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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
4/23/2014 5:00:46 PM

Russia vows response if 'interests' in Ukraine attacked

AFP

A pro-Russian armed man stands guard near the state security service building in Slaviansk, April 23, 2014. U.S. Vice President Joe Biden told Russia on Tuesday that "time is short" for action on defusing the crisis in eastern Ukraine, but Moscow refused to be rushed, saying it could handle any tougher economic sanctions the West might impose. REUTERS/Gleb Garanich


Slavyansk (Ukraine) (AFP) - Russia issued a sharp warning on Wednesday that it will strike back if its "legitimate interests" in Ukraine are attacked, raising the stakes in the Cold War-like duel with the United States over the former Soviet republic's future.

"If we are attacked, we would certainly respond," Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told state-controlled RT television.

"If our interests, our legitimate interests, the interests of Russians have been attacked directly, like they were in South Ossetia for example, I do not see any other way but to respond in accordance with international law," he said, referring to Russia's armoured invasion of Georgia in 2008.

Moscow also insisted that Kiev withdraw the forces it has sent into eastern Ukraine to dislodge pro-Russian rebels who have seized control of government buildings in several towns.

Both Kiev and Washington believe the current crisis is being deliberately fuelled by Russian President Vladimir Putin in a bid to restore former Soviet glory.

The Kremlin has an estimated 40,000 Russian troops poised on Ukraine's eastern border, prompting Washington on Wednesday to start deploying 600 US troops to boost NATO's defences in eastern European states neighbouring Ukraine.

The first unit of 150 US soldiers arrived in Poland on Wednesday, with the remainder arriving in Estonia, Lithuania and Latvia in the coming days.

Reports of two journalists -- an American and a Ukrainian -- being held in the flashpoint rebel-held town of Slavyansk have done nothing to ease the mounting tensions.

The US State Department said it was "deeply concerned about the reports of a kidnapping of a US citizen journalist in Slavyansk, Ukraine, reportedly at the hands of pro-Russian separatists".

- Journalists held -

The town was also the source of gunfire that damaged a Ukrainian military reconnaissance plane on Tuesday, and the site of a crime scene for two bodies that Ukraine's acting president, Oleksandr Turchynov, said had been "brutally tortured".

One of the two victims was believed to be a local politician and member of Turchynov's party, which the president used as justification to relaunch "anti-terrorist" operations against the insurgents on Tuesday.

Deputy Prime Minister Vitaly Yarema said security forces had been activated "to liquidate all the groups currently operating in Kramatorsk, Slavyansk and the other towns in the Donetsk and Lugansk regions," according to the Interfax Ukraine news agency.

The spiralling violence -- coupled with America and Russia both accusing each other of inflaming the situation through the use of proxies in Ukraine -- has scuppered a Geneva accord agreed last week between Ukraine, Russia and the West which was meant to move Ukraine away from the brink of civil war.

- Trading blame -

Russia said it wants Kiev to pull back its army units and start a "genuine internal Ukrainian dialogue involving all of the country's regions".

Lavrov accused the US of orchestrating the new offensive, noting that it was announced immediately after a two-day visit from US Vice President Joe Biden to Kiev.

"The Americans are running the show," he told RT.

There were no immediate reports of any confrontation between the Ukrainian military and the pro-Moscow fighters.

In Slavyansk on Wednesday, the streets were calm, with locals walking about as usual.

A handful of rebels wearing camouflage gear and ski masks but with no apparent weapons stood outside the barricaded town hall they are occupying.

In front of the building were three photos of militants killed in a weekend attack on a nearby roadblock that the separatists have blamed on pro-Kiev ultra-nationalists.

The local rebel leader, Vyacheslav Ponomaryov, who styles himself as Slavyansk's "mayor" told a news conference that the two journalists being held were unharmed.

The American journalist is Simon Ostrovsky of Vice News, who used to be employed by AFP in Azerbaijan. The Ukrainian is Irma Krat, who appears to work for her own pro-Kiev outlet.

Ponomaryov asserted that Ostrovsky "is not being detained, was not abducted, has not been arrested" and claimed he was "working" in one of the rebel-occupied buildings.

However the Twitter feed of the normally prolific journalist has been inactive for over a day.

Vice News said in an online statement that it was "aware of the situation, and is in contact with the US State Department and other appropriate government authorities to secure the safety and security of our friend and colleague, Simon Ostrovsky".

The State Department's spokeswoman Jen Psaki condemned the abductions and said in a statement: "We call on Russia to use its influence with these groups to secure the immediate and safe release of all hostages in eastern Ukraine."

Washington has also underlined its worry about "the lack of positive Russian steps to de-escalate" the crisis.

Sanctions, on top of those already imposed on President Vladimir Putin's inner circle, will follow if no progress is made soon, it warned.

Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev has acknowledged his nation's economy was facing an "unprecedented challenge" with recession looming, but Russia has nonetheless dismissed the threat of sanctions and insists it has the right to protect the Russian-speaking population in Ukraine.

Watch video


Russia issues blunt threat to respond in Ukraine


As Kiev officials restart antirebel operations, Russia's foreign minister makes a historical comparison.
U.S. troops in region

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Myrna Ferguson

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
4/23/2014 5:22:54 PM
Hi Miguel,

This is a great post. I just love to see things go back to the cops and the way they have and do treat people. Occupy was several years ago, but people haven't forgotten how cruel they were treated.

LOVE IS THE ANSWER
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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
4/23/2014 5:34:57 PM

Myrna, I can't but agree with you. That the iniciative backfired was only appropriate.

Thanks for visiting and posting.

Miguel

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
4/23/2014 5:43:30 PM
A new, nation-wide epidemic in the US

Long Island teen gamer latest victim of 'swatting,' police say

Dylan Stableford, Yahoo News
Yahoo News


Gamer Plays 'Swatting' Prank on Teen After Losing

Watch video

A hoaxer who triggered a massive police response after falsely reporting he killed his mother and was threatening to shoot more people was engaging in a prank called "swatting," authorities say.

Police received a call at about 3 p.m. Tuesday afternoon from a person who identified himself as Rafael Castillo, a 17-year-old from Long Beach, N.Y.

"I just killed my mother and I might shoot more people," the person said, according to police.

The threat prompted Nassau County police to scramble helicopters and send a SWAT team to Castillo's home, leading to a two-hour standoff that involved more than 60 officers, some with guns drawn.

But it turned out the call was made by a disgruntled gamer who had just been eliminated by Castillo while playing the video game "Call of Duty" — a prank known in the gaming world as swatting, in which losers exact revenge on winners by getting police to respond to the winner's home.

When police arrived, they found Castillo’s mother, 54-year-old Maria Castillo, making coffee in the kitchen. Castillo himself did not immediately respond because he was in his room still playing the game with headphones on.

"He didn't realize anything was going on — he couldn’t hear anything," Castillo's brother, Jose, told the New York Post. "I told him, 'There’s a bunch of cops outside that are looking for you.'"

When he emerged, Castillo, a high school junior, realized he had become a swatting victim.

"I right away had an idea what it was, because I've seen it on the news," Castillo said.

Long Island police said they're aware of the swatting phenomenon.

"It’s a nationwide epidemic right now, where people play video games, and if you lose the video game, you try to develop information about the person you're playing," Long Beach Police Commissioner Michael Tangney told CBS New York. "And then we send this army of police personnel out. In this bizarre world of swatting, you get points for the helicopters, police cars, the SWAT team, and the type of entry. It’s very sophisticated, and unfortunately it's also very dangerous."

While police "felt very early on that it was a hoax," Tangney said, "we don’t take any shortcuts."

Investigators are now working to identify the alleged hoaxer.

"If we determine who made this call, there will be an arrest," Tangney told the Long Island Herald. "He did something so, so foolish, and so dangerous. I'm very angry — it’s a tremendous waste of taxpayer resources, it's a tremendous danger to law enforcement."

Castillo's mother said the time has now come for him to put down the "Call of Duty" controller.

"The kid played too much," she told WPIX-TV. "Go work. He's 17, he can work."




A virtual game of Call of Duty turns into a real-life massive police response at a New York home.
Leads to 90-minute standoff



"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
4/23/2014 10:12:22 PM

Children's corpses reveal desperate attempts to escape Korean ferry

Reuters


The search continues for the missing passengers of a South Korean ferry that capsized last week, as 185 people remain unaccounted for. Rough Cut (no reporter narration).


By Jungmin Jang and Ju-min Park

MOKPO/SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korean divers swam though dark, cold waters into a sunken ferry on Wednesday, feeling for children's bodies with their hands in a maze of cabins, corridors and upturned decks as they searched for hundreds of missing.

The divers, with oxygen and communications lines trailing, can only see a few inches in front of them in the wreckage of the ship that started sinking a week ago after a sharp turn. Most of the victims were high school children, who were told to stay where they were for their own safety.

And most of the bodies found in the last two days had broken fingers, presumably from the children frantically trying to climb the walls or floors to escape in their last moments, media said.

"We are trained for hostile environments, but it's hard to be brave when we meet bodies in dark water," diver Hwang Dae-sik told Reuters, as the funerals of 25 students were held near the capital, Seoul.

Prosecutors investigating the disaster raided the home of Yoo Byung-un, the head of a family that owns the Chonghaejin Marine Co. Ltd, the company that operated the Sewol ferry. They also raided his son's home and the office of a church with which Yoo has been associated, said a prosecutor who did not want to be identified.

The finances of Chonghaejin and its complex share structure have come into the spotlight in recent days. Yoo was jailed for fraud for four years in the early 1990s.

But it was not immediately clear how big a development this was. Korean police and prosecutors often make dramatic raids to show that progress is being made in a high-profile case.

Underwater, at the site of the sunken Sewol, divers are able to work for nearly an hour at a time as long as the oxygen lines do not snag on sharp corners of the ship's internal structure. When they use cumbersome oxygen tanks on their backs instead, they can work for about 20 minutes before an alarm bell sounds.

The Sewol sank last Wednesday on a routine trip from the port of Incheon, near Seoul, to the southern island of Jeju.

Of the 476 passengers and crew on board, 339 were children and teachers on a high school outing. Only 174 people have been rescued and the remainder are presumed to have drowned.

The confirmed death toll on Wednesday was 150, many found at the back of the ship on the fourth deck.

In a rare move, the disaster prompted reclusive North Korea, which routinely threatens the South with destruction, to send a message of sympathy. The two sides are still technically at war after the 1950-53 civil conflict ended in a mere truce.

"We express condolences for the missing and dead, including young students, from the sinking of the Sewol," a South Korean Unification Ministry spokeswoman quoted the message as saying.

Hwang, the diver, said his team had retrieved 14 bodies so far. "We have to touch everything with our hands. This is the most grueling and heartbreaking job of my career," he said.

Captain Lee Joon-seok, 69, and other crew members have been arrested on negligence charges. Lee was also charged with undertaking an "excessive change of course without slowing down".

LAW REQUIRES CAPTAIN TO STAY ON BOARD

Several crew members, including the captain, left the ferry as it was sinking, witnesses have said, after passengers were told to stay in their cabins, even though it was time for breakfast. President Park Geun-hye said on Monday that instruction was tantamount to an "act of murder".

"The charged crew members appear to have not carried out their duty to rescue the passengers at all," prosecutor Ahn Sang-don told a briefing. "Based on the fact that they were gathered in the bridge, engine room and so on, then left the boat, we believe negligent homicide is applicable."

According to Article 10 of Seafarers' Act, a captain has to remain on board until all passengers have disembarked.

A boy with a shaking voice gave the first distress call to the emergency services when the ferry listed.

Most of those who survived made it out on deck and jumped into rescue boats, but many of the children did not leave their cabins, not questioning their elders, as is customary in hierarchical Korean society. They paid for their obedience with their lives.

Lee was not on the bridge when the ship turned. Navigation was in the hands of a 26-year-old third mate, who was in charge for the first time on that part of the journey, according to crew members.

The wife of one crew member under investigation who did not wish to be identified quoted her husband as saying: "I should have died out there."

"He told me that he was taking some rest as he had finished his shift. He fell from his bed and struggled to open the room door to get out. He said he didn't go to the steering house to meet up with rest of the crew. Rather he was found by coastguards and was rescued.

"My husband didn't get along with other crewmen, but he told me that Captain Lee was someone comfortable and extremely calm. He said Captain Lee was like no other: he didn't drink much, although he did smoke."

(Additional reporting by Meeyoung Cho, Joyce Lee, and Narae Kim; Writing by Nick Macfie; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)




"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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