killed six men whose bodies were found in four cars
abandoned in an area of southern Russia close to
the volatile Caucasus mountains.
Three of the cars had been rigged with explosive
devices, but only one of the bombs went off and no
one was hurt.
The UN staff union said that at least 58 of its
personnel were killed by terrorists and insurgents
in 2013.
It said that working for the world body became
more dangerous in the year.
According to the figures released on Wednesday by
the Staff Union’s Standing Committee for the
Security and Independence of the International Civil
Service, the highest number of casualties occurred
in attacks targeting the UN in South Sudan, Somalia
and Darfur region of Sudan
The figure showed that 33 peacekeepers and 25
civilians and associated personnel were killed in
2013 while working for the organisation.
The union added that the number represents an
increase in the death-toll from attacks on UN staff
members compared with the previous year, when
37 UN personnel were killed.
“Among the horrific assaults was the killing of 12
people associated with the UN Mission in South
Sudan during an ambush on April 9, 2013,” it said.
The Department of Peacekeeping Operations in New
York, also said that about 30 peacekeepers were
escorting a civilian convoy when they were
ambushed by some 200 armed, unidentified men
near the settlement of Gumuruk.
“The shootout that followed led to the killing of five
Indian peacekeepers, two national staff and five
contractors.
“Overall in 2013, 16 peacekeepers were killed in
Darfur, seven in South Sudan, four in Mali and four
in the Democratic Republic of the Congo,” the union
said.
It added that five civilian staff members, four of
them working for the UN Relief and Works Agency
for Palestine Refugees, were killed in Syria.
The union’s overview came just months after UN
scribe, Ban Ki-moon, appealed to Member States
and host governments to support all measures of
safety and security measures to improve the
operational environment for UN personnel.
“UN personnel serve in an increasingly dangerous
environment and encounters a variety of threats not
previously encountered in the history of the
organisation,” Ban told members of the General
Assembly.
He cited a UN report released in 2013 on “Safety
and Security of Humanitarian Personnel and
Protection of UN officials” which showed that
significant security incidents affecting UN staff in
2012 increased to 1,793 compared with 1,759 in
2011.
China has fined popular film director Zhang Yimou
more than $1m for violating the country’s one-child
policy.
The director, who said he has three children, has 30
days to pay 7.5m yuan ($1.2m, £729,000), state
media say.
Mr Zhang, known for directing the Beijing Olympics
opening ceremony in 2008, in December apologised
for violating the strict policy.
China introduced the policy in the 1970s to curb
population growth.
The policy until recently limited most urban couples
to a single child. Rural families were allowed to have
two children if their first-born was a girl.
But last year, China said it would relax the policy –
families will be allowed two children if one parent is
an only child.
The family planning bureau in Binhu district, Wuxi
city, Jiangsu province, sent Mr Zhang a letter
collecting the “social maintenance fee”, Xinhua
news agency says, citing the district’s official
microblog account.
The fine was calculated based on the income of Mr
Zhang and his wife, Chen Ting, when their two sons
and daughter were born, the Binhu government
said.
The couple made $580,000 in 2000, 2003 and 2005,
the Binhu government added.
The wife of Mr Zhang – who denied reports he
fathered more children with other women – is from
Wuxi city.
Mr Zhang, 61, directed some of China’s most
successful films, including Hero, the House of Flying
Daggers and the Flowers of War.
A 30-year-old man was on Wednesday beaten to a
pulp by residents of Temidire Estate at the Okejetu
area of Osogbo, Osun State, for allegedly attempting
to kidnap a two-year-old girl from her mother’s
shop.
Our correspondent gathered that the suspected
kidnapper who declined to give his identity had gone
to Mrs. Folake Oni’s shop to buy a bottle of soft
drink.
It was not clear if the suspect was sane, but he
behaved like somebody whose mental sanity was
questionable.
He had bruises on some parts of his body and
appeared very weak but he struggled to cover his
genitals with a piece of cloth.
The suspect was said to have gone to the shop, had
the first drink and requested another bottle. But as
the woman went inside to bring the drink, the
suspect was said to have grabbed the girl whose
name is Marvelous.
The mother, on coming back, discovered that the
customer and her baby had disappeared and she
raised the alarm.
An eyewitness, who declined to reveal his identity,
said that the woman on sighting the kidnapper ran
after him and continued shouting for help.
Passersby later joined her in hot pursuit of the
suspect, but the man reportedly dropped the baby
and managed to hide inside a pit.
It was gathered that one of the residents saw him
and also jumped inside the pit dragged him out and
stripped him naked before others joined in beating
him up.
The mother of the kidnapped baby, who spoke with
our correspondent, said the suspect came to her
shop, pretending to be a customer and used the
opportunity to steal her baby and started running.
She said, “He came in and asked for a bottle of soft
drink and I gave him. He requested another bottle
and I went inside to bring it, but on coming back I
discovered that he had grabbed Marvelous and was
running away.
“I shouted for help and my neighbours rushed out,
ran after him and brought him out from where he
was hiding. I thank God that he did not succeed in
kidnapping my baby.”
The Police Public Relations Officer, Mrs. Folasade
Odoro, said she had heard about the case, but was
waiting to be properly briefed on it.