Friday, April 22, 2011

The Anzac Day ceremony...


The Anzac Day ceremony of 25 April is rich in tradition and ritual. It is a form of military funeral and follows a particular pattern. The day's ceremonies have two major parts: one at dawn and another, more public event, later in the morning.



The dawn service





Sound: Anzac Day dawn service

A typical commemoration begins with a march by returned service personnel before dawn to the local war memorial. Military personnel and returned servicemen and women form up about the memorial, joined by other members of the community. Pride of place goes to war veterans.



A short service follows with a prayer, hymns (including Kipling's 'Recessional' or 'Lest we forget') and a dedication that concludes with the fourth verse of Laurence Binyon's For the Fallen:



They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old:

Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.

At the going down of the sun and in the morning

We will remember them.



The last post is then played, and this is followed by a minute's silence and the reveille. A brief address follows, after which the hymn 'Recessional' is sung. The service concludes with a prayer and the singing of the national anthem.



The Anzac parade

Another ceremony takes place later on the morning of 25 April. Returned service personnel wear their medals and march behind banners and standards. The veterans are joined by other community groups, including members of the armed forces, the Red Cross, cadets, and veterans of other countries' forces.







Patea war memorial on Anzac Day

The march proceeds to the local war memorial. Another service takes place there, and various organisations and members of the public lay wreaths. This service is a more public commemoration than the dawn service. It is less intimate and less emotional. The speech, usually by a dignitary, serviceman or returned serviceman or woman, can stress nationhood and remembrance.



After these services many of the veterans retire to the local Returned and Services' Association (RSA) club or hotel, where they enjoy coffee and rum (in the case of the dawn service) and unwind after an emotionally and, for elderly veterans, physically exhausting event. At the end of the day, the ceremony of the retreat is performed.

http://huttriver8.blog.co.uk/

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Anzac Day occurs on April 25 every year. It actually commemorates all New Zealanders and Australians killed in war and honours returned servicemen and women...



Anzac Day occurs on 25 April. It commemorates all New Zealanders and Australians killed in war and also honours returned servicemen and women.





Anzac art 1916



The date itself marks the anniversary of the landing of New Zealand and Australian soldiers – the Anzacs – on the Gallipoli Peninsula in 1915. The aim was to capture the Dardanelles, the gateway to the Bosphorus and the Black Sea. At the end of the campaign, Gallipoli was still held by its Turkish defenders.



Thousands lost their lives in the Gallipoli campaign: 87,000 Turks, 44,000 men from France and the British Empire, including 8500 Australians. To this day, Australia also marks the events of 25 April. Among the dead were 2721 New Zealanders, almost one in four of those who served on Gallipoli.



It may have led to a military defeat, but for many New Zealanders then and since, the Gallipoli landings meant the beginning of something else – a feeling that New Zealand had a role as a distinct nation, even as it fought on the other side of the world in the name of the British Empire.



Anzac Day was first marked in 1916. The day has gone through many changes since then. The ceremonies that are held at war memorials up and down New Zealand, or in places overseas where New Zealanders gather, remain rich in tradition and ritual befitting a military funeral.

http://www.nzhistory.net.nz/war/anzac-day/introduction

http://peter-petterson.blogspot.com/

Today in history - 2007 - Police raid suspected terrorists around NZ...



A man bailed after being arrested as part of nationwide police raids on suspected weapons training camps yesterday is tonight back in custody.

View video: Activist appears in court

Anti-terrorism law's impact on human rights questioned ... Napalm found in swoop ... Guerrillas in the mist ... Tame Iti's many roles



Jamie Beattie Lockett, 46, of Takanini in Auckland was bailed by Auckland District Court Judge Josephine Bouchier this morning after appearing on firearms charges.



That decision was overturned last night in a late sitting at the High Court in Auckland following an appeal from the Crown.



Justice Helen Winkelmann said Judge Bouchier had failed to take into account that further "more serious" charges could be against Lockett under the Terrorism Suppression Act.



Police had produced a photograph "retrieved" from a security camera yesterday morning showing men wearing camouflage clothes and balaclavas training at a "para military-style" training camp in the Urerewas.



While only two of the group had so far been identified, police alleged Lockett attended the same camp about the same time.



Lockett was remanded in custody until Friday.



Lockett, who represented himself and had waived his right to interim name suppression, was one of five people who appeared in Auckland District Court yesterday after the police raids.



The Crown opposed his bail application at the hearing this morning.

http://www.stuff.co.nz/28399



Monday, April 18, 2011

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Saturday, April 16, 2011



Russian police officers reportedly 'sold' phone data to contract killers...




Russian police officers reportedly  'sold phone data to contract killers’...


The victim Andrel Kozlov...

A group of Russian policemen have been accused of selling confidential mobile phone data to contract killers who used it to murder one of the country’s top anti-corruption crusaders.



Mr Kozlov and his driver were shot dead in September 2006 after being ambushed in a car park in Moscow Photo: AP By Andrew Osborn, Moscow 4:58PM BST 14 Apr 2011

In the latest scandal to hit the police force, investigators said they had opened a criminal investigation into three Moscow policemen suspected of selling mobile phone data that was used by a group of killers to track their target’s movements and work out where and when it was best to murder him.



Their victim, 41-year-old Andrei Kozlov, was the first deputy head of the Russian central bank and one of the country’s most prominent anti-corruption crusaders. He and his driver were shot dead in September 2006 after being ambushed in an unlit car park in northern Moscow by two gunmen. The three policemen, who are being formally investigated for abusing their authority, insist they did nothing wrong and got a judge’s permission to access Mr Kozlov’s mobile phone records. It is unclear though why a judge would have agreed to such a request.



Igor Trunov, a lawyer involved in Mr Kozlov’s murder trial, warned that the allegations were part of a wider pattern of police corruption. “Corruption and the participation of law enforcement employees in illegal activity is widespread,” he told Vzglyad magazine. “Take any criminal case and we will find them in either the role of middleman or accomplice. To our great misfortune, they share information and sell their position and their powers.”



In 2008, a businessman whose bank Mr Kozlov shut down a few months earlier on suspicion of money laundering was found guilty of ordering the hit and sentenced to 19 years in jail. Six others, including the gunmen, were handed long prison sentences too. But as the Kremlin forges ahead with a major anti-corruption drive, the police’s role in the case is coming under closer scrutiny. Experts say the officers probably charged the equivalent of between 450 and 1,200 pounds for their services but that the price demanded by corrupt officers now for similar services is much higher. Police corruption in Russia is rife with officers routinely extorting bribes from motorists and demanding cash to let people off real or invented crimes. In a recent case, a policeman was caught taking a bribe from a funeral agency in exchange for informing them about recent deaths so that they could get a head start on rival agencies

Acknowledgements: The Telegraph Group

Friday, April 15, 2011



Some NZ supermarkets are bulk selling to Chinese customers -  creating shortages elsewhere in the market...







New Zealand supermarkets were forced to ration baby formula to customers to stop exporters from clearing the shelves and selling to China. 

New Zealand supermarkets were forced to ration baby formula to customers to stop exporters from clearing the shelves and selling to China. Auckland supermarkets are selling baby milk formula to Chinese exporters thousands of cans at a time while rationing them to other shoppers.



This bulk trade has been unknown to export authorities and has now sparked an investigation.



As mothers fret online about disappearing stocks of formula, receipts obtained by the Weekend Herald show that major supermarkets have been allowing bulk sales to select clients, including a recent sale at Pak'n Save worth more than $170,000.



The purchase was made by an exporter who operates on a Chinese website similar to Trade Me and consisted of a single transaction for 5346 cans of Karicare baby formula and 2220 packets of Anchor milk powder.



When told of the transaction, Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry manager for food imports and exports Bill Jolly said that it "puts a different context" on the trade of New Zealand baby formula to China and that investigators would probe the issue.



There has been a premium in China for New Zealand-manufactured dairy products since the deaths of Chinese children who drank milk tainted with the industrial chemical melamine.



New Zealand supermarkets were forced to ration baby formula to customers to stop exporters from clearing the shelves and selling to China.



"[The evidence of bulk sales] has stimulated my interest. It has the potential to cause quite a few concerns," said Mr Jolly.



The ministry's director of compliance and enforcement, Geoff Allen, said only certified exporters were allowed to sell in large amounts.



"I'm surprised by the size of these particular purchases," Mr Allen said.



Ordinary Pak'n Save shoppers are limited to as little as three cans of formula at a time due to supply shortages. In the past two weeks, New Zealand mothers have taken to Chinese-language community website SkyKiwi in search of formula.



"My son has started on Karicare, but yesterday we couldn't find it on the shelves in Mt Albert. I tried Albany today and again there was no milk [formula]," wrote a mother.



Xiao Dai said her sister was struggling to find baby formula for her child. "Has anyone seen Karicare's first phase of milk powder in supermarkets? Where can I buy it?"



Chinese website SkyKiwi user Benjamin was outraged when told of the bulk sales to exporters.



"How can our supermarkets sell these huge amounts to those bloody traders and then put up an apology sign when they are out of stock for New Zealanders?"



A manager at an East Auckland supermarket, who refuses to sell in bulk, said stocks of baby formula for ordinary shoppers had been severely squeezed.



"We order maybe 100 cartons for our normal, regular customers and we're only getting supplied 10 cartons, 20 cartons," the manager said. "There's a huge shortage at the moment because there are so many people selling hundreds of cartons to people who ship it overseas. It just puts a strain on the New Zealand market."



A Chinese exporter's website allowed orders of up to 6100 cans of baby formula at a time. Boxes of six $26 cans of Karicare Gold+2 were sold for more than $210, creating a margin of almost $55 per minimum order.



The exporter said that it was a registered company in New Zealand and paid taxes through Inland Revenue.



The manufacturer of Karicare products, Nutricia, said it could not guarantee the quality of products shipped outside New Zealand.



All its sales in New Zealand went through supermarkets, and it had no role in any subsequent sales arrangements, it said.



But the company tried to supply all orders it received from supermarkets so there was enough stock to meet local demand.



A spokesman for Countdown owner Progressive Enterprises said its stores only allowed bulk sales when there was enough stock for ordinary customers.



The bulk sales came from supplies that were separate from shelf stock, he said.



"We allow bulk sales in our store on all products, not just baby formula.



"Whether someone needs paper towels for an event, or ice or meat for a barbecue, we allow special orders," the spokesman said.



Anyone could approach the company to buy in bulk, but the priority at its supermarkets was to have stock on the shelves, he said.



Quotas had been imposed on baby formula to make the products more consistently available to shoppers, he said. "We put the limit in place to basically make sure that all our customers have equitable access to the products."



Pak'n Save owner Foodstuffs' Auckland general manager retail, Rob Chemaly, responded to questions asking why some customers were given special dispensation with a statement that "in general" the company did not advocate bulk sales of baby formula.



"It is important to ensure sufficient product is available for all customers," Mr Chemaly said.



In response to further questions, Mr Chemaly confirmed that Foodstuffs was aware of the bulk sales for the purpose of export.


Acknowledgements to all those commenters:


Tuesday, April 05, 2011

Cropped image of England rugby celebrations.Image via Wikipedia
A sculpture of Michael Jones  "The Iceman" to be displayed at Eden Park in Auckland...




What has been described as a larger than life statue of the former All Black great, Michael Jones, diving to score the first try at the inaugural Rugby World Cup final at Eden Park in Auckland, in 1987, will be displayed at the redeveloped Eden Park for this year's event.

Auckland artist Natalie Stamilla said the sculpture, which she estimates will cost $300,000, will be cast in bronze and be 150% greater than life size. Stamilla said she had been able to secure funding to cover all costs related to the sculpture project, which will be placed on permanent loan at Eden Park.The design of the sculpture is based on a photograph by Geoff Dale, Stamilla's father, who worked as a press photographer during the 1987 tournament.

Most fans won't be aware that the actual first try at the 1987 cup final was a penalty try. So the 'Ice Man's' try was the first touch down, if you like.

A similar try by the new legendary No 7, and skipper, Richie McCaw, would probably see a similar sculpture at AMI Stadium (Lancaster Park) in Christchurch, despite the fact that the earthquake ravaged city took no active part in the 2011 Rugby World Cup.

http://anzacbloggersunite.blog.co.uk

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Thursday, March 31, 2011

The Wines of New ZealandImage by Stuck in Customs via Flickr
NZ Zespri helping out Japan in a practical way...









NZ Zespri helping out Japan in a practical way...



New Zealand 's Zespri helping Japan quake relief.


Zespri's first shipment this year of kiwifruit to Japan is also carrying 30,000 litres of packaged water for relief efforts.

Zespri's first shipment this year of kiwifruit to Japan is also carrying 30,000 litres of packaged water for relief efforts.

The MV Haru Verdy has already left Tauranga bound for Kobe and Tokyo and a second ship is due to leave early next week.

Supply Chain Manager, Sally Gardiner, says Zespri has been monitoring the situation in Japan since the earthquake and tsunami.

She says they're concerned not only for the Zespri's 17 staff, but also for the well being of their customers and distributors with whom they've forged strong bonds.

Mr Gardiner is thanking other companies that have contributed to getting the shipment of water to Japan. They include the operators of the M.V. Haru Verdy, who are shipping the water free of charge.

Ms Gardiner said the new season kiwifruit is due to arrive in-market in Japan in mid-April.

“Our suppliers in Japan tell us that demand for ZESPRI® Kiwifruit remains strong, and based on this, our export programme to Japan will continue as planned,” Ms Gardiner said.

“Shortly after these initial shipments to Japan, shipments of ZESPRI® GREEN, GOLD and ORGANIC kiwifruit will begin to other key markets in Asia, Europe and North America.

“The 2011 season is on track to be a strong one. Early indications are that the volume produced during the 2011 season will be similar to last year’s, with around 100 million trays of kiwifruit being exported,” Ms Gardiner said.

In the coming months, around 25,000 people, mostly seasonal workers, will be employed by the New Zealand kiwifruit industry to harvest, pack and ship ZESPRI® GREEN, GOLD and ORGANIC kiwifruit, injecting millions of dollars into the New Zealand economy.

Acknowledgements: NZ City

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Monday, March 28, 2011

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Landsat 7 image of the Bristol ChannelImage via Wikipedia
England's tsunami of 1607...



An account of an early natural disaster and the effect it had on the West of England and Wales

The world was horrified by the tsunami that struck Asia several years ago. To most of us, it was the first time we’d heard the word, the first time such a terrifying incident could strike out of the blue, without warning.

An Account from England and Wales:

But it has happened before, many centuries ago near the Bristol Channel in England. The following is based on an account in The Gentleman’s Magazine of 1762, printed in response to a report of a disastrous storm near Quesnoy, France. It quotes extensively from a pamphlet in the Harleian library which was written soon after the event in 1607. It is worth quoting in detail:

“On Tuesday January 27 about 9 in the morning, ‘the sunne being fayrly and bryghtly spred,’ huge and mighty hills of water were seen in the elements, tumbling one over another in such sort as if the greatest mountains in the world had overwhelmed the low vallies, to the inexpressible astonishment and terror of the spectators, who, at first, mistaking it for a great mist, or fog, did not on the sudden prepare to make their escape from it; but on its nearer approach, which came on with such swiftness as it was verily thought the fowls of the air could not fly so fast; they perceived that it was the violence of the waters of the raging seas, which seemed to have broken their bounds, and were pouring in to deluge the whole land, and then happy were they that could fly the fastest. But as violent and swift were the huge waves, and they pursuing one another with such rapidity that in less than 5 hours space, most part of the countries on the Severn’s banks were laid under water, and many hundreds of men, women, and children, perished in the floods. From the hills might be seen herds of cattle, and flocks of sheep, with husbandmen labouring in the fields, all swept away together, and swallowed up in one dreadful inundation. Houses, barns, ricks of corn and hay, were all involved in the common ruin. Many who were rich in the morning were beggars before noon, and several perished in endeavouring to save their effects

Read more at Suite101: England's Tsunami of 1607 http://www.suite101.com/content/tea-for-invisibility-a294678#ixzz1Hqcs2UQs




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Sunday, March 27, 2011

Las vistas desde el overwater bungalow en Bora...Image by jsmoral via Flickr
Polynesians fear 20 metre tsunami from Mururoa  atoll...






French scientist warns that part of radioactive Mururoa atoll could break off and trigger a tsunami...


The president of French Polynesia has asked France to send scientists to assess the risk that the Mururoa atoll, which was used as a nuclear bomb test site for 30 years, could collapse into the Pacific Ocean and unleash a tsunami 20 metres high on the surrounding islands.

Polynesians have been watching the events in Japan - caused by a 10-metre high tsunami - with mounting alarm. The fear that part of the Mururoa atoll might collapse into the sea is not new. Back in 1997, one year after the final, highly controversial, nuclear test, an official report referred to the risk.

Now locals have seized on an admission by a French nuclear safety official, Marcel Jurien de la Graviere, that "the possibility of a collapse of part of the Mururoa atoll cannot be ruled out".

President Gaston Tong Sang writes in his letter to his opposite number Nicolas Sarkozy that there is disquiet among French Polynesians, who fear not only a 20-metre high tsunami washing over their islands, but also the release of radioactive material which has so far been entombed in the atoll. De la Graviere suggested that people on nearby Tureia atoll could be exposed to radiation 300 times the level in France.

Meanwhile, locals have told ABC News that there are places on Mururoa atoll where the road has sunk two metres below sea level and that there are huge cracks in the coral.

Tong Sang wants Paris to set up an alarm system, although its usefulness would be questionable given that Tureia has a maximum elevation of a few metres and is only 70 miles away from Mururoa.



Read more: http://www.thefirstpost.co.uk/76504,news-comment,news-politics,french-polynesians-fear-20-metre-tsunami-from-nuclear-mururoa-atoll#ixzz1HlWupe5X

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Thursday, March 24, 2011

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