Saturday, August 14, 2010

Cap Badge of the Australian Special Air Servic...Image via Wikipedia
Another Anzac soldier killed in Afghanistan - the 18th Australian killed there...





Just over a week after a Kiwi soldier, Lt Tim O'Donnell, was killed in Afghanistan, an Aussie special forces SAS trooper, Jason Thomas Brown, has also been killed there.



An Australian special forces soldier has been killed in a clash with insurgents, taking the Afghanistan death toll to 18 since 2001 and seven so far this year alone.



Trooper Jason Thomas Brown, 29, a member of the Perth-based Special Air Service Regiment (SASR), died from multiple gunshot wounds when insurgents opened fire on his patrol.



That occurred early on Saturday morning in northern Kandahar province, a hotspot for fighting and the focus of recent operations by the Australian Special Operations Task Group.



Acting defence force chief Lieutenant General David Hurley said Trooper Brown was participating in an ongoing Australian and Afghan mission to disrupt insurgent activities.



He died despite receiving immediate first aid and being evacuated by helicopter to the coalition hospital at Kandahar. No other Australian or Afghan soldiers were wounded.



Lieutenant General Hurley said Trooper Brown, unmarried with no children, was an outstanding soldier with just over 10 years service in the Australian Defence Force (ADF).



Born in Sydney, he joined the army in 2001, serving with the 1st Battalion Royal Australian Regiment (1RAR) and then with the commando battalion 4RAR. He joined the SASR in 2007.



This was his first deployment to Afghanistan but he had served three times in East Timor.



He leaves his parents and a sister.



Lieutenant General Hurley said Australian troops in Afghanistan faced significant threats every day and did so with professionalism and courage.



"When a member of the ADF family dies in the service of our country, it hits us all very hard," he told reporters.



Defence Minister John Faulkner said recent months had been a time of increasing danger in Afghanistan, but Australian soldiers continued to carry out their work with courage and professionalism in conditions of real hardship.



"I can assure Jason's family and friends that he, together with his mates, were striking at the heart of the Taliban insurgency as part of our mission in Afghanistan to make sure that extremists and international terrorist groups do not again find safe havens and training grounds in that country," he said.



Both Prime Minister Julia Gillard and Opposition leader Tony Abbott briefly halted electioneering to express their condolences to Trooper Brown's family and friends.



In Wollongbar, northern NSW, Ms Gillard said she would contact Trooper Brown's family in due course.



She said Australia had lost a brave soldier and the nation would mourn his loss.



Ms Gillard said the government remained committed to the mission in Afghanistan, which was expected to take another two to four years.



"Our nation cannot see Afghanistan once again become a safe haven for terrorists ... who are trained, and trained to take the lives of Australians," she said.



In Perth, Mr Abbott said Afghanistan could never again become a safe haven for terrorism.



"It's important that Australia pull its weight in the world. The opposition continues to fully and strongly support the Australian commitment to Afghanistan," he said.



This is the first death of an Australian soldier during the campaign.



The death of Private Nathan Bewes came a little more than a week before the election was called.



The leaders of both major parties suspended their campaigns for a full day to attend Private Bewes' funeral in Murwillumbah on July 22.



Ms Gillard said they would do so again if Trooper Brown's funeral was held before election day.


Acknowledgements:  Channel Nine


http://anzacbloggersunite.co.uk/


Sunday, August 08, 2010


Fallen hero is brought home by Kiwi self defence force...



The body of a fallen Kiwi hero has been brought home from Afghanistan. Lieutenant Tim O'Donnell, the commander of a small convoy that came under attack from the Taliban, was a decorated hero from East Timor some years ago. He lost his life and two of his men were seriously injured in last week's attack.



Lieutenant O'Donnell was the first member of the NZ self defence force to lose their life in Afghanistan, although three other Kiwi born soldiers have died in Afghanistan - two with the Australian Army and one in the US forces - the latter was actually a nephew of the NZ opposition leader, Phil Goff.



Some say it was inevitable that a NZ soldier would be killed there. The majority of Kiwi soldiers in Afghanistan are with the elite special forces SAS, but Lt O'Donnell was serving with the Reconstruction Force - building roads, schools, hospitals etc. His two injured men have been sent back to New Zealand with his body, and were received at the Linton Army Camp, just outside Palmerston North in the lower North Island today.



Lieutenant Tim O'Donnell will be buried with full military honours this week. His two injured men should be fit enough to attend his funeral.



R.I.P Lieutenant Tim O'Donnell and the many other troops of the ISAF to lose their lives in Afghanistan. Will the price be too costly to continue to fight America's unwinnable war in Afghanistan?

Friday, August 06, 2010

Claim $1000 from a lawsuit against TransUnion - Sponsored Post

I think that would be a good claim if you could get it and it was a justified claim. Everybody could do it

sponsored like
peter petterson's profile on MyLikes

Thursday, August 05, 2010

Timeline: David Bain...


 June 20, 1994 - David Bain's parents, Robin and Margaret, two sisters, Laniet and Arawa, and brother, Stephen, are shot and killed in their Dunedin home. Bain calls emergency services in a distraught state.



* June 24, 1994 - Bain is charged with five counts of murder. The following day the rest of his family are farewelled by 1000 mourners.



* July 7, 1994 - Bain home is razed by Fire Service at request of family.



* October 1994 - Depositions hearing begins and Bain is committed for trial in May 1995.



* May 8, 1995 - Three-week-long murder trial begins in the High Court at Dunedin. Unprecedented public and media interest.



* May 29, 1995 - Jury finds Bain guilty on all five murder counts.



* June 21, 1995 - Bain sentenced to mandatory life term, with a minimum non-parole period of 16 years.



* December 19, 1995 - Court of Appeal dismisses Bain appeal.


* May, 1996 - A petition to Privy Council seeking leave to appeal fails.



* July 22, 1996 - Court of Appeal lifts suppression order covering defence witness Dean Cottle and evidence that was to have been presented at Bain's murder trial. It alleges Laniet told Cottle that her father was having an incestuous affair with her and she was going to confront the family.



* April 16, 1997 - Joe Karam launches his book, David and Goliath. It says Robin, not David, was the killer, and that police botched the investigation.



* May 5, 1997 - Police appoint Assistant Commissioner Brion Duncan to head an independent inquiry reviewing police handling of the murder investigation.



* June 23, 1997 - James McNeish releases his book, The Mask of Sanity, which concludes that David was the killer.



* November 25, 1997 - Police in the murder investigation are cleared by the joint police and Police Complaints Authority inquiry. It finds no serious flaws in the police investigation and says criticism that police were incompetent is unjustified.



* March 1998 - Police officers to sue Karam over claims in his book.



* June 1998 - Petition of 113 pages and 290-page supporting document seeking a pardon for Bain is lodged with the Governor-General.



* June 1999 - Former Dunedin pathologist Jim Gwynne presents petition to Governor-General seeking pardon for Bain. Dr Gwynne says evidence shows Robin Bain committed suicide.



* June 9, 2000 - Damages suit brought against Karam by two Dunedin detectives, one since retired, fails in the High Court at Auckland.



* December 19, 2000 - Bain has aspects of his case referred back to the Court of Appeal. Justice Minister Phil Goff said an investigation had shown that "a number of errors" may have occurred in the Crown's presentation of its case.



* October 2002 - Court of Appeal considers four aspects of the case referred to it by Mr Goff.



* December 20, 2002 - Mr Goff announces the case is to be reheard in full by Court of Appeal.



* September, 2003 - Court of Appeal hears case.



* December 13, 2003 - Court of Appeal decides a retrial was not needed on the grounds that the new evidence would not have changed the jury's verdict.



* June 7, 2006 - Bain's legal team wins right to a full Privy Council hearing.



* March 8, 2007 - Five-day Privy Council hearing in London begins.



* May 10, 2007 - Privy Council delivers decision, ordering a retrial.



* May 15, 2007 - Bain granted bail at hearing in Christchurch High Court



* June 21, 2007 - Solicitor-General rules that Bain will face a retrial



* March 6, 2009 - Retrial begins. Bain pleads not guilty to five charges of murder



* June 4, 2009 - Retrial ends, jury begin deliberations



* June 6, 2009 - David Bain found not guilty of all the murders


Consideration for seeking compensation from the Crown: Is David Bain actually innocent? Being found not guilty on the evidence of the last trial is not good enough. Now the debate in New Zealand society continues. It will have  be up to Prime Minister, John Key,  and  his Cabinet  to  decide his innocence.

Wednesday, August 04, 2010

Minnie Dean  - child killer - only woman ever hanged in New Zealand...





First published at Qondio:










Williamina "Minnie” Dean - 1847 - 1895.



Minnie Dean has the distinctly dubious honour of being the only woman to be legally hanged in New Zealand.

She was reportedly born in 1847, being christened Williamina Dean in Edinburgh, Scotland. She married and had two daughters, whose fate is unknown. In 1868 she emigrated to New Zealand, living in Southland with an old woman named Granny Kelly. In 1872, she married Charles Dean, an old Southland settler, and in 1886 they moved to a 22-acre estate in East Winton, known as The Larches.



The Deans made their home in Winton:



Winton is situated 19 miles from Invercargill city on the railway line that then ran from the Southland capital to Kingston. A fire destroyed their home when they first moved in and they were then forced to live in a small twenty-two feet by twelve feet dwelling, which was either already built or built for them.



Minnie Dean sets up her baby farming business:



Minnie Dean set up a baby-farming business, advertising children for adoption. This type of business was popular with lower income women in New Zealand and other parts of the then British Empire. The babies she took into care were illegitimate children brought from their mothers, provided few questions were asked. In October 1889, Minne Irene Dean, came to the attention of the authorities after a six-month-old baby died three days after being taken ill while in her care but the death certificate showed natural causes due to convulsions. Two years later, in May 1891, a six week old baby died, again in Dean's care. An inquest was held but it found that death was from natural causes.



Minnie Dean began to get secretive:



Dean reportedly became more secretive with her dealings and began advertising using false names. In May 1895, a railway guard reported he had seen a woman board the train with a baby but disembark without it. This happened within the train range of East Winton and police began their enquiries. This led police to a Mrs Hornsby who resided in Dunedin. She told police she had handed over her one-month-old grand-daughter with money to Dean at Milburn, four miles north of Milton. Police then brought Mrs Hornsby to The Larches, Dean's residence. While there she recognised not only Dean but a piece of baby's clothing belonging to her grand-daughter.



Dean was arrested:



Dean was arrested and sent to Dunedin to await trial. Police searched the flowerbeds on the Deans property and found two babies bodies buried. Charles Dean was also arrested and the six children in their care were taken away by police. The two bodies were identified as Eva Hornsby (Mrs Hornsby's grand-daughter) and Dorothy Edith Carter (handed over to Minnie by her grandmother. On August 12, 1895, Minnie Dean, at Invercargill prison , was marched to the gallows. Her final words were "No, I have nothing to say, except that I am innocent". She was then hanged and as they often say, met her maker.





The search continued:



The search continued after Minnie Deans's execution, and another baby's body was found. Dean had been charged with the murder of two infants. After further examination of the case, the charges against her husband Charles Dean were dropped. The police theory was that she had taken the Carter infant on the train from Winton and changed trains to get to Lumsden. During the trip to Lumsden she had allegedly killed the child and concealed it's body in a hat box she was carrying. Staying overnight in Lumsden, she boarded the Waimea Plains train to Gore, where she then boarded the Dunedin Express. At Milburn, she met Mrs Hornsby, leaving the hatbox and it's contents in a waiting room. She was accompanied by Mrs Hornsby on another train to Clarendon, the next station on the way to Dunedin. She alighted with Eva Hornsby in her arms and waved goodbye to Mrs Hornsby who continued on to Dunedin. It is here, where Eva Hornsby was smothered. Dean wrapped her body into a parcel and boarded the train back to Clinton. On the way she picked up the hatbox from Milburn. Now carrying two dead babies, she went back to Winton.



The case was heard:



Witnesses began to deliver their testimony. The jury heard: Oilcloth which was found wrapped around Dorothy Edith Carter's body came from the Dean's home. The railway guard who saw Dean get on the train with the hatbox and baby and leave carrying a hatbox only; this was probably a defining part of the evidence. A friend who lived with the Deans for fourteen years identified Minnie's handwriting as the signature 'M.Gray' in the Bluff poison register. Dean claimed she had carried flower bulbs in the hatbox - but the woman who Dean said she had got them off said she had only given her flower cuttings. The clothing found in Dean's possession was identified as that of Dorothy Edith Carter. Several bottles of laudanum and chlorodyne were found in Dean's bedroom. Even though Dean was identified by both grandmothers as the woman they gave their grand-daughters to, she denied it, but finally admitting it under duress and with the evidence of the clothes.



The verdict was 'guilty of the murder' of Dorothy Edith Carter. The sentence - death by hanging!



She had now moved into New Zealand's criminal history as being the only woman executed there

.

The 'Winton baby-farmer'



Minnie Dean

In 1895 Southland's Williamina (Minnie) Dean became the first – and only – woman to be hanged in New Zealand. Her story exposed the stark realities of paid childcare (called baby farming by some people) and the lack of choice that many women faced in this period, the late nineteenth century. It was also a period of economic depression in New Zealand, and perhaps elsewhere in the British Empire. Minnie Dean's name has become historically synonymous with child killing. Songs were written and sung by children about Minnie Deans' evil deeds.


Acknowledgements:  Peter Petterson

http://anzacbloggersunite.blog.co.uk/

http://blogevolve.com/huttriver12
First  NZ soldier killed, and two injured  in Afghanistan...



Lieutenant Timothy O'Donnell had been in the Army for five years and was decorated for his actions in Timor Leste, formerly East Timor.

The New Zealand soldier killed in Afghanistan overnight was a decorated officer who had been in the army for five years.



Lieutenant Timothy Andrew O'Donnell, 28, died and two of his fellow soldiers were injured when their patrol was ambushed in the province of Bamyan. A local interpreter with the patrol was also injured during the attack.



Who was Lieutenant Timothy Andrew O'Donnell?



Lt O'Donnell was part of the guard of honor at Sir Edmund Hillary's funeral.



He had also served as part of the peace keeping force in Timor Leste where he was awarded The New Zealand Distinguished Service Decoration for rescuing some 600 people from an ambush druing a political rally. Read the citation here.



Lt O'Donnell - New Zealand's first combat casualty in Afghanistan - was part of the New Zealand Provincial Reconstruction Team and was based in Bamyan town in Bamyan Province.




Lt O'Donnell told TVNZ last month that the Afghanistan National Police needed more training.



"They still require a lot of work," he said.



"For police - they're not like the police back home. They don't go around really arresting people, they're basically security guards. But it's our job to build up their capacity and develop them so one day when we pull out, they'll be capable of taking over."



Lieutenant O'Donnell a 'free spirit', says Defence chief



Chief of the New Zealand Defence Force (NZDF) Lieutenant-General Jerry Mateparae described Lt O'Donnell as a "free spirit". He said he had spoken to the officer's family this morning and passed on his condolences.



Lt-Gen Mateparae told media Lt O'Donnell had been part of a routine patrol when a bomb went off under one of the vehicles at about 4am local time (12.30am NZT).



After the initial explosion the personnel were able to extricate themselves from the vehicles and take cover in a nearby building and consolidate their position. The attack lasted about 20-30 minutes Lt-Gen Mateparae said.



"Three New Zealand vehicles which made up the patrol came under a complex attack by as yet unknown assailants," he said.



"We believe that an improvised explosive device or IED was detonated and then the patrol came under fire from two positions with rocket-propelled grenades and other small arms fire."



He said it was not clear if the Lt O'Donnell had been killed by the IED or gunshots.



It took 11 hours to get the wounded back to base and Lt-Gen Mateparae praised the operation to get support to the soldiers after the attack.



"The tactics, techniques and processes have been very professional," he said.



Lt-Gen Mateparae said the patrol was backed up by Afghanistan National Police but helicopters could not get to the site because of bad weather.



Injured soldiers injuries not life-threatening



He said the two soldiers were seriously hurt but that their injuries were not considered life-threatening.



One of the injured NZ soldiers had burns to 10 per cent of his body, as well as cuts and abrasions. The second had cuts and abrasions and a suspected broken foot, he said.



The injured men have not been named and it is expected that they will be evacuated to Germany to a military hospital for treatment.



Lt-Gen Mateparae said Defence Force was trying to get the body of Lt O'Donnell and the wounded soldiers back to New Zealand "as expeditiously as possible".



"On behalf of the New Zealand Defence Force we extend our sincere condolences to the family of this brave New Zealander."



Defence Minister Wayne Mapp said the attack showed "the dangers faced by our defence people everyday in Afghanistan".



"The Provincial Reconstruction Team has been been working to assist the people of Bamyan province but it remains a dangerous place especially in the place where this attack occurred on a New Zealand patrol in the north-east."



Mr Mapp said he sent his aroha to Lt O'Donnell's family and the two wounded.



He said it was unusual for a soldier of Lt O'Donnell's rank to receive the New Zealand Distinguished Service Decoration.



"The Government has the responsibility to deploy our young people overseas and serve our country. We all know, that in making these decisions, it is they who pay the price and in this instance it is Lt O'Donnell who has paid the ultimate price," Mr Mapp said.



New Zealand prime inister John Key was  woken to be told of the shocking news.



In Vanuatu, Prime Minister John Key told media the attack involved 10 to 12 soldiers and three cars on patrol. He said it took place about half an hour after the soldiers had visited a neighbouring village.



The attack was in the north-eastern corner of Bamyan in an area where skirmishes were not uncommon and there had been heightened attacks and a "degree of anxiety".



"It wasn't possible to get air support services to give them cover because the weather was too bad at the time. We don't know exactly what's caused the death and injury and I wouldn't want to speculate until we had some better information."



Mr Key said he had been woken and informed of the attack about 1.30am.



Mr Key said he had spoken with Lt O'Donnell's mother and passed on his condolences to her.



He said he would not go into details of the conversation but the soldier's mother had asked to pass on her regards to the families of the injured soldiers.



"I think that shows extraordinary bravery and courage on her part and shows the strength of the wider military family."



Mr Key said the injured soldiers had primarily suffered burns and cuts and that one had a leg injury. They are receiving medical treatment in Afghanistan.



Lt O'Donnell's death not a reason to withdraw - Key



Mr Key said the military was reviewing its procedures, tactics and equipment for Bamyan but that he did not see the incident as a reason to withdraw from the province, or from Afghanistan.



In an earlier statement, Mr Key said Lt O'Donnell's death reinforced the danger New Zealand troops faced.



"This is New Zealand's first combat loss in Afghanistan and reinforces the danger faced daily by our forces as they work tirelessly to restore stability to the province," Mr Key said.



"It is with enormous sadness that I acknowledge that this soldier has paid a high price and my thoughts are with his family and the families of the injured."



Political reaction



Labour leader Phil Goff said Lt O'Donnell's death was a sad reminder that defence personnel put their lives at risk.



"Our thoughts and sympathy are with the family of the soldier who was killed and on behalf of the Labour Party I offer them our sincere condolences," Mr Goff said.



Green Party Defence Spokesman Keith Locke said he was saddened by the death and also sent his condolences to the families of the men and the NZDF.



"We are proud of the good peacekeeping and reconstruction work that our Provincial Reconstruction Team has done in Bamyan Province, and we mourn the loss of one of its members."



The New Zealand Provincial Reconstruction Team The New Zealand Provincial Reconstruction Team's (NZPRT) headquarters in the province is Kiwi Base. To the south is the airfield while the main township and bazaar are located to the north of the base.



The sixteenth rotation of the (NZPRT), commanded by Colonel John Boswell arrived in Afghanistan in April and were expected to remain in the country for about six months.



John Key visited Bamyan earlier this year, and the Government has announced that the NZPRT will extend their secondment until September 2011.



The force works on maintaining security in Bamyan Province, and carries out frequent patrols throughout the area.



It also supports the provincial and local government by providing advice and assistance to the Provincial Governor, the Afghan National Police and district sub-governors.



The NZPRT also identifies, prepares and provides project management for NZAID projects within the region.



It consists of four liaison (LNO) teams supported by infantry, engineers, staff officers, communications and logistic staff.



The first NZPRT deployment to Afghanistan departed in August 2003 on a four month rotation.



New Zealand also has a small number of Special Air Service personnel serving in Afghanistan. In total New Zealand has approximately 140 personnel in Bamyan and about 80 SAS soldiers in Kabul.


As a New Zealand Defence Force spokesman said, we ran out of luck because there  have been ambushes previously.


Acknowledgements:  - NZPA, Derek Cheng, NZ HERALD STAFF

Monday, August 02, 2010

Win An Ipad for a Penny! - Sponsored Post

Win An Ipad for a Penny! - publishers.xy7.com
Win an ipad for a penny. Bids are only 1 cent each! The last Ipad sold for 96 cents. This is not your regular

sponsored like
peter petterson's profile on MyLikes

AFFILIATES NEEDED - Sponsored Post

AFFILIATES NEEDED - autopilotonlinesales.com
MONEY - 51% COMMISSION to sell business videos. View product at http://autopilotonlinesales.com

sponsored like
peter petterson's profile on MyLikes

Kronovia Test 01 - Sponsored Post

Kronovia Test 01 - www.kronovia.com
Empowering the social enterprise with a dynamic SaaS based social media governance platform that allows...

sponsored like
peter petterson's profile on MyLikes

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Farmville - It's Puppy Love - Sponsored Post

Farmville - It's Puppy Love - apps.facebook.com
Have you seen the new puppies in FarmVille? Join me on Farmville in picking one

sponsored like
peter petterson's profile on MyLikes

Wednesday, July 07, 2010

The real "underworld" of international drug trafficking...










Combined Police effort finds homemade drug submarine.



The US Drug Enforcement Administration has helped Ecuador seize a submarine capable of transporting tonnes of cocaine.



DEA officials said the diesel electric-powered submarine was built in a remote jungle and captured near a river close to the Ecuador-Colombia border.



Ecuadorian authorities seized the sub before it could make its maiden voyage.



The DEA says it was built for trans-oceanic drug trafficking.



http://news.msn.co.nz/glance/6912514/police-find-homemade-drug-sub


Enhanced by Zemanta

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Ban on SmokingImage via Wikipedia




All inmates in New Zealand prisons will be prohibited from smoking within a year...

.



The New Zealand  Government on Monday announced the ban, which also extends to lighters and matches, will take effect from 1 July 2011.



More than two-thirds of prisoners are smokers and the ban is expected to affect about 5700 inmates.



Corrections chief executive Barry Matthews says according to evidence from overseas, a ban can work if it is well prepared for and managed over the next 12 months



He says there has to be appropriate education, with inmates offered programmes and nicotine replacements to help them quit the habit.



But he admits some prisoners will get frustrated, especially in the early stages of the ban.



At present prisoners are allowed to smoke in their cells and in designated outside areas. But Corrections Minister Judith Collins says smoking is a serious health risk to inmates and staff.



"We have 3500 staff who every day get exposed to secondhand smoke at levels which are far more than if they were living in the home of a smoker."



Ms Collins says the Government may yet face lawsuits from staff and inmates objecting to being exposed to secondhand smoke.



Prison officers at risk - union:

The Corrections Association says a management plan, adequate staffing and protective equipment are needed to keep everyone safe during the transition to a smoking ban.



President Beven Hanlon told Checkpoint he has already had feedback from prisons around the country that corrections officers will be at increased risk from agitated prisoners.



"We've already had - 'Well, if corrections officers are smoking and we're not allowed to, they'll be getting the bash'.



"It's common sense - we're cutting down on everything we're giving these prisoners and now we're cutting down on their smoking."



Mr Hanlon says prison is the ideal place to get people off their addictions, but it has to be done properly.



Labour seeks reassurance on prison officer support:

Labour MP Clayton Cosgrove fears prison officers will bear the brunt of the ban and be left to deal with prisoners reluctant to give up smoking.



The party wants an assurance from the Corrections Minister that measures will be put in place so staff are kept safe.



Prime Minister John Key is downplaying any suggestion that a smoking ban will mean guards having to deal with more volatile prisoners.



Ministry of Health spokesperson Ashley Bloomfield says the relatively small cost of $100 for each eight-week course of nicotine patches will help reduce the country's estimated $1.5 billion in annual health costs from smoking.



Havoc ahead - Lashlie

Former prison manager Celia Lashlie told Nine to Noon the move is not about secondhand smoke. She says the Government is trying to appeal to "redneck" New Zealanders by appearing tough on people in prison.



The former head of Christchurch Women's Prison says there are many ways for prisons to manage the situation so non-smokers are not affected by secondhand smoke.



Ms Lashlie says a ban will only cause trouble among inmates and prison staff will be stretched even more than they are alread



Why not ban smoking for all?

Howard League president Peter Williams QC told Morning Report he agreed with concerns that a prohibition of smoking in prisons would create more violence and a blackmarket for tobacco.



But he said it could be a very good idea as long as there is a comprehensive programme to help inmates give up smoking.



Mr Williams also said the Government should not be selective and a ban should apply to all members of the Ministry of Justice - the judiciary, probation officers and court staff.



Rethinking Crime and Punishment project director Kim Workman, who was previously the head of the prison service, says going smoke-free will be hugely unpopular amongst prisoners.


The experts have had their say, but what does this writer think about all the comments and emotional outpourings above.There is little  sympathy for many of the inmates in NZ prisoners - thieves, burglars, drug-pushers, rapists and murderers etc - but they are in prison as  punishment, not put in prison to be further punished. Apart from their cigarettes and at times illegal drugs, inmates have only their thoughts. At least half of all prison inmates have mental health issues, and many have gang affiliations.

Is a total ban on smoking the right thing to do? Is there another way? Could smoking rooms be a consideration for smokers in prisons? But it is a fait accompli on behalf of this government.. They will not change their minds before the  elections late next year. Seems to me that political expediency has a lot to do with this policy.

Acknowledgements: © 2010 Radio New Zealand


Enhanced by Zemanta

Monday, June 28, 2010

Julia GillardImage via Wikipedia
No place for Kevin Rudd In Aussie cabinet reshuffle...




New Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard has excluded the man she rolled last week from cabinet.



Ms Gillard told media that while Kevin Rudd was on the backbench after today's reshuffle, she would be "absolutely delighted" to give him a senior cabinet role if the Labor government was re-elected.



Ms Gillard said she had spoken to Mr Rudd about his future and he had confirmed he would run for his seat at the next election.



"What I've said to Kevin is that I think that this is the best course and it would enable him, if he chose to do so at this time, to spend more time with his family, which I know is one of his key priorities in life,"

Ms Gillard told Australian media this afternoon.



Ms Gillard gave her own portfolios of education, employment, workplace relations and social inclusion to former Labor leader Simon Crean.



Foreign Minister Stephen Smith will add Mr Crean's trade role to his portfolio.



Acknowledgements: - NZ Herald staff


Enhanced by Zemanta

10 Reasons Not To Get Back Together With An Ex @TheFrisky - Sponsored Post

I just love the frisky - you too?

sponsored like
peter petterson's profile on MyLikes

Sunday, June 27, 2010

A former National Party logoImage via Wikipedia
Maori prisoners will be hit most by a bill before NZ Parliament to remove their  right to vote... 







Maori prisoners will be hit most by a bill being introduced to the NZ Parliament to remove the right of prison inmatesto vote.



National MP Paul Quinn, himself a Maori from Ngati Awa, admits his private member's bill aimed at taking the vote away from people in prison will disproportionately affect Maori.



Currently only prisoners serving a three-year sentence or longer are barred from voting.



Mr Quinn's Electoral Disqualification of Convicted Prisoners Bill would remove the right to vote from all inmates on election day.



He told Waatea News the fact that one in two males and almost two-thirds of female prisoners are Maori didn't affect his thinking.



Before offenders get their first prison sentence, Mr Quinn says, statistics show 80% will have been convicted at least 10 times.



The bill is currently before the Law and Order Select Committee.


KR's Opinion:

This could actually create some debate about whether prison inmates should have te right to vote anyway? Should they in my opinion?  Even a social democrat like myself would find it difficult to justify; but what is the real reason behind this decision to remove the right of prison inmates to vote, after the National Party has always supported it? Is ths the thin edge of the philosophical wedge, a secret agenda to undermine democracy in New Zealand? Will they reconsider the right for, say, intellectually, and mentally ill people who are institutionalised  to also lose the right to vote too?



Acknowledgements: © 2010 Radio New Zealand/ Peter Petterson


Enhanced by Zemanta
New Zealand family  to sue power company and hospital over mother's 2007  death





The family of Auckland woman Folole Muliaga plan to sue both Mercury Energy and Middlemore Hospital over the mother of four's tragic death.



Legal papers are to be filed at the Auckland High Court seeking financial redress from Mercury and the hospital regarding Mrs Muliaga's death, which followed power being cut to her Mangere home in 2007, Fairfax media reported.



Mrs Muliaga, 45, a morbidly obese woman, was using a mains-powered oxygen machine and died three hours after a contractor to Mercury Energy disconnected her power over an unpaid bill of $168.40.



In findings released in 2008 following an inquest, Coroner Gordon Matenga found that the action of cutting Mrs Muliaga's power on May 29 2007 was a factor in her death.



Mercury later presented the Muliaga family with $10,000, but now lawyer Olinda Woodroffe is reported to be seeking more.



Mrs Muliaga's widower Lopaavea Muliaga said he wanted closure for himself and his children.



Acknowledgements: - NZPA


Enhanced by Zemanta

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Navstar-2F satellite of the Global Positioning...Image via Wikipedia
No escaping parking wardens and spies in the skies for motorists of the future...






No escaping parking wardens and spies in the sky for motorists of the future...



First published at Qondio:



Motorists could be charged for parking without the need for buying tickets from roadside meters, it has recently been revealed.



But on the flipside, however,they could be financially rewarded for avoiding peak-hour congestion nominated roads.



A former Auckland City Council transport chairman advised that the next generation wireless traffic technology, used to some extent in Europe and Japan already, costing NZ $6.5 billion dollars and named "Galileo" will be in place by 2013. The European satelitte system will be much faster and more accurate, allowing New Zealand and other countries to revolutionise their traffic monitoring.



The Galileo network, built by the European Union and the European Space Agency, will provide more detailed location information than the Global Positioning System (GPS) developed by the US. It has been described as the next generation GPS.



The Galileo would send precise information to an electronic device carried by the driver, such as a mobile phone. At the same time a smart sticker or computer chip stuck on the windscreen would confirm registration details with the electronic device.



That device would "tell" the city council computer where the vehicle was parked. A parking charge would then be sent by the council to the electronic device, which the driver would approve before completion of the transaction. If the driver parked longer than charged for, it could be adjusted automatically.



While there are no radical parking charges considered, economies of scale under the new Auckland super city being created this year, would undoubtably make centralised traffic controls more attractive.



Acknowledgements: Peter Petterson


Enhanced by Zemanta

President Obama sacks General McChrystal as top US commander in Afghanistan...




WASHINGTON - President Barack Obama ousted Gen. Stanley McChrystal as the top US commander in Afghanistan on Wednesday, saying that his scathing published remarks about administration officials undermine civilian control of the military and erode the needed trust on the president's war team.



Obama named McChrystal's direct boss - Gen. David Petraeus - to take over the troubled 9-year-old war in Afghanistan. He asked the Senate to confirm Petraeus for the new post "as swiftly as possible."



The president said he did not make the decision to accept McChrystal's resignation over any disagreement in policy or "out of any sense of personal insult." Flanked by Vice President Joe Biden, Defence Secretary Robert Gates and Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, in the Rose Garden, he said: "I believe it is the right decision for our national security."



Obama hit several gracious notes about McChrystal and his service, saying that he made the decision to sack him "with considerable regret." And yet, said he said that the job in Afghanistan cannot be done now under McChrystal's leadership, asserting that the critical remarks from the general and his inner circle in the Rolling Stone magazine article displayed conduct that doesn't live up to the necessary standards for a command-level officer.


Obama seemed to suggest that McChrystal's military career is over, including in his praise of the general that the nation should be grateful "for his remarkable career in uniform."



McChrystal left the White House after his Oval Office call to accounts, and returned to his military quarters at Washington's Fort McNair. A senior military official said there is no immediate decision about whether he would retire from the Army, which has been his entire career. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly.



With the controversy have the effect of refueling debate over his Afghanistan policy, Obama took pains to emphasize that the strategy was not shifting with McChrystal's outster.



"This is a change in personnel but it is not a change in policy," he said.



Indeed, as Obama was speaking, McChrystal released a statement saying that he resigned out of "a desire to see the mission succeed."



"I strongly support the president's strategy in Afghanistan," McChrystal said.



With Washington abuzz, there had been a complete lockdown on information about the morning's developments until just before Obama spoke.



But by pairing the decision on McChrystal's departure with the name of his replacement, Obama is seeking to move on as quickly as possible from the firestorm.



Petraeus, who attended a formal Afghanistan war meeting at the White House Wednesday, has been overseeing the wars in both Afghanistan and Iraq as head of US Central Command.



Petraeus is the nation's best-known military man, having risen to prominence as the commander who turned around the Iraq war in 2007. The Afghanistan job is actually a step down from his current post.



Acknowledgements: -Associated Press


Enhanced by Zemanta

Farmville - It's Puppy Love - Sponsored Post

Farmville - It's Puppy Love - apps.facebook.com
Photo of puppies in Farmville

sponsored like
peter petterson's profile on MyLikes