bank heist, approaching the teller's window with a large bouquet of flowers and handing over a hold-up note.

- A Kuwaiti MP proposed state-aid for male citizens to take second wives, in a bid to reduce the large number of unmarried women in the oil-rich emirate.

- Shanghai officials hope to curb the growing popularity of man's best friend in the city with a one-dog policy.

- A Frenchman who lost all his limbs in an electrical accident successfully swam across the Channel, a challenge he had been preparing for two years.

- A set of dentures made for Britain's war-time prime minister Winston Churchill known as "the teeth that saved the world" sold for nearly 18,000 pounds (21,500 euros, 28,000 dollars) at auction.

- The strongest and most expensive beer ever created sold out within hours, a Scottish brewery said, as they courted controversy by packaging the bottles inside the bodies of stuffed squirrels and stoats.

- A British woman sparked an Internet hate campaign after she was caught on camera dumping a cat in a rubbish bin. She was fined 250 pounds (400 dollars, 280 euros) after pleading guilty.

- Two Australian men needed surgery after shooting each other in the buttocks during a drinking session to see if it would hurt.

- Even Hong Kong's dead cannot escape the Internet. In Chinese culture, relatives are expected to visit the cemetery at least once a year to pay their respects. But now, mourners can simply visit memorial.gov.hk set up by the government and set up a page free-of-charge.

- The BBC apologised "unreservedly" after a radio presenter jokingly announced that Queen Elizabeth II had died.

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