Post by account_disabled on Mar 11, 2024 5:31:15 GMT
Francisco Oliva, president of the association of foster families on the islands, points out that they are already protecting twenty of these young people and can care for more. Go to download The association of foster families of the Canary Islands has offered to the Canary Islands Government to host more unaccompanied migrant minors, according to its president, Francisco Oliva, who believes that they have the capacity to host the sixty who may be in a position to do so. Since the years 2009-10, when the Canary Islands Government program began, families have been taking suitability courses to be able to take in minors. Currently there are about two hundred active families hosting Canarian minors, but they also do so with unaccompanied migrants, up to the number of about twenty. The “business” of welcoming migrants Of the six hundred minors who are currently warded by the Canary Islands Government, Oliva understands that at least ten percent can be taken in by these families. He recalls that the families do not receive any remuneration for this work, beyond what the minor is responsible for, which is about 20 euros per day, an amount that decreases as more minors are taken in.
Faced with this, Oliva points to the “hosting business”, recalling that last year the Canary Islands Government spent ten million euros in “NGOs/companies” that have located in the Canary Islands due to immigration. Without going any further, he points out the case of the Cabildo of Gran Canaria, which contributes 120 euros per day per young person welcomed to an NGO: “If someone doesn't see a business there, let me know.” The El Hierro Giant Lizard Recovery Center acquires the status of “zoo park” Giant lizard of El Hierro | Photo: Cabildo de El Hierro Giant lizard of El Hierro | Photo: Cabildo de El Hierro Miguel Ángel Rodríguez, biologist at the El Hierro giant lizard recovery center, states that this will WhatsApp Number List facilitate the conservation of the species. Go to download The El Hierro Giant Lizard Recovery Center has just acquired the status of a zoo, which, in the opinion of biologist Migue Ángel Rodríguez, will contribute to the conservation of the species. The Cabildo of El Hierro, in coordination with the Government of the Canary Islands, is thus taking a first step towards updating the Recovery Plan for the El Hierro Giant Lizard (Gallotia simonyi) approved in 2004. This plan will continue with captive breeding tasks, censuses of natural populations, predator control, reintroduction into the natural environment, health and behavioral studies as well as environmental education tasks.
More than three hundred copies The adaptation of the center as a zoological park is a step that aims to enhance the conservation and biodiversity of this unique species, but above all to guarantee compliance with the basic conditions of health, well-being and safety of the giant lizards of El Hierro (Gallotia simonyi ) housed in the center. The center currently has 312 specimens: 163 in the best-known center that can be visited, and 149 in a complementary facility that is only available to researchers.The Canary Islands fight breaks gender barriers Jennifer Perez | Photo: Cabildo de Gran Canaria Jennifer Perez | Photo: Cabildo de Gran Canaria Jenifer Pérez, monitor of the Canarian wrestling school project, Cabildo de Gran Canaria, affirms that the traditional Canarian sport attracts the attention of young schoolgirls. Go to download Canarian wrestling has been breaking gender barriers for years, as there are already eleven women's teams competing in the regional league. To improve these figures even more, the Cabildo of Gran Canaria activates for the fifth year the Canarian Wrestling School that brings this vernacular sport to the schools and institutes of the island. It is about, as instructor Jénnifer Pérez points out, bringing young people closer to “the values of sport, culture and Canarian society.” Women like to fight He affirms that the centers receive the instructors “with open arms” and without any discrimination, since the cases of children who show surprise at the presence of women in sports “are almost non-existent.” In the specific case of Pérez, she has never felt discriminated against and she believes that women like Canarian wrestling, as demonstrated through these activities with schoolgirls.