Thursday, April 05, 2007

Seal hunt closing in southern Gulf


The picture above shows a gunman at the bow of the boat killing the seals while a trail of blood follows behind the boat.

The destruction of the Harp Seal is complicated by the fact there are no observers that could get close enough to observe the hunt. I am quite confident the hunters will have taken more than their limit because they weren't observed.

Additionally, the pups are compromised in their survival strategy due to Human Induced Global Warming. They have no solid sea ice to rest on where they can feed from their mothers. As a result there are less youngsters surviving to breed when mature which places them automatically on The Endangered List AGAIN due to the negligence of the Canadian government.

Seal hunt starts amid 'bad ice'
03 April 2007

CANADA'S controversial annual seal hunt opened today in the southern Gulf of St. Lawrence, where the worst ice conditions in more than two decades have nearly wiped out the herd there.


Fisheries officials said the scarcity of seals in the area led to only two of 40 eligible boats participating in the start of the traditional northern spring hunt that is important to the livelihood of Canadian seal hunters and aboriginal peoples. "

The bad ice contributed to a high rate of drowning" of baby seals, Fisheries Department spokesman Phil Jenkins said. "The mortality from bad ice is going to be fairly high."

The ice is broken and deteriorated and Mr Jenkins said it is part of a trend seen over the past four or five years. Newborn seals cannot swim in the first weeks of life and need solid ice to survive.

The total quota for this year's seal hunt is 270,000 animals. That is 65,000 fewer than last year, a change made mainly because of the toll from the ice conditions.

The seal population in Canada now stands at about 5.5 million.

largest concentration of seals was in the more northerly Strait of Belle Isle, between Quebec and Newfoundland and Labrador.

Ice conditions there are better and the area will be open to hunters beginning tomorrow.

About 70 percent of the seals sought in Canadian waters will be taken in the third stage of the hunt - off northern Newfoundland. An opening date has yet to be announced.

Animal welfare groups condemned the government's decision to allow a hunt in the southern region.

I've witnessed the hunt for nine years, and I've never seen ice conditions this bad," said Rebecca Aldworth of the Humane Society of the United States.

The US has banned Canadian seal products since 1972 and the EU banned the white pelts of baby seals in 1983.

The European Commission said earlier this month that it would launch a study to see whether seal hunting in Canada is carried out in a humane way, though it has so far rejected calls for an EU-wide ban on the import of adult seal pelts and other products.

AP
Posted by Picasa

Massacred for fashion - the annual slaughter of seals



The Canadian Press

Dangerously thin ice kept members of the Commons fisheries committee off the floes Wednesday as the seal hunt opened in the northern Gulf of St. Lawrence.
Instead, Cape Breton-Canso MP Rodger Cuzner and five colleagues observed the hunt off the south coast of Newfoundland from a Canadian Coast Guard vessel about 100 metres from the harvest.

Thin ice appeared to be keeping the seals away, too.

“Our chopper pilot, who has been flying with the (Department of Fisheries and Oceans) for 20 years, said he has never seen this lack of ice,” Cuzner said by telephone from Newfoundland. “
(DFO officials) believe a fair amount of seals have left by the Cabot Strait. It is still too early in the season to say where they are, though. Others believe they continue to move north.”

Newborn seals cannot swim in the first weeks of life and need solid ice to survive.

Posted by Picasa

It's always an interesting follow up to cut and paste a 'map' of the experience



A collage of sorts. I think it takes the experience to a level whereby parents can understand how their children preceive their world while providing for even more 'together' time. It helps bring the 'fun' to the home environment whereby all that emotional juice children find when observing animals can translate into themes for learning.
Posted by Picasa
Zoos

New at the Zoo's Oceans exhibit
Please touch the sharks
Petting zoos typically are a matter of goats and sheep, but the Indianapolis Zoo has something else in mind for its Oceans exhibit: shark touching.
The "touch pond" is the cornerstone of the zoo's Oceans exhibit, which, after a $9.5 million remodeling, re-opens May 26.
The building today is all dust and new drywall, but the pond is well along toward completion. It is vaguely rectangular, surrounded by a knee-high wall. It's no bigger than a backyard swimming pool and shallower, only 3 feet deep.
It will be home to a couple of dozen dog sharks at any one time. One of them is nearly 6 feet long, and the rest soon will be as large.

http://www.indystar.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070403/LOCAL18/704030405/-1/LOCAL17


National Zoo Hopes for Elephant Baby
Associated Press

Apr 1, 2007 : 9:18 pm ET
WASHINGTON -- Scientists at the Smithsonian's National Zoo are hoping that the zoo's Asian elephant is pregnant. Scientists from the zoo and from Germany performed two artificial inseminations over the weekend on 31-year-old Shanthi, and will have to wait four months before they can confirm whether she has conceived, zoo spokesman John Gibbons said. Shanthi is the mother of Kandula, the zoo's 5-year-old male elephant that was conceived by an artificial insemination in 2000. "Of course there's no guarantees, but the scientists were cautiously optimistic," Gibbons said of the new attempts. "So now it's a matter of time. Fingers crossed." If she has conceived, the calf would be born in 22 months. The pregnancy attempts are part of the National Zoo's two decades of elephant conservation efforts.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/1110AP_Smithsonian_Elephant.html


Smithsonian Zoo scientists artificially inseminate Asian elephant
Tucson, Arizona Published: 04.02.2007
WASHINGTON (AP) — Scientists at the Smithsonian's National Zoo are hoping that the zoo's Asian elephant is pregnant.
Scientists from the zoo and from Germany performed two artificial inseminations over the weekend on 31-year-old Shanthi, and will have to wait four months before they can confirm whether she has conceived, zoo spokesman John Gibbons said.
Shanthi is the mother of Kandula, the zoo's 5-year-old male elephant that was conceived by an artificial insemination in 2000.

http://www.azstarnet.com/allheadlines/176374


Zoo opens; officials optimistic

Updated: 4/2/2007 5:04 AM
Utica Zoo officials said they've been averaging a debt of around $100,000 for the past four years.
Utica Zoo Public Relations Coordinator Nicole White said, "It actually got to that point where we were near closing, and I mean we're not out of the woods yet, not totally on our feet. It's going to take some more work."
Part of the reason for some of their money woes is because of the high cost to run the zoo.


http://www.news10now.com/content/top_stories/default.asp?ArID=100493\



Zoo planning new exhibit for Komodo Dragons
By
HINA ALAM
The Lufkin Daily News
Sunday, April 01, 2007
Nine-year-old Rajah sat still on his platform. Rajah means "king" in Hindi, so the platform was befitting.
His betrothed, Jasmine, was more feisty. The 13-year-old moved around, her claws making a sort of clack-clack-clack on the concrete floor. She flicked her forked tongue. The metal cage with its diagonal mesh rattled as she tried climbing it.


http://www.lufkindailynews.com/news/content/news/stories/2007/04/2/dragons.html


Second surgery at Oregon Zoo clears out Tusko's tusk

Posted by
Katy Muldoon
April 01, 2007 16:37PM
Categories:
Breaking News, Portland
The veterinarian drilled. The dentist chiseled. They both pried and pulled. Finally, after more than 3½ hours of surgery today on a beloved Oregon Zoo elephant, the two men rose to their feet and slapped their right hands in a bloody high five.
They'd just removed the final piece of a difficult puzzle: a 10-inch-long chunk of rock-hard tusk and dentin from high inside the pachyderm's skull. At last, Tusko was tusk-free.
Today's surgery was the second in six weeks for the 13,500-pound Asian elephant, who had suffered for years from an untreatable infection in his left tusk. Concerned that the infection could lead to heart, liver or kidney trouble, zoo veterinarian Mitch Finnegan decided the tusk had to go.


http://blog.oregonlive.com/breakingnews/2007/04/second_surgery_clears_out_tusk.html


Zoo animals deserve better
By ELIZABETH PEARSE Bloomington, Ind.
I no longer live in La Crosse, so the March 21 letter regarding the Myrick Park monkeys was the first time I’d heard of the eco-park proposal. How wonderful that the town is taking more steps toward positive ecological impact.However, the letter made me think about the zoo conditions, and rather than swaying me in favor of keeping the monkey “tradition,” I now hope more folks will realize what an awful thing it is to continue allowing these monkeys to live in their concrete habitat.Yes, many children have laughed and perhaps even experienced this “joy” described by the writer at seeing the monkeys. This doesn’t make a necessarily positive attribute. I’ve seen very young children point and laugh gleefully at an adult who has fallen down a flight of stairs. Does that mean that pushing someone down the stairs is a good way of entertaining children?

http://www.lacrossetribune.com/articles/2007/04/02/opinion/letters/01letter02.txt


Zoo releases 150th kiwi for Operation Nest Egg
Monday, 2 April 2007, 10:19 amPress Release: Auckland Zoo
AUCKLAND CITY COUNCIL
MEDIA RELEASE
2 April 2007
Zoo releases 150th kiwi for Operation Nest Egg
Three-week old Auckland Zoo-born kiwi Taepaepaetanga oterangi travels to a new home on Motuora Island today, becoming the 150th kiwi chick to be incubated, hatched, reared and released by the zoo.
While the “overseas trip” to the kiwi creche north of Auckland is a major milestone for this little 430g chick, today marks an even bigger accomplishment for Auckland Zoo. The zoo has been contributing to the Bank of New Zealand Save the Kiwi's Operation Nest Egg programme with partner, the Department of Conservation (DOC), since late 1996, and today achieves a 93 per cent success rate with incubation to final release of kiwi.
Taepaepaetanga oterangi (Taepapepae), whose name refers to the "place where the horizon meets the sky", and "a pinnacle of achievement", is the off-spring of male kiwi Rainbow, who was one of the first eggs received by the zoo in December 1996.


http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/AK0704/S00006.htm


Yesterday I visited The Singapore Zoo

http://jennybeanjourneys.blogspot.com/2007/04/singapore-zoo.html


At the Wild Animal Park
New program for 2007!
Here's a unique opportunity for photo buffs to take pictures at the
Wild Animal Park with a Zoological Society of San Diego award-winning staff photographer.
Enjoy a Photo Sleepover adventure for adults and teens ages 16 and older that features close-up animal encounters, a unique nighttime experience at
Lion Camp, and other behind the scenes opportunities at the Wild Animal Park! The evening includes a talk by our staff photographer, who will share some of the secrets of his craft and give a practical demonstration. You will visit several major areas of the Park, where photographers will have the opportunity to take pictures in a relaxed, non-crowded environment. Dinner and next day breakfast included. Spacious tents are provided in our campground near the Park’s East Africa field exhibit.

http://www.sandiegozoo.org/calendar/wap_photo_sleepover.html



Thai zoo's panda pornography fails to arouse frigid bears
Bangkok - Thailand's Chiang Mai Zoo on Monday resorted to artificially inseminating a female panda after failing to stimulate a natural liaison between two pandas on loan from China with some bear pornography.
'We have to admit that the panda pornography failed,' said Sopol Damnui, director of Thailand's Zoological Park Organization.


http://news.monstersandcritics.com/asiapacific/news/article_1285793.php/Thai_zoos_panda_pornography_fails_to_arouse_frigid_bears



Zoo's cranes deserving of their crowns
By TOM GALUSHASPECIAL TO THE CHIEFTAIN
“Korongo" is the Swahili word for "crane." According to the Pueblo Zoo's Mary Tucey, who lived in Tanzania, it is also a nickname for a tall, lean person.
This is far from a disparaging term, Tucey stresses. Uganda honors the gray crowned crane as its national bird, featuring it on its flag. This esteemed locust hunter shares the Ugandan coat of arms with an antelope.
And, no wonder. All cranes are striking, but these long-legged birds, with gray-blue and white feathers, wings extending like long tails, black velvet caps, white cheek patches, inflatable red gular sacs (wattles), and a prominent orange crest that bristles 3-4 inches from their heads are outstanding - as visitors to the Pueblo Zoo's African Savanna area can see.



At the Zoo
The polar bear worked the crowd like a trouper. He dived to the bottom of the pool, blowing bubbles as he skirted the bottom, exploding to the surface just inches away from the thick plate-glass window where children and parents watched, their picturephones and digital cameras poised.
Shaking the water from the thick fur plastered to his enormous skull, he rolled over on his back, planted his hind paws on the surface of the glass, and propelled himself back across the pool. The power of his backward thrust churned an impressive wake, yet he appeared languid, lazy and very pleased with himself. Reaching the other side of the pool, he again dived for the bottom with the ease of an Olympic swimmer, heading this time for the crowd standing at the second observation window.
He worked the two windows in turn, giving equal delight to the viewers crowding each window. Back and forth he swam with power and grace, sometimes pausing to toy with a dented plastic drum, sometimes pushing a large black ball with his head, but always careful to give each window of zoo visitors an equal show.
It's time for the summer vacationers to return to the zoo, and the polar bears are ready.

http://www.journalnow.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=WSJ%2FMGArticle%2FWSJ_BasicArticle&c=MGArticle&cid=1173350527771&path=!localnews!education!&s=1037645509111



Bear cub craze thrills Berlin Zoo

Knut, a polar bear cub at the centre of an animal rights row, has been introduced to the public at Berlin Zoo.

Berlin Zoo is bracing for a record attendance over Easter weekend as its star attraction - the polar bear cub Knut - pulls in the crowds.
The media frenzy over Knut boosted visitor numbers to 200,000 in March - double the zoo's normal figure.
The German daily Sueddeutsche Zeitung says Knut's popularity has pushed the zoo's shares up 67% since mid-January.
Knut, born last December, ignited a heated debate about hand-rearing after his mother rejected him.
Knut was brought up and bottle-fed by his keeper, Thomas Doerflein.
An animal rights activist said Knut should be killed rather than treated like a domestic pet - a suggestion that triggered a nationwide surge of affection for the cub.
Germans have been eagerly following his progress on television and the internet.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/6519763.stm



Berlin Zoo stock rises 94% on appeal of polar bear cub
FRANKFURT: Shares of the operator of the Berlin Zoo climbed 94 percent this week as investors bet that "Knut," the name of a baby polar bear rejected by his mother, would become a brand name like Paddington Bear or Winnie the Pooh.
Knut, born at the zoo Dec. 5, has captivated Germany. Television news channels have documented the fluffy white cub's every move: quaffing milk from a bottle, snoozing in a hammock, snuffling up to his handlers and scampering around outdoors.


http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/04/03/europe/bear.php



Berlin Zoo Stock Jumps on `Knut' Polar Cub Brand Bets (Update1)
By Andreas Hippin
April 3 (Bloomberg) -- The German baby polar bear rejected by his mother has sent shares of the operator of the Berlin Zoo up 94 percent this week as investors bet ``Knut'' will become a brand name like Paddington Bear or Winnie the Pooh.
Knut, born on Dec. 5, has captivated Germany. Television news channels have documented the fluffy white cub's every move: quaffing milk from a bottle, snoozing in a hammock, snuffling up to his handler and scampering around outdoors.


http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601100&sid=adjAaVeZ5wRU&refer=germany



Zoo impala dies after it's anesthetized and crated
A 21-month-old impala that had been loaded into a crate Monday afternoon at the Toledo Zoo for transport to Wisconsin was found dead Tuesday morning of what zoo officials said were complications from an old neck injury.
The death marked the second time in a year that a Toledo Zoo impala had died during a transport to another zoo, although the scenario zoo officials described this time differed markedly from when an impala broke its back during trailer loading last April 20.
According to a zoo statement, the impala was anesthetized for loading into the crate Monday. During a check at 12:35 a.m. Tuesday, it appeared to be in good condition except for "a slow recovery from the anesthesia."

http://toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070405/NEWS38/704050364/-1/NEWS



Zoo's frisky new addition makes his debut Crowd welcomes 'darling' 285-pound baby
By Sheldon S. Shafer
sshafer@courier-journal.com
The Courier-Journal
When the 285-pound elephant calf breaks into a trot, his four legs look like they are going in four different directions.
"He's still trying to figure out how to use all his parts, including his trunk," said Dave Campbell, the Louisville Zoo's elephant area supervisor.


http://www.courier-journal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070405/NEWS01/704050428



EARAZA News
The annual 2006 Conference of the Eurasian Regional Association of Zoological Parks and Aquariums was held at the Moscow Zoo on March 22 and 23.


It was attended by representatives of 25 zoos. The open session, where research issues were discussed and reports on the current research projects were heard, was attended by about 50 participants.
The report by the EARAZA Presidium and the Executive Office for 2005, and the program and the proposed budget for 2006 were discussed at the closed session.
Further on the Presidium proposed for discussion the guidelines for monitoring the status of animal husbandry at EARAZA zoos and aquariums. After an animated discussion, the guidelines were approved. The conference adopted a decision on establishing a group of experts from the professional staff of EARAZA zoos and on the monitoring procedure, and developed the travel guidelines for members of the group visiting institutions in situ.
Due to the discussion of the above-mentioned issues, the question of admission of new members was postponed until the next conference.


http://www.zoo.ru/newse.htm


'N Korean communists ate my giant rabbits'
By Martin Beckford
Last Updated: 9:56am BST 05/04/2007

A rabbit breeder who
sold 12 of his animals to North Korea so the communist country could start its own breeding programme fears they have been eaten by officials.

Karl Szmolinsky sent the huge rabbits, which can grow as big as dogs and produce 15lb (7kg) of meat, to North Korea last year so they could be bred and used to ease desperate food shortages.
He thought they were being kept at a zoo in the capital Pyongyang and was planning to travel to the country after Easter to give advice on setting up a breeding facility.


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/04/05/wrabbit105.xml



Cleveland Metroparks Zoo Delivers Live, Interactive Zoo Experience to Remote Schools Using Cisco Wireless Network
Cisco Wireless Mesh Helps Zoo Broadcast Real-Time Videoconferencing Programs From Its Animal Exhibit Areas
LAS VEGAS, NV -- (MARKET WIRE) -- April 05, 2007 -- CISCO PARTNER SUMMIT 2007 -- Cleveland Metroparks Zoo is making a trip to the zoo an entirely new experience for school kids around the country.
The zoo is now providing video learning programs from many of its animal exhibits throughout the 168-acre park using Cisco® (NASDAQ:
CSCO) wireless mesh technology provided by Total Systems Integration, Inc. TSI is a Cisco Premier Certified Partner, Advanced Wireless, and Wireless Mesh Authorized Technology Provider (ATP).
Prior to the implementation of wireless technology, Cleveland Metroparks Zoo would broadcast animal education programs from within the walls of its two media centers. This meant that program presenters had to show animals in their zoo exhibits through the use of pictures and videos. Today, a program about orangutans, for example, can be broadcast from the actual viewing area where the primates reside.


http://www.marketwire.com/mw/release_html_b1?release_id=235420



Kinkajou flees zoo, bites bus passenger
A kinkajou, also known as a honey bear that escaped from a Mexico City zoo boarded a bus and attacked a passenger, officials said Tuesday. The kinkajou, which is about the size of a small dog, got on the bus at about 11 p.m. Monday after escaping from the San Juan de Aragon Zoo.
The animal sat next to the bus driver for almost an hour as he drove through the city, and scratched and bit a 20-year-old female passenger when she tried to hold it, the Mexican news agency Notimex said.

http://abclocal.go.com/wtvd/story?section=bizarre&id=5184380



Rare Baby Takin Makes Minnesota Zoo Debut
(CBS) A very rare baby animal is making its debut at the Minnesota Zoo. A Sichuan Takin calf was born on March 14 and is now in an exhibit with her mother, father and two other Takin. It has yet to be named and only weighs about 48 pounds. Once full grown, she will weigh between 500 to 700 pounds.Takin are rare in North American zoos -- only 50 are found in 12 zoos in North America. The animal is considered a national treasure by the Chinese.

http://wbztv.com/watercooler/watercooler_story_095003906.html


"Coming out" party planned for Woodland Park Zoo's tiger cub
"Coming out" party
She's been an online video star for several weeks. So, it's time for her public debut.
Woodland Park Zoo's new Sumatran tiger cub, born at the zoo on Dec. 12, will have her first day on public display on Monday in the zoo's Adaptations Building. The zoo has planned a celebration at 11:30 a.m. to mark the debut and announce the female cub's new name.
Some staffers have been calling her Diva, but the zoo's been conducting a naming poll. A list of suggested names, picked by staff members, is posted on the zoo's Web site —
www.zoo.org — and voting is open until midnight Sunday. The poll is open to all ages. The suggested names — all Malay/Indonesian names — reflect the endangered Sumatran tiger's native habitat, the island of Sumatra.

http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2003652249_here05m.html



Endangered Sumatran tiger gives birth

http://www.zoo.org/spotlight/ss.htm


Big baby steals the show at zoo

When a 285-pound elephant calf breaks into a trot, his four legs look like they are going in four different directions.“He’s still trying to figure out how to use all his parts, including his trunk,” said Dave Campbell, the Louisville Zoo’s elephant area supervisor.“He tries to mimic his mother and throw sand on himself, but it doesn’t really work. He throws hay around but eats very little. And he sticks his head in a bucket and gets wet but we don’t think he swallows.”

http://www.courier-journal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=200770404044



Rare Tassie Devil zoo birth
A family of Tasmanian devils have welcomed a new addition in a rare birth at a Gold Coast animal park.
Tasmanian devils Midnight and Adam are the proud parents of at least one baby, Currumbin Wildlife Sanctuary curator Matt Hingley said on Thursday.
He said staff had just discovered the baby, about 17 days old, during a quick peek inside Midnight's pouch.
Tasmanian Devils give birth to a maximum of four young.


http://www.smh.com.au/news/National/Rare-Tassie-Devil-zoo-birth/2007/04/05/1175366401048.html



Male elephant mauls his mate at Israeli zoo

JERUSALEM, April 4 (Reuters) - A male elephant has mauled one of his mates to death at an Israeli zoo in front of crowds visiting during the Jewish Passover holiday.
Yossi, a 33-year-old male African elephant and herd leader chased Atari, a 46-year-old female, and smashed her against a stone wall several times, crushing her, a video of the incident released on Wednesday showed.
Some of the thousands of visitors to the Safari Zoo, outside Tel Aviv, could be heard shouting "Oh my goodness!" as she collapsed.
At close to seven tonnes, Israeli zookeepers say Yossi is the largest elephant in captivity anywhere. Atari was about half his weight.
"She didn't stand a chance," zookeeper Vicka Minkowitz said.
Zookeepers said they had quarantined Yossi in his pen since Sunday's incident, which they are investigating with international experts.
Some experts suspect the elephant, born in captivity in Israel, had a fit of rage typical of the mating season, though he had not displayed such behaviour in the past.
He had previously mated peacefully with Atari, who has given birth to some of his 20 offspring, Minkowitz told Reuters.
"It's the first time he has showed such a temper," she said.



Zoo hatches slithering Easter surpriseIt's traditionally the time for fluffy chicks to emerge but a Norfolk zoo is hatching a real Easter surprise - a clutch of Indonesian pythons.
Staff at Thrigby Hall Wildlife Gardens were astonished when the first baby short python emerged because they had not realised that the mother had been tightly curled round 12 eggs. Ken Sims, director of the zoo at Thrigby, near Yarmouth, said: "The mother python stays with the eggs and assists with the incubation by wrapping herself round them and twitching to raise her body temperature. "She had secreted the eggs in deep litter in the enclosure."

http://new.edp24.co.uk/content/news/story.aspx?brand=EDPOnline&category=News&tBrand=EDPOnline&tCategory=news&itemid=NOED03%20Apr%202007%2016%3A55%3A55%3A960



Chicks And Ducklings May Be Source Of Salmonella Infection
Salmonella and Easter
Parents bringing chicks or ducklings home as gifts this Easter could expose their children to harmful bacteria.
State health officials advise against chicks and ducklings as gifts.
Chicks and ducklings can carry Salmonella bacteria. Handling these young birds can lead to spread of the bacteria - which can cause diarrhea, vomiting, fever, and may cause death in small children and the elderly.Last spring, six people developed Salmonella infections in our state from exposure to chicks that came from three different hatcheries. Three of those who became ill were children under five.


http://www.emaxhealth.com/75/10765.html


Oregon Zoo ready to 'Party for the Planet'
Tuesday, April 03, 2007
PORTLAND - The Association of Zoos and Aquariums is throwing a party: 141 parties in 42 states and two countries, to be exact. The Portland version of the AZA's "Party for the Planet" takes place at the Oregon Zoo from noon to 4 p.m. during its Earth Day celebration Sunday, April 22.
"At the 'Party for the Planet,' our members will showcase their animals and educate visitors about how actions we take in our own neighborhoods affect the environment where these animals make their homes," said Dot Siegfried, marketing manager for the AZA.
The Oregon Zoo's party promises fun for everyone. "We're excited to participate in this event," said Tony Vecchio, zoo director. "We want to show people that helping the Earth is fun."

http://www.oregonlive.com/news/argus/index.ssf?/base/news/117562642726250.xml&coll=6



Rare Red Bird of Paradise hatches at zoo
There really is a Red Bird of Paradise -- and, now, three of them live at Brookfield Zoo.
A Red Bird of Paradise chick hatched last week at Brookfield Zoo -- thanks to some zookeeper match-makers.
The perching birdhouse at Brookfield Zoo is chirping with excitement these days. And that's because Mr. Red Bird of Paradise, the one with the reddish feathers, and Mrs. Red Bird of Paradise are the proud parents of a very rare little chick born just this past Thursday. It's been a long wait.

http://abclocal.go.com/wls/story?section=local&id=5180260



Brookfield Zoo's 'tunnel of love' is real love nest
After 2 unsuccessful tries, exotic and rare red birds of paradise welcome first chickBy John BiemerTribune staff reporterPublished April 4, 2007
The tunnel of love led to a successful coupling for a pair of red birds of paradise that has had trouble mating at Brookfield Zoo -- and last week the stork arrived, bringing the zoo's first hatchling of the rare and colorful bird.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/chicago/chi-0704030600apr04,1,7706727.story?coll=chi-newslocalchicago-hed&ctrack=1&cset=true



A Stroll Around Merida’s Zoo
Almost a hundred years ago, February 1910 to be exact, the city fathers (and mothers?) of Merida decided to designate a large area of land to the trees. They sectioned off a part of the Centro Historico that was across from the O’Horan Hospital (the oldest hospital in Merida), the City Jail (now a government building) and the Parque de la Paz (Peace Park). They planted the whole area with all the different trees from the region: flamboyanes, lluvias de oro, zapote, mango, guayaba, mamey, ciruela, palms, pech, and many others. Each tree apparently had a plaque identifying it’s botanical name and so the Parque del Centenario, established in the year of Mexico’s Centennial celebration, became a Botanical Garden. It was surrounded by a low stone wall and it was a cool, well-shaded place for la gente (the people) to stroll and relax.

Five years later, the city decided to put animals in the park. They started with local birds, including faisan (pheasant), quails and pavos de patio (backyard turkeys). Gradually, more and more animals were added, and the park gradually became a zoo. Between 1929 and 1942, there was very little money for frivolous things (this being after the Mexican Revolution), and the park went for many years without improvements. Then in 1942, they added large steel cages and some larger animals (hippos, and lions and zebras, oh my!).

http://www.yucatanliving.com/destinations/merida-zoo.htm


San Francisco Zoo Honors Bay Area's First Grizzly Bear

With an Exclusive Ty Beanie Baby(R)
Pre-Sale of Zoo's Ty Beanie Baby(R) Collector Series Begins April 6 SAN FRANCISCO, April 4 /PRNewswire/ -- Today the San Francisco Zoo and Ty Inc. (Ty) have announced the launch of an exclusive edition Ty Beanie Baby(R) of the Bay Area's first-ever captive California grizzly bear -- Monarch. The Zoo's inaugural Ty Beanie Baby(R) celebrates the male grizzly bear who served as the foundation for the San Francisco Zoo in the early 1900s, despite never setting a paw in the Zoo's current location. (Photo:
http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20070404/SFW041 )Monarch Beanie Babies, which go on pre-sale beginning April 6, can be purchased only through the San Francisco Zoo's Web site at http://www.sfzoo.org for $7.99 (does not include sales tax or shipping and handling). The famous Ty Beanie Baby(R) hang tag will feature Monarch's birth date, a replica of the California state flag and the San Francisco Zoo's logo, as well as the signature Beanie Baby poem. Monarch Beanie Babies will be available for purchase at the Zoo's Wildlife Connection gift shop in May.

http://www.prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT=104&STORY=/www/story/04-04-2007/0004559591&EDATE=


San Francisco Zoo

http://www.sfzoo.org/


Penguin mourned at Maryland Zoo
Maryland Zoo in Baltimore workers are mourning the bird they called 10-63.
Veterinarians called in a specialist to try to correct a congenital spine defect that plagued the 6-month-old male penguin. He had been recovering until Friday, when workers found 10-63 lying in a corner of his enclosure at the zoo’s hospital.
“We are really saddened by his death, but we learned a lot from the surgery and from his after-care,” zoo veterinarian Carol Bradford said.
Zoo staff are awaiting a detailed necropsy, an animal autopsy, from Johns Hopkins University before determining a cause of death, but Bradford said, “preliminary reports indicate he may have had a respiratory condition, possibly due to being hospitalized and the operation.”


http://www.examiner.com/a-655463~Penguin_mourned_at_Maryland_Zoo.html



Central Park Zoo Welcomes New Addition
The Central Park Zoo is showing off its newest addition – a Colobus monkey born just two weeks ago. The little bundle of joy doesn't have a name yet, because zoo officials don't know it's a boy or a girl. The baby’s mother - Tana - is a longtime resident of the zoo, and officials are waiting for her permission to inspect the newborn. So far, the new mom has been very protective. Colobus monkeys are native to Central Africa and are recognized by their black coat and white stripes. Zoo officials say the baby will start growing its long black coat in the new few months.

http://www.ny1.com/ny1/content/index.jsp?stid=1&aid=68330


Upstate Zoo Working to Re-Gain Accreditation
(Binghamton, N.Y.) AP -- An upstate zoo that lost its accreditation by a national organization in 2005 is making progress toward regaining the recognition. The Binghamton Zoo at Ross Park--the nation's fifth oldest zoo--was dealt one blow when the American Zoo and Aquarium Association pulled its accreditation. That was followed by major damage caused by a flash flood last November. Zoo director Michael Janis says the facility could be ready to seek re-accreditation next year. Janis--who has been overseeing the zoo for just over a year--has been working to bring financial stability to the operation. While the zoo director is hopeful accreditation could be restored in 2008, he says the zoo won't apply for it until he's certain everything's in order. Janis says he wants to be sure the zoo's not "turned down again."

http://www.13wham.com/news/state/story.aspx?content_id=240e156f-911a-4f29-8c1f-f6a5d21f0a70


California Condor Lays Egg In Mexico
San Diego -- A California condor has laid an egg in Mexico for the first time since at least the 1930s, biologists at the Zoological Society of San Diego announced Monday. If the chick hatches and survives, scientists hope it will herald the return of a breeding condor population to Mexico, decades after the iconic giant of the skies was wiped out there."This is a momentous occasion," said Dr. Mike Wallace, a field scientist who observed and measured the egg in its nest. "We're all excited."Wallace and colleagues found the egg March 24 in an abandoned eagle nest on a cliff in the Sierra San Pedro de Martir National Park, located in the arid interior of the Baja California peninsula more than 100 miles south of the U.S.-Mexico border.

http://www.todaysthv.com/news/news.aspx?storyid=43884



Cincinnati Zoo conducts largest tulips display in Midwest
By Juliann Wetz
Contributing Writer
Monday, April 02, 2007
The Cincinnati Zoo's "Zoo Blooms" is the largest tulip display in the Midwest, and features over 80,000 tulips in a variety of dazzling spring colors. Though the event is commonly described as "Tulip Mania," daffodils, hyacinths and flowering trees are also on display.
During the month, special shows and concerts will highlight the floral beauty of springtime. Garden tours will be offered at 11 a.m. April 14, 21 and 28. This Saturday and Sunday, the annual Daffodil Show, hosted by the Southwest Ohio Daffodil Society will feature daffodils in a variety of shades and sizes.

http://www.journal-news.com/hp/content/oh/story/news/local/2007/04/02/pjm040507loop1.html



Layla the rhino calf wows crowds at Budapest zoo
By Gergely Szakacs
BUDAPEST (Reuters) - The world's first rhino calf born through artificial insemination thrilled scores of children and journalists in her press debut at Budapest Zoo on Thursday.
Layla, a two-and-a-half-month old Southern White Rhino who is Hungary's answer to celebrity German polar bear cub Knut, at first appeared intimidated by the crowd at her naming ceremony, but later sniffed happily around her paddock.
"Every new life is a miracle and we have had the fortune of being part of an even more special kind when this vigorous and playful calf came to light," Budapest Zoo Director Ilma Bogsch told journalists.

http://www.reuters.com/article/scienceNews/idUSL0517488520070405


Bird ‘flu follows trade, not migration routes
29-03-2007
A comprehensive critical review of recent scientific literature on the spread of Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza H5N, published in the British Ornithologists Union journal Ibis[1], concludes that poultry trade, rather than bird migration, is the main mechanism of global dispersal of the virus.
The review finds that migratory birds have been widely and repeatedly blamed for outbreaks that have subsequently been found to originate in the movement of live poultry and products such as poultry meat. The authors, French ecologists Michel Gauthier-Clerc, Camille Lebarbenchon and Frederic Thomas of Station Biologique de la Tour du Valat (a research centre for the conservation of Mediterranean wetlands) and GEMI (Génétique et Evolution des Maladies Infectieuses –the Laboratory of Genetics and Evolution of Infectious Diseases), warn that a misdirected emphasis on contacts between wild birds and outdoor poultry may lead to a reversion to intensive indoor poultry rearing, which actually increases the risk of outbreaks.

http://www.birdlife.org/news/news/2007/03/avian_flu_report.html


PETA ASKS ARKANSAS STATE REP. TO INCLUDE BAN ON BULLHOOKS, CHAINS, AND OTHER CRUEL DEVICES WITH $250,000 GRANT TO ELEPHANT FACILITY
Vilonia, Ark. -- Today, PETA sent an urgent letter to Arkansas State Rep. Eddie Hawkins urging him to include certain animal care standards in a bill that he introduced—House Bill 2045—which would appropriate $250,000 for an elephant compound in Faulkner County. Specifically, PETA is asking Hawkins to stipulate that bullhooks, electric prods, chains, and other cruel devices will not be used on the elephants; that the animals will have access to the entire property and not be warehoused in barns, as they often are at zoos and pseudo-sanctuaries; and that dangerous practices such as elephant rides will be prohibited.

http://www.peta.org/mc/NewsItem.asp?id=9676


Court to rule if chimp has human rights
Kate Connolly in BerlinSunday April 1, 2007
He recognises himself in the mirror, plays hide-and-seek and breaks into fits of giggles when tickled. He is also our closest evolutionary cousin.
A group of world leading primatologists argue that this is proof enough that Hiasl, a 26-year-old chimpanzee, deserves to be treated like a human. In a test case in Austria, campaigners are seeking to ditch the 'species barrier' and have taken Hiasl's case to court. If Hiasl is granted human status - and the rights that go with it - it will signal a victory for other primate species and unleash a wave of similar cases.


http://observer.guardian.co.uk/world/story/0,,2047459,00.html?gusrc=rss&feed=12


The Animal Welfare Act
The new
Animal Welfare Act is coming into force in England as of Friday. Basically, owners of animals are now legally required to ensure their basic welfare. It's amazing to think that up until now there was no obligation in law to care for one's pets, but congratulations to the government for doing the right thing.The government now needs to take steps to heavily reform or ban battery farming (and to work with the EU to ensure there is a consistent policy on this so cheap battery-farmed eggs from other EU countries can't flood our markets), and make sure regulations on circuses and zoos are putting the welfare of the animal before the entertainment of the crowds.

http://mytaleofme.blogspot.com/2007/04/animal-welfare-act_05.html



Pet welfare act coming into force

People will be legally liable for the basic welfare of their pets under new laws coming into force in England.
The Animal Welfare Act, which became law in Wales last week, includes harsher fines of up to £20,000 and jail terms of up to a year for cruelty.
The RSPCA is raising awareness of the act, which has been dubbed a bill of rights for pets, ahead of its official introduction on Friday.
The government says existing laws are outdated and too inflexible.
The Act, which raises penalties for cruelty from the previous maximum of six months in prison or a £5,000 fine, is the most significant new law on animal welfare for 94 years.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/6521765.stm



Lawmakers vote to ban exotic pets
Richard RoeslerStaff writerApril 3, 2007
OLYMPIA – Farewell, my rhinoceros.
A divided state Senate on Tuesday voted to ban most private ownership of a long list of “potentially dangerous wild animals,” including crocodiles, jaguars, gaboon vipers and all primates, even small monkeys.
House Bill 1418 now goes back to the House, which is expected to concur. If it becomes law this summer, people who already own such animals could keep them but couldn’t add any more, even through breeding.
State lawmakers have debated such a ban for seven years, but the issue took on new life this year when Lewis County officials were faced with four homeless Siberian tigers after their owner was evicted from property in Lewis County, south of Olympia.

http://www.spokesmanreview.com/breaking/story.asp?ID=9384



Life as a skull cleaner is a messy job
NEW YORK (Reuters Life!) - When most people think of a family business a butcher store, flower shop or restaurant comes to mind. But Jay Villemarette's company is not your normal neighborhood firm.
He owns and operates Skulls Unlimited International, a company that cleans, sells and stores skulls. Business is so busy he can hardly keep up with demand.
"We get deliveries from UPS and FedEx everyday that consist of anything from bears to deer to cougars to buffalo to dogs and cats. You name it, it comes in," said Villemarette, owner and founder of the Oklahoma City firm.

http://www.reuters.com/article/gc08/idUSL2729433120070403


Dated

SF Zoo Exhibit Has Birds At Your Fingertips

SAN FRANCISCO -- A new exhibit at the
San Francisco Zoo has visitors getting up close with exotic birds.
Visitors, armed with a feed stick, can pay a $2 admission fee to entry to the Binnowee Landing of
Australia exhibit.

http://www.nbc11.com/news/9349111/detail.html


Parakeets At SF Zoo Test Positive For Disease

One week ago, the San Francisco Zoo opened a brand new bird exhibit. Now, zoo officials have a public relations nightmare on their hands. Five parakeets in the exhibit have tested positive for a disease that could threaten all the birds.
Bird lovers are still enthusiastic about the 600 small birds on exhibit at the San Francisco zoo. Reports of five of them testing positive for a potentially contagious condition called bird and feather disease did not worry this couple.
Alex Ramirez, bird owner: "That's what the guy over there said, he said if you have birds at home to sanitize your hands and take your clothes off before you handle them."
The disease severely damages a bird's beak. Birds also begin to lose their feathers. It doesn't affect humans but can kill other birds.
http://abclocal.go.com/kgo/story?section=local&id=4278576


Zoo insists elephant breeding program will continue

Updated: 6/17/2006 9:17 AMBy: Megan Driscoll
Zoo officials said we will see more of the elephant breeding program for some time to come. Despite recent hardships, zoo representatives said the program will go on.
"I think it kind of started out as a little bit of a rumor that the elephant program was suspended at the zoo for a year, which is completely inaccurate. The program is still strong as ever," said zoo spokesperson Sarah Fedele.


http://news10now.com/content/top_stories/default.asp?ArID=69817


Zoo Plans Birthday Celebration For Tai Shan

POSTED: 3:41 pm EDT June 16, 2006
UPDATED: 4:21 pm EDT June 16, 2006
WASHINGTON -- Tai Shan's first birthday is just a few weeks away, and the National Zoo is planning a big celebration for the giant panda cub.

http://www.nbc4.com/news/9383881/detail.html


Mill Mountain Zoo introduces new cougar
The Mill Mountain Zoo will debut its newest resident this weekend. Eight month old Nina the cougar will be making Mill Mountain her permanent home after coming from the Columbus Zoo.
Nina has also traveled with Jack Hanna on educational programs and appeared on network TV shows.
Nina's new home will be right next to Ruby, Mill Mountain's well-known Tiger.
All fathers can see Nina free of charge on Sunday with a paid child's admission.


http://www.wdbj7.com/Global/story.asp?S=5040763&nav=S6aK


Zoo sticks its neck out for new herd

16 June 2006 07:00
A Norfolk zoo is hoping to get the go-ahead for a £500,000 project which would see giraffes roaming the county's countryside.Banham Zoo, near Attleborough, has submitted plans to Breckland Council to build a giraffe house as part of a major scheme that would also see the construction of a new house for its existing zebra herd. Its sister site, Africa Alive at Kessingland, near Lowestoft, has kept giraffes for a number of years and zoo director Martin Goymour said the idea to introduce them at Banham had been three years in the planning.“This is something we've have been considering for some length of time and giraffes are a particular favourite of mine. We keep them at our sister park and have kept them very successfully for 12 years.

http://new.edp24.co.uk/content/news/story.aspx?brand=EDPOnline&category=News&tBrand=EDPOnline&tCategory=news&itemid=NOED15%20Jun%202006%2018%3A01%3A02%3A720



Zoo's budget is a bearClosure would end sacred ceremonies for some
By Natasha Kaye JohnsonDiné Bureau
WINDOW ROCK — Generally, zoos are a place to view animals up close and personal. For Native people who go to the Navajo Nation Zoo, it is a place to give offerings to sacred animals and conduct traditional ceremonies. But with a possibility of the zoo closing, people will no longer have direct access to some of those sacred animals. The zoo needs about $200,000 a year to operate. Last year, the zoo, which has been under the Navajo Parks and Recreation since it opened 1977, barely made budget. With the entire Navajo Nation budget in a financial crunch, the zoo faces the possibility of closure once again this fiscal year.

http://www.gallupindependent.com/2006/jun/061406zoosbdgt.html


Navajo Nation Zoo and Botanical Park

Thousands of acres in the corner of northeast Arizona stand virtually untouched by man. This land is sacred to the Navajo people, serving as a testament to their survival and a living reminder of their heritage. Nine acres of Window Rock are dedicated to the display and preservation of plants and animals that are native to the reservation and of cultural importance to the Navajo. The carefully maintained walking trails lead you on a tour of native plants traditionally used for food, medicine and weaving. Stop along the way and visit the hogan, the traditional Navajo house. The animals on display are as likely to run across the trail or swoop past you in the sky as they are to be exhibited in an enclosure. Guided tours are available, but should be arranged before you arrive. Use caution as you walk, watching for snakes and other animals that are not part of the displays.

http://search.cityguide.aol.com/phoenix/entertainment/navajo-nation-zoo-and-botanical-park/v-127884


All creatures great and small
SALLY RAIKES
COMING round from the anaesthetic, Steveo the parakeet is looking a little groggy after an operation on his broken wing. Outside in the corridor, a greyhound draped in a blanket is being led back from radiotherapy, and a few doors down the cat ward is filling up with blinking and slightly bewildered felines. In the waiting-room, a labrador, a golden retriever and a terrier eye each other warily as they await their call.
It's a typical day at the University of Edinburgh vet school, where animals from all over the country are referred for treatment by their local vets. Owners have been known to bring pets from as far afield as Leeds, Shetland, the Isle of Man and Northern Ireland for access to the school's state-of-the-art facilities.


http://living.scotsman.com/index.cfm?id=853962006

continued ...

Exhibition of Animal Painters in the Moscow Zoo

The exhibition "Brothers of Ours…" presenting works by Volgograd animal painters will take place in the exhibition hall of the Moscow Zoo in April.
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Wednesday, April 04, 2007

Dick Cheney stated to Bush at an outing in Crawford, "Ah, come on George we are too close to stop now."


Richard Cheney's covert Energy Committee coveted the Caspian Sea in the National Energy Policy. The plans for exploitation of the region begins with Chapter Eight, something about "Enhancing National Energy Security/Strenghtening Global Alliances. NOT. (page down to the bottom, 980 KB). I am so tired of writing about this junk you have no idea. Bush and Cheney need to be impeached.


How do U.S. contractors legally do business there?

...Yet, in January, Halliburton won a contract to drill at a huge Iranian gas field called Pars, which an Iranian government spokesman said "served the interests" of Iran....

...Halliburton says the operation — videotaped by NBC News — is entirely legal. It's run by a subsidiary called "Halliburton Products and Services Limited," based outside the U.S. In fact, the law allows foreign subsidiaries of U.S. corporations to do business in Iran under strict conditions....

...Still, Halliburton stands out because its operations in Iran are now under a federal criminal investigation. Government sources say the focus is on whether the company set out to illegally evade the sanctions imposed ten years ago....

THE INVASION into Iraq was for oil and the chaos that exists there today is due to an illegal war declared by liars in the Executive Branch. An invasion into Iran would be met with Russian backed resistance as Russia has no plans of fighting a war on it's own soil. Russia has already supplied Iran with missiles to deter any attack already planned by Bush, Cheney and Halliburton.

It was just a matter of time before this would occur and now with the country turning to Democrats to rid the USA of the burden of corruption, the Oval Office is all about Iran and an invasion to secure the country for it's oil and gas.

The Bush Administration has radicalized most countries around the globe and alienated most of it's allies. The USA military is depleted and unable to defend itself in Iraq today. We have recently witnessed the increased number of deaths of American soldiers exceeding that of the Iraqi forces. The USA is defeated in Iraq and it's time to leave.

The confrontation of Iran and Russia is based in the same corruption as the invasion into Iraq.
Posted by Picasa

The Die is Cast. There will be no invasion into Iran.


Basically, the British need to give Iran what they want and take their sailors back home, leave Iraq along with the USA, return to Afghanistan to fight the 'real' war and leave peace in the Middle East to Russia.

Perhaps some will recognize this map. It's the Caspian Sea. To the south is Iran. In the northwest corner is Russia. Anyone besides Walker Bush actually believe Russia is going to allow an invasion into Iran? I don't.

By ALISSA J. RUBIN
Published: April 4, 2007
BAGHDAD, April 3 — An Iranian diplomat kidnapped by armed men wearing uniforms of the Iraqi security forces was freed here on Tuesday,
Iraq’s foreign minister said, adding that he continued to work to free five Iranians held separately by American military forces and was optimistic that they would be released soon.

I thought Georgie stated there would be exchange for the hostage sailors. Well. That doesn't seem to be a realistic statement, now does it?
Russia is the only country left on the planet that can negotiate a Middle East peace.

A senior Russian politician has proposed changes to the constitution that would enable President Vladimir Putin to remain in power for longer than currently expected.
Sergei Mironov, the speaker of the upper house of parliament, called for the two-term limit on holding the presidency to be extended to thee terms – a move that would allow Mr Putin to stay on past the 2008 deadline to which he is bound by the current rules of the constitution.
Mr Mironov also suggested that each tenure should be extended from four to at least five years, Russian news agencies reported.
The Kremlin responded immediately to the proposals, insisting that the President had no plans to stay on after his term came to an end.

I agree. Vladimir is needed to maintain a perspective that will interpret into a global peace. Now that the USA is coming to terms with an illegal war and an Executive Branch completely out of control, the advances in Global Peace and prosperity can take huge leaps. President Putin should consider the offer. The 'thing is' he probably won't. I am confident he has other plans by now. Pity. He's still needed in a world too unstable to sustain a change in Russia at this time. But, time marches on.


While the Arab League has never been a particularly effective group, this year, at least when it comes to the Palestinian issue, many feel the League has managed to place the ball firmly in Israel's court.
However this is of little solace to Palestinians, who know the ball can stay there indefinitely if Israel decides not to play. The 2002 Arab Peace Initiative, relaunched at the Riyadh summit, has one major flaw visible to everyone from Marrakech to Muscat: It depends on an Israeli response.
The Arabs cannot push anything forward alone. Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas wants a committee to follow up on the proposal, and for it to work with the international Quartet, a group with more teeth than the League.
Prime Minister Ehud Olmert did indeed break five years of Israeli silence on the matter, declaring there were positive aspects to the initiative. However, Israel says the right of return clause makes the proposal problematic.

Prime Minister Olmert is correct. There are issues of the Palestinian Right to Return that creates violence and not peace. Israel has to be reassured of it's sovereignty and not an attempt to infiltrate Israel proper to undermine it's Right to Exist. Otherwise, the reintroduced proposal is very attractive and is a viable solution for Israel. But, the elements of Palestine are gathering in a way that lends itself to violence rather than peace.

JERUSALEM, March 31 — Hamas, the dominant faction in the Palestinian government, is building its military capacity in the Gaza Strip, constructing tunnels and underground bunkers and smuggling in ground-to-air missiles and military-grade explosives, senior Israeli officials say.
The officials, including a top military commander who spoke in an interview on Friday, said that Hamas had learned tactics from
Hezbollah, the Lebanese militant group, which brought in and stored thousands of rockets in bunkers near the northern Israeli border before its war with Israel last summer.
In Gaza, the Israeli commander said, Hamas has now recruited 10,000 fighters to its so-called Executive Force, a parallel police force intended to counter the control its rival Fatah exercises over the
Palestinian Authority’s security forces. The Executive Force is now divided into five “so-called brigades, with battalion leaders” and is receiving more military training and sharing a common headquarters, he said, with the Qassam brigades, Hamas’s military wing.

Basically, what is occuring in Iraq is a crime. The death tolls are rising and the USA and Britain are overstepping their bounds at every turn. The Brits are planning an exit except for a skeleton crew of troops, approximately 5000, that will be able to act as protection for diplomats. The USA's Bush can't come to terms with his illegality both domestically and in his warring strategies in Iraq. He needs to be impeached along with his Vice President for the USA to get on with it's business and facilitate peace while REDEFINING it's purpose to defeat terrorist networks rather than sovereign nations such as Iran and Russia. It might be noted that Speaker of the House Pelosi was well received in the Middle East.

From the Jordan Times :


Editorial:
Constructive visit
Contrary to US President George Bush’s opinion, US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Damascus for talks with Syrian President Bashar Assad and other high-ranking Syrian officials can make a dent in Syrian policies on Lebanon and Iraq, and contribute to their solution.
Pelosi said so in statements in Beirut Tuesday: “Our visit to Damascus is very important for us.” Such visit was also deemed important by the study group on Iraq headed by former US Secretary of State James Baker, whose findings “encourage this diplomacy and this dialogue with Syria”.
Aware that solutions to some problems in the region follow the Damascus route, powerful Democrat Pelosi dismissed criticism of her visit, expressing her delegation’s “clear intention to make our stances very clearly to the Syrian leadership”.
The US congressional delegation will not have come all the way to Syria to congratulate Assad for his policies vis-à-vis the two neighbouring countries, but rather to prod him to change course, most likely to stop meddling in Lebanon’s political scene and to contribute more convincingly to the stability and security of Iraq.
The Baker-Hamilton recommendations did mention that talks with Damascus are indispensable for finding a solution to the Iraqi conflict, in view of Syria’s geographic proximity and of allegations that terrorists cross the Syrian-Iraqi border to wreak havoc on the lives of innocent Iraqis.

I especially liked the detailed account in The Jordan Times of the House Speaker's interests while in Syria.

...Pelosi, a California Democrat, is scheduled to meet Assad and other Syrian officials on Wednesday. She made no comment on arrival and headed for the old city of Damascus where she toured the 8th century Omayyad Mosque.
Pelosi draped a scarf over her head as she entered the historic mosque and stopped at a tomb inside the mosque said to contain the head of St. John the Baptist. She made the sign of the cross in front of the tomb. About 10 per cent of Syria's 18 million people are Christian. In the nearby outdoor Bazouriyeh market, she chatted with Syrians, who offered her dates, in front of shops selling olive oil soaps, spices and herbs. At one point, she bought some coconut sweets and eyed Syrian carpets.
In Washington, Bush said visits to Syria by US officials were "counterproductive". "A lot of people have gone to see President Assad... and yet we haven't seen action. He hasn't responded," he told reporters at a Rose Garden news conference.
He said Assad had not reined in violent elements of Hamas and Hizbollah as requested by the international community and had acted to destabilise the democratically elected government of Lebanon.
"Sending delegations doesn't work. It's simply been counterproductive," Bush said.
Pelosi has shrugged off the criticism, pointing out that Republican members of Congress have also visited Syria.
During a visit to neighbouring Lebanon Monday, she said she considers the visits to be an "excellent idea" and was hopeful of rebuilding lost confidence between Washington and Damascus.
"We have no illusions but we have great hope," she said.
Syria treated the visit as a diplomatic victory. State-run newspapers published news of Pelosi's trip on their front pages, with one daily publishing a photograph of Pelosi next to the headline: "Welcome Dialogue". But there were some warnings against high expectations....

Sounds as though she was more than welcome to enjoy her circumstances and shown a great deal of hospitality.

THE BOTTOM LINE IS THIS.

President Putin isn't about to have a war at the Russian border, now or in the future. If Bush and Blair actually think they can raise enough international eire to invade Iran they aren't going to be able to 'go it alone' for long, because Russia and China in it's 2000 Friendship Pact won't put up with them for very long. Bush's military ain't up to it and if he tries to turn it into a nuclear war then why not just hand over nukes to Iran and get it over with.

Russia is not about to hand nukes to Iran or any other sovereign authority while an international war is eminent. Besides that, Russia has made it perfectly clear in recent weeks how it intends to 'handle' Iran and it's nuclear plant. It ain't going to happen so long as Iran has a bad attiude.

The British were within two miles as the crow flies of Iranian waters. That may be legal but it wasn't prudent with the tense climate that exists between the countries involved. The British were wrong to pursue such close encounters and they need to admit it to themselves. Their sailors should never be allowed to stand trial in Iran. It would simply continue to escalate the circumstances in the region. The Brits need to bring their sailors home.

In acting in such a casual manner and allowing such close contact between entities in the region, Britain has compromised the initatives of the UN and the IAEA as well as the British military.
It is my guess, if Britain asks Russian diplomats for assistance in extracating their sailors they might find cooperation.

The circumstances in the Middle East have gotten out of hand because the USA has an incompetent Executive Branch. The Brits fell into peril as there is little prudency in proving safeguards to diplomacy as the Bush adminisration doesn't believe in it. At this point, diplomats are the only why to conduct a conclusion to this and it has to include Russia to remove the tensions that now exit.

The conflict the world needs to address is that or disarming terrorists and NOT pointing guns at each other. The UN and IAEA as well as Russian diplomats need to readdress this issue to a peaceful resolve without compromising the UN Security Council's resolution to inhibit the nuclear capacity of Iran. Iran cannot be allowed to accumulate nuclear capacity and the deescalation of tensions will allow the people of Iran to move away from war and extremism while the Democrats under the leadership of Pelosi provide a diplomatic solution of their own where the Executive Branch can't fight it's way out of a diplomatic paper bag.
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Tuesday, April 03, 2007

Poor Nations to Bear Brunt as World Warms

A woman harvesting corn in Malawi, an African country that is already prone to drought and faces grim prospects under global warming.

By ANDREW C. REVKIN
Published: April 1, 2007


The world’s richest countries, which have contributed by far the most to the atmospheric changes linked to global warming, are already spending billions of dollars to limit their own risks from its worst consequences, like drought and rising seas....

...Two-thirds of the atmospheric buildup of carbon dioxide, a heat-trapping greenhouse gas that can persist in the air for centuries, has come in nearly equal proportions from the United States and Western European countries. Those and other wealthy nations are investing in windmill-powered plants that turn seawater to drinking water, in flood barriers and floatable homes, and in grains and soybeans genetically altered to flourish even in a drought.

In contrast, Africa accounts for less than 3 percent of the global emissions of carbon dioxide from fuel burning since 1900, yet its 840 million people face some of the biggest risks from drought and disrupted water supplies, according to new scientific assessments. As the oceans swell with water from melting ice sheets, it is the crowded river deltas in southern Asia and Egypt, along with small island nations, that are most at risk.

“Like the sinking of the Titanic, catastrophes are not democratic,” said Henry I. Miller, a fellow with the Hoover Institution at Stanford University. “A much higher fraction of passengers from the cheaper decks were lost. We’ll see the same phenomenon with global warming.”

WHO ARE YOUR FRIENDS ?

April 3, 2007
Editorial

It would be hard to overstate the importance of yesterday’s ruling by the Supreme Court that the federal government has the authority to regulate the carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases produced by motor vehicles.

It is a victory for a world whose environment seems increasingly threatened by climate change. It is a vindication for states like California that chose not to wait for the federal government and acted to limit emissions that contribute to global warming. And it should feed the growing momentum on Capitol Hill for mandatory limits on carbon dioxide, the principal greenhouse gas.

The 5-to-4 ruling was a rebuke to the Bush administration and its passive approach to the warming threat. The ruling does not require the government to regulate greenhouse gases. But it instructs the Environmental Protection Agency to reconsider its refusal to regulate emissions, urges it to pay attention to the scientific evidence and says that if it takes the same stance, it has to come up with better reasons than its current “laundry list” of excuses.

The ruling also demolishes President Bush’s main justification for not acting — his argument that because the Clean Air Act does not specifically mention greenhouse gases, the executive branch has no authority to regulate them. The president has cited other reasons for not acting, including costs. But his narrow reading of the Clean Air Act has always been his ace in the hole.


The court offered a much more “capacious” reading of the act, as Justice John Paul Stevens wrote for the majority. The plaintiffs — 12 states and 13 environmental groups — had argued, and the court agreed, that while the act does not specifically mention greenhouse gases, it gives the federal government clear jurisdiction over “any air pollutant” that may reasonably be anticipated to endanger “public health or welfare.” This interpretation was first set forth by Carol Browner, administrator of the E.P.A. under President Clinton, and remained agency policy until Mr. Bush reversed it in 2001.

The administration had also argued that the states did not have standing to sue on this issue because they could not show that they would be harmed by the government’s failure to regulate greenhouse gases. The court ruled that the states have a strong and legitimate interest in protecting their land and their citizens against the dangers of climate change and thus have standing to sue.

The ruling reinforces state efforts in other ways. California and nearly a dozen other states have adopted their own regulations requiring lower greenhouse gas emissions from cars and trucks. These rules, however, require federal approval, which seemed unlikely as long as the agency could claim that carbon dioxide was not a pollutant — a claim it can no longer make.

The E.P.A. had also argued that reducing emissions would require it to tighten fuel efficiency standards, a job assigned by law to the Department of Transportation. The automakers have made much the same argument against California’s emissions rules. But the court said that the E.P.A. could not shirk its responsibilities just because another department sets mileage standards. The agency is clearly in for some serious soul-searching.

The decision was unnervingly close, and some of the arguments in the dissent, written by Chief Justice John Roberts Jr., were cause for concern — especially his comments about the “complexities” of the science of climate change, which is too close for comfort to the administration’s party line.

Still, the Supreme Court, for the first time, has said that global warming is a real and present danger. This can only encourage those on Capitol Hill and in the states who are growing increasingly impatient for aggressive action.
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