Thursday 28 February 2013

Photophilanthropy @ Messy Church Feb 2012

Today's song.

Kathy Bland tells today's story.

Tinkling the ivories.

Today's challenge for those too busy to sit down and do crafts.

Everyone gets stuck in making treasure chests.

Decorating the treasure chests.

Making scrolls to go in the treasure boxes,

"Can't stop we are busy doing the challenge!"

In true Blue Peter style they make a temple.

Sandals like they might have worn in Jesus' time.

Making jigsaw cards.

Where would we be without our ladies in the kitchen?

Getting stuck into some Fussball.

Tuesday 26 February 2013

Lunchtime #Streetphotography #LeominsterPhotographyProject






BA Photography students from Hereford College were in Leominster today as part of their Leominster Photography Project.

Lets hope they didn't get a snap of me!

Saturday 23 February 2013

Kuchma Stamps Out Press Freedom In Ukraine

This story from the Ukraine reads like something from a James Bond story. On 16th September 2000 Ukrainian journalist Georgiy Gongadze failed to return home to his wife and two children (who have spent the last 12 years living in the United States as political refugees.) Two months later, on 3 November 2000, a body was found in a forest in the Taraschanskyi Raion (district) of the Kiev Oblast (province), some 70 km (43 mi) outside Kiev. The corpse had been decapitated and doused in dioxine, apparently to make identification more difficult; forensic investigations found that the dioxine bath and decapitation had occurred while the victim was still alive.
Georgy Gongadze (undated family photo)
Georgy Gongadze is seen here in an undated family photo
   Born in Georgia in 1969, Georgiy Ruslanovich Gongadze became a successful journalist, first in Georgia (where he reported on the conflict in Abkhazia) and then in Ukraine. His strongly independent line soon attracted hostility from the increasingly authoritarian government of Leonid Kuchma; during the October 1999 presidential election, his commentaries prompted a call from Kuchma's headquarters to say "that he had been blacklisted to be dealt with after the election."
   In April 2000, Gongadze co-founded a news website, Ukrayinska Pravda (Ukrainian Truth), as a means of sidestepping the government's increasing influence over the mainstream media. He observed that following the muzzling of a prominent pro-opposition newspaper after the election, "today there is practically no objective information available about Ukraine". The website specialized in political news and commentary, focusing particularly on President Kuchma, the country's wealthy "oligarchs" and the official media.
    In June 2000, Gongadze wrote an open letter to Ukraine's chief prosecutor about harassment from the SBU, the Ukrainian secret police, directed towards himself and his Ukrayinska Pravda colleagues and apparently related to an investigation into a murder case in the southern port of Odessa. He complained that had been forced into hiding because of harassment from the secret police, that he said he and his family were being followed, that his staff were being harassed, and that the SBU were spreading a rumor that he was wanted on a murder charge.
   While serving as head of the Ukrainian interior ministry's external surveillance service, Olexiy Pukach tracked Gongadze, the court found. Pukach testified that he had accidentally strangled the journalist with a belt while interrogating him about possible links to foreign states in September 2000.
   He further admitted severing Gongadze's head from his body, which was found in woodland in the Kiev area later that year. Part of the skull was found in 2009.
    On 14 September 2010, Ukraine's Office of the Prosecutor General issued a statement stating that prosecutors had concluded that former Interior Minister Yuri Kravchenko had ordered Pukach to carry out the murder. Kraychenko committed suicide in 2005.
   First Deputy Prosecutor General of Ukraine Renat Kuzmin claimed 20 February 2013 that his office had collected enough evidence confirming former President Leonid Kuchma's(1994-2005) responsibility for ordering Gongadze's assassination. Kuchma's replay the next day was: "This is another banal example of a provocation, which I've heard more than enough in the past 12 years"
    Under former President Leonid Kuchma opposition papers were closed and several journalists died in mysterious circumstances. Between 1995 and 2004 11 journalists were found hung or died in mysterious circumstances.


Thursday 14 February 2013

Iraq...Ten Years After.










   February 15th 2003 was a coordinated day of protests across the world, with millions of people expressing opposition to the then-imminent Iraq War. It was part of a series of protests and political events that had begun in 2002 and continued as the war took place. The British Stop the War Coalition (StWC) held a protest in London which it claimed was the largest political demonstration in the city's history. Police estimated attendance as well in excess of 750,000 people and the BBC estimated that around a million attended. The protest was organised under the slogan "No war on Iraq - freedom for Palestine".
    It is perhaps disheartening to think that ten years on Iraq is still blighted by suicide bombings. So typically English that day in 2003. The largest anti-war protest since Vietnam, yet it was so peaceful. "Make Tea Not War" remains my favourite refrain from that day. Families picnicking in hyde Park pouring peaceful cups of tea from thermoses sat on folding garden furniture as George Galloway vented forth on the stage booming aroung the park on the PA his face ten foot hgh on the installed video walls dotted around Hyde Park.
   And now ten years on and with Saddam Hussein long dead where is Iraq? Still struggling, still suffering under terror.
   Human Rights Watch warns that “the Iraq people today have a government that is slipping further into authoritarianism”, listing “draconian measures against opposition politicians, detainees, demonstrators, and journalists, effectively squeezing the space for independent civil society and political freedoms in Iraq”.
   Iraq is now 150th out of 179 countries in the World Press Freedom Index, worse than Russia or Zimbabwe; and the US government-funded Freedom House rates Iraq 6 for civil liberties and 6 for political rights, with 7 being the worst. No wonder Tony Dodge, an Iraq expert at the LSE, warns that “Maliki is heading towards an incredibly destructive dictatorship”.
   We did not stop an inferno which began a month later, consuming the lives of hundreds of thousands, including 179 British soldiers.
   An analysis by Iraq Body Count and co-authors published in 2011 concluded that at least 12,284 civilians were killed in at least 1,003 suicide bombings in Iraq between 2003 and 2010 killed. The study reveals that suicide bombings kill 60 times as many civilians as soldiers