Less goldcrests, more firecrests in Britain


Firecrest

From Wildlife Extra, about Britain and Ireland :

Goldcrests numbers crash while Firecrests thrive

16/12/2009 08:51:53 Mixed fortunes for crests

Goldcrests and Firecrests have experienced very mixed fortunes this autumn.

Goldcrests – Very low numbers

Several Bird Observatories have reported a distinct lack of Goldcrests, backed up by anecdotal reports from many birders. The apparent population crash is reflected by the BirdTrack reporting rate which shows that they have featured on less than half the complete lists than normal for this time of year. Last winter was the coldest for 12 years and the very low temperatures both here and in Scandinavia seem the most likely cause for the decline.

Firecrests – Population boom

In contrast, it has been an excellent autumn for Firecrests. During September, October and November there were 23% more reports on BirdGuides than 2008. The difference between the two crests’ fortunes is probably attributable to the more southerly distribution of Firecrest, meaning that a smaller proportion of the population suffered the effects of the exceptionally cold winter 2008/09.

Birdtrack Goldcrest report.

Birdtrack Firecrest report.

‘Mayor’ Karzai defends convicted corrupt Mayor Sayebi


This video is called The Corrupt Government of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan.

Officially, Hamid Karzai is president of Afghanistan; however, he is popularly known as “the mayor of Kabul”. Though there is an official mayor of Kabul: recently convicted for corruption.

From Reuters:

Karzai backs accused officials

Published: Wednesday, December 16, 2009

KABUL – Opening a three-day anti-corruption conference, Hamid Karzai, the Afghan President, defended the most senior of his officials to be convicted of graft in years.

The President spoke at length about the bribes ordinary Afghans are forced to pay and rebuked officials who “after one or two years work for the government, get rich and buy houses in Dubai.”

However, he also cast doubt on the biggest anticorruption conviction his prosecutors have achieved in years.

Abdul Ahad Sayebi [spelled Sahebi by the BBC] , the Kabul Mayor and a Karzai appointee, was sentenced to four years in prison last week for corruption.

He is now free on bail, pending an appeal, and attended the conference, sitting toward the front.

“One very serious caution I want to say,” Mr. Karzai said.

“The mayor of Kabul has been sentenced to four years jail. I know the mayor. He is a clean person. I know him.”

He said Sayebi had been targeted by enemies for refusing to grant them government land, then gestured to his chief justice and attorney general demanding they look into the case, although he also said Sayebi should still go to jail if guilty.

Mr. Karzai’s standing among the countries that have deployed nearly 110,000 troops to defend his government has plunged since he was re-elected Aug. 20. A UN backed probe found nearly a third of his votes were fake.

Norwegian diplomat Kai Eide, the UN envoy to Afghanistan, will step down from his post at the end of his term in March. Eide has been widely criticised for his overseeing of the highly controversial elections that took place in August that were mired by fraud and alleged corruption: here.

Following new revelations about the criminal character of the German army attack in Kunduz [in Afghanistan], German Defence Minister Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg has gone on the offensive: here.

United States animal trade scandal


This video is called Save the wild chinchillas.

From Associated Press:

20,000 exotic animals found at shipping company in Texas

Published: December 16, 2009

Chinchillas are among the thousands of animals confiscated Tuesday from U.S. Global Exotics in Arlington, Texas. Starving snakes, dead rodents and hundreds of reptiles packed in shipping crates were discovered when animal welfare groups in Texas raided an exotic animal delivery company, officials said.

ARLINGTON, Texas – A raid on an exotic animal delivery company in Texas found starving snakes, hundreds of reptiles packed in shipping crates and rodents that had killed and eaten each other, officials said.

Dozens of people with the city of Arlington and animal welfare groups took inventory Tuesday of the animals — estimated at 20,000 — and removed them from the U.S. Global Exotics during the raid. The Arlington-based company, which advertises that it delivers exotic animals worldwide, did not respond to a telephone message seeking comment and its Web site was down on Wednesday.

“Sometimes animals die, but the amount of animals dead far exceeded what you would normally see at any company like this,” said Jay Sabatucci, manager of animal services with the city of Arlington. “Animals were not fed, not fed properly, overcrowded and attacking each other. Some were in an environment not proper for them, such as snakes in a 72-degree room with a lamp over them, which is not enough heat and could cause them to die.”

The company’s warehouse held mostly reptiles and rodents and also spiders, sloths and hedgehogs, but it was unclear how many were dead, said Maura Davies, a spokeswoman with the SPCA of Texas. Veterinarians treated the most severely malnourished animals, she said.

Hundreds of rodents were crammed in small containers covered with wire, and many had killed and eaten each other, Davies said. Other animals were kept in feeding troughs, and there were numerous stacked shipping containers still holding turtles and other reptiles that had been sent to the company, Davies said. About 200 iguanas were in one small room, she said.

A hearing will be held within 10 days to determine if the animals will be returned to the company or stay in the care of the animal welfare groups, Sabatucci said. The city is considering filing criminal charges against the owner, he said.

The city was tipped off recently by federal officials who had executed a warrant for another violation and reported concerns about the animals’ conditions, Sabatucci said.

World’s worst endangered animal smuggling kingpin: here.

Monkeys, butterflies, turtles… how the pet trade’s greed is emptying south-east Asia’s forests: here.

Huge INTERPOL investigation into illegal wildlife trade across 18 countries: here.

Fast Fact Attack: Endangered Species No. 83 – The Long-tailed Chinchilla: here.

Atlantic pomfrets on Dutch beaches


Atlantic pomfret

From Dutch daily De Telegraaf:

Atlantic pomfrets wash up on West Frisian Islands

AMELAND – In recent weeks, on the beaches of Ameland and Terschelling dozens of Atlantic pomfrets have washed ashore. Dirk Visser of Rijkswaterstaat Ameland found in two weeks time, every day about ten specimens of this tropical fish. “A total of one hundred washed up on Ameland and about eighty on Terschelling,” Visser said.

The Atlantic pomfret, officially “Brama brama”, is especially common in the Atlantic Ocean. The animal can be one meter long. The fish owes his nickname in Dutch, zilvervis, to the “beautiful silver color,” according to Visser. The specimens which he finds are about 40 centimeter long.

According to him, every now and then, the fish reach the North Sea. “As they get cold, they come straight into the surf. Then they get pecked to death by seagulls. “They just leave the skin. That’s for the crows which come later.”

The Atlantic pomfrets are often still in good health as they arrive on the islands. “Until they get pecked to death.”

Visser does not expect many more Atlantic pomfrets will beach on the islands. “It is really colder now. So I do not think many more will come.”

Jeppesen Dataplan torture flights lawsuit


This video from the USA is called ACLU Challenges Jeppesen Dataplan and CIA Rendition.

From the San Francisco Chronicle in the USA:

Torture suit too hot to be heard, U.S. says

Bob Egelko, Chronicle Staff Writer

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

PST SAN FRANCISCO — A lawsuit accusing a Bay Area flight-planning company of aiding an alleged CIA program of kidnapping and torturing terror suspects threatens national security and is too sensitive to discuss fully in a public courtroom, an Obama administration attorney argued Tuesday.

“The case cannot proceed without getting into state secrets,” Justice Department lawyer Douglas Letter told an 11-judge panel of the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco.

Several judges noted that most of the essential facts of the case have been widely aired – the existence of the “extraordinary rendition” program under President George W. Bush, the five plaintiffs’ accounts of their abduction and torture, and the alleged participation by Jeppesen Dataplan of San Jose – and asked why the case is too sensitive for the courts to hear.

Letter said he could reply only in a closed session. For the record, he said, “the U.S. government will not confirm or deny any relationship with Jeppesen.”

The court met privately with Letter after the one-hour public hearing, a practice that the plaintiffs’ lawyer, Ben Wizner of the American Civil Liberties Union, described as common in cases involving government claims of secrecy.

During the public session, Wizner accused the administration of trying to cover up wrongdoing.

The CIA has engaged in kidnapping and torture and declared its crimes state secrets,” he said. Dismissing the suit without deciding whether the plaintiffs’ rights were violated, he said, would be “dangerous to democracy.”

Omar Deghayes confirms allegations of British collusion in secret detention and rendition: here.

Obama Nobel prize cartoons


Obama Nobel prize, cartoon by Mikhaela

This cartoon is from the blog of Mikhaela in the USA:

I wasn’t planning to do two “Obama is a Mean Old Warmonger” cartoons in a row but come on… accepting the Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo with a speech about how war IS peace? Dude was asking for it…

Mikhaela’s other recent cartoon about this is here.

Obama and escalation in Afghanistan, cartoon by Mikhaela

The first in a two-part series examining the significance of US President Obama’s Nobel Prize speech and his repudiation of Nuremberg principles, in the context of the history and development of international law: here. Part 2 is here.

EX-NOBEL DIRECTOR: OBAMA PEACE PRIZE DIDN’T HAVE DESIRED EFFECT “Geir Lundestad, long-time director of the Nobel Institute and secretary of the Nobel Peace Prize committee, has commented publicly on the decision. In ‘Secretary of Peace, 25 years With The Nobel Prize,’ a new memoir released on Thursday, he said Obama’s award ‘failed to live up to the panel’s expectations … In hindsight, we could say that the argument of giving Obama a helping hand was only partially correct,’ Lundestad wrote.” [Dominique Mosbergen, HuffPost]

Alan Grayson: Afghan War ‘Futile’: here.

Waterbirds in winter


Small canals are already frozen. However, today there is no ice on the river Rhine yet.

If the frost continues, the river will freeze; with only a few spots of water kept open by swimming birds.

Today, a great cormorant, a mute swan, and mallards. A herring gull sitting on a bridge.

This video says about itself:

A black swan and a mute swan both shake their wings out one after the other, conviniently illustrating the difference between the species. Filmed in Cambridge.

Tiger Woods, money and media hysteria


This video is called Tiger Woods’ winning highlights from the 2018 TOUR Championship.

By David Walsh in the USA:

The Tiger Woods episode: Money, the media, and the “path to redemption”

16 December 2009

The American media is generally full of rubbish, but more rubbish has been written and broadcast about Tiger Woods and his affairs than any other subject in some time. This episode brings together many of the most deplorable elements that dominate official public life in the US at present: money, celebrity, official piety, and media prurience.

The revelation that Woods, the world’s leading golfer and one of its most prominent sports figures, has had numerous lovers is nobody’s business but his own, his wife’s and the people immediately around them. How they sort that out is a purely personal matter. Woods hasn’t committed any crimes, and the relentless media attention is reprehensible. All the arguments of tabloid journalists to the effect that “celebrities” forfeit their right to privacy is self-serving nonsense.

The issue has garnered so much coverage for several reasons, Woods’ enormous skill with a golf club probably being, in the immediate sense, one of the less significant ones. Of course, without that ability the financial interests currently bound up with his brand name would not exist, but whether he can hit a golf ball longer or more accurately than his rivals is not the issue at present.

“Tiger Woods” has existed for a number of years not as an independent human personality, but as a commodity, portions of which have been purchased by various concerns. Nike owns one part, Procter & Gamble (Gillette) owns another, PepsiCo (Gatorade) still another, AT&T owns a fifth slice, and so on. The Professional Golfers Association (PGA) Tour, the sports media, the television networks, of course, have bought their own pounds of flesh.

Woods has enriched himself over the past decade—some estimates put his total earnings at over $1 billion (most of that in product endorsements)—but these various commercial interests have taken in vastly more than that.