'We're stuck in mum's handcuffs'
Two worried young children phoned police for help when they found handcuffs in their parents' bedroom, put them on - and could not escape. It was one of the top 10 strange calls received by Dyfed-Powys Police during the past six months.
There was also the woman who found a tarantula in a bunch of bananas... which turned out to be a leaf.
The force has set up a new number, 0845 330 2000, for non-emergency calls to ease pressure on 999 operators.
The new number replaces the 43 different police station numbers which were available.
Ch Insp Iain Sewell said: "Our aim is to make it easy for people to contact us. But some calls never cease to amaze our trained telephone operators.
"We wish to be helpful but while requests for directions, bin bags or weather reports may sound amusing, there is a serious implication when it stops our staff dealing with matters of real concern, real emergencies where a life could be in danger.
"I hope people will store the new telephone number and use it for non-emergency calls in the future; calls which report an incident or crime that has already taken place and is no longer urgent; calls about cases or for information that are police matters," he added.
The new number is being introduced after it emerged that just one in five 999 calls to the police was for a genuine emergency.
"People perceive the police as a service to the community - a one-stop shop for advice on all kinds of things," said Ch Insp Sewell.
"Many like the fact that they can speak to real people and not the automated service which many companies provide.
"Although we are here to help and treat all calls the same, it is important that people do not abuse the telephone line and use it only for the correct purposes," he said.
Top 10 strange calls
1. Two young embarrassed children: "Can you send the police up here? Mum and dad went out and we found some handcuffs in their bedroom and put them on and now we're stuck together and don't have a key. Come quick, they'll be home soon."
2. A woman rang up screaming that she had been to her local supermarket and bought bananas. When she got them home, a tarantula crawled out. It turned out to be a leaf from the garden.
3. "My husband's late home from work. Where is he?" (Police said: "A call like this could be important ... but this was just a personal moan").
4. "What's the weather like in Carmarthen? There's snow in Brecon."
5. A school rang up to say there was a pigeon in the building and wanted police to get it out.
6. A man rang to say that he had received an electricity bill but had already paid it. It turned out he had changed supplier so had two bills.
7. "Get the police now, there's a peacock on my lawn."
8. Man: "My next door neighbour is in my garden". Police: "Have you asked him what he's doing?", Man: "No. Get the police straight away." (It turned out he was gardening).
9. "I've lost my snake in the house."
10. A teenager rang to say he missed the bus home from school and wanted a lift from the police as his dad could not pick him up.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/wales/4071066.stm
India's five-year-old policeman
At a time when most children prepare to go to school, Saurabh Nagvanshi is off to the office. Saurabh works at a police station in Raipur, the capital of India's central state of Chhattisgarh. He is five years old.
He is part of an Indian system that allows a family member to take the post of a government employee who dies while in service.
There is no age limit and many families have no alternative but to send young children to work to make ends meet.
Saurabh has to feed a family of five and so his mother, Ishwari Devi Nagvanshi, holds his hand and takes him the 110km (68 miles) from Bilaspur, where they live, to Raipur.
Signing for the cheque
In this surrogate police job, a child must work one day and go to school the next. At work, the children are asked to do filing and bring tea and water for senior officials. The children are paid 2,500 rupees ($57) a month.
At an age when children are learning how to write, Saurabh now knows how to sign his name when he receives his monthly salary.
He is quiet. If you try to talk to him he will either run away or hide behind his mother.
Mrs Nagvanshi says: "In order to run the house I had no option but to make my child work. It's not nice. He should be jumping around and playing at his age."
Respect
For most of the children who take on the responsibilities of their dead fathers, there is no time to play.
Manish Khoonte, who is 10, works as a child officer in the Korba police station.
His begins at 0600 by going to school with his two younger brothers. In the afternoon, after finishing his studies, he goes to work. He gets extra tuition in the evening.
He loves football, but has no time to play.
But he does get 2,400 rupees a month and the respect of his peers - they call him "policeman".
Manish says he wants to become an inspector someday.
Jitesh Singh, 13, wants to leave his job as a child officer as soon as possible but thinks it could be many years before that happens.
Janki Prasad Rajwade, 18, feels the same way. She joined the police in 1994 after her father's death.
Since then, she has spent every day wondering when she will be able to leave.
She says she does not like filing and serving tea but has little choice.
She hopes to finish her studies and get a job with the federal Indian Police Service, not the state force.
'Illegal'
Railway Police superintendent in Raipur, Pawan Dev, says the employment of the children in the police must be seen from a social perspective.
The money is a great relief to the families, he says. In addition, the workload is light.
But Subhash Mishra, a member of the state's Human Rights Commission, says it is wrong to make children work like this.
He says, instead, the families should be given an equal amount of money to pay for the child's upbringing and education.
Subhash Mahapatra, president of a human rights organisation called Forum for Fact-finding, Documentation and Advocacy, goes further.
According to the Geneva Convention, he says, employing children as police officials and making them work at such a young age is against Indian and international laws.
"It is very similar to the definition of child soldiers as outlined by the United Nations," he says.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/4073204.stm
Huge table gives food for thought
http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/image...r203300_pa.jpg The sculpture is a tribute to the loneliness of writing
A table and chair the size of a house have been captivating visitors to north London's Hampstead Heath.
The 30ft (9m) sculpture, The Writer, will be on Parliament Hill for four months before returning to Italy.
The tribute to the loneliness of writing is meant to inspire visitors to the heath, which has associations with writers Keats and Coleridge.
Leslie Mare, from the Corporation of London which runs the heath, said: "People seem to love it or hate it".
Giancarlo Neri, who used to play soccer for New York Apollos in the seventies, chose the heath, one of London's most popular parks, after hearing of its artistic heritage.
The Naples-born artist used six tons of steel and 1,000lb of wood to create the giant sculpture.
He said he wants people to interact with it, using it as a picnic spot or using the legs as goal posts.
When it was on display in Rome two homeless people were said to have lived underneath it.
Ms Mare told BBC News: "People talk about it, look at it, some people have even graffiti'd on it but it's really engaged people.
"It's almost a reminder of the heath's hidden heroes, and hopefully will encourage new young budding artists and writers."
The sculpture will be officially unveiled at a party on the heath on Wednesday, during the first week of Art Fortnight London.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/4117974.stm
Girl probes 'PlayStation thumb'
A 13-year-old girl has become the youngest author to be published in South Africa's main medical journal for her research on "PlayStation thumb". Safura Abdool Karim interviewed 120 of her former schoolmates for a science project about whether they suffered problems after playing computer games.
Symptoms of "PlayStation Thumb" include blisters numbness and tingling, mainly in the thumb, she wrote.
She said the condition is similar to Repetitive Strain Injury (RSI).
"Although RSI is not new, in the past it occurred mainly among adults," she said.
"Today computers and computer games are creating new medical problems, such as PlayStation thumb, which are becoming common in children."
'Waste of time'
South African Medical Journal's deputy editor, Professor JP van Niekerk, said Ms Karim's work would be listed on the Index Medicus, an international registry of medico-scientific articles, "so the world can see this and cite it".
"I think it's a jolly good article. It was accepted on merit, but we also thought it was great fun," he said.
Her study found that 28 of the 60 boys and 17 of the 60 girls she spoke to played regularly.
Of these, eight boys and seven girls complained of symptoms such as redness, tingling and blisters.
Ms Karim said she had not seen the journal yet, "but I was really happy to hear it had been accepted".
She said she herself did not own a PlayStation because they were a "waste of time".
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/4122828.stm