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{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2021}} | |||
== Rhyging == | |||
{{Use Jamaican English|date=March 2012}} | |||
Famed ] outlaw Ivanhoe ']' Martin, was a 24 year old man who died of gunshot wounds sustained during a shootout with police officers on September 9, 1948, in ], ]. ] is appropriately regarded as the initial ]. | |||
{{Infobox criminal | |||
| image_name = Rhyging_Martin.jpg | |||
| name = Rhyging | |||
| image_size = | |||
| image_caption = Rhyging posing with a gun, as reproduced in the ''Daily Gleaner'' | |||
| birth_name = Vincent Martin | |||
| birth_date = 1924 | |||
| birth_place = ] | |||
| death_date = {{death date and given age|1948|9|df=y|9|24}} | |||
| other_names = Ivanhoe | |||
| death_place = ], ] | |||
| charge = Wounding, robbery, murder | |||
| conviction_penalty = | |||
| conviction_status = | |||
| occupation = | |||
| spouse = | |||
| children = | |||
}} | |||
'''Vincent''' "'''Ivanhoe'''" '''Martin''' (1924{{ndash}}9 September 1948), known as "'''Rhyging'''", was a ]n criminal who became a legendary outlaw and ], often regarded as the "original ]".<ref name="AugustynMarley2010">{{cite book|author1=Heather Augustyn|author2=Cedella Marley|title=Ska: An Oral History|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bUba45txcJ8C&pg=PA69|date=2010|publisher=McFarland|isbn=978-0-7864-6040-3|page=69}}</ref><ref name="Marcus1990">{{cite book|author=Greil Marcus|title=Lipstick Traces: A Secret History of the Twentieth Century|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=TVAoeipLL38C&pg=PA263|date=1990|publisher=Harvard University Press|isbn=978-0-674-53581-7|page=263}}</ref> He became notorious in 1948 after escaping from prison, going on the run and committing a string of robberies, murders and attempted murders before he was gunned down by police. In subsequent decades his life became mythologised in Jamaican popular culture, culminating in the 1972 cult film '']'', in which he is portrayed by ]. | |||
His nickname comes from the term ''rhyging'', also spelled ''rhygin'', a variant of "raging".<ref name = "rhy"/> In ] it is used to mean ''wild'', ''hot'', or ''bad''.<ref name="White2006">{{cite book|author=Timothy White|title=Catch a Fire: The Life of Bob Marley|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=h4nfr2cYAMQC&pg=PA102|date=2006|publisher=Macmillan|isbn=978-0-8050-8086-5|page=102}}</ref> | |||
Often alluded to historically as the "Jamaican ]", the seemingly invincible gunman managed to escape from prison, elude a massive dragnet, and live a life of crime for years with the help of the jamaican public before his ] at ]. | |||
==Life== | |||
The name ] is a Jamaican ](patwa)word meaning something like ''wild'', ''hot'', or ''bad''. Ivan was nicknamed this by the locals during his rise to fame as an uncatchable two gun gangster. | |||
===Early career=== | |||
] could never be caught, and because of this he was seen as sort of a hero to the sufferers living in the ghetto of 1940's Jamaica. An avenging angel of hope to the people brutalized by the police and ignored by their government. Jimmy Cliff refers to him as a kind of Jamaican ], who was "very much on the side of the people". | |||
Born Vincent Martin in ], Jamaica, he turned to a life of violent crime in his teenage years after moving to ]. Short and slim with an "effeminate" voice,<ref name = "jam"/> he compensated by building a reputation for extreme violence. He was first arrested at 14 for wounding, for which he was sentenced to a ].<ref name = "gleaa"/> Further arrests for wounding and larceny followed, leading to a six-month stint in gaol. After this, he became part of a criminal gang and adopted a variety of pseudonyms, including "Ivanhoe", "Alan Ladd" and "Captain Midnight".<ref name = "jam">Walker, Karyl, "The story of Rhygin: The Two-Gun Killer", ''Jamaica Observer'', 21 October 2007.</ref> In 1946 he was arrested for robbery, beginning his career of self-dramatisation by defending himself in court, irritating the judge with his "long-winded" and grandiose speeches.<ref name = "I">], ''I and I: The Natural Mystics – Marley, Tosh and Wailer'', Random House, 2012, p. 94.</ref> After a year in gaol, he was released, but quickly committed another robbery, for which he was convicted and sentenced to a five-year term. On 30 April 1948 he escaped from gaol. What followed was a period of several months during which he eluded police, ending in an intense six-week crime spree in West Kingston. Lurid reports about the spree appeared in the '']'' newspaper, which popularised his nickname "Rhyging".<ref name = "I"/> | |||
⚫ | Rhyging continues to play a role in Jamaican culture as a '']'' |
||
== Pronunciation of Rhygin' == | |||
Though the name inherited by the infamous criminal/anti-hero is spelled ] ]] The legendary name ] is often pronounced in Jamaican dialect or ] as ''Rhygin''' The name is acceptably pronounced as though you were saying the word rhyming only with a hard 'Guh' sound in place of the letter m. | |||
== Cultural references == | |||
He was the inspiration for the 1972 film ] starring ] as Ivan Martin and directed by ]. | |||
===Crime spree=== | |||
He is also mentioned by the band ] in the song "]" off the 1979 album release ]. | |||
The crime spree began when police attempted to capture him in August. After learning from an informer that he was at the Carib Hotel, several officers lay in wait for him there. Rhyging was in a room with a woman when the police burst in. He grabbed his gun and managed to shoot his way out, leaving one officer, a Detective Lewis, dead. Two other men were wounded: policeman H. E. Earle, and ex-sergeant Gallimore, a retired officer who was assisting.<ref name = "jam"/> The killing of Lewis led the mayor of Kingston, ], to launch a major manhunt. Bustamante was a pallbearer at Lewis's funeral.<ref name = "jam"/> | |||
The following day he killed a woman named Lucille Tibby Young, the girlfriend of Eric Goldson, the man he believed had informed on him.<ref name = "I"/> He broke into her room and demanded she take him to Goldson. When she said she did not know where Goldson was, he shot her in the chest, killing her. He then also shot the two other women who were in the room at the time, Estella Brown and Iris Bailey, wounding them. Immediately after this the police offered a £200 reward for the capture of Rhyging, dead or alive.<ref name = "jam"/> Rhyging responded by writing an open letter to Detective Sergeant Scott, one of the detectives leading the search for him. The letter, which was published in the '']'', stated, | |||
The legend gave inspiration to Boston ] band ]. Established as a 3 piece in the late summer of 2003. | |||
<blockquote>I have an arsenal of 29 shots and I am satisfied that I have made history for the criminal element in Jamaica. Don't think that I am going to kill myself because this will only serve to spoil my great record. But I hope that Detective Scott will train his men some more. I am going to show the police force what is lacking and what I can do.<ref name = "jam"/></blockquote> | |||
⚫ | ] | ||
He killed another man a few days later. Jonathan Thomas, an associate of Rhyging, was walking along the street with his wife when Rhyging appeared and shot him. He then attempted to kill another man, Selvyn Maxwell, but Maxwell managed to wrestle the gun from Rhyging's hand. Rhyging escaped after stealing Maxwell's car.<ref name = "jam"/> He was also involved in robberies, possibly to fund a planned escape from Jamaica.<ref name = "rhy">Aylmer, Kevin, "Towering Babble and Glimpses of Zion", in ''Chanting Down Babylon: The Rastafari Reader'', Temple University Press, 1 January 1998, p. 285.</ref> He was suspected of robbing the'' White Horses'' Inn at Mary Brown's Corner (during which a security guard was tied up) and a store near Rousseau Road.<ref name = "gleaa"/> | |||
The crime spree made Rhyging famous. During the spree, he sent taunting messages to the press and made a photograph of himself holding guns.<ref name = "rhy"/> In a letter to the ''Daily Gleaner'' he gave his own account of the shoot-out at the hotel, | |||
<blockquote>I decided to make a dash. I ran to the door with my pistol in my hand. I did not even have time to reach for my close (sic). I looked outside. I heard the sound of another shot. I see the men mean to make the end of me tonight, but I intend to carry someone with me. At that time I only had five shots with me....I put myself outside. I was hit in my right shoulder. That did not make much.... One shot fired from this crowd hit the butt of my gun. I fired back. I think I saw every man except one man who was staggering.<ref name = "jam"/></blockquote> | |||
Police circulated a description of Rhyging at the time, which stated that he was "5-foot 3 inches" tall, but tended to wear shoes with high heels to improve his stature. He also had "several front teeth missing in the upper jaw", but sometimes wore false teeth. He tended to wear polarised sunglasses and had "a habit of looking backwards after every few steps, and spitting after every few words he speaks".<ref name = "I"/> | |||
===Death=== | |||
Rhyging hid out with some friends for a while near his childhood home in St. Catherine, but police were informed of his whereabouts. He managed to flee to ], but again police were quickly tipped off. On 9 September 1948, they swooped on his hideout. He fought off police for an hour, but was killed when he attempted a break-out. He died, aged 24, of gunshot wounds on the beach at Lime Cay. He had been shot five times in the head, and several times all over his body.<ref name = "jam"/> He may have been hiding at Lime Cay while waiting for a boat to take him to Cuba.<ref>Christopher Farley, ''Before the Legend'', HarperCollins, 2009, p. 87.</ref> Police at the time believed that he intended "to board a boat which would take him out of the island or to someplace on the south-western coast of the island."<ref name="terror">C. Roy Reynolds, {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130803080344/http://jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/20001207/cleisure/cleisure4.html |date=3 August 2013 }}, ''The Jamaica Gleaner''.</ref> | |||
Rhyging's body was held at the city mortuary before being buried in a ]. Large numbers of people came to see the body of the notorious criminal, including Eric Goldson, who reportedly commented "The race is not for the swift. Rhyging you gone at last!"<ref name="terror"/> In order to avoid large crowds gathering to see his burial, police stated that they were taking the body to ]. He was taken to ], where he was buried quickly without ceremony.<ref name="terror"/> | |||
==Posthumous fame== | |||
In the immediate aftermath of Rhyging's death the ''Gleaner'' ran stories exploring the life of the criminal; one, entitled "History of a Killer", was about his life, the other, "Who Was This Man with a Price on His Head", asked: | |||
<blockquote>Who was Rhyging? This man with a price on his head whose twisted mind made him an enemy of society. Who was this five feet-three of ruthless killer who at the turn of last September blasted a blood-spattered path to newspaper headlines, with seven falling before his guns and three of the seven dead? Vincent Martin was his true name. In the puckish manner of his underworld comrades they named him Rhyging. Rhyging in their jargon means a man who is always on top. To them this snarling, boastful little gunman was top-notcher of the crime-filled west end.<ref name="gleaa">C. Roy Reynolds, {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131202221401/http://jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/20001211/cleisure/cleisure5.html |date=2 December 2013 }}, ''The Jamaica Gleaner''.</ref><ref name="AugustynMarley2010"/></blockquote> | |||
Martin became a folk-hero for the poverty-stricken residents of the Jamaican ghettos of the 1940s, acquiring an anti-hero persona, "much like ] or ]".<ref name="AugustynMarley2010"/> According to Kevin Aylmer, he became a "cultural icon of the Jamaican working class" because of his self-identification as a hero of "Hollywood ']s', and his masculine swagger allied with an uncanny ability to seemingly appear and disappear at will".<ref name="AugustynMarley2010"/> Shortly after his death Jamaican comedians ] created a drama called ''Rhygin's Ghost''. A song about him entitled "Rhygin" is the B-side of ]'s 1965 single "Ten Commandments". He is also the subject of ]'s 1966 poem "Dead Man", written in Jamaican patois. The poem "balances acceptance of the moral propriety of his necessary demise against the vicarious thrill of identification with his apparently indomitable badness".<ref name = "coop">], ''Noises in the Blood: Orality, Gender, and the "Vulgar" Body of Jamaican Popular Culture'', Duke University Press, 1995, p. 110.</ref> | |||
His life inspired the 1972 film '']'', Jamaica's first feature film, starring ] as Ivan Martin and directed by ].<ref>, interviews by Dave Simpson, '']'', 20 August 2012.</ref> In the film Rhyging is portrayed as a reggae singer and song writer, who is tricked out of the rights to his songs and is drawn into drug-dealing, but becomes famous as he achieves notoriety for his crimes.<ref>{{cite news|title= Perry Henzell, 70, Filmmaker of 'The Harder They Come,' Dies |work= ]|date=5 December 2006|url = https://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/05/obituaries/05henzell.html|accessdate=2011-04-14}}</ref> According to Cliff, "Rhygin was very much on the side of the people; he was a kind of Robin Hood, I guess you could call him".<ref>], ''Bass Culture: When Reggae Was King'', Penguin UK, 2001, unpaginated.</ref> Together with the movie Ivan is also referred to in the song "]" by the rock band ]. | |||
]'s 1980 novel ''The Harder They Come'', derived from the film, is also a sympathetic account of his life, and portrays him as an innocent victim of con-men when he first arrives in Kingston.<ref>], ''Fifty Caribbean Writers: A Bio-bibliographical Critical Sourcebook'', Greenwood Publishing Group, 1986, p. 460.</ref> | |||
The film was later adapted as a stage musical,<ref>Henzell, Justine, "Reggae Revolution: Perry Henzell Created Jamaica's First Feature Film against All the Odds", ''New Statesman'', Volume: 137, 10 March 2008, p. 41.</ref> with a script overseen by Henzell, and was first staged in 2006 at the ],<ref>Johnson, Richard (2012), ", '']'', 11 November 2012.</ref> subsequently transferring to other theatres, with ] playing the role of Rhyging.<ref>, What's On Stage, 7 July 2008.</ref> | |||
⚫ | Rhyging continues to play a role in Jamaican culture as a '']'' (]) used to scare children.<ref name = "coop"/> | ||
==References== | |||
{{Reflist|30em}} | |||
{{Authority control}} | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
⚫ | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] |
Latest revision as of 17:58, 10 October 2024
Rhyging | |
---|---|
Rhyging posing with a gun, as reproduced in the Daily Gleaner | |
Born | Vincent Martin 1924 Jamaica |
Died | (aged 24) Lime Cay, Jamaica |
Other names | Ivanhoe |
Criminal charge | Wounding, robbery, murder |
Vincent "Ivanhoe" Martin (1924–9 September 1948), known as "Rhyging", was a Jamaican criminal who became a legendary outlaw and folk hero, often regarded as the "original rude boy". He became notorious in 1948 after escaping from prison, going on the run and committing a string of robberies, murders and attempted murders before he was gunned down by police. In subsequent decades his life became mythologised in Jamaican popular culture, culminating in the 1972 cult film The Harder They Come, in which he is portrayed by Jimmy Cliff.
His nickname comes from the term rhyging, also spelled rhygin, a variant of "raging". In Jamaican Patois it is used to mean wild, hot, or bad.
Life
Early career
Born Vincent Martin in Linstead, St. Catherine, Jamaica, he turned to a life of violent crime in his teenage years after moving to Kingston. Short and slim with an "effeminate" voice, he compensated by building a reputation for extreme violence. He was first arrested at 14 for wounding, for which he was sentenced to a birching. Further arrests for wounding and larceny followed, leading to a six-month stint in gaol. After this, he became part of a criminal gang and adopted a variety of pseudonyms, including "Ivanhoe", "Alan Ladd" and "Captain Midnight". In 1946 he was arrested for robbery, beginning his career of self-dramatisation by defending himself in court, irritating the judge with his "long-winded" and grandiose speeches. After a year in gaol, he was released, but quickly committed another robbery, for which he was convicted and sentenced to a five-year term. On 30 April 1948 he escaped from gaol. What followed was a period of several months during which he eluded police, ending in an intense six-week crime spree in West Kingston. Lurid reports about the spree appeared in the Daily Gleaner newspaper, which popularised his nickname "Rhyging".
Crime spree
The crime spree began when police attempted to capture him in August. After learning from an informer that he was at the Carib Hotel, several officers lay in wait for him there. Rhyging was in a room with a woman when the police burst in. He grabbed his gun and managed to shoot his way out, leaving one officer, a Detective Lewis, dead. Two other men were wounded: policeman H. E. Earle, and ex-sergeant Gallimore, a retired officer who was assisting. The killing of Lewis led the mayor of Kingston, Alexander Bustamante, to launch a major manhunt. Bustamante was a pallbearer at Lewis's funeral.
The following day he killed a woman named Lucille Tibby Young, the girlfriend of Eric Goldson, the man he believed had informed on him. He broke into her room and demanded she take him to Goldson. When she said she did not know where Goldson was, he shot her in the chest, killing her. He then also shot the two other women who were in the room at the time, Estella Brown and Iris Bailey, wounding them. Immediately after this the police offered a £200 reward for the capture of Rhyging, dead or alive. Rhyging responded by writing an open letter to Detective Sergeant Scott, one of the detectives leading the search for him. The letter, which was published in the Jamaica Times, stated,
I have an arsenal of 29 shots and I am satisfied that I have made history for the criminal element in Jamaica. Don't think that I am going to kill myself because this will only serve to spoil my great record. But I hope that Detective Scott will train his men some more. I am going to show the police force what is lacking and what I can do.
He killed another man a few days later. Jonathan Thomas, an associate of Rhyging, was walking along the street with his wife when Rhyging appeared and shot him. He then attempted to kill another man, Selvyn Maxwell, but Maxwell managed to wrestle the gun from Rhyging's hand. Rhyging escaped after stealing Maxwell's car. He was also involved in robberies, possibly to fund a planned escape from Jamaica. He was suspected of robbing the White Horses Inn at Mary Brown's Corner (during which a security guard was tied up) and a store near Rousseau Road.
The crime spree made Rhyging famous. During the spree, he sent taunting messages to the press and made a photograph of himself holding guns. In a letter to the Daily Gleaner he gave his own account of the shoot-out at the hotel,
I decided to make a dash. I ran to the door with my pistol in my hand. I did not even have time to reach for my close (sic). I looked outside. I heard the sound of another shot. I see the men mean to make the end of me tonight, but I intend to carry someone with me. At that time I only had five shots with me....I put myself outside. I was hit in my right shoulder. That did not make much.... One shot fired from this crowd hit the butt of my gun. I fired back. I think I saw every man except one man who was staggering.
Police circulated a description of Rhyging at the time, which stated that he was "5-foot 3 inches" tall, but tended to wear shoes with high heels to improve his stature. He also had "several front teeth missing in the upper jaw", but sometimes wore false teeth. He tended to wear polarised sunglasses and had "a habit of looking backwards after every few steps, and spitting after every few words he speaks".
Death
Rhyging hid out with some friends for a while near his childhood home in St. Catherine, but police were informed of his whereabouts. He managed to flee to Lime Cay, but again police were quickly tipped off. On 9 September 1948, they swooped on his hideout. He fought off police for an hour, but was killed when he attempted a break-out. He died, aged 24, of gunshot wounds on the beach at Lime Cay. He had been shot five times in the head, and several times all over his body. He may have been hiding at Lime Cay while waiting for a boat to take him to Cuba. Police at the time believed that he intended "to board a boat which would take him out of the island or to someplace on the south-western coast of the island."
Rhyging's body was held at the city mortuary before being buried in a pauper's grave. Large numbers of people came to see the body of the notorious criminal, including Eric Goldson, who reportedly commented "The race is not for the swift. Rhyging you gone at last!" In order to avoid large crowds gathering to see his burial, police stated that they were taking the body to Spanish Town. He was taken to May Pen cemetery, where he was buried quickly without ceremony.
Posthumous fame
In the immediate aftermath of Rhyging's death the Gleaner ran stories exploring the life of the criminal; one, entitled "History of a Killer", was about his life, the other, "Who Was This Man with a Price on His Head", asked:
Who was Rhyging? This man with a price on his head whose twisted mind made him an enemy of society. Who was this five feet-three of ruthless killer who at the turn of last September blasted a blood-spattered path to newspaper headlines, with seven falling before his guns and three of the seven dead? Vincent Martin was his true name. In the puckish manner of his underworld comrades they named him Rhyging. Rhyging in their jargon means a man who is always on top. To them this snarling, boastful little gunman was top-notcher of the crime-filled west end.
Martin became a folk-hero for the poverty-stricken residents of the Jamaican ghettos of the 1940s, acquiring an anti-hero persona, "much like John Dillinger or Bonnie and Clyde". According to Kevin Aylmer, he became a "cultural icon of the Jamaican working class" because of his self-identification as a hero of "Hollywood 'oat operas', and his masculine swagger allied with an uncanny ability to seemingly appear and disappear at will". Shortly after his death Jamaican comedians Bim and Bam created a drama called Rhygin's Ghost. A song about him entitled "Rhygin" is the B-side of Prince Buster's 1965 single "Ten Commandments". He is also the subject of Louise Bennett-Coverley's 1966 poem "Dead Man", written in Jamaican patois. The poem "balances acceptance of the moral propriety of his necessary demise against the vicarious thrill of identification with his apparently indomitable badness".
His life inspired the 1972 film The Harder They Come, Jamaica's first feature film, starring Jimmy Cliff as Ivan Martin and directed by Perry Henzell. In the film Rhyging is portrayed as a reggae singer and song writer, who is tricked out of the rights to his songs and is drawn into drug-dealing, but becomes famous as he achieves notoriety for his crimes. According to Cliff, "Rhygin was very much on the side of the people; he was a kind of Robin Hood, I guess you could call him". Together with the movie Ivan is also referred to in the song "The Guns of Brixton" by the rock band The Clash.
Michael Thelwell's 1980 novel The Harder They Come, derived from the film, is also a sympathetic account of his life, and portrays him as an innocent victim of con-men when he first arrives in Kingston.
The film was later adapted as a stage musical, with a script overseen by Henzell, and was first staged in 2006 at the Theatre Royal Stratford East, subsequently transferring to other theatres, with Rolan Bell playing the role of Rhyging.
Rhyging continues to play a role in Jamaican culture as a duppy (bogeyman) used to scare children.
References
- ^ Heather Augustyn; Cedella Marley (2010). Ska: An Oral History. McFarland. p. 69. ISBN 978-0-7864-6040-3.
- Greil Marcus (1990). Lipstick Traces: A Secret History of the Twentieth Century. Harvard University Press. p. 263. ISBN 978-0-674-53581-7.
- ^ Aylmer, Kevin, "Towering Babble and Glimpses of Zion", in Chanting Down Babylon: The Rastafari Reader, Temple University Press, 1 January 1998, p. 285.
- Timothy White (2006). Catch a Fire: The Life of Bob Marley. Macmillan. p. 102. ISBN 978-0-8050-8086-5.
- ^ Walker, Karyl, "The story of Rhygin: The Two-Gun Killer", Jamaica Observer, 21 October 2007.
- ^ C. Roy Reynolds, "Through the 20th century with the Gleaner History of a killer" Archived 2 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine, The Jamaica Gleaner.
- ^ Grant, Colin, I and I: The Natural Mystics – Marley, Tosh and Wailer, Random House, 2012, p. 94.
- Christopher Farley, Before the Legend, HarperCollins, 2009, p. 87.
- ^ C. Roy Reynolds, "Rhyging terror ends in May Pen Cemetery" Archived 3 August 2013 at the Wayback Machine, The Jamaica Gleaner.
- ^ Cooper, Carolyn, Noises in the Blood: Orality, Gender, and the "Vulgar" Body of Jamaican Popular Culture, Duke University Press, 1995, p. 110.
- "How we made: songwriter and actor Jimmy Cliff and actor Carl Bradshaw on The Harder They Come", interviews by Dave Simpson, The Guardian, 20 August 2012.
- "Perry Henzell, 70, Filmmaker of 'The Harder They Come,' Dies". The New York Times. 5 December 2006. Retrieved 14 April 2011.
- Lloyd Bradley, Bass Culture: When Reggae Was King, Penguin UK, 2001, unpaginated.
- Daryl Cumber Dance, Fifty Caribbean Writers: A Bio-bibliographical Critical Sourcebook, Greenwood Publishing Group, 1986, p. 460.
- Henzell, Justine, "Reggae Revolution: Perry Henzell Created Jamaica's First Feature Film against All the Odds", New Statesman, Volume: 137, 10 March 2008, p. 41.
- Johnson, Richard (2012), "Keeper of the flame: Justine Henzell protecting her father’s legacy", Jamaica Observer, 11 November 2012.
- "Rolan Bell On ... His Reggae Education", What's On Stage, 7 July 2008.