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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
11/8/2018 5:09:11 PM

Ukraine’s neo-Nazis ‘believed’ to have trained US white supremacists – FBI


Ukraine's neo-Nazi Azov battalion is “believed to have participated in training and radicalizing” US-based white supremacists, the FBI said in a recent indictment of several California men involved in the Charlottesville violence.

Four members of the “Rise Above Movement” (RAM), described by the FBI as a “white supremacy extremist group” were indicted for conspiracy to riot over the August 2017 violence in Charlottesville, Virginia, among other things. Inthe affidavit, signed by FBI Special Agent Scott Bierwirth, 28-year-old Robert Rundo is said to have traveled to Germany, Italy and Ukraine in the spring of 2018.

Rundo allegedly met with Olena Semenyaka, one of the officials of the National Corps - a political wing of the Azov Battalion.

“Based on my training and experience, I know that the Azov Battalion is a paramilitary unit of the Ukrainian National Guard which is known for its association with neo-Nazi ideology and use of Nazi symbolism, and which is believed to have participated in training and radicalizing United States-based white supremacy organizations,” says Bierwirth, who was an officer in the US Army prior to joining the FBI.

The Azov Battalion started as a paramilitary group comprised of right-wing nationalists but is now part of Ukraine’s Interior Ministry. It has patronage in the Ukrainian government, with its former commander Andrey Bilitsky now serving as member of the national parliament.

The UN’s High Commissioner for Human Rights reported that members of the Azov Battalion were allegedly involved in various crimes during their deployment to fight anti-government forces in the east of Ukraine. These included looting, unlawful detention, rape and torture.

READ MORE: Ukraine’s right-wing Azov Battalion stages own version of Nazis’ ‘Cathedral of Light’ ceremony

Azov is by far the most notorious of the “volunteer battalions” established in 2014, after several regions of Ukraine refused to submit to the new government following a US-backed violent overthrow of the president in Kiev. Its logo features the Wolfsangel (Wolf’s Hook), which the Nazi party originally used as its symbol, and the Schwarze Sonne (Black Sun), a symbol created by the SS leader Heinrich Himmler and representing twelve “sig runes” of the notorious Nazi organization.

The Azov battalion is openly neo-Nazi. Even the Russia-hating Atlantic Council admits that. They even added “And no, RT didn’t write this headline” to their article


While the US Congress tried in 2015 to outlaw providing any US aid to Azov, the Obama administration got rid of that provision in the 2016 defense bill. In any case, by that point the unit had already been officially incorporated into the National Guard. It is currently eligible for “lethal assistance”authorized by the Trump administration in December 2017.

Though it has long been known that Azov and other Ukrainian militias have attracted volunteers with neo-Nazi sympathies from around the world, this is the first known instance in which the US government has claimed the militia is involved in training and radicalizing American extremists.


(RT)


"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?
11/9/2018 10:42:04 AM

Crab & caviar: Russian gang lord behind massacre of 12 lived high life in high-security prison


© Tatyana Kuznetsova / Sputnik

Jailed for organizing brutal murders and extortion, a Russian crime lord lived the high life behind bars, as photos show him indulging in crab meat and caviar while holding banquets with his buddies.

He wasn’t nicknamed ‘Zlodey’ (the Villain) for nothing. Vyacheslav Tsepovyaz is one of the most ruthless thugs in Russia.

In 2010, his gang dispatched a death squad to kill a farmer in the southern Krasnodar Region. The thugs entered the man’s home and murdered him and his family. Neighbors were visiting him at that time, so they killed them, too, and then torched the place. In all, 12 people were butchered that night, including four children.

The hideous crime so shook the nation that the name of the small town the unlucky farmer lived in – Kuschevskaya – became a household name for rampant crime.

The gang members were apprehended shortly thereafter. The public was shocked to learn that they had terrorized the area for decades, acting unhinged and committing crimes with near-total impunity.

The gang leader was sentenced to life in prison (the death penalty is de facto banned in Russia) and later died behind bars. His close associate, Tsepovyaz, who facilitated the murders and paid the killers, got nearly 20 years in jail – a strict-regime penal colony in the Amur Region of Russia’s Far East.

Photos recently published in the media show that the term ‘strict regime’ actually means the opposite when dealing with a man of refined tastes such as Tsepovyaz. Steel bars didn’t come between him and his gourmet meals and parties, as one photo captured him enjoying crab meat and red caviar, both local delicacies.


In another photo, he is seen smiling, sitting in front of a row of juicy kebabs.


Some pictures show him having what appear to be banquet parties with friends, sporting smartphones with internet access. These things are not only strictly forbidden but effectively blur the line between prison and hotel.

How did a notorious mobster like Tsepovyaz get away with all this luxury? His wife, Natalya, was sending him money. In fact, she claims to have sent him up to 3 million rubles (US$45,400) a year.

“Yes, we were talking. He was calling me, sending the credit card numbers,” she told Komsomolskaya Pravda.

Natalya and Vyacheslav are now divorced, but when they still were a couple, the loving wife sent her inmate husband money not only to order expensive food but to pay “hefty sums” for dentistry and even to buy bees and beehives – beekeeping was his prison hobby.

The crime lord’s legal team believes that the photos may have been leaked online in connection with the ongoing court battle between former spouses over various assets. Speaking to Interfax news agency, his lawyer said the damning pictures were likely dumped online to generate negative buzz around Tsepovyaz and to “influence the judge’s decision.”

The correctional services say they uncovered Tsepovyaz’s leisure activities last year. The ensuing probe led to several correctional officers being “disciplined,” Deputy Director of the Federal Penitentiary Service Valery Maksimenko told Moskovsky Komsomolets newspaper. He also said the pictures of Tsepovyaz’s escapades are from 2015.

“What can I say – even in the remotest regions, sometimes it’s hard to avoid corruption, especially if a convict, who conspires with the officials, has the gift of persuasion and – what’s important – crazy amount of money.”

The Investigative Committee, meanwhile, has started its own probe following the scandal. The committee’s chief, Aleksandr Bastrykin, called on investigators to thoroughly check the prison and “immediately press criminal charges” if necessary.


(RT)

"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?
11/9/2018 3:52:35 PM

Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates Are Starving Yemenis to Death

The world was rightly outraged by the murder of Jamal Khashoggi, but the bombs of Mohammed bin Salman and his Emirati allies are killing dozens each day in Yemen.


A Yemeni child inspects the rubble of a house in Yemen's rebel-held capital Sanaa on August 11, 2016, after it was reportedly hit by a Saudi-led coalition air strike.
(MOHAMMED HUWAIS/AFP/GETTY IMAGES)

Ja
mal Khashoggi was but the latest victim of a reckless arrogance that has become the hallmark of Saudi Arabia’s foreign policy. Yemenis were saddened, but not surprised, at the extent of the brutality exhibited in Khashoggi’s killing, because our country has been living through this same Saudi brutality for almost four years.

As human rights advocates working in Yemen, we are intimately familiar with the violence, the killing of innocents, and the shredding of international norms that have been the hallmarks of Saudi Arabia’s military intervention in our country. For nearly four years, Saudi Arabia has led a coalition, along with the United Arab Emirates, that has cynically and viciously bombarded Yemen’s cities, blockaded Yemen’s ports, and prevented humanitarian aid from reaching millions in need.

According to the Yemen Data Project, Saudi and Emirati aircraft have conducted over 18,500 air raids on Yemen since the war began—an average of over 14 attacks every day for over 1,300 days. They have bombed schools, hospitals, homes, markets, factories, roads, farms, and even historical sites. Tens of thousands ofcivilians, including thousands of children, have been killed or maimed by Saudi airstrikes.

But the Saudis and Emiratis couldn’t continue their bombing campaign in Yemen without U.S. military support. American planes refuel Saudi aircraft en route to their targets, and Saudi and Emirati pilots drop bombs made in the United States and the United Kingdom onto Yemeni homes and schools. Nevertheless, U.S. attention to the war in Yemen has been largely confined to brief spats of outrage over particularly dramatic attacks, like the August school bus bombingthat killed dozens of children.

Saudis and Emiratis couldn’t continue their bombing campaign in Yemen without U.S. military support.

Saudi crimes in Yemen are not limited to regular and intentional bombing of civilians in violation of international humanitarian law. By escalating the war and destroying essential civilian infrastructure, Saudi Arabia is also responsible for the tens of thousands of Yemeni civilians who have died from preventable disease and starvation brought on by the war. The United Nations concluded that blockadeshave had “devastating effects on the civilian population” in Yemen, as Saudi and Emirati airstrikes have targeted Yemen’s food production and distribution, including the agricultural sector and the fishing industry.

Meanwhile, the collapse of Yemen’s currency due to the war has prevented millions of civilians from purchasing the food that exists in markets. Food prices haveskyrocketed, but civil servants haven’t received regular salaries in two years. Yemenis are being starved to death on purpose, with starvation of civilians used by Saudi Arabia as a weapon of war.

Three-quarters of Yemen’s population—over 22 million men, women, and children—are currently dependent on international aid and protection. The U.N. warned in September that Yemen soon will reach a “tipping point,” beyond which it will be impossible to avoid massive civilian deaths. Over 8 million people are currently on the verge of starvation, a figure likely to rise to 14 million—half of the country—by the end of 2018 if the fighting does not subside, import obstructions are not removed, and the currency is not stabilized.

Over 8 million people are currently on the verge of starvation, a figure likely to rise to 14 million—half of the country—by the end of 2018

To be clear, there is no party in this war is without blood on its hands; our organization, Mwatana, has documented violations against civilians by all parties to the conflict in Yemen, not only Saudi Arabia. The Houthis have killed and injured hundreds of civilians through their use of landmines and indiscriminate shelling, while militias backed by the United Arab Emirates, Yemeni government-backed militias, and Houthi militias have arbitrarily detained, forcibly disappeared, and tortured civilians. But the de facto immunity that the international community has given Saudi Arabia through its silence prevents real justice for violations by all sides.

The people of the Middle East have long and bitter experience with international double standards when it comes to human rights, as purported champions of universal rights in the West regularly ignore grave violations by their allies in the region, from the former shah of Iran to Saddam Hussein to Saudi Arabia’s current crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman.

This double standard was on display during the crown prince’s recent tour of world capitals and Silicon Valley, where he was generally praised as a “reformer,” and media figures recited his vision for Saudi Arabia in the year 2030 without asking what will be left of Yemen by the year 2020 if the war continues.

Similarly, this double standard is on display when Western policymakers downplay Saudi and Emirati violations of Yemenis’ human rights by claiming that a close partnership with Riyadh is needed to prevent perceived Iranian threats to the international community, without asking whether that same community is also endangered by Saudi Arabia’s daily violations of basic international norms. And yes, there is a double standard in the wall-to-wall coverage of Khashoggi’s horrific murder, when the daily murder of Yemenis by Saudi Arabia and other parties to the conflict in Yemen hardly merits mention.

Those in the United States and elsewhere who are incensed by Khashoggi’s murder must summon similar moral clarity and condemn Saudi Arabia’s daily killing of innocents in Yemen.

If Saudi violations are to be genuinely curtailed, Khashoggi’s killing must mark the beginning, not the end, of accountability for Saudi crimes. Khashoggi’s death has been reduced to a single data point, rather than being seen as the result of subverting universal values in favor of geopolitics or business interests.

Those in the United States and elsewhere who are incensed by Khashoggi’s murder must summon similar moral clarity and condemn Saudi Arabia’s daily killing of innocents in Yemen.

Reversing course—ending U.S. military support for the Saudi-Emirati intervention in Yemen and supporting U.N.-led peace efforts and the reopening of Yemen’s air and sea ports—can still save millions of lives.

If U.S. lawmakers had spoken up and taken action on Yemen years ago, when Saudi Arabia’s rampant violations were already well known, thousands of Yemeni civilians who since then have been killed by airstrikes or starvation would still be alive today—and perhaps Jamal Khashoggi would be, too.


Radhya Almutawakel
is a co-founder and leader of Mwatana Organization for Human Rights, which recently received the Roger Baldwin Medal of Liberty, a biennial prize awarded by U.S.-based Human Rights First. @RAlmutawakel

Abdulrasheed Alfaqih is a co-founder and leader of Mwatana Organization for Human Rights, which recently received the Roger Baldwin Medal of Liberty, a biennial prize awarded by U.S.-based Human Rights First. @ralfaqih



"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?
11/9/2018 4:57:41 PM
Inside, it was ‘like hell.’ Another mass shooting in another public place claims 12 lives


Twelve people, including a sheriff's deputy, were fatally shot Nov. 7 at the Borderline Bar and Grill in Thousand Oaks, Calif.

It was college night at a country-music bar in the third-safest city in America. Inside, people were line dancing. Outside, a man in black clothing approached the door.

He shot the security guard with a .45-caliber handgun.

Then he went inside.

In the next few minutes, the gunman — identified by police as 28-year-old Ian David Long — killed 11 other people in the Borderline Bar & Grill, including a sheriff’s sergeant who rushed in to stop him.

For many of those inside, there was a grim benefit to being young in America during an age of massacres: They knew exactly what this was, and they knew exactly what to do, in the way that past generations knew how to hide from tornadoes or nuclear bombs.

“They ran out of back doors, they broke windows, they went through windows, they hid up in the attic, they hid in the bathroom,” Ventura County Sheriff Geoff Dean said. “Unfortunately, our young people, people at nightclubs, have learned that this may happen. They think about that.”

Witnesses said some victims stayed, protecting friends, and in doing so sacrificed their lives.


This undated photo provided by the Ventura County Sheriff's Office shows Sgt. Ron Helus, who was killed Wednesday. (AP)

The carnage added Thousand Oaks to the seemingly endless list of American cities that have experienced a mass shooting. The violence came just days after 11 people were gunned down in a Pittsburgh synagogue, months after 17 students and staff were massacred in a Parkland, Fla., high school, and a year after rampages at a Las Vegas country music festival and in a Sutherland Springs, Tex., church took the lives of a combined 84 people.

At least one survivor of the Las Vegas shooting was in the bar Wednesday — again trying to enjoy country music while on a night out — his second mass shooting in 13 months.

Like in Las Vegas and in Sutherland Springs, the shooter in California died of an apparent suicide before providing any explanation for the attack. At the Borderline on Wednesday, Long was found dead inside an office at the bar.

Witnesses said Long did not utter a word to explain why he had chosen this place, this night, these people, this obscene and wasteful end.

When asked by a reporter what it looked like inside the venue, Dean responded: “Like hell.”

On Thursday, police identified the deceased officer as Sgt. Ron Helus, a 29-year veteran of the Ventura force. Family members identified several other victims, many of whom were in their late teens or early 20s.

Cody Coffman was 22. His father, Jason Coffman, said Thursday that he had last spoken to his son as the younger man left for the night.

“I said, ‘Don’t drink and drive,’ ” Jason Coffman recalled, his voice breaking with emotion. “The last thing I said was, ‘Son, I love you.’ ”

Police said that as many as 15 other people were injured in the attack, mostly with cuts from diving under tables. At least one suffered a nonfatal gunshot wound.

Residents of Thousand Oaks, Calif. gathered for a vigil Nov. 8 after a mass shooting at a local country-music bar left 12 people dead.

Police said they weren’t sure why the gunman, who lived in nearby Newbury Park, Calif., was drawn to the bar.

Long grew up in the area, played high school varsity baseball, and joined the Marine Corps in 2008, the year he graduated. He served as a machine-gunner in Afghanistan from November 2010 to June 2011 and became a corporal two months later. He left the Marine Corps in 2013, and attended California State University at Northridge between 2013 and 2016 and did not graduate.

A former roommate said that Long was quiet and prone to unusual behavior — like dancing alone in his garage to “trance” music, a kind of electronic dance music.

In recent years, police said they had “several contacts” with Long, mostly for minor events including traffic accidents. In April, deputies were called to the home Long shared with his mother for a reported disturbance, Dean said. Neighbors described that incident as looking like a standoff, with police cars blocking the street and officers taking cover with rifles.

“They went to the house, they talked to him,” Dean said. “He was somewhat irate, acting a little irrationally. They called out our crisis intervention team, our mental health specialist, who met with him, talked to him and cleared him.”

On Wednesday evening, there were at least 100 people inside the Borderline bar — which describes itself as Ventura County’s largest country dance hall and live-music venue. The city of 130,000, northwest of Los Angeles, was ranked “third safest,” based on FBI crime data.

Many of the patrons were drawn by the “college country night” promotion. Six off-duty police officers from other agencies were inside, Dean said. It appeared they were there as patrons, not working paid security details.


In this image taken from video, a victim is treated near the scene of the mass shooting at a bar in Thousand Oaks, Calif., on Wednesday. (RMG News/AP)

It was 11:20 p.m. Pacific time. Chris Brown’s “Turn Up the Music” was blaring on the dance floor.

David Anderson, 23, of Newbury Park, had survived the mass shooting at the Route 91 Harvest country music festival in October 2017 that killed 58 in Las Vegas. After that, when he went out, he liked to keep his eyes on the door.

Looking at the door Wednesday, he saw Long enter.

“I knew exactly what it was, the moment it was,” Anderson said.

“He took two to three steps in, and his stance and the way that he was aiming at everyone was very uniform and you could tell he had training,” Anderson said. “And basically it was like slow motion. I watched the gun.”

Anderson estimated that the gunman fired 10 to 15 times.

“It was a very stern, straight-faced, focused face,” he said. “Didn’t say anything.”

In the bar, people dived for cover, or began to run.

“It was sheer panic,” said Teylor Whittler, 19, who was inside the venue at the time. “I ran to the side. We all dog-piled on top of each other. I kept getting stomped on. Just trampled.”

She said she ran to the back door, where people crowded during a pause in the gunfire. “And then, all of a sudden, a couple of guys started running to the back door and said, ‘Get up, he’s coming.’ ”

Witnesses described the shooter as standing over 6 feet tall and wearing dark clothing. Police said Long had a pistol with an extended magazine, meaning it could hold more ammunition than a standard clip.

Some hid under a pool table as the shooter emptied his gun and then paused to reload. Some threw bar stools through a window and escaped.

Other survivors credited Cody Coffman with acting heroically, warning others to run.

“At first I thought it was robbery,” said Sarah Deson, 19. “A smoke bomb then went off and Cody was yelling, ‘Everyone get down!’ He then told me to run for the front door because the shooter had moved further into the bar. I ran fast — so fast — all the way across the street to a gas station. Then I heard the second round of shots.”

Rochelle Hammons, 24, said she heard a volley of shots before she was able to flee.

“All of a sudden we heard four shots, you know, ‘bang, bang, bang, bang.’ Everyone got down on the floor. Everyone ducked and covered each other,” she said. “As everyone crouched down on the floor, I figured that my only chance would be to run out to the nearest exit. I saw the nearest exit, and I ran out as fast as I could.”

From inside her car, she saw a police officer arrive, she said. She rolled down her window and told him there was an active shooter inside.

“You’ve got to hurry, you’ve got to get in there,” she urged him.

Nearby, Helus was in his patrol car, talking to his wife, when he got the call. He told her he loved her before hanging up and moving toward the bar.

Police said Helus arrived about 11:22 p.m. On the scene, according to radio traffic obtained by the Daily Beast, he reported finding one person down outside. He told the dispatcher he was outside an entrance with two California Highway Patrol officers.

“I’m going in,” Helus said, according to the radio calls. Inside, the gunman shot Helus several times.

“He died a hero,” said Dean, the sheriff, with his voice cracking, “because he went in to save lives.”


Family members of loved ones killed or injured in the mass shooting at Borderline Bar & Grill, comfort each other at the family reunification center located at the Alex Fiore Thousand Oaks Teen Center in California. (Philip Cheung/For The Washington Post)

Berman and Fahrenthold reported from Washington. Rob Kuznia and Tony Biasotti in Thousand Oaks and Julie Tate, Alice Crites, Jennifer Jenkins, William Wan, Allyson Chiu, Antonia Noori Farzan, Meagan Flynn, Kyle Swenson, Fred Barbash, Alex Horton, Amar Nadir, Lindsey Bever, Isaac Stanley-Becker, Katie Mettler and Matt Zapotosky in Washington contributed to this report.

(The Washington Post)

"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?
11/9/2018 6:28:41 PM
Passport

Trump signs order denying asylum to illegal migrants, as caravan approaches US - migrants 'have to come in legally'

Border patrol asylum seeker
© Agence France-Presse/John Moore
A US Customs and Border Patrol agent speaks with a Cuban asylum seeker in Texas
President Trump has signed an immigration order requiring asylum seekers to make their claim at their point of entry to the US, and barring illegal immigrants from requesting asylum.

"We need people in our country but they have to come in legally and they have to have merit," Trump told reporters on Friday, before departing for Paris.

The order comes after weeks of Trump promising to crack down on illegal immigration, as a caravan of several thousand migrants makes its way toward the US' southern border from Central America. The caravan is currently around 600 miles from the United States.


The directive is a temporary measure, and circumvents current laws that state anyone who applies for asylum in the US is eligible to have their case heard, no matter whether they arrived legally or illegally. As such, it is likely to be challenged in federal courts.

Those denied asylum under the new order will still be able to apply for 'withholding of removal' - a limited form of asylum that doesn't allow for green cards or family members to join the applicant; or asylum under the United Nations Convention Against Torture. In both cases, the applicant has to demonstrate a credible threat if they were to return home.

It forms one part of the president's latest efforts to tighten border security and clamp down on immigration. Before the midterm elections, Trump mulled ending birthright citizenship - the policy that ensures all children born on US soil are automatically citizens - by executive order.

"We're the only country in the world where a person comes in and has a baby, and the baby is essentially a citizen of the United States for 85 years with all of those benefits," Trump told Axios. "It's ridiculous. It's ridiculous. And it has to end."

Any executive order ending birthright citizenship would likely provoke a Constitutional debate and be challenged in the Supreme Court, as birthright citizenship is currently guaranteed under the 14th Amendment of the US Constitution.

In addition to policy changes, Trump has also beefed up the physical security of the US' 2,000-mile border with Mexico.

Over 5,200 US troops have been sent to the border to erect razor-wire fences and provide surveillance and logistical support to the National Guardsmen and Customs and Border Patrol agents already there.

The president said last week that "anywhere between 10,000 and 15,000 military personnel" may be deployed to the border, if the current contingent is not enough.

Trump also underscored that anyone who does cross the US border illegally will be detained in "tent cities" and other immigration detention facilities, as "we're not doing releases" anymore. Trump has been a long time critic of the Obama administration's 'catch and release' policy, under which apprehended immigrants would be released and asked to return for a court hearing at a later date. Unsurprisingly, many do not.

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