[Abel-tasman] Are you about to go on a date with a felon?

Instant Check Mate InstantCheckMate at uknwbngb.us
Thu Oct 17 01:09:20 CEST 2013


Investigate Backgrounds in Seconds

http://www.uknwbngb.us/2558/5/46/16/55.10tt62883642AAF15.php





To Unsub- http://www.uknwbngb.us/2558/5/46/16/55.10tt62883642AAF9.html





























 JOHANNESBURG  Mozambique's rhinoceros population was wiped out more than 
a century ago by big game hunters. Reconstituted several years ago, it 
has again been driven to extinction, or to the brink of extinction, 
by poachers seeking their horns for sale in Asia.A leading rhino expert 
told The Associated Press that the last rhino in the southern African 
nation has been killed. The warden in charge of the Great Limpopo 
Transfrontier Park   the only place where the horned behemoths lived 
in Mozambique    also says poachers have wiped out the 
last of the rhinos. Mozambique's conservation director believes a few may 
remain.Elephants also could become extinct in Mozambique soon, the warden 
of the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park, Antonio Abacar, told AP. He said 
game rangers have been aiding poachers, and 30 of the park's 100 
rangers will appear in court soon."We caught some of them red-handed while 
directing poachers to a rhino area," Abacar said.A game ranger arrested 
for helping poachers in Mozambique's northern Niassa Game Reserve said on 
Mozambican Television TVM last week that he was paid 2,500 meticais (about 
$80) to direct poachers to areas with elephants and rhinos. Game rangers 
are paid between 2,000 and 3,000 meticais ($64 to $96) a month.While 
guilty rangers will lose their jobs, the courts serve as little deterrent 
to the poachers: killing wildlife and trading in illegal rhino horn and 
elephant tusks are only misdemeanors in Mozam
 On the night of the Benghazi terror attack, special operations put out 
multiple calls for all available military and other assets to be moved 
into position to help -- but the State Department and White House 
never gave the military permission to cross into Libya, sources told Fox 
News.The disconnect was one example of what sources described as a communication 
breakdown that left those on the ground without outside help."When you are 
on the ground, you depend on each other -- we're gonna get 
through this situation. But when you look up and then nothing outside 
of the stratosphere is coming to help you or rescue you, that's 
a bad feeling," one source said.Multiple sources spoke to Fox News about 
what they described as a lack of action in Benghazi on Sept. 
11 last year, when four Americans, including Ambassador Chris Stevens, were 
killed."They had no plan. They had no contingency plan for if this 
happens, and that's the problem this is going to face in the 
future," one source said. "They're dealing with more hostile regions, hostile 
countries. This attack's going to happen again."Under normal circumstances, 
authorities in Benghazi would have fallen under the chief of mission, one 
source said -- the person in charge of security in the country 
who in this case was Stevens. But once Stevens was cornered and 
members of his security detail pushed his distress button, that authority 
would have been transferred to his deputy. However, that deputy
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://post.in-mind.de/pipermail/abel-tasman/attachments/20131016/ff2a8ef6/attachment-0001.htm


More information about the Abel-tasman mailing list