2015年12月24日 星期四

Blindfolded Muslim takes to the street for hugging experiment

A blindfolded Muslim man stands on a street in Toronto with a sign asking passersby to give him a hug - and films the reaction


By Social Media Content Editor
"I am a Muslim. I am labelled as a terrorist. I trust you. Do you trust me? Give me a hug."
Those were the words at Mustafa Mawla's feet as he stood blindfolded with outstretched arms on a busy Toronto street, while a camera rolled a few feet away.
The Canadian Muslim was taking part in the 'Blind Trust Project' - a social experiment to "to break down barriers and eliminate the fear and ignorance projected towards Muslims and Islam."
The project was the brainchild of 24-year-old Canadian Muslim Assma Galuta - who teamed up with film-makers Time Vision to shoot the video.She told the Huffington Post that the reason for making Mr Mawla wear the blindfold was to give complete trust.
“Blindfolded, anyone could harm him or feel very angered," she said. "He’s giving people his full trust and he wants to see if people trust him enough to give him a hug.”
To date nearly 800,000 people have watched the video to see what the public's response to the experiment would be.
And to the delight of everyone involved in the project, that response was overwhelmingly positive.
Dozens of passers-by of all ages, genders and colours, stopped and embraced Mustafa Mawla in a hug.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/northamerica/canada/11406213/Blindfolded-Muslim-takes-to-the-street-for-hugging-experiment.html



Structure of the Lead
WHO-Muslim man
WHEN- 2015.02.11
WHAT- asking passersby to give him a hug
WHY- because a social experiment 
WHERE- street in Toronto
HOW-that response was overwhelmingly positive

Keyword:

1.labelled:貼標籤
2.blindfolded:蒙住眼睛
3.eliminate:消除
4.involved:參與
5.overwhelmingly:絕大多數

2015年12月17日 星期四

Bangkok bomb: Has the case been solved?

Thailand’s military rulers are facing up to the deadliest attack in the capital in recent memory after at least 19 people were killed in a bomb blast that the government blamed on forces seeking to destroy its tourist economy.

Body parts and mangled scooters were scattered across a busy intersection in central Bangkok after the improvised device went off at about 7pm local time (noon GMT) at the Erawan Hindu shrine.


Bangkok explosion witness: 'There was fire, shrapnel and so much smoke'

There was no immediate claim of responsibility, but the deadly assault in which more than 123 people were injured is a major test for the military-run administration, which ousted the elected government in May 2014. The military is fighting a Muslim insurgency in the south but militants rarely launch attacks of this scale on the capital.

“The perpetrators intended to destroy the economy and tourism, because the incident occurred in the heart of the tourism district,” the defence minister, Prawit Wongsuwan, told Reuters. 

“We still don’t know for sure who did this and why,” he later told reporters. “We are not sure if it is politically motivated, but they aim to harm our economy and we will hunt them down.”

“It was a pipe bomb,” the national police chief, Somyot Poompanmoung, said, adding that the toll could climb to nearer 30. “It was placed inside the Erawan shrine.” CCTV footage captured a cloud of fire, and showed Thai people and a foreign man running away.

“Those who have planted this bomb are cruel. They aim to kill because everyone knows that at 7pm the shrine is crowded with Thais and foreigners,” Somyot said. “Planting a bomb there means they want to see a lot of dead people.”

Bangkok has been mostly calm since the coup last year but anger from the opposition has intensified after the junta said it may not hold elections until 2017. The last major bombing in Bangkok occurred on New Year’s Eve at the end of 2006, when three people were killed in a series of explosions. Responsibility was never claimed.

Police and the fire brigade cordoned off the entire intersection with tape and human barriers. Four major roads and the above-ground metro rail converge here, and high-rise hotels and malls line the street. Shards of glass lay on the road and a sign from the nearby Alexander McQueen shop had letters missing from the impact of the blast.

Hundreds of onlookers, mostly from the security services but also journalists and some tourists, stood at the edge of the tape. When thunder clapped in the clouds above, everyone jumped.

The UK Foreign Office said people should “monitor media and take extra care” after the explosion. It later released a statement saying: “We are in contact with local authorities and urgently seeking further information following reports of an explosion in Bangkok.”

At the multistorey Grand Hyatt hotel, which is right next to the shrine, locals and tourists waited for the situation to calm down, looking at photos of the wreckage on social media as they sat only metres away.

Thanapon Peng, a 25-year-old who works in marketing, passed the site on a motorbike taxi moments after the blast. “I saw glass. I saw some organs of people on the road. I don’t know how many people there were,” he told the Guardian. “I heard that about 80 people are wounded but we don’t know how many died.”

He was told by hotel staff to wait inside, where a musician continued to play on the mezzanine grand piano and staff tried to help people. Outside, a single empty stretcher lay where taxis drop off guests.

There were suggestions in the aftermath that a second and third bomb had been hidden in the capital. Police with torches looked under bushes and walked the grounds of the nearby police station in an apparent search for other devices.

Tamar Johnson, 20, a British tourist staying in the nearby Lebua hotel, said she and her sister were at the rooftop bar when they heard a huge explosion. “At first we thought it was just thunder because there’s been electrical storms all day so we didn’t think much of it,” she told Caters News Agency.

“Then my mum phoned me from the hotel. She was shouting about a bomb so we sprinted back to our hotel. It was chaos – people were running around and there were police and ambulances everywhere.”

“Now we’re on the 23rd floor and we’re all together waiting for it to calm down. It’s really scary. The hotel staff are looking after us but they’ve closed the doors and told us not to leave until we hear anything else.”

 Scenes of chaos in the aftermath of Bangkok bombing
Medics and police formed a line at the large intersection and walked slowly forward, looking for any debris from the blast. A volunteer medic said: “Some people died here, some people died at hospital.”


A full death toll would come later, medics said, as many of the critically wounded had been sent to different hospitals.

The explosion was large enough to throw a metre-wide chunk of metal to a third-floor balcony on the other side of the street, about 50 metres away. Human flesh lay on the road and medics were picking it up two hours after the blast.

The shrine is a major attraction for visitors from Asia and for Thai people. Dedicated to the Hindu god Brahma, it is also popular among Thailand’s Buddhist and Chinese tourists.

Nearby tailors sell suits to tourists and diplomats, and the road straddles the capital’s main metro line.

Several ambulances rushed along the road away from the shrine to hospitals. Most of the wounded were taken to a hospital very close to the blast site and a long line of ambulances waited outside. Empty wheelchairs and stretchers stood at the entrance to the emergency care unit, where people were packed into the reception.

In the lobby, police said foreigners who speak Thai had arrived to volunteer to help translate for wounded tourists. Hospitals were calling for Chinese translators and many had arrived and registered their mobile phone numbers with the police, to be called on later.

Tony Chan, a Chinese physical education teacher, said he was in Bangkok on a three-week trip and came to the hospital to see if he could do something for the wounded. “I heard a very loud sound. I thought it was thunder. Later I saw the news so I came to see if I could provide some help,” he said.

The Nation television channel reported that the government would set up a “war room” to coordinate a response. Some were pointing fingers at Muslim separatists who have waged a long campaign in Thailand’s south, but the country has also seen violent confrontations between political groups in the capital. Two pipe bombs exploded in the same district in February but did not cause significant damage.

The Thai government posted a statement late on Monday evening, attributed to Maj Gen Werachon Sukhondhapatak, saying preliminary investigations had revealed that an IED was used to cause the explosion.

“As for possible motivations as to who may have caused this incident, it is too early to speculate which group may have been responsible for this crime but authorities are following possible leads.”

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/aug/17/bangkok-bomb-thai-capital-reels-deadliest-attack-in-years

Structure of the Lead
WHO-Thailand’s military rulers
WHEN- 2015.08.17
WHAT- The perpetrators intended to destroy the economy and tourism
WHY-  they aim to harm Thailand’s economy
WHERE- Bangkok of Thailand
HOW- more than 123 people were injured

Keyword:

1.administration:行政
2.perpetrators:肇事者
3.captured:抓獲
4.intensified:愈演愈烈
5.urgently:緊急
6.mezzanine:夾層
7.speculate:推測

2015年12月3日 星期四

Cecil the lion killer Walter Palmer breaks silence and returns to work

The American dentist who killed Cecil the lion in Zimbabwe has expressed dismay at the furore that engulfed his family and staff and said he needed to return to work for his patients.
Walter Palmer, who has kept a low profile for more than a month after becoming the target of protests and threats, is to return to his suburban Minneapolis dental practice on Tuesday.


The 55-year-old dentist, who has not been charged with a crime, also reaffirmed that the hunt was legal and that he and the others in his party had no clue that the lion was the much-loved 13-year-old.
“I have a lot of staff members, and I’m a little heartbroken at the disruption in their lives,” Palmer told the Associated Press and the Minneapolis Star Tribune. “And I’m a health professional. I need to get back to my staff and my patients, and they want me back. That’s why I’m back.”
After Palmer was named in late July as the hunter who killed Cecil, his Bloomington clinic and Eden Prairie home became the focus of protests and animal welfare groups vandalised a holiday home he owns in Florida.
Vilified on social media, Palmer said he was “heartbroken” for causing disruptions for staff at his clinic, which was shut for weeks until reopening in late August without him. He said the ordeal had been especially hard on his wife and daughter, who both felt threatened.
“I don’t understand that level of humanity to come after people not involved at all,” Palmer said.
As for himself, he feels safe enough to return to work. “My staff and my patients support me and they want me back,” he said. But he but declined to say where he has spent the past weeks or describe security steps he has taken.
“I’ve been out of the public eye. That doesn’t mean I’m in hiding,” Palmer said. “I’ve been among people, family and friends. Location is really not that important.”
Cecil, a fixture in the vast Hwange national park, had been fitted with a GPS collar as part of Oxford University lion research. Palmer said he shot the animal using an arrow from his compound bow outside the park’s borders but it did not die immediately. He disputed accounts that the wounded lion wandered for 40 hours and was finished off with a gun, saying it was tracked down the next day and killed with an arrow.
Palmer said he believes he acted legally and that he was stunned to find out his hunting party had killed one of Zimbabwe’s treasured animals.
“If I had known this lion had a name and was important to the country or a study obviously I wouldn’t have taken it,” Palmer said. “Nobody in our hunting party knew before or after the name of this lion.”
Palmer, who has several big-game kills to his name, reportedly paid thousands of dollars for the guided hunt.
Theo Bronkhorst, a professional hunter who helped Palmer, has been charged with “failure to prevent an illegal hunt”. Honest Ndlovu, whose property is near the park in western Zimbabwe, faces a charge of allowing the lion hunt to occur on his farm without proper authority.
Palmer pleaded guilty in 2008 to making false statements to the fish and wildlife service about a black bear he fatally shot in western Wisconsin outside the authorised hunting zone. He was given probation of one year and was fined nearly $3,000 as part of a plea agreement.
http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2015/sep/07/cecil-the-lions-killer-walter-palmer-going-back-to-work-within-days

Structure of the Lead

WHO- Walter Palmer
WHEN-2015.09.08
WHAT- Palmer was named in late July as the hunter who killed Cecil
WHY- He killed Cecil the lion in Zimbabwe
WHERE- Vast Hwange national park
HOW-He was given probation of one year and was fined nearly $3,000 as part of a plea agreement

Keyword:

1.reaffirmed:重申
2.disruption:瓦解
3.reopening :重啟
4.compound bow:複合弓
5.disputed :爭議
6.treasured:珍惜
7.authorised:合法
8.probation:緩刑