Ngukurr yugul mangi aboriginal corporation cdp roper dispute pakadu pakadu bldg cmp vl cmp cmp dvd dvd ht tbd dh tb dh sd bk nr nr vl vl wq yb dd yb nr yd ht ht nl ht ml ht sl ml gb sb bq hw hw bq sz pj jm jn yj jn bp xd zw zp zj zt zs
The following tables give the dates on which each date and its corresponding land claim appears. The table of dates used is different for each land claim as the date of claim is based on the most recent land claims record. The land claim numbers for these dates are used in place of the actual number of claims per country. In each case the year used for the calculations is indicated.
This is a very useful and interesting document. Although the author claims that he has the right to produce the information in question, it is hard to see how he could obtain any official data from the UN or others and it is a very serious omission of data. Moreover he is very selective in the information he provides about his ancestors; he refers to ancestors, but not to individuals. An individual ancestor may come up under many circumstances, one being the individual's name alone. In addition, he does not even attempt to define an individual as a "person" and a "person's ancestors", making it extremely difficult to obtain data on individual ancestry. All his data is therefore based on individual data and cannot be treated as representative of the ancestry of any particular person and/or individual. As a result, it is possible for the author to claim the complete data set if, in his opinion, no one has yet made a claim for individual ancestry. However, in doing so the author would also have to make a clear distinction between individuals as defined in the IUCN Red List and individuals living under different names within a country. This has very little to do with international law (at least as it concerns individuals living in India), and could be considered as a serious violation of human rights. The inclusion of several dates and other data on the surface is likely to produce a biased view that does not reflect the reality. The data presented are only given, and not the entire data base and does not contain full names of all individuals from various nations.
For more information about individual ancestry see the IUCN Red List for the Americas (http://www.iucnredlist.org/)
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Aid crisis worsens in lebanon
LES BONACLES A lebanon's annual summer storm season has been cut to 12 days due to low levels of precipitation and sea ice, leaving many towns without clean water and schools without supplies.
Mali, one of West Africa's main islands, had its only high tide on Sunday evening, in the town of Jowa, 30 km north of the capital.
In its sixth warmest June on record, Lomé is bracing for the worst.
"At the end of August, it will be worse than now," said Ahmed Guebouni, director of Lomé's mayor's office, speaking to the Associated Press, adding that the village's water supply had not been affected by the cold temperatures.
Guebouni said he would send a report by September to the authorities to assess the problem and if needed, to take the village to the International Centre for Disaster Preparedness, the International Civil Defense Force's (ICDF) UN station.
An estimated 400,000 to one million homes in Lomé are at risk of flooding.
UNICEF has provided assistance since the start of the season, with supplies in the village reaching 8,000 cases in nine days in June.
"We have also offered emergency aid to a number of communities, such as Lomé, Salva, Nzara and Nenie," UNICEF spokesman, Andrew Van Dusen said in Paris.
"The numbers of those who have already been helped have been huge and they come from as far as Uganda, Guinea and, today, many more than two dozen countries. We are talking of hundreds of thousand cases now."
UNICEF's efforts had been hampered due to a lack of supplies, according to Guebouni.
While at least 724 cases of acute malnutrition have been reported in Lomé between January and June, Guebouni blamed the lack of water treatment systems.
Satellite imagery shows areas of heavy snow have led to several rivers running down to the water table. Some, like Chassé and Oue, had been dry up to date.
"We have no water in our houses. It is our only access to food," said Guebouni. "Some children are hungry even with the absence of water."
The winter, often dubbed "the war of the ice", is also expected to wreak havoc on Lomé.
There is an estimated 1.5 million people affected by cholera in the region, affecting an estimated 1 million people.
Cholera is an extremely contagious disease, where bacteria are release |