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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
8/26/2012 5:00:05 PM
Video of the South African Shooting Emerges (Graphic Video)













Reuters videographer John “Dinky” Mkhize was present at last week’s violent shooting in South Africa near a huge platinum mine. Police opened fire on striking mine workers who had been posted near the mine for a full week on August 16. They opened fire with automatic weapons on a group of strikers running towards police vehicles. The shooting lasted for several seconds before one officer shouted out, “Cease fire!”

The incident has shocked the nation and the world after 34 people were killed and a further 78 people were injured. Mkhize’s video is one of the first to show the brutality of the moment and includes many graphic images of bloodshed and destruction. Mkhize commented on the experience as he saw it from just two or three yards away, at the back of the police line.

This could have ended peacefully but, you know, since these guys [the striking mine workers] have been camping there for quite a number of days you could clearly tell that this was going to be different because they were not prepared to do what they were told by the police. Instead, they made it very clear that they will listen to the mining management or their leaders but no one else.

After police arrived, they met the crowd of workers holding machetes and sticks. Mkhize described the tension of the scene, “One could see that with the build-up of the police that, you know, the police were not going to let this go.” Below is the video of the shooting. As a warning, Mkhize’s video is graphic and shows an up-close depiction of the shooting.

The videographer could not tell how the event became so volatile so quickly. He told producer Natalie Armstrong, “As to why this group were running towards the police line I definitely can’t say.” The graphic imagery is a reminder of the brutality of the moment, the kind of violence many commentators say they haven’t seen since apartheid.

President Jacob Zuma announced that a commission would investigate the violence of the last two weeks in order to establish the chain of events. Thursday was also a national day of mourning. A memorial service was held near the Lonmin-owned platinum mine and 1,000 people were reported to have attended it.

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
8/26/2012 5:09:05 PM

Expanding control, Syrian rebels run prisons



Associated Press/Muhammed Muheisen - In this Friday, Aug. 24, 2012 photo, Syrian prisoner, Mohammed Abeid, 42, gestures while talking at a makeshift prison run by rebels in a former elementary school in Al-Bab on the outskirts of Aleppo, Syria. Many improvised detention centers have sprung up as rebels wrest cities from army control, but these facilities fall under no national or regional authority, causing concern among rights groups. (AP Photo/Muhammed Muheisen)

In this Friday, Aug. 24, 2012 photo, a Free Syrian Army Soldier holds his AK-47 while standing by the door of a makeshift prison run by rebels in a former elementary school in Al-Bab on the outskirts of Aleppo, Syria. Many improvised detention centers have sprung up as rebels wrest cities from army control, but these facilities fall under no national or regional authority, causing concern among rights groups. (AP Photo/Muhammed Muheisen)

Al-BAB, Syria (AP) — An elementary school hallway in this north Syrian city is now a prison.

Behind a padlocked gate sit 10 men, accused by the rebels who have taken over the city of theft, thuggery and spying for the regime ofPresident Bashar Assad.

The head guard says all prisoners get three meals a day and one shower. All will be tried by the town's new legal council, and no one is mistreated, he says.

One alleged crook, however, has two black eyes.

"I flipped my motorcycle," he said, speaking within earshot of his captors.

An accused regime informer has a bruised face and red stripes on his arm, as if he's been lashed with a cord.

"I fell down," he said.

The Al-Bab prison is one of the many lockups rebels fighting against Assad's regime have set up after seizing areas from government forces.

These facilities report to no national or regional authority, causing concern among rights groups and leading to a wide range of practices.

One badly bruised captive told Human Rights Watch he'd been blindfolded and beaten daily for three weeks. Elsewhere, reporters from The Associated Press saw former regime soldiers frolicking in a swimming pool with their captors.

It is impossible to determine the number of rebel detention centers, but interviews with rebel commanders, activists, captives and human rights researches in north Syria — plus visits to three facilities — provide a window into the issue.

Little evidence has surfaced that rebels are practicing the widespread, institutionalized torture that human rights groups accuse Assad's regime of. But many prisoners bear bruises and scars from beatings and lashings.

A number of rebel groups acknowledge sending prisoners believed to have blood on their hands to the firing squad. Others realize the living are worth more than the dead and seek "blood money" from captives' families or try to exchange them for rebels held by the regime.

The captors also vary. Running north Syria's largest known rebel prison, in the town of Marea, is a barrel-shaped former truck driver nicknamed "Jumbo" who has a bullet lodged in his head from a gunfight with government troops. Others are run by civilian councils of lawyers, teachers and Muslim clerics who administer a mix of Syrian and Islamic law.

The lack of oversight worries human rights groups.

"It is extremely important that the opposition leadership send a strong message that the kinds of abuses we've seen are not acceptable and that those committing them will be held accountable," said Anna Neistat of Human Rights Watch, who is researching rebel prisons.

More than 17 months of unrest in Syria has killed more than 20,000 people, anti-regime activists say. The conflict has recently descended into a civil war between Assad's regime and rebels seeking to overthrow it.

Assad blames the violence on foreign-backed terrorists seeking to weaken the country.

While neither side appears to be approaching victory, rebels have recently pushed the army from a number of towns in the country's north, leaving them in charge of services like distributing fuel and bread and running prisons. Their fractured approach to administering justice shows how far they are from forming an alternative national government should Assad's regime fall.

North Syria's two largest prisons are run by the Revolutionary Council of Aleppo and the Countryside, which is closely linked to the area's largest rebel grouping, the Islamist Tawheed Brigade. The group holds hundreds of prisoners.

The AP was denied access to the group's main prison in Marea, north of Aleppo. But Neistat of the New York-based Human Rights Watch interviewed two prisoners in private during a visit this month. Both said they'd been beaten on the soles of their feet — practice some rebel leaders say is permitted by Islamic law, an idea some Muslims dispute.

The improvised nature of the rebel lockups is clear in Al-Bab, 45 kilometers (28 miles) northeast of Aleppo.

Rebels took control of the city in a battle last month against regime forces holed up in the post office. After some fled, rebels stormed the building, throwing the dead bodies of government soldiers from the roof.

After the regime's withdrawal, local leaders formed a 12-person council to run the city's affairs. They opened the prison in the elementary school.

About 60 people have been through the prison this month, said Mohammed Nouh, the head guard. A prison office collects testimony from residents, and a judicial council of lawyers and Islamic clerics reviews cases. Most people are released in a few days, Nouh said.

The 10 alleged criminals in the prison one recent afternoon had all been caught in the last week, Nouh said. Each had a mattress and a pillow and access to a toilet behind a curtain down the hall. The guards brought plastic razors so the men could shave.

Nouh said the prisoner with the bruised head and arm was a regime spy.

"Lots of people said he's an informer, that he was giving coordinates to the regime," he said.

During an interview away from the guards, Mohammed Abeid, 42, said he'd been arrested because he worked for a government company.

"They arrested me because they say that I belong to the regime," he said. "It's not true."

He said he had not been abused, had eaten well and spoken to the judicial committee, which had yet to decide his fate.

The town's other lockup is a bare room in a former government agriculture office that now houses a rebel brigade.

Fifteen men surrendered to the brigade during the post office battle, and 10 were released after rebels determined they hadn't killed anyone, said Omar Othman, the group's commander.

Interviewed alone, the five remaining captives said they had not been abused and ate regularly, though they worried the rebels were using them to raise money by demanding ransom.

They had been divided by sect. Othman said three former police officers — all Sunni Muslims like most of the rebels — had been exonerated and would go home soon. The two others were military security officers and Alawites, members of the religious minority of Assad and many in his regime.

While denying that sectarianism influenced the group's decisions, Othman said the two men had repressed anti-regime protests and that the regime would want them back.

"We want a prisoner exchange, nothing more and nothing less," he said.

Other groups too have used captives to their advantage.

A rebel group in the Aleppo suburb of Kafar Hamra held 13 captured soldiers in their rural, three-story villa. While technically prisoners, the captives moved about freely, ate with the rebels and swam with them in the villa's pool.

All were Sunni Muslims in their early 20s who had been doing their mandatory military service when caught. Even when interviewed alone, they said they ate better with the rebels than they had in the army and trusted them to get them home.

"Why would I flee?" asked captive Mohammed Kilani, 22. "They are feeding me and giving me cigarettes and we play soccer together and they tell me they'll get me to my family."

A while later, the uncle of one of the captives paid the rebels $750 to release his nephew, a captured conscript from Damascus.

"It's fine," Jihad Khalid said of the money. "If they'd asked for more, we would have paid it."

"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?
8/26/2012 5:18:06 PM

Official: Egypt tells Israel tanks needed in Sinai


Associated Press - FILE - In this Aug. 9, 2012 file photo, army trucks carry Egyptian military tanks in El Arish, Egypt's northern Sinai Peninsula. An Egyptian intelligence official and a military official say Egypt's defense minister, Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi told his Israeli counterpart in a telephone call Thursday that Egypt's increased military presence in the Sinai Peninsula is needed to fight terrorism and is temporary. Israel says Egypt has since moved tanks into Sinai without its consent -- which is required under the 1979 peace treaty between the countries. (AP Photo, File)

FILE - In this Monday, Aug. 13, 2012 file photo, newly-appointed Egyptian Minister of Defense, Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi meets with Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi, unseen, in Cairo, Egypt. An Egyptian intelligence official and a military official say el-Sissi told his Israeli counterpart in a telephone call Thursday that Egypt's increased military presence in the Sinai Peninsula is needed to fight terrorism and is temporary. Israel says Egypt has since moved tanks into Sinai without its consent -- which is required under the 1979 peace treaty between the countries. (AP Photo/Egyptian Presidency, File)

CAIRO (AP) — In the first direct contact with his Israeli counterpart since taking office, Egypt's new defense minister defended his country's increased military presence in the Sinai Peninsula, saying it is needed to fight terrorism and assuring him it is only temporary, Egyptian officials said Saturday.

The officials — one from Egyptian intelligence and another from the military — said Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi called Ehud Barak on Thursday in their first conversation since el-Sissi became defense minister earlier this month. The phone call followed grumbling from Israeli officials about not being consulted before Egypt's leaders deployed tanks to the Sinai Peninsula, the strip of Egyptian land that borders Israel and the Gaza Strip.

The Israeli defense ministry refused comment. An Israeli defense official said no conversation took place between el-Sissi and Barak. The official spoke on condition of anonymity due to the extreme sensitivity of the matter.

But as the new defense minister, el-Sissi at some point would have to speak with senior Israeli officials, particularly after they publicly expressed their concerns about Egypt's deployment of heavy weaponry to Sinai.

Under the 1979 peace accord between the two countries, Egypt is allowed to have only lightly armed policemen in the zone along the border with Israel. The treaty stipulates that significant military moves by Egypt must be coordinated with Israel.

Egypt used attack helicopters and armored personnel carriers in coordination with Israel to go after militants suspected of being behind the Aug. 5 killing of 16 Egyptian soldiers in Sinai.

Later, however, Egypt deployed U.S.-made M60 tanks to Sinai without consulting with Israel, which drew objections from the Israel despite the fact that it has long encouraged Cairo to crack down on militants in Sinai.

Israel does not view the Egyptian military buildup there as a strategic threat. The problem, Israeli officials said, is with Egypt setting a precedent by moving troops to Sinai without coordinating the move with Israel first.

Israeli officials stressed that significant military moves by Egypt must be run by Israel first, giving it a veto of sorts over Egyptian security strategy.

Israel has the most powerful military in the Middle East, and Egypt's new military deployment in Sinai is not viewed as a threat. In addition, the two nations have been at peace for decades and — despite some turbulence in their relations in the wake of Egypt's uprising last year — remain in close contact regarding security matters.

Israel has itself been a target of Islamic militants based in Sinai in recent months and wants to see Egypt's security forces reign in the lawlessness that has swept across the desert peninsula since longtime President Hosni Mubarak was toppled and his powerful police force disappeared from the streets.

In his phone call with Barak on Thursday, el-Sissi also assured the Israeli that Egypt respects the nations' peace treaty, the intelligence and military officials said on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of relations between Egypt and Israel at this time.

In Egypt, the president's spokesman could not be immediately reached for comment.

Israel-Egypt relations have grown increasingly complicated since the June election of President Mohammed Morsi, an Islamist and member of the Muslim Brotherhood who is Egypt's first freely elected civilian leader.

Morsi's sudden move earlier this month to replace longtime leaders of the Egyptian military familiar to Israel following the Sinai attack has added to the tensions. El-Sissi served as head of military intelligence for two years before assuming the job of defense minister from Hussein Tantawi, who held the post for 20 years.

The conflicting reports seemed to reflect sensitivities that were also apparent in an incident last month after Israel said Morsi wrote back to Israeli President Shimon Peres, who had sent the Egyptian president a letter wishing him well on the start of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan. The president's office denied sending any reply.

The letter was a potential embarrassment since Morsi's Brotherhood group has long been hostile to Israel and has said its members in government will have no contact with it — though they have promised to preserve the landmark peace treaty.

The confusion surrounding the letter might have stemmed from a protocol mix-up. It was sent by the Egyptian Embassy in Tel Aviv to Peres by fax and by courier — and was on the mission's stationary, not the presidency's, though it is written in the name of Morsi. An Egyptian Foreign Ministry official and an official close to the presidency told The Associated Press that Morsi has no intention to communicate directly with the Israelis and that he mandated the Foreign Ministry to take over routine contacts with Israel. Both spoke on condition of anonymity.

___

Associated Press writer Ian Deitch contributed to this report from Jerusalem.

"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?
8/26/2012 6:17:53 PM
Dear friends, let's hope this interesting shift in international relationships has positive results

Iran, defying Western isolation, opens developing nations summit

"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?
8/27/2012 10:40:47 AM

200 Bodies Found Near Damascus (Graphic Video)
















Syrian opposition activists report that more than 200 bodies have been found in the town of Darayya near Damascus. If confirmed, the the killings would require “unequivocal condemnation from the entire international community,” the UK Foreign Office said.

With reports of over 400 killed, the deaths in Darayya would make Saturday the bloodiest yet in the 18-month uprising,

The activist Local Co-ordination Committees (LCC) said that most of the bodies were those of young men, though some found are reportedly those of children and women. Activists are circulating a graphic video that shows scores of corpses lined up in a dimly lit room in what is described as the Abu Suleiman al-Durani mosque.


Darayya is a working-class Sunni community south-west of Damascus and a population of several hundred thousand; it has reportedly been a “mainstay of opposition support within the capital area” since the uprising against the regime of President Bashar al-Assad began in March of 2011, says the New York Times. Darayya is near the Meze military airport, a major base for Syrian forces. Activists say that they had established a “large armory” inside the city that, it was rumored, included helicopters.

Syrian forces have been shelling Darayya since midweek and sending hundreds of soliders followed by tanks and military trucks. While the Free Syrian Army initially put up resistance, regime forces were in control of Darayya by late Friday or early Saturday. Electricity and internet lines were cut and soldiers reportedly went house to house to conduct searches.

Local activists say that mass killings like those reportedly carried out in Darayya have increased in recent months, says the BBC. Human Rights Watch says that while such are “not a new pattern… [they are] now happening in more areas and in greater numbers.”

In May, 108 people, including over 30 children, were found massacred in the Syrian village of Houla. Earlier in August, the United Nations issued a report that said it has been “state policy” to conduct indiscriminate attacks against civilians and other atrocities and that members of the “Shabiha” militia have been thoroughy involved in a “gross violation of international human rights.”

Amnesty International has also issued a new report on the fighting in Aleppo, Syria’s second city, according to which “the overwhelming majority of victims were killed in air strikes and artillery attacks by government forces.” Rebel forces were also criticized for “imprecise or indiscriminate weapons such as mortars and home-made rockets.”

A full-fledged investigation of atrocities can only be carried out in the International Criminal Court in the Hague with the approval of the UN Security Council, the Guardian says. But such an inquiry is unlikely because Russia, Syria’s main ally and supplied of arms, has steadfastly blocked this.

The Guardian also says that, as the conflict drags on and the death toll mounts, Western diplomats have indeed “largely given up on security council diplomacy and are stepping up their assistance to the fragmented opposition,” though without arming the rebel forces as countries including Saudi Arabia and Qatar reportedly are.

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Image from a screenshot of a video uploaded by mousa4hak via YouTube



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