COLOMBO - LKA
COLOMBO, Sept 5, 2012 (AFP) -A Chinese man arrested for attempted theft after swallowing a diamond worth nearly $14,000 at a gem exhibition in Sri Lanka Wednesday will have to undergo surgery to remove the stone, police said.
The 32-year-old had asked the stall owner for a close inspection of the 1.5-carat diamond on the opening day of Facets Sri Lanka, an annual jewellery show in the capital Colombo.
"He came with another Chinese man. One of them tried to distract me while the other had a diamond in his hand," Suresh de Silva, director of the Belgrade International gem store, told AFP.
"When I realised what was happening and shouted, one ran away and we managed to catch the man who swallowed the stone."
The man was taken to the Colombo National Hospital where he was to be administered laxatives, but police said X-rays showed the diamond was lodged in his gullet and was not going down.
"Doctors have advised surgery to remove the diamond," police spokesman Ajith Rohana told AFP.
"The man's life could be in danger if the pointed end of the diamond tears his guts. We have already informed courts about this. For the man's own safety, he will have to undergo surgery."
He said a successful prosecution was dependent on retrieving the stone, adding that officers were also keen to interview the other man, who fled the hall.
The two men had arrived in Sri Lanka on Monday as tourists, police said.
The diamond owner Silva said the captured man had offered to pay for the 7.2mm-diameter stone, which was valued at 1.8 million rupees ($13,600), but that exhibition organisers wanted police to press charges.
"He... appeared to be appraising it and suddenly put it in his mouth," a police officer who declined to be named said.
A spokeswoman at the hospital said that an X-ray had been taken and that officers were holding the suspect under observation.
"I believe the X-ray confirmed something that looked like a stone. The man is in police custody," National Hospital spokeswoman Pushpa Soya told AFP.
Photographs showed the man, dressed in a black shirt and jeans with his head bowed, being escorted from the exhibition centre by uniformed policemen.
Sri Lanka does not mine diamonds but it has a large gem and jewellery industry and is famed for its blue sapphires.
aj/jms
Man swallows $14,000 diamond at Sri Lanka gem show
Man swallows $14,000 diamond at Sri Lanka gem show
NASA plans ISS medical evacuation for Jan. 14
- Space station set to be decommissioned after 2030
- NASA and SpaceX target undocking Crew-11 from the International Space Station no earlier than 5 p.m. ET on Jan. 14, with splashdown off California targeted for early Jan. 15 depending on weather and recovery conditions
WASHINGTON: NASA crew members aboard the International Space Station could return to Earth as soon as Thursday, the US space agency said, after a medical emergency prompted the crew to return from their mission early.
“NASA and SpaceX target undocking Crew-11 from the International Space Station no earlier than 5 p.m. ET on Jan. 14, with splashdown off California targeted for early Jan. 15 depending on weather and recovery conditions,” the agency said in a post on X.
Details of the medical evacuation, the first in ISS history, were not provided by officials, though they said it did not result from any kind of injury onboard and that the unidentified crew member is stable and not in need of an emergency evacuation.
The four astronauts on Nasa-SpaceX Crew 11 have been on their mission since Aug. 1. These expeditions generally last around six months, and the crew was already due to return to Earth in the coming weeks.
American astronauts Mike Fincke and Zena Cardman, as well as Japan’s Kimiya Yui and Russia’s Oleg Platonov, would be returning, while American Chris Williams will stay onboard the international body to maintain a US presence.
Officials indicated it was possible the next US mission could depart to the ISS earlier than scheduled, but did not provide specifics.
Continuously inhabited since 2000, the ISS functions as a testbed for research that supports deeper space exploration — including eventual missions to Mars.
The ISS is set to be decommissioned after 2030, with its orbit gradually lowered until it breaks up in the atmosphere over a remote part of the Pacific Ocean called Point Nemo, a spacecraft graveyard.










