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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
11/11/2015 10:41:30 AM

Offensive against Islamic State in Ramadi looms as dozens are killed across Iraq

Iraqi military reinforcements are gathering near Ramadi, the Anbar province capital seized by Islamic State forces in May.

By Fred Lambert | Nov. 10, 2015 at 5:56 PM

Iraqi security forces move through Baghdad, Iraq, on June 30, 2009. On Nov. 10, 2015, Iraqi military forces were gathering around Ramadi, the capital of western Iraq's Anbar province, for an impending assault. Clashes between pro-government forces and Islamic State militants across the country meanwhile killed dozens. File photo by Ali Jasim/UPI
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RAMADI, Iraq, Nov. 10 (UPI) -- Iraqi military reinforcements gathered Tuesday for an anticipated assault against Ramadi, the capital of western Iraq's Anbar province, as continued clashes with the Islamic State killed dozens across the country.

Maj. Gen. Ismail Mahlawi, commander of operations in Anbar, told IraqiNews.comreinforcement units, including "artillery batteries and tanks," arrived at his command Tuesday, adding "our last battle is storming the city of Ramadi, which will be launched in the next few days after the completion of all preparations."

Xinhua news agency quoted a provincial security source who confirmed the development, saying the reinforcements were gathering in the nearby town of Khaldiyah. The source said Iraqi military units were able to in recent weeks encircle Ramadi after multiple bloody battles with IS forces in surrounding towns.

IS fighters seized most of Ramadi in May, and while the Iraqi military, backed by U.S. air power and Iran-trained Shia militias, launched an offensive across Anbar province in mid July, gains have been limited.

Several families are now evacuating Ramadi in anticipation of the coming attack, Xinhua quoted Ali Dawood, head of the town hall of Khaldiyah, as saying.

Preliminary rocket and artillery barrages against IS positions in Ramadi and Khaldiyah Island, east of the city, killed dozens of IS fighters on Monday, Ibrahim al-Fahdawi, head of the security committee in Khaldiyah, told IraqiNews.com.

Dozens of people were meanwhile killed Tuesday in northern, western and central Iraq during clashes between pro-government forces and IS militants, including in the Anbar province town of Garma, east of Fallujah.

Shia militias known as Hashid Shaabi, or Popular Mobilization Committees, killed at least seven jihadists in the IS-held town, Col. Ahmed Karim Bedaiwi, commander of the 2nd Hashid Shaabi Regiment, told IraqiNews.com.

Xinhua, quoting a security source who spoke on condition of anonymity, reported Kurdish peshmerga fighters repelled an IS assault on the town of Makhmour, in Nineveh province, southwest of Mosul in northern Iraq, killing at least eight militants.

The Hashid Shaabi and Iraqi security forces likewise killed dozens of IS fighters and lost one Shia militiaman during clashes at a base east of Tikrit, the capital of Saladin province, Xinhua quoted a provincial security source as saying.

Last month, the office of Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi announced a "second phase" in the liberation of Saladin province as security forces began advancing on various locations, including the IS-held oil refinery in the town of Baiji.

The assault's first phase was in April, when Iraqi troops captured Tikrit, mainly with the help of the Hashid Shaabi and U.S. airstrikes.

Baghdad pulled Hashid Shaabi forces from the Sunni Arab city after reports surfaced alleging looting, arson and illegal killings. U.S. officials assert they did not work directly with the Shia militias, which are trained and equipped by Iran.

U.S. Central Command on Tuesday said the U.S.-led coalition conducted 16 airstrikes against IS forces in Iraq the previous day, including one near Fallujah, seven near Sinjar, two near Tal Afar, four near Ramadi and two near Albu Hayat.

Ali Ibrahim Dbon, commander of al-Jazeera and al-Badiya Operations, told IraqiNews.com on Tuesday 65 IS fighters had been killed during operations in the Albu Hyat area of Anbar province, while five vehicles used by the militants were destroyed and 75 explosive devices dismantled.

(UPI)

"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?
11/11/2015 10:50:32 AM

Russia to deploy new weapons to counter US missile shield

Associated Press
14 hours ago

Russian President Vladimir Putin chairs a meeting with defense officials in the Bocharov Ruchei residence in the Black Sea resort of Sochi, Russia, Tuesday, Nov. 10, 2015. President Vladimir Putin said Tuesday that Russia will counter NATO's U.S.-led missile defense program by deploying new strike weapons capable of piercing the shield. (Alexei Druzhinin/RIA Novosti, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP)

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MOSCOW (AP) — Russia will counter NATO's U.S.-led missile defense program by deploying new strike weapons capable of piercing the shield, President Vladimir Putin said Tuesday.

Putin told defense officials that by developing defenses against ballistic missiles Washington aims to "neutralize" Russia's strategic nuclear deterrent and gain a "decisive military superiority."

He said that Moscow will respond by developing "strike systems capable of penetrating any missile defenses."

"Over the past three years, companies of the military-industrial complex have created and successfully tested a number of prospective weapons systems that are capable of performing combat missions in a layered missile defense system. Such systems have already begun to enter the military this year. And now we are talking about development of new types of weapons," Putin said.

His statement comes amid a severe strain in Russia's relations with the U.S. and its NATO allies, which have plunged to the lowest point since the Cold War over the crisis in Ukraine.

For many years, the Kremlin has protested the U.S.-led missile shield, voicing concern that it could eventually become capable of intercepting Russia's nuclear-tipped intercontinental ballistic missiles, thus eroding the strength of the nation's nuclear deterrent.

Washington, in turn, has argued that the shield was aimed to fend off missile threats from nations such as Iran and North Korea and wouldn't be capable of dealing with the massive Russian nuclear arsenal.

Putin argued Tuesday that the U.S. has kept working on the missile shield despite Iran's deal with six world powers that has curbed its nuclear program in exchange for relief from international sanctions.

"So, references to the Iranian and the North Korean nuclear missile threat just have served to cover up the true plans, and their true task is to neutralize nuclear potential of other nuclear powers, ... Russia in particular," Putin said. "Regrettably, our concerns and cooperation proposals haven't been taken into account."

Putin added that in the future Russia may also work on the development of its own missile defense systems, but will now focus primarily on commissioning new strike weapons.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said that Russia aims to spend less on its missile-defense system than the United States has done.

"The Russian president has repeatedly said that we are not going to follow the United States' lead and spend stratospheric amounts on a missile-defense system," he told journalists. "The president has been saying the options we choose are much lower in cost but no less, and maybe even more, efficient."

"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?
11/11/2015 10:57:41 AM

Syrian army enters Aleppo air base after Islamic State siege: state TV

Reuters

A man walks out of a crater caused by what activists said was a barrel bomb dropped by forces loyal to Syria's President Bashar Al-Assad in the town of Dael, north of Deraa, Syria November 8, 2015. REUTERS/Alaa Al-Faqir

BEIRUT (Reuters) - Syrian soldiers fought their way into an air base in northern Syria on Tuesday and freed military personnel inside, state television said, after a nearly two-year siege by Islamic State insurgents at the facility.

A military source close to the government said the army was working to secure the Kweires air base in Aleppo Province, where soldiers and officers have been under attack since 2013.

It is the most high-profile victory for Syria's army since Russia launched an air campaign in support of President Bashar al-Assad on Sept. 30.

State television broadcast live footage from the air base of an emotional, fatigue-clad reporter announcing the news, played victory songs and ran archive footage of military exercises.

"We, the heroes of Kweires, are now celebrating with our brothers this victory," one of the freed soldiers told state TV, speaking by phone.

"We dedicate this victory to President Bashar al-Assad and we promise him we will continue fighting until all of Syria is liberated. We will not kneel to Daesh," he said, using an Arabic name for Islamic State.

The military source said hundreds of soldiers were freed.

Syrian state media said that Assad congratulated the head of the military air base for the steadfastness of the troops and also the commander of the offensive which broke the siege.

"Your steadfastness for years is an evidence of your confidence in the Syrian Army and its hero troops," SANA quoted Assad as telling Major General Monther Zamam, head of Kweires air base, in a phone call.

Britain-based monitoring group, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, also said that an advance party of troops had reached the air base and "broken the siege."

Syrian troops have also been supported by Iranian forces and Lebanese Hezbollah fighters in a push to regain territory, largely in the north, lost to insurgents during almost five years of conflict.

Rebels have frustrated a campaign to reclaim territory elsewhere in the country, where Russian jets have flown more than 1,600 sorties in little over a month.

Dozens of soldiers were shown on television arriving at the air base, elated and beaming, and it aired calls from the families of the freed soldiers.

"We talked to him three hours ago, and he is in high spirits," the mother of Lieutenant Iyad Salameh said.

Syrian Information Minister Omran al-Zoubi praised the "strength and steadfastness" of the soldiers, and sounded a defiant tone against "terrorists", the term which Syria's government uses to describe all rebels fighting against it.

The breaking of the Kweires siege stood in stark contrast to Islamic State's capture of Tabqa air base in Raqqa province in the north of the country last year, when militants killed scores of soldiers.

The families of soldiers under siege in Kweires had staged protests urging the government to do more to take it back.

(Reporting by Mariam Karouny and John Davison; Editing by Louise Ireland and Lisa Shumaker)

"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?
11/11/2015 1:57:11 PM

Human trafficking survivor: I was raped 43,200 times

By Rafael Romo, CNN

Updated 0454 GMT (1254 HKT) November 11, 2015
| Video Source: CNN


Watch video

Mexico City (CNN)Karla Jacinto is sitting in a serene garden. She looks at the ordinary sights of flowers and can hear people beyond the garden walls, walking and talking in Mexico City.

She looks straight into my eyes, her voice cracking slightly, as she tells me the number she wants me to remember -- 43,200.

By her own estimate, 43,200 is the number of times she was raped after falling into the hands of human traffickers.

She says up to 30 johns a day, seven days a week, for the best part of four years -- 43,200.

Her story highlights the brutal realities of human trafficking in Mexico and the United States, an underworld that has destroyed the lives of tens of thousands of Mexican girls like Karla.

    Human trafficking has become a trade so lucrative and prevalent, that it knows no borders and links towns in central Mexico with cities like Atlanta and New York.

    U.S. and Mexican officials both point to a town in central Mexico that for years has been a major source of human trafficking rings and a place where victims are taken before being eventually forced into prostitution. The town is called Tenancingo.

    Tenancingo, Mexico: A breeding ground for traffickers (video) 04:47

    Even though it has a population of about 13,000, Susan Coppedge, the U.S. State Department's Ambassador at Large to Combat Human trafficking, says it has an oversized reputation when it comes to prostitution and pimping.

    MORE: How you can help end sex trafficking

    "That's what the town does. That is their industry," Coppedge says. "And yet in smaller, rural communities the young girls don't have any idea that this is what the town's reputation is, so they are not suspicious of the men who come from there. They think they have got a great future with this person. They think they love and it is the same story of recruitment every time."

    Mistreated from the age of 5

    Karla says she was abused for as long as she can remember and felt rejected by her mother. "I came from a dysfunctional family. I was sexually abused and mistreated from the age of 5 by a relative,' she says.

    When she was 12 she was targeted by a trafficker who lured her away using kind words and a fast car.

    She says she was waiting for some friends near a subway station in Mexico City, when a little boy selling sweets came up to her, telling her somebody was sending her a piece of candy as a gift.

    Five minutes later, Karla says, an older man was talking to her, telling her that he was a used car salesman.

    The initial awkwardness disappeared as soon as the man started telling her that he was also abused as a boy. He was also very affectionate and quite a gentleman, she says.

    They exchanged phone numbers and when he called a week later, Karla says she got excited. He asked her to go on a trip to nearby Puebla with him and dazzled her by showing up driving a bright red Firebird Trans Am.

    "When I saw the car I couldn't believe it. I was very impressed by such a big car. It was exciting for me. He asked me to get in the car to go places," she says.

    'Red flags' were everywhere

    It didn't take long for the man, who at 22 was 10 years older than Karla, to convince her to leave with him, especially after Karla's mother didn't open the door one night when she came home a little too late.

    "The following day I left with him. I lived with him for three months during which he treated me very well. He loved on me, he bought me clothes, gave me attention, bought me shoes, flowers, chocolates, everything was beautiful," Karla says.

    But there were red flags everywhere also.

    Karla says her boyfriend would leave her by herself for a week in their apartment. His cousins would show up with new girls every week. When she finally mustered the courage to ask what business they were in, he told her the truth. "They're pimps," he said.

    "A few days later he started telling me everything I had to do; the positions, how much I need to charge, the things I had to do with the client and for how long, how I was to treat them and how I had to talk to them so that they would give me more money," Karla says.

    Four years of hell

    It was the beginning of four years of hell. The first time she was forced to work as a prostitute she was taken to Guadalajara, one of Mexico's largest cities.

    "I started at 10 a.m. and finished at midnight. We were in Guadalajara for a week. Do the math. Twenty per day for a week. Some men would laugh at me because I was crying. I had to close my eyes so that that I wouldn't see what they were doing to me, so that I wouldn't feel anything," Karla says.

    There would be several other cities. She would be sent to brothels, roadside motels, streets known for prostitution and even homes. There were no holidays or days off, and after the first few days, she was made to see at least 30 customers a day, seven days a week.

    Karla tells how she was attacked by her trafficker after a john gave her a hickey. "He started beating me with a chain in all of my body. He punched me with his fists, he kicked me, pulled my hair, spit at me in the face, and that day was when he also burned me with the iron. I told him I wanted to leave and he was accusing me of falling in love with a customer. He told me I like being a whore."

    And then came a child...

    One day, when she was working at a hotel known for prostitution, police showed up. They kicked out of all of the customers, Karla says, and shut down the hotel. She thought it was her lucky day -- a police operation to rescue her and the other girls.

    Her relief turned quickly to horror when the officers, about 30 she says, took the girls to several rooms and started shooting video of them in compromising positions. The girls were told the videos would be sent to their families if they didn't do everything they asked.

    "I thought they were disgusting. They knew we were minors. We were not even developed. We had sad faces. There were girls who were only 10 years old. There were girls who were crying. They told the officers they were minors and nobody paid attention," Karla says. She was 13 years old at the time.

    In her nightmare world even a pregnancy was cause for horror not joy.

    Karla gave birth at 15 to a girl -- a baby fathered by the pimp who would use the daughter to tighten the noose around her neck: if she didn't fulfill his every wish, he would either harm or kill the baby.

    He took the baby away from her a month after the baby was born, and she was not allowed to see her again until the girl was more than a year old.

    Karla Jacinto was finally rescued in 2006 during an anti-trafficking operation in Mexico City.

    Her ordeal lasted four very long and tormenting years. She was still a minor, only 16, when it ended -- but she has endured a lifetime of horror that will stay with her as long as she lives.

    CNN independently verified portions of Karla's story. We have spoken with the United Against Human Trafficking group she was referred to after being rescued, and to senior officials at Road to Home, a shelter where Karla lived for one year after her rescue. Due to the clandestine nature of the human trafficking business, corroborating everything Karla told us is not possible.

    'Take the blindfold off your eyes'

    Karla is now 23 years old. She has become an outspoken advocate against human trafficking, telling her story at conferences and public events.

    She told her story to Pope Francis in July at the Vatican. She also told the U.S. Congress in May.

    Her testimony was used as evidence in support for H.R. 515 or Megan's Law that mandates U.S. authorities share information pertaining to American child sex offenders when these convicts attempt to travel abroad.

    Her message is that human trafficking and forced prostitution still happens and is a growing problem in our world.

    Karla says: "These minors are being abducted, lured, and yanked away from their families. Don't just listen to me. You need to learn about what happened to me and take the blindfold off your eyes."

    Doing nothing, she says, puts countless girls at risk of being trafficked for years and raped tens of thousands of times, just like she was.

    You can help end sex trafficking by donating to a charity or making another pledge.

    Find out more at cnn.com/freedom

    "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?
    11/11/2015 3:48:23 PM

    Fears of new flareup in Ukraine as violence grows on frontline

    AFP

    A Ukrainian soldier patrols past a destroyed school in the villag e of Pisky near Donetsk October 26, 2015 (AFP Photo/Anatolii Stepanov)


    Pisky (Ukraine) (AFP) - It's been only two months since Yelena Krivonos has stopped sleeping in her cellar to hide from shelling, but now that violence has ticked up in eastern Ukraine she is headed back underground.

    "Combat has begun again," the 31-year-old mother of two said after taking warm clothing for herself and her children to the basement. "At night they are launching mortars and something heavier, the house is shaking again."

    "I guess the end of this war is still a long way off."

    Yelena's house stands close to the frontline near Donetsk, the largest city held by pro-Russian separatists in the country's east who have battled with Ukraine's forces since April 2014.

    In September, the latest in a string of Western-brokered ceasefire agreements went into force, pushing fighting to its lowest level since close to the start of the conflict.

    Officially the warring sides insist they have been withdrawing weapons, with Ukraine's military on Saturday saying it has pulled their 82-mm mortars back from the frontline, following similar declarations by pro-Moscow rebels.

    On the ground however, each side is accusing the other of firing at soldiers and civilians, underlining the fragility of the truce that some fear could disintegrate like previous ceasefires.

    In the village of Pisky, the closest Ukrainian position to the ravaged rebel-controlled Donetsk airport, soldiers report combat injuries every day.

    On the other side of the frontline in rebel-held territory, Yelena's village of Staromikhailivka and outlying neighbourhoods of the insurgent capital Donetsk complain of Ukrainian attacks.

    "Even after pulling back heavy weapons, we are seeing the enemy take tanks almost into Pisky," said Dmitry Dvoichenkov, artillery operator and press officer for Ukraine's 93rd brigade based in the village.

    "They are shooting every day from firearms, mortar launchers and grenade launchers," he said. "Lately we even had people die... constantly we have people hit, our guys are injured on a daily basis."

    If there is a full-blown assault on Ukrainian positions, "we'll defend with what we have," Dvoichenkov said, adding that the rest of weaponry could reach the frontline "within an hour".

    On Tuesday, Kiev said four Ukrainian soldiers were injured in eastern Ukraine.

    - Finger pointing -

    Military spokesman Vladyslav Seleznyov accused the rebels of trying to "provoke us to return fire to disrupt the truce" and to "distract OSCE observers from the fact that they are not pulling back heavy weapons."

    Kiev suspects that rebels are worried about the next step of the ceasefire agreement signed in Minsk in February, which requires them to give control of the Russian border back to Ukrainian authorities.

    On the rebel side, Donetsk People Republic's (DNR) officials say attacks could be launched by rogue Ukrainian forces.

    "Battalions that are not under Kiev's control shot at Donetsk," said DNR defense ministry spokesman Eduard Basurin. "They are doing it on purpose, provoking us to respond," he told AFP.

    With the conflict that has killed over 8,000 people now dragging out into its second winter, some voices in Kiev are expressing fear that a new cycle of violence could still follow months of relative quiet.

    The most recent report by the OSCE monitoring mission, released Sunday evening, noted a "relatively tense general situation" in the area, including a "considerable number of military hardware" moving in areas where it is supposed to have been withdrawn.

    On the frontline, tension is felt by troops guarding checkpoints separating government-controlled territory from rebel-held zones.

    "Snipers shoot at us in the evening and at night," said one soldier named Oleg guarding a post in Marinka, the last Ukrainian position before rebel areas, as he pointed to a foggy ravine.

    "Lately they are coming so close that we can see them with the naked eye," he said.

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

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