Arrest

Humane Society of Missouri's Animal Cruelty Task Force Rescues 55 Dogs, Recovers 20 Deceased Animals from Horrific Conditions in Stone County, Missouri

Retrieved on: 
土曜日, 1月 20, 2024

ST. LOUIS, Jan. 20, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Late yesterday afternoon, the Humane Society of Missouri's (HSMO) Animal Cruelty Task Force (ACT) – one of the nation's largest animal-rescue and disaster-response teams – rescued 55 dogs, mostly large-breed mixes, from a property in Stone County, Missouri. The rescued dogs were transported to HSMO's Macklind headquarters in St. Louis to receive health evaluations and emergency veterinary treatment. The carcasses of 15 dogs and five goats were also found on the property, but it was unclear whether the animals died of starvation or froze to death. The remains were removed, and necropsies will be performed.

Key Points: 
  • The rescued dogs were transported to HSMO's Macklind headquarters in St. Louis to receive health evaluations and emergency veterinary treatment.
  • The emergency rescue was prompted by calls on Friday morning from concerned residents and the Stone County Sheriff's office.
  • Members of the Animal Cruelty Task Force deployed immediately due to the animals' reported conditions and the dangerous cold.
  • To report an animal that may be in danger or is suffering from neglect or abuse, call the local police and the Humane Society of Missouri's Animal Cruelty Hotline at 314-647-4400.

Domestic violence: criminalising coercive control in France could bring more justice to victims

Retrieved on: 
水曜日, 1月 17, 2024

Over the last decade in many European countries, legislators, magistrates, government ministers, law enforcement agencies, lawyers and service providers have recognised that prevailing approaches to domestic violence were failing and have adopted the new model of “coercive control” to reframe domestic violence as a crime against rights and resources rather than as an assault.Criminalising coercive controlDrawing on interviews with several hundred French professionals, victims, service providers and academics, the Chandler-Vérien French parliamentary mission on domestic violence tasked by Prime Minister Borne with improving the judicial treatment of domestic violence stressed the urgency of translating coercive control into law and called on coercive control to be at the core of future information campaigns and professional training.

Key Points: 


Over the last decade in many European countries, legislators, magistrates, government ministers, law enforcement agencies, lawyers and service providers have recognised that prevailing approaches to domestic violence were failing and have adopted the new model of “coercive control” to reframe domestic violence as a crime against rights and resources rather than as an assault.

Criminalising coercive control

  • Drawing on interviews with several hundred French professionals, victims, service providers and academics, the Chandler-Vérien French parliamentary mission on domestic violence tasked by Prime Minister Borne with improving the judicial treatment of domestic violence stressed the urgency of translating coercive control into law and called on coercive control to be at the core of future information campaigns and professional training.
  • We believe that enacting a coercive control offence in France would be a significant advance in the equality agenda.

Coercive control: a “liberty crime”

  • Coercive control has been referred to as a “liberty crime” because of the experience of entrapment it produces, analogous to being held hostage.
  • The rights infringed upon include autonomy, dignity and self-determination, even more so when victims have a disability.


current domestic-violence laws have failed to hold perpetrators accountable and to protect victims, mainly women and children;
the lack of social control and legal sanctions encourages aggravation and recidivism, creating a revolving door in French courts and prisons;
victims confront situations that more closely resemble captivity than an assault.

A system of impunity

  • The French state’s High Council for Equality has found that the conviction rate for perpetrators of domestic violence amounted to a “true system of impunity”.
  • The gap between the current criminalisation of domestic violence and its reality as experienced by victims can erode trust in the justice system.
  • The conviction rate of perpetrators and the number of domestic homicides in France reflect the perpetrators’ lack of accountability.

Surveillance, isolation, intimidation, control, personalised credible threats

  • In most cases, violence and/or sexual abuse is accompanied by intimidation, isolation, control tactics, and personalised credible threats.
  • These begin in the house and can extend to every activity, including work, and involve children, other family members and unrelated others, including professionals, as spies, informants or co-victims.
  • Because perpetrators aim to monopolise all the resources and privileges available in a relationship or family space, their adult partner is usually their primary target.
  • But any person who is seen as obstructing this monopoly is likely to be targeted as a secondary victim, including children, grandparents, siblings, friends, neighbours, coworkers, as well as law and social services professionals.

What about the children?

  • Coercive control of women by men is the most important cause of violence against children and child homicide outside war zones.
  • This often occurs after a separation, in the context of legal proceedings relating to the child’s custody and parental rights or during visiting rights.


The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

South Africa has made its genocide case against Israel in court. Here's what both sides said and what happens next

Retrieved on: 
火曜日, 1月 16, 2024

Last week, the South African government presented a case to the International Court of Justice.

Key Points: 
  • Last week, the South African government presented a case to the International Court of Justice.
  • Read more:
    What enforcement power does the International Court of Justice have in South Africa's genocide case against Israel?

Defining genocide


The crime of genocide is covered in the 1948 United Nations Convention for the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide. It is defined as acts committed with intent to destroy, either in part or in whole, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, including:
killing members of the group
causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group
deliberately inflicting conditions of life calculated to bring about a groups physical destruction, in whole or in part
imposing measures to prevent births
forcibly transferring children.
The Genocide Convention is designed to not only prosecute individuals and governments who committed genocide, but to prevent it from occurring. Therefore, the Convention states that while genocidal acts are punishable, so too are attempts and incitement to commit genocide, regardless of whether they are successful or not.

The South African case

  • The South African government argued that Israeli forces had killed 23,210 Palestinians.
  • Crucially for the court, South Africa argued Israeli forces were often aware that the bombings would cause significant civilian casualties.
  • Beyond the death toll, South Africa argued that there were 60,000 wounded and maimed Palestinians.
  • The South African government also alleged the Israeli attacks and the actions of its forces were preventing the humanitarian needs of the Palestinian people being met.

The Israeli response

  • The Israeli government rejects all of the allegations by South Africa.
  • It says the civilian casualties have been an unfortunate consequence of carrying out military operations in an urban environment.
  • The Israeli Defence Force also runs a Civilian Harm Mitigation Unit.
  • Instead, the court will decide whether the allegations are at the least plausible, and if so, likely order that Israel and Palestine reach an interim ceasefire, and for Israeli forces to take all necessary steps to prevent genocide.

How significant is it?

  • That said, the prospect of any ruling by the International Court of Justice having a meaningful impact on the conflict in Gaza is remote.
  • The UN and its legal institutions are powered solely by a belief the international community is respectful of international institutions and international law.
  • For Israel and for its most powerful supporters, a finding against it by the court would likely be something they dispute and ultimately ignore.

Where does this leave Australia?

  • Small to middle powers that rely on international rules to further their interests may be moved to support the cause for a ceasefire more vocally.
  • After all, the Australian government supported Ukraine’s case against Russia, also about genocide.


Dean Aszkielowicz has received funding from the Army Research Scheme. Paul Taucher does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

The Epoch Times and Sen. Ron Johnson Host Screening of Jan. 6 Documentary in U.S. Capitol

Retrieved on: 
金曜日, 1月 12, 2024

WASHINGTON , Jan. 12, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- The Epoch Times held a screening on Jan. 9, 2024, in the U.S. Capitol building for the second part of EpochTV's exposé-style documentary, "The Real Story of January 6 Part 2: The Long Road Home." Part two was released exclusively on EpochTV on the third anniversary of the momentous day in January of 2021.

Key Points: 
  • Part two was released exclusively on EpochTV on the third anniversary of the momentous day in January of 2021.
  • "The federal government has not given the American public any reason to trust them," said Sen. Johnson as part of his opening remarks.
  • For more information about the documentary, visit Jan6RealStory.com and follow the documentary on social media at @realstoryofJ6.
  • This documentary is the culmination of a 3-year investigation by The Epoch Times to search for the truth.

TSA detects 6,737 firearms at airport security checkpoints in 2023

Retrieved on: 
水曜日, 1月 10, 2024

WASHINGTON, Jan. 10, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- During 2023, the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) intercepted a total of 6,737 firearms at airport security checkpoints, preventing them from getting into the secure areas of the airport and onboard aircraft. Approximately 93% of these firearms were loaded. This total surpasses the previous year's record of 6,542 firearms stopped at checkpoints and represents the highest one-year total in TSA's history.

Key Points: 
  • WASHINGTON, Jan. 10, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- During 2023, the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) intercepted a total of 6,737 firearms at airport security checkpoints, preventing them from getting into the secure areas of the airport and onboard aircraft.
  • "We are still seeing far too many firearms at TSA checkpoints, and what's particularly concerning is the amount of them loaded, presenting an unnecessary risk to everyone at the TSA checkpoint," said TSA Administrator David Pekoske.
  • In the fourth quarter of 2023, which ended Dec. 31, Transportation Security Officers (TSOs) stopped 1,665 firearms at checkpoints.
  • The total represents an average of 18 firearms per day at TSA checkpoints, of which nearly 93% were loaded.

Kestra Medical Technologies Surpasses 200 Million Covered Lives for ASSURE Wearable Cardioverter Defibrillator (WCD) System

Retrieved on: 
木曜日, 1月 4, 2024

Kestra Medical Technologies announced today that the ASSURE® Wearable Cardioverter Defibrillator (WCD) system is now available to cover over 200+ million health plan members across the U.S.

Key Points: 
  • Kestra Medical Technologies announced today that the ASSURE® Wearable Cardioverter Defibrillator (WCD) system is now available to cover over 200+ million health plan members across the U.S.
  • The company reached this covered-lives milestone less than eighteen months after commencing the national commercial launch phase of the ASSURE system in the U.S.
  • View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20240104748165/en/
    Kestra Medical Technologies announced today that the ASSURE® Wearable Cardioverter Defibrillator (WCD) system is now available as a contracted coverage benefit to over 200 million insurance plan members across the U.S.
  • (Photo credit: Kestra Medical Technologies, Inc.)
    “Since launching the ASSURE system, prescriber demand and patient preference have enabled us to rapidly contract with both national and regional payors,” said Brian Webster, CEO of Kestra Medical Technologies.

Peter Magubane: courageous photographer who chronicled South Africa's struggle for freedom

Retrieved on: 
木曜日, 1月 4, 2024

The photographer suffered great losses during apartheid.

Key Points: 
  • The photographer suffered great losses during apartheid.
  • He miraculously survived being shot 17 times below the waist at the funeral of a student activist in Natalspruit in 1985.
  • Despite the pain and suffering he witnessed and experienced, Magubane’s photographs testify to the hope that is at the heart of the struggle for a just world.

Witness to momentous events

  • He not only witnessed, but also took part in, many of the most significant events in modern South African history.
  • Referred to as the “dompas”, the document was used to control and restrict the movement of black South Africans.
  • His images focusing on life in the township were later to form the subject of several of his books.
  • He soon began to work as a photographer under the tutelage of Drum’s chief photographer and picture editor, Jürgen Schadeberg.
  • the events of that day produced the picture of the funeral as one of the central iconographic emblems of the anti-apartheid struggle.
  • Her slender hands are beautiful, and their perfect smoothness accentuates the brutal rupture where her skin has been broken.

The archive

  • In 2018 his work was exhibited in a major retrospective, On Common Ground, alongside that of another renowned South African photographer, David Goldblatt.
  • He served as Nelson Mandela’s photographer from 1990 to 1994.
  • Magubane’s indomitable spirit and compassionate vision live on through his work.


Kylie Thomas ne travaille pas, ne conseille pas, ne possède pas de parts, ne reçoit pas de fonds d'une organisation qui pourrait tirer profit de cet article, et n'a déclaré aucune autre affiliation que son organisme de recherche.

My life as a 'Jillposter': the radical feminist poster group that pasted prints around Melbourne in the ‘80s

Retrieved on: 
水曜日, 1月 3, 2024

Jillposters was a self-funded radical feminist poster group active in Melbourne from 1983 until 1988.

Key Points: 
  • Jillposters was a self-funded radical feminist poster group active in Melbourne from 1983 until 1988.
  • Yet we produced an amazing range of posters and postcards, most of which are held in Australia’s national collection.


Read more:
From Duchamp to AI: the transformation of authorship in art

A medium for political messages

  • Women were at the forefront of postermaking in Australia in the early 1980s.
  • Silkscreen printing, as it was taught at art schools, was and is a laborious, hand-driven process.


But our posters were ideal as a medium for conveying political messages and disseminating information. Many poster workshops and groups were born in the 1970s and 80s in various locations; including Megalo Workshop in Canberra, Tin Sheds and Earthworks Poster Collective in Sydney, and Red Letter Press and Another Planet Posters in Melbourne.

Off to a flying start

  • Jillposters got off to a flying start in February 1983 when a group of friends met at the University of Melbourne student union to discuss forming a political poster group.
  • We each contributed the grand sum of A$10 to get things started and to open a bank account.
  • Our initial plan was to paste up all of our posters around the streets of Melbourne.
  • Going out late at night with a bucket of sloppy wallpaper paste, large brushes and a roll of posters was all very exciting.
  • Our aim was to find walls where our political posters wouldn’t be covered up by other groups pasting up band posters.

Shifting gear


We then shifted gear slightly and allocated a smaller portion for street paste up and the larger portion for sales through retail outlets such as galleries and bookshops in Australia and New Zealand. Poster production soon increased and our designs became more detailed and colourful.

  • We were also contacted by mainstream galleries wanting to acquire our posters for their collections.
  • Both the National Gallery of Australia and the Art Gallery of Ballarat bought posters in 1983 and then continued to collect all the posters we produced.
  • The State Library of Victoria also collected them and, in more recent years, the Ian Potter Museum at the University of Melbourne collected a range of posters.


Carole Wilson received government arts funding from federal and state arts bodies when she worked for Another Planet Posters between 1988 and 1990. She was a founding member of Jillposters and then went on to work at Another Planet Posters.

Journalist Yuyu Dong's Detention Extended Two Months By China

Retrieved on: 
土曜日, 12月 30, 2023

WASHINGTON, Dec. 30, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- Following is a statement from Eileen O'Reilly, president of the National Press Club, and Gil Klein, president of the National Press Club Journalism Institute, on the extended detention of Chinese journalist Yuyu Dong.

Key Points: 
  • WASHINGTON, Dec. 30, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- Following is a statement from Eileen O'Reilly, president of the National Press Club, and Gil Klein, president of the National Press Club Journalism Institute, on the extended detention of Chinese journalist Yuyu Dong.
  • "We have learned through the family of Chinese journalist Yuyu Dong that his unjust detention has been extended two months.
  • This extension will now push Yuyu's detention beyond the anniversary date of his arrest in 2022.
  • It is time for China to step up and release Yuyu to his family.

Will the world see more wars or unrest in 2024? Here are 5 hotspots to watch

Retrieved on: 
土曜日, 12月 30, 2023

Some of these nations have been dealing with simmering unrest, however, which could erupt in 2024 and seize the global spotlight.

Key Points: 
  • Some of these nations have been dealing with simmering unrest, however, which could erupt in 2024 and seize the global spotlight.
  • Here are five places where I believe civil conflicts or unrest could worsen and potentially lead to violence.

Myanmar

  • Myanmar descended into chaos in 2021 when a military coup overthrew the democratically elected government led by Aung San Suu Kyi and sparked widespread civil protests that eventually morphed into an armed resistance.
  • The country, home to 135 ethnic groups, has rarely known peace.
  • This exploded after the coup as ethnic militia groups joined forces with pro-democracy fighters from the Bamar majority protesting the junta.

Mali

  • In Mali, a nation in the turbulent Sahel region of Africa, tensions escalated throughout 2023 and now threaten to erupt into full-scale civil war.
  • A United Nations peacekeeping mission was established in 2013 to bring stability to Mali.
  • Then, in 2015, key rebel groups signed a peace agreement with the Mali government.
  • Read more:
    Mali crisis: UN peacekeepers are leaving after 10 years – what's needed for a smooth transition

    After two more coups in 2020 and 2021, military officers consolidated their power and said they would restore the state’s full territorial control over all of Mali.

Lebanon

  • In 2019, widespread civil protest broke out in Lebanon against leaders who were perceived not to be addressing the day-to-day needs of the population.
  • The International Monetary Fund criticised Lebanon in September for a lack of economic reform.
  • Most recently, the war between Israel and Hamas has threatened to spill over to Lebanon, home to the Hezbollah militant group, which claims to have an army of 100,000 fighters.

Pakistan

  • Pakistan also faces spillover from instability in neighbouring Afghanistan and increased terror attacks.
  • Pakistan is expected to hold parliamentary elections in February 2024, after which the current military caretaker government is expected to transfer power back to civilian rule.
  • Read more:
    How Imran Khan's populism has divided Pakistan and put it on a knife's edge

Sri Lanka

  • Sri Lanka faced a debilitating economic crisis in 2022 that led to critical fuel, food and medical shortages.
  • Stability returned in 2023 as Sri Lanka began implementing economic reforms as part of a bailout agreement with the International Monetary Fund.
  • Elections are also due in Sri Lanka by late 2024.


Jessica Genauer does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.