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nedjelja, 06.11.2011.

NELSON LAW FIRM - LAW FIRM


NELSON LAW FIRM - MILITARY DIVORCE ATTORNEY.



Nelson Law Firm





nelson law firm






    law firm
  • a firm of lawyers

  • A law firm is a business entity formed by one or more lawyers to engage in the practice of law. The primary service provided by a law firm is to advise clients (individuals or corporations) about their legal rights and responsibilities, and to represent their clients in civil or criminal cases,

  • The Law Firm is an hour-long reality television series that premiered on NBC on July 28, 2005. In the series, twelve young up-and-coming trial lawyers competed for a grand prize of $250,000.





    nelson
  • A wrestling hold in which one arm is passed under the opponent's arm from behind and the hand is applied to the neck (half nelson), or both arms and hands are applied (full nelson)

  • Armed trawler Nelson was a British auxiliary warship which served during World War I. She was built in 1905 as the fishing smack G&E, operating from Lowestoft and registered as LT 649. In 1915 she was armed for defence against U-boat attack, and fought several actions against them.

  • English admiral who defeated the French fleets of Napoleon but was mortally wounded at Trafalgar (1758-1805)

  • any of several wrestling holds in which an arm is passed under the opponent's arm from behind and the hand exerts pressure on the back of the neck











Mondulkiri: Rubber plantation dispute




Mondulkiri: Rubber plantation dispute





SITUATION IN MONDOLKIRI TENSE AFTER LAND CLASHES
12/23/08
Kuch Naren
and Katie Nelson
The Cambodia Daily

Sen Monorom town, Mondolkiri province - Tension continued Monday following the weekend's violent confrontation between ethnic minority villagers and workers for the Khaou Chuly company who are clearing 2,705 hectares of land for a massive rubber plantation in Pech Chreada district, which the villagers say is their land.
Three of the firm's excavators were torched and another smashed by hundreds of villagers who protested on Saturday morning against the company's clearing of contested land.
No one was hurt during the protest, though armed police reportedly raised their guns and pointed them at the protestors in order for them to retreat.
"[On Sunday] I held negotiations with all seven village chiefs and with the commune councilor, but unfortunately I could not meet with the villagers," said Yim Lux, Mondolkiri deputy provincial governor.
"I am really deeply sorry over the wrongdoings that have been committed by the villagers who used violence to destroy the property of the company," he said.
Workers for the Khaou Chuly company, which was granted a land concession by the government in late 2007 to establish the rubber plantation, said on Monday the villagers showed up caring tools and plastic bags and water bottles filled with gasoline and diesel.
"There were 12 of us and many of them. I tell you honestly that those villagers were not unarmed, they carried axes, hoes, machetes and small knives. We are afraid they will come back," said Oum Chreang, 59, one of the workers.
"It is not even the company they are hurting. We are families who are trying to earn a living," Oum Chreang said, adding that he and others are merely contract workers who have been hired to clear the land and are not Khaou Chuly staff.
Villagers, who refused to give their names because they fear retribution for speaking out, said they are now staying close to their homes because they are afraid of being arrested by the numerous local, provincial and military police who have been deployed to the area since Saturday.
Those interviewed on Monday who had taken part in the protest said that they had chopped at excavators with axes, but the axes were already at the site and were being used to clear the forest.
Nhim Mak, Pech Chreada village chief, appealed for calm on Monday.
"Now provincial authorities and provincial police are resolving this matter but I am very sorry for the incident because whatever the villagers have done was quite violent," he said.
"They should calm down," he said.
According to Nhim Mak, several police officers were injured during the confrontation with the villager after they arrived at the scene on Saturday.
"They were bitten by the villagers," he said, adding that the officers did not fight back for fear of being accused of brutality.
In dispute is a large swath of forest several kilometers from the famous Busra commune waterfall that locals says has been farmed by 1,030 local families have grown rice, bananas and cassava for the past three decades.
The government in 2007 awarded that land in a 99-year lease to Khaou Chuly Group, and the firm started clearing portions of the forest in April. A large rubber tree nursery is already in operation and thousands of saplings already dot the site.
The villagers say they are objecting to further forest clearance until they receive proper compensation for the loss of their land.
Saturday's protest involved around 400 villagers marching to the disputed property where a dozen workers were using four excavators to clear trees and brush.
Yim Lux said he hopes to negotiate a peaceful settlement with the villagers and the company, though those responsible for Saturday's violence would be prosecuted.
"I will try my best to negotiate and compromise with the company but the people who caused violence destroyed property will face the law system for their wrongdoings," he said.












i-am-prepared-to-die--extracts-from-nelson-mandela-s-1964-rivonia-trial-speech




i-am-prepared-to-die--extracts-from-nelson-mandela-s-1964-rivonia-trial-speech





After the 1948 election victory of the Afrikaner-dominated National Party, which supported the apartheid policy of racial segregation, Mandela began actively participating in politics. He led prominently in the ANC's 1952 Defiance Campaign and the 1955 Congress of the People, whose adoption of the Freedom Charter provided the fundamental basis of the anti-apartheid cause.[20]] During this time, Mandela and fellow lawyer Oliver Tambo operated the law firm of Mandela and Tambo, providing free or low-cost legal counsel to many blacks who lacked attorney representation.
Mahatma Gandhi influenced Mandela's approach, and subsequently the methods of succeeding generations of South African anti-apartheid activists. (Mandela later took part in the 29–30 January 2007 conference in New Delhi marking the 100th anniversary of Gandhi's introduction of satyagraha (non-violent resistance) in South Africa).









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