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Members of the UK Parliament criticize US Extradition Act of 2003

LONDON — The special relationship — Britain and the US, or is that the US and Britain? — is often remarked on here in Britain, particularly when there is a change at the top of government. But now there is an issue that threatens the perfect calm — extradition — to be specific, the Extradition Act of 2003.

Another Zimbabwean loses his penis

In a Botswana prison, a Zimbabwean man attempted suicide by cutting his private parts into pieces. That's not the first Zimbabwean penile loss this week.
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If only restoring real penises were this easy. This pair of Roman statues Mars and Venus, had been restored on the ex-the prime minister Berlussoni's orders at a cost of 70,000 euros. Thanks to Papa Silvio, Mars is now sporting a brand new penis and a new right hand. (Montage/GlobalPost)

There must be easier ways to kill oneself, even in prison.

Cleopus Nkomo, 27, a Zimbabwean man incarcerated in a Botswana high-security prison, has reportedly chosen the road less traveled.

He chopped his penis into pieces with a sharp razor blade, Kitwe Times reports.

He remains in critical condition.

Nkomo, a suspected rapist and serial killer facing four murder charges, was rushed to Nyangabwe Referral Hospital as prison wardens collected parts of his penis, Kitwe Times reports.

A surgeon tried to sew back the pieces, but sometime during the process, some parts – including the testicles – had gone missing.

Nyangabwe public relations officer Caiphus Gabana confirmed the accident:

“From what I can gather some of the parts were missing, but the surgeon who attended the patient tried to put together the pieces though the man was critically injured,” he said to the local correspondent.

“It’s just unbelievable he did all this to himself.”

Maybe so.

But the loss of one's penis is hardly an isolated incident in this part of Africa.

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Trinidad to allow sex in prison?

The proposal to allow conjugal visits to prisoners in Trinidad so far creates more tension than it’s supposed to release.
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(TONY KARUMBA/AFP/Getty Images)

The nation of Trinidad has been troubled by the diminishing focus on family life.

This week, Justice Minister Herbert Volney came up with a solution. In order to encourage family life, conjugal visits should be allowed in the nations’ prisons, The Trinidad Express reports.

Based on the immediate feedback, the nation didn’t think it was such a hot idea.

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