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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
9/14/2015 11:05:53 AM

Babies, children drown as migrant boat capsizes off Greek island

Reuters

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Now I Get It: Migrant crisis


ATHENS (Reuters) - Thirty-four refugees, almost half of them babies and children, drowned when their boat sank off a Greek island on Sunday, almost certainly the largest death toll in those waters since the migrant crisis began, the coastguard said.

Four babies, six boys and five girls died when the wooden vessel carrying them overturned on Sunday morning, about three miles (5 km) east of the small island of Farmakonisi, close to Turkey's coast, the service added.

Tens of thousands of mainly Syrian refugees have braved rough seas this year to make the short but precarious journey from Turkey to Greece's eastern islands, mainly in flimsy and overcrowded inflatable dinghies.

Thousands have died, many of them taking the much longer crossing from Libya, in Europe's worst migrant crisis in decades.

Details of the nationalities and ages of the victims of Sunday's sinking off Farmakonisi were not immediately available.

The coastguard said 68 people were rescued from the water and another 30 survivors from the same boat were found on Farmakonisi.

On Lesbos, an island which has borne the brunt of Greece's migrant intake, a Reuters photographer saw 10 dinghies arriving within 90 minutes on Sunday.

One inflatable carrying about 70 refugees, including many children, burst about 100 meters (90 yards) from the shore.

Locals pulled infants and toddlers - including a two-month old baby cradled by his father - ashore on rubber rings.

Greece has regularly called for more help from authorities in dealing with the influx, and caretaker Prime Minister Vasiliki Thanou urged the bloc on Sunday to agree a more comprehensive policy.

Other countries were wrong to criticize Greece's response to the flow of migrants, Thanou said during a trip to Lesbos.

"We would urge them to consider the responsibility of guarding a 16,000 km long coastline of European borders ... and whether a future Europe of principles can be constructed by building walls," she said.

The vast majority of refugees reaching Greece quickly head north to other countries, with Germany the most favored destination.

EU states have so far failed to reach agreement over proposals by Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker to accept a mandatory quota system for accepting refugees.

(Reporting By Michele Kambas and Alkis Konstantinidis.; Editing by John Stonestreet and Andrew Heavens)


28 refugees drown 3 miles off Greek island


It's thought to be the largest death toll from any single accident in Greek seas since the crisis began.
68 rescued in water

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
9/14/2015 11:22:32 AM

India police hunt for explosives' owner after deadly blast

AFP
People look at the buildings that were partially damaged due to a powerful explosion in Petlawad town, Jabua district of central India's Madhya Pradesh state, on September 12, 2015 (AFP Photo/Sam Panthaky)


Police were hunting Sunday for the owner of an illegal cache of explosives blamed for a massive blast in a crowded restaurant in central India that left more than 80 people dead.

The explosion, one of the worst such accidents in recent years, on Saturday morning tore through the restaurant building complex in central Madhya Pradesh state, packed with office workers and school children having breakfast.

Scores of labourers waiting at a bus stand outside the complex were also hit with shooting debris from the blast that destroyed neighbouring buildings in the town of Petlawad.

"The official death toll is 88, but the actual number may be higher, nearly 100. That will be confirmed soon," senior Jhabua district police official Seema Alava told AFP by phone.

Some 100 people were also injured, the official said, as rescue workers wrapped up their search for more victims buried in the steel and concrete wreckage.

A witness, Saurabh Jain, told the Hindustan Times newspaper's website that the restaurant was packed as normal when the blast occurred.

"People were screaming and shouting. Some were crying, 'I'm dying, I'm dying, please help me'," the 23-year-old said.

Sharmila Kataria, 40, described a "horrible sight" in the aftermath of the explosion.

"When my eyes adjusted to (the) rising dust, all I could see was bloodied bodies and body parts strewn over a large area," she told the website.

Alava said police initially blamed a gas cylinder in the restaurant for the main explosion. But it now appeared gelatine sticks and other explosives illegally stored elsewhere in the complex accidently detonated, triggering a chain reaction, she said.

"It was the other way around. The explosives in the building exploded first... the extreme heat sparked a... chemical reaction and then that was it. Everything went off after that," Alava said.

She said police were searching for a suspect known as Rajendra Kasawa, who has been on the run with his brothers since Saturday, to question him over his deadly stockpile of sticks, detonators and urea.

Kasawa had a license for the materials used for digging wells and in the construction and mining industries. But Alava said they were stored "in an unauthorised way in a residential area".

A local contractor, Kasawa rented space in the building from where he operated his business helping farmers, according to locals.

"We were up almost all night. We will find him, it is only a matter of time," Alava said, adding that he faces charges including culpable homicide.

- Angry crowds -

The hunt came as Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan visited the site in Petlawad, 950 kilometers (590 miles) south of New Delhi, and vowed to bring those responsible to justice.

"Those guilty will not be spared at any cost," Chouhan told the crowds at the blast site, adding he has ordered a judicial inquiry into the tragedy.

But a group of angry relatives and neighbours heckled and surrounded Chouhan, demanding better enforcement of laws against owners of such explosives who often work as contractors in the district's manganese and bauxite mines.

Television footage on Saturday showed scores of people and rescue workers using their bare hands to shift mangled heaps of steel and concrete of the ruined buildings.

Photographs also showed corpses covered in dust and ash lying in the streets alongside the twisted wreckage of burned-out vehicles.

Workers collected firewood and lit pyres that billowed black smoke into the sky as mass cremations of dozens of people were carried out late Saturday.


Owner of explosives sought after blast in India


An illegal cache appears to have accidentally set off a massive explosion in a crowded restaurant.
At least 88 dead

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
9/14/2015 2:35:54 PM

Migrant crisis: Germany starts temporary border controls

  • 8 hours ago

Germany has introduced temporary controls on its border with Austria to cope with the influx of migrants, the interior minister has said.

Thomas de Maiziere said refugees could "not choose" their host countries and called on other EU states to do more.

Trains between Germany and Austria were suspended for 12 hours.

Germany's vice-chancellor has said the country is "at the limit of its capabilities" as more than 13,000 migrants arrived in Munich on Saturday.

Germany expects 800,000 migrants to arrive this year.

Migrants sleeping in Munich rail station, 13 September 2015Image copyrightReuters
Image captionSome migrants spent the night in Munich station

"The aim of these measures is to limit the current inflows to Germany and to return to orderly procedures when people enter the country," Mr de Maiziere told a news conference.

He gave no details. The move goes against the principle of the Schengen zone, which allows free movement between many European countries. However, the agreement does allow for temporary suspensions.

Germany's train services with Austria were stopped until 03:00 GMT on Monday. They have now resumed.


Analysis: Damien McGuinness, BBC News, Berlin

Border with Germany near Salzburg, Austria, 13 September 2015Image copyrightReuters

Politically this is a shrewd move by Thomas de Maiziere. His announcement comes just a day before he travels to Brussels to meet other EU interior ministers to discuss the migrant crisis. The measure will help him put pressure on other European countries to do their bit. It highlights just how much Germany is struggling to cope.

The move could also serve as a useful threat; after all, Mr de Maiziere said Germany was controlling the border with Austria "first", the implication being more could follow. The possibility that Germany might suddenly decide to control its other borders could well help jolt EU partners into action.

For migrants, the announcement means Germany is not pursuing an open-door policy. After weeks of confusion, Berlin is now sending out the clear message that the Dublin Regulation does still hold, meaning that people have to apply for asylum in the first EU country they arrive in. After that, if Berlin gets its way, they will then be sent elsewhere in Europe according to a strict quota system.


Read more on the migrant crisis

Lyse Doucet: Where does this crisis end?

Caring for solo child refugees

Crisis explained in graphics

What next for Germany's asylum seekers?


Many migrants have been refusing to register in countries such as Greece or Hungary, fearing it will stop them being granted asylum in Germany or other EU states.

The city of Munich, in the German state of Bavaria, has taken the brunt of arrivals over the weekend.

Bavarian Premier Horst Seehofer said the controls sent an "important signal".

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, who has taken a tough line on the migrant crisis, told Germany's Bild newspaper he welcomed the new controls, saying they were "necessary to protect German and European values".

On Sunday, the Czech Republic also said it would boost border controls with Austria.

map

Europe as a whole is struggling to deal with an enormous influx of people, mostly from Syria but also Afghanistan, Eritrea and other countries, fleeing violence and poverty.

On Sunday, Greek coastguards said at least 34 people, including 11 children, drowned when a boat carrying about 100 migrants capsized off the island of Farmakonisi in the southern Aegean Sea.

The BBC's Lyse Doucet in Greece says it is the largest loss of life in a single incident in the Aegean since the crisis began.

A migrant family from Syria sits in a special train at the train station in Munich, southern Germany, on September 13, 2015.Image copyrightAFP/Getty Images
Image captionGermany's vice-chancellor said the rate at which migrants were arriving was straining Germany's ability to cope

Earlier on Sunday, Germany's Vice-Chancellor Sigmar Gabriel, who is also economy minister, warned the country was being stretched to its limits by the new arrivals.

"It is not just a question of the number of migrants, but also the speed at which they are arriving that makes the situation so difficult to handle," he told the Tagesspiegel newspaper.

Mr Gabriel also called on European countries, Gulf states and the US to give billions of euros towards schools, accommodation and food in refugee camps in the Middle East.

Migrants are escorted by Hungarian police officers as they wait to board a bus at a migrant collection point near the Serbian Hungarian border in Roszke, Hungary September 13, 2015.Image copyrightReuters
Image captionHungary opposes European quotas on the number of refugees it is to accept

A steady stream of migrants is travelling from Greece, through Macedonia, Serbia and Hungary, to Austria and Germany.

Hungary is aiming to complete a four-metre-high (13ft) fence along the border with Serbia by 15 September, when tougher measures, including arresting illegal immigrants, come into force.

The European Commission announced plans last week for mandatory quotas to share out 120,000 additional asylum seekers among 25 member countries.

Hungary, the Czech Republic, Slovakia and Romania are opposed to this.


What are the current border rules?


  • The European Union's Schengen zone allows passport-free movement between member countries
  • 26 European countries participate, but not the UK or the Irish Republic
  • Schengen signatories can re-impose border controls for short period for "public policy or national security" reasons after consulting "contracting parties".


    (BBC News)


"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?
9/14/2015 4:26:07 PM

Taliban storm Afghan prison, free hundreds of inmates

AFP

An Afghan soldier takes up a position near the main prison building after an attack in Ghazni, on September 14, 2015 (AFP Photo/Rahmatullah Alizadah)


Taliban insurgents in military uniform stormed an Afghan prison Monday, freeing hundreds of inmates after detonating a car bomb and killing four policemen in the country's largest jailbreak in years.

The brazen raid in the eastern city of Ghazni comes as the Taliban ramp up attacks on government and foreign targets despite being embroiled in a bitter leadership transition.

It was the Taliban's third mass prison break since 2008 and a major blow to Afghan forces facing their first fighting season without full NATO support.

"Around 2:30 am six Taliban insurgents wearing military uniforms attacked Ghazni prison. First they detonated a car bomb in front of the gate, fired an RPG (rocket-propelled grenade) and then raided the prison," deputy provincial governor Mohammad Ali Ahmadi told AFP.

The interior ministry said 355 of the prison's 436 inmates escaped. Most were Taliban and other militants.

It added that four Afghan police officers were killed and seven wounded in the raid, which left bullet-riddled bodies near the entrance of the prison.

Ahmadi said the raid came hours after inmates protested at government moves to shift up to 20 Taliban prisoners to Kabul -- a possible indication that the jailbreak was coordinated.

He added that daggers and knives carved out of furniture pieces were found on some of the inmates.

The Taliban, who launched a countrywide summer offensive in late April, claimed responsibility for the raid.

- Uptick in attacks -

"This successful operation was carried out at 2:00 am and continued for several hours. The jail was under Taliban control," spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said in a statement.

"In this operation, 400 of our innocent countrymen were freed... and were taken to mujahideen-controlled areas," it added.

The Taliban are known to exaggerate and distort their public statements.

In the last major Afghan jailbreak in 2011 nearly 500 Taliban inmates escaped from a prison in the southern province of Kandahar.

The Taliban at the time said they sprang the inmates through a one-kilometre tunnel that took five months to dig. The government described that incident as a security "disaster".

And in 2008 about 1,000 prisoners including hundreds of Taliban rebels escaped when suicide bombers blew open the gates of Kandahar city's main prison.

Taliban insurgents are stepping up their summer offensive despite a simmering leadership succession dispute after the confirmation of the death of longtime chief Mullah Omar.

Mullah Akhtar Mansour, a trusted deputy of Omar, was named as the insurgents' new chief in late July but the power transition has been acrimonious.

Afghan security forces, stretched on multiple fronts, are struggling to rein in the Taliban as NATO forces pull back from the frontlines.

NATO ended its combat mission last December and pulled out the bulk of its troops although a 13,000-strong residual force remains for training and counter-terrorism operations.

In other bloodshed this month unidentified attackers on September 5 shot dead 13 minority Shiite Hazaras after dragging them out of their vehicles in the northern province of Balkh.

The men were taken from two vehicles in a rare fatal attack targeting ethnic minorities.

Afghanistan's president the same day implored international donors for their continued support, saying the "wounded country" faced a host of security and economic challenges.

Donors have pledged billions of dollars over the past decade to reconstruct the war-torn nation.

But much of that money has been lost to corruption which permeates nearly every public institution, hobbling development and sapping already overstretched state coffers.


Hundreds escape Afghan prison after Taliban raid


A brazen attack by insurgents frees more than 400 inmates from a prison in eastern Afghanistan.
4 police officers killed


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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
9/14/2015 4:42:24 PM

Deadly Northern California wildfire incinerates homes

Associated Press

Associated Press Videos
Raw: Massive Wildfire Rages in Northern CA


MIDDLETOWN, Calif. (AP) — An explosive wildfire burned largely unchecked Monday after incinerating homes, apartment blocks and hundreds of other buildings as it raced through rural communities in Northern California's Lake County, leaving at least one person dead and sending thousands fleeing down flame-lined streets.

But it's not the only one. A second massive wildfire, less than 200 miles away is blamed for destroying 135 homes as it spread through Amador and Calaveras counties in the Sierra Nevada. That fire was 30 percent contained.

The California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection confirmed Sunday one fatality in the Lake County wildfire that raced through dry brush and exploded in size within hours. In addition to the homes, officials also counted two apartment complexes and 10 businesses destroyed by the flames, department spokeswoman Lynn Valentine said.

Valentine couldn't provide details on the circumstances of the death. By Monday morning, crews had gained 5 percent containment of the 95-square-mile blaze.

In addition, up to 1,000 structures such as barns, sheds and other outbuildings were burned, said Cal Fire spokesman Daniel Berlant.

A shift in the weather was expected for the first part of the week as a trough of low pressure approached the West Coast. The National Weather Service said that would mean a cooling trend with increasing winds, higher humidity and showers, then more widespread precipitation Wednesday. The week will end drier and warmer.

In Lake County, residents fled from Middletown, dodging smoldering telephone poles, downed power lines and fallen trees as they drove through billowing smoke.

Teri Molini said she first heard word of the fire Saturday afternoon and raced out of her house with the family dog, blankets and mementos. Four hours later, she could see the flames from where she sought shelter.

"We said, 'OK, this thing's a beast," Molini, 53, said.

Whole blocks of houses were burned in parts of the town of more than 1,000 residents that lies about 20 miles north of the famed Napa Valley. On the west side of town, house after house was burned to their foundations, with only charred appliances and twisted metal garage doors still recognizable.

Firefighters on Sunday afternoon could be seen driving around flaming utility poles to put out spot fires. Homeowner Justin Galvin, 33, himself a firefighter, stood alone at his house, poking its shin-high, smoking ruins with a piece of scrap metal.

"This is my home. Or it was," said Galvin, who spent all night fighting another massive fire in the Sierra Nevada foothills.

Valentine said most of the destruction occurred in Middletown and Hidden Valley Lake, as well as among numerous homes along a shuttered state highway.

Wind gusts that reached up to 30 mph sent embers raining down on homes and made it hard for firefighters to stop the Lake County blaze from advancing, Berlant said.

Four firefighters who are members of a helicopter crew suffered second-degree burns during the initial attack on the fire. They remained hospitalized in stable condition.

The fire continued to burn in all directions, triggering the evacuation of a stretch along Highway 281, including Clear Lake Riviera, a town with about 3,000 residents. It was threatening critical communications infrastructure as well as a power plant, Cal Fire said.

The fire erupted Saturday afternoon and rapidly chewed through brush and trees parched from four years of drought. Entire towns as well as residents along a 35-mile stretch of State Route 29 were evacuated. Gov. Jerry Brown on Sunday declared a state of emergency to free up resources.

Brown had already declared a state of emergency for the separate 111-square-mile wildfire about 70 miles southeast of Sacramento that has turned the grassy, tree-studded Sierra Nevada foothills an eerie white.

Mark Ghilarducci, director of the Governor's Office of Emergency Services, said this summer's fires are the most volatile he has seen in 30 years of emergency response work. The main cause behind the fast-spreading fires is dry conditions from the drought.

"The bushes, the trees have absolutely no moisture in them, and the humidities are so low that we are seeing these 'fire starts' just erupt into conflagrations," Ghilarducci said.

Lake County saw devastation in just the last two months. In late July, a wildfire east of Clear Lake destroyed 43 homes as it spread across 109 square miles. As firefighters drew close to surrounding that blaze, another fire erupted several miles from the community of Lower Lake on Aug. 9 and more than doubled in size overnight.

Residents in the area had to evacuate from their homes two times in as many weeks.

East of Fresno, the largest wildfire in the state continued to march westward and away from the Sierra's Giant Sequoia trees, fire spokesman Dave Schmitt said. The fire, which was sparked by lightning on July 31, has charred 211 square miles and was 36 percent contained Sunday, the U.S. Forest Service said.

Firefighters have maintained a precautionary line around Grant Grove, an ancient grove of Giant Sequoia trees, and set prescribed burns to keep the flames from overrunning it.

Some fire came through the area but it hasn't done much harm, fire spokesman Frank Mosbacher told the Fresno Bee.

The grove is named for the towering General Grant tree that stands 268 feet tall. There are dozens of Sequoia groves in the Sierra Nevada, and some trees are 3,000 years old.

___

Rodriguez reported from San Francisco. Associated Press photographer Eric Risberg in Middletown and Daisy Nguyen in Los Angeles contributed to this story.






1 dead, 400 homes destroyed in California blazes


Two of the state's fastest-burning wildfires in decades overtook several Northern California towns.

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