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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
2/24/2015 11:24:10 AM

IS jihadists kidnap 90 Christians in Syria: monitor

AFP

An image grab taken from a video released on March 17, 2014 by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant's al-Furqan Media allegedly shows ISIL fighters raising their weapons with the Jihadist flag at an undisclosed location (AFP Photo)


Beirut (AFP) - Jihadists from the Islamic State group have kidnapped at least 90 Assyrian Christians in northeast Syria, a monitor said on Wednesday.

The abductions took place on Tuesday after IS seized two Assyrian villages from Kurdish forces in the province of Hassakeh, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

The Britain-based monitor had no details on the missing Assyrians, who were taken from two villages -- Tal Shamiram and Tal Hermuz -- after they were attacked by IS.

IS has destroyed churches and Christian shrines in Syria, and demanded that Christians living under its rule pay a tax known as jizya.

In Libya, IS jihadists last week released a video showing the beheadings of 21 mostly Egyptian Christians.

Much of Hassakeh is divided between Kurdish and IS control.

Fighters from the Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG) have been on the offensive in the province in recent days.

They have taken 24 villages and hamlets as part of an operation to try to recapture the town of Tal Hamis and surrounding areas.

Tal Hamis lies to the east of the villages taken by IS on Tuesday.

YPG forces have also been on the offensive in Raqa province, which neighbours Hassakeh, seizing 19 villages as they advance following their recapture of the strategic border town of Kobane last month.

The Kurdish forces have been backed by US-led air strikes launched by the international coalition fighting IS.

The Observatory said the coalition carried out a series of strikes around Tal Hamis on Tuesday that killed 14 IS members.

"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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2/24/2015 3:15:29 PM

Ukraine rebels say they withdrawing weapons; Kiev doubtful

Reuters



Trucks of the separatist self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic army towing mobile artillery cannons, are seen as they pull back from Donetsk, February 24, 2015.REUTERS/Baz Ratner

By Anton Zverev and Natalia Zinets

DONETSK, Ukraine (Reuters) - Pro-Russia separatists said on Tuesday they had begun pulling heavy weapons from the front line in east Ukraine under a ceasefire deal, but Ukraine said the rebels were using the cover of the truce to reinforce for another advance.

Fighting has eased in eastern Ukraine in recent days, raising hope that a ceasefire due to start on Feb. 15 can finally take effect after the rebels initially ignored it to storm a government-held town last week.

Since taking the railway hub of Debaltseve in one of the worst defeats for Kiev of the war, the Moscow-backed rebels have indicated they want the truce to take effect. But Kiev says the rebels are still shooting, which the rebels deny.

Western countries have not given up on the ceasefire deal to end fighting that has killed more than 5,600 people, but have made clear they are suspicious of the rebels and their presumed patron, Russian President Vladimir Putin.

European countries have warned of new economic sanctions against Moscow if the rebels advance deeper into territory the Kremlin calls "New Russia". Washington says it could arm Kiev.

"Today at 9 in the morning (1 a.m. ET) the planned withdrawal of heavy equipment started," rebel commander Eduard Basurin told Reuters. "We're pulling it back 50 km (30 miles) from the boundary line ... Of course we won't say exactly where we're pulling it back to."

Basurin denied Ukrainian military reports of fighting in southeast Ukraine, saying there had been "provocations" from the government side but no serious clashes.

But the Kiev military said in a statement that rebel assertions they were pulling back guns were "mere empty words".

"On the contrary, the terrorist groups, making use of the ceasefire period, are reinforcing their units and building up ammunition."

It said one of its soldiers had been killed and seven wounded in the past 24 hours, and repeated that it would not start pulling back weapons until shooting stopped.

SOLE SIGNAL

"As soon as the fighters implement the ceasefire for two full days, that is the sole signal to start the withdrawal," military spokesman Andriy Lysenko said in a briefing, noting however that fighting had diminished.

Separatist press service DAN reported ten incidents of government shelling near the rebel-held stronghold of Donetsk.

Kiev and its Western allies say the rebels are funded and armed by Moscow, and backed by Russian military units on the ground. Moscow denies aiding sympathisers in Ukraine, and says the heavily armed Russian-speaking troops operating without insignia there are not its men.

Putin, who has mainly struck a conciliatory tone since the rebels captured Debaltseve last week, said in an interview with state television he did not think Russia and Ukraine would go to war against each other.

"I think that such an apocalyptic scenario is unlikely and I hope this will never happen," he said. He said he saw no need for another meeting with the leaders of France, Germany and Ukraine like the one that produced the truce deal.

NEXT TARGET?

Kiev says the rebels have launched attacks on villages near Mariupol, a port of 500,000 people, and fears that could be the next separatist target.

"There's been quite intense shelling since the morning. The situation is tense but under control," Dmytro Chaly, spokesman for the Ukrainian military in Mariupol, said on television channel 112.

A feud over natural gas, which appeared to have been settled for the winter by an agreement late last year, has also resurfaced.

Kiev has accused Moscow of failing to deliver gas it paid for in advance under the deal; Russia said on Tuesday that Ukraine had paid in advance for only two more days of supply, after which it could be cut off.

The dispute dates back to last week when Kiev cut back gas to rebel-held areas. Moscow replied by supplying the rebel areas directly and suggesting it would bill those shipments to Kiev's account. Kiev says it will not pay for gas supplied to the rebel areas without its permission, through pipes outside its control.

Russia is the biggest supplier of natural gas to Europe, and much of that transits Ukraine. Gas disputes between the two countries have hurt European supplies in past winters during peak demand, although last year Russia cut off gas to Ukraine for six mostly warm months without hitting European flows.

The EU said it was not worried about supplies: "At the moment, gas flows to the EU are normal and we expect that the gas transit to the EU will not be affected," European Commission spokeswoman Anna-Kaisa Itkonen told reporters.

(Additional reporting by Pavel Polityuk, Alessandra Prentice and Peter Graff in Kiev, Katya Golubkova and Vladimir Soldatkin in Moscow; Writing by Peter Graff; Editing by Sonya Hepinstall and Giles Elgood)

"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?
2/24/2015 3:32:12 PM

U.S., South Korea to start military drills amid tension with North

Reuters

The guided-missile destroyer USS Lassen (DDG 82) arrives to participate in the annual joint military exercises, dubbed Key Resolve, between South Korea and the United States, as South Korean navy Sailors wave South Korean and U.S. national flags at a naval port in Donghae, South Korea. South Korea and the U.S. on Monday will kick off an annual military drill amid worries about possible bloodshed following North Korea’s threat to scrap a decades-old war armistice and launch a nuclear attack on the U.S. Photo: AP


SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korea and the United States will begin eight weeks of joint military drills starting March 2, military officials said on Tuesday, an annual exercise that typically provokes heightened rhetoric and military threats from North Korea.

North Korea regularly protests the annual exercises, which it says are a rehearsal for war, and has recently stepped up its own air, sea and ground military exercises, amid a period of increased tensions between the rival Koreas.

"The whole course of Key Resolve and Foal Eagle is aimed to occupy the DPRK through preemptive strikes," said an editorial in the ruling Workers' Party newspaper, the Rodong Sinmun, referring to the names for the exercises.

DPRK is short for Democratic People's Republic of Korea, the North's official title.

Tuesday's statement by the joint U.S.-South Korean Combined Forces Command said the North Korean army had been informed of the dates and "non-provocative nature" of the exercises.

On Monday, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un told his Korean People's Army (KPA) commanders to focus on "combat readiness" this year, according to state media.

In 2013, following its third nuclear test, North Korea declared the armistice agreement which ended the 1950-53 war as "invalid" in response to the exercises.

The U.S. responded with long-range nuclear-capable B-2 bomber flights over the Korean peninsular in a show of force it said was designed to show U.S. ability to "conduct long-range, precision strikes quickly and at will".

Overtures for dialogue by both Koreas in recent months have stalled, with Pyongyang describing inter-Korean relations as "inching close to a catastrophe," in a separate Rodong Sinmun article.

The annual U.S.-South Korean drills are divided into two phases: 'Key Resolve', which runs from March 2 to 13, and 'Foal Eagle', which runs from March 2 to April 24.

'Key Resolve' is a computer simulated command exercise; 'Foal Eagle' includes actual "ground, air, naval, and special operations," field exercises, the statement said.

"A chance for dialogue and (a) diplomatic solution (has) already been scuppered. What remains to be done is to militarily react to the U.S. while bolstering up war deterrence to the maximum," Tuesday's Rodong Sinmun editorial said.

(Reporting by James Pearson; Editing by Tony Munroe and Michael Perry)


"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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2/24/2015 3:41:30 PM

Scientists Find Troubling Link Between Air Pollution And Suicide

LiveScience

"Air pollution could be a modifiable risk factor" in preventing suicide,
says study researcher Amanda Bakian. (Photo: Getty Images)

Suicide may be linked to air pollution, according to new research that finds spikes in completed suicides in the days following peak pollution levels.

The research took place in Utah, part of the United States’ western “suicide belt.” Suicide is the 10th-leading cause of death in the United States; in Utah, it is the eighth. Though the notion that suicide and air quality could be linked may not seem intuitive, similar studies in South Korea, Taiwan and Canada have also linked the two.

Altogether, the findings suggest that suicide “is a preventable outcome, and air pollution could be a modifiable risk factor,” said Amanda Bakian, an epidemiologist at the University of Utah and the leader of the new study. [5 Myths About Suicide, Debunked]

Suicide’s Environmental Triggers

Suicide is complicated. Unsurprisingly, mental illness plays a huge role — at least 90 percent of people who die by suicide have a diagnosable mental disorder, according to the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention (AFSP). But a mental disorder alone does not necessarily make a person suicidal, nor do all people who envision committing suicide actually do so. Research suggests that short-term factors in a person’s life seem to be important, as suicide is often brought on by an immediate personal or mental health crisis in a vulnerable person, according to the AFSP.

Related: 15 Myths and Facts About Suicide and Depression

Some of these short-term factors may be external. It has long been recognized that deaths by suicide peak in the springtime months, which could be a result of social factors. However, a small but growing body of evidence suggests that physical inflammation might also be to blame. Inflammation occurs when the immune system goes into overdrive, triggering the release of a variety of compounds that act on all of the body’s systems. The inflammatory compound quinolinic acid has been directly linked to suicidal thoughts, and research has further connected suicide rates with the level of inflammation-promoting particles in the air. For example, a 2013 study published inthe journal BMJ Open found that suicides in Denmark went up with tree pollen levels.

Air pollution can cause inflammation as well. A 2010 study in the American Journal of Psychiatry linked suicide with increases in particulate matter in the air in Korea; 2011 research in the Journal of Affective Disorders made the same link in Taiwan. Another 2010 study, this one in Vancouver, found that wintertime emergency room visits for suicide attempts increased in the days following high air pollution levels.

In Salt Lake County, where Bakian and her colleagues are based, winters are marked by air patterns known as inversions, which often trap air pollution close to the ground. They wondered if pollution might be linked with suicides in Utah.

A Tentative Link

Working with the Utah Department of Health’s Office of the Medical Examiner, Bakian and her team gathered data on all suicides in Salt Lake County between 2000 and 2010, a total of 1,546. They chose to focus only on completedsuicides, not suicide attempts, because the demographics and characteristics of people who complete suicide and people who attempt suicide are different. (Men are more likely than women to complete suicide, for example, and people who die by suicide use more lethal means, such as guns, than people who survive an attempt.)

Related: Talk Therapy Substantially Reduces Suicide Risk, Study Finds

The researchers then compared the timing of these suicides with air pollution levels, including fine and coarse particulate matter, nitrogen dioxide and sulfur dioxide from Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) monitors in the county. They found that suicide risk went up two to three days after levels of fine particulate matter and nitrogen dioxide rose.

"The finer the particulates, the better they are at permeating thoracic airways," Bakian told Live Science. The study is the first to examine the link between nitrogen dioxide and completed suicides.

Surprisingly, the link between the levels of these pollutants and suicide was strongest not in the winter, but in the spring and fall.

"What it makes us think is that air pollution interacts with other spring and fall risk factors for suicide," Bakian said. [Suicide: Red Flags & How to Help]

The link was also strongest in men and among the 25- to 64-year-old age group, as well as among those who died by violent means such as firearms, the researchers reported Feb.10 in the American Journal of Epidemiology.

Bakian and her colleagues are interested in researching what might make some subgroups more vulnerable to the effects of air pollution than others. But everyone agrees that more work is needed.

"It is worth highlighting that this is only one study in an area where there is only a small body of research," said André Gagnon, a spokesman for Health Canada, the public health department of the Canadian government, where the Vancouver study was done. "These findings should, therefore, be interpreted cautiously."

Most importantly, Gagnon noted, the research can’t establish that the air pollution caused the increase in suicides; it shows only a correlation between the two. In an editorial accompanying the new study in the American Journal of Epidemiology, University of Queensland researchers Yuming Guo and Adrian Barnett noted that the findings bolster the small body of research linking suicide and pollution, but that questions remain.

For example, the researchers controlled for the level of sunlight during the study period, which might affect suicide risk, but they did not control for precipitation directly. Rain or snow alone could influence suicidal behavior, and might also wash pollution from the skies, Guo and Barnett said.

Follow Stephanie Pappas on Twitter and Google+. Follow us @livescience, Facebook & Google+. Original article on Live Science.

"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?
2/24/2015 3:58:40 PM

Purple UFO Interrupts Peru TV Show

| By Posted: Updated:


Eduardo Chavez Guerra / YouTube

A television production crew in Lima, Peru, videotaped a purple-colored disc-shaped UFO hovering in the distant sky near a construction site. So far, there's no official explanation for the object.

According to Peru This Week, television show "Alto al Crimen" was shooting an episode in the upscale Miraflores district of Lima on Feb. 10. The show's host, Lima Congressman Renzo Reggiardo, halted an interview to allow his camera operator to focus on the strange-looking purple object in the sky.

Watch this video of the purple Peru UFO:


Both distant and zoomed-in perspectives of the UFO reveal a saucer-shaped object, with a large central bright purple section, tapering off on either end. The extreme right end appears almost black in color, while the opposite end seems to be a darker purple shade than the center part of the object. The video also reveals that sometimes the two dark ends appear to become smaller and larger.

Eyewitnesses reported seeing the aerial object for up to two hours, and yet, no video has emerged showing how the UFO left the scene. So, the question remains: How, exactly, did it go away? Did it fall to the ground, float away or speed up and vanish over the nearby ocean? Or perhaps (as in some UFO reports over the years), did it simply vanish?

The Peru chapter of the Mutual UFO Network (MUFON) is investigating this case, seeking more eyewitnesses who may have videotaped the purple aerial object from different vantage points.

The image below shows the Miraflores area of Lima, Peru, bordering the Pacific Ocean, where the UFO was seen.

limaperuufomap

Some possible explanations, according to MUFONPeru.org include a drone or a kite.

The following composite image shows the object in two positions beyond the construction site where it was spotted by eyewitnesses.

peruufocomposite

CORRECTION: This post initially mistranslated the title of the Peruvian television show.


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

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