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British-born science fiction author Arthur C Clarke has died in hospital in Sri Lanka at the age of 90.
Clarke had been in and out of hospital since his 90th birthday in December and had breathing difficulties, his aide Rohan de Silva said.
"Sir Arthur passed away a short while ago at the Apollo Hospital," Mr de Silva said.
Clarke, who foresaw communication satellites in 1945, wrote more than 80 books.
He was most famous for his novel 2001: A Space Odyssey, which was made in to a film by controversial director Stanley Kubrick.
Clarke was Sri Lanka's best-known resident guest and has a scientific academy named after him.
His valet, WKM Dharmawardena, said funeral arrangements would be finalised after his family returned to Sri Lanka from Australia.
Mr Dharmawardena said Clarke's condition began to deteriorate in recent weeks and he had been in hospital for the past four days.
Prayer for peace
Clarke marked his birthday on December 16 wishing for peace in his adopted home of Sri Lanka, where he has lived for the past five decades. He ran a diving school there that was affected by the December 2004 tsunami.
Clarke blew out a single candle on his cake to mark his birthday, which was celebrated at the Central Bank of Sri Lanka building within Colombo's high security zone.
Sri Lanka's President Mahinda Rajapakse joined the government-organised festivities.
The author said he had sadly watched - for close to half his lifetime - a bitter ethnic conflict tearing up Sri Lanka.
"I dearly wish to see lasting peace established in Sri Lanka as soon as possible," he said, referring to Asia's longest-running war in which the Tamil Tigers' campaign for an independent homeland has left tens of thousands dead.
Although the conflict started in 1972, fighting has been escalating since late 2005, when a Nordic-brokered truce unravelled.
"But I'm aware that peace cannot just be wished - it requires a great deal of hard work, courage and persistence," he said in a taped message.
Clarke also wished for evidence of extra-terrestrial life and for the world to adopt cleaner fuels on his birthday.
He said he did not feel "a day older than 89" as he completed "90 orbits around the sun."
"I have no regrets and no more personal ambitions," the writer said, who was confined for the past three decades to a wheelchair because of the effects of childhood polio.
- AFP
Electron wrote:sledge your comments are like a fat chick raping a hot dog, its unpleasent to watch but in the end its gonna happen
Mr O wrote:I'm part Irish, part Scottish, very Welsh, mostly drunk, somewhat Transformers nerd and all bastard.
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