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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/10/2013 9:25:26 PM

In Nigerian school slaughter, Boko Haram may be raising the stakes
Christian Science Monitor


On a dirt road in the northern Nigerian city of Kaduna this morning, 13-year-old Joseph John walked home to collect money from his father for school fees. He was frustrated by missing his class. But after three attacks on schools in less than a month – including a gruesome massacre of children July 6 – he said school is more frightening than it used to be.

“We are not even free to play,” he said, munching a biscuit as he walked along the muddy road. “We are all afraid.”

Early last Saturday militants said to be Boko Haram Islamic radicals stormed a boarding school in Yobe state, opened fire, threw explosives, and killed as many as 42 people, mostly children, some of them as they tried to escape the flames, reports say.

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Parents in the north were already pulling their children out of schools when Yobe State Governor Ibrahim Gaidam ordered all state schools shut down this week.

Some analysts now argue the recent attacks on children and lower schools may signify a frightening new element to Boko Haram, pushing its position by going after the most vulnerable, and perhaps even pushing the young into the arms of Islamic schools.

Strangely, days after the killings, reports from local officials said a ceasefire between the government and militants had been agreed to, though so far nothing is confirmed.

Since May, much of northern Nigeria has been under an emergency rule as the Nigerian government initiated another military crackdown in what has been a four-year battle against the radical Boko Haram insurgent group.

The government regularly reports successes against insurgents and says it has killed scores of militants, arrested hundreds, and re-taken territories formerly occupied by Boko Haram.

What exactly is taking place – the killings, battles, negotiations – is highly unclear. With no independent observers on the ground in Yobe, Adamawa, and Borno, the three states under emergency rule, it’s hard to know what’s really going on says John Campbell, a former US ambassador to Nigeria now at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York.

“[The attack] makes me even more skeptical than I already was about government claims about making progress,” he added. “It seems to be a ratcheting up of the general horror.”

In the past, Boko Haram, whose name is loosely translated as “Western education is sinful,” has attacked schools but the buildings were usually empty. In June, at least six other people were killed in two other school attacks.

So far, no one has claimed responsibility for the attack and one man claiming to be Boko Haram’s second-in-command denied the group's involvement. Boko Haram, however, is a shadowy organization that appears to have loosely connected sub-groups with distinctly different goals and messages that clash. An overriding goal for the group is to push their unorthodox local vision of Islam in Nigeria's mostly Muslim north, a region that is locked in a power struggle with the more populous Christian south.

Boko Haram has been blamed for thousands of deaths since it began violent operations in 2009, attacking churches, marketplaces, government buildings, and media houses. Nigerian security forces have been accused of perpetuating the violence by shooting before making arrests and detaining prisoners without charges.

The recent school attacks could drive more children to Islamic schools, some analysts say. Yet these schools don’t prepare students to go to college, according to University of Abuja Institute for Anti-Corruption Studies director Kabir Mato. He says one outcome would be more poor, young people with little else to do but fight.

“People are going to be poorer,” he said in his office in the Nigerian capital, Abuja. “And the more they get poorer, the more possibilities of having more resurrections and insurrections from the younger elements.”

A Nigerian human rights commission said military gains may also be undermined by a pending food crisis as farmers have been cut off from their lands. The military clampdown and a complete shut down of mobile phone services in the region limited their ability to accurately assess the situation on the ground, the group said.

As reports were trickling out of the Yobe boarding school over the weekend, officials in Kano, Nigeria’s second-largest city, announced a Boko Haram ceasefire, drawing hope from some and skepticism from others. It was the second ceasefire announced this year. Abubakar Shekau, the man believed to be the Boko Haram leader, has repeatedly rejected government reports of ongoing peace talks and called the first ceasefire announcement fraudulent.

Back in Kaduna, a city beleaguered by sectarian violence sometimes fueled by Boko Haram attacks, parents say if the government is winning against the group, it isn’t helping them much. One middle-aged man who wanders the city in search of work as a day laborer, James Peter, said he has dropped by the school three times in a day to check on his two children.

"We can’t wait for the government to provide security for our children,” he said. “We have to do it.”

* Ibrahima Yakubu contributed to this report from Kaduna, Nigeria.

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Related stories

Read this story at csmonitor.com


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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/10/2013 9:52:04 PM

Syria opposition denies Russian chemical attack allegation


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The shadow of a Free Syrian Army fighter is cast on a wall of a school in Sheikh Maksoud area in Aleppo July 9, 2013. REUTERS/Muzaffar Salman

By Louis Charbonneau

UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - The opposition Syrian National Coalition on Wednesday denied a Russian charge that rebel fighters fired a projectile laden with the nerve agent sarin at a suburb of Aleppo in March, saying U.N. inspectors should be allowed to investigate the attack.

Separately, Western diplomats said Russia blocked a draft U.N. Security Council resolution this week calling for a stalled U.N. chemical weapons investigation team to be allowed to visit Syria and to be permitted to conduct an "objective" inquiry.

Russia, along with Iran, is Syria's closest ally and chief arms supplier. The draft resolution echoed a recent statement by the Group of Eight (G8) developed nations including Russia.

"The Free Syrian Army strongly condemns all usage of chemical weapons against a civilian population and denies Russia's allegations about the FSA using chemical weapons in Khan al-Assal, Aleppo," Khalid Saleh, a spokesman for the coalition, said in a statement.

"Only the Assad regime has the know-how, capability and willingness to use these weapons," Saleh said, referring to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

"The coalition and supreme military council have asked for the U.N. monitors to come to Syria to investigate the use of these weapons and the Assad regime refuses to allow them to do so," he said.

Russia's U.N. envoy Vitaly Churkin on Tuesday said Russian scientific analysis strongly indicated a projectile containing sarin that hit Khan al-Assal on March 19, killing 26 civilians and military personnel, was fired by rebels.

The government and rebels have blamed each other for that incident, as well numerous other alleged chemical attacks. Both sides deny using chemical weapons themselves.

"The usage of chemical weapons is inconsistent with the guiding principles and goals of the Syrian revolution," Saleh said. "Targeting civilians indiscriminately to achieve political gains is a common characteristic of the Assad regime."

The United States has cast doubt on the Russian analysis of the Khan al-Assal incident and, along with France, called for full U.N. access to Syrian sites where chemical weapons use was suspected.

The United Nations says as many as 100,000 have died in the two-year civil war.

CHEMICAL PROJECTILE FELL SHORT?

Speaking on condition of anonymity, a senior Western diplomat also expressed skepticism about the Russian claim that the rebels were behind the Khan al-Assal attack.

He dismissed the idea that Assad's government was willing to let the U.N. team investigate Aleppo because it was certain the rebels were responsible for the March 19 chemical attack. He said available evidence suggested the Syrian army carried out the attack.

"What they hope will be discovered there is lots of soldiers who were poisoned by chemical weapons, which is true," the envoy said. "But our information suggests that that was because the projectile ... fell short and landed in an area where there were Syrian troops, not that the opposition had done it."

Churkin said Russian experts visited the location where the projectile struck and took their own samples of material from the site. Those samples, he said, were then analyzed at a Russian laboratory certified by the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons.

He also said that the projectile was not a standard military weapon.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, Western diplomats on the 15-nation Security Council said Russia blocked a draft resolution based on a statement Moscow supported at last month's G8 summit in Belfast that urged all parties to the conflict to grant access to the U.N. team "in order to conduct an objective investigation into reports of the use of chemical weapons."

Diplomats said Russia justified its opposition to the resolution by saying the timing was not right. Russia's U.N. mission did not respond to a request for comment.

So far, chief U.N. chemical weapons inspector Ake Sellstrom's team has not traveled to Syria because of diplomatic wrangling over the scope of access he would have there.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon wants Sellstrom to have unfettered access to investigate all credible alleged chemical attacks while Assad's government wants the U.N. experts to confine their investigation to the March 19 incident. That disagreement has caused a deadlock in talks between the United Nations and Syria on access for the inspection team.

Syrian U.N. Ambassador Bashar Ja'afari on Monday said his government has invited Sellstrom and U.N. disarmament chief Angela Kane to Damascus to discuss allegations of banned arms use in Syria's two-year civil war but suggested it would not compromise on access.

The senior Western diplomat said Sellstrom and Kane were expected to accept the invitation and travel to Damascus soon to discuss ways of breaking the deadlock.

(Reporting by Louis Charbonneau; Editing by Vicki Allen and Cynthia Osterman)


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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/10/2013 9:54:54 PM

Watchdog: Ocean contamination likely at Fukushima
Associated Press


TOKYO (AP) -- Japan's nuclear watchdog said Wednesday that the crippled Fukushima power plant is probably leaking contaminated water into the ocean, a problem long suspected by experts but denied by the plant's operator.

Officials from the Nuclear Regulation Authority said a leak is "strongly suspected" and urged plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co. to determine where the water may be leaking from and assess the environmental and other risks, including the impact on the food chain. The watchdog said it would form a panel of experts to look into ways to contain the problem.

The watchdog's findings underscore TEPCO's delayed response in dealing with a problem that experts have long said existed. On Wednesday, the company continued to raise doubts about whether a leak exists.

TEPCO spokesman Noriyuki Imaizumi said the increase in cesium levels in monitoring well water samples does not necessarily mean contaminated water from the plant is leaking to the ocean. TEPCO was running another test on water samples and suspects earlier spikes might have been caused by cesium-laced dust slipping into the samples, he said. But he said TEPCO is open to the watchdog's suggestions to take safety steps.

The Fukushima Dai-ichi plant was ravaged by the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami and has since struggled with leaks of water used to cool the reactors, hampering decommissioning efforts.

Marine biologists have warned of the possibility of continuous leak of radioactive water into the sea via an underground water system, citing high levels of radioactivity in fish samples taken near the plant.

Since May, TEPCO has reported spikes in cesium levels in underground water collected from a coastal observation pit, while the water-soluble element strontium showed high levels in seawater samples taken in areas just off the coast of the plant. The company says most of the contamination has been there since the 2011 accident.

TEPCO has said it has detected "no significant impact" on the environment. It says cesium tends to be absorbed in the soil, and denies water contaminated with that element reached the sea.

But the Nuclear Regulation Authority said Wednesday that samples from both the pit water and coastal seawater indicated that contaminated underground water likely had reached the sea.

Watchdog chairman Shunichi Tanaka said he thinks that the seawater contamination has been happening since the accident, but that it was worst early in the crisis.

"What's most important is to minimize the leak to the outside and reduce the impact on the human society," he said.

TEPCO says that it has taken steps to prevent seawater contamination in areas near the plant, but that it is impossible to completely prevent the contamination from spreading into wider areas.

Atsunao Marui, underground water expert at the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, said there is a possibility of new leaks from reactor buildings. He said TEPCO will have to expand its sea water sampling and its investigation of the underground water system to assess the extent of possible contamination.

"It is important to apply several layers of protection," he told NHK television.

The plant, which still runs on jury-rigged systems to cool the reactors, has been plagued by problems, including repeated leaks of contaminated water from storage tanks. Managing the contaminated water and its storage has been a chronic headache.

"When something unexpected happens, we can only take stopgap measures, which shows how unstable Fukushima Dai-ichi still is," Tanaka said. "Given the situation, we can only use the best of our wisdom and do what we can."


"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?
7/10/2013 9:58:16 PM

Dzhokhar Tsarnaev Pleads Not Guilty

The Atlantic Wire


Dzhokhar Tsarnaev Pleads Not Guilty

Alleged Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev officially plead not guilty to using a weapon of mass destruction and the 29 other counts during a short, pre-trial hearing on Wednesday.

RELATED: F.B.I. Released the Tsarnaevs' Photos Because of Reddit and the Post

Tsarnaev entered the courtroom in a prison jumpsuit, hair long, with shackles around his feet, shortly after 3:30 p.m. with a cast on his left wrist while members of his family were present in the courtroom, wiping tears from her eyes. WFXT's Sharman Sachetti reported his sisters showed up, baby in tow, for the pre-trial hearing. The trial will last about three to four months, and the prosecution expects between 80-100 witnesses to take the stand.

RELATED: New Secrets of the Forgotten Watertown Shootout, Revealed

There was a huge police presence outside the courthouse on Wednesday:

Tsarnaev's fans (yes, they exist) showed up early with T-shirts and signs and Guy Falkes masks to demonstrate outside of the courtroom. Some were chanting "justice for Dzhokhar" and "give him his freedom back," as the motorcade carrying Tsarnaev approached the courthouse. The New York Times' Jess Bidgoodreported about 3 dozen were allowed into the packed courtroom.


"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?
7/11/2013 10:04:47 AM

Washington man charged in 3-year-old son's slaying

Associated Press


HELENA, Mont. (AP) — Police charged a Washington state man in the slaying of his 3-year-old son Tuesday, a day after he was arrested while washing blood off his clothes in a southwestern Montana convenience store restroom, authorities said.

Jeremy Brent Cramer, 38, of Lacey, has been charged with deliberate homicide, Anaconda-Deer Lodge County Attorney Ben Krakowka said. He made an initial court appearance Tuesday, where he asked to be represented by a public defender. His bond was set at $250,000.

The boy's mother told police on Monday that her husband had taken their child from their home in the Olympia suburb of Lacey, and was not returning cellphone calls or messages, the Lacey Police Department said in a statement.

Police requested help from law enforcement in eastern Washington, Idaho and Montana in a search for the boy after the 31-year-old woman reported her husband's fuel card was used in Moses Lake, Wash.

A convenience store clerk in the Anaconda area called police at about 10:30 p.m. Monday after finding Cramer washing blood off himself in the restroom.

Investigators later found Cramer's vehicle in a rural area near Mill Creek Road, about 5 miles southeast of Anaconda.

An initial search turned up no sign of the boy Monday night, but his body was found after the search resumed at daybreak.

The cause of death has not yet been determined and the boy's name has not been released, Krakowka said.

Krakowka declined to provide more details about where the boy was found or how he may have died.

"We don't want to compromise our investigation until we feel that we've found out everything we can," Krakowka said.

Lacey Police Cmdr. Jim Mack said an Amber Alert wasn't issued because the mother, whose name is not yet being released, never indicated that the child was in danger.

"My officers had no reason to believe that the father was going to harm the child," Mack said. "It's a tragedy for the community."

He said that Cramer had only lived in Lacey about a year, and had a Montana driver's license. He said that police had never been called out to the home previously.

Mack said that the couple had been arguing about finances recently.

"He had asked her earlier within the last couple of weeks if they could do a road trip to the East Coast, and she said, 'No, we don't have the money,'" Mack said. "It sounded like he wanted to go to the East Coast."

Agents with the state Division of Criminal Investigation are assisting Anaconda-Deer Lodge Law Enforcement in the investigation.

___

AP writer Rachel La Corte in Olympia, Wash., contributed to this report.


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

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