World
Bollywood actress Poonam Pandey sued for faking cervical cancer death in HPV vaccine promotion stunt
A Bollywood film actress and model who faked her own death to highlight the dangers of cervical cancer and to promote the HPV vaccine is now being sued for the stunt.
A post on Poonam Pandey’s Instagram page on Feb. 2 stated that she had died from cervical cancer, with her team confirming the news to the media. Her manager, Nikita Sharma, stated the star had “bravely fought the disease” but had “tragically passed away,” according to NDTV India.
However, the following day, Pandey, 32, posted a video of herself revealing she was alive and well and that the death announcement was a ruse to raise awareness about the potentially fatal disease.
The move sparked uproar online, with the overwhelming majority of commentators slamming Pandey for her actions.
Poonam Pandey, a Bollywood film actress and model, faked her own death via a social media post on Friday to raise awareness about the potentially fatal disease and for women to get vaccinated. (Ashish Vaishnav/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)
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“I’m alive, I didn’t die because of cervical cancer,” Pandey told her 1.3 million followers, as poignant music played in the background.
“Unfortunately, I can’t say that about the hundreds of thousands of women who have lost their lives because of cervical cancer. I’m here to tell you that, unlike other cancers, cervical cancer is preventable, all you have to do is get a test and you have to get HPV vaccine.”
“We can do all this and more to make sure there are no more lives lost to this disease,” she added.
She then directed her followers to log onto a specially designed website – www.poonampandeyisalive.com – which was packed with information on the deadly cancer and the vaccine designed to prevent it. The website and her Instagram posts relating to her fake death have now been deleted.
Cervical cancer visualized by sagittal MRI, papillomavirus infection is often the cause. (CAVALLINI JAMES/BSIP/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)
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Pandey and her husband Sam Bombay are now being sued for more than $12 million by Faizan Ansari, according to The Times of India. Ansari is an actor and reality TV star.
The lawsuit alleges Pandey and Bombay orchestrated a “false conspiracy of death” and trivialized serious illnesses like cancers for their own publicity gains.
Ansari argues that the couple’s actions betrayed the trust of millions of Indians and also tarnished the reputation of the Bollywood fraternity.
The lawsuit demanded the couple’s arrest and called for them to appear in court to face defamation charges.
Pandey’s initial death post came a day after India’s finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman announced plans for a cervical cancer vaccination program for girls aged 9 to 14 as part of her interim budget in 2024, according to NDTV. Cervical cancer arises from the cervix, which is the lower part of the uterus in the female reproductive system.
Cervical cancer is ranked as the most frequent cancer in women in India, with around 365 million women aged above 15 years of age, who are at risk of developing cervical cancer. The World Health Organization estimates there are 74,000 deaths annually in India, accounting for nearly one-third of the global cervical cancer deaths.
This undated image provided by Merck in October 2018 shows a vial and packaging for the Gardasil 9 HPV vaccine. (AP Images)
Pandey’s stunt caused a firestorm online and was mostly panned by her followers.
“Am happy she is alive but pls arrest her for this drama and publicity stunt,” wrote one follower, with his top post getting nearly 33,000 likes on Feb. 3.
Another commenter wrote, “Exploiting a serious issue like cervical cancer for cheap publicity is absolutely disgraceful. Using your platform to spread awareness is commendable, but faking your own death is a new low. Respect for real survivors and victims matters more than attention-seeking stunts. #Disappointed.”
Pandey posted a second video the day after her death post acknowledging the blowback she was receiving. She said she was sorry for upsetting people but did not appear to have any regrets.
“Yes, I faked my demise. Extreme, I know. But suddenly we all are talking about cervical cancer, aren’t we?” Pandey said. “It’s a disease that silently takes a life and this disease needed the spotlight urgently.”
“I am proud of what my death news has been able to achieve.”
“Unlike some other cancers, cervical cancer is entirely preventable,” she said. “The key lies in the HPV vaccine and early detection tests. We have the means to ensure no one loses their life to this disease. Let’s empower one another with critical awareness and ensure every woman is informed about the steps to take.”
World
Gunman kills 6 at youth welfare facility in suspected child custody dispute: reports
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A suspect is in custody after six people were shot and killed Monday at a youth welfare facility in northern Germany, officials said.
The shooting happened around midday in Stade, a town of about 50,000 people near Hamburg. Authorities said the victims — four women and two men — all worked at the youth center or affiliated organizations. Five were pronounced dead at the scene, while a sixth died later at a hospital, according to The Associated Press, citing authorities.
Several others were wounded in the shooting, which may have been tied to a child custody dispute, the outlet reported.
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The shooting happened around midday in Stade, a town of about 50,000 people near Hamburg. (News5/Reuters)
Police said the shooting happened at a facility on Dankersstrasse that houses pregnant women and young mothers with children, according to The Associated Press.
The suspect, a 45-year-old man, had an appointment at the facility earlier in the day before the shooting unfolded around midday. His 3-month-old daughter and the child’s mother were safe, Reuters reported.
The suspected gunman was arrested. Police said two others were also subject to police measures on suspicion of involvement but did not provide additional details, according to The Associated Press.
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Authorities said the victims — four women and two men — all worked at the youth center or affiliated organizations. (News5/Reuters)
German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier said he was “deeply shocked” by the violence at a place meant to protect women and children.
“The horrific act of violence in Stade claimed the lives of six people today. I am deeply shaken by the extent of the violence in a place that is meant to provide protection,” Steinmeier said.
“My condolences go to the families of the dead and injured, who must endure so much pain. My thanks go to all first responders and doctors.”
SUSPECT ‘NEUTRALIZED’ AFTER MONTREAL SHOOTING LEAVES AT LEAST 2 DEAD INCLUDING OFFICER
Police warned people to avoid the area after the shooting but later said there was no danger to the public. (News5/Reuters)
Police warned people to avoid the area after the shooting but later said there was no danger to the public. Investigators were still collecting evidence Monday evening, Reuters reported.
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Mass shootings in Germany are rare.
Earlier this year, a car plowed into a pedestrian zone in Leipzig, Germany, killing two people and leaving several others seriously injured.
Stade Police could not immediately be reached by Fox News Digital for comment.
World
EU will ‘come to its senses’ on Israel, former Netanyahu adviser says
European Union leaders must recognise that the most pressing challenge they face is an internal one — not possible disagreements with Israel, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s former national security advisor, Jacob Nagel, told Euronews.
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His comments come as EU-Israel ties are coming under strain. Earlier this month, Israel’s Foreign Minister, Gideon Sa’ar, severed all contact with the bloc’s foreign policy chief, Kaja Kallas, due to alleged comparisons of Israel to apartheid-era South Africa.
Meanwhile, the European Commission is under pressure from some of its member states to propose a range of options to restrict EU trade with illegal Israeli settlements in the occupied Palestinian territories.
“At the end, I think that also the EU countries will come to their senses and will realise who are the good guys and who are the bad guys,” Nagel, who served for more than 40 years in Israel’s Defence Ministry and the Prime Minister’s Office and is now a Senior Fellow at the Foundation for Defence of Democracies (FDD), said onEuronews’ interview programme 12 Minutes With.
He argued that the EU “is not relevant” — even though the bloc remains Israel’s largest trading partner — echoing a statement made to Euronews by Netanyahu last year.
Nagel went on to state that the EU and its leaders should focus on different, more pressing issues.
“See some of the countries inside Europe, and I don’t want to say names, you go in the streets, there is terror,” he said.
“There are some European countries that understood it, and they took their fate into their hands, but some have already lost the war against the immigrants. I think Europe is facing a big problem that it has to solve, and its problem is not Israel.”
US ‘remains our best friend’
Asked if US-Israel relations had recently come under strain over the latter’s military operation in Lebanon, Nagel acknowledged there may have been some tension but insisted that “Israel and the US are the best allies. They are our best friends.”
On the Israeli side, while Netanyahu avoided direct public criticism, some government and opposition figures denounced Washington’s apparent sidelining of Israel in the US ceasefire memorandum of understanding (MoU) with Iran, signed on 17 June, and for dragging the Jewish state out of the conflict before it achieved its goals.
On the US side, Trump reportedly angrily berated Netanyahu at the start of June over Israel’s threats to resume airstrikes on Beirut and its southern suburbs, jeopardising talks with Iran, which were ongoing at the time.
Later, Vice-President J.D. Vance told Israel it was isolated on the international stage, saying Trump is Israel’s only ally left in the world.
While stressing he understood Trump’s reasons for engaging with Iran, Nagel said the US president was nonetheless “making a mistake” by prioritising domestic interests, particularly the economy — the biggest concern for US voters — over securing a more favourable deal to end the Iran conflict and preventing the Islamic Republic from eventually acquiring a nuclear bomb.
“Iran is now getting exactly what it wants and needs,” he said, pointing to the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz and the temporary waivers for Iranian oil exports, which means that Iran will, at least during the 60-day negotiation period provided by the MoU, receive direct, conventional hard-currency payments.
Experts estimate that selling oil legally could generate roughly $8 billion (around €7 billion) during this initial 60-day window alone.
“Trump is now listening to his close allies like Vice-President J.D. Vance, [Steve] Witkoff and [Jared] Kushner, and not listening to [Defence Secretary Pete] Hegseth and [State Secretary Marco] Rubio and others, and he decided to prioritise the American interests; he wants to bring down the price of oil.”
Both Hegseth and Rubio have been advocating a more hawkish line on Iran to limit its power and guarantee US security and that of its allies, including Israel.
However, Nagel recognised that Trump’s ‘America first’ drive and focus on bringing down the price of oil is “legitimate” given November’s mid-term elections and rising fears among Republicans over a Democratic takeover of Congress.
“The people in the US, they don’t know where Iran is, where Israel is, what enriched uranium is. They just know how much they are paying for a gallon of oil when they go to the gas station,” he said.
“We would very much like the US to be with us, but sometimes they have their own interests,” Nagel also said, adding that this is merely a temporary shift in attitude.
“The US will come to its senses very soon. We work together with them. At the end, they will understand who the Iranians are, and they will go back to make sure that the work is finished.”
World
Clockenflap’s Justin Sweeting and Woozi Studio’s Mia Min Yen on Asia’s Live Music Boom at Golden Melody Festival: ‘No Longer Is a Fan Just Buying a Ticket, But Investing in a Memory’
Each year, Taiwan’s Golden Melody Festival conferences, which take place before the Golden Melody Awards, bring together local and international music industry experts across a series of keynotes and panels covering topics ranging from the global market and music production to extended economic value and industry trends.
The festival’s first market presentation, titled “The Rise of Asia’s Live Music Economy,” featured Justin Sweeting, co-founder and head of music at Hong Kong’s outdoor music and arts festival Clockenflap, and Mia Min Yen, founder of Woozi Studio, LLC, an agency that bridges the gap between East and West, who shared their perspectives on the evolving landscape of Asia’s live music market.
At the presentation, Sweeting made the structural case for Asia as a key touring destination. Rising costs in Europe and North America are pushing artists and promoters to look eastward, while the region’s geographic proximity and well-connected transportation networks make multi-country routing far more practical than it once was. Collaborative projects like Sunset Rollercoaster’s AAA Tour, he noted, have shown how teams across Asia can pool resources, align on market strategies, and collectively expand what is possible for touring across the region. He also stressed that government support, solid infrastructure, and cultural awareness – knowing when not to schedule, whether around Lunar New Year or Ramadan, and when to lean in during peak festival seasons – are just as critical to long-term success.
“The pandemic reset many people’s relationships with live music. I’d argue there’s a depth of appreciation now which was amplified after being taken away for so long,” Sweeting tells Variety.
Sweeting painted a picture of a region whose time has come. “Broadly speaking, Asia is very much a growth story and I’d say this is the result of several factors coming together. On the audience side, the region has a massive, youthful middle class across Southeast Asia, China, South Korea and India with rising disposable income and a genuine hunger for live experiences,” he says.
Yen agrees the ground has shifted. “Fans’ listening habits and ways of discovering music have evolved, driving a dramatic shift in festival curation over the last ten years. Today’s audiences prioritize community, shared identity and experience, over traditional, commercial, or genre-based lineups,” she tells Variety.
That emotional investment has translated into higher spending and higher expectations. “No longer is a fan just buying a ticket, but investing in a memory. From the queue experience to merch offerings, everything needs to be considered and to feel special,” Sweeting adds.
On the question of sustainable growth, Yen is direct. “I think there needs to be room for local promoters to thrive. The live music industry cannot be a monopolistic market. Furthermore, a clearer division of labor is essential, and the role of Asia-focused booking agents/agencies will undoubtedly become more prominent,” she says.
Sweeting is equally candid. “Asia is not homogeneous, and it is its diversity that presents both challenges as well as what makes the region so exciting. Distinct cultures, languages, geopolitical factors, currencies, tax and visa regulations and more, mean that there are complexities throughout,” he says.
Looking five years ahead, Yen says: “The Southeast Asian market is set to bloom, language barriers will continue to diminish, emerging sounds from this region will become increasingly prominent, [and] more Western artists will be drawn towards this market.”
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