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Politics : Dutch Central Bank Sale Announcement Imminent? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: sea_urchin who wrote (22035)11/30/2004 5:01:00 AM
From: GUSTAVE JAEGER  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 81247
 
Off Topic --but I couldn't resist....

LFA Sonar Kills AGAIN:

Whales and dolphins beached in Australia

Associated Press
Tuesday November 30, 2004
The Guardian


More than 120 whales and dolphins died after swimming on to beaches on two southern Australian islands, where rescue teams were yesterday desperately trying to prevent others becoming stranded.

Some 97 animals - 72 pilot whales and 25 bottlenose dolphins - died after beaching on Sunday on King Island between the Australian mainland and the south-east island state of Tasmania.

On Maria Island, 450 kilometres (280 miles) away, about 25 dead pilot whales were beached, according to whale rescue expert Shane Hunniford.

Two dozen more were stranded on the island but appeared to be "reasonably fit and healthy", he said.

More than 30 rescuers dragged eight whales - each about four metres (13 feet) long and weighing one tonne - into deep water by late afternoon.

Wildlife officers have worked side by side with local volunteers to rescue the mammals.

Marine biologists will take samples from the dead whales and examine weather patterns in a bid to explain the phenomenon.

The beachings come a year after 110 pilot whales and 10 bottlenose dolphins died when they were stranded on Tasmania's remote west coast. Scientists at the time said a predator, such as a killer whale, may have driven the animals to their deaths.

Although individual strandings in Australia are not rare, mass strandings are.

guardian.co.uk

06/13/03
NRDC Goes to Court to Fight the Military over Dolphins and Whales


The National Resources Defense Council (NRDC) is taking the Bush Administration to Federal Court on June 30th, 2003. At issue is the survival of thousands of whales and dolphins.

This long-awaited courtroom battle is the culmination of an eight-year campaign by NRDC to stop the U.S. Navy from illegally deploying its Low Frequency Active (LFA) sonar system -- a new technology that blasts ocean habitats with noise so intense it can maim, deafen and even kill marine mammals.

What's at stake? Consider: last year, the Bush administration issued the Navy a permit to deploy LFA sonar over 75 percent of the world's oceans and to harass or injure up to 12 percent of every single marine mammal species found anywhere in this vast expanse of ocean!

But before that disaster could unfold, the NRDC went to court last fall and won a dramatic eleventh-hour reprieve for thousands of whales and dolphins. A federal judge blocked global deployment of the sonar system until a full trial could be held and all the evidence heard.

That all-important proceeding will begin on June 30th. It will determine whether this dangerous technology is finally unleashed upon our planet's oceans -- or whether it should be permanently blocked until the Navy obeys the law and demonstrates that LFA would not cause serious harm to ocean life.

Scientists are warning that LFA sonar may threaten the very survival of entire populations of whales, some already teetering on the brink of extinction. At close range, the system's shock waves are so intense they can destroy a whale's eardrums, cause its lungs to hemorrhage, and even kill.

Further away, LFA noise can cause permanent hearing loss in marine mammals after a single transmission. At 40 miles away, LFA noise is still so intense it can disrupt the mating, feeding, nursing and other essential activities of marine mammals.

Two years ago, the mere testing of high-intensity Navy sonar in mid-frequency range caused a mass stranding of whales in the Bahamas. Whales from three different species died, their inner ears bleeding from the explosive power of the sonar signal.

Just last month, a group of biologists off the coast of Washington state witnessed a "stampede" of distressed marine mammals as a U.S. destroyer, operating a powerful mid-frequency sonar system, passed through. Over the next several days, ten porpoises were discovered stranded on nearby beaches.
[...]

seashepherd.org

Posted: July, 2001
Low Frequency Active Sonar (LFAS)
Navy Sonar System Threatens Marine Mammals
by John Kehe


newconnexion.net



To: sea_urchin who wrote (22035)11/30/2004 6:18:17 AM
From: GUSTAVE JAEGER  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 81247
 
The European Union needs Turkey [and, incidentally, why both the US and Israel, together with their European quislings, covertly foil Turkey's EU bid]

By Soner Cagaptay

Saturday, November 27, 2004


On Oct. 6, the European Union issued its much-anticipated report evaluating Turkey's accession prospects. The report said that Ankara satisfied the EU's membership rules sufficiently to begin accession talks. However, the report also suggested a special track for talks with Turkey, one with no promise of membership. This sets Turkey apart from all other candidate countries for which accession talks have been close ended.

Most Europeans would not find this attitude troublesome. After all, common wisdom is that the EU does not need Ankara. Turkey is undesirable because it is large and Muslim. Nothing could be more shortsighted: Europe needs Turkey precisely for those reasons. With its young, secular-minded population, Turkish democracy offers a solution to Europe's twin dilemmas of an aging population and a restless immigrant community of mostly Arab, radical Muslims whose numbers are growing exponentially. For its own sake, the EU needs to bring Ankara into the union.

So far, the Turks have put forth a brave face on the EU's treatment of them. Europe's recent decision, for instance, was hailed as a diplomatic victory in Ankara. Yet, Turkey's EU accession is by no means a done deal. First, there is the possibility that the union's final decision in December, which will take into account the recent report, will create a separate accession track for Ankara, along with a laundry list of Turkey-specific reform requirements.

To be sure, there is room for continued political reform in Turkey. Yet, even European bureaucrats admit that Ankara satisfies the EU's accession rules - the rule of law, democracy and respect for human rights - at least as much as some of the EU countries. Sooner or later, most Turks will catch up with the fact that Brussels expects Ankara to become perfect, while it is sufficient for other EU pretenders to be simply good. Brussels will find glitches in Turkey as long as it keeps looking for them, which only increases the chances of an anti-EU backlash in Turkey once the current euphoria dies down and the EU's wavering attitude falls onto the Turks' radar screen.

A second impediment ahead of Turkey's membership is internal European politics. Although the governments in France and Germany, the two most powerful nations in the EU, are supportive of Ankara's bid, today there is powerful opposition in both countries against Turkey's accession. This is fed first and foremost by a backlash toward Muslim immigrants. It is unfortunate that many Europeans fail to see that Turks are "Western Muslims" who can better acclimatize to Europe than most other Muslim immigrants.

A comparison between France, whose Muslim community is mostly North African, and Germany, whose Muslim community is mostly Turkish, makes this case. The heavily disenfranchised North African Muslim community in France is a hotbed of radical Islam. Meanwhile, though the Turks in Germany are not quite fully assimilated into mainstream society, fundamentalist Islam has failed to take roots among them.

Another concern that feeds opposition to Turkish membership is a fear that this will bring Europe closer to the turmoil of the Middle East. Yet the fact is the EU will only become a true actor in Middle East politics, and have a say in shaping regional peace, after it takes in a country from the region. Another benefit of Turkey's accession is that this would give the EU access to the rich energy resources in the Middle East, Caucasus and Central Asia. Without Turkey, the EU is at best a regional club. With Turkey, it can become a powerful global player.

For sure, many Europeans will continue to have difficulty in seeing the strategic wisdom of Turkey's membership. After all, most Europeans would rather stay away from the Middle East. But the fact is that sooner or later Europeans will need to take a closer look at their Middle Eastern neighbors. Birthrates are so low in Europe that the EU population, currently at 455 million, will shrink by at least 25 million by 2050. What is worse, the EU will age dramatically: In 2050, nearly one third of Europeans will be dependant and over 65, siphoning off funds from European welfare states. On the other hand the Turkish population, which is at 70 million today, will jump to 97 million in 2050. More importantly, this will be a young population, with a low dependency rate of 10-15 percent.

Turkey's membership is the panacea for Europe's demographic demise and the impending failure of the famed welfare states. It is also Europe's best investment in "Western Islam." The sooner the Europeans come to these conclusions, the easier it will become for them to think about a European Turkey. Europe might well survive without Ankara, but with Turkey in its ranks it has a chance to excel.

Soner Cagaptay is a senior fellow and director of the Turkish Research Program at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. This commentary is taken from bitterlemons-international, an online newsletter: bitterlemons-international.org

dailystar.com.lb