Jacques Clemens, who celebrated his 105th birthday on July 11, may be the oldest living priest who still holds regular services according to the Belgian Catholic Church. When Clemens was about to retire at 75, the local bishop asked him to remain in service until they found a successor. Decades later, Clemens is still in his job and nobody is there to succeed him. Clemens was born in The Hague in 1909 and later moved to Belgium where he became a priest in 1936. In the image above, he holds up a photograph taken on the day of his ordination. Seventy-eight years on, he is still performing his priestly duties, holding a regular mass in his parish in the southern Belgian village of Nalinnes. Before the church where he currently works was constructed, Clemens had performed mass in some less conventional facilities. "I used to make the service in a barn and in a cellar before the St. Benoit church was built in 1957," he said. Waking up every day at 5:30 a.m. and going to bed at 9 p.m., Clemens believes he owes his long life to a strict routine. He said he was happy to continue as a priest as long as his health permitted it. Father Jacques Clemens prays with members of his congregation in the village of Gerpinnes. Clemens stands at St. Benoit church, where he regularly holds mass. The priest sits and waits before the start of a service. He stands by his lectern during the service. The church is reflected in the surface of a cup as he holds it up. according to the world’s oldest priest who will celebrate his 107th birthday on Monday who has also celebrated his 80th anniversary as a Catholic priest gets up every morning at 5.30 and goes to bed at 9 his bishop asked him to remain in service until they found a successor — he only stopped holding regular church services at his parish last year ‘Sultan’ earns Rs 15 cr in Pak in five days Lahore: Bollywood superstar Salman Khan-starrer "Sultan" has earned Rs 150 million ( Rs 15 crore) on the first five days of its release setting a new record of doing the best business on Eid days the distributors of "Sultan" in Pakistan the film directed by Ali Abbas Zafar has eclipsed the opening weekend record set by Pakistani movie "Jawani Phir Nahi Ani" on Eidul Azha last year One advantage 'Sultan' had over previous films was that it was released over a five-day weekend because of Eid holidays Two of the major casualties of Sultan's onslaught were Hollywood animated film “Finding Dory” and the Pakistani heist-film — “Sawaal 700 Crore Dollar Ka” Inmates break out of jail cell to save guard           Houston: Eight handcuffed inmates busted out of their jail cell and saved the life of a guard having a heart attack The only guard posted next to the cell had been cracking jokes with them when he collapsed due to a cardiac arrest one of them managed to break the cell door open called emergency services and the guard was brought back to life 30?"green-strip-scroll":""}">\n ${e.display_status||e.scheduleTime}\n 30?"green-strip-scroll":""}">\n ${e.display_status+" It was started by Sardar Dyal Singh Majithia and is run by a trust comprising five eminent persons as trustees.The Tribune the largest selling English daily in North India publishes news and views without any bias or prejudice of any kind rather than agitational language and partisanship It is an independent newspaper in the real sense of the term.The Tribune has two sister publications Punjabi Tribune (in Punjabi) and Dainik Tribune (in Hindi) Remembering Sardar Dyal Singh Majithia A nine-year-old boy was forcibly restrained by a police officer at a special education primary school in southern Belgium The incident took place Tuesday in the city of Nalinnes when police were called to the school to "calm down a 9-year-old child who was being difficult," The Brussels Times reported Video footage filmed by the boy’s mother shows a police officer restraining him on the ground "The management restrained him initially before calling in our services The child was difficult and the mother was not responding to calls from the school," said Commanding Officer of the Germinalt police zone Alain Bal The mother said she received an urgent call to pick up her son from school and when she arrived saying “I had the image of George Floyd in my mind.” who kneeled on his neck for nearly 10 minutes until he died The mother added that her son had suffered a nervous breakdown because he was exposed to racist insults from a student who called him "a dirty Black." She said this happened for the second time in a week An investigation has been launched into the incident following the mother's complaint.