Pakistan points fingers in Bin Laden's demise - Five men are finally able to escape a bunch of really angry tigers - A country music legend faces a medical ordeal - And why are some Japanese companies afraid of the internet?

Pakistan’s official report into the killing of Osama Bin Laden blames the negligence and incompetence of the country’s intelligence service for allowing the terrorist leader to reside there for years, undetected.  US Navy Seals killed Bin Laden in May of 2011 in his Pakistan home after a nearly decade-long hunt.  The report also lambastes the US for acting “like a criminal thug” in taking out Bin Laden without first consulting the Pakistani government.

Five men are on their way to safety after spending several days trapped in trees and surrounded by angry Sumatran Tigers.  Rescuers including police officers reached Mount Leuser National Park on Sumatra Island in Indonesia to help the men and drive off the beasts.  Last week, one of their deer traps snagged and killed a baby tiger, whose cries drew other tigers from the jungle.  And they were not happy.  One of the tigers killed a sixth member of the group early in the ordeal.

The UK is banning membership in two terrorist organizations.  Officials accuse the UK-based Minbar Ansar Deen of promoting terrorism through its website.  And Boko Haram is the Islamist militant group implicated in the massacre of dozens of children and teachers at a school in northern Nigeria, and dozens of kidnappings in the region.  Help those groups in the UK, and face serious charges.

The air brakes on that runaway oil train which devastated a Canadian town had been disabled by firefighters who put out a fire on one of the engines just 90 minutes before the disaster.  That train rolled uncontrolled down an 8-mile slope, until it derailed and the oil tanker cars exploded.  The death toll in the town of Lac-Megantic, Quebec is now up to 13 lives lost, with 40 people still unaccounted for.  And officials fear many of the missing were incinerated by the exploding crude oil tanker cars that burned down half the town. 

The pilot of Asiana Airlines Flight 214 was on a training flight when it clipped the sea wall at San Francisco International Airport, lost its tail, and crashed and burned.  The veteran had 10,000 hours flying other planes, but only 43 hours at the controls of a 777, and none landing a 777 at San Francisco.  Two teen passengers were killed and dozens more are recovering from injuries ranging from slight to critical.  Local officials are investigating if one of the teens had actually survived the crash, only to be run over and killed by an emergency vehicle rushing down the runway to help the more than 300 passengers and crew who lived through the crash.

Legendary old school country music singer Randy Travis is hospitalized in Texas, said to be in critical condition with a viral infection attacking his heart.  Viral cardiomyopathy is a disorder that allows an infection to slow the heart rate and in some cases, stop it.  Travis had a string of hits in the 1980s including “1982”, “On the Other Hand”, and “Forever and Ever, Amen”.  He staged a comeback in the last decade by switching to gospel music. 

Japanese commercial TV networks are refusing to air the commercial for Panasonic’s latest television, and there’s growing speculation they feel threatened by its combined TV-Internet function.  Although Japan has a reputation as a technology leader, there’s something about the Internet that some Japanese companies have not been quick to embrace.  The networks claim the split screen functions might confuse viewers.  But this didn’t confuse viewers, nor this or this or this.  Or this.  Or most of these somehow did not confuse the folks.