Graphic film on female sex tourists cheered in Cannes

Graphic film on female sex tourists cheered in Cannes

A graphic, unflinching look at the delicate interplay of desire, money and power among European women sex tourists and African gigolos hit the screen yesterday in the Cannes contender “Paradise: Love”.

Austrian director Ulrich Seidl, who scandalised cinema’s top international showcase five years ago with another take on rich and poor and the sex trade, “Import/Export”, this time turns his camera on women as the consumers.

“Paradise: Love” stars Margarethe Tiesel as Teresa, a 50-year-old Viennese single mother of an insolent teenage daughter who needs a break from it all, in a breakout performance cheered by audiences here.

She sets off alone to the white sandy coast of eastern Kenya where she falls in with a group of “sugar mamas”, fellow middle-aged women who feel neglected at home and seek the attention of much younger local men in exchange for cash.

“It is about female loneliness that takes hold when you reach a certain age and no longer look like someone from an advert,” Tiesel told reporters.

“The exploited begin to exploit in a place where they have power. I don’t judge these women, I understand them and I understand completely what they struggle with.”

Tiesel, an accomplished stage actress in her first major film role, appears nude through much of the picture and has various on-screen couplings with Kenyan “beach boys” that leave little to the imagination.

She said her faith in Seidl as a director gave her the confidence to expose herself to such an extent.

“Ulrich told me from the beginning, ‘Nothing will happen that you don’t want to happen, Frau Tiesel’,” she said.

Teresa begins tentatively at first, breaking off a tryst with an insistent lover when he goes too fast for her.

But she soon meets Munga (Peter Kuzungu), a dreadlocked charmer and a willing student in the ways of Western seduction.

However as their affair continues, his demands for money become more frequent as he describes the plight of his poor “sister” and her baby.

When Teresa finds out the woman is actually his wife, she flies into a jealous rage and beats him in front of the other guests on the hotel’s palm-lined beach.

Duped and disappointed, she steels herself to ferociously pursue beach boys with little regard for their dignity, or her own.

Seidl, one of 22 directors competing for the top prize at Cannes this year — all of them men, said many Western women were looking for more than a holiday fling, a key difference to male sex tourism in developing countries.

“This is about our society in the first place and asking why women like Teresa find themselves so lonely. They go to these places where they think they can get what they need — their desire for happiness, sexuality and tenderness,” he said.

“Women from the rich West exploit young African men. But it’s also a business, and they (the men) get something for it.”

“Paradise” revisits ground covered in the trailblazing 2005 film “Heading South” starring Charlotte Rampling and set in a Haitian resort but critics hailed a fresh approach to the rich subject matter.

“Import/Export” dealt with women from the former Soviet Union working in the West as prostitutes and featured a notorious scene in which an amateur actress performed on-screen oral sex on an actor after being made to crawl on all-fours and bark like a dog.

Some critics hailed the work as a brilliant take on the commoditisation of the human body under modern capitalism but the Hollywood Reporter notably dismissed the Cannes competition entry as a “tawdry little film”.

Source: Yahoo News

Malawi president vows to repeal gay ban

Malawi president vows to repeal gay ban

Former president Bingu wa Mutharika and President Joyce Banda wave to supporters of the Democratic Progressive Party. Picture: Amos Gumulira Source: AFP

MALAWI’s new president has announced she will repeal her southern African country’s ban on homosexual acts.

President Joyce Banda’s announcement during her first state of the nation address on Friday is one of several steps she has taken that break with the administration of her predecessor, Bingu wa Mutharika, who died in office in April.

Malawi faced international condemnation for the conviction and 14-year prison sentences given to two men in 2010, who had been arrested after celebrating their engagement and were charged with unnatural acts and gross indecency.

Mutharika pardoned the couple, but said it was on “humanitarian grounds only” and insisted they had “committed a crime against our culture, against our religion, and against our laws”.

Source: Yahoo News

Malawi to overturn ban on homosexuality

Malawi to overturn ban on homosexuality

MALAWI’S new president has announced she will repeal her southern African country’s ban on homosexual acts.

President Joyce Banda’s announcement during her first state of the nation address on Friday is one of several steps she has taken that break with the administration of her predecessor, Bingu wa Mutharika, who died in office in April.

Malawi faced international condemnation for the conviction and 14-year prison sentences given to two men in 2010, who had been arrested after celebrating their engagement and were charged with unnatural acts and gross indecency.

Mutharika pardoned the couple, but said it was on “humanitarian grounds only” and insisted they had “committed a crime against our culture, against our religion, and against our laws”.

Source: Yahoo News

Lawyer blames Ugandan rebels for slaughter

Lawyer blames Ugandan rebels for slaughter

Published: 16 May 12 07:38 CET | Double click on a word to get a translation
Online: http://www.thelocal.se/40860/20120516/

The lawyer of a Swedish company boss jailed in Central African Republic with 10 others on suspicion of murder on Tuesday said the real killers were rebels of Uganda’s Lord’s Resistance Army.

The man, who heads the big game Central African Wildlife Adventures company, and 10 of his employees were charged with murder on May 10, after 13 miners were found dead in March at Ngungunza in the northeast of the country.

“The real killers are elements of the LRA,” lawyer Mathias-Barthelemy Morouba told AFP.

“The victims were bound with bicycle tyres carefully cut up into ropes, then they were beaten with sticks until they died.

“The murderers also used daggers and machetes, because the rear part of the skull of some victims has been cracked open with a machete. Nowhere in this country do we see massacres of this kind,” he added.

Ngungunza is in an area “infested with ‘Tongo-Tongo’ (LRA rebels). So we cannot say that Erik Mararv, who contacted the police, (and) who brought to the site the Central African armed forces armed to the teeth, is the one who killed these 13 people. All the same, he makes a funny killer,” Morouba said.

A member of the paramilitary police, who asked not to be named, told AFP that the Sweden and the other 10 suspects, some of them foreigners, were being held in Bangui’s central Ngaragba prison.

Chased out of Uganda, the head of the LRA, Joseph Kony is believed to be in the Central African Republic with several hundred men, according to the United Nations in late March.

Source: Yahoo News

Lion World Tours Offers a 5-Star South Africa Safari Trip

Lion World Tours Offers a 5-Star South Africa Safari Trip

DELRAY BEACH, Fla., May 15, 2012 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — You can watch the sun rise from your bedroom’s private viewing deck at Lion Sands River Lodge, which is positioned on a site with trees dating back 800 years. The Lodge is about spirit, warmth, nature and relaxation, hosted by a family of staff that will make it feel like home away from home. Alternatively you can sip fine wine in one of Tinga Game Lodge‘s spacious suites as the animals stop by for a drink from the Sabie River. Tinga offers the ultimate combination of total luxury and first-class service and is one of Africa’s premier destinations offering the ultimate African safari experience.

The ten-day Lion Sands in Style package includes:

  • Roundtrip flights from Toronto, Montreal or Ottawa to connect with your international flight
  • International flights from New York (JFK) or Washington, D.C., on top-rated South African Airways
  • Flights within South Africa and all ground transfers
  • Four nights at the upscale More Quarters in Cape Town
  • Three nights at the 5-star Lion Sands River Lodge or Tinga Game Lodge in this big-5 wildlife paradise
  • Six open-vehicle game drives
  • Half-day tour of the Ernie Els Winery near Cape Town
  • 13 meals: Seven breakfasts, three lunches and three dinners

Lion Sands in Style is valid for travel September 2, 11, 18 (Lion Sands) and October. 5, 12, 31 (Tinga Game Lodge)

To book any of these travel deals, call Lion World Tours at 1-800-387-2706 (USA) or 1-800-668-9968 (Canada) or visit www.lionworldtours.com for detailed itineraries of the deals offered.

FOR MORE INFORMATION

Arnelle Kendall | Vice President of Public Relations

The Travel Corporation | 110 East Atlantic Avenue Suite 325 | Delray Beach, Florida 33444 | USA

E: arnelle.kendall@travcorpusa.com | T: 561.330.0850

__________________________________________________________________________

Terri Jankelow | Sales Manager

Lion World Tours | 33 Kern Road | Toronto, Ontario M3B 1S9 | Canada

E: terri@lionworldtravel.com | T: 1-416-920-5466

__________________________________________________________________________

About Lion World Tours

Lion World Tours specializes in group and individual tours to Southern and East Africa, and is a member of The Travel Corporation, which also includes Trafalgar, Contiki, Brendan Vacations, Red Carnation Boutique Hotel Collection, Uniworld Boutique River Cruise Collection and Insight Vacations. In its fifth decade, clients continue to benefit from Lion World Tours’ destination knowledge, expertise, and emphasis on customer service. With their safari specialists all having first-hand knowledge of Africa, Lion World Tours can confidently assist clients in creating an African adventure that fits their specific interests as well as their budget. Affordable luxury and value for money are what keep clients coming back to Lion World Tours.

This information was brought to you by Cision http://www.cisionwire.com

http://www.cisionwire.com/the-travel-corporation-usa/r/lion-world-tours-offers-a-5-star-south-africa-safari-trip,c9260609

Source: Yahoo News

Swedish man charged for Central African slaughter

Swedish man charged for Central African slaughter

Published: 15 May 12 07:43 CET | Double click on a word to get a translation
Online: http://www.thelocal.se/40836/20120515/

A Swedish professional hunter and 10 members of his safari firm have been charged with murder after 13 miners were found dead in the northeast of the country, police said Monday.

Erik Mararv, who heads the big game Central African Wildlife Adventures company, and the 10 employees, several of them foreigners, “were charged with murder on Thursday and remanded in custody in Bangui’s central N’garagba prison where they were being held,” a police official told AFP.

They were initially detained last month in Bakuma and Bangassu and then taken to the capital Bangui.

The bodies of the 13 miners who had been working in Ngungunza were discovered on March 29th.

Photos of the dead men showed them to have been bound with their hands behind their backs and beaten or stabbed to death, police had earlier said.

“The inquiry that followed the discovery of the 13 corpses in the Ngungunza mining worksite … was carried out with utmost discretion with a view to gathering a maximum of evidence likely to lead to the truth,” the official said.

At the time of his arrest, the Swede’s wife insisted her husband had nothing to do with the killings.

“In the southern part of our hunting grounds there is a place where they pan gold in a stream. We were building roads in that area, and we had some employees from central Africa working with us. They went down to the stream to fetch water and found dead people. They called my husband and asked him what to do,” the man’s wife told daily Expressen at the time of his arrest in mid-April.

The organization Human Rights Watch wrote on their website that they have documented several attacks in the region, suspected to having been carried out by The Ugandan Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) rebel group, “including a massacre of 13 artisanal gold diggers in the Cawa Safari camp area around March 20”.

The group says that further investigations will be required to determine if the attack was carried out by the LRA or not, although the massacre resembled previous LRA attacks in Congo.

“The victims were beaten to death with machetes and pieces of wood. Some were tied up or stripped naked before they were killed. The LRA is the only armed group suspected to have been active in the camp area recently,” the organization wrote.

Source: Yahoo News

Respected leader a 'lord of Sydney drug trade'

Respected leader a 'lord of Sydney drug trade'

Nigerian Chief Maximus Osuamadi with John Watkins, Tanya Gadiel and David Borger. Photo is believed to have been taken about 5 years ago. Picture: Facebook Source: Supplied

Nigerian Chief Maximus Osuamadi with former Labor Premier Morris Iemma. Photo is believed to have been taken about 5 years ago. Picture: Facebook Source: Supplied

  • Suspect a respected elder in the West African community
  • Police say he’s a major player in an African crime syndicate
  • Osuamadi denies the allegations, back in court May 30

TO some, including Sydney’s politicians and business leaders, Maximus Osuamadi was a Nigerian tribal chief who boasted royal ties.

Referring to himself as “His Royal Highness”, he posted pictures of himself posing with former premier Morris Iemma and other ex-government MPs on his Facebook site.

Apparently from the state of Owerri, he was a respected elder in the West African community that had made the western suburbs its home.

But the New South Wales drug squad claims Osuamadi is a major player in an African crime syndicate operating in Sydney for the past few years.

Last month he was among eight Nigerians arrested in raids across Sydney and Adelaide over the importation of cocaine, methamphetamines and heroin into Australia.

There is no suggestion Mr Iemma or other MPs were aware of the alleged crimes.

The arrests came after a major undercover operation to “identify and prosecute syndicate members involved in WAOC (Western African organised crime) criminal activities in NSW”.

In a police statement tendered to Burwood Local Court, officers said: “The syndicate and the accused are highly involved in the importation of prohibited drugs.”

Police said Osuamadi frequently left his home in Granville to return to Nigeria and other countries.

“It is known to investigators that members of the syndicate and the accused are involved in the supply of and have access to false identification and passports,” the police alleged.

The court was told of an alleged deal between Osuamadi, a male co-accused and an undercover officer in which Osuamadi said he was planning to travel to China to organise the smuggling of heroin. He said although he no longer had any drugs to sell, he could broker a deal for a drug buy from his co-accused and help fund the importation.

Osuamadi told the undercover officer his associate, Chidi Amagwula, had 590g of methamphetamine to sell. The officer was to get a sample before a bulk amount – 500g for $22,000 per 100g – was supplied at a later date.

The court heard a series of clandestine meetings took place between Osuamadi, Amagwula, who was among those arrested, and the officer.

Osuamadi, who denies the allegations, was charged on April 4, denied bail and is back in court on May 30. 

Source: Yahoo News

'Good lad' David jailed for reporting massacre

'Good lad' David jailed for reporting massacre

Infamous ... Joseph Kony.

David Simpson was exploring a remote area in a region thought to be run by the Lord’s Resistance Army, headed by the self-styled messiah Joseph Kony. Photo: AP

David Simpson could not have been happier. Having left behind his family farm on the edge of the North York Moors in England, the 24 year-old was working for an exclusive safari company in the Central African Republic.

He was tracking herds of antelope and elephants, living in the forest camp and flying clients across the country in his light aircraft.

Now he is in a grim African prison. Mr Simpson, from the small village of Gillamoor, is languishing in a cell in Bangui – the capital of one of Africa’s wildest, most corrupt and least developed countries.

He had stumbled across a massacre, finding 18 bodies in the lawless south-east of the country, and reported it to the police. But to his horror, and that of his parents, it was Mr Simpson who was charged.

“I just keep on thinking, ‘How can this be happening?”‘ said his mother Vicky, 53, sitting in the conservatory of the family home, which has views of rolling hills. Their four black labradors lolled at her heels, and the immaculately kept house was filled with flowers from friends and wellwishers.

“In the rest of the world it would never have even got to an investigation, let alone being put in prison,” she said. “I was happy that he was out there, because I knew he was happy. But I never expected this.” Mr Simpson’s sister Helen, 17, added: “Here you are innocent until proven guilty. Out there it seems to be the exact opposite.”

The family can talk to him on his mobile phone, and say he is resilient but desperate to get out. It could take a year for the case to come to trial. Last week he was moved from Bangui’s police cells to the country’s main prison, where he shares a cell with about 60 other prisoners.

They cannot lie down without elbowing other inmates and there is no food provided. Mr Simpson, who is being held with his boss Erik Mararv, 27, relies on food brought by Mr Mararv’s sister.

On Friday, the UK Foreign Office said it had registered a formal complaint with the authorities in Bangui. But the family is angry that the British authorities have been so slow to act since Mr Simpson reported the murders on March 23 and was imprisoned on March 29.

“It’s been amazing how little the Foreign Office has done,” said his father Peter, 54, who rears pheasants and partridges for shoots. “I’m a straight-talking Yorkshire gamekeeper, so I told them in no uncertain terms that they had to do something. He’s a good lad and it’s not right that he is in prison for reporting a crime.”

His son was passionate about his work in the Central African Republic – despite having scarcely set foot out of Yorkshire before.

For his 18th birthday his parents had bought him flying lessons, and he relished the experience. But he was working at a door factory in Sheffield and hated city life.

He was unsure what to do with his life. Then, in 2010, he saw a documentary about managing safari farms in Africa, rounding up and monitoring animals by plane. He emailed the producer, and two months later was starting a new life in a country which he had previously not heard of.

His role was to fly over the jungle which carpets most of the country, spotting new herds and watering holes.

When the sites were identified, the safari company Cawa would set about building roads and setting up the camps to work in that area. Big-game hunters would flock to the country, paying in excess of £40,000 ($65,000) for a fortnight to shoot animals such as the giant eland or the bongo – both huge, beautifully-striped antelopes. Leopards, lions, buffalo and baboons also populate the lush forest.

With there being almost no roads, Mr Simpson would fly the guests in his light aircraft from camp to camp.

“I had never seen him so happy,” said his brother Paul, 22, who visited him. “He had a pet monkey and was learning the local dialect, Sangho. He believed his work was really important. If the hunting company didn’t exist then poachers would wipe out a lot of the animals, killing them for the meat and hides. Two thirds of the people in the village with the camp rely on the company for their livelihoods. He absolutely loved it out there.”

On March 23, Mr Simpson was exploring a remote area in a region thought to be run by the Lord’s Resistance Army.

The militia, headed by the self-styled messiah Joseph Kony, has terrorised Uganda, Sudan and the Democratic Republic of Congo for 25 years, murdering thousands and abducting an estimated 20,000 children to serve as soldiers.

With his African colleagues, Mr Simpson was looking for signs of wildlife. Instead they found the remains of 18 villagers who had been tortured with boiling water and hacked to death with machetes.

The Yorkshireman knew many of them, having worked in the villages. One of his African colleagues recognised his brother. Another saw his cousin among the dead.

The men went to get the police. But they were dismayed when officials took one photograph on a mobile phone and left. The situation took a dangerous turn when the military then told local people that the safari company had killed their men.

“He realised the situation was turning, so he ran to his plane but they were chasing him,” said Paul. “He was fired at while he was taking off. The locals then burnt the truck and looted one of the depots. It was chaos.”

Mr Mararv, a Swedish citizen born in the Central African Republic, voluntarily went to the police in the capital to assist their investigation. But he was arrested, and several days later Mr Simpson and 13 local staff were also detained. They suspect that they are being held because officials hope to obtain huge bribes.

“The justice minister told us they could be free for 1 million euro [$1.3 million],” said Paul. “It’s a joke. They see white people and think we are the money tree.”

Mr Simpson is hoping international pressure will speed up his release. Despite his ordeal, he is keen to continue his work in Africa, and his family wants to travel there.

“I’d like to go and visit him, and I think we might go in January,” said his mother. “But I think we need to sort this mess out first.”

The Sunday Telegraph, London

Source: Yahoo News

David Simpson: British safari man accused of mass murder 'framed by local poachers'

David Simpson: British safari man accused of mass murder 'framed by local poachers'

By George Arbuthnott

|

Behind bars: David Simpson could face the death penalty if convicted of murder after finding 18 mutilated bodies in the Central African Republic

Behind bars: David Simpson could face the death penalty if convicted of murder after finding 18 mutilated bodies in the Central African Republic

A British man jailed in Africa after discovering the site of a suspected massacre may have been framed by locals he had banned from poaching, it was claimed yesterday.

David Simpson, 24, was working for a safari firm in the Central African Republic when he says he came across 18 mutilated bodies.

He reported the horrific discovery to the authorities but was later arrested and charged with murder.

The Cawa safari company’s Swedish boss, Erik Mararv, is also being held.

Sources close to the case claim the official police report into the killings contains evidence based solely on hearsay.

One said: ‘Some of the local people have attempted to frame the men because they were not allowed to poach on the firm’s land or because the company did not employ them, or because they have been fired.’ 

Mr Simpson, from Gillamoor, near Pickering, North Yorkshire, denies  the accusations.

He could receive the death penalty if found guilty but before anything is decided, he faces up to six months in jail as an independent judicial review is carried out.

Even if he is released, he will not be allowed to leave  the country until legal proceedings are concluded.

It is widely believed supporters of the notorious warlord Joseph Kony carried out the killings.

His militia, the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA), which is bolstered by thousands of child soldiers, is said to have carried out two similar massacres in recent months.

And it is claimed the LRA previously took a number of the safari firm’s employees hostage, including one staff member who was held for 18 months.

Framed? Mr Simpson, pictured with a colleague from the big game hunting company he worked with, may have been set up by locals

Framed? Mr Simpson, pictured with a colleague from the big game hunting company he worked with, may have been set up by locals

Mr Simpson spoke to British journalists from jail by telephone last week. He lives in a single cell with Mr Mararv and ten other employees. They are all ‘officially suspected’ of the killings.

Mr Simpson says he discovered the mutilated bodies on March 22 when clearing a route with some colleagues through dense bush on the southern border of Cawa’s vast hunting reserve.

He claims they were together in groups of four lying face-down in circles with their heads together.

Wanted: It is widely believed supporters of the notorious warlord Joseph Kony carried out the killings

Wanted: It is widely believed supporters of the notorious warlord Joseph Kony carried out the killings

His father Peter said: ‘He has not really spoken about the experience of finding the men which is worrying. He said it is not affecting his sleep but we do not know how it will affect him in the future.

‘He knew the men he found, many of them by name, as they had worked for the company.’

It has also emerged that the bodies were never recovered from the jungle. Locals say they are now likely to have been eaten by animals.

Source: Yahoo News