08 October 2010

UK Offers Free For All 'Public Sex'

Here’s the Pub, Church and Field for Public Sex

By Sarah Lyall

Puttenham, England : There was the man they called “Bob the Builder,” who wore only a hard hat. There was the naked sunbather who remarked, “Nice day for it, isn’t it?” to a woman taking a walk.

And there was the moment, Jules Perkins said, when the dizzying array of sexual forces that have somehow descended on her blameless Surrey village came together all at once, like a scene from a one-size-fits-all X-rated film. alt
A mat used by people having sex in a field adjacent to the lay-by on the A31 next to the village of Puttenham.

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The lay-by on the A31that is a popular haunt of Doggers and people cruising for sex.

“There were two blokes sitting side by side, watching a man and a woman having sex,” Ms. Perkins said, describing what happened as she strolled with her dog on the hill between her house and the Hog’s Back ridge. “Nearby, there were two men sunbathing together, wearing nothing but tight little white underpants.”

Later, she found a pink vibrator in the bushes.

“I gave it to the police,” she said. “They said, ‘What should we do with it?’ I said, ‘Put it in Lost Property.’ ”

Puttenham, about an hour’s drive from London, has fewer than 2,500 residents and is famous for its ancient church; its friendly pub, the Good Intent; and its proud inclusion in both the Domesday Book — an 11th-century survey of English lands — and “Brave New World.”

Unhappily for many people here, it is also famous for being featured on lists of good places to go “dogging” — that is, to have sex in public, sometimes with partners you have just met online, so that others can watch. So popular is the woodsy field below the ridge as a spot for gay sex (mostly during the day) and heterosexual sex (mostly at night) that the police have designated it a “public sex environment.”

Public sex is a popular — and quasi-legal — activity in Britain, according to the authorities and to the large number of Web sites that promote it. (It is treated as a crime only if someone witnesses it, is offended and is willing to make a formal complaint.) And the police tend to tread lightly in public sex environments, in part because of the bitter legacy of the time when gay sex was illegal and closeted men having anonymous sex in places like public bathrooms were routinely arrested and humiliated.

Enthusiasts’ Web sites alert practitioners to known dogging locations — more than 100 in Surrey alone — and offer handy etiquette tips for the confused or overly excited.

“Only join in or move closer if you are asked,” advises one site, Swinging Heaven, which says it has more than one million registered members.

Richard Byrne, a senior lecturer in countryside management at Harper Adams University College in Shropshire, said that modern technology has made dogging much more convenient than it used to be, thanks to search engines, Facebook groups and people tweeting about their experiences. “And of course, everybody’s got mobiles,” he said.

Swinging Heaven says that the practice began in Britain in the 1970s, and that the term comes from the phenomenon of voyeurs “doggedly” following people having sex. Others say that practitioners claim to be “walking the dog” when they are, in fact, going out to meet naked strangers in fields.

Britons are a tolerant bunch, and most probably would not care who watched whom doing what in whatever configuration, as long as they all went somewhere else. Why, Puttenham residents wonder, do they have to do it 400 yards from the village nursery school?”

“We have nothing against gays or whoever it is up there,” said Lydia Paterson, who lives here. “It’s just the principle of, ‘What on earth is going on?’ ”

A stroll through the field the other day unearthed no doggers (it was raining) but revealed much evidence of their existence. Debris — used condoms, things made of rubber, pages torn from pornographic magazines, snack wrappers, discarded tea cups — littered the area. The paths were dotted with black mats that people had conveniently left behind for the next time.

Residents have been pressing the authorities to do something, arguing that the government should simply close the rest stop that provides access to the offending field, just off the busy A31 road. That way, people hoping to have sex would have nowhere to park.

But local government officials refused, saying closing it would unfairly penalize motorists who genuinely wanted just to rest and would deprive the owner of the Hog’s Back cafe, also at the rest stop, of his livelihood.

Alternative suggestions, discussed at a recent meeting of the Surrey County Council Cabinet, included deploying rangers to patrol the site on horseback; encouraging hikers to roust doggers with actual dogs; and filling the field with potentially bad-tempered bulls.

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Jules Perkins (left) and Lydia Paterson standing in one area where people dogging or cruising for sex have been seen by local people.

“It was like, ‘Are you taking this seriously?’ ” Ms. Paterson said. “One cabinet member said, ‘If you close this site, there could be an increase in suicides because these people have nowhere else to go.’ ”

Some older residents sympathize with the council. “Honestly, it’s been going on for so many years,” said Jennifer Debenham, 71, a customer at the Good Intent.

Referring to a nearby village, an elderly man at the bar piped up, “At Wisley, there are two sites, one for males and one for heteros.”

Mrs. Debenham said, “I think we should just let them get on with it.”

The man added, “If you want to find out more, just put ‘dogging’ into your search engine.”

Meanwhile, frazzled residents trade tales of woe: The half-dressed men who materialize from the shrubbery and theatrically pretend to be foraging for nuts and berries. The Internet reviews (“One site listed us as the No. 2 dogging site in Europe,” Ms. Perkins said wearily). The occasion when an unsuspecting motorist went for a bathroom break in the bushes, only to be surrounded by a crowd of eager men.

“It was the quickest pee he’d ever done in his life,” Ms. Paterson said.

The council has agreed to institute an “active management plan” that might include cutting down some shrubbery and putting in security patrols. And the police recently put up a sign warning people not to engage in “activities of an unacceptable nature.”

“There was a lot of debate over the wording for that sign,” Ms. Paterson said. “I guess they didn’t want to say, ‘Don’t have sex.’ ”

Images: Andrew Testa for The New York Times

via nytimes

Northeast India Postal Services Gets Vehicle Tracking System

gps Shillong, Oct 8 : The Global Positioning System (GPS), a vehicle tracking software for mail motor services in the Northeast and Assam circles, was inaugurated today at the Shillong GPO building.

The department of posts will take steps to improve its services all over the country through the use of modern technology, Chairman of the Postal Services Board Radhika Doraiswamy said after inaugurating the system.

Already, all the branches of post offices have been linked in a network throughout the country, she said.

The GPS project will allow the tracking of movements of Mail and Motor Service vehicles covering all the remote and hilly areas of the region.

Out of 75 GPS, 15 are being installed in Assam Circle and the rest 60 in other North-Eastern states, with Meghalaya having 11.

The system will help monitor the movement of postal vehicles and other functions of the postal department to improve efficiency and give better services to the people, she added.

Liu Xiaobo Wins Nobel Peace Prize

LIU-XIAOBO-NOBEL-PEACE-PRIZE Oslo, Oct 8 : Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo has won the 2010 Nobel Peace Prize "for his long and non-violent struggle for fundamental human rights in China."

The Norwegian Nobel Committee says it has long believed that there is a close connection between human rights and peace.

Below is  AP's earlier story is below.

OSLO, Norway (AP) – Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo has won the 2010 Nobel Peace Prize "for his long and non-violent struggle for fundamental human rights in China."

The Norwegian Nobel Committee says it has long believed that there is a close connection between human rights and peace.

Happy Birthday, Mr Putin- Full Calendar

Lingerie-clad students from Moscow's most renowned university have posed in an erotic calendar proclaiming their love for Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, who turns 58 on Thursday. The calendar, called "Vladimir Vladimirovich, We love you. Happy Birthday Mr Putin," features twelve women wearing only underwear and pouting at the camera with saucy slogans.

'Happy Birthday, Mr Putin'

The women are all named as journalism students at the Moscow State University and a spokeswoman for the faculty confirmed to AFP that the models study there. Clad in a black lace negligee, Miss March, Lena Gornostayeva, wishes Putin a happy birthday with the message: "You put out the forest fires, but I'm still burning."

'Happy Birthday, Mr Putin'

Journalism faculty spokeswoman Larisa Bakulina slammed the calendar as a "work of erotic tastelessness." "We are not happy that they used the brand of the journalism faculty," she said. "It is tactless on the part of the publishers."

'Happy Birthday, Mr Putin'

The November page of a 2011 calendar features a girl with her name and a text saying: "Vladimir Vladimirovich, I do not need a fire bell, I need you!" One of the creators of the calendar, Maxim Perlin, 22, a producer at a patriotic Internet televison channel, said that he put it together with a publisher, Vladimir Tabak.

'Happy Birthday, Mr Putin'

The January page of a 2011 calendar features a girl with her name and a text saying: "Vladimir Vladimirovich, Everyone needs a man like you" "The idea of the calendar was to show girls who are not simply models who turn up for 100 dollars, but girls who have some political opinion, who have already achieved some success," Maxim Perlin said.

'Happy Birthday, Mr Putin'

The September page of a 2011 calendar features a girl with her name and a text saying: "Vladimir Vladimirovich, you only grow better with the years!" Fifty thousand copies of the calendar went on sale on Tuesday at Auchan hypermarkets, Perlin. "We hope it will have some commercial success."

'Happy Birthday, Mr Putin'

The October page of a 2011 calendar features a girl with her name and a text saying: "Vladimir Vladimirovich, you are my premier!" On Wednesday a stack of the calendars, costing 260 rubles each (8.71 US dollars) was on sale at a hypermarket on Leninsky Prospekt in southern Moscow.

'Happy Birthday, Mr Putin'

The August page of a 2011 calendar features a girl with her name and a text saying: "Vladimir Vladimirovich, Who? If not you?" Designer Antonina Shapovalova, a leader of Nashi pro-Kremlin youth movement, in 2008 created a line of girls' thong knickers with the slogan "Vova, I'm with you," using a nickname for Vladimir Putin.

'Happy Birthday, Mr Putin'

The February page of a 2011 calendar features a girl with her name and a text saying: "Vladimir Vladimirovich, Will you take as the second pilot?" Perlin works for a pro-Kremlin channel called Russia.ru. Its creator Konstantin Rykov was behind a website called Zaputina.ru, or For Putin, which pushed for the leader to run for a third presidential term.

'Happy Birthday, Mr Putin'

The February page of a 2011 calendar features a girl with her name and a text saying: "Vladimir Vladimirovich, Give me a ride on Kalina!" Perlin denied that he was a member of United Russia or any pro-Kremlin youth group and said that the calendar was funded from proceeds of publishing projects.

'Happy Birthday, Mr Putin'

The May page of a 2011 calendar features a girl with her name and a text saying: "Vladimir Vladimirovich,I love you!" "We chose girls from our acquaintances and friends. I am a journalist and my friends are journalists. We know the girls who study there very well. They are 90 percent our friends," he said.

'Happy Birthday, Mr Putin'

The February page of a 2011 calendar features a girl with her name and a text saying: "Vladimir Vladimirovich, How about the third term?"

'Happy Birthday, Mr Putin'

The April page of a 2011 calendar features a girl with her name and a text saying: "Vladimir Vladimirovich, You are the best!"

Source: AFP

Commonwealth Games Athletes on a Shopping Spree!

CWG athletes on a shopping spree!New Delhi, Oct 8 : Africans are busy buying vuvuzelas here, never mind that the blaring bugle originated in their continent! Indians are going for T-shirts with pictures of Shera the mascot, while Canadians are snapping up shot glasses. Commonwealth Games merchandise sales are skyrocketing, though some traders say it has come too late.

"Everything is being sold off and we are refilling every day. We are selling every day about 2,000 pieces of the over 36 items that are up for grabs," Suresh Kumar, chairman of Premier Brands, merchandising partner and sole retail concessionaire for CWG 2010, told IANS.

The Games began Oct 3, but already T-shirts, vuvuzelas and Shera soft toys have proved to be the biggest hits.

"We have sold over 65,000 T-shirts already out of our first lot of 75,000. We have ordered another lot of 14,000 and we should cross the 100,000 mark.

CWG athletes on a shopping spree!

"Around 21,000 vuvuzelas have been sold out of our total stock of 50,000 and 10,000 Shera soft toys have been picked up out of a lot of 25,000," he added.

Other items selling like hot cakes include "mugs, batches, coasters, key chains and the 13-in-1 bandana". The bandana, made available in different colours and designs, he says, can be worn in 13 ways and that's why the name!

CWG athletes on a shopping spree!

T-shirts, both collared and round neck, are available in eight colours for Rs.275 each with an option of either a CWG logo or the Shera imprinted on it.

"The shopping reaction is very good. Almost everything in the stock in the Games Village has been sold out as all visitors are buying something or the other," Imran Shaikh, in charge of merchandising for the Organising Committee (OC), told IANS.

CWG athletes on a shopping spree!

"Africans are preferring vuvuzelas, Indians are taking home T-shirts and mugs while Canadians are going for coasters and shot glasses...We are refilling almost twice daily," he said.

The vuvuzela has been imported from China in two colours - bright yellow and red. The loud monotone bugle that took the recent FIFA World Cup by storm is priced at Rs.250 and comes with stickers of Shera the Games mascot, the CWG logo and safety instructions pasted on it.

CWG athletes on a shopping spree!

Another import, the Shera soft toy, is available in three sizes - 4 inch, 6 inch and 9 inch for Rs.150, Rs.200 and Rs.250 respectively. The mugs, on the other hand, are available in a variety like magic mugs, night glow mugs, plain mugs and coloured inside mugs.

Despite the bullish sales, the delay will lead to eventual losses for Premier Brands.

CWG athletes on a shopping spree!

"Our total investment is around Rs.5 crore and earlier we were anticipating a profit of about Rs.10-12 crore (over $2.25 million) but now the balance sheet will close at around Rs.8 crore ( $1.8 million) with a loss of anywhere between Rs.80 lakh-Rs.1 crore ($225,000), all because of the delay," said Kumar.

CWG athletes on a shopping spree!

The merchandise is made available at four official stores, four mobile vans and at 63 venues within 11 Games stadiums. While the stores are at the Games Village, Pragati Maidan, CWG headquarters and the Ashok Hotel respectively, the vans mainly go to schools with bulk orders.

Other goods adorning the shelves are caps, vizors, badges (small and big); notepads (50 pages and 100 pages), plates, national flags with the national anthem engraved in it; cover for mobile phones and laptops; sippers and musical instruments.

CWG athletes on a shopping spree!

When it comes to pricing, Kumar said: "We are not selling anything at over Rs.300 - that's our maximum price." The cheapest item on display is a puzzle for Rs.26 and the maximum on the list is T-shirts for Rs.275 each.

Merchandising, however, began late in India for CWG vis-a-vis big ticket sports events in other nations. For the 2008 Beijing Olympics, it started as early as three years before the Games while the 2012 London Olympics' flagship store and online sales have already started functioning.

CWG athletes on a shopping spree!

"We were given four dates earlier but the OC failed to launch the merchandise and now we've had only a month in hand. We were even slated to sell the products in the entire country but now we are restricted only to Delhi and the national capital region because of no time," said Kumar.

Source: IANS

Jairam Questions Govt on Northeast India Projects

By Ravish Tiwari

JAIRAM_RAMESH In unprecedented distancing from the government by a key minister and questioning its development works in the strategic Northeast India and Bhutan, Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh has taken up with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh demands for a review of all hydel projects in the region and a “moratorium on any further clearances for hydel projects in Arunachal Pradesh” since “these are bound to be the subject of agitation” in Assam.

In a letter to the Prime Minister on September 16 after attending a meeting in Guwahati of “civil society organizations” opposed to big dams, Ramesh has highlighted the views of “some NGOs” that “we should not make Arunachal Pradesh a pawn in the race between India and China”.

This, Ramesh states, was the response to his explanation on the “strategic significance” of projects in Arunachal Pradesh. But in his letter, he only names one NGO called Adi Students Union which made a representation to him on this issue.

His visit has upset several senior Cabinet members. A senior minister told The Indian Express: “This is suo motu activism that only serves to incite passions. How can a minister discuss strategic aspects of projects with activists in such a sensitive region?”

At least ten times in the three-page letter to the Prime Minister, Ramesh refers to “sentiments”, “dominant view”, “great concern”, “concerns of the people”, “opposition building up”.

The letter ends with the warning that the “feeling in vocal sections of Assam’s society particularly appears to be that ‘mainland India’ is exploiting the North-East hydel resources for its benefits”.

What’s worrying for the government is that Ramesh has already made some assurances that could impact the pace of progress. “What I could assure the audience, of course, is that for projects not yet started, we will carry out cumulative environmental impact assessment studies as well as comprehensive biodiversity studies.”

This flies in the face of his own commitment to fast-track projects on the Siang river in Arunachal Pradesh. It is recorded in the minutes of a recent meeting of the task force on hydro power development: “Minister of State for Environment and Forests emphasized the need for time-bound development of hydro potential in Siang river and he offered, on his part, to consider forest and environment clearance on a fast track basis for hydro electric projects in Siang river.”

Ramesh has taken up with the Prime Minister concerns over mega projects in Bhutan like the Kurichu dam and Mangdechhu hydel project. These are bound to have diplomatic ramifications as these projects are being built with Indian help, and power produced from them would be purchased by India.

There are strong strategic underpinnings to these projects as they symbolize the cooperation hastened by Bhutan’s unflinching support to not let its territory be used by N-E insurgent groups.

Confirming that he had written to the Prime Minister after his trip to the North-East, Ramesh refused to go into details when contacted by The Indian Express. He, however, said the PM is slated to take an inter-ministerial meeting on the subject on October 13.

In his letter, Ramesh has pointed to concerns over projects mostly being built on tributaries of the Brahmaputra which even China is looking to harness on its side. He is careful enough to front these as views distilled from a “public consultation” organized at the “request of a large number of civil society organizations in Assam” on September 10 where he claims “over a thousand people participated in an interaction which extended over six hours”.

At the same time, he ends up lending weight to some of these concerns while pointing out that elections in Assam are due in next six months. “Even leaving aside elections, these issues are important in themselves and merit our serious consideration. Personally, I believe that some of the concerns that were expressed cannot be dismissed lightly.”

The key concerns and “sentiments” to which Ramesh has sought to draw the PM’s attention are:

There should be a “moratorium on any further clearances for hydel projects in Arunachal Pradesh” until downstream impact assessment studies, cumulative environment impact assessment studies and biodiversity impact studies are completed.

The 135 dams of different capacities being planned in Arunachal Pradesh “are being given green signal” without carrying out these studies.

These MoUs signed “with the knowledge of the Central government” have not taken on board the concerns of the people of Assam. “The Government of Assam should be a party to these MoUs, especially where downstream impacts are significant”. Incidentally, most of these MoUs were signed during the first UPA government.

There is “great concern” on the downstream impact in certain districts of Assam from “existing hydel projects of NEEPCO like Ranganadi and Kopili”. Incidentally, these projects have been declared fully operational more than five years ago. “There is also concern on the Kurichu hydel project executed by India in Bhutan and its downstream impacts in districts like Barpeta, Baska, Nalbari and Kamrup.”

“There is opposition building up in Assam to the 2000 MW Lower Subansiri hydel project being implemented by NHPC in Arunachal Pradesh... the demand being made, on the basis of an expert committee report prepared by a team from IIT Guwahati, Guwahati University and Dibrugarh University is for the project to be scrapped”. Ramesh, however, has also clarified in his letter that he told the audience he was “in no position to make any commitment on the existing Lower Subansiri”.

Award of projects in Arunachal Pradesh to different companies in the same river basin is making the “task of environment impact assessment very difficult”. The examples given are of three different companies involved in projects on Subansiri and also on Siang.

The 1750 MW Lower Demwe hydel project on the Lohit river “should not be given forest clearance, although environmental clearance has already been given for the project” because of the downstream impact of this project on Assam.

The 1500 MW Tipaimukh hydro-electric project in Manipur “should not be proceeded till a comprehensive downstream impact assessment study has been undertaken”.

Environmental impact of hydel projects in Bhutan need to be “studied better”. The entire approach to dams in the Northeast “needs to be looked afresh” and factors such as “high seismicity and rich biodiversity have not been adequately considered by Government of India” before granting clearances.

Naga Council Manipur Ready For Talks

manipur Guwahati, Oct 8 : New Delhi has managed to broker a semblance of truce between the agitating United Naga Council (UNC) and the Manipur government.

Talks between the two are likely to be held on October 16. The UNC had last month imposed a 20-day economic blockade on Manipur. It came less than two months after another Naga organization – All Naga Students' Association of Manipur – had temporarily suspended its 69-day blockade on two arterial highways leading to state capital Imphal.

The UNC has been opposing the autonomous district councils (ADCs) in hills of Manipur inhabited by Nagas and other tribes.

It has refused to accept the elections to these ADCs until the state government amends the Manipur (Hill area) District Council Act of 2008, which it claims restrains the functioning of the councils.

A spokesperson of the UNC confirmed New Delhi's role in facilitating talks between the Naga body and the Manipur government.

"Our leaders have returned after camping 25 days in Delhi. Let's see what comes out of the meeting likely late next week," he said.

Railway Services To Northeast India Partially Restored

indian railways Silchar (Assam), Oct 8 :  Rail services between the northeastern states of Tripura, Manipur, Mizoram and southern Assam and the rest of India were restored partially Thursday after 114 days of disruptions, a railway official here said.

The train services were suspended June 15 following heavy landslides caused by incessant rains and damage to tracks.

“The Northeast Frontier Railway (NFR) has resumed direct train services between Lumding in southern Assam and Agartala again. However, the authority has decided to suspend the running of the special daily express train between Lumding and Silchar due to some technical reasons,” a NFR spokesman told reporters.

The metre gauge railway line from Guwahati passes through southern Assam’s mountainous North Cachar Hills district connecting landlocked Tripura’s capital Agartala and parts of Manipur and Mizoram with the rest of India.

Goods trains on this section resumed services July 3 after the track was repaired partially in the area, 300 km south of Assam’s main city Guwahati.

According to a senior Tripura government official, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh had earlier asked Cabinet Secretary K.M. Chandrasekhar to personally ensure regular delivery of food grain, fuel and other essential items to the northeastern states.

“In view of the suspension of railway services, the supply of food grain and transport fuels was badly affected in Mizoram, Tripura, Manipur and southern Assam for the past few months,” Tripura Food and Civil Supplies Minister Manik Dey told IANS.

Meanwhile, the Tripura and Mizoram governments have asked the central government and the Food Corporation of India (FCI) to build a buffer stock of rice and other essential commodities for the northeastern states.

Rail transport is the main mode of transport in the landlocked region for supplying foodgrain and other important goods.