Tag Archives: olympics

How did Greece lose its Olympics ‘army?’

Gianna Angelopoulos at the Athens 2004 swimming venue in her volunteers' uniformGianna Angelopoulos at the Athens 2004 swimming venue in her volunteers’ uniform

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Poolside

Center stage

The speech

Let the Games begin

Olympic moment

Olympic planning

Moment of pride

All lit up

Olympic harmony

Broader horizons

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Leading Women connects you to extraordinary women of our time — remarkable professionals who have made it to the top in all areas of business, the arts, sport, culture, science and more.

(CNN) — When Athens was behind schedule in delivering the 2004 Olympic Games, the Greek government called Gianna Angelopoulos to take charge.

Angelopoulos had already successfully led the bid committee that saw Athens awarded the 2004 Olympic Games. When she received the appointment in 2000 to become president of the organizing committee, she had just four years instead of the usual seven, to deliver a successful Games.

She was the first female president of both a bid committee and an organizing committee for an Olympic Games

“We were the miracle, we showed a different Greece, a can-do Greece in four years instead of seven,” she says.

Now Angelopoulos, who was named an ambassador at large by the Greek government, has written a book entitled, “My Greek Drama”. The personal memoir captures her experience of running the Games along with an assessment of the country’s financial crisis.

In an interview with CNN, she says Greece should use lessons learned during the Olympics to turn around its fortunes during its current economic crisis, which has seen 64% youth unemployment, a bailout from the European Union and a crippling austerity drive.

“It’s not by chance that the crisis came,” she says. “Politicians like to blame each other. They should have a lesson of how Greece performed during the Olympics.

With the Greek economy in its sixth year of recession, Angelopoulos isn’t just critical of how the government is handling the crisis — she’s also concerned about Greece’s reputation overseas.

We were the miracle, we showed a different Greece, a can-do Greece.
Gianna Angelopoulos

“The image of Greece around the world is that it’s in crisis and Greeks are lazy and never perform. What I know about Greece is we created a miracle in the making of the Olympics.

“The Greece I know is so different from the Greece I see now. All this achievement was dropped, the politicians dropped it.”

Angelopoulos, 57, who grew up in the island of Crete, trained as a lawyer and served two terms in Greek parliament.

With her direct manner, she has won both friends and enemies among her fellow Greeks.

Read: What famous daughters learned from their moms

In 1996, with Greeks still wounded from losing out to Atlanta 1996 for the centenary of the modern Olympic Games, Angelopoulos was asked by the prime minister to lead the bid for Athens to be host city in 2004.

After a successful bid, Angelopoulos was initially excluded from organizing the Games themselves, but was called back in 2000 when progress was stalling and the International Olympic Committee was beginning to question whether Athens could deliver on time.

Although questions continued to be asked about Greece’s readiness, Jacques Rogge, president of the International Olympic Committee, eventually described Athens 2004 as “unforgettable, dream Games”.

“It’s a woman’s dream to achieve something unique and monumental for our country, and shows that women can do whatever they want,” says Angelopoulos.

“We can break the glass ceiling and show that there’s no such thing as mission impossible.

“I want this book to show about the effort and struggle that every woman and every young person can do to pursue his or her dream.”

In preparation for the Olympic Games, Athens built numerous infrastructure projects, from a new airport and new tram line to renewed public spaces and state-of-the-art sports facilities.

However, Angelopoulos says not enough was done to plan for the legacy, and many of the facilities went to waste.

It’s a woman’s dream to achieve something unique and monumental for our country.
Gianna Angelopoulos

“I’m saddened to see that state-of-the-art facilities are abandoned, empty, closed,” she says.

“If people ask me about organizing a Games, I would say ‘plan for the day after, not just for the Olympics’. The excellent facilities can really make a difference for the day after.”

She adds: “I went to successive governments and I urged them to show me a plan for the day after.

“They just told me ‘you do your job, we have everything in hand’. They did nothing and lost the readiness of people to do things differently, to show the world a different Greece.”

As well as the facilities lying empty, Angelopoulos says a return to the public spirit, which was evident during the Games, would help Greece through its current crisis.

Read: Angelopoulos’ advice for future Olympic bidders

“An Olympic Games is a unique opportunity to get citizens engaged with a noble cause,” she says. “We had no tradition of volunteering in Greece, but we got 165,000 wanting to help. It was like an army, but it was lost.

“Through this tough time for Greece, people are selling their houses, selling their cars, taking their children out of university. Imagine if this volunteer spirit and way of helping people was still in place? Things would be different.

“This kind of common spirit is needed in a country, not just in good times.”

Since the Olympic Games, Angelopoulos has become active with the Clinton Global Foundation and Harvard’s John F. Kennedy School of Government, running a project which asks global leaders to share their experience with students.

“After my disappointment about how the politicians let down people I turned to the international stage and that’s why I participated in the Clinton Global Initiative,” she says.

After her years out of the spotlight, Angelopoulos is embarking on a lecture tour in the United States, publicizing “My Greek Drama” and sharing her dream that Greece can soon be a proud nation once more.

“Even if there’s a lot of drama in my book, I believe there’s a better chapter ahead. We can be the authors of our own story,” she says.

“My Greek Drama,” published by Greenleaf Book Group Press, is out now.

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How did Greece lose its Olympics ‘army?’

Twitter strikes ad deal with Starcom MediaVest Group, bringing in Coca-Cola, Walmart, P&G, more

111655267 2 520x245 Twitter strikes ad deal with Starcom MediaVest Group, bringing in Coca Cola, Walmart, P&G, more

Twitter has reportedly signed a deal with the Starcom MediaVest Group, a division of advertising giant Publicis. According to the Financial Times, the deal could potentially be worth hundreds of millions of dollars over a multiyear period. The significance here is that it brings in large brands like Proctor & Gamble, Walmart, Microsoft, and Coca-Cola into the mix and gives Twitter’s advertising platform more credibility.

If a deal is struck, it would be a big win for the social network that has recently been on an advertising push of late. Earlier this month, it announced a deal with BBC America to display in-stream sponsor videos. It’s also possible that the agreement is part of an effort by Starcom MediaVest Group to take advantage of Twitter’s increased presence in the media scene.

Twitter’s CEO Dick Costolo has said in the past that it’s a media company. It has made noted improvements to its offering in an effort to help boost its advertising revenue. This month, the company launched a redesigned business site to help educate brands on what Twitter is and how to use it effectively. This deal helps it to compete against the likes of Google AdWords and Facebook’s advertising platform.

Starcom MediaVest Group’s global chief executive Laura Desmond told the Financial Times: “Twitter in a very short period of time has gone from an experiment to something that is essential.”

Brands have been looking for new ways to get involved with new technology in a means to increase the number of eyes looking at their commercials and advertisements. With the proliferation of services designed to take advantage of the “second screen”, it appears brands like Coca-Cola, Walmart, Microsoft, and others are paying attention to Twitter.

After all, if you look at not only the social TV apps in the market today, but also the big events like the Olympics, the Super Bowl, US presidential debates, and even the Game of Thrones season premiere, people are talking on Twitter. Regarded rating service Nielsen even published a study that denotes that there’s a “strong correlation” between Twitter usage and TV ratings.

We have reached out to Twitter for comment and will update this if we hear back.

More to follow.

Photo credit: NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP/Getty Images

Original article: 

Twitter strikes ad deal with Starcom MediaVest Group, bringing in Coca-Cola, Walmart, P&G, more

Tourist raped on minibus in Rio: Police


Tourist raped on minibus in Rio, police say

By Shasta Darlington, CNN

April 1, 2013 — Updated 1415 GMT (2215 HKT)

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • Foreign tourist was kidnapped, raped and robbed on a minibus in Rio de Janeiro, police say
  • Male passenger on the minibus also held captive and robbed, police say
  • Police won’t release the identities or nationalities of the victims
  • Incident highlights security concerns in Rio before upcoming high-profile events

Sao Paulo, Brazil (CNN) — A female foreign tourist was kidnapped, raped and robbed on a minibus in Rio de Janeiro, police said, highlighting security concerns in the Brazilian city that will host matches in the 2014 World Cup and will put on the Summer Olympics two years later.

A male foreign tourist on the minibus was also held captive and robbed, according to Rio police.

Police said they would not release the identities or nationalities of the victims.

The woman and man boarded the minibus in the Copacabana beach district in Rio de Janeiro early Saturday. Three men subsequently boarded the minibus and forced all the other passengers off, police said.

The woman was raped, and the two passengers’ credit cards were used at multiple locations inside and outside of Rio de Janeiro over a span of hours, the police said in a statement.

According to Brazilian newspapers, the man was handcuffed and beaten, while the woman was repeatedly raped. The two were dumped in Itaborai, a city more than 30 miles (about 50 kilometers) away, after six hours, O Globo newspaper said.

According to Rio police, two men have been arrested — Jonathan Foudakis de Souza, 20, and Wallace Aparecido Souza Silva, 22. They are searching for a third man in relation to the crime.

They said a Brazilian woman who was raped a week earlier has also identified the suspects.

Rio de Janeiro has launched a citywide offensive against crime, particularly drug-fueled violence in the shantytowns.

Police, backed by army troops, have stormed the slums, hoping to seize control from gangs and help secure the city before many high-profile events begin this year.

Pope Francis‘ first big international trip will be to Rio in July when he is expected to lead millions of young people in celebration of World Youth Day.

Rio de Janeiro also will stage many of the key matches when Brazil hosts the World Cup next year, and it will be the host city for the Olympic Games in 2016.

Rio has gone a long ways toward cleaning up its image as one of Latin America’s most violent cities.

But Brazilian media already are drawing parallels between this attack and the infamous gang rape of a young woman on a bus in India.

Continue reading here - 

Tourist raped on minibus in Rio: Police

Wonder of Yu: Paralympic drive

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Hong Kong’s Paralympic fencing champion

Hong Kong’s Paralympic fencing champion

Hong Kong’s Paralympic fencing champion

Hong Kong’s Paralympic fencing champion

Hong Kong’s Paralympic fencing champion

Hong Kong’s Paralympic fencing champion

Hong Kong’s Paralympic fencing champion

Hong Kong’s Paralympic fencing champion

Hong Kong’s Paralympic fencing champion

Hong Kong’s Paralympic fencing champion

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CNN’s Human to Hero series screens on World Sport at 1700 GMT (1200 ET) and 2230 GMT every Wednesday, and 0500 GMT Thursdays.

(CNN) — The only tinge of regret Alison Yu Chui Yee has from another prodigious Paralympic campaign is that she didn’t take a leaf out of Usain Bolt’s book.

Another two fencing gold medals at London 2012 took her tally to seven overall, enhancing her reputation of one of Hong Kong’s greatest ever Paralympians, and she had planned to premiere her very own signature pose at the apex of her latest triumph.

But the 28-year-old, who jokes she only took up fencing because she was promised there would be plenty of “handsome guys” on show, missed the chance to showcase her own version of the Jamaican sprinter’s move because she was too immersed in battle.

“I watched the Beijing Olympics and saw so many champions when they won try to do so many signature postures,” she told CNN’s Human to Hero series.

Read: Motorbike champ Lorenzo dances with danger

“I did think ‘What should I do if I get the gold medal in Beijing? Should I kiss the blade or hug the coach?’

“Finally (when I) knew that I won, I just took off my mask with a facial expression that my friend said looked like I had just woken up because I was still concentrating!”

Her celebrations might need some work but Yu’s pedigree in the noble art of fencing is indisputable.

Diagnosed with bone cancer in her left leg at the age of 11, Yu eventually had to have part of it removed. After making the move to fencing from swimming, she was instantly transfixed, rising through the ranks to make her Olympic debut at Athens, Greece, in 2004, aged just 20.

The sport, based on attack and defense with swords, has a heritage that some claim dates back as far as 1200 BC, due to the discovery of several ancient Egyptian carvings detailing duels involving combatants with blades and wearing masks for protection.

Read: ‘Girl with the dancing horse’

After being enticed along to her first lesson by a friend who promised a bevy of attractive men to look at, Yu was transfixed.

“In the very first lesson, I didn’t see any handsome guys but I felt fencing was so cool because the costume is all in white and you have to wear a mask. It’s just so mysterious. It reminded me of the movie ‘The Mask of Zorro.’

“After that I found fencing does not only have a good appearance, but also the strategy and the technique is very interesting. You have to use your physical strength together with your mental strength. I think it is so challenging and I love it.”

Fencing remains one of only four sports to have featured in every modern Olympic Games since 1896 but Yu’s first thought when she arrived at the world’s biggest sporting event at the age of 20 was about hamburgers, not history.

“I was so excited,” she explained. “Everything was just so new to me.

“I heard there’s a restaurant open 24 hours and a fast food shop which you can take all the food that you want free of charge. I couldn’t wait to eat so many hamburgers!”

Read: Judo giant – ‘Celine Dion puts me in the zone’

That excitement was also transmitted to Yu’s performance as she bagged a gold medal in all four of her events in 2004, both as an individual and as part of the Hong Kong team in the epee and foil categories, which use different blades and scoring systems.

Wheelchair fencing sees athletes compete in a chair that is fixed into a frame and fastened to the floor. Points are scored by landing a blow with the tip of your sword on an opponent in epee and foil.

Yu excelled in both fields of combat.

She’s taken part in nine fencing events in her Paralympic career to date winning seven golds, one silver and one bronze.

After the relative disappointment of winning only one gold in Beijing, where she had to settle for silver in the epee, Yu bounced back to win both her individual events at London 2012 despite a difficult preparation working with a new coach — during which she had contemplated quitting the sport.

“I was so depressed. I’m quite an optimistic girl, and I can hardly imagine that I cried a lot at that time. After training I would just go back to the room and cry because I didn’t know what I was doing and the training atmosphere was just not very good.”

However, cheered by her teammates and helped with her training by able-bodied fencing colleagues, she got back in the groove and had a successful Games, also winning bronze in a team event.

“When I came back, I just bought them a very big meal and shared my happiness with them.”

Yu’s record makes her one of Hong Kong’s most successful Paralympians, and that fact leaves her bursting with pride.

“Whenever I see the Hong Kong flag is flying in the sky, not because of anybody else, because of my efforts, I think it’s the most proud time of my life,” Yu said.

“I was the first female fencer in Hong Kong who captured four gold medals in the Paralympic Games (in Athens).

“When I came back to Hong Kong, so many reporters and journalists were waiting for us and interviewing us, and I thought ‘Wow, I just looked like a Hollywood star!’

“I am so proud of being a Paralympian because I think the Games are a very good platform for disabled persons to perform themselves.

I did think ‘What should I do if I got the gold medal in Beijing? Should I kiss the blade or hug the coach?’
Alison Yu Chui Yee

“Within the Paralympics movement, it’s not just talk about excellence, it’s not just talk about the competition, it’s also talk about the equality and how your world accepts those disabled people.”

Yu’s infectious character explains why she’s had little difficulty in overcoming the treacherous obstacles that were placed in front of her at such an early age.

A dedicated, passionate athlete, away from fencing she is relentlessly positive, something that has driven her through cancer and onto a clutch of gold medals.

“When I had bone cancer, I was just 11 years old. I think my parents suffered a lot because they worried about my health, my life, so much,” she said.

“For me, it was quite bad feeling during the treatment. But I quite enjoyed staying in the hospital because so many kids played with me.

“Every time when I talk about this memory, my mom scolds me because she says, ‘Come one, no one like hospital life, only you.’

“I think the most important thing for your life is the way you interpret things. Having an optimistic point of view is so important — your life will be so bright.”

Excerpt from - 

Wonder of Yu: Paralympic drive

Ai Weiwei to release album


Chinese artist Ai Weiwei to release heavy metal album

By Katie Hunt, for CNN

March 12, 2013 — Updated 1055 GMT (1855 HKT)

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • Dissident Chinese artist Ai Weiwei to debut a heavy metal album
  • Nine tracks on the album focus on Chinese politics
  • Decision to branch out into music came from his 2011 detention
  • Elton John encouraged him to complete the album

Hong Kong (CNN) — Dissident Chinese artist Ai Weiwei, whose artwork is shown in museums around the world, is taking a different direction with his latest project — a heavy metal album.

Ai wrote and sang each of the nine tracks on the debut album, which is called “Divina Commedia” after a poem by Italian poet Dante, and will be released next month.

“The lyrics are about the current political situation,” he told CNN by telephone from Beijing.

One song is about Chen Guangcheng, the blind activist who fled to the U.S. embassy in Beijing after escaping from house arrest last year.

Another mentions Wang Lijun, the police chief who also sought shelter with U.S. officials last year, in Chengdu, a move which exposed the scandal engulfing disgraced Chinese politician Bo Xilai and his wife, now convicted murderer, Gu Kailai.

Ai Weiwei: Despite flaws, America should be proud

Outspoken and provocative, Ai is perhaps best known for his work on the famous “Bird’s Nest” stadium built for the 2008 Olympics in Beijing.

His critical stance toward the Chinese government gained attention after the 2008 Sichuan earthquake that left nearly 90,000 dead, including many children who died when their shoddily-constructed schools collapsed.

A recent exhibition of his work at the Hirshhorn Museum in Washington DC featured hundreds of children’s backpacks lashed together in the shape of a snake, which Ai said represented the bags left behind by the students.

While a departure from his acclaimed sculpture and installations, the album is not his first foray into the world of music — last October he filmed a parody of “Gangnam Style,” the surprise worldwide hit by Korean rapper Psy.

In that clip, Ai limited his musical involvement to dancing, but other clips can be found on the Internet of the artist flexing his vocal cords.

Ai told CNN the decision to branch out into music stemmed from his detention in 2011 when his guards would ask him to sing a tune to pass the time. Ai was taken into custody in April and detained for 81 days amid a government crackdown on political activists. He was accused of evading a huge amount of taxes, charges Ai has said were trumped up.

Ai was released but with heavy restrictions on his movements and the Chinese government still holds his passport.

While Ai describes the tracks as “heavy metal” or “hard rock”, it was an encounter with pop star Elton John that encouraged him to finally complete the album. John dedicated his performance in Beijing in November to Ai, who at the time said he was deeply touched by the gesture.

Ai cited few musical influences and said he knew little about Western popular music despite a stint living in New York in the 1980s: “When I grew up all the music we had was revolutionary stuff.”

Ai said he would try to release the album in China next month, along with a music video, but he was gloomy about its prospects.

“I am completely censored,” he said. “I will put it online so people can download it but I think the authorities will just delete it.”

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Ai Weiwei to release album

Hot times for rednecks

A scene from

A scene from “Duck Dynasty.”

Editor’s note: Dean Obeidallah, a former attorney, is a political comedian and frequent commentator on various TV networks including CNN. He is the editor of the politics blog The Dean’s Report and co-director of the upcoming documentary, “The Muslims Are Coming!” Follow him on Twitter: @deanofcomedy.

(CNN) — Move over Kim Kardashian, your crown as queen of reality TV has been stolen by rednecks. And not just one redneck, but many of them. Hollywood can’t get enough redneck culture. Why? Because shows about rednecks are making Hollywood a lot of money.

The most popular reality shows on cable no longer star “beautiful people” like the Kardashians or “The Real Housewives.” Nope. Now that title is held by the likes of the men from A&E’s “Duck Dynasty,” who make duck calls for hunters and look like a ZZ Top cover band.

Also sharing that crown is 7-year-old Alana Thompson, better known as “Honey Boo Boo.” She has coined expressions like, “You’d better Redneckognize.” Her show even featured a visit to the “Redneck Games,” which her mother described as, “a lot like the Olympics but with a lot of missing teeth and butt cracks showing.”

Dean Obeidallah

Dean Obeidallah

Then there’s History Channel’s smash hit, “Swamp People,” which features alligator hunters in the Louisiana bayou. Also, don’t forget National Geographic’s “Rocket City Rednecks” and MTV’s new show, “Buckwild,” which stars West Virginian teens and has been dubbed the “Jersey Shore of Appalachia.”

A quick look at the ratings for these programs makes it clear why the networks are red hot for rednecks. The third season of “Duck Dynasty” premiered on February 27 and the episode set the record for the highest rated show in the history of A&E. Amazingly, the premiere actually beat “American Idol” and “Modern Family” that night in the coveted 18- to 49-year-old demographic. Add to that, just last week, “Duck Dynasty” held four of the top 20 spots on all of cable, while “Swamp People” came in as the 14th highest rated cable show.

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Comedian Jeff Foxworthy once joked: “You may be a redneck if your lifetime goal is to own a fireworks stand.” But now that line might more accurately be revised to, “You may be a redneck if your goal is to have a hit reality TV show.”

What makes Hollywood’s current love affair with redneck culture so intriguing is that it has demonized these folks for years. Hollywood has portrayed rednecks almost exclusively via a parade of inbreeds, morons and bigots. The film “Deliverance” is the most famous over-the-top example of this trend. There are also lighter redneck caricatures such as those in “The Dukes of Hazzard” and “The Beverly Hillbillies.” The list goes on.

When Hollywood hasn’t been demonizing rednecks, it has simply been dismissing them as being part of the “flyover” people who live between New York and Los Angeles.

Some people in the South are understandably not happy with these new reality shows because they may be propagating negative stereotypes. In December, Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia called on MTV to cancel “Buckwild” for fear it would present “shameful behavior” and advance negative stereotypes about people from his state.

Object all you want, but the TV executives truly don’t care. How can I say this? I’m from New Jersey, where we were subjected to an onslaught of similar reality shows. “Jersey Shore,” “Jersey Couture” and “Jerseylicious” are our equivalent of the horsemen of the apocalypse.

“Jersey Shore” didn’t end because New Jersey residents complained about the negative depiction, especially of Italian-Americans. (I’m half Italian so I was keenly aware of this issue.) No, the shows ended when America got bored with seeing people covered in self-tanner get drunk and hook up in a hot tub or punch each other in a Seaside Beach bar.

With the redneck shows, there is a silver lining that was absent with “Jersey Shore.” Most of us have never seen rednecks be themselves. We have only seen Hollywood’s interpretation. So while I’m sure there are things that “Honey Boo Boo” says or does that make some cringe, there are also real moments with her and her family that are endearing.

In the “Swamp People” episodes I’ve watched, the hunters are portrayed as resourceful people trying to outwit their hunting opponents. With “Duck Dynasty,” I’ll be honest, I truly have no idea what the fascination is, but I’m sure many from other parts of the country asked the same thing about “Jersey Shore.”

In time, redneck reality shows will pass. A new group of Americans will become the focus of Hollywood’s reality show factory. I’m not sure who that will be but I’m confident that before the reality show craze ends, every profession, race and culture in the United States will get their 15 minutes of fame.

But as long as redneck shows get ratings, Hollywood will keep pumping them out. To them, it’s not about the “red” of the people’s neck, it’s only about the green.

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The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of Dean Obeidallah.

Pelican, gull freed from beer can collars


Pelican, gull freed from beer can collars are recovering

By John Zarrella, CNN

March 6, 2013 — Updated 2126 GMT (0526 HKT)

This herring gull was one of two birds found by a rescue group with beer cans shoved over their heads.

This herring gull was one of two birds found by a rescue group with beer cans shoved over their heads.

(CNN) — Maya Totman says she’s never seen anything like this before: birds with beer cans forced over their heads.

“This is sickening,” she said. “We are here to help the wildlife and this is what you do.”

Totman, who heads Florida Keys Wildlife Rescue Inc., received a call Monday about two injured birds on Big Pine Key, about 30 miles east of Key West.

When she arrived, she found a semi-paralyzed brown pelican and a weak, emaciated herring gull. Each bird had a Busch beer can around its neck like a collar.

Someone had cut the ends of the cans and forced them over the birds’ heads, around their necks.

“They were gasping for breath,” Totman said. “They wouldn’t have survived another day or two.”

A rescue official said the birds were

A rescue official said the birds were “gasping for breath.”

The cans were immediately cut off. The pelican had symptoms of avian botulism and needed fluid to flush toxins from its system. The gull needed fluids as well, along with a helping of fresh fish soup.

Totman said the birds are doing beautifully and should be released back into the wild soon.

“We come across birds stuck in nets, bottles, fishing line and with hooks in them, but never this,” said Totman, who has been working in the Keys since 1993.

Totman said she believes at least two people were involved, one to hold down the bird and another to put the can around its neck.

“No way one person can do this,” she said.

Who did it? So far, there are no leads, but Totman said the area crime watch was notified and is keeping an eye out.

The birds were found a day after an osprey was found shot with BB gun pellets in the same area. The osprey was not seriously injured.

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Pelican, gull freed from beer can collars

Lion kills worker at California sanctuary


Lion kills worker at sanctuary in California

By CNN Staff

March 7, 2013 — Updated 0316 GMT (1116 HKT)

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • NEW: Conservationist says she had been in cage with lion before
  • The victim of the attack was a 26-year-old intern
  • Another employee tried to distract the lion away from the injured worker
  • A deputy shot and killed the adult male African lion

(CNN) — A 26-year-old female intern was killed Wednesday afternoon by an African lion inside a cage at an exotic cat sanctuary in California, authorities said.

“Our thoughts and prayers are with her and her family at this critical time,” said Dale Anderson, founder of Project Survival Cat Haven in Dunlap.

The lion, a 5-year-old, 350-pound cat named Cous Cous, was shot and killed, officials said.

“Another employee had made several attempts to distract the lion away from the victim and into another enclosure prior to the deputy’s arrival, but all attempts failed,” the Fresno County Sheriff’s Office said in a news release.

A sheriff’s deputy shot and killed the lion and then gave medical assistance to the worker, it said. “The victim died at the scene.”

The head of The Jungle Jenny Foundation, which focuses on conservation of endangered species, said she had been in Cous Cous’ cage before, accompanied by a park worker.

She said there was no indication from the lion that he was dangerous.

“I didn’t see any type of aggressive behavior,” Jenny Michaels told CNN’s Piers Morgan.

She said the workers at the park were top-notch.

“It was really well run, very professional,” she said. “I don’t know the circumstances (of the attack) but I can tell you that in my interaction over at Project Survival they have been professional and … they have run their protocol strictly.”

Noted animal expert Jack Hanna said that even if the woman had known the lion, a big cat can be unpredictable in the way it reacts to what it sees or hears.

“They are wild animals, end of story,” he said. “No matter what anyone says, they are wild animals.”

Hanna said it would be unusual for someone to enter an adult lion’s cage without another person or with someone close by.

Project Survival said it would investigate whether safety protocol was followed.

Cat Haven is a 100-acre wooded sanctuary that is home to “some of the rarest cats in the world,” including lions, tigers, jaguars and leopards, according to its website.

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Lion kills worker at California sanctuary

Iranian sharpshooters target rats


Iranian sharpshooters target rats

By Ashley Fantz and Shirzad Bozorgmehr, CNN

March 6, 2013 — Updated 0647 GMT (1447 HKT)

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • Big rats are reportedly running rampant in 26 districts in Tehran
  • The government uses poison, and teams of sharpshooters are killing the rodents with air guns
  • The biggest headache is Norwegian rats, which can grow to 16 inches

(CNN) — The rats die hard in Iran.

Sharpshooters in Tehran are training their air gun scopes on the country’s longstanding rodent problem. Rats are reportedly running rampant in 26 districts in the capital.

Iran has the biggest beef with Norwegian rats, Mohammad Hadi Heydarzadeh, a top environmental official, told CNN.

He said the buggers have “entered Iran from abroad by cargo ships.”

Though it’s unclear if the rats come with paperwork, a search of ratbehavior.org shows that that particular kind of rat can grow 16 inches long. And they are very aggressive, “fighting, chasing, biting and boxing.”

While the Iranians have used poison to kill the rats during the daytime, at night the teams of sharpshooters use infrared lenses to hunt them down.

“We have identified the rats’ places of congregation by using (computer) software,” Heydarzadeh explained.

By the end of 2013, the Iranians hope to have 40 teams of shooters working, he added.

So far, 2,205 rats have been killed. Their bodies are carted off and incinerated or buried in special dumps, the environmental official explained.

University researchers are working with the government to assess whether their newest plan of attack is working.

But Heydarzadeh feels good.

“The number of these rodents in Tehran,” he said, “is on the decline.”

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Iranian sharpshooters target rats

Argentina ‘Operation Condor’ trial starts


Trial over terrifying ‘Operation Condor’ under way

By Mariano Castillo, CNN

March 5, 2013 — Updated 1613 GMT (0013 HKT)

Relatives of victims during South American military regimes hear trial ruling at Argentine embassy, Montevideo, March 31, 2011.

Relatives of victims during South American military regimes hear trial ruling at Argentine embassy, Montevideo, March 31, 2011.

(CNN) — A trial over one of Latin America’s darkest moments is under way in Argentina, where 25 defendants are accused of crimes against humanity for their alleged role in a 1970s campaign of repression and violence.

Operation Condor was an organized campaign by the continent’s right-wing governments to suppress and crush political opposition. On Tuesday, 25 former officials tied to the operation appeared in court for the first day of what officials say could be a trial of more than two years.

The clandestine nature of Operation Condor means that its full extent may never be known, but researchers estimate that 50,000 were killed, 30,000 were “disappeared” and presumed killed, and 400,000 were jailed, according to The Center for Justice and Accountability.

Chile under dictator Augusto Pinochet was central to the operation, which also included participation from Argentina, Uruguay, Brazil and Paraguay, the center says.

Tuesday’s trial is the first time for such a large number of defendants in the case to be tried together. The defendants are Argentinean except for one Uruguayan, former Maj. Juan Cordeiro Piacentini.

Among the specific charges, 12 of the defendants, including former Argentine dictator Jorge Rafael Videla, are accused of 108 counts of human rights violations in several South American countries.

Videla is already serving a life sentence for human rights abuses during his tenure.

Another former Argentinian dictator, Gen. Reynaldo Benito Bignone, is among another group of defendants being charged with 35 specific cases of abuse under Operation Condor.

Bignone also was previously convicted of human rights abuses in another trial and is serving a 25-year sentence.

The trial is expected to last a minimum of two years and about 500 witnesses are expected to testify, the government’s Center for Judicial Information said.

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Argentina ‘Operation Condor’ trial starts