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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
11/2/2014 5:33:48 PM
Death toll rises to 55: police

Suspected suicide bomber kills 45 on Pakistani-Indian border

Reuters

Pakistani relatives gather around the bodies of blast victims after a suicide bomb attack near the Wagah border on November 2, 2014 (AFP Photo/Arif Ali)


By Mubasher Bukhari

LAHORE Pakistan (Reuters) - At least 45 people were killed on Sunday when a suicide bomber blew himself up on the Pakistani-Indian border, police said, just after a daily ceremony when troops from both sides simultaneously lower the two nations' flags.

Hundreds of people visit the Wagah border crossing near the Pakistani city of Lahore to witness the flags of both countries being lowered just before sunset.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack, which took place on the Pakistani side of the border.

"The death toll increased to 45," the provincial police chief in the Pakistani city of Lahore told Reuters. Authorities had earlier put the death toll at 37.

Pakistani police said they were investigating and a doctor said up to 70 people had been wounded.

"According to initial information it was a suicide attack," Inspector General of Punjab Police, Mushtaq Sukhera, told local television channels.

"When ... security was a bit relaxed, the suicide attacker blew himself up near a restaurant."

India and Pakistan have fought three wars and remain locked in a bitter conflict over the region of Kashmir, which both sides claim.

India accuses Pakistan of sponsoring jihadist groups in the region and encouraging them to make inroads into Indian territory to stage attacks against Indian forces, a charge Pakistan denies.

"I was sitting in my office near the border when I heard the blast. I rushed to the scene and saw scattered bodies, injured men, women and children and smashed cars," a Pakistani intelligence source told Reuters.

Media reports earlier said the explosion was caused by a gas cylinder.

Ashok Kumar, inspector general of India's Border Security Force guarding Wagah, said the blast had taken place 500 meters from the border at around 6:15pm local time.

"Our side is safe. We are alert, have increased our security, we are in constant touch with district officials and state police," he said.

Any explosion on the India-Pakistan border is far more serious than a similar event on the Pakistan-Afghan border, another Indian security official said. He said there had not been any major attack in Pakistani Punjab in recent months.

(Writing by Maria Golovnina, additional reporting Frank Jack Daniel in New Delhi; Editing by Gareth Jones)


"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?
11/2/2014 11:17:57 PM

Heaving Fighting In Kobani After Peshmerga Join Battle

Posted: Updated:



Smoke rises above the Syrian city of Kobani after an airstrike by the US led coalition, seen from a hilltop on the outskirts of Suruc, near the Turkey-Syria border Sunday, Nov. 2, 2014. (AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda) | ASSOCIATED PRESS


By Mariam Karouny and Omer Berberoglu

BEIRUT/MURSITPINAR, Turkey, Nov 2 (Reuters) - Iraqi Kurdish fighters have joined the fight against Islamic State militants in Kobani, hoping their support for fellow Kurds backed by U.S.-led air strikes will keep the ultra-hardline group from seizing the Syrian border town.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which monitors the civil war, said heavy clashes erupted in Kobani and that both sides had suffered casualties, while the U.S. military said it had launched more air raids on Islamic State over the weekend.

Idriss Nassan, deputy minister for foreign affairs in Kobani district, said Iraqi Kurds using long-range artillery had joined the battle on Saturday night against Islamic State, which holds parts of Syria and Iraq as part of an ambition to redraw the map of the Middle East.

"The peshmerga joined the battle late yesterday and it made a big difference with their artillery. It is proper artillery," he told Reuters.

"We didn't have artillery we were using mortars and other locally made weapons. So this is a good thing."

Nassan did not elaborate and it was not immediately possible to verify that progress against Islamic State had been made.

The arrival of the 150 Iraqi fighters -- known as peshmerga or "those who confront death" -- marks the first time Turkey has allowed troops from outside Syria to reinforce Syrian Kurds, who have been defending Kobani for more than 40 days.


ALL EYES ON KOBANI

"They are supporting the YPG. They have a range of semi-heavy weapons," said Jabbar Yawar, secretary general of the peshmerga ministry in the Kurdish region in northern Iraq, referring to the main Syrian Kurdish armed group.

Eyewitnesses in the Mursitpinar area on the Turkish side of the border from Kobani said two rockets were fired on Saturday night.

A Reuters witness said fighting on Sunday was heavier than in the last two days, noting a strike in the late morning and the sound of three explosions.

Attention has focused on Kobani, seen as key test of the effectiveness of American air strikes, and of whether combined Kurdish forces can fend off Islamic State, an al Qaeda offshoot made up of Arabs and foreign fighters.

Air strikes have helped to foil several attempts by Islamic State, notorious for its beheading of hostages and opponents, to take over Kobani.

But they have done little to stop its advances, in particular in Sunni areas of western Iraq, where it has been executing hundreds of members of a tribe that resisted its territorial gains.

In their latest air strikes, U.S. military forces staged seven attacks on Islamic State targets in Syria on Saturday and Sunday and were joined by allies in two more attacks in Iraq, the U.S. Central Command said.

In the Kobani area, five strikes hit five small Islamic State units, while two strikes near Dayr Az Zawr 150 miles (240 km) to the southeast in Syria destroyed an Islamic State tank and vehicle shelters.

U.S. and partner nations hit small Islamic State units near the Iraqi cities of Baiji, north of Baghdad, and Falluja, in Anbar province to the west of the capital.

The ultra-hardline Islamic State regards Iraq's majoriy Shi'ites as infidels who deserve to be killed.

The group is expected to try and deploy suicide bombers to inflict mass casualties as Shi'ites prepare for the religious festival of Ashura, an event that has been marred by sectarian bloodshed in the past.

Two car bombs killed a total of 20 Shi'ite pilgrims in different parts of Baghdad on Sunday, police and medics said.

Shi'ite militias and Kurdish peshmerga fighters stepped in to try and fill a security vacuum after U.S,-funded Iraqi military forces crumbled in the face of an Islamic State onslaught in the north in June.

Islamic State inflicted humiliating defeats on the Kurds.

While the Kurds have retaken some territory with the support of U.S. air strikes in the north, Islamic State faces limited resistance in Iraq's western Anbar province, where its militants last week executed over 300 hundred members of the Albu Nimr tribe because it had defied the group for weeks.

In the first official confirmation of the scale of the massacre, the Iraqi government said Islamic State had killed 322 members of the tribe, including dozens of women and children whose bodies were dumped in a well.

The systematic killings, which one tribal leader said were continuing on Sunday, marked some of the worst bloodshed in Iraq since the Sunni militants swept through the north in June.

The Albu Nimr, also Sunni, had put up fierce resistance against Islamic State for weeks but finally ran low on ammunition, food and fuel last week as Islamic State fighters closed in on their village at Zauiyat Albu Nimr.

"The number of people killed by Islamic State from Albu Nimr tribe is 322. The bodies of 50 women and children have also been discovered dumped in a well," Iraq's Human Rights Ministry said.

Since Islamic State declared a "caliphate" in large areas of Syria and Iraq in June, the militants have lost hundreds if not thousands of fighters in battles against other Sunni rebels, Islamist groups, forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and in U.S.-led air strikes.

Fighters inside the group say that it receives hundreds of volunteers every month, which helps it carry our more attacks. It also received pledges of allegiances from Islamist groups in places such as Pakistan, Africa and some Arab states. (Writing by Michael Georgy; editing by Giles Elgood and Philippa Fletcher)


"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?
11/3/2014 10:12:21 AM
Another possibility - a reader suggests - is the western propaganda has won the support to start a war

World War 3 trial run: Russia simulates attack on Denmark, stimulates war fears

Norman Byrd

November 2, 2014
7:59 PM MST

Denmark, situated nearly in the geographic center of the of the European Union, was the target of a simulated attack by Russia this summer.
David Liuzzo, Creative Commons

In what might be a precursor to World War 3, Russia simulated an attack on the European Union nation of Denmark this summer, according to the Danish Defense Intelligence Service (DDIS). The Inquistr reported Oct. 31 that a simulated attack on the Danish island of Bornholm using military jets loaded with live ordnance took place in June. The revelation of the trial run has done nothing to alleviate speculation and fears that Russia is indeed preparing for World War 3.

According to the Danish intelligence agency, Russian jets loaded with live missiles flew on a mission toward Bornholm. And although attack simulations are nothing new, they are rarely done when there is a possibility for actual disastrous consequences. While the simulation was taking place, Bornholm was playing host to a gathering of 9,000 political dignitaries.

“DDIS did not release concrete details about the simulated attack but characterised it as the largest Russian military exercise over the Baltic Sea since 1991 and of a more offensive character than observed in recent years. The DDIS Risk Assessment 2014... strongly focuses on Russia and the Ukraine crisis, predicting that 'over the next few years, the situation in eastern Ukraine will highly likely turn into a new frozen European conflict, and the Ukraine crisis will continue to strain relations between Russia and the West.'"

In addition to the simulated summer attack on Bornholm island, Russia has stepped up its challenges to NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization) defenses in the last few weeks. The Danish intelligence agency also reported that within a 24-hour period, Russia flew 19 combat missions testing both NATO and other neighboring countries. They also launched a ballistic missile into the Barents Sea area during the same time frame. The flurry of activity has prompted DDIS and U. S. intelligence to assess Russia's motives for its increased military activity as possible preparations for World War 3.

“It is not farfetched that at some point within the next two years [Russian President Vladimir] Putin makes a more aggressive move in Eastern Europe and uses a nuclear threat to deter a NATO response,” retired Air Force former intelligence chief Lt. Gen. David Deptula told the Daily Beast.

At the same time, Danish officials do not believe Russia poses a direct military threat to Denmark itself. This, despite the increased military activity of late and the simulated attack on one of the nation's islands.

Still, this isn't the first indicator that Russia and/or its President might be preparing for World War 3. Rumblings out of Moscow and via various venues show that Putin not only has been planning for a possible conflict with the West for over a decade but that he has also made threats about invading Ukraine and other European nations, not to mention making veiled threats about a possible nuclear confrontation.

But just how serious a threat can it be when the United States and its allies have been in a virtual stand-off of one kind or another with Russia and its allies (or just Russia) for over half a century? When does the state of affairs move from business as usual and an indirect or implied imminent threat to something that might necessitate a pre-emptive move by the West? Or does there exist such a scenario outside the abstract? Could it be that there is only a retaliatory scenario, one where Russia must be the obvious aggressor for a conflict to transpire? And just where is the line that Russia must not cross, that line that marks the beginning of World War 3?


"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?
11/3/2014 10:30:54 AM

Jerusalem on edge in row over contested shrine

Associated Press

FILE - In this Thursday, Oct. 30, 2014 file photo, Palestinian youths throw stones during clashes with Israeli border police after Moatez Higazi, suspected of trying to kill a hard-line Jewish activist, was killed in east Jerusalem. This combustible city at the center of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict has been edging toward a new conflagration, with politicians on both sides stoking religious fervor over an ancient Jerusalem shrine known to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary and to Jews as the Temple Mount and sacred to both. (AP Photo/Mahmoud Illean, File)


JERUSALEM (AP) — This combustible city at the center of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict has been edging toward a new conflagration, with politicians on both sides stoking religious fervor over an ancient Jerusalem shrine sacred to Muslims and Jews.

After months of escalating violence, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday made his clearest attempt yet to cool tempers, saying he won't allow changes to a long-standing ban on Jewish worship at the Muslim-run site, despite such demands from ultranationalists in his coalition.

Netanyahu's reassurances to Muslims came just days after the religious feud over the Old City shrine, known to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary and to Jews as the Temple Mount, threatened to spin out of control.

Israel closed the compound for a day last week, a rare move, after a Palestinian shot and wounded a prominent activist who has campaigned for more Jewish access to the site.

Angered by the closure, Jordan, the custodian of the mosque compound, warned it might seek diplomatic sanctions unless Israel halts what a Jordanian official said were "repeated violations" at the site. The U.S. has urged Netanyahu and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas to show restraint.

Feuding over the Old City compound has sparked violence in the past, and both Netanyahu and Abbas seem leery of a new round.

"It is very easy to ignite a religious fire, but much harder to extinguish it," Netanyahu told his Cabinet Sunday.

It remains unclear to what extent Netanyahu is willing to clash with coalition members lobbying for a greater Jewish presence at the shrine, the holiest in Judaism as the site of former biblical temples. There's growing buzz about early elections, and hardline parties are Netanyahu's natural allies.

On Saturday evening, Housing Minister Uri Ariel of the Jewish Home party, a key coalition partner, ignored appeals to tone down the rhetoric. At a rally for Yehuda Glick, the rabbi wounded by the Palestinian gunman last week, Ariel was quoted as saying that "the status quo on the Temple Mount will change."

Under that status quo, Muslim authorities reporting to Jordan continued to administer the site, home to the Al-Aqsa and Dome of the Rock mosques, after east Jerusalem's capture by Israel in 1967. Jews were allowed to visit, but not to pray there.

Abbas also called for calm. "We hope that this quiet will happen and that the status quo ... at the Al-Aqsa Mosque will be preserved," he said at a meeting of Palestine Liberation Organization members Sunday.

Last month, Abbas urged Palestinians to defend Al-Aqsa "by any means." Israel lambasted this as a call to violence and accused Abbas of incitement, though in Sunday's remarks Netanyahu largely blamed the Jerusalem unrest on Islamic extremists.

Abbas has said repeatedly he would not allow another Palestinian uprising to erupt. His security forces have broken up Al-Aqsa solidarity marches in the West Bank that were organized by his rival, the Islamic militant group Hamas.

Abbas suspects Hamas is trying to stir up unrest over the issue in an attempt to weaken him, his aides have said. Al-Aqsa is Islam's third-holiest site, after Mecca and Medina in Saudi Arabia.

The wrangling over the shrine comes at a time when a negotiated solution for Jerusalem, claimed by Israelis and Palestinians as a capital, is out of reach. U.S.-led peace talks collapsed earlier this year, and there's not enough common ground between the sides to warrant resumption.

Netanyahu rejects any withdrawal from east Jerusalem — the area sought by the Palestinians as the capital of a future state. Instead, the Israeli leader is promoting construction for Jews in east Jerusalem, including an announcement last week that plans for more than 1,000 new settlement apartments there would move forward.

Meanwhile, discontent is growing among the city's Palestinians who complain of longstanding discrimination and fear Israel is marginalizing them further with its accelerated settlement drive.

"It will come to a point where it's either us or them in the city," said Fathi Jaber, a Palestinian merchant who sells religious trinkets in the Old City's Muslim Quarter, across from a Jewish settler enclave.

The surge in clashes between Palestinian stone-throwers and Israeli riot police has revived speculation — mainly in the Israeli media — that another Palestinian uprising might erupt, following two attempts since the 1980s to shake off Israeli occupation through protests and armed attacks.

On tense days, the Jerusalem shrine looks like a fortress, ringed by hundreds of Israeli troops with helmets and shields who seal access roads and restrict entrance.

In near-daily confrontations in Arab neighborhoods, teens and young men burn tires or throw stones and firecrackers from the cover of overturned garbage containers, drawing tear gas volleys from riot police.

Police have stepped up security in those areas, with Netanyahu saying Sunday he ordered "massive reinforcements" to quell the violence. Also Sunday, Israel approved an amendment to the penal code that would enforce tougher punishment — up to 20 years in prison — for Palestinians who throw rocks at cars.

Some 900 Palestinians have been arrested since the start of riots in east Jerusalem this summer, with at least 300 indictments served, police said Sunday. About 100 arrests were made since the latest round of clashes, after a Palestinian motorist rammed his car into a train station on Oct. 22, killing two people.

In one such clash over the weekend, tear gas engulfed the Abu Tor neighborhood, home to Moataz Hijazi, a 32-year-old Arab waiter who attacked Glick. Hijazi, later killed in a shootout with police, was trying to defend Al-Aqsa and is considered a hero by the community, said his brother Oday, 28.

"It was something that made people proud," he said. He spoke in a large tent where the family received a steady stream of mourners, many coughing from the tear gas fired by police at nearby stone-throwers.

Palestinian officials said Abbas sent a condolence letter to the family Sunday in which he wrote that "martyr Moataz was killed defending the rights of our people and their holy shrine."

In Israel, Jewish access to the Temple Mount has turned from a fringe issue into a mainstream idea.

After 1967, most rabbis considered Jewish prayer at the Temple Mount a sacrilege. But since the 1990s, nationalist clerics have been pressing for an increased Jewish presence, triggering angry reactions by Muslims who argue the site is exclusively theirs.

Over the past 15 years, the number of Jewish visitors has increased significantly, Muslim officials say. Israeli police put the number of Jewish visitors at 20 to 30 a day, along with some 2,000 tourists.

Jews touring the mount are often greeted by defiant chants of "Allahu Akbar," Arabic for "God is Great," and occasionally by rocks. Police have clashed with Arab stone-throwers at the site, firing tear gas and stun grenades. At times of tension, younger male Muslims are barred from the shrine.

Hatem Abdel Kader, an activist in Abbas' Fatah movement, said Jerusalem's Palestinians feel abandoned and that an uprising in the city would likely be spontaneous. "If there will be an uprising, it will not wait for permission from anyone," he said.

___

Associated Press writers Mohammed Daraghmeh in Ramallah, West Bank, and Peter Enav in Jerusalem contributed reporting.


"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?
11/3/2014 10:34:48 AM
Ukraine Says Rebel-Held Elections Pose Threat to Peace

Nov 3, 2014 2:59 AM GMT-0500


Photographer: Dimitar Dilkoff/AFP via Getty Images

Voters prepare to cast their ballots at a polling station in Donetsk.

Russian-backed rebels held elections in their self-proclaimed people’s republics in eastern Ukraine, a move that the government in Kiev said poses a threat to the peace process.

Rebels organized the ballots in the territory of Donetsk and Luhansk a week after boycotting Oct. 26 national parliamentary elections. The one-day ballot, designed to pick a head of government as well as local parliament, was only backed by Russia and defied governments from Kiev to Washington.

About 5.2 million people live in the conflict zones, according to the United Nations which estimates that the seven months of fighting has cost more than 4,000 lives. Fighting has continued almost daily since the belligerents agreed to a cease-fire in Minsk, the capital of Belarus, on Sept 5. The U.S. and the European Union blame Russian President Vladimir Putin’s government for instigating the conflict. Russia denies involvement.

“The farce under barrels of tanks and guns, which two terrorist organizations staged” was “a horrible event that has nothing in common with real expression of free will,” Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko said in a statement on his website yesterday. Poroshenko said the elections breach the truce agreement signed in Minsk.

‘Stable Dialogue’

In Moscow, the Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement on its website: “We respect the expression of the will of southeastern regions’ citizens.” The statement called for “stable dialogue” between what it called representatives of the southeastern regions and the government in Kiev.

Rebels attacked Donetsk airport with mortars, Ukraine’s National Security and Defense Council said on its Facebook page. Ukrainian forces suffered no losses in the attack yesterday, according to the council.

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon called the elections a “breach of the constitution and national law,” according to the organization’s website. “These ‘elections’ will seriously undermine the Minsk protocol and memorandum, which need to be urgently implemented in full.”

The elections should legitimize the leadership in the two regions and lead to closer ties with Russia, including increased economic aid, a lawmaker from Russia’s ruling United Russia party said yesterday.

“The results of these elections are important,” lawmaker Mikhail Markelov said in comments posted on the party’s website. “They will lead to a totally new level of ties with Russia.”

Ukraine’s security service said yesterday it opened a criminal probe into the rebel-held elections, calling them illegal and breaching the constitution.

‘Illegal Elections’

“The criminal investigation is not a political gesture,” military spokesman Andriy Lysenko said in Kiev yesterday. “The part of Donbas that remains temporarily occupied will eventually be liberated and those who took part in organizing the illegal elections will be held accountable according to Ukrainian law.”

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Pavlo Klimkin told Russia’s RBC television that yesterday’s polls in Donetsk and Luhansk will create problems “that can never be solved,” according to a video of the interview posted on YouTube. “The situation will deteriorate no matter what anyone says.”

Crimea Annexation

Current separatist leaders Alexander Zakharchenko and Igor Plotnitskiy sought to legitimize the roles they assumed at the start of the rebellion, which was triggered by the ouster of Russian-backed President Viktor Yanukovych in February and Russia’s annexation of Crimea in March.

Zakharchenko, 38, was one of three candidates running for the top job in the Donetsk People’s Republic. He led the group of protesters that seized the local government building on April 16 and later “took part in many important battles,” according to the biography posted on the local election commission’s website.

He was in the lead with 81 percent in the Donetsk vote, state-run Russian news service RIA Novosti reported, citing an exit poll provided by Roman Lyagin, the Central Elections Commission Chairman. Zakharchenko’s party won local parliamentary elections, RIA reported, citing the poll.

Plotnitskiy, 50, joined the Soviet army in 1987, where he served until 1991, when the Soviet Uniondisbanded, according to a biography compiled by state-run Russian news service RIA Novosti. He became the commander of the local separatist unit “Zarya” in April and the next month he became “prime minister” of the people’s republic.

Voter turnout was “high,” Donetsk People’s Republic said on its website yesterday, citing Lyagin.

“Many arrived before polls opened and queued up to cast their ballots,” Lyagin said. Voting didn’t take place in three districts because of heavy fighting there. “This is a real war, and we didn’t open these polls to ensure voters’ safety.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Aliaksandr Kudrytski in Minsk, Belarus atakudrytski@bloomberg.net


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

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