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Poisoned guests rarely invited before deadly mushroom lunch, Australia trial hears

Poisoned guests rarely invited before deadly mushroom lunch, Australia trial hears
In a trial that has seized international attention, prosecutors played a recording of a police interview with Patterson’s son, then 14, following the lunch. (AFP)
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Updated 09 May 2025

Poisoned guests rarely invited before deadly mushroom lunch, Australia trial hears

Poisoned guests rarely invited before deadly mushroom lunch, Australia trial hears
  • An Australian woman accused of triple murder with a toxic mushroom-laced beef Wellington had rarely invited her four guests to eat at her home before, a court heard Friday

SYDNEY: An Australian woman accused of triple murder with a toxic mushroom-laced beef Wellington had rarely invited her four guests to eat at her home before, a court heard Friday.
Erin Patterson, 50, is charged with murdering the parents and aunt of her estranged husband in July 2023 by serving them the pastry-and-beef dish with death cap mushrooms.
She is also accused of the attempted murder of her husband’s uncle, who survived the meal after a long stay in hospital.
Patterson has pleaded not guilty to all charges.
In a trial that has seized international attention, prosecutors played a recording of a police interview with Patterson’s son, then 14, following the lunch.
The teenager, who cannot be named for legal reasons, said his mother had hosted his paternal grandparents at her house “once before.”
And she had “never” previously hosted Heather and Ian Wilkinson, his father’s aunt and uncle, the boy said.
His mother’s relationship with the couple was “not a negative one, but it is not strong,” the youngster told police.
The accused’s estranged husband, Simon Patterson, had declined the invitation to lunch at her home in the sedate Victoria state farm village of Leongatha.
Four members of his family attended: his parents Don and Gail Patterson, and his aunt and uncle.
While the guests had lunch, Patterson’s children went to a McDonald’s and the cinema.
Within hours after eating, the four guests developed diarrhea and vomiting and were taken to hospital, where doctors diagnosed death cap mushroom poisoning.
Days later, three of the guests were dead. Ian Wilkinson, a local pastor, lived after weeks of hospital treatment.
On the morning after the lunch, Patterson’s son said she was “a little bit quieter” than usual, complaining of “feeling a bit sick and had diarrhea,” the court heard.
The family had missed their local church service because “mum was feeling too sick,” he said.
That night, Patterson and her children ate the purported leftovers of the beef Wellington.
The defendant has said she scraped off the mushrooms because her children were picky eaters.
“It was probably some of the best meat I’ve ever had,” her teenage son said.
“Mum said it was leftovers.”
Jurors also heard a recording of a police interview with Patterson’s daughter, then nine, who said her mum was a good cook.
“We make cupcakes and muffins,” she said.
The girl, who also cannot be named for legal reasons, said she did not get sick from eating the claimed leftovers.
The prosecution alleges Patterson deliberately poisoned her lunch guests and took care that neither she, nor her children, consumed the deadly mushrooms.
Her defense says it was “a terrible accident” and that Patterson ate the same meal as the others but did not fall as sick.
The trial is expected to last another five weeks.


Keep your furry friends cool for the summer

Keep your furry friends cool for the summer
Updated 14 August 2025

Keep your furry friends cool for the summer

Keep your furry friends cool for the summer
  • From frozen treats to cool-down measures, ways to keep your cat or dog safe as temperatures soar

RIYADH: If you think you can barely stand the scorching summer heat, think about how your pets feel.

The hot months can be a brutal time for stray animals and house pets. Normal body temperature ranges for dogs and cats are higher than for human beings, making them prone to overheating, dehydration, and paw pad burns from hot surfaces.

Arab News spoke to a few pet care centers for their top summer care tips.

Keep pets out of dangerous heat

Albanderey Aloyeadi, CEO Saudi Animal Welfare Society (Refq), said they campaign against leaving pets outdoors or in cars.

Humane World for Animals also advises never to leave your pets in a parked car because temperatures inside a vehicle can rapidly rise to dangerous levels.

Pawsers operates with an emphasis on raising animal awareness in the Kingdom through working with multiple community led groups. (Supplied: Pawsers Pet Care)

Temperatures inside a parked car can rise by almost 11 degrees Celcius within the first 10 minutes, even with a window cracked open, according to the US Center for Disease Control and Prevention.

“During the summer, we make a concerted effort to spread awareness in the community about the dangers of heat for animals,” Aloyeadi said.

This includes educational campaigns on proper hydration and sheltering.

Helping strays

Operationally, Refq increases monitoring of stray animals in urban areas in the summer to make sure they have access to clean water and shade.

They also partner with community members to designate safe feeding zones that help Refq track, feed, and protect stray animals more efficiently.

The Refq mobile app, a volunteer-driven platform, enables users to report animal abuse or neglect, locate animals in need, and facilitate adoptions, operating in collaboration with government agencies.

Adjust routines for cooler hours

“A good rule of thumb is if you can’t place your hand on the pavement outside, then neither can your pet,” said Pawsers Pet Care founder Ali Alriyahi.

Located in Alkhobar and Riyadh, they are a “one-stop shop” for all your pets’ needs.

When the weather starts to heat up, Pawsers employees are careful not to allow their pets outside if the temperature reaches above 32 C, especially if the humidity is high. They limit playtime to indoor activities where a controlled air conditioning unit and circulation system maintains optimal temperature and air quality conditions for the pets.

Outdoor time at Pawsers is during the very early mornings and late evenings and will last only about five minutes, depending on the heat index.

Through their outreach programs, Pawsers has found homes for thousands of abandoned and/or injured cats and dogs, also offering subsidized and discounted prices in services for strays and rescue animals.

Hydration is key

Chez Ayah, a full-service pet center in Riyadh, is known for its individualized approach to dog services.

Founder and owner Ayah Al-Bokhari said: “We’ve added indoor enrichment, supervised pool sessions and — most importantly — a lot of melon. Seriously, a lot of melon. It’s hydrating, safe, and the dogs love it.”

In the summer, Chez Ayah adjusts the entire routine to prioritize cooler hours, starting as early as 5:30 a.m. before the sun rises.

Their in-house park is additionally equipped with more than 10 outdoor AC units and large shaded areas for comfort.

“Every dog’s routine is customized based on their temperament, energy level, and needs,” Al-Bokhari added.

In addition to daycare and pet center services, there are best practices for pet owners to adopt in their homes in the summer, as well as for pedestrians to practice when coming across a stray on the street.

Pawsers operates with an emphasis on raising animal awareness in the Kingdom through working with multiple community led groups. (Supplied: Pawsers Pet Care)

Be mindful of humidity

It is important to watch out for high humidity levels, especially if you live on the coast, because it reduces the ability of an animal to cool itself.

Limit exercise on hot days and provide shade and water (preferably ice water) when taking your pets out for a walk.

Home cooling hacks

Make “pupsicles” by freezing pet-safe treats.
Use cooling wraps, vests, or mats soaked in cold water.
Don’t shave your pet’s fur — it insulates from heat and sun.
Provide shaded areas or ventilated rooms indoors.
Avoid leaving pets in enclosed spaces such as dog houses, which trap heat.

Very old, very young, overweight, inactive pets, and pets with heart or respiratory diseases are more prone to heat strokes. (Supplied: Pawsers Pet Care)

Know the signs of heat stroke

Be mindful for signs of heat stroke, which include heavy panting, glazed eyes, difficulty breathing, a rapid heartbeat, fever, excessive thirst, unresponsiveness and inactivity, dizziness, lack of coordination, excessive salivation, vomiting, a deep red or purple tongue, seizures, and unconsciousness.

Very old, very young, overweight, inactive pets, and pets with heart or respiratory diseases are more prone to heat strokes.

Certain breeds of cats and dogs, such as pugs and shih tzus who have short muzzles, will find it harder to breathe in the heat.

With temperatures regularly soaring above 40 C in Saudi summers, pet owners have to take extra measures to keep animals safe.

A national network of cooling and hydration stations for animals could be a valuable initiative, giving pets and strays a place to drink and cool off with minimal disruption.


 


McDonald’s Japan’s Pokemon card Happy Meals promotion comes to an unhappy end

McDonald’s Japan’s Pokemon card Happy Meals promotion comes to an unhappy end
Updated 13 August 2025

McDonald’s Japan’s Pokemon card Happy Meals promotion comes to an unhappy end

McDonald’s Japan’s Pokemon card Happy Meals promotion comes to an unhappy end

TOKYO: Fast-food chain McDonald’s Japan has canceled a Happy Meal campaign that came with coveted Pokemon cards, apologizing after resellers rushed to buy the meals and then discarded the food, leaving trash outside stores.
The meals, called Happy Sets in Japan, were meant for children. They came with a toy, such as a tiny plastic Pikachu, and a Pokemon card. They sold out in a day, according to Japanese media reports.
Mounds of wasted food were found near the stores.
“We do not believe in abandoning and discarding food. This situation goes against our longtime philosophy that we have cherished as a restaurant to ‘offer a fun dining experience for children and families.’ We sincerely accept that our preparations had not been adequate,” the company said in a statement Monday.
McDonald’s said it was working on ways to prevent such a situation from happening again, such as limiting the number of meals each person can buy and ending online orders. It said it might deny service to customers who fail to abide by the rules.
“We vow to return to the basics of what lies behind the Happy Set, which is about helping to bring smiles to families so we can contribute to the wholesome development of the hearts and bodies of children, who are our future,” the company said.
Collecting Pokemon cards is popular among adults and children in many places, with the most popular cards selling for $1,000 or more.
Unusually large crowds were seen flocking to McDonald’s stores when the meals with Pokemon cards went on sale. The cards were later being resold for up to tens of thousands of yen (hundreds of dollars) online.
McDonald’s has been selling Happy Meals for more than 40 years. In Japan, they usually sell for 510 yen ($3.40).


Gulf tourists say Polish mountain town is a cool place

Gulf tourists say Polish mountain town is a cool place
Updated 13 August 2025

Gulf tourists say Polish mountain town is a cool place

Gulf tourists say Polish mountain town is a cool place
  • Thousands of Gulf residents spending their summer vacation in Zakopane, a resort known for its ski lifts and hiking trails, where historic wooden houses mix with modern hotels

ZAKOPANE: Saudi photographer Fahad Alayyash gazed over the Alpine-like panorama of the Tatras, Poland’s highest mountain range — and a surprising new hotspot for Arab tourists.
The 38-year-old is among thousands of Gulf residents spending their summer vacation in Zakopane, a resort known for its ski lifts and hiking trails, where historic wooden houses mix with modern hotels.
“We’ve completely taken over the place,” Alayyash said while standing on Gubalowka, a peak overlooking Zakopane, where dozens of visitors drink coffee, shop for souvenirs and enjoy the view.
Zakopane, located in southern Poland, has become a major summer draw for holidaymakers from the United Arab Emirates, ֱ and Kuwait, with up to seven daily flights from the region at nearby Krakow Airport.
The boom started with a Saudi travel agency representative, said Agata Wojtowicz, head of the Tatra chamber of commerce.
She said the official came to Zakopane to scout for a new destination with a direct connection to the Gulf and “was astonished” by the town.
Flydubai launched the first Dubai-Krakow connection in 2018 and Emiratis are now coming in droves — helped by their visa-free access to the European Union.
Last year they were Poland’s fastest-growing tourist group, according to the tourism ministry, with numbers 66 percent higher than in 2023.
Manal Alanazy, a 45-year-old educational technology professor at King Saud University, said Zakopane is well-known among Saudis.
“When I told my dad and my brother that I’m going to Poland, my brother didn’t like it. He said: ‘It’s all Gulf people there,’” she told AFP.
Zakopane uses social media to attract Gulf tourists who have created “a snowball effect” of growing interest, said Wojtowicz.
Over the past three years, Arab influencers have been invited on promotional visits, according to Grzegorz Biedron, chairman of its tourism organization.
Both Alanazy and Abdullah Alotaibi, a 30-year-old Kuwaiti ship captain, learnt about Zakopane from X.
“I saw on Twitter (X) a thread about Zakopane, and how it treats all people the same, and there is no racism about religions, so I liked it and I came,” said Alotaibi.
Arab tourists cite the feeling of safety as one of Zakopane’s key assets.
“It was dark and I was walking... I’m like, ‘You’re not in Poland, you’re in one of the Gulf countries. Just look. Nothing will happen,’” said Alanazy.
For Zakopane’s business owners, the Gulf clientele has been a blessing.
“This year, around two-thirds are Arabs,” Anna Stoch-El Einen, who owns a kebab restaurant and souvenir shop, said of her customers.
“We have very few Polish tourists in the region, perhaps because of the weather,” she added.
The hospitality industry has adapted fast to the preferences of Middle East visitors.
Stoch-El Einen offers menus in Polish and Arabic, and has a “halal” certificate displayed over the counter.
“We also make sure that we have a halal menu,” said Wiktor Wrobel, CEO of the region’s Nosalowy hotel group.
Arab customers constitute up to 30 percent of all summer guests at his five-star hotel in Zakopane.
City mayor Lukasz Filipowicz told AFP “local entrepreneurs are very happy about the presence of tourists from the Middle East.”
He said the biggest challenge was the difference in driving cultures, with visitors often breaking parking and entry laws.
“Every municipal police patrol is equipped with a handbook in Arabic... so that tourists from the Middle East can understand and comply with the applicable regulations,” Filipowicz said.
The day is rainy, but the drizzle did not deter Gulf visitors escaping the infernal summer heat in their home region. Temperatures sometimes top 50C in the Gulf, whereas Polish summers are generally mild.
Alanazy initially wanted to vacation in Paris.
“I canceled because the heatwave hit the European countries,” she told AFP, adding that “the weather is perfect” in Zakopane.
Wrobel said climate change is a reason behind the surge in Zakopane’s popularity.
“The respite that visitors from Arab countries are looking for cannot be found in Italy or Spain, where temperatures have also risen significantly,” he told AFP.
Hanka Krzeptowska-Marusarz, whose family runs a guesthouse in Zakopane, recalled seeing a Kuwaiti in full Islamic attire as she stood in a meadow, arms spread out, soaked in torrential rain.
“I thought it was beautiful,” she said.


Venus Williams to get new Barbie as part of Inspiring Women collection

Venus Williams to get new Barbie as part of Inspiring Women collection
Updated 13 August 2025

Venus Williams to get new Barbie as part of Inspiring Women collection

Venus Williams to get new Barbie as part of Inspiring Women collection
  • Williams’ doll, to be released on Friday, will celebrate the tennis great and pay equity champion
  • The doll, suggested to retail for $38, will feature Williams in all white with a green gem necklace, wristband, racket and tennis ball

Venus Williams has a new Barbie, this one part of the dollmaker’s Inspiring Women collection.
Williams’ doll, to be released Friday, will celebrate the tennis great and pay equity champion with a doll wearing the uniform she wore while winning Wimbledon in 2007.
Williams’ win for the fifth of her seven grand slam titles was the first time a woman received equal prize money as the men at a top-level tournament.
The doll, suggested to retail for $38, will feature Williams in all white with a green gem necklace, wristband, racket and tennis ball.
Williams also had a Barbie doll released in May 2024 that highlighted nine trailblazing female athletes as part of Barbie’s 65th anniversary celebration.


Lebanese craftsman keeps up tradition of tarboosh hat-making

Lebanese craftsman Mohammed Al-Shaar sews the brim of a tarboosh at his workshop in the northern Lebanese costal city of Tripoli
Lebanese craftsman Mohammed Al-Shaar sews the brim of a tarboosh at his workshop in the northern Lebanese costal city of Tripoli
Updated 13 August 2025

Lebanese craftsman keeps up tradition of tarboosh hat-making

Lebanese craftsman Mohammed Al-Shaar sews the brim of a tarboosh at his workshop in the northern Lebanese costal city of Tripoli
  • Brimless hats made with maroon, black or green felt, some embroidered with Lebanon’s national emblem, the cedar, sit on display in the small workshop

TRIPOLI: Nestled among shops in a bustling market in north Lebanon’s Tripoli, Mohammed Al-Shaar is at his workshop making traditional tarboosh hats, keeping up a family craft despite dwindling demand.

With a thimble on one finger, Shaar, 38, cuts, sews and carefully assembles the pieces of the conical, flat-topped felt hat also known as a fez, attaching a tassel to the top.

Reputedly the last tarboosh craftsman in Lebanon, the Tripoli native has been making the hats for 25 years in know-how passed on by his grandfather.

“Our family has been carrying on this craft for 125 years,” said Shaar, who also studied tarboosh making in Egypt.

The brimless hats made with maroon, black or green felt, some bearing floral motifs or embroidered with Lebanon’s national emblem, the cedar, sit on display in the small workshop.

While the tarboosh has been around in Lebanon for several centuries, it became particularly common during the late Ottoman period.

“The tarboosh used to have great value — it was part of day-to-day dress, and the Lebanese were proud of it,” Shaar said, noting the hat now is largely seen as a traditional item or appealing to tourists.

“Nowadays, people barely wear the tarboosh, except for traditional events,” he said.

As well as a onetime symbol of prestige or social status, the hat was used for non-verbal communication, Shaar said.

“When a man wanted to woo a beautiful young woman, he used to slightly tip his tarboosh to the left or right,” he said, while knocking someone’s tarboosh off was offensive.

As successive crises have hit Lebanon, including a catastrophic 2020 port explosion in Beirut and a recent war between Israel and Hezbollah, tourism has diminished.

Shaar said his “work has slowed, and demand for the tarboosh has dropped” as a result.

Sales have plummeted to just four or five of his handmade hats a month compared to around 50 before the crisis, he said.

Recent customers have mainly been music and dance troops, or religious figures who wear the tarboosh covered with a turban.

Shaar said he used to employ three others but now works alone, selling his handmade hats for around $30.

But he said he wasn’t about to close up shop or abandon his passion for tarboosh making.

“I feel like my soul is linked to this craft. I don’t want to shut or to stop working,” he said.