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SKorean stem cell scientist sues for old job

SEOUL, Nov 7: Disgraced South Korean stem cell scientist Hwang Woo-suk, who was fired from one of the country's top universities after his team falsified landmark papers, is suing to get his old job back, his lawyer said.

Hwang, who was sacked by Seoul National University in March and is on trial in a criminal fraud case related to his work, said in a court filing he was unfairly dismissed due to distorted evidence, his lawyer, Lee Geon-haeng, said by telephone.

An investigation panel at the university said in a report in January that Hwang's team knowingly fabricated key data in two groundbreaking papers on embryonic stem cells that have since been retracted by the journal Science, which published them.

Hwang, once celebrated as a national hero, was indicted in May on charges of fraud and embezzlement after prosecutors said he was the mastermind of a scheme to make it look like his team had produced stem cells from cloned human embryos.

Prosecutors have charged Hwang with committing fraud to secure funds and misusing 2.8 billion won (2.97 million dollars) in state funds and private donations, as well as violating bioethics laws in procuring human eggs for research.

Hwang, who has apologised for fraud in his team's work, has denied any wrongdoing and said he was duped by junior researchers into believing the landmark results.

Hwang's work had raised hopes because it seemed to fulfil a promise of embryonic stem cell studies where tissue could be grown to repair damaged bodies and cure illnesses such as Parkinson's disease and severe spinal cord injuries.

Reuters

Egypt added to RSF Internet blacklist, Libya off

PARIS, Nov 7 (Reuters) Journalists' rights group Reporters Without Borders (RSF) has added Egypt to its list of the worst suppressors of freedom of expression on the Internet but removed neighbouring Libya as it found no Web censorship there. Nepal and the Maldives were also removed from the 2006 list, published yesterday, bringing the total number of countries on it to 13, all of them states regularly criticised by human rights groups, such as.....

Saturn moon gives clues about early life on Earth

WASHINGTON, Nov 7: Billions of years ago, Earth may have been shrouded in a blanket of atmospheric haze like that seen on Saturn's moon Titan, providing organic material that nourished our planet's earliest life forms, researchers said.Some scientists look to Titan as a model for what early Earth's atmosphere may have looked like.They think Titan's atmosphere, packed with organic aerosol particles created when sunlight reacts with methane gas, may offer clues about Earth's climate when primitive organisms.....

Chile snares suspects in global Web site attacks

SANTIAGO, Chile, Nov 7 (Reuters) Chile arrested members of a local group they say hacked into thousands of Web sites globally, including those of US space agency NASA and three Latin American governments, police said. The bust follows an eight-month-long probe that involved international intelligence agencies and ended with the arrest of four Chileans, including two minors. ''According to our records they could be the third most important (hackers) in the world,'' Gerardo Raventos,.....
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