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Posts Tagged ‘night’

Snipers to protect Sydney’s penguins

Night watch on endangered species in Australia after nine birds mauled to death

Fox attacks on endangered penguins have led Australia’s wildlife authorities to post snipers at night to protect the birds.

A colony of about 120 little penguins (Eudyptula minor), also known as fairy penguins, at Quarantine beach in Sydney has recently lost about nine of its number to attacks. On Sunday night, the two snipers took their first watch but were unable to shoot the animals responsible.

“We’ve got infrared cameras as well to detect fox movements along with fox baiting … This is really a microcosm of the devastation foxes can wreak in some areas,” the National Parks and Wildlife Service told the Sydney Morning Herald.

Autopsies on the dead penguins showed foxes or dogs were probably responsible because of the nature of the bite marks. DNA swabs were being analysed.

Angelika Treichler from local group Manly Environment Centre told the Herald the attacks were happening at dusk when the nocturnal penguins come ashore. She urged dog owners to keep their animals on leads.

Meanwhile, the snipers are there to stay. “We’ve had no luck so far finding what has done this so we’ll keep on trying,” the parks service said. “We’ll be there for as long as necessary.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Controversial group in Srebrenica incident

Sarajevo media are reporting that a group of men and women associated with Serbia’s Obraz movement shouted offensive slogans in Srebrenica on Sunday night. The group is said to have almost caused an incident with their hateful and insulting chants on Sunday night directed at the Srebrenica victims, reports claim.

International Space Station To “De-Orbit” In 2016 Due To Lack Of Long-Term Funding

A number of times in recent weeks a bright, unblinking light has appeared in the night sky of the nation’s capital: a spaceship. Longer than a football field, weighing 654,000 pounds, the spaceship moved swiftly across the heavens and vanished…

Iran: students tell of police invasion

• Victims tell of arrests, threats and beatings
• Two women among five killed by officers

They came in the small hours, just as the dormitories were settling down for the night. Outside, Tehran was still in ferment, a city gripped by fury two days after a “stolen election”. Inside the dorms on Amirabad Street, students were trying to sleep, though nerves were jangling; just hours earlier several had been beaten in front of the main gate to the university.

What happened next developed into one of the seminal events of Iran’s post-election unrest: police broke locks and then bones as they rampaged through the dormitories, attacked dozens of students, carted off more than 100 and killed five. The authorities still deny the incursion took place. But the account pieced together from interviews with five of those present tells a different story.

“We were getting ready to go to sleep when we suddenly heard them breaking the locks to enter our rooms,” said one of the 133 students arrested that night. “I’d seen them earlier beating students but I didn’t imagine that they would come inside. It’s even against Iranian law.”

Forty-six students from one dorm were arrested and taken to the basement of the interior ministry on nearby Fatemi Street. It was there, on the building’s upper floors, that the vote-counting and – claim opposition supporters – the rigging, was going on. Another 87 were taken to a security police building on Hafez Street. Students spoke of torture and mistreatment.

Five died: they were Fatemeh Barati, Kasra Sharafi, Mobina Ehterami, Kambiz Shoaee and Mohsen Imani – buried the following day in Tehran’s famous Behesht-e-Zahra cemetery, reportedly without their families being informed. Their names were confirmed by Tahkim Vahdat, a student organisation.

Witnesses said the two women and three men were repeatedly beaten on the head with electric batons. Their families were warned not to talk about their children or hold funerals – like the parents of Neda Soltan, whose face became synonymous with the protest movement after she was filmed being shot dead in the street.

Under Iranian law, police, revolutionary guards and other militia are not allowed to enter universities – a legacy of the 1999 student riots. Until last month those riots were the most serious unrest the country had seen since the Islamic revolution.

But with the country convulsed by protests at the 12 June elections, there was no holding back that Sunday night. “The police threw teargas into the dorms, beat us, broke the windows and forced us to lie on the ground,” one student recalled. “I had not even been protesting but one of them jumped on me, sat on my back and beat me. And then, while pretending to search me for guns or knives, he abused me sexually. They were threatening to hang us and rape us.”

Another described the scene: “The riot police stood in two lines, formed a tunnel with their shields as its roof, and made us run through it again and again while beating us and banging on their shields. “One of my roommates had a broken leg but they still made him run.”

Others spoke of similar experiences at the hands of the Basij (paramilitary militia). “The Basiji was on my back and told me: ‘I have not fucked anyone for the past seven years, you cute boy! I’ll show you what I can do to you when we arrive.’ They were harassing us and claiming we insulted them or the supreme leader.”

Before being taken away on a bus the students were made to stand in front of a dormitory block with plastic bags over their heads, their hands bound with plastic ties – known there as “Israeli handcuffs”.

“I had a second to recognise that it was the main building of the interior ministry in Fatemi Street,” said another student, weeping. “I just couldn’t believe it, there were senior politicians, members of parliament and investigators on the upper floors and we were in the basement. I have no doubt that they were busy rigging the votes upstairs.”

One detainee was abused by guards after he lost control of his bladder. Hours later they were given bread and cheese that had been placed on a dirty floor and warned they would be punished if they refused to eat. A Basiji called Ali filmed them with his mobile phone, ordering the captives to say “I am a donkey”.

Injuries were ignored. One student who had lost an eye after being hit by a plastic bullet was not given medical attention. “We were begging them to transfer these two who were suffering more than others to the hospital but they just said ‘let them die’,” a witness said.

Later, gas was pumped into the cells when all the students were being held in the security police building. Their ordeal ended 24 hours later when the president of Tehran University, Farhad Rahbar, and Alireza Zakani, a Tehran MP, spoke to the detainees. Rahbar told them that he had given the police permission to enter the dormitories to control the situation – but denied it a few days later.

Before being released the students were ordered to put on fresh clothes supplied by the police. “They didn’t want there to be any evidence of what had happened,” one of them said. “But what’s stronger than 133 students who were there, who saw everything, and suffered?”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Iran: students tell of police invasion

• Victims tell of arrests, threats and beatings
• Two women among five killed by officers

They came in the small hours, just as the dormitories were settling down for the night. Outside, Tehran was still in ferment, a city gripped by fury two days after a “stolen election”. Inside the dorms on Amirabad Street, students were trying to sleep, though nerves were jangling; just hours earlier several had been beaten in front of the main gate to the university.

What happened next developed into one of the seminal events of Iran’s post-election unrest: police broke locks and then bones as they rampaged through the dormitories, attacked dozens of students, carted off more than 100 and killed five. The authorities still deny the incursion took place. But the account pieced together from interviews with five of those present tells a different story.

“We were getting ready to go to sleep when we suddenly heard them breaking the locks to enter our rooms,” said one of the 133 students arrested that night. “I’d seen them earlier beating students but I didn’t imagine that they would come inside. It’s even against Iranian law.”

Forty-six students from one dorm were arrested and taken to the basement of the interior ministry on nearby Fatemi Street. It was there, on the building’s upper floors, that the vote-counting and – claim opposition supporters – the rigging, was going on. Another 87 were taken to a security police building on Hafez Street. Students spoke of torture and mistreatment.

Five died: they were Fatemeh Barati, Kasra Sharafi, Mobina Ehterami, Kambiz Shoaee and Mohsen Imani – buried the following day in Tehran’s famous Behesht-e-Zahra cemetery, reportedly without their families being informed. Their names were confirmed by Tahkim Vahdat, a student organisation.

Witnesses said the two women and three men were repeatedly beaten on the head with electric batons. Their families were warned not to talk about their children or hold funerals – like the parents of Neda Soltan, whose face became synonymous with the protest movement after she was filmed being shot dead in the street.

Under Iranian law, police, revolutionary guards and other militia are not allowed to enter universities – a legacy of the 1999 student riots. Until last month those riots were the most serious unrest the country had seen since the Islamic revolution.

But with the country convulsed by protests at the 12 June elections, there was no holding back that Sunday night. “The police threw teargas into the dorms, beat us, broke the windows and forced us to lie on the ground,” one student recalled. “I had not even been protesting but one of them jumped on me, sat on my back and beat me. And then, while pretending to search me for guns or knives, he abused me sexually. They were threatening to hang us and rape us.”

Another described the scene: “The riot police stood in two lines, formed a tunnel with their shields as its roof, and made us run through it again and again while beating us and banging on their shields. “One of my roommates had a broken leg but they still made him run.”

Others spoke of similar experiences at the hands of the Basij (paramilitary militia). “The Basiji was on my back and told me: ‘I have not fucked anyone for the past seven years, you cute boy! I’ll show you what I can do to you when we arrive.’ They were harassing us and claiming we insulted them or the supreme leader.”

Before being taken away on a bus the students were made to stand in front of a dormitory block with plastic bags over their heads, their hands bound with plastic ties – known there as “Israeli handcuffs”.

“I had a second to recognise that it was the main building of the interior ministry in Fatemi Street,” said another student, weeping. “I just couldn’t believe it, there were senior politicians, members of parliament and investigators on the upper floors and we were in the basement. I have no doubt that they were busy rigging the votes upstairs.”

One detainee was abused by guards after he lost control of his bladder. Hours later they were given bread and cheese that had been placed on a dirty floor and warned they would be punished if they refused to eat. A Basiji called Ali filmed them with his mobile phone, ordering the captives to say “I am a donkey”.

Injuries were ignored. One student who had lost an eye after being hit by a plastic bullet was not given medical attention. “We were begging them to transfer these two who were suffering more than others to the hospital but they just said ‘let them die’,” a witness said.

Later, gas was pumped into the cells when all the students were being held in the security police building. Their ordeal ended 24 hours later when the president of Tehran University, Farhad Rahbar, and Alireza Zakani, a Tehran MP, spoke to the detainees. Rahbar told them that he had given the police permission to enter the dormitories to control the situation – but denied it a few days later.

Before being released the students were ordered to put on fresh clothes supplied by the police. “They didn’t want there to be any evidence of what had happened,” one of them said. “But what’s stronger than 133 students who were there, who saw everything, and suffered?”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


8 militants killed in Chechnya special op

8 militants have been killed in special operations in three regions of Chechnya since last night, the North Caucasus republic’s interior ministry said Sunday. During the night, police tried to stop a car for a search in the Zavodsky district of the capital, Grozny. Shots were fired from the car, and “in the return fire three members of armed groups were killed,” the ministry said in a statement.

Robert David Jaffee: Punting On Israeli Army Boot Camp

Inside a firing simulator, someone says that I am shaking my head. I am, not because I am afraid of shooting but because I am convinced that nearly all of the guys are against me.

Jonathan Sanchez Pitches First No-Hitter Of The Season

SAN FRANCISCO — On a night when Jonathan Sanchez was nearly perfect, his father chose the perfect time to show up in San Francisco and cheer him. The Giants’ left-hander threw the majors’ first no-hitter of the season Friday night and ca…

‘Entourage’ Premiere: The Boys Are Back (PHOTOS)

Season 6 of “Entourage” premieres on HBO Sunday night, and the cast came out for the premiere in LA Thursday night.

All the guys were there – Adrien Grenier, Kevin Connolly, Jerry Ferrara, Jeremy Piven, Kevin Dillon and Rex Lee, as were some …

Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks | 07.04

By: Cal Roach

Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks :: 07.04.09 :: Milwaukee, WI


Stephen Malkmus

It seemed like a coup that Burnhearts Tavern got Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks to play a little free street festival in a southern Milwaukee neighborhood, but Malkmus does have some history with the city. It was here, in 2003, that he busted out a night’s worth of Pavement tunes for the first time since that band’s demise. No such luck at this Pabst-sponsored show, but there were certainly some surprises in store.

As expected, the band rolled out quite a few tunes from last year’s Real Emotional Trash, including opener “Dragonfly Pie,” which dissolved into grungy ambiance, and then “Gardenia,” which suffered a bit from bass-heavy, muddy sound (all banter was completely lost on the small crowd) but the background vocals were spot-on. “Hopscotch Willie” showcased Malkmus’ ever-increasing focus on guitar improv. The Jicks have become a tighter ensemble with each show, it seems, but there is no question who the leader is.

You never know which Malkmus you’ll get on any given night; sometimes he’s inspired, sometimes nothing is working. Explorations seemed a little stunted in the early going, but some of that may have been attributable to a drunken, overly chatty crowd (what do you expect after six hours’ worth of two-dollar PBRs?). By the fifth song or so (“Jenny And The Ess-Dog”), Malkmus was clearly beginning to access the latent guitar heroics within. After a few more, he was on fire, as if spitting in the face of the apathy he helped to proliferate in the ’90s, now lounging bemusedly in front of him – overly trousered, fashionably aloof, but probably drunker than he’d have envisioned. He was clearly determined to either win over a legion of post-hipsters or at least reward the fanatical few.


Stephen Malkmus

Tonight’s forays ranged between fierce peaks and petering out, but Malkmus was melodic and relatively precise throughout. I’d seen the band last winter and they’d never developed any sort of groove at that show, but tonight everyone was locked in. The only thing that was somewhat disappointing was that drummer Janet Weiss lagged a bit. She is the rare drummer that can completely take over a song, but tonight she was just letting them happen. It was just a case of high expectations, though; if I hadn’t seen her completely dominate before, I’d have had nothing to complain about.

Aside from the stalled momentum brought on by “Cold Son” late in the set it was a high-octane show, replete with several brand new tunes that I might have been able to name if I could’ve made out any of the stage banter. Highlights included “(Do Not Feed The) Oyster,” a Pavement-on-cough-medicine slow-burner, and “Elmo Delmo,” featuring a dark yet childlike, gooey interlude that birthed a concise, dramatic final freak-out. The evening culminated with an epic “No More Shoes,” with Weiss finally coming alive and galloping with Malkmus as he channeled Robbie Krieger, then John Fogerty as the jam intensified, and then Zoot Horn Rollo as it disseminated, a dynamic voyage with the kind of intuitive playing most bands never dream of pulling off.

This showstopper seemed a logical end to the set, but instead, after Malkmus taught bassist Joanna Bolme how to play it, The Jicks got funky with “Emotional Rescue,” more competent and fun than it had any business being, a weird, carnivalesque thrill. The encore continued the festival-minded randomness with a hungry cover of The Kinks‘ “All Day And All Of The Night” (a little easier to teach) and a final nod to their most obvious influence with The Velvet Underground‘s “What Goes On,” stretching it out as if they didn’t want to leave the stage, trailing off in the end. These covers were more interesting than mind-blowing but The Jicks had satisfied every craving they have the capacity to fulfill, quite the bargain at zero dollars.

Stephen Malkmus & The Jicks tour dates available here.

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