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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
8/9/2015 11:41:46 PM

Nearly 400 Kurdish rebels killed in 2 weeks of airstrikes: report

AFP

A member of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) walks past graves at a cemetary on July 29, 2015 deep in the Qandil mountain, the PKK headquarters in northern Iraq (AFP Photo/Safin Hamed)

Ankara (AFP) - Nearly 400 members of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) have been killed and hundreds injured in two weeks of Turkish airstrikes on positions in northern Iraq, the official Anatolia news agency reported on Sunday.

The report, which could not be independently verified, said at least four PKK leaders and 30 female rebel fighters were among the dead.

Anatolia generally bases its information on security and Turkish intelligence sources.

Turkey last month launched a two-pronged "anti-terror" offensive against Islamic State (IS) jihadists in Syria and PKK militants after a wave of attacks inside the country. But so far the Kurdish rebels have borne the brunt of dozens of airstrikes, while just three have been officially recognised as targeting IS.

"So far 390 terrorists have been rendered incapable of causing harm and another 400 have been injured, with 150 suffering serious injuries," Anatolia said.

The PKK has meanwhile kept up its attacks on the Turkish state, killing at least 20 members of the security forces since the start of the latest cycle of violence that has shattered a ceasefire declared in 2013.

In the latest incident, a policeman was killed and another injured in an attack believed to have been carried out by the PKK in Midyat, a town in predominantly Kurdish southeast Turkey, according to the Dogan agency.

The PKK's insurgency for greater rights and powers for Turkey's Kurdish minority began more than 30 years ago and has left tens of thousands dead.

"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?
8/10/2015 12:03:17 AM

Israel cracks down on Jewish extremists with new arrests

Associated Press

Palestinians mourn the death of Saed Dawabsheh, 32, during his funeral procession in the West Bank village of Duma near Nablus on Saturday, Aug. 8, 2015. The father of a Palestinian toddler killed in a July 31 firebomb attack blamed on Jewish extremists has died of wounds sustained in the same incident, his family said Saturday. His 18-month-old toddler perished in the flames, while his 4-year-old brother and parents were seriously hurt. (AP Photo/Majdi Mohammed)


JERUSALEM (AP) — Israel intensified its crackdown on Jewish extremists Sunday, imprisoning two high-profile ultranationalist Israelis for six months without charge and arresting additional suspects in West Bank settlement outposts, security authorities said.

The crackdown comes after a deadly July 31 firebomb attack on a Palestinian home in the West Bank that killed an 18-month-old boy and his father and severely wounded his mother and brother.

Tensions have soared since that attack and on Sunday, Israeli troops shot and killed a Palestinian who had stabbed an Israeli in the West Bank, wounding him lightly.

Authorities called the arson attack an act of "Jewish terrorism," and Israel's Security Cabinet approved the use of harsh measures to combat the trend, including administrative detention, which allows suspects to be held for lengthy periods without charge.

The measure has been mainly used against Palestinians suspected of involvement in militant groups, and rarely against Israelis.

Meir Ettinger, the grandson of the late U.S.-born ultranationalist Rabbi Meir Kahane, and Eviatar Slonim, another Jewish extremist, were placed under administrative detention Sunday for their suspected involvement in an extremist Jewish organization, the office of Israel's defense minister said.

The two, who are in their early 20s, were arrested last week. Another suspected Jewish extremist, Mordechai Meyer, was placed under six-month administrative detention last week.

Israeli human rights activists who advocate on behalf of Palestinians, as well as lawyers for the Israeli suspects, criticized the use of administrative detention.

"It is carried out based on an administrative order only, without indictment or trial, and the detainee cannot defend himself against the allegations as the evidence is classified," a statement by human rights group B'Tselem said.

"This measure is dangerous ... for the entire legal system and for democracy," added Aharon Rozeh, a lawyer for Ettinger and Slonim, who said his clients were innocent.

Israel's Shin Bet security agency has accused Ettinger of leading an extremist Jewish movement that encouraged attacks on Palestinian property and Christian holy sites, including an arson attack on a well-known church near the Sea of Galilee in northern Israel that marks the New Testament story of the miracle of the loaves and fish.

In late July, Israel arrested five young Israelis in connection with the arson attack, including Meyer.

Israeli authorities also carried out arrest raids Sunday in two West Bank settlement outposts. Israeli police spokeswoman Luba Samri would not say whether the arrests were linked to the arson attack. The arrests, carried out by a nationalist crime unit, were connected to "a number of events that occurred recently" in the West Bank, she said.

Authorities said one of the raided outposts was Adei Ad, close to the Palestinian village of Duma, where the arson attack took place. In January, Jewish settlers near Adei Ad threw stones at U.S. consular vehicles carrying visiting American officials.

Father of Palestinian toddler killed in arson attack dies (video)


Authorities would not name the other outpost raided, but Israeli media identified it as Baladim. Both outposts — small, isolated Jewish settlements built without government authorization — are located in an area known for its hard-line settler population.

In the stabbing attack Sunday, Israeli police said the Palestinian assailant stabbed the 26-year-old Israeli at a West Bank gas station. Police said troops opened fire, killing the Palestinian. Last week, a Palestinian motorist rammed his car into Israeli soldiers in the West Bank, wounding three.

Meanwhile, the father of the Palestinian detainee on hunger strike, Naser Allan, said his 30-year-old son is in serious condition after 56 days without food. He said Mohammed was arrested in November 2014 and placed in administrative detention for two six-month periods.

Naser said his son, now a lawyer, previously had been imprisoned from 2006-2009 for alleged affiliation with the Palestinian militant group Islamic Jihad.

A contentious Israeli law passed last month permits the force-feeding of inmates on a life-threatening hunger strike. Allan's father said that Israeli authorities are threatening to force-feed his son, who has refused medicine or vitamins, only drinking water.

A spokeswoman for the Israeli hospital where he is being held, and Israel's prison services, did not return requests for comment.

Scores of Palestinian prisoners have used hunger strikes in recent years to highlight their detention without trial or charges.

Israel in the past has acceded to their demands and at times has released prisoners. In June, Israel released Khader Adnan, 36, a senior activist in Islamic Jihad, after he carried out a 55-day hunger strike to protest his detention.

Some 200 Palestinian prisoners over the last six days have launched open-ended hunger strikes in four Israeli jails to demand improvements in daily services, said to Issa Karake, Palestinian minister of prisoner affairs.

Karake said the prisoners' demands included allowing the families of Gaza prisoners to visit, permitting access to satellite television stations, and ending the use of force and solitary confinement.

___

Associated Press writer Miriam Berger in Jerusalem contributed to this report.

___

This story has been corrected to show the name of the Jewish extremist given six months of administrative detention is Mordechai Meyer, not Mordechai Mayer.

"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?
8/10/2015 12:55:25 AM
Man charged after shooting dead his ex-wife, another adult, and six children ... including his own son.

Texas suspect's 13-year-old son among family of eight shot dead

Reuters

KABC – Los Angeles
Texas police: 5 children, 3 adults found dead inside home


By Kevin Murphy

(Reuters) - A Texas man has been charged with capital murder after a family of six children, one of them his own son, and two adults were found shot to death in a house in Houston, officials said on Sunday.

The children ranged in age from 6 to 13. The bodies of all eight victims, some of them handcuffed, were found in three bedrooms of the house, Craig Clopton, a homicide detective with the Harris County Sheriff's office, told a news conference.

David Conley, 48, surrendered to police after a standoff at the house on Saturday night that lasted several hours, said Harris County Chief Deputy Sheriff Tim Cannon.

The dead included married couple, Valerie and Dwayne Jackson, and six children, one of them Conley's 13 year-old son Nathaniel. Conley had a prior relationship with the dead woman, and the shootings are believed to have stemmed from a domestic dispute, Cannon said.

"The mass killing and the taking of the entire family are tragic realities our community has been forced to confront all too often," Cannon said. "We do not and cannot fully comprehend the motivation of an individual that would take the lives of so many innocent people, especially the lives of the young people."

Sheriff's deputies went to the house after a relative of one of the victims asked for a check on the family's welfare, Cannon said. They called for backup after learning that there was a man inside the home wanted for a prior aggravated assault.

When the deputies spotted the body of child through a window, they tried to force their way inside the home and were shot at before pulling back and calling for help.

Conley is being held without bond on three counts of capital murder, but each count can cover multiple offenses, officials said.

Authorities identified the children as Nathaniel Conley, 13, Honesty Jackson, 11, Dwayne Jackson, 10, Caleb Jackson, 9, Trinity Jackson, 7, and Jonah Jackson, 6.

(Reporting by Kevin Murphy in Kansas City Editing by Jill Serjeant and Eric Walsh)







The bodies of six children and two adults are discovered after police exchange gunfire with a suspect, officials say.
Man charged


"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?
8/10/2015 10:11:38 AM

FBI to assist in probe of Texas football player's death

Associated Press

Wochit
Texas College Football Player Shot By Police was Unarmed..

Watch video

ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — The FBI has been asked to help investigate the death of a Texas college football player who was fatally shot by an officer during a burglary call at a car dealership, a suburban Dallas police chief said Saturday.

During a news conference Saturday night, Arlington Police Chief Will Johnson said he had spoken to the FBI's Dallas field office after the death early Friday of Christian Taylor, a 19-year-old African-American who was unarmed when shot by a white police officer. Johnson stressed the move "in no way diminishes my confidence" in local officers to conduct the investigation.

Arlington officer Brad Miller has been placed on administrative leave. Police say the officer, who joined Arlington police last year and was still completing his department field training, had never before fired his weapon in the line of duty.

Taylor's death came two days before the one-year anniversary of the death of Michael Brown, an unarmed, black 18-year-old who was fatally shot by a white police officer in Ferguson, Missouri. Brown's death galvanized the "Black Lives Matter" movement and sparked protests that at times turned violent.

Johnson mentioned the current climate during the news conference, noting that "our nation has been wrestling with the topics of social injustice, inequities, racism and police misconduct" and that his department would "pledge to act in a transparent manner."

Johnson said Miller and another officer found Taylor "freely roaming" inside the dealership's showroom when they arrived, sometime after 1 a.m. Friday.

The officers told Taylor to surrender and lie down on the ground, but he refused, the chief said. They saw him trying to escape the showroom and pursued him.

The incident ended with Miller shooting his service weapon four times at Taylor, hitting him at least twice, according to Johnson. The officer with Miller — his field training officer, a nearly two-decade veteran — used his Taser, but not a gun.

Johnson repeatedly refused to describe the confrontation or say how close Taylor got to either officer before Miller opened fire.

Police had gone to the Classic Buick GMC in Arlington, about 10 miles west of Dallas, after being contacted by a company that manages security cameras at for the car dealership. Police were advised that someone had driven a car onto the lot, started to damage another car, then drove his own vehicle into the glass front of the showroom. Johnson said Taylor appeared to have kicked out the windshield of a car.

Some of the nationwide criticism of police use of force in the last year has happened online, and Taylor's death resonated on social media, with some posts questioning the official account and calling for video to be released.

Police say they are investigating Taylor's death both as a possible criminal case and to determine whether department rules were broken.

Taylor graduated last year from Mansfield Summit High School in Arlington and was listed on Angelo State's roster as a 5-foot-9, 180-pound defensive back.

___

Follow Nomaan Merchant on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/nomaanmerchant.



Arlington officer Brad Miller has been placed on administrative leave after fatally shooting football player Christian Taylor.
Burglary call


"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?
8/10/2015 10:25:55 AM

Palestinians bury second arson victim as accusations fly

AFP

Members of the Palestinian Red Crescent Society carry the body of Saad Dawabsha during his funeral in the West Bank village of Duma on August 8, 2015 (AFP Photo/Jaafar Ashtiyeh)


Duma (Palestinian Territories) (AFP) - The father of a Palestinian toddler killed in a firebomb attack by Jewish extremists last week died from his burns Saturday, and relatives at his funeral denounced Israel for complicity in settler violence.

Thousands of mourners, many waving Palestinian flags, turned out to lay Saad Dawabsha to rest as his flag-draped body was carried by an honour guard of Palestinian security forces.

"It's a crime committed by the settlers but with the agreement of the (Israeli) occupation," relative Anwar Dawabsha told AFP.

"It isn't possible that Israel with all its army and its intelligence services still has no information on this attack," he said.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu repeated Saturday evening a pledge to hunt down the killers.

"I wish to express my deep sorrow at the death of Saad Dawabsha," he wrote.

"Last week, when I visited the family in hospital, I promised to use all the means at our disposal to catch the murderers and bring them to justice, and that is what we are doing."

Netanyahu had condemned the attack as "terrorism in every respect" and ordered a crackdown on Jewish extremism that has seen three people arrested, but no one has so far been accused of carrying out the firebombing.

- 'No clue' -

But Israeli Arab MP Zouheir Bahloul was unimpressed by the pace of the investigation.

"A week has passed and, apart from a few showcase arrests, the security forces have no clue or idea who set this terrible fire," Bahloul, of the main opposition Zionist Union party, said in a statement.

The July 31 attack in the village of Duma that killed 18-month-old Ali Saad Dawabsha, and also wounded his mother and brother, led to angry Palestinian protests and an international outcry over Israel's failure to curb violence by hardline Jewish settlers.

Saad Dawabsha died early Saturday in hospital in the southern Israeli city of Beersheba where he was being treated for third-degree burns for the past eight days.

The head of the hospital's intensive care unit said his prospects had been slim from the outset.

"With burns covering 80 percent of the body, chances of survival are very, very slim, almost zero," Motti Klein told Israeli public radio.

"He underwent a number of skin grafts but, despite everything, his vital systems collapsed."

Dawabsha's wife, Riham, and four-year-old son Ahmed are still fighting for their lives in another Israeli hospital, near Tel Aviv.

However, a doctor said Ahmed was showing some encouraging signs.

"He is conscious at the moment, communicating with relatives," Marina Rubinstein told the radio.

"Yesterday he was licking ice lollies and was pleased with that."

"His condition is still serious," she added. "He faces a large number of operations and a very long period of hospitalisation."

The Dawabsha family's small brick and cement home was gutted by the fire, and a Jewish Star of David was spray-painted on a wall along with the words "revenge" and "long live the Messiah".

- 'Confront the occupation' -

"Nothing will stop these murderous settler attacks and... we cannot wait until they come into our villages and our homes," Hossam Badran, spokesman of the Palestinian Islamic movement Hamas, wrote on Facebook from his base in Qatar Saturday.

"Our people in the West Bank have only one choice: that of open and comprehensive confrontation against the occupation."

Israeli media reported that the army was on alert for possible unrest in the occupied territory and for "Palestinian revenge attacks."

Some of those at the funeral hurled rocks at Israeli border police nearby, who responded with tear gas, but there were no reports of injuries or arrests.

The United Nations called for restraint.

"Political, community and religious leaders on all sides should work together and not allow extremists to escalate the situation and take control of the political agenda," wrote UN peace coordinator Nickolay Mladenov in a statement.

One of the three suspected Jewish extremists taken into custody was detained under regulations normally invoked for Palestinians, which allow indefinite internment without charge.

Earlier Saturday an autopsy was performed on Saad Dawabsha's body at An-Najah University Hospital in city of Nablus, near Duma.

A Palestinian official told AFP the pathologist's report would be submitted in evidence to back up a complaint to the International Criminal Court in The Hague.

On Monday, the Palestinians submitted a request to the ICC to probe the firebombing and "settler terrorism".

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

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