Posts Tagged ‘Camera’

Corruption in Malaysia laid bare as investigation catches Sarawak’s ruling elite on camera

A new investigation by Global Witness today reveals the systemic corruption and illegality at the heart of government in Sarawak, Malaysia’s largest state. A film, shot undercover during the investigation, shows for the first time the instruments used by the ruling Taib family and its lawyers to skirt Malaysia’s laws and taxes. It shows how they cream off huge profits at the expense of indigenous people, and hide their dirty money in Singapore.

Click the image below to watch the film

Sarawak still exports more tropical logs than South America and Africa combined, despite having just five per cent of its forests left intact after decades of industrial logging and plantation development. Sarawak’s Chief Minister Abdul Taib Mahmud has ruled the state for over three decades and controls all land allocation and forestry licensing. He is widely understood to abuse this power to enrich his family and associates.

“This film proves for the first time what has long been suspected – that the small elite around Chief Minister Taib are systematically abusing the region’s people and natural resources to line their own pockets,” said Tom Picken, Forest Team Leader at Global Witness. “It shows exactly how they do it and it shows the utter contempt they hold for Malaysia’s laws, people and environment.”

Global Witness posed as foreign investors looking to buy land for oil palm plantations. We approached the Regional Corridor Development Authority (RECODA), the government body charged with receiving foreign investment. An official at RECODA during a meeting in March 2012 directed our investigator to certain members of Taib’s family looking to sell their company licensed to log and clear land for plantations. 

Out of four land leases offered to Global Witness during 2012, members of the Chief Minister’s family were direct shareholders or beneficial owners of three of these. The fourth deal was proposed by an intermediary on the understanding that Taib would receive a multimillion dollar kickback from the selling party. The key findings of this investigation are:

  • KICKBACKS: A representative of one of Sarawak’s biggest tycoons indicated that Taib would be likely to receive a multimillion dollar kickback for a plantation licence;
  • CORRUPT LAND DEALS: Some members of Taib’s family are allocated land through directives from the Ministry of Resource Planning and Environment, headed by Taib, for a tiny fraction of its real commercial value, enabling these individuals to ‘flip’ these assets for multimillion dollar profits;
  • EVASION OF MALAYSIAN TAX: One company, jointly owned by Taib’s first cousins, a Malaysian MP for Taib’s party and a sister-in-law of the Malaysian Prime Minister, was offered for sale through an illegal transaction in Singapore designed to evade Malaysian tax;
  • THE SERVICE ECONOMY OF CORRUPTION: A well-established service economy of local lawyers routinely facilitates illegal transactions in violation of Malaysian and Sarawak law.

Additionally, Global Witness was told by senior government officials and a timber company executive that it is standard practice in Sarawak for companies to pay a personal kickback to Taib in return for obtaining timber and plantation licences, typically amounting to 10 per cent of the commercial value of the licence.

The findings also reveal that the small elite around Taib have a deep seated contempt for Sarawak’s indigenous population, whose rights to their ancestral land are enshrined in Sarawak’s law and protected under the Malaysian constitution. Two of Taib’s first cousins repeatedly referred to indigenous communities as “naughty” people who “try to make money” through “squatting” on land that has been licensed to private companies for logging and plantations.

“The Taib family and their friends have treated Sarawak’s natural resources like a personal piggy bank for decades,” said Picken. “This investigation shows how they are willing to stash this dirty cash in jurisdictions like Singapore, which one lawyer in the film describes as “the new Switzerland”. Until Singapore and other financial service centres stop allowing corrupt politicians and criminals to shield themselves and their loot from justice back home, the likes of Taib will continue to get away with stealing from their own people.”

Global Witness is calling on Malaysia’s federal authorities to hold a Royal Commission of Inquiry to investigate the extent of corruption in Sarawak’s executive and government institutions, explore institutional reforms to improve systems of transparency and accountability, and to ensure prosecutions swiftly follow against those found to have been engaged in corruption. Key to these reforms will be granting Malaysia’s Anti-Corruption Commission independent powers to prosecute.       

Global Witness put our allegations to the individuals concerned. The law firm in London representing Chief Minister Taib – Mishcon de Reya – told Global Witness:

“The Government of Sarawak issues licences for land in very controlled circumstances… This is an administrative exercise, not political patronage.”

“Our client never demands or accepts bribes for the grant of licences and leases.”

“He has not issued any ‘directive’… illegally to benefit his cousins.” 

A summary of the responses received from other parties is included at the end of the film, which is available here.

/ENDS

Contact: In London: Oliver Courtney +44 (0)7912 517147 [email protected]

Tom Picken +44 (0)7810 558247 [email protected]

Editor’s notes:

  • A 15 minute film by Global Witness documenting some of the covert footage obtained is available at: http://bit.ly/16ESEVU
  • Sarawak’s Chief Minister Abdul Taib Mahmud has governed Sarawak for 31 years. One of his many ministerial roles includes heading up the Ministry of Resource Planning and Environment which controls all land classification, timber and plantation licensing in the state.
  • Leaked Sarawak land registry documents suggest members of Taib’s family have interests in companies holding land leases totalling nearly 200,000 hectares (source here), conservatively valued at over half a billion US dollars.
  • Much of Sarawak’s environmental destruction has occurred on the ancestral land of Sarawak’s indigenous population, who depend upon access to farmland and healthy forests for their livelihood and whose rights are protected under Malaysian law. These rights have been systematically ignored by the Sarawak Government, resulting in widespread environmental degradation, social disenfranchisement and economic deprivation. 

The National Trust launches new competition to capture the spirit of Octavia on camera

The National Trust has launched a new amateur photography competition called ‘Your Space’ which is set to celebrate green spaces and the life of National Trust founder Octavia Hill.

Run in conjunction with National Trust Magazine, the competition will run from May until August and asks people to capture what green spaces mean to them.

Four internationally-acclaimed photographers, Mary McCartney, Joe Cornish, Arnhel de Serra and Charlie Waite, have helped launch the ‘Your Space‘ competition with a new collection of pictures at National Trust places that capture the relationship between people and green places.

Octavia Hill was a leading environmental campaigner in Victorian Britain. She campaigned to save green spaces in and around London, such as Parliament Hill, and, years ahead of her time, saw the benefit of spending time in the outdoors and closer to nature.

As one of three founders of the National Trust, Octavia Hill, set about acquiring green places and built heritage to be looked after by the charity for the benefit of the nation until she died in August 1912.

The competition is based around her writings on green space: ‘We all need space; unless we have it we cannot reach that sense of quiet in which whispers of better things come to us gently [and we need] places to sit in, places to play in, places to stroll in, and places to spend a day in…’

The competition includes all green space in the UK, not just National Trust places, and hopes to capture images of everyday green places.

These could include pictures from the local park, where people play with their kids or walk their dogs, or favourite strolls in the countryside.

What is important is that the images capture what these places mean to the photographer and why they matter.

Fiona Reynolds, Director-General of the National Trust, said: “This competition is all about using photography to reflect on why green spaces matter to us as a nation. We’re looking for powerful and inspiring images that celebrate this special relationship that we have with our parks and countryside.”

There are four categories in the competition: ten and under, 11-16 year olds, over 16s and smartphones. Entries need to be submitted by 31 August 2012 and the full terms and conditions can be found on the website*.

The prize for the overall winner, worth £1,500, will include a bespoke one-to-one day long workshop with award winning landscape photographer Charlie Waite, a special landscape print and up to two nights stay in a National Trust holiday cottage.

The three runners-up will join Charlie at a National Trust property for day which includes lunch and behind-the-scenes tour.

A panel of judges, including Mary McCartney, Joe Cornish, Arnhel de Serra, Charlie Waite, Sue Herdman (Editor of National Trust Magazine) and Chris Lacey (National Trust Photographic Manager), will decide on the winners for the four categories. One of the category winners will then go on to be the overall winner of the competition.

Entries for the competition can be uploaded at www.nationaltrust.org.uk/yourspace and shared via Facebook and twitter.

- Ends -

Notes to editors:
*The competition was launched on the 8 May 2012. Entries need to be submitted by the 31 August 2012. The judging panel, whose decision is final, will meet in late September 2012 and the winners will be announced in January 2013. Full terms and conditions for the competition will be available on the website. Images can be taken on National Trust land or on non-Trust sites.

About The National Trust:
The National Trust is one of the most important nature conservation organisations in Europe, looking after more than 250,000 hectares of countryside, 710 miles of coastline and hundreds of historic places across England, Wales and Northern Ireland.

PR Contact:
Mike Collins
Senior Press Officer
The National Trust
Heelis
Kemble Drive
Swindon
SN2 2NA
01793 817708
www.nationaltrust.org.uk
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Environment Agency: Hi-tech camera monitors migrating eels

Until recently, scientists knew when adult eels set off for the Sargasso Sea to spawn, but were unable to record the number of eels leaving our rivers on their epic 3,000 mile journey across the Atlantic.

Now, thanks to a hi-tech acoustic camera, the Agency can track the movement of these creatures as they set off on their migration. The device, that uses sound waves (sonar), has been placed in the Huntspill River in Somerset to capture images of eels. Data collected will provide a valuable insight into the eel’s mysterious life cycle.

The American-made instrument was originally designed to carry out safety checks on oil rigs detecting hairline cracks on metal surfaces. Acoustic cameras are particularly useful in locations where visibility is poor such as underwater sites. Images of near video quality are captured using sonar instead of light waves.

The use of this equipment on the Huntspill is providing the Environment Agency with valuable information on eel numbers. Measuring up to a metre in length, adult eels head out to sea between October and January after growing to maturity in our rivers. Some are up to 20 years old.

There has been a 95% decline in the eel population over the past 30 years as a result of over fishing, pollution, loss of habitat and disease. It is thought changes in ocean currents caused by climate change may also have reduced their numbers.

Eels stop feeding prior to migration and undergo complex physiological changes. Bizarrely, their digestive systems are absorbed into their bodies and replaced with reproductive organs. A number of factors influence the timing of their migration including water temperature, phases of the moon and rainfall.

The acoustic camera on the Huntspill has already produced some excellent images of eels at the start of their migration. Data collected this winter will be compared with a base line survey carried out two years ago when the equipment was first trialled.

‘The introduction of the acoustic camera is our first real chance to record and capture eel numbers by direct observation and increase our understanding of the creature’s mysterious life cycle,’ said Pete Sibley for the Environment Agency.

A video clip clearly showing an eel passing the Huntspill monitoring camera is available from the Environment Agency’s regional press office on 01392 442008.

Notes to Editors:

• The European eel spends its early life in our rivers before heading across the Atlantic to the Sargasso Sea off the Bahamas to spawn. Although the spawning site has been known since 1922, no adult eels have ever been found in the Sargasso Sea – only their tiny larvae. This is one of the last great biological mysteries being studied by scientists using satellite tracking.

• Eggs laid in the Sargasso Sea hatch into transparent larvae that make the return journey to Europe floating on ocean currents. By the time they reach our shores, the larvae have developed into glass eels that swim into our rivers where they become elvers that, in turn, grow into adult eels.

• Eels are very efficient swimmers. They are also good at saving energy. Research has shown that after reaching the west coast of Africa they hitch a lift on powerful ocean currents that carry them across the Atlantic to the Sargasso Sea. After completing their incredible 3,000 mile journey, they spawn then die.

 

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Sony Launches Its Latest Digital Camera Campaign, The “7 Picture…

(PRWEB) January 13, 2012

Supported by an integrated digital marketing campaign featuring exclusive video, online and social media content; the Cyber-shot TX55’s launch highlights its profile as the world’s slimmest* compact digital camera at just 12.2mm thin, as well as its range of diverse functions such as the unique “Picture Effects” feature.

At the heart of the campaign is the “7 Picture Effects Challenge” Facebook application, which not only just provides a quick introduction of the exciting new feature, but also showcases how easily accessible it is to anyone. Digital Photos can be instantly uploaded from one’s computer or your Facebook albums, allowing for creative enhancement of your most precious memories with just a few simple clicks.

Kicking off with a 3-minute video profiling the creative journey of the brilliant minds behind the trendy handbag label “BOYY” – the “7 Picture Effects Challenge” campaign will showcase how this digital camera’s 7 cool picture effects similarly inspires and fosters a sense of ingenious creativity.

The Challenge

From now until 18 January 2012, participation in the challenge is open to anyone who simply creates an imaginative work of art with Picture Effects through the Facebook app, shares the app with 7 friends, and garners 7 for the entry. All entries will then be entered for a chance to win a Cyber-shot TX55 digital camera and an exquisite BOYY bag (total worth of up to SGD $ 1,500), with the winner selected by Sony based on the relevance of the photo to the type of picture effects applied, and the accompanying caption submitted.

The campaign will be rolled out in Singapore and Thailand, where it will be promoted via traditional, web, and viral marketing elements across a wide range of digital platforms; as well as display ads on a variety of popular portals such as Yahoo!, MSN and Sanook.

Developed by Inet Channel Co., Ltd, more information about the “7 Picture Effects Challenge” can be found on http://www.7pfx.com, and Sony’s Facebook pages at http://www.facebook.com/SonySingapore and http://www.facebook.com/SonyThai.

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Environment

Speed camera information now available

So far 75 English local authorities have published some or all of their information showing accident and casualty rates as well as speeds at camera sites before and after the introduction of speed cameras. This will allow local residents to see whether speed cameras are having a positive impact on accident rates in their areas.

All local authorities were asked to publish information about the effectiveness of their speed cameras as soon as practicable and provide a web link to this material by 20th July 2011. The remaining 72 authorities plan to publish their data in the next few weeks.

Road Safety Minister Mike Penning said:

“Local residents have a right to expect that when their council spends money on speed cameras, they publish information to show whether those cameras are helping to reduce accidents or not.

“I hope that this information will help local people to make informed judgements about the impact cameras are having on their local roads.

“However, residents can only hold their council to account if it has made information available so I would urge those councils which have not yet published their data to do so as soon as possible.”

Links to the local authorities’ information can be found on a central hub on the Department’s website.

Police forces are to publish the number of prosecutions arising from each permanent or long term temporary fixed camera site in their area each year, along with the total number of offences recorded by all cameras and the total numbers of offenders given a fixed penalty notice, or taken to court and the numbers of people opting to complete speed awareness courses. Some forces, including Cambridgeshire, Dorset, Lancashire, and Thames Valley have already provided some offence data but in most cases this information will be published by police forces later in the year. The Department will then review the position related to the publication of speed camera information with the police.

Department for Transport

52,000 Photos from Groundbreaking Camera Trap Study Offer First Global View of Declining Mammal Populations

Arlington, VA — The first global camera trap mammal study, announced today by a group of international scientists, has documented 105 species in nearly 52,000 images, from seven protected areas across the Americas, Africa and Asia. The photographs reveal an amazing variety of animals in their most candid moments — from a minute mouse to the enormous African elephant, plus gorillas, cougars, giant anteaters and — surprisingly — even tourists and poachers.

IN PHOTOS: See the images from the camera traps »

Analysis of the photographic data has helped scientists confirm a key conclusion that until now, was understood through uncoordinated local study: habitat loss and smaller reserves have a direct and detrimental impact on the diversity and survival of mammal populations. Impacts are seen in the form of less diversity of species and less variety of body sizes and diets (smaller animals and insectivores are the first to disappear), among others. This information replicated over time and space is crucial to understand the effects of global and regional threats on forest mammals and anticipate extinctions before it is too late.

The results of the study have been published in the article “Community structure and diversity of tropical mammals: data from a global camera trap network“, in the journal Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society. The study was led by Dr. Jorge Ahumada, ecologist with the Tropical Ecology Assessment and Monitoring (TEAM) Network at Conservation International. Protected areas in Brazil, Costa Rica, Indonesia, Laos, Suriname, Tanzania and Uganda were researched, making this not only the first global camera trap mammal study, but also the largest camera trap study of any class of animals (not just mammals).

To gather data, 420 cameras were placed around the world, with 60 camera traps set up in each site at a density of one per every two square kilometers for a month in each site. After photos were collected from 2008-2010, scientists categorized animals by species, body size and diet, among other things. They found that larger protected areas and continuous forests tend to contain three similar attributes:

  1. a higher diversity of species
  2. a greater variety of animal sizes, including populations of larger mammals
  3. a greater variety of diets among those mammals (insectivores, herbivores, carnivores, omnivores)

“The results of the study are important in that they confirm what we suspected: habitat destruction is slowly but surely killing our planet’s mammal diversity” said Dr. Ahumada. “We take away two key findings from this research. First, protected areas matter: the bigger the forest they live in, the higher the number and diversity of species, body sizes and diet types. Second, some mammals seem more vulnerable to habitat loss than others: insect-eating mammals — like anteaters, armadillos and some primates, are the first to disappear — while other groups, like herbivores, seem to be less sensitive.”

Of the sites researched, the Central Suriname Nature Reserve presented the highest number of species diversity (28) and the Nam Kading National Protected Area in Laos presented the lowest number of species diversity (13). The body size of species photographed ranged from 26 g (Linnaeu’s Mouse Opossum, Marmosa murina) to 3,940 kg (African elephant, Loxodonta africana).

With around 25 percent of all mammal species under threat and little global quantitative information available, this study fills a very important gap in what scientists know about how mammals are being affected by local, regional and global threats such as overhunting, conversion of land to agriculture and climate change.

“What makes this study scientifically groundbreaking is that we created for the first time consistent, comparable information for mammals on a global scale setting an effective baseline to monitor change. By using this single, standardized methodology in the years to come and comparing the data we receive, we will be able to see trends in mammal communities and take specific, targeted action to save them”, said Dr. Ahumada, adding that since 2010 cameras have been installed in new places, expanding the monitoring network to 17 sites (Panama, Ecuador, another site in Brazil, two sites in Peru, Madagascar, Congo, Cameroon, Malaysia and India). “Without a systematic, global approach to monitoring these animals and making sure the data gets to people making decisions, we are only recording their extinctions, not actually saving them.”

Mammals serve as indicators of ecosystem health and play important roles in nature that ultimately benefit people, such as plant growth control, nutrient cycling and seed dispersal. For instance, some scientists argue that the removal of large mammals through excessive hunting reduces the capacity of forests to store carbon, since those animals are responsible for the dispersal of large, high carbon density seeds. Forests decreased capacity to store carbon means decreased capacity for people to alleviate the effects of climate change.

“We hope that these data contribute to a better management of protected areas and conservation of mammals worldwide, and a more widespread use of standardized camera trapping studies to monitor these critically important animals,” concluded Dr. Ahumada.

The Tropical Ecology Assessment and Monitoring (TEAM) Network is a partnership between Conservation International, The Missouri Botanical Garden, The Smithsonian Institution and the Wildlife Conservation Society, and partially funded by these institutions and the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation.

Local Partners in the study are: Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazonia (INPA), Conservation International Suriname, Organization for Tropical Studies, Museo Tridentino di Scienze Naturali, and Institute of Tropical Forest Conservation.

Fast facts:

  • Americas, Africa and Asia
  • Seven sites:
    • Bwindi Impenetrable Forest (Uganda)
    • Udzungwa Mountains National Park (Tanzania)
    • Bukit Barisan Selatan National Park (Indonesia)
    • Nam Kading National Protected Area (Lao PDR)
    • Central Suriname Nature Reserve (Suriname)
    • Manaus (Brazil)
    • Volcan Barva Transect (Costa Rica)
  • 420 cameras used
  • 60 cameras in each site
  • 1 camera every 2 square kilometers
  • Cameras were set up for a month in each place
  • Timeframe of data analyzed in the paper: 2008-2010
  • Number of sites being monitored today: 17

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Available content for media (***Mandatory image credits as stated in each caption***)

DOWNLOAD: Photos are available for media use

DOWNLOAD: Full paper: “Community structure and diversity of tropical forest mammals: data from a global camera trap network”, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society: Biological Sciences, 27 September 2011, vol. 366, no. 1578, 2703-2711.

All data from the study is publicly available at: www.teamnetwork.org/en/data/query

Note to editors:

Conservation International (CI)
— Building upon a strong foundation of science, partnership and field demonstration, CI empowers societies to responsibly and sustainably care for nature, our global biodiversity, for the long term well-being of people. Founded in 1987, CI has headquarters in the Washington, DC area, and nearly 900 employees working in more than 30 countries on four continents, plus 1,000+ partners around the world. For more information, visit www.conservation.org and follow us on Twitter: @ConservationOrg or Facebook

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Mammals ‘caught’ in camera traps


Bukit Barisan Selatan, Indonesia. Southern pig-tailed macaque (Macaca nemestrina), a vulnerable species. The first global camera trap mammal study has documented 105 species in nearly 52,000 images, from seven protected areas across the Americas, Africa and Asia

Photograph: Conservation International

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Environment news, comment and analysis from the Guardian | guardian.co.uk

Enviro-Equipment, Inc. Adds Infrared Camera Rental for Energy Auditing…

Charlotte, NC (PRWEB) June 21, 2011

Enviro-Equipment, Inc., a provider of environmental equipment rentals and supplies, expands its inventory to the residential energy auditing and building diagnostics industries with the addition of the new Testo 875-2i Infrared Camera for thermal imaging. With this technology a user can discover energy loss, weak spots, and anomalies in buildings quickly and damage-free. Building inspectors use the Testo 875-2i to test heating, ventilation, and air conditioning systems, to pinpoint roof leaks, to identify mold risk areas, and discover pipe rupture without opening floors and walls to pinpoint the leak.

According to Rand Ratterree, Enviro-Equipment’s Branch Manager, “We chose the Testo 875-2i over other brands and models of handheld cameras because it exceeds The Building Performance Institute (BPI) and Residential Energy Services NETwork (RESNET) for energy auditing performance requirements for thermal imagers. The Testo has a higher image resolution, longer operation time, advanced reporting software, and an integrated digital camera. It is also rugged and easy to use, even for beginners.”

The main features of the Testo 875-2i are:

  •     Exceptional image quality

320 x 420 pixel camera resolution and a temperature resolution (NETD) of

  •     Detection of condensation areas

Pinpoint potential high risk moisture areas and avoid mold growth with a thermal scan.

  •     Integrated digital camera

View both the infrared and digital image simultaneously for faster and more reliable diagnosis of a measurement area.

  •     Automatic Hot/Cold Spot Indicator

Automatically pinpoint the hottest and coldest spot of a measurement object or area and mark them in the thermal imager display.

“Adding the Testo Infrared Camera to our existing mold, moisture, and indoor air quality rental equipment also allows us to expand further into environmental assessment applications for building related industries”, says Denise Chew, President of Enviro-Equipment, Inc. “This investment emphasizes our commitment to our customers by offering the latest thermal imaging technology available for nondestructive testing.”

Enviro-Equipment, Inc., a woman-owned small business founded in 1993, rents and sells environmental monitoring equipment used for pollution control, ground-water remediation, water and wastewater treatment, energy auditing and building diagnostics, safety and industrial hygiene, and environmental assessment. The Charlotte, NC office also offers large-scale remediation equipment, environmental sampling supplies, safety products, equipment repair, and training. Enviro-Equipment’s customers include colleges and universities, government agencies, industry, and environmental consultants in the ground-water hydrology and industrial hygiene fields across the U.S. For more information visit http://www.enviroequipment.com or contact Rand Ratterree at 704-588-7970.

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Environment

Climate Video Action Week: Start Your Camera!

Cameras are standard on most cell phones, which has led to a surge in goofy videos of things like co-workers dozing off.  But for one week in March, your camera phone can serve a higher purpose — stopping climate change.

Be a part of Environmental Defense Action Fund's Climate Video Action Week, a video campaign to connect you directly to your Senators. To participate, create a 30-second video explaining why you want a strong climate bill with a real cap on carbon  — now.

During the first week of March, we'll send the videos to your Senators, and we'll also feature the best ones in our next online ad campaign.

My colleague, Erin, explains more in the video below.

Please spread the word and re-post this video for your friends to see! And again, here's where to get the full details of the video action week.

Further information:

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