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Entries in world (301)

Saturday
Oct312009

Christopher "Dudus" Coke Wanted

Christopher Dudus Coke


Christopher "Dudus" Coke, 40, a Jamaican national, is wanted by the US authorities on a number of drug and weapon offenses. See the story here.

The U.S. has officially asked the Jamaican government to hand him over to face those charges and has complained about the tardiness on the part of Jamaican government to do so. See the extradition request here.

"The U.S. government is looking forward to the Jamaican government respecting their obligations under the treaty," Patricia Attkisson, spokeswoman for the U.S. Embassy in Kingston, said.


Acknowledging the request for Christopher Dudus Coke's extradition, a Jamaican official responded:

“The Government has been notified and discussions are taking place. It is principally the prerogative of the Ministry of Justice and the Attorney General’s office”, Foreign Affairs Minister Kenneth Baugh said.


Coke's lawyer, Tom Tavares-Finson, said he had not seen any paperwork and did not know why the U.S. was interested in his client. He claimed that Coke had no connections with the United States and was also not sure if his client would turn himself in voluntarily.

"We're waiting to hear what the decision is," said Tavares-Finson, who has dismissed the U.S. charges as "hype."


According to reports, Coke is the alleged leader of the "Shower Posse" gang. He is charged in the U.S. Southern District of New York with conspiracy to distribute cocaine and marijuana and conspiracy to illegally traffic in firearms. Coke faces a maximum sentence of life in prison if convicted. Under the Extradition Treaty, accused persons do not have to sell illicit drugs in the United States to be convicted in that country. See a report in the Jamaican newspaper the Jamaica Gleaner concerning the U.S.- Jamaican Extradition Treaty.

Christopher Coke is not only politically well-connected to the governing party in Jamaica, the JLP (Jamaica Labour Party), he is also the recognized leader of his community of Tivoli Gardens in downtown Kingston. His influence stretches across the entire island of Jamaica and overseas to the U.S. and England. His extradition to the U.S. would likely have huge ramifications among his followers and his community.


View Tivoli Gardens, Jamaica in a larger map


Another Jamaican newspaper, the Jamaica Observer gives this perspective on Coke, as well as some background information. His aliases include Dudus, President and Shortman:

"He is the leading figure among JLP garrisons and many leaders in those communities report to him. He is tremendously powerful and is feared by friends and foes alike"


According to an article in Jamaicaviews.com, there could be social unrest if Coke was to be extradited. He has the legitimacy that the government can only envy among the urban poor. A Caribbean scholar with knowledge of the workings of inner-city communities across the region put it this way:

“For the people, legitimacy in the Government stops at Carib 5 cinema (in Cross Roads). From that point down, he (Dudus) is more legitimate than the Government. He has a monopoly of force and consensual power because he has legitimacy that the Government of Jamaica cannot even dream to have where the urban poor is concerned.”

What does a government do when they have created a government within a government? What do they now do when they have to hand up this government to another government?” he asked. “He (Dudus) can get kids to be off the street at 8:30 pm. The Government does not even have the power to scratch anybody’s hair much more to do something like that. People feel safer in Tivoli Gardens than anywhere else. It is the safest garrison. This is touchy. In a country that barely understands order, you have found somebody to provide order in the midst of chaos because downtown is chaos. What do you do with him?”


The government in Jamaica is under pressure to respond to the U.S. request for extradition from the opposition party the PNP (People's National Party). Peter Bunting, Opposition spokesman on national security, claims that the Government's failure to extradite Tivoli Gardens strongman, Christopher 'Dudus' Coke, has caused a stand-off between Washington and Kingston.

Peter Bunting, said in a press statement that the longer the Government took to honor the US request to send Coke to stand trial, the country's national interests and international reputation was being jeopardized.

"It is completely untrue," said Minister of Justice and Attorney General Dorothy Lightbourne:

"The Jamaican Government has, indeed, responded through the channels laid down in the Extradition Treaty between Jamaica and the United States and there is ongoing communication between the authorities of both states," she said in a press statement.


There has also been criticism of Jamaica's Prime Minister, Bruce Golding. Tivoli Gardens is his constituency and he has mostly been silent on the requested extradition of Christopher Coke. An editorial asked a question that Prime Minister Golding needs to answer clearly and unequivocally:

That question is "whether the Government's loyalties lie with those who hold that the end justifies the means or the citizens of this country who are committed to order and the rule of law".


According to Claude Robinson, a journalist with the Jamaica Observer:

All that can be expected of the Prime Minister is a simple and clear statement acknowledging the request and affirming that it will be dealt with in accordance with our democracy and our constitution without regard to the political affiliation of the target of the request. Once that due process is complete, the country will be told the full outcome. That's all that was expected from the prime minister. He should have delivered.


So the question remains, as it has for over two months now:

Will the Jamaican government hand over Christopher "Dudus" Coke to the U.S. authorities to answer the criminal charges against him?

 

 

 

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Thursday
Oct222009

The Car of the Future

Toyota-FT-EV-II


Looking for a new car? Tired of all those cars with a pesky steering wheel and omnipresent brake and gas pedals? How about see-through LED rear combination tail lights and electric sliding doors on both sides? Ever just want to stretch your legs while tackling the constant stop-and-go of rush hour traffic?

Well, the Toyota FT-EV II was made just for you.


Toyota-FT-EV-II-side


Designed for short distant driving, the electric motor can travel around 90km (50 miles) at up to 100km/h (60 mph), making it most useful in the city.

Rather than a conventional steering wheel, Toyota has fitted the FT-EV II with joystick-like controls which means there are no conventional controls such as accelerator, brake pedal... or even a steering wheel.

Toyota-FT-EV-II-interior


Key to the FT-EV II’s space efficiency is careful placement of the battery and electric motor, freeing up space and leg room at the front of the car.

Toyota has also paid attention to improving vision with a large windscreen and airy cabin feel.

Toyota-FT-EVII


Even the LED tail lights form part of the rear vision, allowing the driver to see through them when reversing.

FT-EV II Concept dimensions:
Length 2,730 mm
Width 1,680 mm
Height 1,490 mm
Wheelbase 1,900 mm
Seating 4

This is a concept car. See other concept vehicles from Toyota: The FT-86 and the single-seat personal mobility i-Real



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Wednesday
Oct072009

Was Baby Yair Carrillo For Sale?

Maria GurrollaYair Anthony CarilloTammy Silas


30-year-old Maria Gurrolla was not only devastated at the loss of her 4-day-old son, Yair Anthony Carrillo, she was also a bloody mess. A woman, later identified as Tammy Renee Silas,39, approached Maria at home at 3816 East Ridge Dr., Nashville, Tn., claiming to be an immigration officer who had come to arrest her.

The "immigration officer" proceeded to attack Maria, stabbing her multiple times. Maria managed to escape and ran to one of her neighbors for help. When she returned to her home she discovered that the "immigration officer" had left, taking Maria's 4-day-old son with her. An amber alert was also issued.

The police were able to locate and arrest Tammy Renee Silas, at her home in Ardmore, Alabama about 80 away. Silas is charged with the federal offense of kidnapping. She is also accused of attacking Maria Gurrolla with a knife and stealing her then 4-day-old baby. The FBI is holding Silas in the Morgan County Jail in Alabama. She'll appear in federal court when U.S. Marshals bring her back to Nashville.



Maria Gurrolla was notified that her baby was found. She went with her other 3 children, aged 3, 9, and 11 to get her infant son. After allowing her a brief visit with him, state welfare officials took him and the other three children and placed them in foster care, without much explanation except to say that it was for the safety of the children.

It was later learned that Department of Children's Services received credible reports that Maria was trying to sell her baby.

A statement released by DCS had said, in part, that "the Department of Children's Services still had concerns about the well-being and safety of (her other) children, based on credible and serious information that we are currently receiving."

 

See Video Clip Here


 

However, one day later, Metro police agreed that Yair should be returned to the custody of his parents and a Juvenile Court agreed. Maria Gurrolla has now been reunited with all of her children. A family member said that Gurolla and her family are currently staying with another relative right now because she is afraid to go back to her home where the attack happened.


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Wednesday
Sep162009

Mexican Independence Day

Mexican Flag



September 16, 1810 was the day when father Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla, a Roman Catholic priest from the town of Dolores, near Guanajuato, Mexico rang the bell of his church and gathered his congregation together. Flanked by Ignacio Allende, Juan Aldama and others, he called on all Mexicans to stand up and fight for the liberation of Mexico from Spain.

Mexican dance 2Mexican dressMexican group

 


View Untitled in a larger map

 

Mexican danceMexican coupleMexican boy and girl



His speech known as the Grito de Delores (the cry from Delores) was the beginning of a war that would last for 11 years and 11 days. Spain finally recognized an independent Mexico on September 27, 1821 by signing the Treaty of Cordoba.

MexicansMexican flag 2Mexican and Flag



Click the following links for details on the Mexican War of Independence and Independence Celebrations

Mexico celebrates its independence in September as do many other countries.





















































































































































CountryDateHoliday
Andorra September 8
(1278)
Our Lady of
Meritxell Day
Armenia September 21
(1991)
Independence
Day
Belize September 21
(1981)
Independence
Day
Botswana September 30
(1966)
Independence
Day (Botswana Day)
Brazil September 7
(1822)
Independence
Day
Chile September 18
(1810)
Independence
Day
Costa Rica September 15
(1821)
Independence
Day
El Salvador September 15
(1821)
Independence
Day
Gibraltar September 10
(1967)
National
Day15
Guatemala September 15
(1821)
Independence
Day
Guinea-Bissau September 24
(1973)
Independence
Day
Honduras September 15
(1821)
Independence
Day
Korea (North) September 9
(1948)
Founding of the
Democratic People's Republic of Korea
Libya September 1
(1969)
Revolution
Day
Mali September 22
(1960)
Independence
Day
Malta September 21
(1964)
Independence
Day
Mexico September 16
(1810)
Independence
Day
Nicaragua September 15
(1821)
Independence
Day
Papua New Guinea September 16
(1975)
Independence
Day
Qatar September 3
(1971)
Independence
Day
St. Kitts and Nevis September 19
(1983)
Independence
Day
San Marino September 3
(A.D. 301)
Founding of the
Republic
Saudi Arabia September 23
(1932)
Unification of
the Kingdom
Slovakia September 1
(1992)
Constitution
Day
Swaziland September 6
(1968)
Independence
Day
Tajikistan September 9
(1991)
Independence
Day (or National Day)
Uzbekistan September 1
(1991)
Independence
Day
Vietnam September 2
(1945)
Independence
Day

 

 



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Monday
Sep142009

Caster Semenya - Is She or Isn't She

Outrage



In a previous post, I discounted the idea that Caster Semenya, 18, from South Africa (the women's 800-meter world champion), could be a hermaphrodite .....well I was wrong.
Australian media claimed to have obtained leaked details of the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) tests. The Sydney Daily Telegraph said these showed that the 800-metre world champion has a chromosomal abnormality that means she has no womb or ovaries but internal testes that produce the male hormone, testosterone.

The IAAF has refused to confirm or deny the veracity of the article. However, IAAF spokesman Nick Davies said: "The statements should be treated with caution as they are not official statements by the IAAF."
"We have received the results from Germany, but they now need to be examined by a group of experts and we will not be in a position to speak to the athlete about them for at least a few weeks.

"After that, depending on the results, we will meet privately with the athlete to discuss further action."

The IAAF has confirmed it will not comment further on Semenya until after the IAAF council meeting in Monaco on 20-21 November. That has done nothing to quell the firestorm of speculation in the media and around the world.

Many are questioning why this issue was not resolved before allowing Semenya to compete on the world stage. Her country of South Africa is solidly behind her, even the President, Jacob Zuma, has issued a statement in her defense.

Athletics Semenya Gender TestCaster Semenya



Some have taken issue with the term "hermaphrodite" being used to describe Caster Semenya and suggest that a more appropriate word would be "intersex" or more specifically Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome (AIS).

What this means is that even though outwardly a person may appear to be female, there are certain male characteristics, like internal male sex organs and testosterone production, that they also carry. One serious side effect of this condition is the likelihood of developing cancer.
....AIS people typically self identify as female. They can not have offspring. Sexual intercourse is limited because of the 'blind vagina" but this is fixable with surgery. Removal of the testes and 'fixing' of the blind vagina are not normally considered "gender reassignment." The testes removal is more of a life and death thing ... there is a high risk of cancer without that surgery.

Caster SemenyaCaster



Discussion of AIS may seem very clinical and abstract but it bears remembering that it affects real people, like Caster Semenya who is only 18 years old, still a teenager with most of her life ahead of her, and probably did not know before now that she had such a condition.
All her life she considered herself to be female, just like other females; her family considered her to be a normal female child; she interacted with others around her as a female; she was a female athlete competing with other female athletes. There is bound to be a tremendous psychological impact on discovering that she is not a normal female and moreover knowing that the world does not see her as a normal female. She may even be prevented from competing with other females in the future.

According to media reports Caster has gone into hiding. She is scared, sad and devastated by reports that she is a hermaphrodite. Some fear that she may be suicidal.

The chairman of South Africa's Parliament's portfolio committee on sport and recreation, Butana Komphela said.

Caster Semenya



"She is like a raped person. She is afraid of herself and does not want anyone near her. She has been placed on an altar for all the world to see. If she commits suicide, it will be on all our heads."

"I spoke to her today. She says she is okay. But I can hear that she is disguising a lot of agony. She is traumatised by all of this. The best we can do is protect her and look out for her during this trying time," Komphela said.

Regardless of the mental trauma that Caster must be experiencing, there seems to be an effort to capitalize on her by the Athletics SA (ASA).

ASA boss Leonard Chuene said that they would soon start accepting bids for a management team for her. He said the ASA was protecting her as a brand but denied that they were cashing in on the publicity.
"She is a brand and a champion of the world. There is nothing sinister about protecting her from ambush marketing or hijacking. There must be an appearance fee for her to appear on magazine spreads. Those people who want to use her must pay."

Hopefully this is not just another example of people making a business out of other people's misery. Hopefully someone is looking out for Caster Semenya's best interests.



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