Iranian director Farhadi makes late Cannes entries

Updated 23 April 2016
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Iranian director Farhadi makes late Cannes entries

PARIS: Oscar-winning Iranian film director Asghar Farhadi has been added to the line-up for next month’s Cannes Film Festival, the organizers said Friday.
The creator of such modern classics as “About Elly” and “The Past” — which won Berenice Bejo best actress at Cannes in 2013 — is a late entry to the main competition for the Palme d’Or, which he has yet to win.
Farhadi, 43, won both the best foreign language film Oscar and Golden Globe in 2013 for “A Separation.” His new film, “The Salesman,” has two his two regular stars,
Shahab Hosseini and Taraneh Alidoosti play a couple who are actors whose relationship turns sour during their performance of Arthur Miller’s “Death of a Salesman.”
Veteran pop star Iggy Pop will also walk the red carpet at Cannes, the most important festival in the movie calendar, for the premiere of Jim Jarmusch’s documentary about him, “Gimme Danger.”
Another documentary, about the hunt for the remnants of Joseph Kony’s Lord’s Resistance Army in Congo, by American novelist Jonathan Littlell will also get a special screening, the organizers said.
In a year which is not short on stardust, Hollywood stalwart Jeff Bridges will grace the festival again in British director David Mackenzie’s modern western about struggling Texan farming folk, “Hell or High Water,” in a late addition to the Un Certain Regard section line-up.


These shy, scaly anteaters are the most trafficked mammals in the world

Updated 21 February 2026
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These shy, scaly anteaters are the most trafficked mammals in the world

CAPE TOWN, South Africa: They are hunted for their unique scales, and the demand makes them the most trafficked mammal in the world.
Wildlife conservationists are again raising the plight of pangolins, the shy, scaly anteaters found in parts of Africa and Asia, on World Pangolin Day on Saturday.
Pangolins or pangolin products outstrip any other mammal when it comes to wildlife smuggling, with more than half a million pangolins seized in anti-trafficking operations between 2016 and 2024, according to a report last year by CITES, the global authority on the trading of endangered plant and animal species.
The World Wildlife Fund estimates that over a million pangolins were taken from the wild over the last decade, including those that were never intercepted.
Pangolins meat is a delicacy in places, but the driving force behind the illegal trade is their scales, which are made of keratin, the protein also found in human hair and fingernails. The scales are in high demand in China and other parts of Asia due to the unproven belief that they cure a range of ailments when made into traditional medicine.
There are eight pangolin species, four in Africa and four in Asia. All of them face a high, very high or extremely high risk of extinction.
While they’re sometimes known as scaly anteaters, pangolins are not related in any way to anteaters or armadillos.
They are unique in that they are the only mammals covered completely in keratin scales, which overlap and have sharp edges. They are the perfect defense mechanism, allowing a pangolin to roll up into an armored ball that even lions struggle to get to grip with, leaving the nocturnal ant and termite eaters with few natural predators.
But they have no real defense against human hunters. And in conservation terms, they don’t resonate in the way that elephants, rhinos or tigers do despite their fascinating intricacies — like their sticky insect-nabbing tongues being almost as long as their bodies.
While some reports indicate a downward trend in pangolin trafficking since the COVID-19 pandemic, they are still being poached at an alarming rate across parts of Africa, according to conservationists.
Nigeria is one of the global hot spots. There, Dr. Mark Ofua, a wildlife veterinarian and the West Africa representative for the Wild Africa conservation group, has rescued pangolins for more than a decade, which started with him scouring bushmeat markets for animals he could buy and save. He runs an animal rescue center and a pangolin orphanage in Lagos.
His mission is to raise awareness of pangolins in Nigeria through a wildlife show for kids and a tactic of convincing entertainers, musicians and other celebrities with millions of social media followers to be involved in conservation campaigns — or just be seen with a pangolin.
Nigeria is home to three of the four African pangolin species, but they are not well known among the country’s 240 million people.
Ofua’s drive for pangolin publicity stems from an encounter with a group of well-dressed young men while he was once transporting pangolins he had rescued in a cage. The men pointed at them and asked him what they were, Ofua said.
“Oh, those are baby dragons,” he joked. But it got him thinking.
“There is a dark side to that admission,” Ofua said. “If people do not even know what a pangolin looks like, how do you protect them?”