Substitute hosting on HLN's The Joy Behar Show, on Tuesday, CNN's Don Lemon prodded Jay Bakker, the son of televangelist Jim Bakker, to accuse Rick Perry and Michele Bachmann of exploiting fears of Christians as he claimed that the GOP presidential hopefuls were: “playing to a group of people who deal a lot with fear and using fear to control folks.” The dismissive Bakker then asserted: “I feel like they've kind of hijacked Christianity,” and added that he thinks the Perrys and Bachmanns were advancing “fairy tales” that global warming doesn't exist and claimed they wanted to “ignore” science. Lemon initially invited on Bakker to analyze the discussion he had with his previous guest, Randy Roberts Potts about what it was like to grow up gay in the “shadow” of his grandfather televangelist Oral Roberts. However it wasn't long before Lemon switched topics to the 2012 GOP primary race, as seen in this exchange from the August 23 show:
Continue reading …Spotlight on restraint tactics as Phillip Hulmes, 53, becomes third person in eight days to die after being shot with the stun gun Police restraint tactics are under fresh scrutiny after a third member of the public died following the use of either a Taser stun gun or pepper spray by officers. Amnesty International said the number of fatalities over the past eight days had reaffirmed its concerns that Tasers were “potentially lethal” weapons. Initial reports suggest Philip Hulmes, 53, was hit by a Taser after refusing to leave his terraced house in Over Hulton, near Bolton on Tuesday night. It is understood that his daughter had called the police after he locked himself inside his house while in possession of a knife and began to harm himself. Greater Manchester police said when officers arrived they were threatened by the man and a decision was made to “deploy the Taser”. “Following that, it became quite obvious the man had serious stab wounds to his stomach,” a spokesman said. “He was taken to Royal Bolton hospital for treatment to his injuries but died a short time later. The coroner has been informed and an investigation into the circumstances surrounding the death has begun by Greater Manchester police’s professional standards branch.” A postmortem was being carried out on Hulmes and the death has been referred to the Independent Police Complaints Commission. As forensic teams moved into the property on Wednesday, Kenneth Brown, who lives several doors away, said he had watched the events unfold. “We saw all the flashing lights and police and ambulance at the front,” he said. “They were shouting through the front door begging for him to open up and they had to smash it down in the end. His daughter came down and asked him to open the door.” Brown said his neighbour had worked as an HGV driver but was made redundant. Most recently, he was employed by a firm which delivered parts for mechanics. As investigators began piecing together the events which led to Hulmes’s death a white police tent covered the entrance to his property on a busy main road near the M61. Christine Bellis, 61, another neighbour said Hulmes had lived alone and was a regular dog walker who was very friendly and easy to talk to. “All we know was that the paramedics said that he had a knife with him. The police had to smash the door down,” she said. “He really was a nice bloke who kept himself to himself. We think that he had a bit of heart trouble.” Christine’s husband Raymond, 62, added: “This is a real tragedy. It is terrible because he was a very nice man.” The death of Hulmes came as the IPCC continued its investigations into two other fatalities after the use of restraint techniques by police in two different forces; Cumbria and Cheshire. Dale Burns, 27, died after being subjected to shocks from a Taser gun and pepper spray when police were called to his flat in Cumbria last week and Jacob Michael, 25, died on Monday after being pepper sprayed during his arrest by 11 officers in Widnes, Cheshire. Postmortems into Burns and Michael have proved inconclusive and investigators are waiting for the results of toxicology tests for more information. Simon Chesterman, the Association of Chief Police Officers lead officer on Tasers, told the Guardian their use was carefully scrutinised by the scientific and medical community, and in cases where there were fatalities, by the IPCC. “Where a Taser is associated with injury or something more serious then clearly there will be full investigation of that. We will be looking at the outcomes of those investigations to see if our guidance to officers needs to change. We need to understand the full circumstances of the cases and we should avoid any knee-jerk responses.” But Helen Shaw, co-director of Inquest, the charity that advises the family of those killed in contentious circumstances, said the police did not seem to have learned lessons from a pattern of cases where inquest juries had found “overwhelming evidence of unlawful and excessive use of force or gross neglect. “Whilst we await the outcome of the inquests and investigations into these recent deaths it is imperative that the police are reminded that they cannot act with impunity.” Tasers Police Independent Police Complaints Commission Weapons technology Helen Carter Sandra Laville guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• Mining group gloomy over world economic situation • Debt crisis could last 10 years, says chief executive Kloppers The world’s largest mining company, BHP Billiton, has issued a warning on the state of the world economy despite reporting record-breaking profits of more than $31bn (£19bn). The Melbourne-based group cited booming business in developing economies – including “another strong year of growth” in Chinese steel production – as a key factor behind its 60% surge in pre-tax profits and 36% rise in revenues. However, chief executive Marius Kloppers struck a gloomy note about the world economic situation, saying: The world has had a growth decrease, it’s got poor demographics and it’s got high debt. That depresses growth – you can’t just make debt disappear. “So far all we’ve done is shovelled it from the balance sheet of the consumer to the balance sheet of the government. No debt has actually been paid off. There is a lot more to come and this is not a one-year, two-year thing – this is a decade.” The company warned: “Global imbalances and high levels of sovereign debt continue to create uncertainty and a protracted recovery remains our base case assumption for the developed world … Across the important growth economies of China and India, recent economic data suggests monetary policy is having the intended effect [of slowing growth].” Income from iron ore, BHP’s biggest division, rose a better than expected 122% to $13.3bn, spurred by strong demand from Chinese steel producers. Iron ore is currently trading at $178 a tonne and has more than tripled in cost since 2008. The story was the same in other divisions. Earnings from base metals such as copper, which has risen in price by almost 30% in 12 months, soared 47%. Profits from oil grew 38%, thanks to rising prices. However, BHP repeated concerns expressed by rivals that materials and operating costs were rising rapidly in the mining industry and making it more difficult to open up new supply. Kloppers used an example to illustrate the problem: “You want [giant truck] tyres for three years out, 57-inch tyres, and you think you have a project for which you haven’t ordered them? Then they are not to be had at any price.” Its biggest hit came from the weakness of the US dollar against the Australian dollar, which, together with inflation, took $3.2bn bite out of full-year operating profit, but BHP insisted it was “congenitally” opposed to currency hedging. The company is the last of the big miners to report its results, and they were generally well received by market watchers. In a note to clients, Investec mining analyst Mark Heyhoe wrote: “Unlike peers, BHP was marginally ahead of consensus figures due to strong iron ore and petroleum results … Although we expect prices and earnings will be volatile, BHP looks strongly positioned for 2012 with gearing below peers at 9% and generating $30.1bn of operational cash flow.” Shares in the group, which have risen by about a third since the onset of the financial crisis, edged up 42.5p to £19.32, as the company also sought to please investors with a 22% rise in dividend, having completed a $10bn share buyback ahead of expectations. “We see buybacks really as the deployment of surplus capital after other priorities have been completed,” Kloppers said. Despite admitting to $314m of costs associated with its aborted bid for Canada’s Potash Corp at the end of last year, Kloppers hinted that the company may pay out more in investment banking and legal fees as it seeks out deals to expand its shale gas interests outside the US. “From a medium and long-term strategy, our view is that shale gas will play into the world’s total energy mix and it would be our anticipation that over time we hope to participate in other areas of the world as well.” BHP moved into US shale gas this year, making its largest ever acquisition by snapping up independent prospector Petrohawk for $12.1bn as well as paying $4.75bn for Chesapeake Energy Corp’s Fayetteville shale assets. Having become an important source of natural gas in America over the past decade, interest in shale has now spread to Canada, Europe, Asia, and Australia. It has been promoted as a source of energy that emits fewer greenhouse gases than other fossil fuels, though those claims are controversial and often disputed. Environmentalists have also raised concerns that the process used to extract shale gas – called hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking” – can contaminate drinking water. America’s Environmental Protection Agency is examining those claims. In total, BHP’s pre-tax profits for the year ending June 2011 rose from $19.6bn to $31.3bn, on the back of a rise in revenues from $52.8bn to $71.7bn. Soaring prices for iron ore, copper and oil boosted attributable profit before exceptional items to $10.98bn for the six months to June, up from $6.77bn a year ago, but missing an average forecast of $11.7bn according to Thomson Reuters. Glencore move Glencore has launched a A$268m (£170m) cash bid to acquire the 27% of an Australia-based nickel miner it does not own, in an opportunistic move taking advantage of recent plunges in natural resources shares. The commodities trader is offering A$0.87 for the rump of Sydney-listed Minara Resources, a 36% premium on Tuesday’s closing price but still a 15% discount on the shares’ 2011 high. The acquisition is the second since Glencore’s initial public offering in May, which catapulted the Swiss group straight into the FTSE 100. However its shares, which were widely predicting to become Glencore’s acquisition currency after a six-month lock up period, have since lost 30%. BHP Billiton Mining Global economy Financial crisis Credit crunch Australia Simon Goodley guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …What was the role of the international community in this conflict-torn and heavily armed nation? Military intervention in other countries tends to look like the honourable thing to do while atrocities are being committed against civilians. Nevertheless, William Hague’s promise of Nato support as long as civilians are threatened looks far more like a somewhat open-ended threat. Libya is reportedly awash with weapons, which is a danger to civilians in itself. In recent years, huge piles of deadly hardware have been provided by EU countries, mainly Italy, France and Britain. Simple souls tend to believe that it would be helpful if “the international community”, that wise and neutral force for humanitarian intervention, could stick to arming only itself. If only the “international community” could agree on who and what the hell it actually was, and what, strictly speaking, it existed for. If it does. Libya Middle East Africa Muammar Gaddafi Arab and Middle East unrest Arms trade Deborah Orr guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Parts of the Libyan capital hold out in last attempt to stop rebels tightening their grip on the city Fierce street battles are continuing to rage in parts of Tripoli after Muammar Gaddafi vowed to fight to the death and his supporters fought a rearguard campaign with snipers, mortars and rockets in a last attempt to stop rebel forces consolidating their grip on the Libyan capital. A day after the rebels had celebrated their capture of the regime’s stronghold at Bab al-Aziziya, the compound came under heavy fire from the pro-Gaddafi area of Abu Salim and extensive woods around the city zoo, which rebels said were “infested” with snipers. Green flags, the symbol of the ousted regime, and pro-Gaddafi gunmen could still be seen in front of a large building on the edge of the woods once used by Saif al-Islam, one of Gaddafi’s son and the presumed heir to his reign, to receive guests. Gaddafi loyalists, who the rebels said were mostly Arab mercenaries, also fired on the main road leading to Tripoli airport. Rebels said 400 people had been killed and 2,000 injured in the battle for Tripoli so far. Meanwhile, rebel columns closed in on the coastal city of Sirte, Gaddafi’s birthplace, where loyalist troops were continuing to fire Scud missiles at the rebel-held town of Misrata. It was unclear whether the fighting represented a desperate last stand by regime’s supporters or the start of a guerrilla campaign by a “stay-behind” force, modelled on the tactics Saddam Hussein and his top lieutenants used in Iraq in 2003. A pro-Gaddafi radio station broadcasted statements by the deposed leader claiming he had “discreetly” toured the capital and “did not feel that Tripoli was in danger”. He reportedly said the retreat from his citadel at Bab al-Aziziya had been a “tactical move” and vowed to fight to the death, calling on his supporters to “cleanse” Tripoli of “devils and traitors”. In London, the foreign secretary, William Hague, repeated his assertion that the continued fighting represented “the death throes” of the regime. “I think it is time now for Colonel Gaddafi to stop issuing delusional statements and to recognise what has happened, that control of the country is not going to return,” he said in a statement. “He should be telling his dwindling and remaining forces now to stand down.” Rebel fighters continued a manhunt for the fugitive despot, reportedly involving a search of an extensive tunnel network beneath Bab al-Aziziya, but without any sign of success. Mustafa Abdel Jalil, the head of the opposition National Transitional Council (NTC), announced a reward for Gaddafi’s capture of 2m Libyan dinars (£790,000), funded by a businessman in the rebel stronghold of Benghazi, and an amnesty for past crimes for anyone in his entourage who killed or detained him. Rebel fighters attempted to move into the Abu Salim neighbourhood but were kept at bay by heavy sniper and mortar fire from the woods and from high buildings in the district. In the midst of the fighting, about 35 journalists and diplomats were freed yesterday from the Rixos Hotel, on the edge of Abu Salim, where they had been held for five days by pro-Gaddafi gunmen. Their release was negotiated by the International Committee of the Red Cross, who ferried the journalists to another hotel elsewhere in the city. As skirmishes continued in Tripoli, more details emerged on the operation to take control the city, codenamed Mermaid Dawn. According to a rebel military spokesman, quoted by the Associated Press, men from Tripoli who supported the revolution slipped out of the capital three months ago for training in Benghazi. Once trained, they reinfiltrated the city either by sea, posing as fishermen, or through the western mountains. “They went back to Tripoli and waited; they became sleeper cells,” said the military spokesman Fadlallah Haroun, who helped organise the operation. He said that when the signal for the operation was given, on 21 August, about 150 men rose up from inside Tripoli, blocking streets and pinning down Gaddafi units within the city. Meanwhile, the commander of the battalion charged with defending the entrance to the city, Mohammed Eshkal, was said by another NTC official to have agreed not to put up resistance, because Gaddafi had ordered the death of his cousin 20 years ago. A US official was quoted as confirming reports that Qatari special forces had helped spearhead the rebel storming of Bab al-Aziziyah, and that British, French and Italian advisers had also played a supporting role. In Paris the French president, Nicolas Sarkozy, promised the NTC prime minister, Mahmoud Jibril, that French troops would continue to support the rebels as long as pro-Gaddafi forces continued to resist. An international conference in the French capital on September 1, co-ordinated by the British and French governments, would meanwhile mark the transition from military to civilian support for the Libyan revolution. NTC leaders had been expected to arrive in Tripoli on Wednesday to help bolster the council’s legitimacy as an interim government, but it was not clear whether they had arrived or had put off their trip because of security concerns. Some NTC officials were involved in talks yesterday in Doha with diplomats from a contact group of major powers, aimed at arranging short-term finance for the incoming government. Meanwhile, at the United Nations headquarters in New York, US, British and French diplomats were drafting a security council resolution ordering the unblocking of $1.5bn (£0.9bn) in Libyan funds that were frozen in western bank accounts at the beginning of the war. Around the world, Libyan embassies that had not hitherto changed sides, including Tokyo and Addis Ababa, replaced the Gaddafi green flag with the tricolour used by the NTC. In London, NTC officials, who already had control of the embassy, laid a doormat bearing Gaddafi’s image at the entrance so that visitors would trample on his likeness. Libya Muammar Gaddafi Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Africa William Hague Nicolas Sarkozy Martin Chulov Luke Harding Julian Borger guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Within hours of an earthquake striking the eastern U.S. Tuesday, a rabbi that has spoken for the anti-gay group National Organization for Marriage (NOM) was already blaming homosexuals. In a video posted to YouTube, Rabbi Yehuda Levin asserted that “one of the reasons God brings earthquakes to the world is because of the transgressions of homosexuality.” “An email went out in my community just a few hours ago, ‘How long will it take Rabbi Levin to tie this earthquake in with homosexual marriage?’” he began. “Not very long at all. I’m happy to see that people — even if some of them are scoffers — are starting to see the connection.” “Yes, there is a direct connection between earthquakes and homosexuality. There was in Haiti and it is here, in New York, in Washington, D.C., where they passed homosexual legislation ordinances, in New York City and state, where they opened, especially on Sunday early, where they passed the homosexual marriage law.” Levin continued: “We want everyone to understand that if this kinds of activities continue and are legislated into the moral fiber of the country and are forced down the throats of the religious people, it’s a revolt against God. And literally, there’s hell to pay. The blog Good As You noted that in June, Levin had spoken during a NOM press conference.
Continue reading …Howard Kurtz committed journalistic “incest” by tweeting an article written by his daughter for TheHill.com. That is, according to Fishbowl DC editor, Betsy Rothstein, who ranked it a 6.5 out of 10 on the journalistic “incest scale” : Today Howie takes a quick break from self-pimping to pimp his daughter, Judy Kurtz, who writes the “In the Know” gossip column for The Hill. “John McCain learns the meaning of a Shabbat elevator.” He links to this story by Judy. As The Daily Beast‘s Washington Bureau Chief, Howard Kurtz has been known to write upwards of seven tweets to promo “Reliable Sources,” the Sunday morning program he hosts on CNN. In a sense, it’s touching that he’s taking a feather out of his pimp cap and trying to pass the magic on to his daughter. But there’s something unpalatable about it considering he wouldn’t do this for another journalist and, to our knowledge, has never given a nod to that column or most Capitol Hill gossip columns before. This is our third Incest Desk item on this father-daughter duo. While some get upset when we link a father and daughter journo team for this feature, please understand we’re not saying there’s actual incest going on. It’s Washington incest — disturbing in its own right, but that’s all. We’re giving it a 6.5 on the 1-10 Incest scale (1 is best, 10 is worst). We reached out to The Hill for comment. They declined. Good on The Hill. Such a despicable smear doesn't deserve being dignified with a response. On another note, MediaBistro appears to have lower standards than MSNBC, which suspended then-anchor David Shuster for saying, on air, that the Hillary Clinton presidential campaign had “pimped out” daughter Chelsea.
Continue reading …• Hit F5 for the latest or select our auto-refresh button below • And email your thoughts to rob.smyth@guardian.co.uk “How are you brother?” Is this modern football ? Really? I was going to say that Garry Cook needs to take a long look in the mirror, but I suspect such an activity is the problem here rather than the solution. Every loser wins , said 1980s visionary Nick Berry. And that might be the case tonight. Fenerbahce have been booted out of the Champions League because their hospitality buffets only stretch to 14 courses, not the 16 demanded by Uefa, and that means there is a spare place in this year’s tournament. It has been suggested it may go to the play-off losers with the highest coefficient ( Arsenal are second on that list behind Bayern Munich , who are already through), although this has not been confirmed by any of our snouts. Team news Udinese (4-4-1-1) Handanovic; Ekstrand, Benatia, Danilo, Neuton; Isla, Agyemang-Badu, Asamoah, Armero; Pinzi; Di Natale. Subs: Belardi, Basta, Denis, Abdi, Pasquale, Doubai, Fabbrini. Arsenal (4-2-3-1) Szczesny; Jenkinson, Djourou, Vermaelen, Sagna; Frimpong, Song; Walcott, Ramsey, Gervinho; van Persie. Subs: Fabianski, Rosicky, Oxlade-Chamberlain, Arshavin, Chamakh, Traore, Miquel. Referee Olegario Benquerenca (Portugal) Preamble Hello. Playoffs are usually about contrived drama, yet tonight’s match between Udinese and Arsenal has the whiff of authenticity: it takes us back to the good old days of European competition, when an unseeded knockout meant there was no safety net for the big sides and they could go out of Europe before the advent calendars were off the production line, never mind in the shops. Admittedly this isn’t an unseeded knockout, the authenticity is a contrived attempt by Uefa to replace some of the authenticity that was lost because of an earlier contrivance, but the results are exciting so we’re not going to complain. Tonight Arsenal are in serious danger of suffering a fate even worse than going out of Europe: being dumped into the Europa League. It’s all gone wrong for them in the last couple of weeks. They have a number of injuries, Samir Nasri has done one, the sky is falling in on Arsene Wenger, and some of their supporters can’t find any foie gras in the Islington M&S. These points will concern Arsenal fans, but they should also stimulate them. If they get through tonight it will feel approximately 47 billion times better than it would had they eased past the champions of San Marino, and the lack of foie gras allows you to buy some corned beef and roll back the years. There is also the fact that tipping points are generally made of adversity, particularly for Wenger’s Arsenal. In 1997-98 a dismal December run of four defeats in six games sparked an unbeaten surge to the title; in 2001-02 an unlucky defeat at home to Newcastle was followed by the early dismissal of Gio van Bronckhorst at Anfield in the next match. Arsenal won 2-1, thrillingly , and weren’t beaten again in the league all season; in 2003-04, a tricky midweek tie against Italian opposition was followed by a trip to Old Trafford, Arsenal apparently fit for a mauling. Ruud van Nistelrooy missed a last-minute penalty, Arsenal manhandled him and used the fallout to foster a siege mentality that ultimately rendered them invincible. Such a scenario is improbable this season, because Arsenal are a bit of a mess and Wenger, in essence a good man in a sport full of bad men, looks extremely tired. Yet it’s far from impossible. Ultimately nobody knows anything, and at the very least Wenger deserves to be treated with far more respect than is currently the case, even if Arsenal do go out tonight. They have generally had a great time of things in Italy, from the tragic Paul Vaessen’s winner against Juventus to Thierry Henry shredding Roma and Inter. Even when Arsenal lose in Italy, they often win – second-leg defeats to Sampdoria in 1995 and Roma in 2009 were followed by victorious penalty shoot-outs. A similar scenario is conceivable here, although Arsenal will have to play well to get even that far. For them, this is a proper test. Just as European football should be. Champions League 2011-12 qualifiers Champions League 2011-12 Udinese Arsenal Champions League Rob Smyth guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Fugitive from slaughterhouse continues to outwit her would-be rescuers, who are battling to prevent hunters shooting the animal Three months after Yvonne went on the run, the hunt for Germany’s most famous fugitive is heating up after a search party discovered a sign of her wanderings – a field littered with cowpats. Yvonne, a six-year-old dairy cow, escaped from a Bavarian farm in May days before she was due to be slaughtered. When the local authorities in Mühldorf gave hunters permission to shoot her on sight, animal rights activists waded in. Gut Aiderbichl, an animal sanctuary in Austria, paid Yvonne’s owner €600 (£530), vowing to bring the cow to safety before she was knocked down by a Bavarian bullet. Her whereabouts have now become a national obsession in Germany, with one tabloid offering a reward of €10,000 for her safe return. Her story has spread across the world. On Wednesday Gut Aiderbichl said it had had media inquiries from Abu Dhabi and South Africa, where a psychic claimed to have communicated with her. Indians had been stressing Yvonne’s holiness. Despite the publicity, Yvonne remains at large. An animal whisperer from Switzerland failed to coax her back from the Bavarian forest using telepathy; Ernst, the bull with a “deep baritone moo” and manly musk, also proved strangely resistible. The plan for Friesi, Yvonne’s “long-lost” two-year-old son, to be deployed as an inducement has yet to be put into action: he is still being briefed on his special role (tugging at Mum’s heartstrings). Last week a local radio station leased a helicopter equipped with a heat-seeking camera to fly over the woods where Yvonne is believed to be hiding, but reported that she ran away “nimble as a weasel” when they hovered overhead. This week the Gut Aiderbichl search party spotted some vital clues, including cowpats created, they swear, by Yvonne. A hunter claimed that in the early hours of Monday he came face-to-face with Yvonne, Michael Aufhauser, who runs Gut Aiderbichl, reported. “He told us he looked into her eyes and she looked back like a wild animal, not a dairy cow,” said Aufhauser. The hunter was not allowed to shoot Yvonne because Gut Aiderbichl had been granted an injunction which made it temporarily illegal to kill her. The latest injunction is due to expire on Sunday, though Aufhauser is confident it will be extended. “Right now we are just waiting for her,” he said. “Maybe she will come to us in an hour, maybe days or weeks. But we will stay for as long as it takes.” Germany Europe Animals Animal welfare Animal behaviour Helen Pidd guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Fugitive from slaughterhouse continues to outwit her would-be rescuers, who are battling to prevent hunters shooting the animal Three months after Yvonne went on the run, the hunt for Germany’s most famous fugitive is heating up after a search party discovered a sign of her wanderings – a field littered with cowpats. Yvonne, a six-year-old dairy cow, escaped from a Bavarian farm in May days before she was due to be slaughtered. When the local authorities in Mühldorf gave hunters permission to shoot her on sight, animal rights activists waded in. Gut Aiderbichl, an animal sanctuary in Austria, paid Yvonne’s owner €600 (£530), vowing to bring the cow to safety before she was knocked down by a Bavarian bullet. Her whereabouts have now become a national obsession in Germany, with one tabloid offering a reward of €10,000 for her safe return. Her story has spread across the world. On Wednesday Gut Aiderbichl said it had had media inquiries from Abu Dhabi and South Africa, where a psychic claimed to have communicated with her. Indians had been stressing Yvonne’s holiness. Despite the publicity, Yvonne remains at large. An animal whisperer from Switzerland failed to coax her back from the Bavarian forest using telepathy; Ernst, the bull with a “deep baritone moo” and manly musk, also proved strangely resistible. The plan for Friesi, Yvonne’s “long-lost” two-year-old son, to be deployed as an inducement has yet to be put into action: he is still being briefed on his special role (tugging at Mum’s heartstrings). Last week a local radio station leased a helicopter equipped with a heat-seeking camera to fly over the woods where Yvonne is believed to be hiding, but reported that she ran away “nimble as a weasel” when they hovered overhead. This week the Gut Aiderbichl search party spotted some vital clues, including cowpats created, they swear, by Yvonne. A hunter claimed that in the early hours of Monday he came face-to-face with Yvonne, Michael Aufhauser, who runs Gut Aiderbichl, reported. “He told us he looked into her eyes and she looked back like a wild animal, not a dairy cow,” said Aufhauser. The hunter was not allowed to shoot Yvonne because Gut Aiderbichl had been granted an injunction which made it temporarily illegal to kill her. The latest injunction is due to expire on Sunday, though Aufhauser is confident it will be extended. “Right now we are just waiting for her,” he said. “Maybe she will come to us in an hour, maybe days or weeks. But we will stay for as long as it takes.” Germany Europe Animals Animal welfare Animal behaviour Helen Pidd guardian.co.uk
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