-
French hard left reports 'bomb threat' after far-right activist killing
-
Gabon cuts off Facebook, TikTok after protests
-
India celebrates birth of cheetah cubs to boost reintroduction bid
-
Greek taxis kick off two-day strike against private operators
-
Turkey MPs back moves to 'reintegrate' former PKK fighters
-
Sri Lanka unfazed by England whitewash ahead of Super Eights clash
-
Shiffrin primed for Olympic gold after rapid first slalom run
-
Dog gives Olympics organisers paws for thought
-
South Africa fire Super Eights warning to India with UAE romp
-
Ukraine war talks resume in Geneva after 'tense' first day
-
US tech giant Nvidia announces India deals at AI summit
-
US comedian Colbert says broadcaster spiked Democrat interview over Trump fears
-
Kenyan activist fears for life after police bug phone
-
Isabelle Huppert sinks teeth into Austrian vampire saga
-
Peru to elect interim leader after graft scandal ousts president
-
French designer threads a path in London fashion week
-
Hungarian star composer Kurtag celebrates 100th birthday with new opera
-
Congolese rumba, music caught between neglect and nostalgia
-
'Close our eyes': To escape war, Muscovites flock to high culture
-
Denmark king visits Greenland
-
Uncut gems: Indian startups embrace AI despite job fears
-
Ukraine war talks to resume in Geneva as US signals progress
-
Harrop eyes 'Skimo' gold in sport's Olympic debut
-
Junk to high-tech: India bets on e-waste for critical minerals
-
Struggling farmers find hope in India co-operative
-
How Latin American countries are responding to Cuba's oil crisis
-
Philippines VP Sara Duterte announces 2028 presidential run
-
Asian stocks up, oil market cautious
-
Peru Congress impeaches interim president after four months in office
-
Hungry, wounded, orphaned: South Sudan's children trapped in new conflict
-
UK manufacturers struggle under sky-high energy bills
-
New tech and AI set to take athlete data business to next level
-
'Pay or he dies', families told as more Egyptians risk Mediterranean crossing
-
Indonesia coal plant closure U-turn sows energy transition doubts
-
Ukraine war talks to resume in Geneva with no sign of progress
-
Afghan woman's boutique brightens Bamiyan
-
Zuckerberg to testify in landmark social media addiction trial
-
US towns resist Trump plans to jail immigrants in warehouses
-
Ten skiers missing in California avalanche
-
Guatemalan security forces deploy to gang-plagued capital
-
US to discuss base with Mauritius as UK returns islands
-
Mexico prepares for possible drone threats during the World Cup
-
The Numbers are Clear: Latest Iteration of Stagwell's News Advertising Study Shows Germans Love Their News
-
SMX's Low Float Infrastructure Story: After Gold's Record Price This Year, Could This Be a Path Back to Prior Highs?
-
Apex Strengthens Executive Management Team
-
Nano One Provides Corporate Update
-
From Gold to Rare Earths to Digital Assets: How SMX is Redefining Trust Across Industries
-
Your Cannabis Has a Passport: SMX Tracks It End-to-End
-
InterContinental Hotels Group PLC Announces Transaction in Own Shares - February 18
-
Luxury Needs Proof, Not Promises: How SMX Stops Scams Before They Start
'Second time I've died': Nobel laureate Jelinek denies death reports
Austrian Nobel Prize winner Elfriede Jelinek told AFP on Tuesday that she was alive and well, after German-speaking media reported a fake announcement that the writer had died.
"Again? This is the second time I've died. It already happened last year. But I'm alive," the 78-year-old writer told AFP.
Jelinek, one of the most widely read and studied authors in the German language, won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2004.
The false announcement came from an account on social media platform X posing as the Austrian subsidiary of Germany's Rowohlt publishing house.
The information was picked up and published by Austrian and German media outlets.
Rowohlt rebuffed the announcement on its official social media and the fake X account later posted a message confirming it had been a hoax.
"This account is (a) hoax created by Italian journalist Tommasso Debenedetti," the account posted.
The name has been used for years in connection with pranks spreading false information online.
Politicians have also been fooled by pranks apparently carried out by the same person.
An Austrian lawmaker requested a minute's silence during a parliamentary meeting in 2022 as a tribute to former Chancellor Franz Vranitzky, who had been declared dead by Debenedetti.
Jelinek is best known for her 1983 novel "The Piano Teacher", about a woman whose quest for self-mutilation and sado-masochim destroys her romance with a young student.
The book was made into an award-winning film in 2001 and won Jelinek fame outside the German-speaking world.
J.Williams--AMWN