![]() |
Active Topics Memberlist Calendar Search |
| |
| News | |
| |
|
| Author | Message |
|
mkrfm6ccvg
Newbie
Joined: Apr 27 2013 Location: United Kingdom Online Status: Offline Posts: 4 |
![]() Topic: toms shoes sale where ambelopoulia trapping is moPosted: Apr 28 2013 at 2:19pm |
|
und that based on testimony and other evidence, that the name could be used by both males and females and that Blaer had a right to her own name under Iceland's constitution and Europe's human rights conventions. It rejected the government's argument that her request should be denied to protect the Icelandic language,toms shoes sale.Blaer had told the court she was very happy with her name and only had problems with it when she was dealing with state authorities who rejected it.The court did not grant her any damages. The government has not indicated whether it will appeal the decision to the Supreme Court.Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed,toms kids shoes. An insider's guide to politics and policy, available on the iPad or as a PDF download.[标签:标题]
By MENELAOS HADJICOSTIS, Associated Press NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) It's just before first light and the bird-catcher strings nets among the orange, pomegranate, fig and carob trees in his orchard. The sound of chirping emanates from inside a massive carob a trick sent from speakers to attract tiny songbirds. By mid-morning, the man disentangles about a half-dozen blackcaps, snaps their necks with his teeth and drops them in a bucket. For centuries,toms shoe store, the migratory songbirds have been a prized delicacy among Cypriots. They are also an illegal one, as entry into the European Union forced Cyprus to ban the tradition of catching the creatures, some endangered, in nets or on sticks slathered with a glue-like substance. Now economic crisis is luring many out-of-work Cypriots back into the centuries-old trade. They risk stiff fines and even jail time by supplying an underground market for the tiny songbirds illicitly served up in the country's tavernas but they say it's their only way to make ends meet. Served whole either boiled or pickled, the fatty birds are such an ugly sight on a plate that outsiders find it hard to fathom how there could be any profit to be made from them. For many Cypriots, however, the tangy-sweet taste of the birds is pure bliss. Supporters of trapping 'ambelopoulia,' as the blackcaps, robins and other warblers are known locally, ruefully reminisce about how until recently the practice was widely considered an ingrained part of local culture, one so lucrative that it sustained entire livelihoods and put countless kids through college. That changed when Cyprus joined the European Union in 2004 and authorities began cracking down. Trappers were cast as greedy villains out to line their pockets without regard for the ensnared birds. The threat of a maximum 17,000 ($22,500) fine, a three-year jail term or both persuaded many to quit trapping. It's difficult to say how many have again turned to trapping because they've lost their jobs. Even discreet queries are met by a wall of silence. Trust must be earned, especially in villages in the country's southeast, where ambelopoulia trapping is most prevalent. But Andreas Antoniou, the head of the special police anti-poaching unit, said songbird Related articles: |
|
IP Logged |
|
|
||
Forum Jump |
You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot create polls in this forum You cannot vote in polls in this forum |
|