METROWorld PHILIPPINES: Six more bodies have been found at the site of an election-related massacre, taking the death toll to 52. Not all the bodies have been identified, but 17 of them are journalists, making the attack the most deadly ever on the media. Emergency rule has been instituted in Maguindanao province, where the killings took place, with President Gloria Arroyo vowing: The perpetrators will not escape justice. IRAN: Scores of students have been detained in an apparent attempt to prevent opposition protests during annual Student Day next month, a Western-based human rights group has revealed. Seeking to avoid any repeat of the demonstrations that erupted after the disputed presidential election in June, police warned opposition supporters against using the December 7 commemorations to hold more political rallies. INdIA: Imagine embarking on an eight-hour flight with 277 other passengers only to find none of the toilets on the plane was working? Thats what awaited people on Cathay Pacifics service from Hong Kong to Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. They were left rather stressed after all ten toilets broke down. The flight was forced to stop off in Mumbai for a mass toilet break which ended up adding 18 hours to the journey. BELGIUM: King Albert II nominated Flemish Christian Democrat Yves Leterme (pictured) as prime minister yesterday to replace Herman Van Rompuy, who has been named president of the European Union. The king accepted the resignation of Mr Van Rompuy from his functions as prime minister and, at his proposal, nominated Mr Leterme as prime minister, the palace said in a statement. AMERIcA: A thief with a conscience who robbed a church left a note saying: Sorry but Im poor. Forgive me Lord. But after the fourth robbery in two years, the Rev Roger Davis of the Berean Baptist Church in Atlanta is now considering putting up a note asking potential robbers to call him instead and the church will take up a collection for them. Three-week-old gibbon baby Walli is held by surrogate mother Christina Schneider in a zoo in Schwerin, Germany. The baby was rejected by its mother and has to be raised by hand. Walli, who has to be fed every two hours, will be hand- raised for about six months Picture: EPA MALAySIA: Opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim has won a defamation case against a government-linked newspaper over a provocative article. Mr Ibrahim (pictured) claimed the article made him seem like an unprincipled and disloyal American agent, while the newspaper argued it only reported the contents of a foreign magazine. The High Court ordered the New Straits Times to pay him 100,000 ringgit (20,000) in damages. A man carries a poster past a building near the Leopold Cafe, one of the sites of last years militant attacks in Mumbai, India, which left 174 people dead. There have been calls for the sole surviving gunman, Mohammad Ajmal Kasab, to be executed. Meanwhile, in Pakistan, seven people have been charged in connection with the attack, including alleged mastermind Zaki-ur- Rehman Lakhvi Picture: Reuters EXECUTION CALL Google holds out on racist Obama imageBy BARRy eAsTAN OFFENSIVE image which morphed US first lady Michelle Obama into a chimpanzee was yesterday pulled by a blogger after Google said it would not intervene. The image was removed by the author of the Hot Girls blog as global condem- nation grew. An apology was posted in Chinese with a loose English version. Google had also apologised for featur- ing the image among its top results for Mrs Obama but refused to pull it. It instead put a text ad by the picture list titled Offensive Search Results. It states: Sometimes our search results can be offensive. We agree. The web giant said it did not endorse websites that carried offensive content but refused to withdraw it. Google views the integrity of our search results as an extremely important priority, wrote the Google Team. Accordingly, we do not remove a page from our search results simply because its content is unpopular or because we receive complaints concerning it. The team added: We apologise if youve had an upsetting experience using Google. There was, however, no apology to Mrs Obama. The White House has also declined to comment on the matter. It is not the first time Google has apolo- gised for content in its search results. It issued a similar response in 2004 when the top result for the term Jew pointed to an anti-Semitic website. 12 METRO Thursday, November 26, 2009 D index.html2.html3.html4.html5.html6.html7.html8.html9.html10.html11.html12.html13.html14.html15.html16.html17.html18.html19.html20.html21.html22.html23.html24.html25.html26.html27.html