Kidnapped Canadian baby found ‘Thanks to Facebook’

Posted by Unknown on Thursday, May 29, 2014 | 0 comments | Leave a comment...

A baby that was kidnapped Monday in Canada has been found thanks to four Facebook users.
Newborn infant Victoria was abducted from hospital in in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, by a young woman disguised in a nurse’s uniform. Alerts by the local police, featuring details of the suspect’s vehicle, together with a security image of her, went viral on Facebook and Twitter. A Facebook user thought she recognized her former neighbor in the picture and decided to drive, together with three friends, to the former neighbor’s apartment building. They found the wanted car parked outside and called the police.
The police arrived on the scene within minutes and found the suspect and the unharmed baby.
In an emotional Facebook update, the mother of the child described how she and her husband lived through “the worst time of their lives” until their baby was found.
“Four wonderful people, who we’ve had the chance to meet, identified this woman thanks to Facebook. It is the only reason that explains why Victoria is in my arms at this time,” Mélissa McMahon wrote in a Facebook update that has been shared more than 20,000 times, before going on to thank people who shared and retweeted the police alerts.
“In less than an hour, the photo [of the suspect] was everywhere … You were among the more than thousands of people who shared the photo of this woman on social media … Know that it was this that saved her, our little Victoria. Every click, every share made the difference.”
The suspect is in custody and has been hospitalized for mental evaluation.

Sri Lankan elephants transferred to US Zoo

Posted by Unknown on Saturday, May 24, 2014 | 0 comments | Leave a comment...


Three female Asian elephants, including two Sri Lankan-born took up residence at the Smithsonian's National Zoo in Washington on Friday after a 2,500-mile (4,000-kilometer) road trip from western Canada.

Sri Lanka-born Kamala and Swarna, both 39, and Kamala's Canadian-born daughter Maharani, 23, are joining the National Zoo's own four elephants after a week traversing North America in two trucks accompanied by zookeepers and veterinarians.

"It's going to be very exciting to see the two herds get to know each other and form a new herd here," National Zoo elephant curator Tony Barthel said in a statement.

The Calgary Zoo in Alberta announced in 2012 that it wanted to relocate its elephants, citing the city's cold climate, an inability to expand and a desire to see them live in a bigger herd.

Records indicate that Kamala and Swarna lived for a time at the Pinnawala Elephant Orphanage in Sri Lanka with two of the elephants already at the National Zoo.

But the zoo -- home to a $56 million special facility for endangered Asian elephants -- said there was "no way to definitively determine" if they would recognize each other.

Now in quarantine for 30 days as they adapt to their new surroundings, the immigrant pachyderms can be seen on the National Zoo's "elephant cam" at nationalzoo.si.edu.(AFP)

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