Saturday, April 3, 2010

US girl sues for $1m over arrest for desk scribble

US girl sues for $1m over arrest for desk scribble

New York police car, file pic
Alexa Gonzalez was led out of her school in handcuffs by police

A 12-year-old US schoolgirl is suing the New York City authorities for $1m ($650,000) in damages after she was arrested for writing on her desk.

Alexa Gonzalez was led out of her school in handcuffs by police after she was caught scribbling a message to her friends with an erasable, green marker.

Miss Gonzalez and her mother are suing the police and education departments in New York City.

They are claiming for excessive use of force and violation of her rights.

Miss Gonzalez was caught scribbling "I love my friends Abby and Faith" on her desk during a Spanish class in February.

The 12-year-old said her Spanish teacher then "dragged" her to the dean's office where police were called.

'Better judgement'

Miss Gonzalez told the New York Daily News she broke down as she was led out of Junior High School 190 in Queens in handcuffs.

"I started crying, like, a lot," she said. "I made two little doodles... It could be easily erased. To put handcuffs on me is unnecessary."

We want to stop this from happening to other young children in the future
Joseph Rosenthal,
Gonzalez family lawyer

She said she was then held at a local school precinct for hours in what she calls a traumatising and excessive ordeal.

New York City officials have acknowledged the arrest was a mistake, saying better judgement should have been used by the arresting officers.

Miss Gonzalez was suspended from school and tried in a family court, where she was given eight hours of community service and ordered to write an essay about lessons to be learned from the incident.

Her family's lawyer said the school had overreacted by calling the police.

"We want to stop this from happening to other young children in the future," the lawyer, Joseph Rosenthal, told the New York Daily News.

Source

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Commentary

What a horrible thing to do to a 12 year old.

An easily erasable mark on a desk does not deserve 8 hours of community service, and an arrest.

I would sue for as much as the legal maximum, to punish the police force for such use of brutality and such heinous injustice.

US Treasury delays China currency report

US Treasury delays China currency report

By Madeleine Morris
BBC News, Washington

Stacks of 100 yuan notes
The US says an undervalued yuan damages its economy

The US Treasury is delaying by several months a report on whether China manipulates its currency, the yuan.

Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner said he would delay the report, which was due out on 15 April, until after a series of high-level international meetings.

The decision may improve US relations with China but could upset some American lawmakers.

It is no secret that the US believes China keeps the yuan artificially low, harming the US economy.

But saying that in an official report is a different matter.

It would set off a chain of events that could eventually result in unilateral US sanctions against Chinese products and could damage relations between the two countries.

Pressure on Iran

Mr Geithner justified pushing back his report to the US Congress by saying he would use upcoming events, including a G20 meeting and a US-China summit, to try to encourage the communist superpower to change its currency position.

Branding China as a currency manipulator at this stage would cause headaches for the US administration.

Chinese President Hu Jintao is due in Washington later this month for a nuclear summit, and the US is expected to push hard to sign China up to sanctions against Iran over Tehran's nuclear programme.

But the US government is under pressure from its own lawmakers to take a tougher line on China's currency.

A number of members of the US Congress believe the low yuan - which has been pegged to the dollar for nearly two years - is directly affecting their local economies.

Source

Scrap dealer who accidentally set off the Falklands War

Scrap dealer who accidentally set off the Falklands War

Daniel Schweimler
BBC News, Buenos Aires

While Britain has been involved in a number of conflicts since the Falklands War 28 years ago, it remains Argentina's only war in more than 100 years. Its defeat - and the issue of the island's sovereignty - continues to dominate on both a national and a personal level.

Constantino Davidoff
A war could have been avoided
Constantino Davidoff, scrap dealer

Constantino Davidoff played a small but significant role in a small but significant war.

At the end of March 1982, a party of Argentine scrap metal merchants landed on the distant and inhospitable South Georgia island - 900km (600 miles) east of the Falkland Islands.

He was the owner of a company contracted to dismantle a whaling station on the British-owned island.

It was a simple business deal that promised to make him a lot of money - but ended up provoking a war and ruining his life.

I meet Mr Davidoff at his small, neat apartment in the working class Avellaneda neighbourhood, just south of Buenos Aires.

He still deals in scrap metal from a garage below his home. He is in his late 60s now, wearing a cream-coloured safari suit and dangling a large gold cross around his neck.

His walls are covered in maps of the South Atlantic and framed letters of thanks from Argentine veterans' groups he has spoken to about his experience.

"I lost everything - my house, my planes, my boats, my company and eventually, my family. I simply couldn't defend my interests after the war. I was very sick," Mr Davidoff tells me.

Military invasion

He has been trying to sue the British government for $200m (£132m), but the Argentine courts, he explains, are slow and only told him a couple of years ago that he would have to pursue his claim through the international courts.

He told me he had done everything he could to avoid problems with the British authorities.

Map showing the Falkland Islands and South Georgia island

At the end of 1981, he visited the British ambassador in Buenos Aires, spoke to the Falkland Island authorities, signed a deal worth $270,000 (£180,000) with the Scottish owners of the derelict whaling station and then went back to the British ambassador to ask if there was anything else he might need to do.

His claims are confirmed by the 1983 Franks Committee report carried out by the British authorities into the events leading up to the conflict.

But some in London thought the scrap metal workers were the advance party of an invasion of South Georgia island, by the then ruthless Argentine military government.

It was reported that they had planted the Argentine flag and were singing their national anthem.

British Royal Marines were despatched from the Falkland Islands to find out.

The 39 scrap metal workers were detained. Argentina sent its troops to rescue them and, while they were about it, invaded the Falkland Islands.

War declared

Margaret Thatcher, the British Prime Minister at the time, had no hesitation in dispatching a task force to the South Atlantic, and the two previously friendly countries fought a war in which more than 900 people died before Argentina surrendered on 14 June.

Britain won the military battle but is losing the diplomatic war... When the truth is known, then we'll have justice
Constantino Davidoff

"There were no military among my workers. And they didn't sing the national anthem or plant a flag. This was a business deal. I'd have been crazy to ruin it. All it needed was a phone call from the British embassy and I would have withdrawn my workers. I'd have cancelled the contract," Mr Davidoff says. "A war could have been avoided."

Mr Davidoff insists that Britain started the war by sending a military contingent to deal with a civilian matter.

He says though, that, despite his legal claim, he doesn't bear any ill-will towards the British people.

But like every Argentine I've met in the more than four years that I've lived here, and the 20 or so that I've been visiting, he firmly believes that "Las Malvinas son Argentinas" - the Malvinas are Argentine.

Constant theme

Britain is now drilling for oil in the waters near the islands. But it is not the oil or the fishing rights that upset most Argentines - it is a somewhat idealistic sense of justice.

Argentina has been claiming the Falkland islands, or Las Islas Malvinas as they call them, since 1833.

Ice-cream parlour in Argentina with the name Las Malvinas meaning  Falkland Islands
More than 700 Argentines were killed fighting for Las Malvinas - the Falklands

They are marked as Argentine territory in every school atlas. Streets and ice-cream parlours are named after them and there are monuments to the fallen all over the country. For Argentina, it is a constant theme.

For most in Britain, the Falklands War is an historical footnote. And London will not negotiate while the 2,000 or so islanders say they want to remain British.

"Britain won the military battle but is losing the diplomatic war," explains Mr Davidoff.

In February, Latin American and Caribbean nations voted unanimously to back Argentina's claim, while Buenos Aires has renewed its complaint to the United Nations.

The scrap metal merchant believes that in his lifetime, he will see Argentina's sky-blue and white flag flying over the islands, perhaps in a power-sharing deal with Britain.

"Argentina has so much to give the islands. The war didn't end when the white flag went up," says Constantino Davidoff, leafing through the documents on his dining room table. "I believe in truth and justice. When the truth is known, then we'll have justice."

Source

Afghanistan Mullahs in London to bridge cultural divide

Afghanistan Mullahs in London to bridge cultural divide

Emily Buchanan
BBC News world affairs correspondent

Haji Mulla Meherdell Kajar
Hajji Meherdell is against premature withdrawal of British forces

Their faces etched from years of conflict in the war-torn deserts of Helmand Province, four senior Islamic scholars step into a pod on the London Eye.

As the giant wheel turns they stare in silence at the city spread beneath them; the River Thames, the Houses of Parliament and miles beyond.

It is their first time ever in Britain. As they soak up the sights, they know this visit is about much more than tourism.

It marks a new initiative in British government strategy; the recognition that military progress in southern Afghanistan will not hold unless international forces also win the battle for hearts and minds.

In the intense propaganda war on the ground, the Foreign and Commonwealth Office now hopes to improve communication with ordinary Afghans by targeting their religious leaders.

Massive influence

Officials invited these scholars to see life for themselves in the UK, as they have the unique ability to influence thousands of mosques and their congregations in Britain's key military campaign ground.

Across Afghanistan there is widespread ignorance and deliberate misinformation about Britain and Britain's military intentions.

Ordinary people will listen to religious scholars often before politicians. The Taliban uses its religious credentials to tell local people repeatedly that the British are an occupying force which wants to destroy Muslims and their faith.

We have found true Islam in this country, a peaceful tolerant society
Haji Mulla Meherdell Kajar

The four scholars, or ulemas, are supporters of the Afghan government and defy the Taliban, themselves often suffering death threats. They view the Taliban as an arm of foreign powers in the region who want to keep Afghanistan weak, and they are adamant they do not see Britain and its allies as occupiers.

Haji Mulla Meherdell Kajar, chief imam of the Central Mosque in Lashkar Gah, says the foreign forces are doing what they can to help Afghanistan and are making huge sacrifices in the process.

"The propaganda says that the invaders want to destroy us, and illiterate people listen to the propaganda. But these forces were invited in to help overcome our problems."

He was amazed to hear from the BBC that some British Muslims want the international forces to pull out. Hajji Meherdell was emphatically against a premature withdrawal.

False beliefs

"Those Muslim brothers who say Britain should leave Afghanistan - they don't know Islam. Don't they know our whole country is at war? They should advise the British not to withdraw their forces until they bring stability, security and development to us, and then they can go."

What surprised the scholars most, though, was to find Muslims in every walk of life in Britain.

Whether meeting them in the Foreign Office, or as security guards on the London Eye, they had not known before that Muslims had jobs. They believed that Muslims were treated badly and not allowed to practise their religion.

Haji Mokhtar Aqqani
Haji Mokhtar Aqqani is the most senior religious figure in Helmand

They were particularly taken aback by the Afghan mosque in north-west London. They watched as several hundred turned up to pray.

Haji Mokhtar Aqqani, the most senior religious figure in Helmand, addressed the congregation. In Afghanistan he has spoken out against the Taliban, delivered radio messages condemning suicide bombings, and issued a fatwa against the growing of poppies. However even he still thought that Muslims in the UK could not go to the mosque.

After prayers, he told the BBC: "People in Helmand say that in Britain there are no mosques and no freedom to worship, so I was really surprised to see so many people come and pray here freely. I will take that message back home."

The scholars went to other mosques too in Birmingham and London.

Small cost, big dividend?

By the end of the trip, Haji Meherdell concluded: "We have found true Islam in this country, a peaceful tolerant society where Muslims are not harmed, the opposite of what the Taliban and insurgents tell us."

The Foreign Office hopes that if the scholars can go back and influence opinion in Afghanistan it will not just help the security of Afghanistan, but it will disarm the arguments of those who want to recruit young jihadis to strike Britain.

If it proves successful, there could be more attempts to try and bridge the gulf in knowledge and understanding between the two cultures.

Exchanges with British imams could also influence how Muslims in Britain view the international operation.

However this battle progresses, at least it is cheap; the cost of the ulemas' tour being a tiny fraction of that of the military campaign.

Source

Thursday, April 1, 2010

Daimler agrees to pay $185m after admitting bribery

Daimler agrees to pay $185m after admitting bribery

Mercedes-Benz badge
Daimler is best known for its Mercedes-Benz brand

German carmaker Daimler has pleaded guilty to corruption in the US and will pay $185m (£121m) to settle the case.

The charges relate to US Justice Department and Securities and Exchange Commission investigations into the company's global sales practices.

Daimler, the owner of Mercedes-Benz, admitted to paying tens of millions of dollars of bribes to foreign government officials in at least 22 countries.

The company said it had now reformed the way it did business.

Offshore accounts

The offences were committed between 1998 and 2008 by Daimler's German-based exports subsidiary Export and Trade Finance, and its Russian business Mercedes-Benz Russia.

Dieter Zetsche
Today, we are a better and stronger company, and we will continue to do everything we can to maintain the highest compliance standards
Daimler chairman Dieter Zetsche

They were said to have given money and lavish gifts to help win contracts in countries including China, Russia, Thailand, Greece, and Iraq.

The Justice Department said that by "using offshore bank accounts, third-party agents and deceptive pricing practices, these companies saw foreign bribery as a way of doing business".

Daimler has since fired 45 employees implicated in the bribery.

The company's chairman Dieter Zetsche said the firm had "learned a lot from past experience".

"Today, we are a better and stronger company, and we will continue to do everything we can to maintain the highest compliance standards," he added.

'Deserves credit'

The case was heard in a federal court in Washington, where the presiding judge, Judge Richard Leon called the financial settlement a "just resolution".

Prosecutor John Darden added that Daimler had "showed excellent cooperation".

"The company has undertaken an effort to clean its own house," he added.

"That reflects a serious change of mind on part of Daimler. This deserves credit."

Daimler's agreement to pay $185m is broken down into $93.6m to end the US Justice Department investigation, and a payment of $91.4m to settle the civil case from the Securities and Exchange Commission, the US financial watchdog.

The company made a 2.6bn euros ($3.5bn; £2.3bn) loss last year.

Back in 2008, German industrial group Siemens paid $800m to settle a US investigation into bribes paid to government officials in Argentina, Bangladesh, Iraq and Venezuela.

Source

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Serbian MPs offer apology for Srebrenica massacre

Serbian MPs offer apology for Srebrenica massacre

Deputies debate a draft resolution in Belgrade
The vote was broadcast on live television and ending after midnight

Serbia's parliament has passed a landmark resolution apologising for the 1995 Srebrenica massacre - Europe's worst atrocity since World War II.

The motion, approved by a narrow majority, says Serbia should have done more to prevent the tragedy.

It stopped short of calling the Bosnian war killings a genocide.

The murder of nearly 8,000 Bosniaks (Bosnian Muslims) was carried out by Bosnian Serb forces - allies of then-Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic.

The massacre, in what was supposed to have been a UN safe haven, became a symbol for the atrocities of the Balkan wars.

Meanwhile, a Dutch court has rejected an attempt to hold the United Nations responsible for the killings.

Burden 'lifted'

The resolution - which the Serbian government sees as a crucial step in its attempts to join the European Union - was approved after almost 13 hours of heated negotiations in the Belgrade parliament.

AT THE SCENE
Mark Lowen
Mark Lowen, BBC News, Belgrade

It was passed with a majority of just two - highlighting how divisive the Srebrenica massacre remains in Serbia almost 15 years on.

The governing Democratic Party believes this resolution will go some way towards rebuilding Serbia's image as it strives for EU membership.

But for nationalists, the text reiterates what they see as an unfair demonisation of Serbs.

Survivors of Srebrenica say that real reconciliation can only be achieved if the fugitive general Ratko Mladic is finally apprehended.

The pro-Western governing coalition managed to pass the motion with a slim majority - 127 MPs voted in favour, out of a total of 250. Only 173 were present for the vote.

"The parliament of Serbia strongly condemns the crime committed against the Bosnian Muslim population of Srebrenica in July 1995," says the text.

It formally extends "condolences and an apology to the families of the victims because not everything was done to prevent the tragedy".

The head of the governing coalition's parliamentary group said during the debate that approval would help close a tragic chapter in Balkan history.

"Condemning the crime against the Bosniaks of Srebrenica, while paying respect to the innocent victims and offering condolences to their families, will lift the burden off future generations," Nada Kolundzija was quoted as saying by Serbia's B92 website.

But opposition deputies criticised the text, describing it as "shameful" for Serbia. Some nationalist politicians voted against, while others abstained in protest.

Velimir Ilic, an opposition MP, said: "Why do you want to put a mark on the future generations that they will never wash away?"

Serbian nationalists had argued that any resolution must also denounce crimes committed by Bosniaks and Croats during the 1992-95 war.

Mass grave near Srebrenica
Several mass graves have been discovered near Srebrenica

The BBC's Mark Lowen in Belgrade says the resolution comes after years of denial in Serbia that the Srebrenica massacre even took place.

The resolution has been criticised by Bosniaks and Muslims in Serbia because it does not describe the Srebrenica massacre as an act of genocide.

It has been recognised as such by the UN war crimes tribunal in The Hague.

Several Bosnian Serbs have been convicted over their role in the massacre, when Bosniak men and boys were taken from their families and shot dead. The town had been designated a UN "safe haven" under the protection of Dutch UN troops.

The Bosnian Serbs' wartime leader, Radovan Karadzic, is currently on trial in The Hague. The general accused of masterminding the killings, Ratko Mladic, is still on the run.

Lawyers for the victims' relatives have tried to hold the Dutch government and the UN accountable for failing to stop the massacre.

But on Tuesday, The Hague Appeals Court upheld a 2008 lower court ruling affirming UN immunity from prosecution, which it said was essential for it to be able to carry out its duties around the world.


Srebrenica massacre
13 - 17 July: Up to 8,000 Bosniak men and boys are killed at a number of execution sites around Srebrenica. Reports of the atrocities begin to surface on 16 July. Source: UN, ICTY.

Source

Ed Brayton Discusses Hutaree Militia on The Rachel Maddow Show



Commentary

Are these christian extremists? No of course not. We shouldn't say that.

They aren't even christian terrorists. They are just crazy people.

As I've said before, religion means nothing because there are extremists and crazy members of every religion. It's only Islamic people, who decide to go crazy and kill innocent people, that get labaled "Islamists" or "Islamic Terrorists".

I just hope one day we'll live in the world where one religion is not bashed because of the few people that are harmful within it.

That rule applies to bad jews and bad christians, but apparently not to bad muslims.

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Amnesty urges China to disclose execution figures

Amnesty urges China to disclose execution figures

Police lead convicted drug dealers to their execution, Hangzhou,  China (June 2004)
China says it executes fewer prisoners than it has done in the past

Rights group Amnesty International has urged China to disclose the number of prisoners it executes.

In its annual report on the use of the death penalty, Amnesty said some 714 people were known to have been executed in 18 countries in 2009.

But the group said the true global figure could be much higher, as thousands of executions were thought to have been carried out in China alone.

At least 366 people were executed in Iran, 120 in Iraq and 52 in the US.

Amnesty praised Burundi and Togo for abolishing the death penalty in 2009 and said that for the first time in modern history, no-one had been executed in Europe or the former Soviet Union over the year.

'Torture'

Beijing says it executes fewer people now than it has in the past, but has always maintained that details of its executions are a state secret.

However, Amnesty said that "evidence from previous years and a number of current sources indicates that the figure remains in the thousands".

WORLD EXECUTIONS 2009
Hangman in Iran (2007)
China: thousands suspected executed by injection and shooting
Iran: more than 366 executions, by hanging or stoning
Iraq: more than 120 executions by hanging
Saudi Arabia: at least 69 executions by beheading or crucifixion
US: 52 executions by lethal injection or electrocution

It said the death penalty could be applied to 68 offences in the country, including non-violent crimes, with executions carried out by lethal injection or firing squad.

Many people were sentenced based on confessions extracted under torture and having had limited access to legal counsel, it said.

"The Chinese authorities claim that fewer executions are taking place," said Amnesty's Interim Secretary General Claudio Cordone.

"If this is true, why won't they tell the world how many people the state put to death?"

Since 2007, all death sentences passed in China have been subject to a mandatory review by a higher court, a process China says has reduced the number of killings carried out.

"However, as long as statistics on the use of the death penalty in China remain a state secret, it will be impossible to verify this claim and to analyse actual trends," said Amnesty.

Of particular concern to Amnesty were cases of those executed after political unrest in Tibet and Xinjiang, people sentenced to death for financial fraud and a British man, Akmal Shaikh, executed for drug smuggling despite his lawyer's claims he was mentally ill.

"The time is long overdue for China to fall into line with international law and standards on the death penalty and be open and transparent regarding its use of capital punishment," it said.

Abolitionist trend

Amnesty said that by the end of 2009, there were 17,118 people on death row around the world, with 2,001 people sentenced that year.

But while 58 countries still had a death penalty in 2009, only 18 countries were known to have carried out executions.

Graph

It also said "commutations and pardons of death sentences appear to be more frequent" in countries which still pass death sentences, including more than 4,000 in Kenya in a mass commutation in August.

The group noted a sharp rise in executions in Iran in the eight weeks after political unrest following President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's election victory in June 2009.

Iran was also criticised, along with Saudi Arabia, for carrying out executions of people convicted of crimes they committed while under the age of 18.

Saudi Arabia was reported to have carried out executions "at an alarming rate", with at least 69 people publicly beheaded in 2009.

The report also highlighted an increasing abolitionist trend around the world in recent years.

Both Burundi and Togo outlawed the death penalty in 2009, becoming the 94th and 95th countries to do so.

"The world is in reach of 100 countries declaring their refusal to put people to death," said Amnesty.

The group repeated its assertion that the death penalty is cruel, an "affront to human dignity" and often used disproportionately against the poor and marginalised.

It said the secrecy surrounding state executions in many countries was "indefensible".

"If capital punishment is a legitimate act of government as these nations claim, there is no reason for its use to be hidden from the public and international scrutiny," it said.

Source

Minor delays in collider's quest

Minor delays in collider's quest

CMS detector
The CMS is one of four giant detectors at the Large Hadron Collider

The Large Hadron Collider is set to start the work that could lead to the discovery of fundamental new physics.

Scientists working on the European machine will attempt to smash beams of proton particles together at unprecedented energies.

On Tuesday morning, an abnormal electrical signal caused the inbuilt protection system to shut down the LHC.

Engineers are investigating the cause of this signal and hope to achieve the first collisions after 1230 BST.

The seven-trillion-electronvolt (TeV) collisions will initiate 18-24 months of intensive investigations at the LHC.

Scientists hope the study will bring novel insights into the nature of the cosmos and how it came into being.

But they caution that the data gathered from the sub-atomic impacts will take time to evaluate, and the public should not expect immediate results.

"Major discoveries will happen only when we are able to collect billions of events and identify among them the very rare events that could present a new state of matter or new particles," said Guido Tonelli, a spokesman for the CMS detector at the LHC.

"This is not going to happen tomorrow. It will require months and years of patient work," he told BBC News.

The LHC is one of the biggest scientific endeavours ever undertaken.

WHAT IS AN ELECTRON VOLT?
Particle interaction simulation (SPL)
Charged particles tend to speed up in an electric field, defined as an electric potential - or voltage - spread over a distance
One electron volt (eV) is the energy gained by a single electron as it accelerates through a potential of one volt
It is a convenient unit of measure for particle accelerators, which speed particles up through much higher electric potentials
The first accelerators only created bunches of particles with an energy of about a million eV (MeV)
The LHC can reach beam energies a million times higher: up to several teraelectronvolts (TeV)
This is still only the energy in the motion of a flying mosquito
But that energy is packed into a comparatively few particles, travelling at more than 99.99% of the speed of light

Housed in a 27km-long tunnel under the Franco-Swiss border near Geneva, the LHC will collide particles travelling at close to the speed of light.

The expectation is that previously unseen phenomena will reveal themselves in the debris. A key objective is to find the much talked-about Higgs boson particle.

This is thought to have a profound role in the structure of the Universe, and would enable scientists to explain why matter has mass - something which, at a fundamental level, they have difficulty doing at present.

The LHC broke down shortly after its opening in 2008 but, since coming back online late last year, has gradually been ramping up operations.

Two proton particle beams have been circling in opposite directions in the magnet-lined tunnels at 3.5 TeV since 19 March.

Having established their stability, these beams will now be allowed to cross paths and collide on Tuesday. This 7 TeV event will be the highest energy yet achieved in a particle accelerator.

In the coming months, the LHC's four major experiments - its giant detectors Alice, Atlas, CMS and LHCb - will probe the collisions.

"This is new territory," said Professor Tonelli.

"If you want to discover new particles, you have to produce them; and these new particles are massive. To produce them, you need higher energies. For the first time [on Tuesday], we will be producing particles that have energy 3.5 times higher than the maximum energy achieved so far.

"This is why we can start the long journey to make major discoveries in identifying a new massive state of matter."

At the end of the 7 TeV (3.5 TeV per beam) experimental period, the LHC will be shut down for maintenance for up to a year. When it re-opens, it will attempt to create 14 TeV events.

Source

French PM advised against total Islamic veil ban

French PM advised against total Islamic veil ban

A woman wears a full-length veil in Lyon, 25 January
The wearing of full veils has been the subject of a fierce debate in France

France's top administrative body has advised the government that any total ban on face-covering Islamic veils could be unconstitutional.

The State Council also said a ban could be justified in some public places.

Prime Minster Francois Fillon had asked the council for a legal opinion before drawing up a law on the subject.

However, an MP from President Nicolas Sarkozy's party was quoted as saying that those drafting the legislation might ignore Tuesday's ruling.

In the ruling, the council said any law could be in violation of the French constitution as well as the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms.

"It appears to the State Council that a general and absolute ban on the full veil as such can have no incontestable judicial basis," it said.

'Clear message needed'

But it added that rules requiring faces to be uncovered in public places such as schools, hospitals and law courts could be justified for security reasons, to combat fraud and to meet the needs of some public services.

The State Council is required to give an opinion before any major piece of legislation is drafted in France.

Find out about different styles of Muslim headscarf

However, Jean Leonetti, the deputy parliamentary leader of Mr Sarkozy's UMP party, said a ban "needs to be complete or else it is misunderstood".

"We still are of the view that a message needs to be sent that is clear and does not waver in terms of its implementation," he said.

President Sarkozy has said more than once that the face-covering veil is not welcome in France, and that he wants a law restricting it.

In January, a French parliamentary committee recommended a partial ban on Islamic face veils that could be imposed in hospitals, schools, government offices and on public transport.

There are several types of headscarves and veils for Muslim women - those that cover the face being the niqab and the burka. In France, the niqab is the version most commonly worn.

The interior ministry says only 1,900 women wear full veils in France, home to Europe's biggest Muslim minority.

Source

Hyena laughs and giggles decoded

Hyena laughs and giggles decoded
By Matt Walker
Editor, Earth News

Hyenas competing over food
Hyenas scream for a share

The giggling sounds of a hyena contain important information about the animal's status, say scientists.

In the first study to decipher the hyena's so-called "laugh", they have shown that the pitch of the giggle reveals a hyena's age.

What is more, variations in the frequency of notes used when a hyena makes a noise convey information about the animal's social rank.

Details of the US-based research are published in the journal BMC Ecology.

Professor Frederic Theunissen from the University of California at Berkeley, US, and Professor Nicolas Mathevon from the Universite Jean Monnet in St Etienne, France, worked with a team of researchers to study 26 captive spotted hyenas held at a field station at Berkeley.

There they recorded the animals' calls in various social interactions, such as when the hyenas bickered over food, and established which elements of each call corresponded to other factors.

Last year, the researchers published some provisional results from the study.

Now they have confirmed that the pitch of the giggle reveals a hyena's age, while variations in the frequency of notes can encode information about dominant and subordinate status.

"The hyena's laugh gives receivers cues to assess the social rank of the emitting individual," says Professor Theunissen.

"This may allow hyenas to establish feeding rights and organise their food-gathering activities."

Spotted hyenas (Crocuta crocuta) are mainly nocturnal, living in clans of between 10 and 90 individuals.

Hyena mother with cub (Kate Shaw)
Spotted hyenas make up to 10 different types of vocalisation
"Whoops", with long inter-whoop intervals, are primarily used to signal that two individuals have become separated
"Grunts" or "soft growls" are emitted when hyenas of the same clan come into close contact

Often they hunt cooperatively, but this can generate intense competition as clan mates converge on a kill, fighting over its carcass.

However, among spotted hyenas, females dominate, holding a higher rank than all other males, whatever their age.

Profs Theunissen and Mathevon's research suggests that the animals convey this status via their laugh or giggle, which they usually make while fighting over food.

Previously their sounds had been considered a simple gesture of submission, but the new study has allowed researchers to identify exactly which individual hyena makes each giggle, and the circumstances in which they do so.

The information contained within the giggles could be especially important for males new to a clan, as they go immediately to the bottom of the hierarchy when they arrive.

Getting to know quickly who is who may give these individuals a better chance of improving their own status.

Giggles could also allow hyenas to recruit allies, for instance when one or two hyenas are outnumbered by lions fighting over the same kill.

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