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For them a virtual environment has been constructed which includes a virtual hotel with open elevators which takes the patients up 49 storeys with series of ever scarier balconies. Pioneered by Professor Hans Sieburg of the University of California at San Diego, the greatest success of the virtual-reality treatments is with acrophobics (fear of heights). Virtual-reality methods are being used for psychiatric therapies dealing with problems as varied as sex offences, fear of heights and fear of flying. According to Victorino Bolekia Bonay, mayor of the capital, Malabo: ‘They’ll keep arresting and torturing people and seeing coup plots because all that money will make them even more paranoid.’ Far from filling the tiny country’s coffers, critics argue, the wealth will probably accumulate around President Teodoro Obiang and his ruling clique.
The fine for selling or importing the creams is up to $2,000.Įquatorial Guinea will become the ‘Kuwait of Africa’, the country’s government has promised, as Mobil Oil prepares to pump oil out of the local seabed. Women bleach mainly because of social perceptions that lighter skins are more attractive. But the logic of putting women in prison for their use seems a mite too single-minded.
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Skin-bleaching creams which can permanently damage skin are a problem in other African nations too. In December of last year, Captain Yahya Jammeh, chairman of the military junta, signed the Skin Bleaching (prohibition) Decree 1995, one of more than 70 decrees introduced since it took control in July 1994 and suspended the old constitution. One has been fined nearly $500 with the alternative of a year’s imprisonment with hard labour. No, the NIA was there to pick up three young women for skin bleaching. When The Gambia’s National Intelligence Agency, acting on a tip-off, swooped on the head post office in the capital, Banjul, it was not for mail tampering, suspected sabotage or interference with government documents.
Contact Seeds of Hope – East Timor Ploughshares at Box S, 55 Queen Margaret’s Grove, London N1 4PZ, England. This is why the women who have carried out the post-action support work are considered to be an equal and essential part of the group, even though less publicly prominent.Īt present the group is women only, though support from men is welcome, and future plans may include men more actively.įrom information supplied by Rowan Tilly. These projections can at first give inspiration but are ultimately disempowering because they encourage belief that someone else – who has more courage, commitment, spiritual strength, and so on, ad nauseam, than ourselves – can act on our behalf. The Seeds of Hope group has worked consciously to counter projections of heroism and martyrdom. All actions are non-violent and ‘challenge the sheep-like habit of doing as others do, of not stepping out of line, otherwise known as obedience’. The Ploughshares philosophy, which is not based on any particular religious doctrine, is about breaking through fears for personal safety and taking responsibility for actions. Since their action other Ploughshares women have carried out support and campaigning work. Their sentences could be anywhere between one and fifteen years. All four women are currently on remand at Risley Prison charged with criminal damage and conspiracy to commit such damage to the tune of £2.4 million ($3.8 million). Some days later Angie Zelter, the fourth Ploughshare, was arrested after publicly stating her intention to disarm a Hawk.
Over two hours later, after much singing, dancing in front of the security cameras and waving to a patrol that went past they finally phoned the British Press Association from within the hangar asking them to phone security at British Aerospace. Lotta Kronlid, Andrea Needham and Joanna Wilson then hung up banners, poured seeds and ashes over the wings, put up photographs of children along with a video and a report from their group Seeds of Hope – East Timor Ploughshares. The women took out household hammers and blow by blow disabled all those components and devices that were connected to weaponry – like the nose cone, the radar, the bomb attachment under the wings and the control devices in the cockpit. Soon after, they magically found themselves inside the south hangar, right in front of a Hawk jet destined for Indonesia, where it was to be used against the people of East Timor, who have suffered the loss of more than a third of their population since 1975. In the early hours of Monday, 29 January 1996, three women snipped their way through the fence of the British Aerospace factory and test site in Warton, Lancashire.