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Chinese Man Sedates Woman, Steals Her Blood For His 'Stress Relief'
- Thursday August 28, 2025
- Offbeat | Edited by Nikhil Pandey
A man in China has been sentenced to two years in prison after breaking into a woman's home, sedating her, and drawing her blood, an act he bizarrely claimed was for "stress relief."
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www.ndtv.com
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COVID-19: Flushing Toilets Can Spread Virus In The Air, Says Report
- Wednesday June 17, 2020
- India News | Edited by Debjani Chatterjee
COVID-19: A recent study by researchers at Yangzhou University in China claims the novel coronavirus can survive in the human digestive tract and appear in faeces of the infected,
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www.ndtv.com
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And Now, Tourists Pluck Peacocks' Tail Feathers In China Zoo
- Monday April 30, 2018
- Offbeat | NDTV News Desk
Tourists visiting a zoo in eastern China reportedly plucked tail feathers from four live peacocks. This is the third such instance reported from China and the second from Liwan Zoo in Yangzhou, Jiangsu this year.It's unclear how the zoo-goers managed to enter the enclosure that houses the majestic birds as visitors' access to it was barred after a ...
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www.ndtv.com
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Chinese Man Sedates Woman, Steals Her Blood For His 'Stress Relief'
- Thursday August 28, 2025
- Offbeat | Edited by Nikhil Pandey
A man in China has been sentenced to two years in prison after breaking into a woman's home, sedating her, and drawing her blood, an act he bizarrely claimed was for "stress relief."
-
www.ndtv.com
-
COVID-19: Flushing Toilets Can Spread Virus In The Air, Says Report
- Wednesday June 17, 2020
- India News | Edited by Debjani Chatterjee
COVID-19: A recent study by researchers at Yangzhou University in China claims the novel coronavirus can survive in the human digestive tract and appear in faeces of the infected,
-
www.ndtv.com
-
And Now, Tourists Pluck Peacocks' Tail Feathers In China Zoo
- Monday April 30, 2018
- Offbeat | NDTV News Desk
Tourists visiting a zoo in eastern China reportedly plucked tail feathers from four live peacocks. This is the third such instance reported from China and the second from Liwan Zoo in Yangzhou, Jiangsu this year.It's unclear how the zoo-goers managed to enter the enclosure that houses the majestic birds as visitors' access to it was barred after a ...
-
www.ndtv.com