Voters on Irelands 12 offshore islands cast early ballots

Presiding officer Hugh ODonnell (left) and Garda officer P.J. McHugh carry the ballot box off the island of Innishfree, Co Donegal. A local home was turned into a temporary polling station where islanders Phil and Hans Schleweck from Stuttgart, Germany, cast their vote. The rest of Ireland will cast their votes on 23 May. Photograph: Paul McErlane/EPA

Sgt Val Murray assists Carmel McBride, presiding officer for Inishbofin, off Co Donegal, with the ballot box as Islanders go to the polls a day earlier in the local and European elections. Photograph: Brian Lawless/PA Wire

Presiding officer Hugh ODonnell (left) and Garda officer P.J. McHugh carry the ballot box to the island of Innishfree, Co Donegal. Photograph: Paul McErlane/EPA

Voters on 12 offshore islands have already cast their ballots for the European and local elections today, just one day ahead of the rest of the State.

Residents of five islands in Donegal South-West, three in Mayo and four in Galway West were able to vote up to 9pm this evening, while those living on seven islands in the Cork South-West constituency will vote tomorrow.

A total of 2,131 people are registered to vote on the 12 islands. In Donegal, where there are five islands, 753 people are entitled to vote.

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Voters on Irelands 12 offshore islands cast early ballots

INTERVIEW: Bright spots can help islands navigate towards sustainable future, says UN biodiversity chief

22 May 2014 Tiny though some may be, islands play a huge role in sustaining life on the planet making up less than 5 per cent of Earths landmass, they are home to 20 per cent of all bird, reptile and plant species and protecting their fragile ecosystems from ill-considered development, polluted waters and invasive species is the main focus of this years International Day for Biodiversity.

While islands and their surrounding near-shore marine areas face immense challenges, especially those triggered by a rapidly warming planet, the head of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) is convinced there are bright spots; that the innovation, experience and knowledge of islands and the communities that thrive among them can contribute significantly to the conservation and sustainable use of Earths biodiversity and natural resources.

Thats the big agenda this year, said Braulio Ferreira de Souza Dias, the Conventions Executive Secretary, in an interview with the UN News Centre. On the International Day and throughout 2014, the CBD Secretariat will aim to boost overall support for islands party to the Convention and States parties that have island territories to make better use of existing solutions, enhance partnerships and mobilize more global attention to the threats islands face.

Along these lines, the UN will be convening the Third International Conference on Small Island Developing States from 1 to 4 September in Apia, Samoa, to focus worldwide attention on the sustainable development of this unique group of countries.

Braulio Ferreira de Souza Dias (left), Executive Secretary of the Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity, speaks at special event on the occasion of the International Day for Biological Diversity (22 May), on the theme "Water and Biodiversity". UN Photo/Devra Berkowitz

We plan to keep up the momentum generated by the [spotlight cast on] islands and oceans at the 2012 Rio+20 conference, said Mr. Dias, referring to the culmination of a series of landmark UN meetings on sustainable development. Rio+20 was preceded in 2002 by the Johannesburg World Summit, which itself was preceded by the historic 1992 Earth Summit, where nations agreed on what have become known as the Rio conventions: the UN Climate Change Convention (UNFCCC); the Convention on Desertification; and the CBD itself.

Sunset in Havana. UN Photo/Milton Grant

Noting the inextricable link between the fate of island biodiversity and islands themselves, under pressure as they are from many of the same threats, he said: Islands are isolated and they have precious biodiversity that is unique to them; if we lose this biodiversityit its gone forever, he said, explaining why it is so vitally important to keep the issue at the top of the development agenda.

[They] are fragile ecosystems, facing threats from desertification, as well as unsustainable fishing, forestry and agriculture. Increasingly, with the onset of climate change, they are also being threatened by sea-level rise and ocean acidification, he added.

Major drivers of biodiversity loss are invasive alien species both animals and plants that colonize an island, out-compete the native fauna and flora and destroy them. For a species to become invasive it must arrive, survive and thrive, according to the CBD.

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INTERVIEW: Bright spots can help islands navigate towards sustainable future, says UN biodiversity chief

Voting begins on Irelands 12 offshore islands

Presiding officer Hugh ODonnell (left) and Garda officer P.J. McHugh carry the ballot box off the island of Innishfree, Co Donegal. A local home was turned into a temporary polling station where islanders Phil and Hans Schleweck from Stuttgart, Germany, cast their vote. The rest of Ireland will cast their votes on 23 May. Photograph: Paul McErlane/EPA

Sgt Val Murray assists Carmel McBride, presiding officer for Inishbofin, off Co Donegal, with the ballot box as Islanders go to the polls a day earlier in the local and European elections. Photograph: Brian Lawless/PA Wire

Presiding officer Hugh ODonnell (left) and Garda officer P.J. McHugh carry the ballot box to the island of Innishfree, Co Donegal. Photograph: Paul McErlane/EPA

Voters on 12 offshore islands have already cast their ballots for the European and local elections today, just one day ahead of the rest of the State.

Residents of five islands in Donegal South-West, three in Mayo and four in Galway West were able to vote up to 9pm this evening, while those living on seven islands in the Cork South-West constituency will vote tomorrow.

A total of 2,131 people are registered to vote on the 12 islands. In Donegal, where there are five islands, 753 people are entitled to vote.

Read more here:

Voting begins on Irelands 12 offshore islands

Musa Otieno insist that Kenya will roll over Comoros Islands in cup of nation qualifier – Video


Musa Otieno insist that Kenya will roll over Comoros Islands in cup of nation qualifier
Former long serving Harambee Stars captain, Musa Otieno has tipped kenya to roll over Comoros Isalands in sunday #39;s africa cup of nations qualifier. Otieno th...

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Musa Otieno insist that Kenya will roll over Comoros Islands in cup of nation qualifier - Video

NZAid funds Cook Islands PM's pearl farm

The Cook Islands Prime Minister Henry Puna is set to get an estimated $116,000 worth of equipment and loan funding from NZAid for his pearl farm in Manihiki, despite an apparent conflict of interest.

The payment is part of a Grant Funding Arrangement (GFA) signed between the Cook Islands and New Zealand in 2013, which gave $1.7 million to the Cook Islands as part of the Pearl Revitalisation Project.

A requirement of the GFA was that all conflicts of interest were to be declared to the New Zealand Government. However, Mr Puna's involvement in his pearl farm was not.

According to a document supplied by the Cook Islands' Ministry of Marine Resources (MMR) in Rarotonga, Mr Puna put in a request for a $38,000 boat, an $18,000 outboard motor and $30,000 worth of building material to upgrade his seeding house.

The document shows the equipment Mr Puna requested was worth more than twice as much as that asked for by most other pearl farmers. He also requested $18,393.75 as part of an emergency float loan.

Financial secretary of the Cook Islands Ministry of Finance and Economic Development Richard Neve says the final list of equipment was approved by the Manihiki Pearl Farmers Association (MPFA), which 23 of 24 pearl farmers are members of including Mr Puna.

"This equipment has been put out in a series of public tenders ... endorsed by MPFA, and procured by MFED."

Mr Neve disputed that Mr Puna will be receiving over $100,000 worth of financial support, but the document provided by MMR says otherwise.

The New Zealand Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade (MFAT) said in response to an Official Information Act request that Mr Puna was not on the list of those declared to have a conflict of interest.

Foreign Affairs Minister Murray McCully says it is well known that Mr Puna's family is involved in pearl farming.

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NZAid funds Cook Islands PM's pearl farm

US Marines removes an aerial bomb in Guam, Mariana Islands during World War II. HD Stock Footage – Video


US Marines removes an aerial bomb in Guam, Mariana Islands during World War II. HD Stock Footage
Link to order this clip: http://www.criticalpast.com/video/65675059644_United-States-Marines_aerial-bomb_detecting-bomb_removing-bomb Historic Stock Footage ...

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US Marines removes an aerial bomb in Guam, Mariana Islands during World War II. HD Stock Footage - Video