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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
10/17/2014 1:21:14 AM

UN rights chief: Ebola, extremists 'twin plagues'

Associated Press

U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Jordan's Zeid Raad al-Hussein speaks during a news conference at the European headquarters of the United Nations in Geneva, Switzerland, Thursday, Oct. 16, 2014. Zeid drew comparisons between the Ebola outbreak and the Islamic State group Thursday, labeling them "twin plagues" upon the world that were allowed to gain strength because of widespread neglect and misunderstanding. (AP Photo/Keystone, Martial Trezzini)


GENEVA (AP) — U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Raad al-Hussein drew comparisons between the Ebola outbreak and the Islamic State group Thursday, labeling them "twin plagues" upon the world that were allowed to gain strength because of widespread neglect and misunderstanding.

At his first news conference since becoming the U.N.'s top human rights official last month, Zeid focused on the "two monumental crises" that he said would inevitably cost nations many billions to overcome.

"The twin plagues of Ebola and ISIL," he told reporters, using an acronym for the group, "both fomented quietly, neglected by a world that knew they existed but misread their terrible potential before exploding into the global consciousness during the latter months of 2014."

Zeid said the U.N. human rights office has begun drawing up guidelines for Ebola-hit nations to follow if they impose health quarantines on people, because such efforts can easily violate a wide range of human rights if imposed and enforced unjustly.

Along the border of Iraq and Syria, the Islamic fighters who are seizing ground represent "a diabolical, potentially genocidal movement" that is the product of "a perverse and lethal marriage of a new form of nihilism with the digital age," he said.

The veteran diplomat and prince from Jordan also urged Iraq to join The Hague-based International Criminal Court and to take the "immediate step" of accepting its jurisdiction to allow for the prosecution of alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity that a U.N. Human Rights Council-appointed mission is investigating.

Syria has signed the treaty establishing the ICC, but has not ratified it.

Zeid said before the end of the year his office will issue an updated tally of deaths from Syria's civil war that "will be well over 200,000." The last count, in August, put the toll at more than 190,000.







Zeid Raad al-Hussein says Ebola and the Islamic State militants have grown due to neglect and misunderstanding.
'Monumental crises'



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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
10/17/2014 10:51:05 AM

Syrian Ambassador Calls ISIS An ‘American Myth’

The Daily Caller


Syrian Ambassador Calls ISIS An ‘American Myth’

Syrian Ambassador Calls ISIS An ‘American Myth’

The Syrian Ambassador to India claimed that ISIS was an American invention on Wednesday, among other controversial remarks.

The statements were made at a press conference hosted by the Indian Women’s Press Corps in New Delhi, the Hindustan Times reports.

“ISIS is an American myth, which gets direct support from Tayyip Erdogan’s [the president] Turkey and is funded by Saudi Arabia and Qatar,” according to Ambassador Riad Kamel Abbas. “Al Qaeda appeared in Syria after the US invaded Iraq. Before that there was no al Qaeda in Syria. It is clear that al Qaeda was created by the US and it is supporting ISIS.”

Abbas also said that several European nations, including France, the UK and Germany, have requested the Assad government to “take care” of Europeans who have gone over to fight with the Islamic State. Those nations view radicalized European Muslims who have received combat experience in Syria as a threat to their national security, the ambassador claimed.

“Intelligence leaders of many European countries came to Syria to meet officials” Abbas said, alleging that the Europeans proceeded to pressure Assad’s government with offers not to press against the regime’s human rights abuses if European citizens fighting in Syria are eliminated before they can return home.

The ambassador expressed appreciation for the position of India’s government, which has so far opted not to join the American-led coalition against ISIS, which includes Qatar and Saudi Arabia, as well as many other European and Middle Eastern nations.
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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
10/17/2014 11:00:43 AM
16 October 2014 Last updated at 20:50 GMT

Islamic State 'being driven out of Syria's
Kobane'


The battle for Kobane is regarded as a major test of whether the US-led air campaign can push back IS

The Islamic State (IS) militant group has been driven out of most of the northern Syrian town of Kobane, a Kurdish commander has told the BBC.

Baharin Kandal said IS fighters had retreated from all areas, except for two pockets of resistance in the east.

US-led air strikes have helped push back the militants, with another 14 conducted over the past 24 hours.

Meanwhile, the new UN human rights commissioner has called IS a "potentially genocidal" movement.

Zeid Ra'ad al Hussein described the group as the antithesis of human rights.

'Tenuous'

Speaking by phone, Kurdish commander Baharin Kandal told the BBC's Kasra Naji that she hoped the city would be "liberated soon".

Ms Kandal said her militia group had been receiving arms, supplies and fighters but she refused to say how, reports our correspondent, who is on the Turkish border near Kobane.

Air strikes continue to target IS fighters in and around Kobane

At the scene: BBC's Kasra Naji on the Turkey-Syria border

Kurdish defenders have victory in their sights. After exactly a month of fighting, they say they have driven Islamic State from most of the city.

But from a hilltop across the border in Turkey, it is clear there is still fighting going on, particularly in the north of the city. Small and heavy arms fire can be heard, as well as occasional explosions. There have also been several air strikes this afternoon by the US-led coalition.

One 32-year-old Kurdish militia commander, who leads the fighting in the east of the city, told me she hoped the city would be "fully liberated" very soon.

Her comments reflect an air of optimism here in Turkey among the Kobane refugees who are hoping to go back to their town in the next few days.

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Major test

The battle for Kobane, which is also known as Ayn al-Arab, is regarded as a major test of whether the US-led coalition's air campaign can push back IS.

US Central Command said that bomber and fighter aircraft had conducted 14 air strikes on Wednesday and Thursday, all of them targeting IS around Kobane.

The strikes "successfully struck 19 IS buildings, two IS command posts, three IS fighting positions, three IS sniper positions, one IS staging location and one IS heavy machine gun", a statement said.

It said the air strikes had "continued to slow IS advances, but that the security situation on the ground in Kobane remains tenuous".

Kurdish defenders on the streets of Kobane

A Kurdish official in Kobane, Idris Nassen, confirmed to the AFP news agency that IS had pulled back from some areas and that "the international coalition has fought IS more effectively during the last few days".

But he warned: "We need more air strikes, as well as weaponry and ammunition to fight them on the ground."

New propaganda film

Meanwhile, IS militants released another propaganda video featuring British hostage John Cantlie on Thursday.

The journalist, who was kidnapped in Syria in 2012, has appeared in several videos released by IS that have all followed the same format - with Mr Cantlie addressing the camera from behind a desk.

There are no signs of violence in the videos but Mr Cantlie has made it clear he is speaking as a prisoner whose life is in danger.

Earlier, Zeid Ra'ad al Hussein, the new UN human rights commissioner, described IS as the antithesis of human rights and "a diabolical, potentially genocidal movement".

He said: "The way it has spread its tentacles into other countries, employing social media and the internet to brainwash and recruit people from across the globe, reveals it to be the product of a perverse and lethal marriage of a new form of nihilism with the digital age."

Activists say more than 600 people have been killed since the jihadist group launched its assault on Kobane a month ago.

More than 160,000 people have fled the mainly Kurdish town in the face of the IS advance.

Capturing the town would give the group unbroken control of a long stretch of the Syrian-Turkish border.

IS fighters, who have seized large areas in Syria and Iraq, have gained a reputation for brutal tactics, including mass killings and beheadings of soldiers and journalists.




(BBC News)



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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
10/17/2014 4:48:41 PM

IS jihadists training to fly Syria warplanes: monitor

AFP


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ISIS reportedly flying warplanes over Syria


Beirut (AFP) - Islamic State group jihadists are being trained by Saddam Hussein's former pilots to fly three fighter jets captured from the Syrian military, a monitoring group said Friday.

The planes, which are believed to be MiG-21 and MiG-23 jets, are capable of flying although it is unclear if they are equipped with missiles, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

The jets were seized from Syrian military airports now under IS control in the northern provinces of Aleppo and Raqa, according to the Britain-based group, which has a wide network of sources inside the war-torn country.

It said that former Iraqi army officers who once served under Saddam were supervising the training at the military airport of Jarrah, east of the city of Aleppo.

Witnesses have reported seeing planes flying at a low altitude to avoid detection by radar after taking off from Jarrah.

It comes as the United States and its allies carry out a wave of air strikes on IS positions in Syria and Iraq.

The jihadists also control two other airports in Syria -- Albu Kamal near the Iraqi border and Tabqa in Raqa province.

IS has captured large parts of Syria and Iraq, committing atrocities and declaring an Islamic "caliphate".

After the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003, some Sunni former officers from Saddam's army joined the ranks of the Islamic State of Iraq, a branch of Al-Qaeda which later became IS.


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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
10/17/2014 4:52:35 PM

Nigeria says reaches deal with Boko Haram over abducted girls

Reuters

Lors d'une manifestation organisée mardi à Abuja, six mois après l'enlèvement de quelque 200 lycéennes à Chibok, dans le nord-est du Nigeria. Les autorités nigérianes ont conclu avec les islamistes de Boko Haram un accord de cessez-le-feu et un autre prévoyant la libération de ces jeunes filles, selon une source proche de la présidence. /Photo prise le 14 octobre 2014/REUTERS/Afolabi Sotunde


ABUJA (Reuters) - Nigeria's government has reached a deal with Islamic militant group Boko Haram for a cease-fire and the release of around 200 girls kidnapped six months ago from a school in the northeast town of Chibok, the defence chief said on Friday.

"I wish to inform this audience that a ceasefire agreement has been concluded," Marshal Alex Badeh said in a statement after three days of talks with the militant group that has wreaked havoc in the northeast of Africa's biggest oil producer.

A presidency source said the agreement stretched to the girls, who were abducted from a secondary school in Chibok near the Cameroon border in April, sparking a worldwide outcry.

The girls have remained in captivity ever since, although police and a parent of some of the missing students said last month one of the girls had been released.

President Goodluck Jonathan has been pilloried at home and abroad for his slow response to the kidnapping and for his inability to quell the violence by the Islamist militants, seen as the biggest security threat to Africa's biggest economy.

Boko Haram, whose name roughly translates as 'Western education is sinful', has killed thousands of people in a five-year insurgency aimed at creating an Islamic caliphate in the vast scrubland of Nigeria's impoverished northeast.

A senior Nigerian security source confirmed the existence of talks, but said it remained unclear whether Abuja was negotiating with self-proclaimed movement leader Abubakar Shekau, or another faction within the group.

"Commitment among parts of Boko Haram and the military does appear to be genuine. It is worth taking seriously," the security source told Reuters.

Several rounds of negotiations with Boko Haram have been attempted in recent years but they have never achieved a peace deal, partly because the group has several different factions.

"There are some talks but it depends on the buy-in of the whole group. I would be surprised if Shekau had suddenly changed his mind and is ready for a ceasefire," the source added.

The government was negotiating with Danladi Ahmadu, a man calling himself the secretary-general of Boko Haram, the presidency source said. It was not clear if Ahmadu is part of the same faction as Shekau.

(Reporting by Felix Onuah, Camillus Eboh and Joe Brock; Writing by Ed Cropley; Editing by Joe Brock)



Nigeria reaches agreement with Boko Haram


The government and the militant group announce an immediate cease-fire and plans to free 200 kidnapped girls.
Talks took three days

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