Archive for May, 2008

GGR welcomes Court action and Council of Europe decision

Monday, May 19th, 2008

“Nowhere is the ridiculous nature of discrimination more clear than in this local Court case”

Gibraltar's Equality Rights Group GGRGibraltar Equality Rights Group GGR has welcomed the start of a hearing in the local courts today of a complaint by a lesbian couple against the Gibraltar Housing Department.


Felix Alvarez - Chairman of Gibraltar's Equality Rights Group GGR
“It is a measure of GGR’s commitment to reasoned change through our democratic institutions that not only have we worked and will continue to do so, for legal and responsible change to come about through parliamentary and judicial routes in our community, but we will not cease from insisting on it,” chairman Felix Alvarez said in a press statement today.


“It is ridiculous and backward in this day and age in a situation of housing shortage that two people in a committed relationship should be required by government to apply for and obtain two separate housing units when they, in fact, wish nothing more than to live together.

The only reason why the Housing Departmentt are refusing to accept to place one of the partners as a joint tenant is the fact that they are lesbian.

Nowhere is the ridiculous nature of discrimination and prejudice more clear than in this case. It’s time government became reasonable, stop being on the defensive, and help create an atmosphere of responsible dialogue in order to lead to what the majority of people in Gibraltar consider today to be fair and reasonable treatment of sexual minority fellow citizens.

As Chairman of GGR I have said it so many times that I have lost track. But I will not tire from repeating it: I am willing to sit around the table with government in a spirit of reasonable understanding.”

In his press release today, Mr Alvarez also takes the opportunity to comment on the recent statement issued by the Council of Europe’s Committee of Ministers regarding GGR’s complaint on age of consent legislation in Gibraltar. In reply to a question tabled by UK Liberal Democrat MP Mike Hancock, the Committee said:


“The Committee of Ministers recalls that it is strongly attached to the principle of equal rights of all human beings.

The Council of Europe’s message of tolerance and non-discrimination applies to all European societies, and discrimination on grounds of sexual orientation is not compatible with this message.

The Committee of Ministers was informed by the United Kingdom that the legislation at issue is currently under review by the Government of Gibraltar. The United Kingdom reaffirmed its commitment on lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) issues, and indicated that the Government of Gibraltar is aware of the importance of compliance with the Convention, notably the principle of non-discrimination.

The Committee of Ministers welcomes the assurance that the United Kingdom takes very seriously its full international responsibility for Gibraltar, and therefore its responsibility for Gibraltar’s compliance with the Convention, and encourages the United Kingdom to resolve this matter in the near future.”

Mr Alvarez today commented:


“Statements from the Committee of Ministers are only published after consensus has been reached. The fact that the Committee clearly signalled that a change in the age of consent in Gibraltar must be effected in the ‘near future’ in order to make equality in consent between gays and heterosexuals a reality, is significant and welcome. It signals the UK’s clear endorsement.

GGR is confident of information it has received that meetings between government and Foreign & Commonwealth Office officials have been taking place in order to reach agreement about the manner and timing of these changes. GGR clearly welcomes developments on this front and looks forward to further announcements. We shall, nonetheless, be keeping a vigilant eye on progress on this matter.”

Source: Equality Rights Group GGR Press Release - 18 May 2008

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Spring Migration: Take your seats for one of the greatest shows on earth

Sunday, May 18th, 2008

The spring migration is under threat, but it’s still an amazing spectacle, best seen from this British outpost, says Michael McCarthy in The Independent on Sunday today.


Griffon Vulture being harrassed  by a Yellow Legged Gull over Gibraltar - (Photo © DM Parody http://dotcom.gi/photos)
It was painful to watch. It was like seeing a gang beat up an innocent passer-by – except that it was happening 200 feet up in the air. The victim was an eagle. The assailants were seagulls – yellow-legged gulls, the Mediterranean version of our familiar herring gull – and they were merciless.

Dozens of them converged on the hapless predator, harrying it with swoops from all sides, easily outmanoeuvring it, since their victim, a short-toed eagle, was a snake-hunter with wings designed for hanging in the air and patiently searching the ground for reptiles, rather than for rapid flight. The late afternoon sun picked out its pale underside as it struggled to get away, on leaden wingbeats.

“They get hammered by the gulls, more than any other species,” said Ian Thompson, as we gazed through binoculars at the drama unfolding above us.

The gulls renewed their attack as the eagle lurched and tottered through the air out of our sight. I wondered what would happen to it. “They get exhausted and downed, and sometimes they die,” said Ian.

Here was the Rock. We were on the heights of Gibraltar, looking out over the strait to Morocco and Africa 15 miles away, observing, live, one of nature’s most remarkable spectacles – the annual spring migration of millions of birds from their African winter quarters to their European breeding grounds.

More than 120 species, from tiny warblers to vultures with door-sized wingspans, fly north every year because the breeding opportunities are better – they can escape the competition in Africa, and take advantage of the much longer summer days in the high latitudes, which offer more time for finding food for hungry chicks.

Yet there is widespread concern among ornithologists that the system of bird migration between Africa and Europe is running into trouble with numbers of bird returning to their breeding grounds falling and the spectre of several species heading towards disappearance. These epic journeys are immense and full of hazard: 2,000 miles to northern Europe, crossing the Sahara, the world’s biggest desert, the Mediterranean, the Pyrenees, and then the Channel, to get to Britain, say, facing bad weather, food shortages, natural predators and human hunters.

I had come as a wildlife tourist because the Rock is one of the best of all places to observe these vast movements, both in spring on the outward passage, and in autumn on the return. You might say it’s Gibraltar’s second, almost secret, identity, much less well known than the familiar one of Little Bit of Britain Stuck on the End of Spain. Long the UK’s most important foreign naval base, guarding the entrance to the Mediterranean (a function now much reduced), Gib has been a British territory since 1704, and crowds of tourists flock ashore every day from cruise ships to look with curious eyes at the bobbies in their blue helmets, the double-decker buses, the English road signs, the English pubs and the English shops. Some also take a taxi to see the famous “apes” – not true apes, but large, tailless macaques that live semi-wild on the Upper Rock, protected by the Gibraltarian authorities.

But not that many people go to Gibraltar, as I had done, looking for wildlife. If you do, at the right time, you may be pleasantly surprised. The Rock is, in effect, another Mediterranean island.

The town at its base is noisy, crowded and packed with cars, its appearance not improved by the hectic commercial and residential development of the past 20 years, much of it on land reclaimed from the harbour. But the whole of the Upper Rock, the higher reaches around and below the 1,400ft summit, form a nature reserve of maquis, or Mediterranean scrub, mainly composed of wild olive and lentisk.

In mid-April, when I visited, this is bursting with exuberantly coloured wild flowers, from the giant Tangier fennel and the Gibraltar candytuft to the wild gladiolus, which in Britain is a great rarity found only in the New Forest. The butterflies, too, are eye-catching: almost at once I spotted a Cleopatra and a Spanish festoon, which are two of Europe’s great showpiece insects.

But the birds are the real interest. Gibraltar attracts them magnetically because its strait is the Mediterranean’s shortest crossing point, the narrowest hop over the water between Africa and Europe. For one group in particular, this is absolutely vital: the soaring birds. Many raptors such as eagles, kites and vultures, and other birds such as storks, are not strongly powered flyers; they have evolved wings which they use to soar on thermals, the currents of air which rise upwards from the land as it warms in the sun. They travel by soaring up on one thermal, and gliding slowly down until they find another.

But thermals do not form over the sea, so to get over the Mediterranean, migrating soaring birds have to use the narrowest crossing, where one enormous rise on a thermal in Morocco will let them glide across to Spain, or vice versa. As a result, they congregate along the straits, twice a year, sometimes in quite enormous numbers. “One day in September, back in the 1970s, from here on the Rock I counted 11,000 honey buzzards, heading south from all directions. I’ll never forget it,” said John Cortes, secretary of the very active Gibraltar Ornithological & Natural History Society, or GONHS (pronounced “Gonze”).

GONHS has a field station and bird observatory at Jews’ Gate, the entrance to the Upper Rock, and it was there that I met Ian Thompson, a retired BT manager from Hatfield in Hertfordshire, who for the past six springs has come out to Gib to be the society’s bird ringer.

Ringing means trapping the migrating songbirds heading for Europe, such as warblers and flycatchers, and fitting them with small lightweight leg rings with an address and unique number, which allow their movements to be traced if they are caught again, or found dead: it has provided a wealth of knowledge of bird movements, essential for conservation policies.

I watched Ian and his friend and fellow ringer Yvonne Benting catch more than 20 songbirds in mist nets in the maquis, and then, handling them with great skill and gentleness, measure them, weigh them, ring them and release them – all completely unharmed. Seeing at really close quarters such English summer visitors as whitethroats and blackcaps, willow warblers and chiffchaffs – usually glimpsed back home as a brief blur in a hedge or high in a tree – was a thrill for anyone interested in birds.

But the large birds of prey passing through were an even bigger attraction, and although Ian and I watched spellbound as the short-toed eagle was attacked by the gulls above us – there are 20,000 pairs of yellow-legged gulls on Gibraltar – the wind was in the wrong direction for a major passage over the Rock. It meant the birds were crossing the straits at the narrowest point of all, at Tarifa in Spain, a few miles along the coast, and there we headed.

Tarifa is a both a charming old town and a hip windsurfing centre, because it is not only continental Europe’s most southerly point, but reputedly its windiest. In the hills a few miles outside the town we found a cafe at an observation point overlooking a valley leading up from the straits, and there at last was the great procession: short-toed eagles, booted eagles, black kites, griffon vultures, Egyptian vultures, soaring past us on the thermals in a magnificent uninterrupted stream, heading out into Europe for the breeding season.

In Tarifa we found another birdwatchers’ treat that windsurfers no doubt pass by: the castle (of Guzman the Good) is a breeding site for lesser kestrels, one of Europe’s rarest falcons, charming small birds of prey which nest colonially.

Back in Gibraltar Ian Thompson gave me another insider’s tip: one of the best birding sites is the old North Front Cemetery. A short walk among the graves produced whitethroats and redstarts, and, an exotic rarity for the Rock, a squacco heron.

My final call was at the Alameda Botanic Gardens in the town, largely unsung, but to me the single most attractive feature of all of Gibraltar. The director is John Cortes of GONHS, and in the past 15 years he and his team have restored the gardens and turned them into an oasis of stunning beauty, resplendent not only in its trees and flowers, but also in its butterflies – the two-tailed pasha, Europe’s most spectacular insect, can be found there.

Its birds can be eye-catching, too. Ambling through its glades I saw blackcaps and woodchat shrikes, and also pied flycatchers, the latter perhaps heading for the oakwoods of Wales. It was a reminder that there is much more to the Bit of Britain Stuck on the End of Spain than bobbies, double-deckers, and English pubs.

Source: The Independent on Sunday > Environment > Nature > Article - 18 May 2008

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GONHS - Gibraltar Biodiversity Project

Bird Migration - Information from Wikipedia, the free encyclopaedia

Image courtesy of DM Parody © http://dotcom.gi/photos

Browse Books on Bird Migration at Amazon.co.uk

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RGP anxious to trace vital witnesses of fatal road traffic accident

Friday, May 16th, 2008


Royal Gibraltar Police (RGP) align=
The Royal Gibraltar Police (RGP) issued a statement today, updating the inquiries they are conducting into the road traffic accident that occurred on 8th May 2008 which resulted in the unfortunate death of 16 year old Nacho Rodriguez.

The Royal Gibraltar Police said they want to express their thanks to all those members of the public who have assisted by providing information about the collision.

However, investigators are still piecing evidence together and are keen to identify and speak to the driver and occupant(s) of a silver/grey four wheel drive which was reported to be in the area of the accident at 7.40pm at Queensway.

Police are appealing for the driver, believed to be a woman, accompanied by a second woman who was also in the car at the time of the accident, to come forward and assist police with their inquiries, by providing investigators with “certain information they may have”. The RGP believe these two women also had two children in the car with them.

Any information should be channelled through the Royal Gibraltar Police Duty Officer who can be contacted at New Mole House Police station on tel 20072500.

Source: Royal Gibraltar Police (RGP) Press Releases - Working Together to Maintain a Safe Community - 16 May 2008

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Government announce recycling bins for glass and metal waste

Friday, May 16th, 2008


Gibraltar Government Press Office - No 6 Convent Place
The Gibraltar Government Ministry for the Environment have announced that as from Monday 19th May 2008 recycling bins will be installed throughout Gibraltar.

Nearly two years after the first invitations to tender for the recycling of glass and metal in Gibraltar, the Environment Ministry are finally providing distinctly coloured bins in yellow and green for the disposal of glass and metal waste only.

In accordance with standard recycling practices elsewhere around the world, the Ministry of Environment, explain that the green bins are for glass bottles, drinking glasses, tumblers and jars only. Metal lids and metal bottle tops should be deposited separately in the yellow bins. The yellow bins are only for the depositing of aluminium and steel drink cans, steel food tins, household aerosols and clean aluminium foil as well as the metal bottle tops and metal lids from the glass bottles and jars.

The Ministry warn that any bags used for carrying these items should not be disposed off in either the green or yellow bins and that no other types of refuse, other than glass or cans should be deposited in these bins.

The Ministry said that items collected in these bins will subsequently be transferred to a recycling plant for completion of the recycling process.

The Environment Ministry are asking the public to ensure that items are cleaned and separated prior to being deposited in the bins. The Ministry statemtent concluded:


“The co-operation of the public will be appreciated and ensure the success of the recycling process.”

As much as we welcome this announcement, it is disappointing that these much needed recycling facilities finally being put in place by the Environment Ministry only provide bins for glass or metal cans and, as yet, there is still no provision for the disposal for recycling, of waste paper or plastic bags and bottles.

FoE Congratulate the Government

Friends of the Earth Gibraltar
Following the Environment Ministry announcement, Friends of the Earth Gibraltar (FoE), congratulated the Government on “finally introducing recycling bins on the Rock”.

FoE Gibraltar welcomed “the beginnings of a comprehensive recycling effort” that are starting to emerge”.

A spokesperson for FoE Gibraltar added:


“However, as a community we still lack public provision for the real “biggie” of re-usable material… waste paper.

Hopefully, public-sector bins will soon be introduced to process Gibraltar’s estimated 1,000 tonnes a year of discarded newspapers and other paper and card items.”

Gibraltar produces around 23,000 tonnes of municipal waste with glass items constituting 5% of our overall waste and cans 4%. Other items that are currently being treated and/or recycled include: Waste oils Batteries Cardboard Metals Refrigerators End of Life Vehicles Wooden Pallets Inkjet and Toner Cartridges.

Sources: Gibraltar Government Press Release -
Friends of the Earth Gibraltar - Press Releases - 15/16 May 2008

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Missing Scottish sex offender arrested in Gibraltar

Saturday, May 3rd, 2008


Royal Gibraltar Police (RGP) Press Release
The Royal Gibraltar Police (RGP) have arrested a missing Scottish sex attacker in Gibraltar last week.

Robert Marshall, was detained on an international warrant issued at Paisley Sheriff Court in Scotland.

Marshall was captured as he played bowls with pals at Devil’s Tower Camp, a British military barracks known locally as DTC, which is situated next to the airport at North Front.

Marshall, 50, went on the run in June 2005, after he was released on bail pending sentence. He had admitted sexually assaulting a woman.

Whilst in Gibraltar, Marshall had been working in the NAAFI shop at the DTC camp.

A spokesman for the Royal Gibraltar Police (RGP) said yesterday:


“Strathclyde Police contacted us to tell us they thought he was working in Gibraltar. We confirmed it and they set the ball rolling.”

Marshall, of Bishopton, Renfrewshire, has been remanded in custody until Tuesday.

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