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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
8/30/2015 5:23:14 PM

Libya arrests three suspected smugglers over migrant boat disaster

Reuters


A view of the bodies of dead migrants that were recovered by the Libyan coastguard after a boat sank off the coastal town of Zuwara, west of Tripoli, August 27, 2015. REUTERS/Hani Amara

By Ahmed Elumami

TRIPOLI (Reuters) - Libyan authorities have arrested three people on suspicion of involvement in launching a boat packed with migrants that sank off the country's Mediterranean coast, killing up to 200 people, a security official said on Saturday.

The vessel, with up to 400 sub-Saharan, Syrian and Asian migrants on board capsized on Thursday, after setting off from the town of Zuwara, a centre of operations for people smugglers exploiting the anarchy in a country with two rival governments.

Libya has turned into a main transit route for migrants fleeing conflict and poverty to make it to Europe.

Three Libyan smugglers involved in launching the ill-fated boat and other vessels to take migrants to Italy have been arrested, said a security official, asking not to be named.

"They are in their twenties," he said. "We think that more are involved which we are still chasing."

By Saturday, 115 bodies had been recovered and about 198 migrants rescued, officials said.

Arrests of smugglers are rare in Libya, where the judiciary has little power since the country is effectively controlled by former rebel groups which helped to oust Muammar Gaddafi in 2011.

On Thursday, Zuwara residents staged a protest to demand authorities clamp down on smugglers who use the town to launch boats due to its proximity to the Italian island of Lampedusa.

Libya has asked the European Union for help to train and equip its navy, which was largely destroyed during the 2011 uprising.

But cooperation was frozen in 2014 as the European Union boycotted a self-declared government controlling western Libya, which seized the capital Tripoli a year ago by expelling the internationally recognized premier to the east.

Western and most Arab powers only deal with the eastern-based government, which has no control of western Libya where smugglers operate.

The number of migrants crossing the Mediterranean to reach Europe has passed 300,000 this year, up from 219,000 in the whole of 2014, the U.N. refugee agency UNHCR said on Friday.

(Reporting by Ahmed Elumami, Writing by Ulf Laessing, Editing by Mark Heinrich and Angus MacSwan)


Libya arrests 3 in migrant boat deaths


Authorities say the suspects were involved in the sinking that killed 200 immigrants in the Mediterranean.
'There are more involved'

"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?
8/31/2015 10:24:43 AM

Hundreds mourn slain 9-year-old Ferguson girl

Associated Press


Jamyla Bolden was a star student.


ST. LOUIS (AP) — Hundreds gathered to remember a 9-year-old girl who was killed when shots were fired into her Ferguson home as she did homework on her mother's bed.

Sobs grew audible and tissues were passed down the aisles as fourth-grade classmates of Jamyla Bolden sang in front of her casket Saturday, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch (http://bit.ly/1fPrcwZ ) reported. The shooting Aug. 18 in the St. Louis suburb also left Jamyla's 34-year-old mother wounded. After searching more than a week, authorities charged a 21-year-old O'Fallon man with second-degree murder and several other felonies.

The pastor at Friendly Missionary Baptist Church told Jamyla's family as the funeral began that the shooting has "wounded" the whole community, region and country.

"We dare not say we experience it in the same way as you," the Rev. Michael Jones added.

Jamyla's killing brought renewed attention to Ferguson, where Michael Brown was fatally shot by officer Darren Wilson on Aug. 9, 2014.

"We say go to school, get an education ... she tried to do all of that," former Missouri Rep. Betty Thompson said after the service.

Lillie Vinson, a longtime friend of Jamyla's great-aunt, said it seemed like the community worked well with the Ferguson Police Department and its new interim chief, Andre Anderson, to try to solve the crime.

"I hope we just stop all of this senseless shooting," Vinson said before the funeral began. "Enough is enough."

Officer Greg Casem told the gathering how he held Jamyla as she was dying and told her to "hold on."

"I watched the ambulance speed away, and I felt lost," he said, overcome with emotion. "You have touched the heart of the entire nation."

The church played a video during the service that featured St. Louis Cardinals President Bill DeWitt III asking the community to pray for Jamyla and justice. He and his wife, Ira, paid for the family's funeral expenses.

____

This story has been corrected to show the shooting happened on Aug. 18, not Aug. 19.

___

Information from: St. Louis Post-Dispatch, http://www.stltoday.com

"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?
8/31/2015 10:54:21 AM

Walruses by the thousands forced ashore by melting sea ice

Thousands of walruses are coming ashore near Point Lay on the Northwest Arctic coast of Alaska.
Photo: Gary Braasch

Walruses by the thousands are being forced to congregate on a remote barrier island near Point Lay, Alaska, because the Arctic sea ice they typically use is melting.

Ten years ago, Alaskan natives in Point Lay were used to seeing a handful at most come to shore each year, but now the walruses are coming en masse almost annually.

Last year, a record 30,000 walruses were forced ashore. It’s too soon to say if this year’s “haul out” will be more, as it is ongoing, but it is the third earliest of the seven that have occurred in the past nine years, according to data from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. It began about August 20 on the barrier island along Kasegaluk Lagoon, locals told photojournalist Gary Braasch of Portland, Oregon.

“We’ve seen rising temperatures, both sea surface and air temperatures in the Arctic, probably twice as fast here as anywhere else in the lower latitude,” Jim MacCracken, a wildlife biologist for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, said in a Friday media conference call.

“The ice has been going out at a faster rate [and] sooner each year, and freeze-up is coming up later each year. And of course when the ice completely melts out, the walruses have to eventually come to shore and haul out. They spend a week in the ocean before they have to come to shore and haul out.”



The “haul out” of thousands of walruses is the second earliest of the seven that have occurred i
n the past
nine years. Photo: Gary Braasch

It is upon this backdrop that President Obama will become the first U.S. president to visit the Alaskan Arctic on Monday. Among the places he will visit on the three-day visit is Kotzebue, located about 200 miles south of the walruses, Dillingham and the Seward area “where he will have the opportunity to view the effects of climate change firsthand,” according to a White House spokesperson.

Three days after the haul out began near Point Lay, Braasch snapped photos of the thousands of walruses, as you see in this post.

Leo Ferreira III, president of the Point Lay Tribal Council, said in the conference call that Braasch disobeyed flight restrictions and the council’s request not to come, as any type of disturbance can cause a stampede and cost the lives of young walruses.

Braasch denied the allegation, telling The Guardian the pilot did not fly over the barrier island and intentionally remained several hundred feet beyond the Fish and Wildlife flight guidelines to avoid disturbing the walruses.

“We were not even close to the limits they set,” Braasch told The Telegraph.

The USFWS said in the conference call it is investigating the matter.



A record 30,000 walruses hauled out last year. Photo: Gary Braasch


“Considering the distance required to be away from the animals to avoid disturbing them and from a light plane, I got some sharp frames,” Braasch told GrindTV.

Braasch posted his photos on his website called “World View of Global Warming, the Photographic Documentation of Climate Change,” and gave GrindTV permission to use them.

In a nutshell, Braasch summed up what is happening with the walruses:

“Summer sea ice is retreating far north of the shallow continental shelf waters of the Chukchi Sea in U.S. and Russian waters, a condition that did not occur a decade ago, according to USGS scientists,” he wrote. “Sea ice is currently far to the north, over very deep water which is not feeding habitat for the walrus, who eat clams, snails, worms, sea cucumbers, and tunicates from the shallow sea floor. Thus the animals have begun retreating back south into the shallow coastal waters and the beach of the barrier island.”

Bad weather has prevented officials in Point Lay from surveying the walruses since Braasch photographed them on Aug. 23.


Read more at http://www.grindtv.com/wildlife/walruses-by-the-thousands-forced-ashore-by-melting-sea-ice/#5riR18LMo74xHzcX.99


"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?
8/31/2015 11:05:45 AM

Video shows Palestinian women, Israeli soldier scuffling

Associated Press

In this Friday, Aug, 28, 2015 photo, Palestinian women and youth scuffle with an Israeli soldier trying to arrest a 12-year-old boy during a protest near the West Bank village of Nebi Saleh. A video showing the incident has been viewed more than 2 million times on Facebook, and shined a light on Israeli military policies in the territory. The Israeli military said Sunday that a "violent riot" broke out at the protest and that it tried to detain the boy because he was hurling rocks. The video sparked accusations from critics that Israel is too heavy-handed in its confrontations with Palestinian protesters, especially minors. (AP Photo)


JERUSALEM (AP) — A video showing an Israeli soldier scuffling with Palestinian youths and women at a West Bank protest has been viewed more than 2 million times on Facebook, shining a light on Israeli military policies in the territory.

In the edited video, the masked soldier is seen holding a 12-year-old boy, his arm in a cast, in a chokehold in an attempt to arrest him. The soldier is swarmed by the boy's female relatives, including his mother and sister, who pull at his skin and uniform and slap him. The boy's sister, a 15-year-old sporting a blonde braid, is seen biting the soldier's hand. Bystanders yell, "He is a little boy. His arm is broken."

The soldier struggles with the boy, and then the female crowd, which ripped the mask off his face, for about a minute before a commanding officer arrives to assist him. The soldier then frees himself and releases the boy, angrily throwing a small stun grenade at a group of people as he walks away.

The original video, which was provided to The Associated Press by its creator, local activist and the boy's relative Bilal Tamimi, showed the same footage. Tamimi said Palestinians had hurled stones at the troops, but that he hadn't seen the boy throw stones, though photos broadcast on Israeli TV seemed to show the boy hurling a stone.

The skirmish took place Friday at a weekly protest in the West Bank village of Nebi Saleh, where Israeli troops and Palestinian protesters often clash. Villagers claim a nearby Jewish settlement has restricted access to a nearby spring.

The Israeli military said Sunday that a "violent riot" broke out at the protest and that it tried to detain the boy because he was throwing rocks. The military says the boy was released "to prevent an escalation of violence."

The video sparked accusations from critics that Israel is too heavy-handed in its confrontations with Palestinian protesters, especially minors.

In Israel, the video was seen as capturing the antagonism Israel's soldiers regularly face from stone-throwing Palestinian protesters and raised concerns for the soldiers' safety.

Israeli Channel 2 aired a recording of a man identified as the soldier's father who said he was proud his son showed restraint in the skirmish. Israeli Culture Minister Miri Regev called for the military to adopt a new policy that would have allowed the soldier to shoot the Palestinians who scuffled with him.

"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?
8/31/2015 11:14:51 AM

Thai police seek 2 new suspects in Bangkok bombing probe

Associated Press

This image released Monday, Aug. 31, 2015, by the National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO) shows Wanna Suansun who police said is renting the second apartment which was raided by authorities in Min Buri, in Bangkok's outskirts, and where police found fertilizer, gun powder, digital clocks and remote-controlled cars whose parts can be used for detonation. Thai police said Monday they were seeking two new suspects — a Thai woman and a foreign man of unknown nationality — in the widening investigation into Bangkok's deadly bombing two weeks ago. Words in Thai say "Official Police Photo". (National Council for Peace and Order via AP)


BANGKOK (AP) — Thai police issued arrest warrants Monday for two more suspects, a Thai woman and a foreign man of unknown nationality, and released their images in the widening investigation into Bangkok's deadly bombing two weeks ago that yielded its first arrest over the weekend.

National police spokesman Prawuth Thavornsiri said he was certain the two were part of a group police say was responsible for the Aug. 17 blast at the Erawan Shrine in central Bangkok that killed 20 people, more than half of them foreigners.

During a televised statement on Monday, Prawuth displayed a photograph of the woman's Thai identification card showing a young woman in a black headscarf and a sketch of the man. He later said police were asking for additional arrest warrants.

The development came after police arrested a man from an apartment in Bangkok's outskirts on Saturday and seized bomb-making equipment that included detonators, ball bearings and a metal pipe believed to be a bomb casing.

Thai police, meanwhile, awarded themselves a 3 million baht, or $84,000, reward Monday for tips leading to the arrest of bombing suspects.

National police chief Somyot Poompanmoung said he was taking the unusual step of giving the reward to the police force both to motivate his officers and to show that Thailand's police are good at their job.

"This money should be given to officials who did their job," he said at a news conference as aides brought out stacks of 1,000 baht notes. It wasn't immediately clear how the money would be distributed to police officers.

More bomb-making materials were discovered in a second apartment during a raid Sunday in a nearby neighborhood, said Prawuth. He said the second apartment, in a neighborhood known as Min Buri, was rented by the Thai woman identified as 26-year-old Wanna Suansun. He said the woman has a house registration in the southern Thai province of Phang Nga, and is also known by the name Mai Saloh.

Prawuth described what police found in the second apartment as "important bomb-making materials such as gunpowder, urea-based fertilizer which can be used as explosive powder when mixed with other substances, a remote-controlled car with its controller which can be used as a detonator, nuts and bolts, small light bulbs and digital watches," among other things.

The arrest warrants for them say they are wanted on a charge of conspiracy to possess unauthorized war material, a reference to the gunpowder.

The wanted man, whose face is shown in a police sketch with short brown hair and a light beard and mustache, is believed to have lived in the apartment, said Prawuth, adding that his nationality was not known. He told The Associated Press the man's name is Jusuf, but did not explain how he learned that or give a precise spelling.

No one has claimed responsibility for the attack, sparking an array of theories about who might be behind it. Police have suggested that the suspects were part of a people-smuggling group who held a grudge against Thai authorities.

Much remains unknown about the man arrested Saturday, including his nationality and his motive. On Sunday, Prawuth said police were working with "a number of embassies" and interpreters to try to establish the man's nationality, adding that he did not speak Thai but spoke some English.

Speculation has grown that the suspect might be part of a group seeking to avenge Thailand's forced repatriation of ethnic Uighurs to China after images circulated online of a fake Turkish passport found in his apartment bearing his apparent picture.

Uighurs are related to Turks, and Turkey is home to a large Uighur community.

Authorities have dodged questions about whether the suspect is believed to be Turkish, saying that he was traveling on a fake passport.

The Turkish Embassy in Bangkok could not immediately be reached for comment. A Turkish government spokesman contacted over the weekend in Istanbul said he had no information on the suspect or any possible Turkish link to the attack.

Another possibility is that the perpetrators are Muslim separatists from southern Thailand, opponents of Thailand's military government and feuding factions within the security services.

The blast at the Erawan Shrine was unprecedented in the Thai capital, where smaller bombs have been employed in domestic political violence over the past decade, but not in an effort to cause large-scale casualties.


2 new suspects sought in deadly Bangkok bombing


Police are seeking a Thai woman and a foreign man of unknown nationality in the widening investigation.
More bomb materials found

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

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