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View Context | Flag comment for removal kaukatsang about 1 year ago
A friend called me last evening. He had just gotten off the phone with his uncle in Lhasa. The situation there sounds grim. There are unconfirmed reports that the Chinese authorities have arrested as many as 30,000 people in the city. Many are being detained in large warehouses on the outskirts of Lhasa. There numbers are expected to increase as authorities are doing house to house search and sweeping through the Tibetan sections of the city. Soldiers are deployed everywhere, and more troops are being brought into the city. There is a total news blackout as authorities have expelled all media people and are preventing tourists from traveling to Tibetan areas.
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Please share with us stories about how the current unrest in Tibet and Tibetan areas of China is being covered by your media. What are people saying? How do you feel about what's going on? Do you have any accounts from friends and others who are in Tibet and China?
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Thank you, Alex. Yes, we hope to have some of the features you have suggested on WE. One small feature we had at the time of launch was a donate button on the org. profile. however, this wasn't really helpful as the button led the user to a resource page. We think it'll be much more useful for organizations to be able to directly embed their donate buttons on their profile. We would also like to work on better linking people with organizations.
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SF Bay Spill Takes Toll on Diving Duck
By TERENCE CHEA, Associated Press Writer Friday, November 23, 2007 (11-23) 09:07 PST SAN FRANCISCO, (AP) -- Thousands of birds have been found dead or blackened since an oil spill two weeks ago, but no species has been hit harder than the surf scoter, a migratory sea duck that had already seen a precipitous population decline in recent decades. The spill occurred when a cargo ship struck the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge, releasing nearly 60,000 gallons of toxic shipping fuel into one of North America's most important estuaries. It came during the fall arrival of hundreds of thousands of migratory birds to San Francisco Bay, where a mild climate and abundant food make it a key wintering ground for shorebirds, seabirds and waterfowl. At least 1,365 birds have been found dead, and more than 1,000 oiled birds have been captured alive and taken to a wildlife care center in Solano County to be cleaned and rehabilitated. Although 27 different species are represented, surf scoters make up about 40 percent of the captured birds and more than 25 percent of the dead ones, said Michael Ziccardi, who heads the Oiled Wildlife Care Network that has been leading the bird rescue effort. Scoters, which live on the bay and dive for clams, mussels and sand crabs below, have been disproportionately affected because they spend almost all their time in the areas hit hardest by the spill, scientists say. The stout sea duck breeds in the remote lakes and wetlands of Canada's northern boreal forests and migrates south to spend winters in San Francisco Bay and other points along the Pacific Coast. A smaller population winters on the Atlantic Coast. Though not listed as a threatened or endangered, their population — now estimated at 500,000 worldwide — has declined 50 to 70 percent in the past four decades, experts say. About 25,000 to 30,000 are killed each year by sport hunters in the U.S. and Canada, mostly on the Atlantic Coast. "This oil spill just adds insult to injury and creates greater stress on these birds," said Elizabeth Murdock, who heads the Golden Gate Audubon Society, which has recruited hundreds of volunteers to help recover oiled birds. Scientists are trying to understand the surf scoter's steep and steady decline. They believe it might be linked to ecological changes caused by global warming in their breeding grounds in Canada's Northwest Territories, as well as by industrial contaminants in their wintering grounds in urbanized areas like San Francisco Bay. "They're being hit on both sides of their life cycle," said Jeff Wells, a biologist with the Boreal Songbird Initiative and author of "Birder's Conservation Handbook.""It's a major cause for concern. When you see something that drastic, it's telling you something about changes in the environment." When the oil gets on the birds' feathers, it impairs their ability to keep dry and warm, forcing many to shore — away from their food supply. Some birds become sick when they ingest the fuel while trying to clean their feathers. In winter, San Francisco Bay is home to around 10 percent of the world's surf scoters, and biologists worry the spill could hurt its future breeding since the oiled scoters were mostly healthy adults. "It definitely could have an effect on overall populations," said John Takekawa, a wildlife biologist with the U.S. Geological Survey who helped track scoters from the bay to their Canadian breeding grounds. "There could be a lasting effect over time." Other bird species suffering from the spill include waterfowl such as scaup and ruddy ducks, seabirds like the common murre and shorebirds such as western and eared grebes. Several brown pelicans and marbled murrelets — both federally protected species — were found oiled but alive. Wildlife workers and volunteers combing the shores continue to find a dwindling number of live and dead birds, but most of the oiled animals will never be found, scientists say. In other spills, only about one in 10 affected birds is recovered. "We're only seeing a relatively small portion of the overall number of animals impacted," Ziccardi said. "Within two weeks, most of the animals that were initially oiled have been collected or unfortunately have already died." Biologists say the so-called bunker fuel, which is loaded with pollutants and slow to break down, has entered the food chain. They worry the spill could threaten the bay's ecosystem and wildlife for years. "Based on other oil spills," said John Bradley, a biologist with the San Francisco Bay National Wildlife Refuge, "it will be months before the cleanup has ended and it will be five or more years before things will be somewhat back to normal." |
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It's frustrating to sit by and not be able to help with the clean-up. The authorities are obviously ill equipped and just don't have enough bodies to clean up the muck.
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Hello, Christopher,
Welcome to WiserEarth! I just made the change. Please know that WiserEarth is community editable meaning that you as a registered user can make edits and changes. All you have to do is click on one of the edit button, make the change and save. Best, Kelsang |
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Hello Marvin,
One of the nice things about WiserEarth is that it is community editable. All you have to do to get editing rights is simply register and join WiserEarth. Registration is free and quick. You can then go to your org profile and make the address or any other changes or update. Let us know if you encounter any problems. Best, Kelsang |
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We've had some amazing people come and go as interns at NCI over the years. Following up on our discussion at the last staff mtg, let's get a good discussion going on how we can brand this as a formal program of NCI. If you all think this is a good idea than I guess what we will need is a draft that explains the goals and objectives of the program, description of the program, suggestions on how we can structure the program, what we could do to ensure that interns get the maximum out of this exciting experience, and getting some sort of an alumni network going if possible. Plus anything else you all would like to add.
All suggestions are welcome. I hope we can have a good and productive discussion going on this topic. |
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The WiserEarth New Delhi event will be held on Friday, July 13, 2007 at 6:00 pm at:
10-B, Ring Road, Lajpat Nagar -IV New Delhi -110024 To RSVP, please call: 986 894 4267 |
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CALLING ALL WISER EARTHERS IN NEW DELHI! LET'S MEET UP!
My friends and I are planning a small event for some of the organizations and people based in New Delhi, India to meet up and discuss WiserEarth. The event is happening on Friday, July 13 at 6:30 pm. Venue to be posted shortly. If you are interested in joining us, please send me an email or internal message me. Looking forward to seeing some of you, and finding out more about the wonderful work you do. |
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It would be great if the organizers of the 2007 US Social Forum recycled all the waste
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Hello all, WiserEarth is at information table #38. This is one floor above the registration hall. Please come by and check us out.
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Peggy, Melinda, and I will be at the Social Forum. We look forward to seeing some of you there.
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Eric, thank you for investing in WiserEarth. Your support is greatly appreciated.
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George, thank you for investing in WiserEarth. Your support is much appreciated.
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Dear Sergio,
Welcome, and thank you for investing in WiserEarth. Your support is greatly appreciated. Best, Kelsang |
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When I search for something on the search bar, the advance search panel doesn't open up. i have to take an extra step by clicking on one of the options next to "Refine your Search". I think it might be more convenient if the search panel is set to open as a default whenever you hit the search button.
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When typing an internal email message the blinking cursor is not visible in the message box.
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Hi Ethan,
You may want to hyperlink all your links. Best, Kelsang |
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the website doesn't seem to work.
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