Hornbill splendor safaris

Hornbill splendor safaris Hornbill splendor safaris aranges the ultimate ethical wildlife safaris, Mountain Gorilla Safaris,Chimp Trekking tours.

Hornbill splendor safaris is a tour operator specializing in the Wildlife Parks & Reserves and Conservation areas in Eat Africa. Hornbill splendor safaris is doing guided tours and guided 4x4 tours in E Africa. Come and tour East Africa and the Wildlife Parks & Game Reserves. Experience real peace and tranquillity as well as true East African hospitality. Knowledgeable and highly experienced guides will make your visit a memorable experience.

01/01/2017

Happy new year

Chimpanzees granted petition to hear 'legal persons' status in courtFor the first time in US history, a judge has grante...
22/04/2015

Chimpanzees granted petition to hear 'legal persons' status in court

For the first time in US history, a judge has granted two chimpanzees a petition – through human attorneys – to defend their rights against unlawful imprisonment, allowing a hearing on the status of “legal persons” for the primates.

On Monday, Manhattan supreme court justice Barbara Jaffe granted a writ of habeas corpus on behalf of two non-human plaintiffs, Hercules and Leo – chimpanzees used for medical experiments at Stony Brook University on Long Island.

In her order, Jaffe ordered Samuel Stanley Jr, the president of Stony Brook, to argue before the court why the chimpanzees were being “unlawfully detained” at his university and should not be transferred to a primate sanctuary in Florida.

On Tuesday afternoon she struck the words “writ of habeas corpus” from the order, in order to clarify that she had not meant to imply the chimpanzees have legal person status.

The attorneys who brought the petition forward, part of the Nonhuman Rights Project (NhRP), argued – before the judge struck the words – that under New York law, “only a ‘legal person’ may have an order to show cause and writ of habeas corpus issued in his or her behalf. The court has therefore implicitly determined that Hercules and Leo are ‘persons’.”

“This is one step in a long, long struggle,” said Steven Wise, the lawyer leading the effort. “She never says explicitly that our non-human plaintiffs were persons but by issuing the order … she’s either saying implicitly that they are or that they certainly can be. So that’s the first time that has happened.

“It feels great. We knew it was going to happen sometime,” he added. “Even though we’re scattered all around the country we all gave each other a high five over the phone.”

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A spokesperson for the judge denied that she had implied personhood to the chimpanzees. “She did not say that a chimpanzee is a person,” David Bookstaver told the New York Daily News.

“She just gave them the opportunity to argue their case.”

Habeas corpus petitions are used, in theory, to fight unlawful imprisonment by forcing a custodian to prove they have legal cause to detain someone.

Wise’s argument in this case and others is that chimpanzees are intelligent, emotionally complex and self-aware enough to merit some basic human rights, such as the rights against illegal detainment and cruel treatment. They are “autonomous and self-determining”, in Wise’s words.

He said he suspects that Eric Schneiderman, who will represent Stony Brook as attorney general of New York, will argue that “Hercules and Leo are things and that they’re not persons, and that’s where the battle lines are drawn. Are they persons or are they not persons?”

Schneiderman may also draw from past rejections of Wise’s petitions. In one failed bid to remove another chimpanzee, Tommy, from captivity in a trailer in Gloversville, New York, an appeals court argued that chimpanzees do not participate in society and cannot be held accountable for their actions.

“In our view,” the judges wrote, “it is this incapability to bear any legal responsibilities and societal duties that renders it inappropriate to confer upon chimpanzees the legal rights … that have been afforded to human beings.”

In another decision, a separate appeals court argued that taking a different chimpanzee, Kiko, to a sanctuary amounted to another form of imprisonment, and that habeas corpus amounted to an inappropriate remedy.

NhRP hopes to move the chimpanzees to the Save the Chimps sanctuary in Fort Pierce, Florida, where more than 250 chimps live on a series of islands along the Atlantic coast.

Kathy Hessler, a professor of animal law at Lewis & Clark law school, told the Guardian that Wise’s burden is to prove chimps are “enough like a human that the legal system should take notice”.

Opponents of Wise’s fight for limited rights for chimpanzees warn that the judge’s granting of the petition does not mean she endorses “personhood” for chimpanzees. Richard Cupp, a law professor at California’s Pepperdine University said “we should avoid reading too much into this document ordering a hearing.”

“It seems quite unlikely that a judge would intend to make such an exceptionally controversial decision that a chimpanzee is a person without even hearing arguments from the other side,” Cupp said. The suggestion that nonhuman animals are persons is “new terrain for judges”, he added.

Cupp and others argue that chimpanzees may deserve greater protections, but not rights. “No one should ever regard animals as if they were stones,” Richard Epstein, a New York University law professor told the Guardian last year, but he said that Wise and his cohorts go too far into a labyrinth of questions about what separates humans from nonhuman animals.

NhRP has appealed against the decisions in Kiko and Tommy’s cases, and its next hearing on behalf of Hercules and Leo is scheduled for 6 May.

NKURINGO MOURNS THE DEATH OF KARIBUIn July 2014, Karibu, the young silverback of the Nkuringo Gorilla group in Bwindi Im...
15/08/2014

NKURINGO MOURNS THE DEATH OF KARIBU

In July 2014, Karibu, the young silverback of the Nkuringo Gorilla group in Bwindi Impenetrable Forest suffered a respiratory infection. The gorilla doctors treated him with antibiotics and anti-inflammatory medications. He had taken on life exploration as a solitary silverback.

Karibu earned this name because he would alarm visitors with thumps on his chests and hoots, a form of welcoming trackers. This big, hairy darling of Bwindi was the self-appointed committee head of the Nkuringo family.

Our sincere commiseration to the bereaved family. May the Lord comfort and strengthen the entire family this difficulty.

RIP.

Pollutants affecting breeding birds, research suggests Courtsey OF BBC WORLD SERVICE Wild birds nesting along urban rive...
07/05/2014

Pollutants affecting breeding birds, research suggests Courtsey OF BBC WORLD SERVICE

Wild birds nesting along urban rivers in south Wales are being affected by harmful pollutants, research suggests.

There are concerns chicks are underweight and altered hormone levels have led to fewer female chicks hatching.

Data obtained by Cardiff University scientists suggested the cause was contaminants found in insects and fish that the birds fed on.

The pollution was described as a "source of concern".

The research was carried out alongside the Natural Environment Research Council, Exeter University, and the University of Saskatchewan in Canada, and looked at Eurasian dipper birds - a river bird that feeds on insects and fish in upland streams.

Dippers are seen as valuable monitors of river pollution that can help assess whether urban contaminants are influencing wildlife reproduction and development.

Professor Steve Ormerod, from Cardiff University school of biosciences, said: "Pollutants are still a source of concern for the wildlife along Britain's urban rivers despite very major recovery from the gross pollution problems of the past.

"Wild birds, such as dippers, are very important indicators of environmental well-being and food web contamination, and we need to know if populations, other species or even people are also at risk."

The research revealed urban contaminants in the birds' food and a strong link with a depressed thyroid hormone - which plays an important role in development and growth - in chicks. One thyroid hormone was 43% lower in chicks from urban rivers than those on rural rivers.

Scientists are now planning to examine the issue further as well as locating the exact sources of the pollution.

John Clark, from the RSPB, said: "We need to work in partnership with water companies, regulators, statutory agencies and communities at a catchment scale to address those practices that continue to introduce damaging chemicals to our rivers."

A new type of Tyrannosaur with a very long nose has been nicknamed "Pinocchio rex".The ferocious carnivore, nine metres ...
07/05/2014

A new type of Tyrannosaur with a very long nose has been nicknamed "Pinocchio rex".

The ferocious carnivore, nine metres long with a distinctive h***y snout, was a cousin of Tyrannosaurus rex.

Trekking 'Impenetrable' fore
10/04/2014

Trekking 'Impenetrable' fore

Chimp attack victim appeals to legislators for permission to sue Connecticut.A Connecticut woman mauled by a friend's ch...
10/04/2014

Chimp attack victim appeals to legislators for permission to sue Connecticut.
A Connecticut woman mauled by a friend's chimpanzee in 2009 describes in a new video what it was like waking up in a hospital after the attack.
Unaware she had lost her vision, Charla Nash said she asked her brother Mike to turn on the lights.
"He said the lights are on," Nash remembers, and "little by little, it started to come together."

Nash was attacked while trying to help coax her friend's 14-year-old pet chimpanzee back into her house. Travis the chimp, which had appeared in television commercials for Coca-Cola and Old Navy, jumped on Nash, biting and mauling her.

Police later fatally shot Travis to stop the attack, which left Nash without hands, a nose, lips or eyelids.

"I remember laying in the room, and I remember sometimes I would try to scratch my leg, and then I wasn't feeling it," she said.
"It's a different world to not be able to see again or to use your hands and do things for yourself that you have to depend on other people for help now," Nash said.

The seven-minute video, released to Connecticut state legislators, features an interview with Nash and footage of her walking around the private medical facility where she lives and receives daily assistance for her injuries.

Representatives for Nash will present her case to the Connecticut State Judiciary Committee on Friday in hopes that legislators will allow her to proceed with a $150 million lawsuit against the state. By law, anyone seeking to sue the state of Connecticut must seek permission to do so.

Since the attack five years ago, Nash has had numerous surgeries, including a face transplant. She sued Sandra Herold, the owner of the chimp, and received $4 million for her injuries, but according to spokesman Shelly Sindland, that settlement doesn't even begin to cover the expenses for her treatment.

Part of the $150 million she's seeking would fund a hand transplant, which doctors unsuccessfully attempted at the time of her face transplant. Nash hopes they will be able to try again.
"I want ... to be able to do more on my own," Nash said.

Nash is still waiting for an opportunity to square off against the state for injuries she contends could've been prevented.
Sindland said authorities at the Department of Energy and Environmental Protection ignored a memo sent in October 2008, four months before the attack, from Connecticut state biologist Elaine Hinsch that said Travis the chimp was "an accident waiting to happen."

The state, Sindland alleges, "knew that the chimp was a danger" but didn't do anything to remove it from the home.
Dennis Schain, director of communications for the Department of Energy and Environmental Protection, told CNN he is aware of the memo, but he said all statements from the case must come from the state Attorney General's Office.

In a statement to CNN, Connecticut attorney general spokeswoman Jaclyn Falkowski said, "The legal question in this case is: Did the state owe a legal duty to protect Ms. Nash from attack by a privately owned chimp on private property? Under well-settled law, it did not."

"While we have the utmost sympathy for Charla Nash, we do not believe that the state is liable for Ms. Nash's injuries. To decide otherwise would set a very dangerous precedent, exposing the state and its taxpayers to unlimited liability and costly litigation."
In June, the Office of the Claims Commissioner denied Nash her request to sue the state for $150 million.

Friday's appeal is the last opportunity for her to get permission to move forward with a lawsuit, and even if it makes it through committee, it would then have to be voted through both the state's House and Senate before moving forward.

Four school stabbing victims in critical condition; teen suspect charged as adultMurrysville, Pennsylvania (CNN) -- A te...
10/04/2014

Four school stabbing victims in critical condition; teen suspect charged as adult

Murrysville, Pennsylvania (CNN) -- A teenage boy wielding two kitchen knives went on a stabbing rampage at his high school in Murrysville, Pennsylvania, early Wednesday, before being tackled by an assistant principal, authorities said.
Twenty students and a security officer at Franklin Regional Senior High School were either stabbed or slashed in the attack, Westmoreland County District Attorney John Peck told reporters.
The accused attacker was been identified as 16-year-old Alex Hribal, according to a criminal complaint made public. Hribal, who was arraigned as an adult, faces four counts of attempted homicide, 21 counts of aggravated assault and one count of possession of a weapon on school grounds, the documents show.
"I'm not sure he knows what he did, quite frankly," Hribal's attorney, Patrick Thomassey, said, adding he would file a motion to move the case to juvenile court.

Living in Harmony with NatureTo live harmoniously with nature is to understand and accept natural forces. The greater th...
27/03/2014

Living in Harmony with Nature

To live harmoniously with nature is to understand and accept natural forces. The greater this understanding and acceptance, the greater the harmony. splendor safaris and Communities around Virunga Chain(Mufumbiro Range), we do live harmoniously with nature.

The whole world is run by intelligence operatives. Sometimes it necessitates a plane to disappear for intel gatherers to...
27/03/2014

The whole world is run by intelligence operatives. Sometimes it necessitates a plane to disappear for intel gatherers to spy on what 'other nations' are doing at sea. Citizens become collateral damage when big egos are spying on each other’s capacity. '.By the way, there are some objects are floating near North Korea...could it be the missing plane?

24/03/2014

Happy week

20/03/2014

splendor safaris nature will remain our best in life.

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