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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
6/26/2014 10:34:50 AM

UN triples appeal for aid funding in Iraq

AFP

A child is seen at a camp for displaced people, in Shikhan, in Kurdistan's Dohuk province, on June 24, 2014 (AFP Photo/Karim Sahib)

United Nations (United States) (AFP) - The United Nations has tripled its appeal for humanitarian funding for Iraq in 2014 to more than $312 million, with the country battling a fierce militant onslaught.

A lightning offensive by Sunni militants in recent weeks has overrun swaths of five Iraqi provinces, killed nearly 1,100 people and displaced hundreds of thousands.

"The funding is urgently needed to help one million people affected by the conflict, including in Mosul and Anbar," said Wednesday Stephane Dujarric, spokesman for UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.

But he cautioned that the original $103 million appeal was "one of the least-funded appeals for 2014, with only six percent of the funding" received so far.

Speaking to journalists via video conference from Baghdad, UN special envoy for Iraq, Nikolay Mladenov, emphasized that in the country "over one million people have been displaced since January."

He said that among those who have fled their homes, some "are increasingly facing challenges in getting food, many of them dropping to one meal a day.

"The situation remains dire, our resources are overly stretched since the beginning of the year."


U.N. triples appeal for Iraq humanitarian aid


The United Nations says $312 million is needed to help hundreds of thousands of displaced Iraqis.
'Situation remains dire'


"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?
6/26/2014 10:45:06 AM

Second Nigeria bombing during World Cup hits home for traveling fans

Eric Adelson
Yahoo Sports


Associated Press Videos

Raw: Deadly Nigerian Mall Explosion




RIO DE JANEIRO – Their expressions changed, and their smiles crumbled. It was clear none of them knew.

While Nigerian fans watched their national soccer team play against Argentina on the big screen here at Copacabana beach, their nation was dealing with another tragedy: a bomb went off at a shopping mall in the capital city of Abuja, killing at least 21 and injuring more. Horrific photos circled the globe, depicting body parts littered on streets and sidewalks, and fans here were cocooned in a temporary escape from an awful reality.

Then the game ended, Nigeria losing 3-2 in a hard-fought match, and the awareness began.

"Again?" said Emeka Ogeonna, 29, who was born in Enugu (250 miles south of Abuja) and lives in New York City now. Told the bombing happened just before the match against Argentina began, Ogeonna took a deep breath.

"Cowardly," he said. "It's awful. Terrible. There's no reason for it. It's a shame that we're seeing this at all, but World Cup is supposed to bring countries together."

Islamic terrorists are blamed for the incident. The extremist group Boko Haram has been setting off explosions regularly in the northeast part of the country, but recently the bloodshed has moved south, into bigger cities including the capital. Last week, in the city of Damaturu, 14 died and 26 were injured in a similar bombing at a World Cup viewing site.

View photo

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Falaju Odun and Ugboka Onos heard about the bombing in Nigeria as they left a FIFA fan fest in Rio de Janeiro. (Yahoo Sports)

Falaju Odun and Ugboka Onos heard about the bombing in Nigeria as they left a FIFA fan fest in Rio de Janeiro. …

The government seems unable to handle the situation.

"People are dying in the country," said Ugboko Onus, 35. "I want the American government to help us. I'm not happy. I need people to come and help us. I have a family in Nigeria. I don't know what to do. I really need Americans to come and help us, you understand?

"I don't know what [Nigeria President Goodluck Jonathan] is doing."

Shock mixed with fear and anger for several of the Nigerian supporters, who were surrounded by thrilled Argentinian fans leaving after their team's victory and excited French supporters flooding the beach for their team's late afternoon game. Nigeria's soccer loss, and the entire event, was quickly forgotten despite the fact that their team advanced to the knockout stage of the World Cup.

"I'm shocked right now, because I'm just hearing from you," said Falaju Oden, 24, of Lagos. "It's very bad news. People watching the World Cup are there to be happy and rejoice. And suddenly we hear of the bomb. It's very bad news. I don't know what to say. This is three or four months now. So I don't know what to say. I'm in a bad mood. A very bad mood."

Terrorism at viewing parties is a scary trend during these games. Nearly 50 Kenyans were slaughtered earlier this month as they watched the tournament. Marauders knocked on doors, asked residents if they were Muslim, and killed them if the answer was no.

Wednesday's news out of Abuja created a ripple of frustration and helplessness. More than one Nigerian wanted military reprisals to begin immediately.

"It needs to come to an end," said Moju Oritsetimeyin, 22. "I think there needs to be some action at some point. The government hasn't taken its role seriously in terms of protecting the people."

The World Cup is the ultimate occasion for gathering in large groups, and that creates vulnerability. There have been no incidents in Brazil or in the U.S., but it's impossible not to be somewhat concerned considering the sizes of the crowds on the subways and in open spaces.

For these Nigerian fans, though, the worry is not here, but at home.

"I don't feel safe in Nigeria," said a man named Temi, who lives in London. "The majority of people are fine but you don't know what's going to happen. I have to call my family to find out if anyone was affected."

He then asked for his surname to be withheld, out of fear that his relatives could become a target.


Shock, fear grip Nigerians in Brazil


Smiles crumble when Nigerian fans at the World Cup are told of another deadly bombing at home.
'I'm just hearing from you'




"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?
6/26/2014 10:54:22 AM

In Iraq, former militia program eyed for new fight

Associated Press

Iraqi government officials claim they're holding on to a key oil refinery in the fight against the Islamic militant group ISIS.


BAGHDAD (AP) — They were known as the Sahwa, or the Awakening Councils — Sunni militiamen who took extraordinary risks to side with U.S. troops in the fight against al-Qaida during the Iraq War. Once heralded as a pivotal step in the defeat of the bloody insurgency, the Sahwa later were pushed aside by Iraq's Shiite-led government, starved of political support and money needed to remain a viable security force.

Now, the Obama administration is looking at the Sahwa, which still exist in smaller form, as a model for how to unite Sunni fighters against the rampant Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant that has swept across most of the nation's north. Also known as the Sons of Iraq — "sahwa" is Arabic for "awakening" — U.S. officials say they hope Sunnis will be similarly stirred to fight back against the new insurgency.

As many as 3,000 core ISIL fighters, many of them foreign, are believed to be in Iraq. But U.S. intelligence officials fear twice that many Iraqi Sunnis are vulnerable to being lured into the violence — pushing the country into an outright civil war. That has prompted the White House, State Department and CIA to look for incentives to keep as many disgruntled Sunnis as possible from joining the fight.

"Hundreds of Sahwa fighters have given up during the past months. Either they have stayed home or joined insurgent groups," said Ramadi militiaman Abu Humam, who would only identify himself by his nickname out of fear for his family's safety. He said he will not join the insurgency because "because they do nothing but kill people."

But Abu Ahmed, a Sahwa fighter from Muqdadiyha, said he joined an extremist group to protect himself and his family after receiving threatening text messages. He said he reported the threats to government security forces, "but nobody cared."

"It seems that both the government and the insurgents hate Sahwa," he said.

The Obama administration knows it cannot recreate the original Sahwa security movement, which was supported and bolstered by American troops in Sunni-dominated areas of western and northern Iraq. Over a three-year period after the Sahwa campaign began in late 2006, the U.S. military paid them at least $370 million.

By contrast, there now are no immediate U.S. plans to arm or fund the Sunni security militias, and there are too few American personnel in Iraq now to try to duplicate the original joint force.

It's thought likely that Iraq's Sunni neighbors — notably Jordan and Saudi Arabia — will use their cross-border tribal networks to bolster the security militias with financing or weapons, but it's not clear whether Washington would even support that privately. The U.S. probably would want to vet the tribes before they received any money or arms, even from other nations, to ensure that the aid does not get passed along to ISIL or other extremist groups.

A similar process in Syria has delayed assistance to the frustrated moderate Sunni rebels in their three-year civil war to eject President Bashar Assad, whose Alawite sect is an offshoot of Shiism.

Secretary of State John Kerry will meet Thursday with diplomats from Saudi Arabia, Jordan and the United Arab Emirates. He hopes to enlist Sunni-dominated Gulf states in the U.S. effort to push Iraq toward creating a more inclusive government that equally empowers Shiites, Sunnis and Kurds, and potentially replaces Shiite Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, as the best option to quell ISIL. He also will talk to Saudi King Abdullah on Friday in a quick visit to Jeddah.

Considering ways to keep Sunni fighters out of the insurgency will be part of the discussions, officials said.

"We're hearing from Sunni leaders across the board that they really want to do something about ISIL. They're figuring out how to do it," said one senior State Department official who, like more than a half-dozen other U.S. officials interviewed, spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the issue by name.

He said many of the Sunni tribes first want to unseat al-Maliki.

Offering more autonomy to Sunni regions of Iraq, diluting Baghdad's power and giving more authority to tribes, could be one avenue for appeasing the fighters, according to a second senior administration official. That would give tribes more say in security decisions, although it's not clear how they would be funded. Unlike the Shiite-dominated south and the far northern Kurdish region, there are few oil reserves in in the Iraqi lands mostly populated by Sunnis.

It is also possible that new Shiite leaders in Baghdad will be willing to fulfill al-Maliki's promises and integrate the Sahwa into government security forces with full salaries and benefits. But that would take months, if not years, to complete, the White House official said. Moreover, there is no obvious successor for al-Maliki, who has shown no signs of stepping down.

Requests by The Associated Press for comment from Saudi, UAE and Jordanian diplomats and intelligence officials were either refused or not immediately granted.

Al-Maliki for years promised American officials he would hire the Sahwa to diversify the overwhelmingly Shiite government security forces and ensure the Sunni militiamen would continue to be paid once the U.S. troops left the country. But the vast majority of an estimated 90,000 Sahwa never got government jobs and, if they are paid by local authorities in the areas they protect, they receive less than a few hundred dollars each month.

Betrayed by al-Maliki's broken promises, and threatened by insurgents, many Sahwa now feel that joining forces with extremists is a safer bet. U.S. officials believe a significant number of Sunni tribal fighters are now fighting alongside ISIL, including the Sahwa and an estimated 1,000 former Baathists and others loyal to the late President Saddam Hussein.

There are still large numbers of Sunni fighters who have not sided with ISIL, the officials said, but there is a fear they might join in if Iranian-backed Shiite militias begin playing a prominent role in the fighting. That would mirror the kind of sectarian bloodshed that brought Iraq to the brink of civil war at the time the Sahwa were created.

"The problem is, there are far too many tribes sitting on the sidelines," said retired Army Col. Peter Mansoor, who helped build the original Sahwa program and is now a professor at Ohio State University. "But if the Iraqi government can re-form the alliance with the tribes, and present itself to the Arab Sunnis as a government they can support, then I think the portion of ISIL that's composed of foreign jihadists could be defeated in short order."

___

Associated Press writers Julie Pace and Ken Dilanian in Washington contributed to this report.

___

Follow Lara Jakes on Twitter at: https://twitter.com/larajakesAP







The Sahwa, a group of Sunni militiamen, took major risks to side with the U.S. in the past, and may play a key role again.
Dangerous life



"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?
6/26/2014 11:04:52 AM

U.S. appeals court backs gay marriage in conservative Utah

Reuters

A federal judge's ruling allowed for same-sex marriages to begin in Indiana on Wednesday.


By Daniel Wallis

DENVER (Reuters) - A U.S. appeals court ruled on Wednesday that conservative Utah may not ban gay couples from marrying, a decision that capped a day of victories for same-sex nuptials and nudges the issue closer to the U.S. Supreme Court.

The ruling by a panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Denver-based 10th Circuit marked the first time that a regional appeals court has made such a decision in the year since the Supreme Court ordered the federal government to extend benefits to legally married same-sex couples.

The decision came as a federal district judge in Indiana joined a growing chorus of jurists who have struck down state gay marriage bans as unconstitutional in rulings that could substantially expand U.S. gay marriage rights if upheld.

"A state may not deny the issuance of a marriage license to two persons, or refuse to recognize their marriage, based solely upon the sex of the persons in the marriage union," the 10th Circuit said in its 2-1 ruling on Utah.

But the panel placed its ruling on hold pending anticipated legal challenges. Utah Governor Gary Herbert, a Republican, said he was disappointed in the ruling, and the state attorney general's office said it would appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.

"All Utahns deserve clarity and finality ... and that will only come from the Supreme Court," Herbert said in a statement.

Supporters of gay marriage in Utah, where the Mormon church wields big political and social influence, planned a celebratory rally Wednesday night in Salt Lake City.

Utah briefly became the 18th U.S. state to allow gay marriage when a federal district judge ruled in December that a state ban on gay matrimony was unconstitutional.

That decision was ultimately put on hold by the U.S. Supreme Court pending appeals but not before more than 1,300 gay and lesbian couples married. Their status remains in limbo.

'FREEDOM OF CHOICE'

Utah lawmakers who oppose gay marriage had argued that a state constitutional amendment banning such unions was approved by voters and that same-sex unions were new enough that evidence about their impact on families might not fully be known.

But the court said the state could not restrict the right to marry, or its recognition of marriage, "based on compliance with any set of parenting roles, or even parenting quality."

"We cannot embrace the contention that children raised by opposite-sex parents fare better than children raised by same-sex parents," it said, adding the right to marry should not be linked to issues surrounding procreation.

Responding to Utah's argument that same-sex marriage was too new to be rooted in tradition, the panel cited a 1967 Supreme Court ruling that invalidated laws prohibiting interracial marriage. "The right at issue was the 'freedom of choice to marry,'" the appeals court said, not tradition. Separately, a U.S. district judge in Indianapolis said Indiana's gay marriage ban was unconstitutional and ordered officials to start issuing marriage licenses.

In Marion County, home to Indianapolis, a spokeswoman for the clerk’s office said the first same-sex couple arrived moments after the decision, and about 50 marriage licenses had been issued by mid-afternoon.

Hundreds of people were still waiting in line in Marion County, and other counties were also issuing licenses to gay couples. Indiana’s attorney general swiftly asked for a stay of the ruling by U.S. District Judge Richard Young, pending appeal.

Meanwhile, in Louisiana, a federal judge heard arguments in a case brought by a gay man seeking the benefits married couples enjoy.

(Reporting by Daniel Wallis; Additional reporting by Jennifer Dobner in Salt Lake City, Susan Guyett in Indianapolis, Jon Herskovitz in Austin, and Lisa Bose McDermott in Texarkana; Editing by Doina Chiacu, Jim Loney and Eric Beech)







Federal courts strike down gay marriage bans in Indiana and Utah, calling them unconstitutional.


Ind. AG to appeal




"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?
6/26/2014 11:13:51 AM

1 suspect held, 1 killed after deadly Nigeria bomb blast

AFP

People watch as smoke fills the sky, after an explosion, at a shopping mall, Wednesday, June 25, 2014, in Abuja, Nigeria. An explosion rocked a shopping mall in Nigeria's capital, Abuja, on Wednesday and police say at least over 20 people have been killed and many wounded. Witnesses say body parts were scattered around the exit to Emab Plaza, in the upscale Wuse 11 suburb. (AP Photo)


Abuja (AFP) - Nigerian authorities have arrested one suspect and killed another, after a bomb claimed 21 lives in a shopping centre in the capital Abuja, a city gripped by fear of attacks by Boko Haram Islamists.

Wednesday's blast shook the Emab Plaza at 4:00 pm (1500 GMT), the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) said, as shoppers were buying groceries ahead of the country's World Cup match against Argentina, which kicked-off an hour later.

"The casualty figure for now is 21 persons dead, 17 injured," national police spokesman Frank Mba said, adding that a suspect had been arrested.

Later the National Information Centre said a second suspect had been shot dead by troops as he tried to escape on a motorbike.

Senior government spokesman Mike Omeri confirmed that the blast was the result of "a bomb attack".

Rescue teams were deployed to the scene and evacuated the victims from the area, NEMA spokesman Manzo Ezekiel told AFP.

"The explosion struck at peak business time," he said, adding that the area was busy at the time of the blast and that 40 cars had been destroyed.

The blast, at the entrance to the mall, was powerful enough to blow out windows in buildings on the opposite side of the street, an AFP correspondent on the scene in the immediate aftermath said.

The area, sandwiched between two other shopping centres and one of the busiest in central Abuja, was littered with the burnt out wreckages of cars and soaked in pools of congealed blood.

Rescue workers could be seen picking through what appeared to be the scorched body parts of victims.

An employee of the nearby Newcastle Hotel in the Wuse II area of the city, who did not want to be named, said she clearly heard the explosion.

Soldiers and police cordoned off the scene of the blast and firefighters were at the location, as thick smoke billowed into the sky, an AFP reporter said.

A soldier close to the scene but who demanded anonymity told reporters that two suspects who tried to flee the scene were caught.

One of them who was shot by soldiers as he was fleeing later died from his injuries.

- 'It is terrible' -

Oreoluwa Adeoye who sells phone accessories at the nearby plaza said: I saw many dead bodies. Some taxi drivers parked at the spot of the explosion waiting for passengers. Some drivers perished there with their passengers."

"It is terrible. There are a lot of human bodies shattered... They are in pieces. The security agencies have been picking human bodies (parts) in nylon bags," said Shuaibu Adamu Baba, an education consultant who said he lost his driver in the blast.

"I lost a driver that has three wives and eight children," he lamented.

Boko Haram which sparked worldwide outrage by kidnapping more than 200 schoolgirls in April, has attacked Nigeria's capital twice in the last 10 weeks.

A car bombing killed 75 people at the Nyanya bus terminal on the outskirts of the city on April 14 while a copycat bombing at the same spot on May 1 left 19 people dead.

The security services put the capital under lockdown following the second explosion as Abuja prepared to host a World Economic Forum summit on Africa in early May.

While the forum went off without a hitch, a Boko Haram attack in the heart of the capital less than two months on will raise fresh doubts about Nigeria's capacity to contain the group's worsening insurgency.


1 suspect held, 1 dead after Nigeria blast


Authorities have arrested one person and killed another following an attack at a shopping center in Abuja.
Death toll remains at 21




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

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