llama (Lama
glama) is a domesticated South American camelid, widely used by Andean cultures
since pre-Hispanic times. They are very social animals and live with other
llamas as a herd. The wool produced by a llama is very soft and lanolin-free.
Llamas are intelligent and can learn simple tasks after a few repetitions. Remember seeing them in Shankar’s Indian. I had posted about that 1996 Kamal starrer –
but this post is on a different topic.
The hit film directed by
Shankar, written by Sujatha had Kamal in dual roles [Senapathy was exceptional]
with Manisha Koirala, Urmila Matondkar, Sukanya appearing in pivotal roles. The
main storyline focussed on a sincere freedom fighter turned vigilante bent on
rooting out corruption and his son facilitating corrupt practices leading to
unfortunate events. In between the
serious scenes, there was tiffs between the heroine Aishwarya (Manisha Koirala), the animal lover
battling Sapna (Urmila Matondkar), the
daughter of a RTO official. Manisha
bringing a camel would be taunted by Urmila ! – both the ladies fighting for
the hero !!
The meerkat
or suricate is a small carnivoran belonging to the mongoose family. Meerkats live in all parts of the Kalahari
Desert in Botswana. A group of meerkats is called a "mob",
"gang" or "clan". A meerkat clan often contains about 20
meerkats, but some super-families have 50 or more members. Most of us would have seen them in Discovery,
Animal Planet, National Geographic channels with a few standing out looking
out, watching for predators with the group busy foraging - a sharp, shrill call is the signal for all
to take cover.
Out in UK, a
meerkat expert has been ordered to pay
£800 compensation after glassing a love-rival monkey handler in a row over a
llama keeper at a Christmas party. Caroline Westlake and her
colleague Kate Sanders came to blows in the London Zoo's Prince Albert Suite in
a jealous feud over Adam Davies, who has dated both women.
In a case branded a
"menagerie a trois", former zoologist Caroline Westlake smashed Sanders
in the face with a wine glass after overhearing her insulting her looks earlier
in the evening. It was Llama keeper Adam
Davies who reportedly was at the centre
of a love triangle that caused a violent row between rival keepers at London
Zoo.
The 30-year-old wept in
the dock as she was sentenced to a 12-month community order and ordered to pay
£800 compensation to Miss Sanders and £200 prosecution costs at Westminster
Magistrates' Court on Wednesday. In an impact statement, Sanders said she has
been left with an ugly scar on her cheek "which will be with me for the
rest of my life". "I have to see that scar every day when I look in
the mirror," she said.
Miss Sanders said she
suffers from nightmares and stress and is afraid to leave her home "for fear
of running into Caroline or her friends". "I think about it every
single day at work and feel a black mark has been placed against me that may
affect my further promotion," she said.
District Judge Jeremy
Coleman described the injury as "nasty" and told the defendant she
was fortunate not to have been convicted of a more serious charge. "It's
an unpleasant injury to someone's face which makes it rather worse," he
said. "It was caused by a glass so an object was used, so really a more
serious charge against you could easily have been justified."
Westlake alleges her
fellow zoo keeper punched her in the face first and held her over a balcony
while spitting in her face. Earlier in the night on December 8 last year,
Westlake heard Sanders asking friends in the toilets: "Have you seen the
state of her?" Prosecutor Daniel
Geller said: "Miss Westlake hit Miss Sanders on the side of her face. She
was holding a wine glass in her hand and it's the glass which made contact with
Miss Sanders's face. "The glass appears to have broken on contact because
it caused a cut to Miss Sanders's face, a cut which was bleeding. Obviously
very surprised by this, Miss Sanders stretched her arms out in defence, pushing
Miss Westlake back by her neck." Miss Sanders was rushed to hospital and
had to have a total of five stitches, the court was told.
Westlake, who was sacked
by the zoo after the incident, had been seeing Mr Davies for a year at the
time, and he had previously had a five-year relationship with Sanders.
Suzanne Kelly, representing
Westlake, disputed the number of stitches Sanders received and insisted she had
struck the first blow. She added: "This is not a case where somebody has
deliberately sought to inflect injury on another person. The complainant must
accept some responsibility for the injury that occurred." She told the
court an employment tribunal had found Westlake was unfairly treated when she
was sacked by the zoo. Ms Kelly added: "The defendant has lost her
livelihood, her means of income. She has lost her good name."
Westlake, who is appealing
against her conviction, was ordered to carry out 80 hours of unpaid work over
12 months. She was also told to pay a £60 victim surcharge on top of £800
compensation and £200 court costs. Judge Coleman said: "I take into account
the fact that you are of previous good character and that as a result of this,
apart from all the upset, you have lost your employment."
A good
storyline for Kollywood perhaps !!
With regards – S.
Sampathkumar
15th Oct 2015.
Largely
reproduced from : Smh.com.au