Payout for protesters locked in shipping container

The South Australian Government has been ordered to pay $724,000 to 10 people involved in a protest at the Beverley uranium mine a decade ago.

The Supreme Court has found the nine uranium protesters and a cameraman were assaulted and all but one falsely imprisoned in a shipping container.

The Government fought the case on behalf of the police officers who arrested the group in the outback.

Eight protesters, the TV cameraman and a girl, 11, sued the Government for assault and false imprisonment over their treatment by police during the protest in May 2000.

Supreme Court Justice Timothy Anderson found police used unnecessary force against all 10, using batons and capsicum spray and locking the nine adults in the container.

He awarded $724,000 but noted it was less than the plaintiffs had sought.

‘Degrading’

Justice Anderson said using the oppressive, degrading and dirty shipping container was a breach of human rights.

He also condemned SA Treasurer Kevin Foley and Police Minister Michael Wright for making antagonistic and provocative comments about the case and the Government for its failure to settle the matter, despite a report by the Police Complaints Authority confirming the use of unnecessary force.

Mr Foley was quoted as calling the group a “bunch of feral protesters”.

The court heard the Government rejected an offer to settle for $600,000 in the weeks before the trial.

Cameraman Jamie Holland says he was held in the container without food, water or a toilet for three hours.

“Inhumane. It shouldn’t happen in Australia. It shouldn’t happen anywhere,” he said.

One of the protesters Lucinda White says Mr Foley was wrong to have made a judgment based on appearance and she is calling for an apology.

“There are real issues here and uranium mining is a really big issue in South Australia,” she said.

“Regardless of how people look they have a right to protest and a right to be safe, not bashed, beaten and falsely imprisoned by the police,” she said.

Man charged over drug lab in shipping container

A man will face court today charged over an alleged clandestine drug lab and weapons stash in Sydney’s south west.

Detectives found the lab yesterday morning in a shipping container in the backyard of a property at Austral.

Police say they seized methylamphetamine, $18,000 in cash and eight illegal guns.

A 40-year-old man was arrested at the scene and charged with nine offences including manufacturing a commercial quantity of drugs.

He has been refused bail and will appear in Liverpool Local Court today.

“Artificial trees” can soak up world’s carbon emissions

London, August 27 (ANI): Engineers have said that a forest of 100,000 “artificial trees” could be deployed within 10 to 20 years to help soak up the world’s carbon emissions.

According to a report by BBC News, the trees are among three geo-engineering ideas highlighted as practical in a new report by researchers form the Institution of Mechanical Engineers.

The report includes a 100-year roadmap to “decarbonise” the global economy.

Lead author Dr Tim Fox said geo-engineering should not be viewed as a “silver bullet” that could combat climate change in isolation.

He told BBC News it should be used in conjunction with efforts to reduce carbon emissions and to adapt to the effects of climate change.

The research team studied hundreds of different options, but have put forward just three as being practical and feasible using current technology.

A key factor in choosing the three was that they should be low carbon technologies rather than adding to the problem.

“Artificial trees are already at the prototype stage and are very advanced in their design in terms of their automation and in the components that would be used,” Dr Fox told BBC News.

“They could, within a relatively short duration, be moved forward into mass production and deployment,” he said.

The trees would work on the principle of capturing carbon dioxide from the air through a filter. The CO2 would then be removed from the filter and stored.

The report calls for the technology to be developed in conjunction with carbon storage infrastructure. he captured carbon dioxide could be stored in empty north sea oil wells.

Dr Fox said the prototype artificial tree was about the same size as a shipping container and could remove thousands of times more carbon dioxide from the atmosphere than an equivalent sized real tree.

“We very much believe that the practical geo-engineering that we are proposing should be implemented and could be very much part of our landscape within the next 10 to 20 years,” he said. (ANI)

15-year-old Iranian boy recounts horrific prison rape ordeal

Tehran (Iran), Aug 22 (ANI): A 15-year-old boy, Reza, has alleged that he was locked up in Iran’s Basij militia base for 20 days, where he was beaten up, raped repeatedly and subjected to sexual humiliation and abuse.

Reza is so horrified with the incident that he refuses to go outside and is terrified of being left alone.

“My life is over. I don’t think I can ever recover,” The Times quoted Reza, as saying.

A doctor who is treating him, has confirmed that he is suicidal, and bears the appalling injuries consistent with his story.

Reza’s family is also enduring the pain with him and is exploring ways to flee Iran.

Reza’s ordeal began in mid-July, when he was arrested along with 40 other teenagers during an opposition demonstration.

He claimed that the arrested teenagers were taken to the Basij militia base, where they were blindfolded, stripped to their underwear, whipped with cables and then locked in a steel shipping container.

Reza claims that three men on the first night singled him out and pushed him to the ground. He further said that one held his head down, another sat on his back and the third urinated on him efore raping him. (ANI)

Nude Jackie Kennedy pic found among Andy Warhol’s possessions

London, August 21 (ANI): A nude picture of former US First Lady Jackie Kennedy Onassis has been discovered in the pile of King of Pop Art Andy Warhol’s possessions.

The snap, which apparently shows the wife of John F. Kennedy skinny-dipping, was said to have been signed “For Andy, with enduring affection, Jackie Montauk”, a reference to the painter’s beach front estate in Montauk.

Archivists sieving through 610 cardboard boxes, filing cabinets and a shipping container belonging to Warhol, who is considered a leading figure in the visual art movement known as pop art, found the photograph, reports the Telegraph.

Researchers working for the Andy Warhol Foundation also found a piece of crusty wedding cake and 17,000 dollars in cash amongst other items.

Matt Wrbican, who has been going through the artist’s things since 1991, said: “He really didn’t like organisation and there would be several boxes going at a time.”

He added: “The only rooms that looked like a normal house were the bathroom and the kitchen.” (ANI)

Kiwi inmates told to build their own jail cells

Wellington, June 21 (ANI): In a bid to deal with a “dangerously high” prison population, inmates in New Zealand could be forced to build their own jail cells from shipping containers.

Prime Minister John Key’s government has asked Corrections, a state sector organisation of New Zealand, to produce options to cope with the burgeoning prison muster, which has increased by 700 so far this year, reports The Sunday Star Times.

Corrections’ core responsibility is the management of the New Zealand corrections system. Its Minister, Judith Collins, has said by the new year the issue of housing prisoners was expected to reach crisis point. Double-bunking the standard practice of putting two prisoners into a single cell was not sustainable and the economic downturn meant the government could not afford to build new prisons in the short term.

Using prisoners to build their own cells was “a great idea” and “a lot better than being locked up all day in a cell”, Collins said.

“We are getting dangerously high in our capacity. We will not have the capacity by the beginning of next year to house all the prisoners that we will have,” she said.

As far as the proposal for shipping-container cells is concerned, Corrections is yet to respond to Collins, which she said would “be spartan but humane and clean. We are looking at whether we could make good use out of prisoner work teams to help build these, and obviously things like landscaping.

“We’re quite keen to have prisoners learning useful construction skills and helping to build their own environment. Prisoners need to learn construction skills so they can earn their keep and, frankly, it’s a lot better than being locked up all day in a cell.” (ANI)

Vietnam arrests Lao ecstasy smuggler

Hanoi – Vietnamese police have arrested a Lao man transporting nearly half a million ecstasy pills in the central province of Thanh Hoa, a law enforcement officer said Wednesday.

Nguyen Xuan Son, head of the Thanh Hoa Department for Drug Crimes, said traffic patrolmen Tuesday stopped a Toyota with a Vietnamese licence plate exceeding the speed limit on National Highway 1.

Inspecting the car, the officers found 78 packages containing 464,000 ecstasy pills.

“This is one of the biggest cases we have found,” Son said. “Each ecstasy pill sells for between 40,000 and 100,000 dong (2.25 to 5.60 dollars).”

The driver of the car, Vientiane resident Xeng Phet, 40, remains in custody.

Le Minh Loan, head of the anti-drug police force in Son La Province, said ecstasy pills weigh an average of 0.9 grams each, meaning Xeng’s car contained over 400 kilograms of the drug.

Loan said Vietnam applies the death penalty for offenders in drug cases involving 10,000 or more ecstasy pills.

Vietnam’s largest drug bust by weight came in May 2008, when border police arrested five Chinese men trying to cross into China with a shipping container holding nearly
8 tons of hashish. Vietnamese police said last week they had completed their investigation of that case and handed it over to the country’s Supreme Prosecutor for trial.(dpa)

New Zealand officials find mystery arms cache from China

Wellington, May 6 (DPA) New Zealand authorities are baffled by a mystery cache of machine guns, bullets, grenades and mortar bombs found in a shipping container from China in the South Island port of Dunedin, according to news reports Wednesday.

Customs spokesman Rowan McArthur said the intended destination of the container, whose contents were discovered by a random X-ray, was not known.

Army bomb-squad experts said the munitions were safe from accidental explosion.

Super-sensors to measure ‘signature’ of inflationary universe

Washington, May 4 (ANI): Scientists have built super-sensitive microwave sensors that would help provide evidence in support of the “inflation theory” of the cosmos, which says the universe expanded rapidly from a subatomic volume.

The new detectors, built at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), were made for a potentially ground-breaking experiment by a collaboration involving NIST, Princeton University, the University of Colorado at Boulder, and the University of Chicago.

This is part of a long-standing project at NIST’s Boulder campus plays a critical role in the study of the cosmic microwave background (CMB)-the faint afterglow of the Big Bang that still fills the universe.

This project previously built superconducting amplifiers and cameras for CMB experiments at the South Pole, in balloon-borne observatories, and on the Atacama Plateau in Chile.

The new experiment will begin approximately a year from now on the Chilean desert and will consist of placing a large array of powerful NIST sensors on a telescope mounted in a converted shipping container.

The detectors will look for subtle fingerprints in the CMB from primordial gravitational waves-ripples in the fabric of space-time from the violent birth of the universe more than 13 billion years ago.

Such waves are believed to have left a faint but unique imprint on the direction of the CMB’s electric field, called the “B-mode polarization.”

These waves-never before confirmed through measurements-are potentially detectable today, if sensitive enough equipment is used.

If found, these waves would be the clearest evidence yet in support of the “inflation theory,” which suggests that all of the currently observable universe expanded rapidly from a subatomic volume, leaving in its wake the telltale cosmic background of gravitational waves.

“The B-mode polarization is the most significant piece of evidence related to inflation that has yet to be observed,” said Ki Won Yoon, a NIST postdoctoral scholar.

“A detection of primordial gravitational waves through CMB polarization would go a long way toward putting the inflation theory on firm ground,” Yoon added.

The data also could provide scientists with insights into different string theory models of the universe and other “unified” theories of physics.

The new NIST detectors may also have applications closer to home, such as in reducing glare in advanced terahertz imaging systems for detecting weapons and contraband. (ANI)