War crimes charges against Mladic

Posted on 16th May 2012 in The monuments of world

The indictment against Ratko Mladic — who went on trial Wednesday at the U.N. war crimes tribunal in the Hague, Netherlands — holds the former Bosnian Serb army commander “individually criminally responsible for planning, instigating, ordering and/or aiding and abetting the crimes charged in this indictment.” Mladic is charged with 11 counts of genocide, crimes against humanity and violations of the laws and customs of war. The counts below detail the atrocities during the 1992-1995 Bosnian war that Mladic is accused of commanding.

COUNT 1: GENOCIDE

Ratko Mladic, along with other former Serbian and Bosnian Serb leaders is accused of “destroying” entire groups of Muslim and Croat communities in various parts of Bosnia. These include the 3-year relentless shelling of the capital, Sarajevo, and several other small towns such as Foca, where Serbs were particularly brutal, executing local Muslims and throwing them into a river. Some of the remains were only found last year.

COUNT 2: GENOCIDE

This count of genocide refers to the mass killing of over 7,000 men and boys in Srebrenica, in July 1995, which is Europe’s worst bloodshed since World War II. Mladic’s troops executed almost the entire Srebrenica male population in a few days, burying them later in mass graves around the town. Many were later found with their hands tied behind their back and identification of the remains is still ongoing.

COUNT 3: PERSECUTIONS

The count relates to the persecution on political and religious grounds against Bosnia’s Muslims and Croats in the Serb-controlled towns like Banja Luka, in western Bosnia, or Bijeljina in the east. Non-Serbs in these and other towns were evicted from their homes by Serb troops, held in prison camps, tortured, raped and killed. Images or skinny, naked prisoners from the camps in western Bosnia in 1992-93 reminded the world of the Nazi-era camps.

COUNTS 4, 5 and 6: EXTERMINATION, MURDER

These counts of the indictment refer to the widespread killings of non-Serbs that took place in the territories under the Bosnian Serb control, but also on the brutal attacks on the capital, Sarajevo, which prosecutors say were designed to “spread terror.” Mladic’s troops from 1992-95 were constantly sniping and shelling Sarajevo, killing thousands of civilians, the longest siege of a capital city since WWII.

COUNTS 7 AND 8: DEPORTATION, INHUMANE ACTS

Mladic’s troops also used forced deportation and various inhumane acts, such as sexual violence, killing, and destruction of houses and cultural monuments and sacred sites, to rid the Serb-controller territories of non-Serbs. This was started in 1992 in what became known as ethnic cleansing. Entire communities were forcefully displaced and the U.N. Security Council set up so-called safe havens in 1993 to protect those communities from Serb troops. Those included Srebrenica, Zepa , Gorazde and Sarajevo.

COUNTS 9 AND 10: TERROR, UNLAWFUL ATTACKS

The main focus of this count is on the siege of Sarajevo and the campaign of sniping and shelling to spread terror among the civilian population. Mladic’s forces sniped and shelled civilians as they conducted every day civilian activities. People were injured and killed inside their homes. The lack of gas, electricity or running water forced people to leave their homes, where they were targeted. People were also targeted while queuing for water or in the markets. Two mortar attacks on the Markale markets killed more than one hundred people and wounded more than 200.

COUNT 11: TAKING OF HOSTAGES

This separate count refers to the events in 1995, when Mladic’s troops took hostage U.N. peacekeepers in Bosnia to force NATO to prevent attacks on Bosnian Serb positions around Sarajevo. Between approximately 26 May 1995 and 19 June 1995, Bosnian Serb forces detained over 200 U.N. peacekeepers and military observers in various locations, sending out images of peacekeepers tied to antennas or radars in a warning to NATO. Some of the detainees were assaulted or otherwise maltreated during their captivity. They were released in several stages after an intervention from then-Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic.

Bicycle tourists stop in Ellwood City

Posted on 14th May 2012 in The monuments of world

ELLWOOD CITY — Just after noon Friday, John Ominski was in front of the Ellwood City municipal building, snapping a picture of the borough’s World War I monument.

“I like checking out these old monuments,” he said.

He’s seen a lot of them over the last few weeks. On April 28, Ominski and his companion, Joanne Pendleton, set out from their home in Silver Spring, Md., by bicycle on what they plan to be a cross-country trip.

They arrived in Ellwood City Friday. Ominski and Pendleton are experienced bicycle tourists, with trips along the Pacific Coast, Blue Ridge Parkway, and Alaska and Europe over the last 20 years, although this is their most ambitious effort so far.

Since Ominski recently retired, it freed up the three to four months they expect to take traveling to Washington state.

So far, they have followed the Greater Allegheny Passage trail, which runs from Maryland to Pittsburgh, and stopped in Ellwood City en route to Erie via a series of trails. Ominski’s conclusion about Ellwood City might differ from that of locals who note the closed storefronts along Lawrence Avenue.

“We’ve found that every little town is different,” he said. “Ellwood City looks like a pretty nice place. The downtown is busier than in other small towns.”

He said the trip has already been interesting, and listed a stop in Connellsville, Fayette County, where a local historian gave him a lecture on the region’s geology and history.

“We’ve seen a lot of wildlife on the bike trails,” he said.

Pendleton said the weather has been pretty mild for their trip, which is fortunate, because their touring bikes are loaded with camping gear. Since leaving home, they have camped at sites along the trail, except for one particularly rainy night last week when they slept indoors at a hotel near McKeesport, Allegheny County.

After going through Ellwood City on Friday, they headed north for Erie before a planned jaunt west.

Their planned route will carry them through the northwest — the Dakotas, Montana, Idaho and Washington — before arriving at the Pacific, although they admitted it won’t be a round trip.

“We’re going to fly back,” Pendleton said.

© 2012 Ellwood City Ledger. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

World War II memories endure in Ukraine

Posted on 6th May 2012 in The monuments of world

EACH MAY, aging veterans of World War II stand a little taller and prouder as they celebrate the end of that devastating conflict.

In Europe, veterans gather at memorials, in parades and throughout town squares, remembering the six-year-long war that officially ended on May 8, 1945 — Victory in Europe (V-E) Day — with the defeat of Nazi Germany.

In Kiev, the capital of Ukraine, an elderly World War II veteran pays his respects at a monument commemorating that longed-for conclusion. Ukraine, now an independent country, was part of the Soviet Union during the war years. Searing memories endure in Ukraine, especially of the Battle of Kiev when the Nazis encircled more than 600,000 Soviet troops, who were killed or captured in the monthlong attack.

Today, tourists flit through Kiev and other Eastern European cities. Visitors sometimes chuckle at the grandiose Soviet-era monuments and proletarian-pride statues. They ooh and aah at the bristling military parade each May in Moscow that celebrates the end of the European fighting. But many veterans and civilian survivors find quieter moments on V-E Day to remember the soldiers, friends and family who died in a world at war.

Kristin R. Jackson is the editor of The Seattle Times’ NWTraveler section. Contact her at kjackson@seattletimes.com.

Lonely Planet's guide to Poland

Posted on 5th May 2012 in The monuments of world

Medieval Teutonic Castle over Nogat river at sunset. Picture: Witold Skrypczak/ Lonely Planet Source: National Features

Sunset on Baltic Sea beach in Swinoujscie at Uznam Island. Picture: Witold Skrypczak/ Lonely Planet Source: National Features

POLAND wears its charms lightly, but venture into its heart and you’ll find medieval cities, fairytale castles and untouched wilderness, served with an invigorating shot of vodka.

–  A thousand years

Poland’s roots go back to the turn of the first millennium, leaving 1000 years of twists and turns and kings and castles to explore.

History buffs of the World War II vintage are well served. Tragically, Poland found itself in the middle of that epic fight, and monuments and museums dedicated to its battles and to Poland’s remarkable survival can be seen everywhere.

There’s a growing appreciation, too, of the country’s rich Jewish heritage. Beyond the deeply affecting Holocaust memorials, synagogues are being sensitively restored, and former Jewish centres, such as Lodz and Lublin, have set up heritage trails so you can trace this history at your own pace. 

– Castles to log cabins

The former royal capital of Krakow is a living lab of architecture over the ages. Its nearly perfectly preserved Gothic core proudly wears overlays of Renaissance, Baroque and Art Nouveau, a record of tastes that evolved over the centuries.

Fabulous medieval castles and evocative ruins dot hilltops elsewhere in the country, and the fantastic red-brick fortresses of the Teutonic Knights stand proudly in the north along the Vistula.

At the other extreme, simple but finely crafted wooden churches hide amid the Carpathian hills, and the ample skills of the country’s highlanders are on display at the region’s many skansens (open-air ethnographic museums). 

– Heart-warming food

If you’re partial to good home cooking, the way your grandmother used to make it, you’ve come to the right place. Polish food is based largely on local ingredients such as pork, cabbage, mushroom, beetroot and onion, combined simply and honed to perfection.

Regional specialities such as duck, goose, herring and even bison keep things from getting dull.

As for sweets, it’s hard to imagine a more accommodating destination. Cream cakes, apple strudel, pancakes, fruit-filled dumplings and a special national mania for lody (ice cream) may have you skipping the main course and jumping straight to dessert. 

– Fresh-air pursuits

Away from the big cities, much of Poland feels remote and unspoiled. While large swathes are flat, the southern border is lined with low mountains that invite days of solitude.

Marked hiking paths criss-cross the country, taking you through dense forest, along broad rivers and through mountain passes. Much of the northeast is covered by interlinked lakes and waterways that are ideal for kayaking and canoeing no experience necessary.

– Top experiences

* Stately Krakow

A unique atmosphere wafts through the attractive streets and squares of this former royal capital, with its heady blend of history and harmonious architecture.

From the vast Rynek Glowny, Europe’s largest medieval market square, to the magnificent Wawel Castle on a hill above the Old Town, every part of the city is fascinating.

Add to that the former Jewish district of Kazimierz and its scintillating nightlife (and then contrast it with the communist-era concrete structures of Nowa Huta) and it’s easy to see why Krakow is an unmissable destination. 

Wroclaw

Throughout its turbulent history, this city on the Odra River the former German city of Breslau has taken everything invaders could throw at it, and survived.

Badly damaged in World War II, it was artfully rebuilt around its beautiful main square, with an intriguing complex of buildings at its centre. Another attraction is the Panorama of Raclawice, a vast, 19th-century painting hung about the walls of a circular building.

Beyond historical gems, Wroclaw has a vibrant nightlife, with plenty of dining and drinking options on the narrow streets of its lively Old Town. 

Great Masurian Lakes

Sip a cocktail on the deck of a luxury yacht, take a dip, or don a lifejacket, grab your paddle and slide off into a watery adventure on one of the interconnected lakes that make up this mecca for Polish sailing and water-sports fans.

Away from the water, head for one of the region’s buzzing resorts, where the slap and jangle of masts competes with the clinking of glasses and the murmur of boat talk.

In winter, when the lakes freeze over, cross-country skis replace water skis on the steel-hard surface. 

Baltic beaches

The season may be brief and the sea one of Europe’s nippiest, but if you’re looking for a dose of sand, there are few better destinations than the Baltic’s cream-white beaches.

Many people come for the strands along one of the many coastal resorts, be it hedonistic Darlowko, genteel Swinoujscie or the spa town of Kolobrzeg. 

 Malbork Castle

Medieval monster mother ship of the Teutonic order, Gothic blockbuster Malbork Castle is a mountain of bricks held together by a lake of mortar. It was home to the all-powerful order’s grand master and later to visiting Polish monarchs.

They have all now left the stage of history, but not even the shells of World War II could dismantle this baby. If you came to Poland to see castles, this is what you came to see; catch it just before dusk when the sunlight colours the bricks kiln-crimson. 

Folk architecture

If the word skansen, referring to an open-air museum of folk architecture, isn’t a regular part of your vocabulary yet, it will be after your trip to Poland.

These great gardens of log cabins and timbered chalets make for a wonderful ramble. You’ll find what’s reputed to be the country’s biggest skansen in Sanok, in the Carpathians, but there are open-air museums around the country.

You’ll find remnants of old wooden churches and other buildings sprinkled throughout the mountains. 

This is an edited extract from Lonely Planet Poland (7th edition) by Mark Baker. Lonely Planet 2012. Published this month, $41.99, lonelyplanet.com

Friendly Planet Travel Kicks Off Phase II of Its “Win the World” Facebook Sweepstakes, Giving Away 3 Additional Exotic …

Posted on 1st May 2012 in The monuments of world

JENKINTOWN, Pa.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–

Surfing on Facebook has become much more profitable ever since Friendly Planet Travel launched its “Win the World” Sweepstakes. In the kick off of Phase II of the amazing, six-destination giveaway on Facebook, just one click enters fans to win a trip of a lifetime for two to three incredible destinations.

In the first phase of the sweepstakes, three exotic trips for two—to South Africa, Peru, and China—were awarded to Facebook fans during the period of January 1 to March 31. After the excitement of Phase I, and a one-month hiatus to catch its breath, Friendly Planet Travel is ready to launch Phase II.

The first drawing, scheduled for June 1, will award a free trip for two to Turkey on Friendly Planet Travel’s popular Best of Turkey program, valued at more than $5,000. A second drawing, scheduled for July 1,will award a free trip for two to Ireland on Friendly Planet Travel’s A Taste of Ireland tour; and a final drawing, scheduled for August 1, will award a free trip for two to India on Friendly Planet’s Taj Mahal Express tour.

Like Phase I, Phase II will give travel aficionados a chance to escape to an exotic destination with included flights, great hotels, some meals, and plenty of escorted touring.

The “Win the World” Sweepstakes is open to all legal U.S. residents over the age of 21, beginning May 1, 2012 at 12 p.m. EDT and ending July 31, 2012 at 11:59 p.m. EDT. To enter to win, visit Facebook.com/FriendlyPlanetTravel, become a fan of the page, and enter the required information. There is no purchase necessary to enter the sweepstakes, and the winner will be announced on Friendly Planet Travel’s Facebook page, the Friendly Planet Travel website, and the Friendly Planet Travel blog.

The first of the three prizes in the sweepstakes is a getaway for two to the crossroads of Europe and Asia—Turkey. All of the inclusions travelers expect from Friendly Planet Travel are included: round-trip airfare from New York’s JFK airport on Turkish Airlines (including fuel surcharges); ground transportation and transfers within Turkey; and 12 nights in superior, first-class hotels. The package also includes 12 buffet breakfasts and 10 dinners; a professional, English-speaking tour director; a comprehensive touring program; and more.

The tour visits Istanbul, where travelers will see unique and iconic sites, including the Blue Mosque , the Hagia Sophia, and the Grand Bazaar. Travelers will also visit Ankara, Turkey’s capital city, and Cappadocia, a UNESCO World Heritage Site with famous rock formations and underground cities.

The trip also includes a visit to the Mediterranean resort of Antalya, a bustling city and resort town; Pamukkale, an area filled with many hot springs and stunning white terraces; and Kusadasi. Travelers will also take in Ephesus, one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World, and famous for the Temple of Artemis, Temple of Hadrian, and the Great Theater. The ruins of Pergamon; the famed ancient medical center in Asklepion; and the ancient city of Troy, best known as the focus of the Trojan War, are also visited.

The Best of Turkey tour concludes with a ferry across the Dardanelles; a visit to Gallipoli, where one of the fiercest battles of World War I took place; and a farewell group dinner.

The other two tours that will be awarded in Phase II of the “Win the World” Sweepstakes are:

For more information about Friendly Planet Travel, please visit the company’s website at www.FriendlyPlanet.com; the blog at blog.FriendlyPlanet.com; or contact Jackie Zima-Evans at 610-228-2138 (office), 215-534-2973 (mobile), or write to Jackie@GregoryFCA.com. To enter to win and for continual updates about the giveaways, check out Friendly Planet Travel’s Facebook page.

Earth's Most Precious Places

Posted on 22nd April 2012 in The monuments of world
  • preciousplaces.jpg

    Australia’s Great Barrier Reef, the Antarctica and Machu Picchu all suffer from environmental pressures.Annemarie Kohl/ NOAA/ Charles Sharp

In 2007, UNESCO flagged the Galapagos Islands as an endangered place. But in 2010, after Ecuador’s government stepped up conservation efforts, the Galapagos were dropped from the list. It’s a story that gives us hope: With conservation efforts, funding, and a hefty dose of eco-focused TLC, we can turn potential disasters around. With that in mind, we researched places with unique features—wildlife, geography, culture—that would be devastating to lose. Once Africa’s wild lions are extinct, for example, there’s no replacing them. Ditto the island nations of the world, and the 9th-century buildings of Venice. Of course, it’s impossible to rank these spots-how can you say, for example, that the Great Barrier Reef is more (or less) important than the Amazonian jungle? Instead, we put together a timeline that shows just how quickly we could lose these earthly wonders if we don’t act now. Yes, this is a sobering read, but the silver lining is that you can make a difference-here’s how (and how to visit responsibly if you so choose).  

SEE THE PLACES


By the year 2100, we could lose…

Antarctica

Antarctica has no permanent residents, but its existence (or lack thereof) has major implications for everyone on earth. Over the past 50 years, temperatures in parts of the continent have jumped nearly 37 degrees—a rate five times faster than the global average. In 2007, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change released a report predicting sea levels would rise between seven and 23 inches by 2100. One caveat: the numbers didn’t account for Antarctica’s rapid ice melt. Now, researchers believe the sea could shoot up three to six feet by the end of the century. Antarctica’s ice cap holds 70 percent of the freshwater on Earth; if it melts, the oceans could rise 187 feet, decimating entire island nations worldwide (the Maldives, for example). Antarctica’s wildlife is also at risk. Krill are essential to the marine food chain—fish, seals, and whales eat them—but the shrimp-like crustaceans’ numbers have dropped 80 percent since the 1970s, disrupting the whole ecosystem.

Donate: Comprised of more than 30 NGOs worldwide, the Antarctic and Southern Ocean Coalition pushes initiatives like tourism regulation, and sustainable fishing. asoc.org

Go green: G Adventures, a sustainability minded tour operator based in Canada, offers a 13-day Antarctica cruise staffed by historians and marine biologists aboard the M/S Expedition. 888/800-4100, gadventures.com. From $4,999 per person.

Venice, Italy

One of the world’s most beautiful, historic, and romantic cities is built on water—and it could soon find itself under it. Rising ocean levels resulting from global warming are a threat to the low-lying Venice, which is made up of 118 small islands on a lagoon that sits at sea level. Flooding from the Adriatic Sea’s high tides has become dire in the last 60 years. In 1900, Piazza San Marco, Venice’s central square, flooded seven times; in 2002, the number jumped to 108. The ocean’s salt water eats away at Venice’s historic buildings, among them the opulent Palazzo Ducale, which dates back to the 9th century. Floodgates are being built around the city, but they’re not scheduled to begin operation until 2015. Water isn’t the only thing flooding the city. Twenty million tourists visit the city annually, which encourages harmful real-estate development and jams Venice’s waterways with traffic. Advocacy group Venice in Peril estimates that the city may be largely unlivable as early as next century.

Donate: Since 1966, Venice in Peril has spearheaded research on how to protect the city from flooding, as well as worked to restore Venice’s monuments, buildings, and artwork. veniceinperil.org

Go green: If you really want to help Venice, don’t visit. If you must go, though, go smart. Canonici de San Marco is a complex of eco tents eight miles outside of Venice, where you can bike in the countryside or take day-trips into the city (011-39/348-722-5577, viacanonici.com. From $157 per night including breakfast and transfers from the Mirano train station). The water that surrounds the city shaped its past-and is in control of its future. Laguna Eco Adventures offers tours of the lagoons on traditional wooden boats, powered by towering sails (011-39/329-722-6289, lagunaecoadventures.com. From $52 per person for a two to four-hour lagoon tour).


By the year 2070, we could lose…

The Himalayas

Like Antarctica, the Himalayas are covered in ice and snow. In fact, the world’s highest mountain range—which runs 1,500 miles through seven countries, including India and China—contains the planet’s largest non-polar ice mass, with over 46,000 glaciers. And just like in Antarctica, the ice is melting. Between 1950 and 1980, about half of the Himalayas’ glaciers were shrinking. That number hit 95 percent in 2010, and scientists predict that the entire Himalayan land mass may be slashed 43 percent by 2070. Global warming is just one reason—soot from millions of coal- and wood-burning stoves in India and China also take a share of the blame. The glaciers absorb the heat, which exacerbates the warming process. The glacier loss will affect people living along Asia’s 10 major rivers—who make up one-sixth of the total global population-that depend on glacial melt to stave off drought and starvation.

Donate: Founded by an Arizona man in 2009, the Himalayan Stove Project has an ambitious goal: Deliver 10,000 clean-burning, fuel-efficient stoves to Himalayan residents by 2014. himalayanstoveproject.org

Go green: Himalayan Eco Treks, which operates out of Nepal, organizes an array of earth-friendly trips, including a 25-day Best of Everest tour that includes eight days of trekking as well as easier days seeing cultural spots like the ancient town of Bhaktapur, a World Heritage site. 011-977-4/266-382, himalayanecotrek.com. From $2,765 per person for the 25-day tour.


By the year 2040, we could lose…

Wine Regions

The extreme heat waves and frosts that come with climate change affect soil conditions, so much so that the world’s most prestigious wine regions from Bordeaux to Rioja to Napa Valley could be unable to grow quality grapes by the end of the century. To put it in perspective, temperatures in California’s Napa (home to 45,000 acres of vineyards) could jump two degrees in the next 30 years, which would upset the balance of sweetness and acidity crucial to good wine, and essentially shrink America’s most famous wine-producing region by 50 percent. The conditions are so extreme in Europe that long-established wine epicenters could be pushed northward to England and Scotland as continental temperatures rise. In fact, Brits are already ramping up the production of sparkling wines, traditionally the domain of France’s Champagne region: In 1990, England was home to 140 acres devoted to sparkling-wine grapes; by 2010, the number spiked to 1,360.

Donate: Helping wine regions around the world is easy: Buy a bottle. The more money pouring into wine regions, the stronger the local economy–which means winemakers can invest in research and technology to keep their grapes healthy.

Go green: Napa Valley Reservations shuttles drinkers between four eco-friendly wineries in a fuel-efficient Mercedes-Benz Sprinter. 707/252-1985, napavalleyreservations.com. From $130 per person.

SEE MORE FROM BUDGET TRAVEL:

10 Most Sacred Spots on Earth

15 Places Every Kid Should See Before 15

The 14 Most Beautiful Home and Garden Tours in America

15 International Food Etiquette Rules that Might Surprise You

To Go or Not to Go: 11 Places with a Bad Rap


By the year 2030, we could lose…

African Lion Habitats

Africa’s wild lions have it especially rough: In the last 50 years, the continent’s population plummeted from 450,000 to about 40,000, a drop of around 91 percent. The culprit: People. Africa could be home to 1.75 billion people by 2050. As Africa’s human population explodes, the competition for resources (think food) increases while farmers and ranchers encroach onto the lions’ territory. According to the University of Minnesota’s Lion Research Center, Africa’s lions may not survive into the next century; other experts say they could be gone in 20 years.

Donate: The Lion Conservation Fund raises local awareness about lion conservation and restores and protects the animals’ habitats. lionconservationfund.org

Go green: Minnesota-headquartered Kuchanga Travel organizes “volun-tourism” trips to Zambia, where participants gather data on the country’s wild lions and help guides care for the animals. Activities include educating local students about conservation and going on lion walks–literally strolling with the animals in the wild. 612/432-4473, kuchangatravel.com. From $2,080 per person for a two-week trip.

The Amazon

At current deforestation rates, 55 percent of the Amazon’s 1.4 billon acres of rain forests could be gone by 2030. (Overexpansion of agriculture, illegal logging, and climate change are all to blame.) The rain forests, which are home to 30 million indigenous people and one-tenth of the world’s known species, also contain up to 140 billion metric tons of carbon, which helps stabilize the global climate.

Donate: Founded by a pair of tropical ecologists in 1999, the Amazon Conservation Association works to protect the region’s biodiversity. amazonconservation.org

Go green: Ecuador-based Tropic introduces visitors to the Huaorani, an indigenous Amazonian tribe whose members lend tips on tree climbing, kayaking nearby rivers, and face painting with achiote paste. Travelers bunk at an eco-lodge run by the Huaorani, and meals are crafted from local produce. 202/657-5072, tropiceco.com. Five-day trips from $860 per person.

The Alps

Increased carbon dioxide emissions are causing glaciers in the Alps to melt rapidly; according to scientists, most of them could be gone by as early as 2030. In some areas of the 600-mile mountain range, glaciers are shrinking by 3 percent every year. This obviously has dire implications, both in terms of physical catastrophes (massive flooding, which would impact the Alps’ 13 million residents) and economic disasters (the Alps thrive on ski tourism, with more than 120 million annual visitors). In 2006, a Swiss ski-resort owner devised a creative solution to keep glaciers cold: He wrapped one in a 43,000-square-foot fleece blanket. Other resort owners soon followed suit and scientists have since experimented with wool, hemp, and plastic coverings. Also at stake: the region’s 30,000 animal species and 13,000 plant species.

Donate: The World Wildlife Foundation’s European Alpine Program is dedicated to preserving the region’s biodiversity. wwf.panda.org

Go green: If you’re traveling with Utah-based Alpenwild, expect to use public transportation, sleep in local inns–and see incredible scenery. The company’s Best of the Alps tour leads hikers through lush forests and picturesque villages before hitting Zermatt, at the base of the Matterhorn, and the Jungfrao Mountains, home to the Aletschgletcher, Europe’s longest glacier. 800/532-9488, alpenwild.com. From $3,495 per person.


By the year 2020, we could lose…

Virunga National Park, Democratic Republic of the Congo

Founded in 1925, Africa’s oldest national park covers nearly two million acres and includes savannas, swamps, and ice fields. It also contains the highest biological diversity of any national park in Africa, with 2,000 plant species, 706 bird species, and 218 mammal species, including hippos and one-third of the world’s mountain-gorilla population. Virunga has been in trouble for nearly 20 years—poaching and habitat destruction are to blame—but a huge problem is its location: it sits near a war zone. The park lies within the Democratic Republic of the Congo, but borders Rwanda. Rebel soldiers from the Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (believed to have been involved with the Rwandan genocide in 1994) operate within the park, and more than 140 rangers have been killed in the line of duty since 1996. Virunga’s hardwood forests are also being destroyed to support an illegal charcoal trade—if that keeps up, most of the trees in southern Virguna will disappear in 10 years.

Donate: Give directly to Virunga National Park; your money goes towards guarding mountain gorillas (you can pick an individual animal or an entire gorilla family to protect) and other conservation efforts. gorillacd.org

Go green: Safely visit the park with Congo-based Kivu Travel, which offers a five-day Gorilla and Volcano tour that includes a climb up the Nyiragongo volcano and a visit to Virunga’s gorillas. kivutravel.net. From $1,650 per person.

Great Barrier Reef, Australia

Stretching 1,429 miles, Australia’s Great Barrier Reef is the world’s largest and most diverse reef system—and it could be gone in 100 years. Coral cover alone has been reduced by half in the last 50 years, and the GBR as a whole only has a 50 percent chance of survival if global CO2 emissions aren’t cut by at least 25 percent by 2020. It’s no surprise, then, that climate change is partly to blame. (Another culprit: agricultural run-off from farms, which affects water quality and creates algae blooms.) When the ocean warms up, the higher temperatures harm the more than 2,900 coral reefs, along with its 1,500 species of fish, 134 species of sharks and rays, 30 species of marine mammals like whales and dolphins, and 23 species of marine reptiles, including sea snakes and turtles. According to the World Wildlife Fund, more than 1,000 starving turtles washed up on Australian shores in 2011. Their main food source, sea grass, had been wiped out by erratic weather like floods and cyclones. Australia’s economy also depends on the reef: Industries like tourism and fishing rake in an annual $5.4 billion and employ 63,000 people.

Donate: Australia’s Great Barrier Reef Foundation funds environmental research and conservation efforts. barrierreef.org

Go green: Australian eco-tour company Quicksilver runs day-trips from Queensland to the Great Barrier Reef on high-speed catamarans. Once there, you can dive, snorkel, and watch marine life from an underwater observatory. 011-61/7-4087-2100, quicksilver-cruises.com. From $228 per person.


Any moment now, we could lose…

Machu Picchu, Peru

UNESCO called Machu Picchu’s problems “urgent,” and rampant tourism is the biggest threat to Peru’s main attraction. Last year marked the centennial of Machu Picchu’s “discovery” by Yale history lecturer Hiram Bingham; 1 million visitors descended on the site, up 30 percent from 2010. With more visitors comes more construction in nearby towns like Aguas Calientes (already packed with hotels and restaurants), straining the fragile land: riverbanks are erosion-prone, and landslides and fires also threaten the site. Ironically, Peru’s economy depends on visitors. About 90 percent of the country’s tourist revenue this region, and 175,000 local people make their living directly from Machu Picchu tourism. When heavy rains and landslides forced the site to close for two months in 2010, a $200 million loss ensued. Losing Machu Picchu is more than economic. Built as an Andes Mountain retreat for Incan ruler Pachacuti in 1450, the stone city is packed with clues that shed light on ancient Incan civilization. Archeological efforts are still ongoing, and new discoveries include cemeteries, roads, and a series of agricultural terraces.

Donate: The World Monuments Fund, which advocates for endangered sites across the globe, added Machu Picchu to its 2010 watch-list. whc.unesco.org

Go green: On Conservation VIP’s 10-day volun-tourism trip, participants help local park rangers with archeological restoration and maintenance of the Inca Trail. 952/228-5946, conservationvip.org. From $2,850 per person.


 

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Upstate veterans return from DC trip to crowds, cheers

Posted on 18th April 2012 in The monuments of world

GREER – The first veteran came off the flight from Washington on Tuesday night in a wheelchair.

Sheriff’s deputies pushed his chair to the top of the escalator at Greenville-Spartanburg International Airport so the World War II veteran could survey the crowd that had come to greet him and dozens of other veterans who had taken an Honor Flight to the nation’s capital.

The crowd cheered and waved American flags. When the veteran raised his hand to wave and beam at them, they cheered even louder.

Each veteran that came off the flight at GSP received the same enthusiastic welcome — a hero’s welcome that is part of every Honor Flight experience. From Boy Scouts to grandchildren, beauty queens in silver tiaras to motorcycle clubs, sheriff’s deputies and active duty and retired military, people of all ages came out to greet the veterans. Some of the veterans tipped their caps or saluted, much to the delight of those cheering them on.

“It makes me so happy for him that he was able to go,” said Spartanburg resident Carolyn Lawter of her father, Arnold Talmadge King, 84.

King signed up to fight the day after peace was declared in World War II, but he still served in Guam with the U.S. Navy, Lawter said. King learned just Monday that he would have a seat on the Honor Flight, after a last minute cancellation.

“It’s unbelievable,” Lawter said of the crowd of hundreds that had come to greet the homecoming flight. “I had no idea this many people would show up.”

The flight for Upstate veterans on Tuesday was made possible through Honor Flight Upstate SC, a nonprofit, volunteer-based program dedicated to honoring World War II veterans and the sacrifices they have made.

The Upstate group is affiliated with the national Honor Flight Network, which flies World War II veterans to Washington to see the memorial built in their honor, and to experience recognition for their service.

“It has been wonderful — every bit of it,” King said, after meeting up with his family at the airport, including granddaughter Ashey King, 9, who made a patriotic poster that read, “Welcome Home, Papa King” in blue and red glitter.

And being able to see the memorial with dozens of other veterans from World War II?

“Indescribable,” King said. “Everywhere you went, someone had a camera taking your picture.”

His wife, Mae, said she cried when she saw her favorite veteran at the top of the escalator.

“But it made me cry when the first one started coming down,” she said.

Honor Flight Upstate SC has flown more than 500 World War II veterans to Washington since May 2008, according to the organization’s website.

It costs $500 to send a veteran on the trip, covering their plane ticket, bus transportation around Washington, food and other incidental needs, made possible through donations.

When the veterans arrive at Ronald Reagan Washington International Airport in Washington, they receive a hero’s welcome at the gate area — a first for some of the service members — and then embark on the tour that includes not only the memorial built to honor them, but also the Korean, Vietnam, Air Force and Iwo Jima memorials and monuments. The veterans also go to Arlington National Cemetery and observe the changing of the guard at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier.

Doctors, nurses and guardians who are assigned to the veterans are on the flight and there are accommodations for those with health needs or who are wheelchair-bound.

Bill Harpst of Ashtabula, Ohio, came to GSP as a surprise to greet his father, Clifford, 86, when he got home. Clifford Harpst, a Greer resident, served in the U.S. Army in Europe and fought in the Battle of the Bulge.

“This is awesome,” Bill Harpst said of the flag-waving crowd. “It’s long overdue for the veterans.”

George E. “Buck” McIntyre Jr., 84, was at the airport watching eagerly for his brother, John, 90, to reach the escalator.

John McIntyre, now an Easley resident, and Buck McIntyre are both veterans. John McIntyre served with the Army in Europe. Buck enlisted shortly before he was to be drafted. Their late brother, Claude, served in Guam and Okinawa and their father, George, was a World War I veteran. The brothers grew up in Spartanburg’s Arcadia community.

Buck McIntyre wore the name tag he received on a previous Honor Flight. He couldn’t wait to talk with his brother about his experience with the program.

“It makes you feel wonderful to see the respect people have for you,” Buck McIntyre said. “It’s something else.”

John McIntyre said he had visited the memorial in the past, as his son, Jeff, works in Washington. But seeing it with other veterans from the same era was something completely different, he said.

“That was the reason I wanted to go,” John McIntyre said. “It was outstanding.”

For more on how to donate to the Honor Flight program or become a volunteer, visit www.honorflightupstatesc.com.

Landmark French chateau set for major renovations

Posted on 17th April 2012 in The monuments of world

With its fairy-tale facade, elaborately turreted roofline and vast grounds, Chambord is probably the French Loire Valley‘s best-known Renaissance Chateau.

But every house and garden needs a spruce-up now and then, and the French state is about to embark on a four-million-euro ($5.3-million) renovation of this grand home which mixes mediaeval motifs with elegant fancy.

“The general idea of these projects is to re-energise the perception of Chambord,” says the estate’s executive director Jean d’Haussonville.

“We want to highlight Chambord’s uniqueness as an architectural masterpiece and show that it is on paar with some of humanity’s grandest monuments, including the Great Pyramid, Angkor Wat or Machu Picchu in Peru,” he added.

The chateau attracted some two million visitors last year, of whom 780,000 paid to visit the building, which has been listed as a regional UNESCO World Heritage cultural site, while others toured the immense grounds for free.

The chateau is located in the Loire Valley in central France, about 200 kilometres (125 miles) southwest of Paris.

Renovations, which should not impede the tourist traffic, are to begin in the autumn, nearly 500 years after King Francois I commissioned the building of the immense chateau, the largest of the Loire grand estates, which boasts 440 rooms, 365 chimneys and a 5,500-hectare (21-square mile) estate.

It also boasts the largest enclosed forest park in Europe, a long-time favourite for presidential hunts.

The renovations include a re-working of the lawn on the estate’s north and east, following plans drawn by the architect Jules Hardouin-Mansart for Louis XIV. Completion is scheduled for 2014.

“We’re able to rebuild the gardens thanks to plans discovered in the national archives,” says curator Luc Forlivesi.

Walkways leading to the castle, which are dusty in the summer and muddy in winter, will be resurfaced and visitor accomodations will be refitted. A farm will be converted into a luxury hotel with a view of the chateau.

The chateau hopes renovations will help boost its reputation as a cultural centre. Last year, the home hosted its first classical musical festival and it is now highlighting the works of modern artists, as well as offering artist residencies and theatrical events.

The state-run firm in charge of the estate hopes to increase visitor numbers to more than one million paying customers in the coming years.

“We would like to invite the public back to Chambord, even if they think they already know it,” d’Haussonville said.

James Bond stuntman crashes while filming

Posted on 16th April 2012 in The monuments of world

By Seltem Iyigun, Reuters

 A stuntman in the new James Bond film “Skyfall” now shooting in Istanbul lost control of his motorcycle and smashed into the window of a 330-year-old shop in the city’s 15th-century Grand Bazaar, Turkish media said on Monday.

The stuntman swerved to avoid hitting extras while careering through the Grand Bazaar at high speed, the NTV news channel said, but then crashed into the jewellery shop and smashed its crystal glass window.

“It is very nice for the Grand Bazaar to be chosen as a location for shooting this kind of movie. But the bazaar’s administration … didn’t notify us the shooting would be like this,” said Mete Boybeyi, the owner of the shop which once served members of the Ottoman court from the nearby palace.

“This place is regulated by the Council of Monuments. We can’t even change our window without their permission,” he said.

The bureaucracy involved in replacing the window would take quite some time, Boybeyi said, and that would mean the shop would remain shut and a loss of revenue.

“No one from the movie crew came to ask ‘what are your losses?’,” Boybeyi said. “We filed a complaint at the police station.”

“Skyfall”, due for release in October this year, is the 23rd film in the popular and lucrative Bond series. Full details of the plot are a fiercely guarded secret, but in the film, producers say, “Bond’s loyalty to M is tested as her past comes back to haunt her”.

The 1963 Bond film “From Russia with Love” and the 1999 Bond film “The World is Not Enough” were also filmed on location in Istanbul, one of the world’s most historic cities which sits on the banks of the Bosphorus dividing Europe and Asia.

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Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Bond stuntman crashes into Istanbul bazaar

Posted on 16th April 2012 in The monuments of world

A stuntman in the new James Bond film Skyfall, currently shooting in Istanbul, lost control of his motorcycle and smashed into the window of a 330-year-old shop in the city’s 15th-century Grand Bazaar, Turkish media said.

The stuntman swerved to avoid hitting extras while careering through the Grand Bazaar at high speed, the NTV news channel said, but then crashed into the jewellery shop and smashed its crystal glass window.

“It is very nice for the Grand Bazaar to be chosen as a location for shooting this kind of movie. But the Bazaar’s administration … didn’t notify us the shooting would be like this,” said Mete Boybeyi, the owner of the shop which once served members of the Ottoman court from the nearby palace.

“This place is regulated by the Council of Monuments.

“We can’t even change our window without their permission.”

The bureaucracy involved in replacing the window would take quite some time, Mr Boybeyi said, and that would mean the shop would remain shut and suffer a loss of revenue.

“No-one from the movie crew came to ask ‘what are your losses?’,” he said.

“We filed a complaint at the police station.”

Skyfall, due for release in October this year, is the 23rd film in the popular and lucrative Bond series.

Full details of the plot are a fiercely guarded secret, but in the film, producers say, “Bond’s loyalty to M is tested as her past comes back to haunt her”.

The 1963 Bond film From Russia with Love and the 1999 Bond film The World is Not Enough were also filmed on location in Istanbul, one of the world’s most historic cities which sits on the banks of the Bosphorus dividing Europe and Asia.

Reuters