ROME river judged too dirty for tourist cruises


Fountains on the Quirinale side of the square:...

Fountains on the Quirinale side of the square: River Tiber or a river of one of the four parts of the world (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Rome river judged too dirty for tourist cruises by Staff Writers Rome (AFP) May 09, 2013

Tourist cruises along Rome’s Tiber River have been suspended indefinitely for the first time since they began a decade ago because the waterway is judged too dirty.

“Tourists and Rome residents were expecting navigation for the year to resume at Easter. But we didn’t open out of respect for them,” said Mauro Pica Villa from “Rome Boats”, the company in charge of all cruises on the river.

“We’re ashamed of the Tiber’s state of abandonment,” he told AFP on Thursday.

The river’s tall stone embankments have become grey with pollution, the river banks are strewn with rubbish and homeless people live under the bridges.

“The last time the river was cleaned up was in 2008! Everyone can see it since trees along the Tiber are covered in plastic bags and other rubbish every time the river overflows,” which happens several times in a year, he said.

Making navigation even more difficult, Pica Villa said, is a 1906 law still in place that classifies the waters of the tiber as “maritime” and not “communal” property meaning Rome city hall is not responsible for the upkeep.

Former Rome mayor Walter Veltroni launched the river cruise services in 2003 and they were initially very successful, selling 40,000 tickets a year.

Pica Villa said it was a shame to be suspending the services, which included tours about the history of Rome’s bridges and romantic dinner cruises.

The Tiber is Italy‘s third longest river and runs 400 kilometres (250 miles) from the hills of Tuscany to the port of Ostia on the Mediterranean.

ITALY: INTERNATIONAL ANIMAL RIGHTS DAY IN ROME


Monte Pincio, Roma, Öl auf Holz, 15,5 x 23,5 cm

Image via Wikipedia

Sent: Sunday, December 11, 2011 10:26 PM

Subject: INTERNATIONAL ANIMAL RIGHTS DAY 2011 IN ROME ( pictures)
 

Animal Equality
INTERNATIONAL ANIMAL RIGHTS DAY 2011 IN ROME

10/12/2011 – Terrazza del Pincio / piazzale Napoleone

On Saturday 10 December 2011 in commemoration for International Animal Rights Day, Animal Equality Italy carried out its first protest with a visual demonstration to remember the billions of animals who die each year victims of speciesism.

During over more than six hours the Pincio’s square was covered with 100 crosses, each on of them was accompanied by a photo of an animal who had been exploited and/or killed in a farm, laboratory, slaughterhouse or other exploitation facilities.

Activists distributed leaflets and explained to the public that it is possible to save the lives of all these animals by choosing a vegan lifestyle.

 

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No More Bull in Barcelona


No More Bull in Barcelona

 ”Every country gets the circus it deserves. Spain gets bullfights. Italy gets the Catholic Church. America gets Hollywood.” – Erica Jong

Bullfighting is a dying sport, and I am pleased to announce that this week, Barcelona, Spain banned bullfighting, after animal rights groups gathered 180,000 signatures calling for a legislative debate. The last bullfight in Barcelona (Warning: Graphic): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jy9kiITFsjI Twelve years ago (August 29, 1999) Notmilk wrote:

Bullfight at San Marcos Fair, Aguascalientes, ...

Image via Wikipedia

 

 

 

 

 

THE BULLFIGHT

 The crowd cheers as a picador riding a blindfolded horse pokes a long sharp-tipped lance into the bull, twisting and turning his weapon so that muscle fibers are shredded and blood streams down the animal’s back. This is not a ferocious bull. The animal frantically looks right and then left for a means to escape. There is none. It has no chance. Colorfully dressed banderilleros run out holding sharp, multicolored ribboned skewers, one in each hand, and forcefully plunge them deep into the animal’s flesh. Ole! That’s the sound of an excited crowd responding to a matador’s sword thrusting deep between the shoulder blades of an exhausted bull. Ole! That’s the roar of the bloodthirsty crowd as the bull collapses upon itself after the sword pierces its heart, gallons of blood spurting and gurgling out of its nose and mouth. Ole! The crowd screams with pleasure as a co-conspirator slices through the spinal cord and the animal begins its deathly shudder. Ole! One last roar as the honored assassin slices off first one ear, then another. Will he later eat these pieces of cartilage with salsa and chips or will they go into his trophy case? Some animals still blink as they are dragged out of the ring by a team of horses. Bullfighting is dead in Barcelona. Ole! :>)

Robert Cohen http://www.notmilk.com