Daily Archives: August 9, 2009

Health Canada studying effect of chemicals on infant genitals

Research will determine if the genitals of Canadian babies are being altered by their moms’ exposure to bisphenol A or phthalates

Globe and Mail | Aug 7, 2009

by MARTIN MITTELSTAEDT

Health Canada has quietly been studying a delicate topic: Whether or not the genitals of Canadian babies are being altered by their moms’ exposure to bisphenol A or phthalates during pregnancy.

The research will measure the distance between the start of a baby’s genitals and its anus, a space that on average is larger in boys than in girls. If the space is getting smaller, it means boys are being born less manly, and likely to have smaller penises and testicles.

The phthalate study is under way and will take up to five years to complete, while the bisphenol A research is just starting.

Phthalates, which are able to reduce levels of the male hormone, testosterone, are found in everything from polyvinyl chloride shower curtains to floor tiles, where they’re used to make plastics less brittle. They’re also added to cosmetics and perfumes to make the fragrance last longer.

Bisphenol A, an estrogen mimic, is the main ingredient in polycarbonate plastic products, including office water-cooler jugs, lenses for eyeglasses and the protective coatings on compact discs. It’s also in the epoxy liners found on the inside of most food and beverage cans, and in some carbonless paper register receipts.

All BPA is made by humans and isn’t found in nature, although there are some microbial sources of phthalates.

Scientists have known for years that dosing pregnant rodents with phthalates feminizes their male offspring, giving them female-like areolas and nipples, and smaller genital tracts. The amounts used to prompt the effects are far above what people are exposed to, but recently, researchers in the U.S. believe that they have detected slightly smaller genitals in boys born to mothers with higher-than-average phthalate exposure during pregnancy.

Bisphenol A has raised health concerns too, with tests in experimental animals leading to such conditions as early puberty, genital malformations and increased prostate growth, often at low doses given during fetal development.

The federal government is also testing several thousand Canadians for their BPA and phthalate levels, but the results are not yet available. Bio-monitoring in the U.S. has found that nearly everyone carries detectible amounts of the two chemicals. One survey conducted between 2003 and 2004 found about 93 per cent of Americans have bisphenol A in their bodies, and researchers looking for phthalates have found a similar percentage.

Group says 100 Czech women subjected to forced sterilization

Gorolová

When Gorolová had her second son 18 years ago, doctors gave her a form to sign without explanation, saying she would “die otherwise.” Photo: Jan Prerovský

European court to hear cases as ministry pens report on issue’s impact

Prague Post | Aug 5, 2009

By Radka Zítková

At least 100 women may have been sterilized against their will in the Czech Republic with many of the victims fearful of publicizing their cases.

Most of the procedures took place in the 1970s and ’80s, but the most recent probably occurred in 2007.

The issue has tarnished the international image of the Czech Republic, according to Human Rights and Minorities Minister Michael Kocáb.

“The sterilization issue has been discussed for a long time, but never enough on a governmental level,” Kocáb said last week. His ministry is now preparing a report on forced sterilization that will also look at the impact “on the Czech Republic at an international level.” But the main focus of the report, whose publication date has not been revealed, is to highlight and deal with injustices that might have happened to more women than originally reported.

The Group of Women Harmed by Forced Sterilization from Ostrava said that victims are now looking at taking their case to the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg.

“We have monitored about 100 women who were unwillingly sterilized,” said the group’s spokeswoman, Elena Gorolová.

Eighteen years ago, when her second son was born by Cesarean section, a doctor gave Gorolová two papers, one to fill in the baby’s name and a second that she was told she had to sign.

“They told me I would die otherwise. I didn’t even read it. No one explained what it was,” she said. Days later, while still in hospital, she was told she had been sterilized. Gorolová said it was a practice approved by top officials: “There was simply the feeling that Roma women shouldn’t have many children.”

The majority of cases took place in Moravia and happened mostly to women of Roma ethnicity between the 1970s and early 1990s. But the last case the group knows about allegedly happened in 2007 to a mother of four in Frýdek-Místek.

Gorolová requested that the identity of this woman remain anonymous. “The 40-year-old woman was repeatedly threatened by a social worker that her children would be taken into institutional care unless she agreed to the surgery,” Gorolová said. “A woman from the social care institution kept returning to her house and eventually forced her to sign the paper of consent. She didn’t want to lose her children.”

Her case is due to go before a Czech court, the fifth such case. In two previous trials, judges have already ruled in favor of petitioners and ordered hospitals to apologize to Helena Ferenc(íková from Vítkovice and Iveta C(erven(áková from Ostrava.

Both judges, however, rejected requests for financial compensation, saying the statute of limitations had expired. However, both women are set to take their cases to Strasbourg, Gorolová said.

In April, Strasbourg ruled in favor of eight Slovak Roma women who were forcibly sterilized and told the country to pay each of them “moral harm” compensation of 3,500 euros ($4,935/89,355 Kc() and 1,000 euros in legal fees. The figure was deemed a legal acknowledgment of their plight rather than a judgment to compensate them.

It is not about the money, Gorolová said, although even this figure could possibly finance undertaking treatment for artificial insemination for younger women.

Gorolová said the group hopes the government will require by law that hospitals explain all aspects of surgery to patients before presenting consent forms.

“Roma women will not always understand the medical jargon. The doctors can’t just say it’s about sterilization; they need to say it’s about not having children,” Gorolová said.

Opium takes over entire Afghan families, villages

Village of Addicts

In this July 13, 2009 photo, Sarab village resident and opium addict Islam Beg, center, offers his opium pipe to his grandson after having an early morning smoke in the Badakhshan province of Afghanistan. In dozens of mountain hamlets in this remote corner of Afghanistan, opium addiction has become so entrenched that whole families, from toddlers to old men, are addicts. (AP Photo/Julie Jacobson)

AP | Aug 9, 2009

By RUKMINI CALLIMACHI

SARAB, Afghanistan — Open the door to Islam Beg’s house and the thick opium smoke rushes out into the cold mountain air, like steam from a bathhouse. It’s just past 8 a.m. and the family of six — including a 1-year-old baby boy — is already curled up at the lip of the opium pipe.

Beg, 65, breathes in and exhales a cloud of smoke. He passes the pipe to his wife. She passes it to their daughter. The daughter blows the opium smoke into the baby’s tiny mouth. The baby’s eyes roll back into his head.

Their faces are gaunt. Their hair is matted. They smell.

In dozens of mountain hamlets in this remote corner of Afghanistan, opium addiction has become so entrenched that whole families — from toddlers to old men — are addicts. The addiction moves from house to house, infecting entire communities cut off from the rest of the world by glacial streams. From just one family years ago, at least half the people of Sarab, population 1,850, are now addicts.

Afghanistan supplies nearly all the world’s opium, the raw ingredient used to make heroin, and while most of the deadly crop is exported, enough is left behind to create a vicious cycle of addiction. There are at least 200,000 opium and heroin addicts in Afghanistan — 50,000 more than in the much bigger, wealthier U.S., according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and a 2005 survey by the U.N. A new survey is expected to show even higher rates of addiction, a window into the human toll of Afghanistan’s back-to-back wars and desperate poverty.

Unlike in the West, the close-knit nature of communities here makes addiction a family affair. Instead of passing from one rebellious teenager to another, the habit passes from mother to daughter, father to son. It’s turning villages like this one into a landscape of human depredation.

Except for a few soiled mats, Beg’s house is bare. He has pawned all his family’s belongings to pay for drugs.

“I am ashamed of what I have become,” says Beg, an unwashed turban curled on his head. “I’ve lost my self-respect. I’ve lost my values. I take the food from this child to pay for my opium,” he says, pointing to his 5-year-old grandson, Mamadin. “He just stays hungry.”

Beg’s forefathers owned much of the land in the village, located beside a gushing stream at the end of a canyon of craggy mountains in Badakshan province, hundreds of miles (kilometers) northeast of Kabul, Afghanistan’s capital.

He once had 1,200 sheep. He sold them off one by one to pay for drugs.

The land followed. He’s turned his spacious home, once lined with ornamental carpets, into a mud shell. He grows potatoes in rows in the last of his fields and each time he harvests the crop, he has to make a choice — feed his grandchildren, or buy opium. He usually chooses drugs.

Basic necessities like soap long ago fell by the wayside.

“If we have 50 cents, we buy opium and we smoke it. We don’t use the 50 cents to buy soap to clean our clothes,” explains Raihan, Beg’s daughter and the mother of the 1-year-old. The toddler wears a filthy shirt and no underwear. “I can be out of food, but not out of opium.”

The country’s few drug treatment centers are in cities far from villages like this one. And even those able to get themselves to the cities are often unable to get help. The drug clinic in Takhar province, the nearest to Sarab, has a waiting list of 2,000 people and only 30 beds.

So the villagers are drowning in opium. They begin taking it when they are sick, relying on its anesthetic properties — opium is also used to make morphine. Sarab, a village located at 8,000 feet (2,438 meters) and snowed in for up to three months a year, is a day’s walk over mountain paths to the nearest hospital. The few shops in town do not even sell aspirin.

“Opium is our doctor,” says Beg. “When your stomach hurts, you take a smoke. Then you take a little more. And a little more. And then, you’re addicted. Once you’re hooked, it’s over. You’re finished.”

When his grandson Shamsuddin, 1, cut his finger in the door jamb, Beg blew opium smoke into the child’s mouth, a common practice in this part of the world which is now resulting in rampant child addiction. He doesn’t want his grandchild to become an addict, but he says he has no choice. “If there is no medicine here, what should we do? The only way to make him feel better is to give him opium.”

From a single smoke, they progress to a three-times-a-day habit that spreads. When Beg began using opium, it wasn’t just his wife and daughter who followed suit. It was his brother. Then his brother’s wife. Like an epidemic, it makes its way across the village.

Health workers say that to treat the addiction, they need to treat the entire community. Last year, the Ministry of Health took 120 addicts from Sarab to a facility in a town one day’s drive away to be treated. Three months later, they found that 115 of the 120 had relapsed.

“First my neighbor started doing opium again,” explains Noor, one of the women treated, whose eyes are dark caves. “Then my cousin. Then my husband. And then after a while, I also started.”

Most of the addicts spend $3 to $4 a day on opium in a part of the world where people earn on average $2. They sell their land and go deeply into debt to maintain their habit.

“I used to be a rich man,” says Dadar, a man who looks to be in his 70s and whose family of seven is addicted. “I had cattle. I had land. And then I started smoking. I sold the cattle. I sold my land. Now I have nothing.”

He wears an old windbreaker encrusted with dirt. His wife pulls back her lips to show a mouth full of diseased teeth. Their grandchildren have knotted hair and ripped clothes stained with muck.

Because they’ve sold their cattle, they no longer eat meat. When they sold the last of their land, they also lost their wheat, potatoes and greens. Their diet now consists of tea and the occasional piece of bread given by a neighbor.

Village chief Sahib Dad says even those who are not addicted are forced to pay a price.

“When a person gets addicted, he has nothing to eat,” says Dad. “That affects his neighbor because the neighbor is forced to give over a part of his food. For this reason, all of us are poorer.”

After selling their land, some families resort to even more desperate measures. They take loans from the shopkeepers who sell them drugs. Then they sell their daughters, known as ‘opium brides,’ to settle the debt. They lease their sons.

“I know he is angry with me. But what can I do? I have nothing left to sell,” says Jan Begum, who has sent her 14-year-old to do construction work for the drug dealers. “I tried to stop, but I can’t. Whenever I do, the pain becomes unbearable.”

The problem is compounded by Afghanistan’s neighbors. Iran immediately to the west has the world’s highest per capita heroin use. The heroin labs there, as well as in Pakistan to the east, use opium imported from Afghanistan. These countries are now exporting heroin addiction back to Afghanistan in the form of returning refugees.

Like opium, heroin in Afghanistan is biting off whole families. Gul Pari, 13, watched her mother get high on heroin when she and her brother were in elementary school. Now she lies in a bed in a drug treatment center for women in Kabul. Her 15-year-old brother Zaihar is across town in a rehab facility for men.

Their bodies are like brittle sticks. The 13-year-old tries to push herself up on one elbow, but her thin arm cannot hold her up, so she falls back onto the pillow. Her emaciated brother leans against a wall to steady himself.

What will happen when they go home is unknown. They live with their mother — a recovering heroin addict — under a tarp in the yard of an abandoned house.

Mohammad Asef, a health worker at the clinic taking care of Zaihar Pari, says he is worried about the boy’s chances of recovering. “In America people go and get high in the park. In Afghanistan, they do it in the home,” says Asef. “They bring it inside. They burn it on the family stove. Everyone sees. So everyone is affected.”

In Sarab, villagers who are not addicted keep their distance from those who are. They don’t invite them into their homes. They discourage them from coming to village meetings. It’s as if they are trying to quarantine themselves.

Beg says that for him all hope is lost. Even after he is buried, it’ll take 70 years for the opium to ooze out of his bones. His hope, he says, are his grandkids — the only people in the family who are not yet addicts.

As Beg is getting high on a recent morning, the 1-year-old crawls over and starts playing with the opium pipe. He picks it up and shakes it, as if it were a rattle. Then, imitating his grandfather, he raises the pipe to his mouth.

NAFTA leaders urged to rein in ‘buy local’ impulses

  • Obama urged to clarify Buy American guidelines
  • Canada, Mexico also should resist ‘buy local’ rules
  • Avoid carbon tariffs, open U.S. to Mexican trucks

Reuters | Aug 7, 2009

By Doug Palmer

WASHINGTON, Aug 7 (Reuters) – North American business groups urged leaders of the United States, Mexico and Canada on Friday to rein in “buy local” provisions they called a threat to free trade and economic growth.

“In this global economic downturn, it is imperative that the three countries work together more intensively than ever to make the most of their strengths and set the stage for robust and sustained economic recovery,” the North American Competitiveness Council said.

Mexican President Felipe Calderon will host U.S. President Barack Obama and Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper on Sunday and Monday in Guadalajara for an annual meeting of North American leaders.

The advisory group made up of leading U.S., Mexican and Canadian business associations had its sternest advice for Obama, who they urged direct his administration to “clarify its intent and interpretation” of Buy American provisions passed as part of the $787 billion economic stimulus bill.

Obama, responding to an international outcry over the measure, persuaded Congress to exempt free-trade partners like Canada and Mexico from the strict requirement that public works projects funded by the bill use only U.S.-made goods.

But state and local governments carrying out stimulus projects can sidestep that instruction because they are not bound by international pacts. That has caused project delays and prompted some Canadian city and provincial governments to consider banning U.S. goods in Canadian projects.

Critics say the Buy American provisions also are at odds with the spirit of the North American Free Trade Agreement, which phased out tariffs among the three countries beginning in 1994 and promoted greater economic integration.

CONSISTENT WITH U.S. OBLIGATIONS

The advisory group urged the White House to make clear that when state and local governments “engage in procurement with the support of federal funds,” they award any contracts in a manner consistent with U.S. trade obligations and the April 2 pledge Obama and other G20 leaders made not to raise any new barriers to trade and investment.

“For the same reasons, we urge provinces and municipalities in Canada not to proceed with ‘buy local’ requirements for public procurement that have been proposed in that country,” the group said, adding a better approach would be for the countries to negotiate reciprocal access to government contracts at the state, provincial and city level.

“We have similar concerns about the new “Buy Mexican” program, but recognize that it is confined to an awareness campaign rather than an active policy,” the group said.

Other recommendations included:

* Full implementation of a long-delayed U.S. commitment to allow Mexican trucks to operate in the United States.

* Rejection of a “carbon tax” on imports from countries judged not to be doing enough to fight global warming.

* Stronger regulatory cooperation among the three countries, and rigorous protection of intellectual property rights essential to innovation and economic growth. (Editing by Philip Barbara)

Chefs warn of backlash against genetically modified crops

Chefs warn of GM backlash

Farm Weekly | Aug 9, 2009

HIGH-profile Margaret River chefs and winemakers are warning of a consumer backlash if the ban on genetically modified (GM) crops is lifted.

The chefs, including Leeuwin Estate’s Dany Angove and Vasse Felix’s Aaron Carr have spoken out, saying GM food goes against a growing demand for organic and biodynamic food.

Mr Angove, Mr Carr, Must resturant’s Russell Blaikie and 10 other Western Australian chefs recently signed the Greenpeace chefs’ charter for GM-Free Australia.

Vanya Cullen, of Margaret River’s biodynamic Cullen Wines, helped launch the Greenpeace guide to GM free alcohol this month.

Mr Angove said a hasty decision to allow GM crops into the shire could have long-term ramifications.

“We don’t know enough about this, and as for GM crops solving world food shortages, it certainly hasn’t proved to be the case in India.

“A lot of people come down here to live in a sustainable way, and they are passionate about it.

“Allowing GM crops in could seriously damage the Margaret River brand; we can promote organic food but I can’t see people lining up to buy GM food,” he said.

Sally Wylie from the Consumers for GM Free Food Organisation said the introduction of GM crops could threaten the wine industry.

“Some vineyards are eliminating canola oils from their processing because there could be a question mark over their product in EU markets,”Ms Wylier said

The councillors will vote on the GM issue when they meet next week, on Thursday 13.

Two petitions were delivered at the last meeting, the first signed by almost 1500 residents and the second, by seven local doctors – both groups oppose allowing GM crops into the region.

Hunger hits Detroit’s middle class

Food has long been an issue in this city without a major supermarket. Now demand for assistance is rising, affecting a whole new set of people.

CNNMoney.com | Aug 7, 2009

By Steve Hargreaves

A security guard watches over groceries being delivered in Detroit.

A security guard watches over groceries being delivered in Detroit.

DETROIT (CNNMoney.com) — On a side street in an old industrial neighborhood, a delivery man stacks a dolly of goods outside a store. Ten feet away stands another man clad in military fatigues, combat boots and what appears to be a flak jacket. He looks straight out of Baghdad. But this isn’t Iraq. It’s southeast Detroit, and he’s there to guard the groceries.

“No pictures, put the camera down,” he yells. My companion and I, on a tour of how people in this city are using urban farms to grow their own food, speed off.

In this recession-racked town, the lack of food is a serious problem. It’s a theme that comes up again and again in conversations in Detroit. There isn’t a single major chain supermarket in the city, forcing residents to buy food from corner stores. Often less healthy and more expensive food.

As the area’s economy worsens –unemployment was over 16% in July — food stamp applications and pantry visits have surged.

Detroiters have responded to this crisis. Huge amounts of vacant land has led to a resurgence in urban farming. Volunteers at local food pantries have also increased.

But the food crunch is intensifying, and spreading to people not used to dealing with hunger. As middle class workers lose their jobs, the same folks that used to donate to soup kitchens and pantries have become their fastest growing set of recipients.

“We’ve seen about a third more people than before,” said Jean Hagopian, a volunteer at the New Life food pantry, part of the New Life Assembly of God church in Roseville, a suburb some 20 miles northeast of Detroit. Hagopian said many of the new people seeking assistance are men, former breadwinners now in desperate need of a food basket.

Hagopian is an 83-year old retired school teacher. She works at the pantry four days a week, spending two of those days driving her own minivan around town collecting food from local distributors.

The pantry, housed in the church basement, gives away boxes of food that might feed a family of four for a week. It includes dry and packaged goods like cereals and pasta, peanut butter, canned fruits and vegetables, 7 or 8 pounds of frozen meat (usually chicken or hot dogs), and eight pan pizzas donated from a local Pizza Hut. Most of the other food is purchased from a distributor or donated by the county food program. Last month they gave out 519 boxes.

Hagopian hopes the demand for food doesn’t get much worse.

“I hope we’re at the top of it because we’ll run out of food, and then we’ll have to go out and find some more,” she said.

She should brace for the worst. Across metro Detroit, social service agencies are reporting a huge spike in demand for food assistance.

Gleaners, an agency that distributes excess food donated from food processors, says their distribution is up 18% from last year. Michigan Department of Human Services, which handles federal food assistance like food stamps, WIC checks and such, has seen a 14% spike in applications since October. Calls to the United Way’s help line have tripled in the last year.

“Given the resources, we could double our numbers,” said Frank Kubik, food program manager for Focus:Hope, a Detroit aid organization that fed 41,000 mostly elderly people last year. Kubik said his program is restricted by charter and budget from serving more than its current number of clients. But if that were changed, he could certainly serve up more meals.

“There’s no doubt about it, there’s just so many out there that are really struggling right now,” he said.
The changing face of hunger

There have been plenty of people struggling in Detroit for a long time. What makes this recession different is the type of people coming in. It’s no longer just the homeless, or the really poor.

Now it’s middle class folks who lost their $60,000-a-year auto job, or home owners who got caught on the wrong side of the real estate bubble.

Many of these people have never navigated the public assistance bureaucracy before, and that makes getting aid to them a challenge.

“They have no idea where the DHS office is,” said DeWayne Wells, president of Gleaners, the food distributor.

To assist these newly hungry, Wells pointed to the United Way’s 211 program, where people can call the hotline and speak to an operator that guides them through a wide range of available social services.

The Michigan Department of Human Services is going digital, rolling out a program where people can apply for food stamps via the Web.

That may help ease another challenge in getting aid to the middle class: pride. Many people feel so bad about having to ask for help that they just don’t, or they have issues with it once they do.

“They’ll say things like ‘I’ve never had to do this before’ and they feel a little uncomfortable,” said Hagopian, the retired school teacher. But she says times have changed, the good union jobs are disappearing and it’s harder and harder to find work.

“I just tell them society is not what it used to be,” she said.
Detroit responds

Actually running out of food doesn’t seem to be a problem, so far. In fact, because more people are being affected the response seems to be greater.

“A few years ago it was someone you saw a profile of on TV,” said Wells. “Now it’s your brother in-law, or the people your kid plays soccer with.”

Wells said volunteers are up at Gleaners, as is general community awareness.

The Feds have helped too. Food stamp allowances were increased 14% nationwide under the stimulus plan.

Detroiters are also helping themselves in smaller ways. Thanks to the dearth of big supermarkets in Detroit proper – a phenomenon largely attributed to lack of people – and plenty of vacant land, community gardening has caught on big.

It’s not so much that these gardens are going to feed the city, although they certainly help. It’s more that they can be used to teach people, especially children, the value of eating right.

“I use vegetables every day,” said one child at an after school gardening program run by Earthworks Urban Farm, near the heart of the city. “Last night, an onion I picked from here, I had in my potatoes.”

Hearing that is good news to people like Dan Carmody, president of Eastern Market Corp., a century-old public market selling fresh produce and other foodstuffs near downtown Detroit.

Carmody is part of a group of people trying to bring healthy food to town. The efforts include setting up mobile produce stands around the city, working with convenience store owns to stock better produce, and trying to set up a program that allows food stamp recipients to spend twice as much money if they buy from a local farmer.

He says the food situation in Detroit is particularly depressing because the surrounding areas are chock full with some of the best eats around: Michigan grows some of the most varied crops in the nation, everything from apples and cantaloupes to peaches and watermelon. Windsor, just across the bridge, is the hydroponics capital of Canada. Artisan Amish farms are also close by in Ohio and Pennsylvania.

Getting this food to Detroit, and getting Detroiters to buy it is the challenge. That’s where the urban farms come in.

“Once kids start seeing where their food comes from,” he said, “it changes the whole approach to how they eat.”  To top of page

Swiss artist fights biometric passport

UPI | Aug 7, 2009

By STEFAN NICOLA

BERLIN, Aug. 7 (UPI) — From his self-chosen exile in Berlin, a Swiss-born artist has been battling Switzerland’s decision to introduce a biometric passport.

Adam Tellmeister places the scalpel on his brand new Swiss passport and cuts right through its blood-red outer fabric. It’s the first cut of an operation — broadcast live on the Internet — that is aimed at removing the chip from his new biometric passport.

Performed in late February, as a finissage of his exhibition on biometrics (in one installation, Tellmeister recreated the chip with hair, skin, bodily fluids and other personal items), the operation meant to protest what Tellmeister says is the newest form of “performance-based racism”: classifying people according to criteria he fears will make it onto the chip once the biometric passport becomes a part of daily life. That it will is likely: The Swiss Parliament gave its green light to the biometric passport in March. On May 17, a referendum was the final hurdle for its introduction.

Aided by a low turnout and a government campaign in favor of the new passport, Switzerland voted for its introduction by a super-thin majority of 50.1 percent, with just 5,504 votes separating the two sides.

The government says the new passport is forge-proof and more convenient.

“We will do our best to ensure that personal data in the fingerprint register is secure,” Justice Minister Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf said.

Yet privacy activists in many countries question what exactly the chip will contain, and whether the stored data violates civil liberties. They also say the chip can be cracked by hackers.

Tellmeister suspects that companies will use the data, stored in Switzerland in a national data center, for commercial purposes; and he fears that in the future, the government may brand “politically troublesome people like me” with the help of the chip in their passports. “You should at least be able to chose whether you want one or not,” he told United Press International over drinks near his Prenzlauer Berg apartment.

A highly political artist, Tellmeister has been a thorn in the side of Swiss authorities for some time. One of his exhibitions featured works revealing Swiss military secrets — Gregor Gysi, today the head of Germany’s far-left Left Party, opened it.

Tellmeister fled Switzerland in 1986 to avoid the military draft. He became the first Swiss national to apply for political asylum in Germany, and ended up in Berlin after a stint in the Netherlands and a short return to Switzerland, where he was arrested for spray-painting a government building. His trial in Zurich finished without him — he escaped the courthouse during a toilet break. Friends smuggled him out of Switzerland and into Berlin, where he has been living and performing ever since, and where he has developed into somewhat of an underground art star.

But Tellmeister lived in Berlin without papers or an identity card; attempts to legalize his stay or open up possibilities for a return to Switzerland all failed.

That is until last year, when Tellmeister’s success in the art scene brought him into big-name German publications like Der Spiegel — and a new chance for life in Switzerland when the government granted Tellmeister a passport under his new name.

The Art Hall Lucerne planned to show his works, and everything was set up for the artist’s return to his home country after over two decades of illegal absence.

But the exhibition never materialized — Tellmeister says it was canceled for political reasons shortly before his planned chip operation. He claims the curator, out of fear of losing government grant money, tried to convince him to soften his guerrilla-like approach.

“But I am not a feel-good artist,” Tellmeister said.

His name is a pseudonym based on his childhood idol William Tell, a legendary figure of disputed historical authenticity who is said to have lived in the alpine canton of Uri in Switzerland in the early 14th century. It’s fittingly ironic that Tell was considered an outlaw before becoming a national hero, one who stood up against authorities.

“Tell would have fought the biometric passport,” the artist said. “Because if there is a biometric passport, a non-conformist figure like Tell isn’t possible anymore.”

Tellmeister’s new exhibition is on display until Aug. 20 at the Wernicke and Hasshoff gallery in Prenzlauer Berg.