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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
2/20/2015 9:57:18 AM

Christians, Jews, Muslims hold peace pilgrimage in London

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Christians, Jews, Muslims hold peace pilgrimage in London

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London (AFP) - Christians, Jews and Muslims from all walks of British life made a pilgrimage through central London on Thursday, in a show of unity against the hatred that drove recent attacks in France and Denmark.

More than 100 people, including faith leaders, children and pensioners, walked in the rain from London's main mosque at Regent's Park to the Central Synagogue and then through the bustling crowds of Soho to Westminster Abbey.

At each venue they gathered for a moment of reflection, led variously by the local imam, rabbi and priest, to emphasise their shared values and hopes for peace.

"The terrorists hope to divide us but these atrocities are uniting us," Sheikh Khalifa Ezzat, chief imam at London Central Mosque, told AFP.

The march was called in response to last month's Islamist attacks in Paris, by a group of religious leaders brought together under the inter-faith Coexist programme.

Since then Europe has been rocked by the shootings in Copenhagen, which once again targeted free speech and the Jewish community.

"The Paris attacks were extremely frightening. The violence -- it was an assault on freedom, on the sanctity of life and it's an assault on Judaism, which again we saw in Copenhagen," said Jonathan Wittenberg, rabbi of the New North London Synagogue.

"We can't let that be the last word... I felt it was very important that there should be a response."

Many of those on the march had travelled to London for the day, including Margaret Lloyd, a 65-year-old follower of the Church of England from Coventry in central England.

"There are so many extreme views flying around, which turn off a lot of people who don't believe in God and make people think religion is responsible for all conflict," she said.

Walking through the streets with her husband, she said: "We want to be here -- this demonstrates that people of faith can be people of peace."

Not everybody agreed. Wittenberg and priest Margaret Cave, who walked with a banner at the front of the march alongside Ezzat, were accosted at one point by a passer-by.

The man, who wore a smart suit, accused them of "appeasing" Muslims who had murdered Jews.

"I think he rather missed the point of all this," remarked one of the volunteer stewards.





"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?
2/20/2015 10:07:14 AM

US fears for cash-strapped Palestinian Authority

AFP

A Palestinian man runs into the ruins of a building that was destroyed by Israeli shelling during a 50-day war in the summer of 2014, in the northern Gaza Strip town of Beit Lahia on February 19, 2015 (AFP Photo/Mohammed Abed)


Washington (AFP) - The United States voiced fears Thursday that the Palestinian Authority may be teetering on the brink of collapse because of a lack of funding, as Israel withholds taxes and donor aid stalls.

Washington has been in urgent talks with regional leaders as well as other stakeholders in the frozen Middle East peace process in a bid to try to release more funds.

"It's true we're very concerned about the continued viability of the Palestinian Authority if they do not receive funds soon," State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki told reporters.

Such funds would include the resumption of monthly Israeli transfers of Palestinian tax revenues, or additional donor assistance, she said.

In January, Israel suspended $127 million in tax revenues which should have been transferred to the Palestinian Authority as punishment for its move to join the International Criminal Court (ICC).

The Palestinians' membership in the ICC, which takes effect on April 1, sets the scene for potential legal action against Israelis for alleged war crimes, in a move which has infuriated the Jewish state.

But the Palestinian economy has also been hit by a slowing of aid funds, as donors have failed to make good on $5.4 billion promised at a Cairo conference in October to help rebuild the impoverished Gaza Strip after last year's 50-day war.

The IMF reported last month that the war between Israel and Gaza drove the Palestinian economy of Gaza and the West Bank into its first contraction since 2006.

Psaki warned that if the Palestinian Authority ceased security cooperation with Israel "or even decides to disband, as they have said they may do as early as the first week of March," it could trigger a dire situation.

"We could be faced with a crisis that could gravely impact both the Palestinians and the Israelis, with potentially serious ripple effects...," she said.

US officials have been in talks with counterparts from the EU, UN, Russia and the Arab League to discuss the situation.

US Secretary of State John Kerry met Thursday with the head of the Arab League, Nabil al-Arabi, praising him as a "solid partner" in many issues including the Middle East peace process.

Israeli-Palestinian talks have stalled since Kerry's dogged bid for a comprehensive peace treaty collapsed spectacularly in April.

Psaki acknowledged that given the situation it "would not seem possible to get further assistance to the Palestinian Authority through Congress in the near future."

Washington was warning partners "about the importance of stability in the region and the implications that go well beyond security," she added.

"Hundreds of thousands of students could be without teachers, hospitals could cease to function... The cost to both Palestinians and Israelis could be immense in both financial and human terms."


"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?
2/20/2015 10:18:16 AM

Errors over Ukraine 'catastrophic': UK parliament report

AFP

A tank of pro-Russian rebels take a position outside Uglegorsk, 6 km southwest of Debaltseve, on February 19, 2015 (AFP Photo/Vasily Maximov)

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London (AFP) - Britain and the European Union are guilty of "sleepwalking" into a crisis in Ukraine, a scathing report from a British parliamentary committee said on Friday.

The criticism from the EU Committee of the House of Lords -- which scrutinises the British government's EU policies -- comes as a ceasefire falters between pro-Russian rebels and Ukrainian forces.

Kiev and the West accuse Russia of arming the insurgents and sending soldiers into Ukraine -- something Russian President Vladimir Putin denies.

The committee "believes that the EU, and by implication the UK, was guilty of sleepwalking into this crisis," said committee chairman Christopher Tugendhat.

"The lack of robust analytical capacity, in both the UK and the EU, effectively led to a catastrophic misreading of the mood in the run-up to the crisis."

A report by the committee said the EU's relationship with Moscow had long assumed an "optimistic premise" that Russia was on the path to becoming more democratic.

It blamed a decline in expertise on Russia in Britain's foreign office and other EU ministries for an inability to give an "authoritative response".

"The government has not been as active or as visible on this issue as it could have been," the report said.

It is the latest blow to the administration of David Cameron over the issue, after the prime minister was described as "a foreign policy irrelevance" in the crisis by Britain's top commander in NATO, General Richard Shirreff.

The foreign office rejected the criticism.

"The UK has played a leading role in supporting Ukraine's right to chart its own future by ensuring that the EU imposed tough sanctions on Russia for seeking to dictate these choices," a spokeswoman said.

The office "has strengthened its expertise on Russia and the region and will continue working to ensure a strong and united response to Russian aggression," she added.

On Thursday, Britain's defence minister warned that EU NATO members Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania could be the next target of Russian interference.

After his comments, Russian bombers were spotted near to British sovereign airspace on Thursday, the latest incident in a trend seen as a show of strength by Russia.

Cameron this week warned that sanctions on Russia could last for "many years to come" if Russia did not back down.


"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?
2/20/2015 10:28:28 AM

Leaders renew backing of tattered Ukraine ceasefire

AFP

Soldiers wave at people form their armoured vehicle as they ride to Artemivsk after leaving Debaltseve in the Donetsk region on February 19, 2015 (AFP Photo/Anatolii Stepanov)

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Kiev (AFP) - The leaders of Ukraine, Germany, France and Russia on Thursday pledged renewed support for a tattered ceasefire in eastern Ukraine despite violations -- including the storming of a key town by pro-Russian rebels.

As the leaders condemned the fighting and urged both sides to observe the truce, there was strident opposition from the separatists and Moscow to a plea from Ukraine for international peacekeepers to enforce the ceasefire.

Washington said pro-Russian rebels had broken the ceasefire more than 250 times since it came into force on Sunday.

The Ukrainian army, meanwhile, said 90 troops had been captured and 82 were still missing after the rebels seized the strategic town of Debaltseve.

The seizure of the town, a transport hub sandwiched between the rebel strongholds of Donetsk and Lugansk, sent government troops into retreat.

The insurgents claimed to have captured as many as 300 government soldiers.

One of the rebel leaders, Alexander Zakharchenko, said that 3,000 to 3,500 troops died in the assault, although such casualty counts on both sides are often greatly exaggerated for propaganda effect.

"Let Kiev take their dead," he said.

- Peacekeeper call -

Kiev's defeat in Debaltseve, which has had many Ukrainians questioning the competence of their military leaders, prompted Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko to appeal for international peacekeepers to be deployed in the east.

Poroshenko again raised the proposal in a four-way telephone conversation Thursday with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, French President Francois Hollande and Russian President Vladimir Putin, his office said.

He found little apparent support, however, with none of the others mentioning it in statements from their offices, and Moscow denying it was mentioned at all.

Instead, the four called for the implementation of the full package of measures agreed in Minsk, including a full ceasefire, withdrawal of heavy weapons and the release of prisoners, according to the French presidency.

They also called for observers from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) to be able to carry out their task of monitoring the ceasefire.

The OSCE, which rebels have blocked from entering Debaltseve, said there were "no exceptions" to the ceasefire's application in the conflict zone -- explicitly rejecting the separatists' argument that Debaltseve should be excluded.

Journalists have also been prevented from getting into the war-ravaged town.

An AFP reporter about four kilometres (over two miles) from Debaltseve on Thursday saw rebels firing Grad rockets for 15 minutes, making the earth tremble.

"There's still fighting, there has been shelling, it's risky," a rebel commander appointed as the new mayor of the town, Alexander Apendikov, said as his convoy stopped on the road.

The commander, nicknamed "The Greek" for his ethnic origins, said the insurgents were going building to building in Debaltseve looking for remaining Ukrainian soldiers refusing to surrender.

"They are hiding, some of them in the woods, we don't know what they're going to do," he said.

- Russia accused -

The EU and US have called the rebel assault of Debaltseve a "clear violation" of the truce aimed at quelling Ukraine's 10-month-old conflict, which has killed more than 5,600 people.

"This violence has continued despite Russian and separatist commitments to a ceasefire agreement," White House deputy press secretary Eric Schultz said Thursday.

"We call on all parties, including Russia, to abide by that plan."

As Western powers pledged support for the ceasefire agreement, a scathing report from a British parliamentary committee said Britain and the EU were "guilty of sleepwalking into this crisis".

The EU Committee of the House of Lords said the EU's relationship with Moscow had long assumed an "optimistic premise" that Russia was on the path to becoming more democratic.

"The lack of robust analytical capacity, in both the UK and the EU, effectively led to a catastrophic misreading of the mood in the run-up to the crisis," said committee chairman Christopher Tugendhat.

In Donetsk, intense artillery fire continued throughout the day, according to a journalist on the ground.

A UN convoy carrying humanitarian aid arrived in the town Thursday, the first to arrive in the rebel stronghold.

The West has accused Russia of sending troops, tanks and weapons to support the separatists with the aim of keeping Ukraine, an ex-Soviet republic, too destabilised to move closer towards the EU and NATO. Moscow denies the allegation.

US Secretary of State John Kerry told his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov on Wednesday "to stop Russian and separatist attacks on Ukrainian positions in Debaltseve and other violations of the ceasefire".

President Barack Obama has also been mulling sending arms to Ukraine if the situation worsens.

But Russia has a mighty military that could trump any armed escalation in Ukraine, and is an important gas supplier to several EU countries. It has already retaliated against sanctions by banning European food imports.

Britain's Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond said Thursday his country remained opposed to arming Ukraine, but noted the question was "one for individual national governments".


"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?
2/20/2015 10:38:01 AM

US wants Mosul offensive on IS in April-May

AFP

Smoke billows after an US air strike near the Mosul dam, Iraq's largest, on the Tigris river, on August 17, 2014 (AFP Photo/Ahmad al-Rubaye)


Washington (AFP) - The US wants Iraq to launch its offensive to retake the strategic northern city of Mosul from the Islamic State group in April or May, military officials said.

Mosul is believed to be held by 1,000-2,000 IS fighters and 20,000-25,000 Iraqi troops are needed to carry out the offensive, an official with US Central Command said on Thursday.

"The mark on the wall we are still shooting for is the April-May timeframe," the official said, adding that because of Ramadan and the increasing heat of summer, "it becomes problematic if it goes much later (than May)."

A US ground role in the offensive force, to help direct air strikes, has not been ruled out, the official said.

But Iraqi troops will form the bulk of the force, while three Kurdish brigades are planned to also participate.

US-led coalition aircraft have recently focused air strikes in the area of Mosul and Kurdish forces have made inroads on the ground nearby.

Kurdish peshmerga forces have also launched successful offensives against IS-held roads near Mosul, which is in the north of the country.

The city once held well over a million people but now is likely a fraction of that size.

Also Thursday, military chiefs from two dozen countries gathered in the Saudi capital to seek ways of bolstering the Iraqi army against the IS jihadists.

Many Iraqi soldiers abandoned their weapons and uniforms when IS advanced last June, seizing large areas of the country.

The extremists also hold parts of Syria.

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

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