"Michael Steele will be on licence for the rest of his life, with strict conditions and intensive probation supervision."
"The salmon farming causes various environmental problems. One is that the fish are kept in cages and fed with pellets."A lot of the pellets and fish faeces end up on the seabed and that leads to less oxygen which kills the sea life in the ocean underneath the cages, and depending on the current, elsewhere in the sea."
When these concerns are put to Mr Clement from Salmón Chile, he explains that there are different categories for the salmon farming concessions."In terms of concessions in the national parks we have 21 that we aren't using," he says. "We have told the government that we don't want to be there and asked to be relocated but nothing has happened for many years."Regarding salmon farming in national reserves, he says that is a different environment which, according to Chilean law and the rules and regulations they follow, they can operate in.
In Chile, the salmon industry is regulated by The Undersecretariat for Fisheries and Aquaculture, a public body that is part of the Ministry of Economy, Development and Tourism.It looks at environmental protection and sustainability, and is also working on a new general aquaculture law to further regulate the sector.
Julio Salas Gutiérrez, the Chilean Undersecretary of Fisheries and Aquaculture, tells the BBC that the government is working to remove fish farms from the national parks.
"It's not right to claim that the government 'has done nothing for years' regarding the relocation of concessions outside of national parks," he says. "Under the current administration, efforts have been made not only to understand the problem, but also to advance it.The stations together serve more than 1.8m passengers a year and the artworks are visible from the trains passing through.
Created by Midlands artist Emily Kaye, they were developed for West Midlands Railway (WMR) and London Northwestern Railway (LNR).The murals ask how men can intervene in situations including online discussions, whether they speak up to encourage positive attitudes, if they actively stand up against male violence, and whether they do enough.
One artwork asks the question: "Which man are you online?"It gives several options as an answer – the man who started the thread, forwarded the photo, laughed, lurked, or made the images, or the man who reported it.