
-
AI porn victims see Hong Kong unprepared for threat
-
Two dead, 10 hospitalized in Pennsylvania steel plant explosions
-
Steely Sinner advances amid Cincinnati power-failure chaos
-
Families forever scarred 4 years on from Kabul plane deaths
-
Scientists find 74-million-year-old mammal fossil in Chile
-
Trump signs order to extend China tariff truce by 90 days
-
Spanish police bust 'spiritual retreat' offering hallucinogenic drugs
-
Jellyfish force French nuclear plant shutdown
-
One dead, 10 hospitalized in Pennsylvania steel plant explosions
-
Trump meets with Intel CEO after demanding he resign
-
Stocks cautious before US inflation report
-
Sabalenka survives massive Cincinnati struggle with Raducanu
-
Trump says plans to test out Putin as Europe engages Ukraine
-
Straka skips BMW but will play PGA Tour Championship
-
Chinese man pleads guilty in US to smuggling protected turtles
-
Trump sends troops to US capital, mulls wider crackdown
-
One dead, dozens injured in Pennsylvania steel plant explosions
-
Trump signs order to extend China tariff truce by 90 days: US media
-
Pollock earns first enhanced England contract as Farrell misses out
-
Iraq announces nationwide power outage amid 'record' heat
-
Harry and Meghan sign reduced deal with Netflix
-
Child dies in Italy as European heatwave sets records and sparks wildfires
-
Trump says dealing 'nicely' with China as tariff deadline looms
-
Trump expects 'constructive conversation' with Putin
-
Trump says Nvidia to give US cut of China chip sales
-
No bread, no fuel, no dollars: how Bolivia went from boom to bust
-
Europeans plan Ukraine talks with Trump before he meets Putin
-
Women's Rugby World Cup to adopt flashing mouthguards to signal head impact
-
Trump deploys National Guard in Washington crime crackdown
-
Stocks cautious before tariff updates, US inflation data
-
UK scientist's remains found on Antarctic glacier 66 years on
-
Talks for landmark plastic pollution treaty grind on
-
Records smashed as new heatwave bakes southwest France
-
UN, media groups condemn Israel's deadly strike on Al Jazeera team in Gaza
-
The shrill is gone: AOL to shut down dial-up internet
-
Al Jazeera journalists hold vigil for staff slain in Gaza
-
Trump deploys National Guard to tackle Washington crime
-
Man City's Grealish to join Everton on loan: reports
-
Talks for landmark plastic pollution treaty stretch into second week
-
EU clears Just Eat takeover by Dutch group Prosus
-
Injured skipper Callender still in Wales squad for Women's Rugby World Cup
-
Gazans mourn Al Jazeera staff killed by Israel
-
Colombia presidential hopeful dies after June rally shooting
-
Stocks cautious before tariff updates, US data
-
India look to break 'final barrier' in Women's World Cup
-
Springboks move captain Kolisi to No 8 for Australia opener
-
Mourners gather in Gaza for funeral of Al Jazeera staff killed by Israel
-
Chinese vessels collide while pursuing Philippine boat in South China Sea
-
EU to hold urgent Ukraine talks before Trump-Putin meeting
-
Tributes to legendary Japan striker hailed by Pele
RBGPF | 0% | 73.08 | $ | |
VOD | 1.3% | 11.51 | $ | |
SCS | 0.5% | 15.96 | $ | |
AZN | 0.72% | 74.07 | $ | |
GSK | -0.24% | 37.71 | $ | |
RIO | 0.45% | 62.14 | $ | |
RELX | 0.08% | 48.04 | $ | |
RYCEF | -0.84% | 14.3 | $ | |
NGG | 0.31% | 71.23 | $ | |
CMSC | 0.04% | 23.06 | $ | |
BTI | 1.87% | 58.33 | $ | |
SCU | 0% | 12.72 | $ | |
CMSD | -0.04% | 23.571 | $ | |
JRI | -0.34% | 13.39 | $ | |
BCC | -1.67% | 80.74 | $ | |
BP | -0.56% | 33.95 | $ | |
BCE | 0% | 24.35 | $ |

Austrian artist turns Hitler manifesto into cookbook
Long reviled as a manifesto of hate, Adolf Hitler's "Mein Kampf" has become the raw ingredient for an art project reconstituting the toxic text into something more savoury: a cookbook.
In a cafe in the Nazi leader's native Austria, an artist is cutting up the book that laid the ideological foundations for Nazism -- "My Struggle" -- letter by letter and reforming them into recipes.
The sentences are mashed and re-served as instructions for making pizza, asparagus salad, tiramisu and egg dumplings -- said to have been Hitler's favourite dish.
Artist Andreas Joska-Sutanto has been working at it for eight years and has so far finished cutting up about a quarter of the book after almost 900 hours of painstaking work.
"I want to show... that you can turn something negative into something positive by deconstructing and rearranging it," the 44-year-old graphic designer told AFP in the Viennese cafe, where he can be observed once a week working for a few hours.
- 'Poisonous words' -
First published in two tomes in 1925 and 1926, Hitler's autobiographical "My Struggle" served as a manifesto for National Socialism and the ensuing wave of racial hatred, violence and anti-Semitism that engulfed Europe.
The book entered the public domain in 2016, when its copyright lapsed.
Once it became available, Joska-Sutanto came up with the idea of meticulously cutting out every single letter of the 800-page text -- with an estimated total of 1.57 million letters -- to rearrange them into cooking recipes.
He glues the pages onto adhesive film before dissecting them.
So far his cookbook draft has 22 recipes.
The original text "no longer has any weight", he said, displaying the remains of the gutted copy of the book.
"All the weight in the form of letters is gone."
He left the Nazi dictator's portrait in the book untouched, he said, to show that "without his poisonous words" Hitler was reduced to staring at the void.
- 'Irreverent' artwork -
Reactions to the project have been mostly positive, Joska-Sutanto said, though he once apologised to a spectator who criticised his work as "extremely irreverent".
At the cafe, owner Michael Westerkam, 33, praised the project -- he said the raising of awareness of difficult topics such as a country's historical past could be achieved "in many ways".
Experts consulted by AFP were reluctant to speak on the record about the project. One, who asked not to be named, said there was a view that it was a "strange" initiative and of "limited" historical and artistic relevance.
Austria long cast itself as a victim after being annexed by the German Third Reich in 1938. It is only in the past three decades that it has begun to seriously examine its role in the Holocaust.
Joska-Sutanto estimates that it will take him 24 more years to finish his project.
D.Qudsi--SF-PST