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Joyce Parker Hyde

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
8/5/2014 2:08:22 AM
Hi Ibrahim, it has been along time since I've seen your writings. This is a very important article you have submitted here and I do hope that the message is getting out to people who can hear the message and understand it.
Thank you and thank you Miguel for providing the platform of this forum.
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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
8/5/2014 1:51:19 PM

What a nice surprise, Joyce. I love your showing up and participating with regard to dear Ibrahim's important message.

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?
8/5/2014 2:08:24 PM
Israel pulls out troops

Cease-fire takes effect to end Gaza war

Associated Press


Associated Press Videos

Raw: Cease-fire Takes Effect to End Gaza War



GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip (AP) — An Israel-Hamas cease-fire, meant to last three days, went into effect on Tuesday in the Gaza Strip, setting the stage for talks in Cairo aimed at reaching a broader deal on a sustainable truce and the rebuilding of the battered coastal territory.

The temporary truce, agreed to by both sides, started at 8 a.m. (0500 GMT) and halted almost a month of fighting.

Israeli ground troops withdrew from the strip's border areas, the shelling stopped and in Gaza City, where streets had been deserted during the war, traffic picked up and shops started opening doors.

If the calm holds, Egypt plans to start shuttling between Israeli and Palestinian delegations in Cairo to work out new arrangements for Gaza. The territory has been virtually cut off from the world since a violent Hamas takeover in 2007 prompted a closure of the territory's borders by Egypt and Israel.

But wide gaps remain and previous international attempts to broker a temporary halt in the fighting have failed.

The Palestinian delegation, which includes Hamas representatives, demands an end to the closure and calls for rebuilding Gaza with international funds.

However, Israel is reluctant to open Gaza's borders unless the Islamic militants are disarmed.

Earlier cease-fire attempts have collapsed and the situation remained volatile on Tuesday.

Just minutes ahead of the start of the truce, shelling still echoed across Gaza and Israel said Hamas fired a heavy barrage of rockets at southern and central Israel.

By mid-morning, traumatized residents began returning to the southern Gaza town of Rafah, hard-hit by Israeli shell fire after an attempt at cease-fire broke down last Friday.

"I never saw anything like this in my life," Tawfiq Barbakh, a 67-year-old father of 12, said of the Israeli shelling over the weekend as he surveyed his badly damaged home. "I don't know how many shells landed every minute but it felt like 20 or 30."

The war broke out on July 8 when Israel launched airstrikes it said were in response to weeks of heavy rocket fire out of Hamas-controlled Gaza. It expanded the operation on July 17 by sending in ground forces in what it described as a mission to destroy a network of tunnels used to stage attacks.

The fighting has claimed nearly 1,900 Palestinian lives — most of them civilians. The war has also left 67 dead on the Israeli side, all but three of them soldiers.

Talks in Cairo will be crucial in the coming days. Ending the Gaza conflict without a sustainable truce raises the probability of more cross-border fighting in the future.

Ahead of the cease-fire, there were also signs that tensions created by the Gaza fighting were spreading to Jerusalem and the West Bank, with two attacks there. The police said they were carried out by Palestinian militants.

As part of the cease-fire, the Israeli military said it was withdrawing all ground troops from Gaza.

Military spokesman Lt. Col. Peter Lerner said the withdrawal was going forward after Israel neutralized cross-border tunnels that were built for Islamic militant attacks inside Israel.

"Overnight, we completed the destruction of 32 tunnels in the Gaza Strip," Lerner said. "They were part of a strategic Hamas plan to carry out attacks against southern Israel."

In a conference call with journalists, Lerner said about 900 Palestinian militants had been killed by Israeli forces during the war. In a conversation with The Associated Press on Sunday, another military official had said at least 300 militants had been killed. Asked about the sharp jump in figures over just two days, Lerner said the figure of 900 militants killed was an approximation, based on reporting from individual Israeli units.

Rocket fire from Gaza continued throughout the war, and by the time Tuesday's cease-fire went into effect, some 3,300 rockets had been fired at Israel, Lerner said. He estimated that Israeli forces destroyed another 3,000 rockets on the ground — but that Hamas has an equal number left for future use.

Lerner declined to say how many ground forces had been involved in the Israeli operation, though the military acknowledged calling up 86,000 reservists, including rotations, during the course of its Gaza operation.

___

Enav reported from Jerusalem. Associated Press writers Karin Laub in Gaza City and Hamza Hendawi in Rafah contributed to this report.








A three-day cease-fire takes effect after the Israeli military says it is pulling out all its ground troops.
Cairo talks planned



"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?
8/5/2014 4:22:55 PM

Ukrainians flee besieged Donetsk as fighting closes in

AFP

People wait at the railway station in the centre of Donetsk, eastern Ukraine on August 4, 2014 (AFP Photo/Bulent Kilic)


Donetsk (Ukraine) (AFP) - The once-bustling leafy boulevards of central Donetsk are now deserted but one place where there is almost certain to be a crowd is the rebel-held city's ornate Stalin-era railway station.

As the boom of mortar fire rocks the mining hub of one million daily, ever more residents are packing up and fleeing a tightening government blockade.

"They are bombing -- that's why we are getting far away from here," said Lyubov, a grey-eyed woman with her hair in a bun, who fled her home in a nearby town.

"We left everything and ran away," she said, adding that she was headed for the government-held city of Dnipropetrovsk, some 200 kilometres (124 miles) to the west, where her son and sister are.

Nearby families huddled around piles of bags and even a canary in a cage as they waited anxiously to make their escape.

"Our house burnt down and our neighbour's too. The whole street was bombed. We are going to Moscow, to my daughter's place," said Yury, a tired-looking moustachioed man, who had arrived with family and neighbours from the town of Shakhtarsk.

- Worse every day -

Once a favoured spot for teenage lovers or family strolls, the manicured avenues in the city centre are now eerily quiet despite the baking hot summer weather.

Many shops and flats have "X"s of tape on the windows to prevent the glass from shattering in case of an explosion, and notices hang on the doors of apartment buildings with instructions on how to reach the nearest bomb shelter.

Stores, shopping malls and libraries are almost all closed and shuttered.

A rebel in a stripy army vest scarf swaggered down the deserted main boulevard, pointing his Kalashnikov from side to side.

"The situation is worse every day," said Olga, a 32-year-old travel agent, one of the few people out on the streets.

Wearing sunglasses, she said her family had fled their home near Donetsk airport to stay with friends in the centre of town after three weeks under heavy bombardment.

"I ran with the kids under a hail of bullets," she said, as she watched her two-year-old son play nearby. "It's like in a film, it's scary of course."

Her son interjected that he was afraid of the "bang-bang" of war.

Oleg was out on a bike ride with his 12-year-old son, Ivan, since his factory has closed due to a lack of deliveries.

"The situation in the city is ****ty, to put it mildly," he said.

Asked if he would leave however, he shook his head. "I've lived in this city for 50 years. I have nowhere else to go."

For some people from nearby towns and villages, Donetsk was the only refuge they had.

On the outskirts of the city, more than a thousand people who had fled from the frontline towns of Shakhtarsk and Gorlivka, milled around in a concrete Soviet-era student hostel now run by rebels.

Children ran along the dark corridors playing football while women sorted donated clothes. There were almost no able-bodied men.

The men had stayed behind to look after family homes -- and to fight, said Pantelei, a 17-year-old rebel from Gorlivka assisting the refugees.

"We sign them up for the rebels, if they want," he said. "The buses are for women and children primarily."

Many women wore just cotton house coats and flip-flops. Many said they had fled straight from the vegetable patch and had no time to change clothes.

The hostel was a dubious refuge, as the rebels who ran it had a military base nearby and had put concrete blocks across the road outside, marking it as a target.

But refugees said they were glad to be living in better conditions after days of hiding from heavy bouts of fighting.

"Thank God: after my cellar, it's a penthouse," said Galina, a hospital nurse.


"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?
8/5/2014 4:34:41 PM

US official: Americans killed in Afghan attack

Associated Press

An Afghan National Army (ANA) soldier keeps watch at the gate of a British-run military training academy Camp Qargha, in Kabul August 5, 2014. The U.S.-led coalition in Afghanistan said there had been "an incident" between Afghan and foreign troops at a British-run military training academy in Kabul on Tuesday, and sources added that casualties were feared. REUTERS/Omar Sobhani

WASHINGTON (AP) — A U.S. official says "about a dozen" of the victims of an Afghan insider attack on Tuesday were Americans, and at least one American was killed.

The official says many details of the attack early Tuesday were still unclear and the numbers could change. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the official was not authorized to discuss details of the attack by name on the record.

A man dressed in an Afghan army uniform opened fire on foreign troops at Camp Qargha, a base west of the capital, Kabul. Among the wounded was a German brigadier general.

Gen. Mohammmad Zahir Azimi, a spokesman for Afghanistan's Defense Ministry, said a "terrorist in an army uniform" opened fire on both local and international troops. Azimi said the shooter had been killed.


Report: Americans killed in Afghan attack


U.S. official says "about a dozen" of the victims of an Afghan insider attack near Kabul were American troops.
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"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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