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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
2/12/2016 1:55:15 PM

DRUG CARTEL BATTLE KILLS 49 IN MEXICAN PRISON

BY ON 2/11/16 AT 11:58 PM

Inmates look from a staircase at the Topo Chico prison in Monterrey, Mexico, February 11.
REUTERS

A battle between the feared Zetas drug cartel and rivals at a prison left 49 people dead in the northeastern Mexican city of Monterrey, authorities said on Thursday, days ahead of a planned visit by Pope Francis to another jail in Mexico's far north.

The incident was one of the worst in a series of deadly riots in recent years to rock the country's overpopulated prisons, some of which are largely controlled by cartels.

Fighting broke out before midnight in two areas of the Topo Chico prison between supporters of a gang leader known as "Zeta 27" and another group, with prisoners using bottles and blades, Nuevo Leon state Governor Jaime Rodriguez said.

"Topo Chico is a ... very old prison. A prison with very difficult security conditions," said Rodriguez, who described the state's prison system as a "time bomb" that needed to be defused. Rodriguez himself survived two assassination attempts while opposing drug cartels as mayor of a suburb of Monterrey, Mexico's third most populous metropolitan area and home to many of the country's largest corporations.

A 2014 human rights report faulted Topo Chico for not preventing violent incidents. The prison has long housed members of the Zetas, known for extreme violence. One Zetas leader was stabbed to death there in September.

Authorities revised down their initial death toll from 52, out of a total of about 3,500 prisoners.

One victim died from gunfire, while the rest were killed from a combination of knives and other objects like bottles and chairs. Flames licked the night sky after inmates set light to food storage areas.

Milenio TV reported that inmates' relatives who had been within the prison's premises for conjugal visits had seen inmates with burns. Twelve people were injured, five seriously, the state government said.

Speaking to local radio, Rodriguez acknowledged the public perception that the Zetas dominated the facility and said the prison system was one of his principal concerns.

"The problem is they have people like my brother living with narcos," said an angry relative of an inmate doing time for robbery, waiting for names of the victims at the prison gates.

Rodriguez said 40 victims had been identified so far. The names of Zeta 27 and a rival known as El Credo were not among a list of 20 names released by state government.

Rodriguez said the fighting had been brought under control at about 1:30 a.m. (0730 GMT) on Thursday and ruled out a prison break, adding no women or children were hurt. Worried family members at one point forced open the prison gates and threw timber and stones at riot police inside, television images showed.

Authorities are transfering inmates out of the prison to bring down the population, with 60 people set to be moved on Thursday.

Pope Francis is set to begin his first visit to Mexico as pontiff on Friday. Next week, he will visit a prison in border city Ciudad Juarez, once one of the world's most violent cities.

Both Monterrey and Ciudad Juarez are more peaceful than at the peak of the war between rival cartels for control of routes to nearby Texas.

For much of the last decade, the Zetas spread terror across Mexico before being debilitated by arrests and deaths of their founding members.

Juan Pedro Saldivar Farias, or Zeta 27, has been mentioned in local media as a suspect in the 2010 murder of U.S. citizen David Hartley.

Thursday's riot was a blow to Nuevo Leon, where many were uplifted when Rodriguez, a blunt, outspoken rancher with a penchant for cowboy hats known as "El Bronco," or "the gruff one," defeated President Enrique Pena Nieto´s ruling party last year, becoming Mexico's first independent candidate to win a governorship.

In 2012, at least 44 inmates died in another Nuevo Leon prison when members of the Zetas plotted with prison guards to stage an elaborate escape.

(Newsweek)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
2/12/2016 2:06:16 PM
Jet1

Russian MOD press briefing: "The conductor's hand is felt" - Konashenkov blasts Western lies about Russia's op in Syria (VIDEO)

© www.theguardian.com
Russian Defence Ministry spokesman Maj-Gen Igor Konashenkov
Russian Defense Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov gives a report on the continuing Russian mission in Syria, and comments on U.S. claims that Russia bombed hospitals in Aleppo. It gets juicy at about 4:30.



Comment: Further reading:

(sott.net)

"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?
2/12/2016 2:17:18 PM

N.Y. policeman guilty of manslaughter in shooting of unarmed black man

Reuters


New York City Police officer (NYPD) Peter Liang is led from the court room at the Brooklyn Supreme court in the Brooklyn borough of New York February 11, 2016. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid

By Joseph Ax

NEW YORK (Reuters) - A New York City police officer was convicted of manslaughter on Thursday for fatally shooting an unarmed black man in a darkened public housing stairwell.

A jury in Brooklyn found Peter Liang guilty in connection with the death of Akai Gurley, 28, who was killed by a bullet fired from Liang's gun on Nov. 20, 2014, that ricocheted off a wall.

A stunned Liang buried his head in his hands after the verdict was read in court.

He faces up to 15 years in prison when he is sentenced in April. The mostly white jury deliberated for more than two days.

The shooting added to nationwide protests in cities like Baltimore and Ferguson, Missouri, over the use of police force against minorities, though Liang, a Chinese-American, was not accused of deliberately killing Gurley.

The rookie officer was on patrol inside a Brooklyn public housing project with his partner and drew his gun upon entering a pitch-black stairwell.

He fired a single bullet that glanced off a wall and into the chest of Gurley, who was walking one floor below.

At trial, Liang, 28, testified that a sudden noise startled him, causing his finger to slip onto the trigger and fire. It was only after descending the stairs, Liang said, that he realized the errant bullet had hit Gurley.

"Oh my God, someone's hit," a tearful Liang recalled saying upon finding a bleeding Gurley lying on a landing, as his girlfriend frantically tried to revive him.

But prosecutors argued Liang fired toward the sound deliberately and that he must have known only another person could have caused the noise that surprised him.

"It was a tragedy, but justice was done," Brooklyn District Attorney Kenneth Thompson told the television station NY1. He added that the verdict showed Akai Gurley's life mattered, echoing the "Black Lives Matter" movement.

A defense lawyer for Liang, Robert Brown, said he would appeal and warned that the verdict would put officers in danger.

"It says to the NYPD, you have to be very cautious about taking your gun out, to the point of risking your own life," he said.

Gurley's family and friends expressed gratitude after the conviction.

"I'm just glad we got a guilty verdict," said Kimberly Ballinger, his domestic partner and the mother of his young daughter.

Activists cheered the outcome on social media, with many saying it was an important step in holding officers accountable. Organizers had already called for a demonstration on Friday at police headquarters regardless of the jury's decision.

Liang's indictment last year came weeks after a grand jury declined to charge a white New York officer in the chokehold death of Eric Garner, an unarmed black man, sparking citywide protests.

Thompson said the Liang case had no connection to the ongoing debate over police tactics.

"This officer was indicted not because of what is happening elsewhere in the country but because of what happened in that stairwell," he said. "This conviction is not a conviction of the entire NYPD."

But Patrick Lynch, the president of the city's largest police union, said the verdict "will have a chilling effect on police officers across the city because it criminalizes a tragic accident."

Liang was also convicted of official misconduct for failing to offer Gurley aid. His lawyers argued he was in shock and felt unqualified to perform CPR due to inadequate training.

As the trial concluded on Tuesday, prosecutors offered jurors a new and more damning account, claiming for the first time that Liang aimed a shot on purpose toward the sound he heard.

"I think it's clear to you that he knew someone was there," Assistant District Attorney Joseph Alexis said in his closing argument, adding that the shooting was "no accident."

Brown, the defense lawyer, said the jury may have been swayed when the prosecution "changed their entire argument."

Liang's lawyers had portrayed the shooting as a "million-to-one" occurrence. They also emphasized the dangers of so-called "vertical patrols," a point that was underscored when two officers were shot this month when conducting a similar patrol in a Bronx public housing building.

In a statement, Mayor Bill de Blasio said he hoped the verdict would bring some closure to Gurley's family.

(Reporting by Joseph Ax; Editing by Sandra Maler, Cynthia Osterman and Bernard Orr)

"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?
2/12/2016 4:05:29 PM

Syria crisis plan: Cessation of hostilities, humanitarian airdrops, peace talks laid out in Munich


Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and UN Special Envoy for Syria, Staffan de Mistura (L-R) arrive for a news conference after the International Syria Support Group (ISSG) meeting in Munich, Germany, February 12, 2016. © Michael Dalder / Reuters

An ambitious plan to end hostilities in Syria with verifiable results within a week, revive the Geneva-3 peace talks, and immediately begin delivering humanitarian aid to civilians has been unveiled in Munich, Germany after talks including the US, Russia, and the UN.

Hostilities in Syria could come to a halt within a week after confirmation by the government of President Bashar Assad and the opposition, according to an official communiqué from the International Syria Support Group (ISSG) meeting.


A mechanism to help resolve humanitarian issues in Syria has been developed, which includes the creation of a task force that will begin work on Friday.

A press conference was held after the meeting of the so-called Syria Support Group, with the participation of Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, US Secretary of State John Kerry, and UN Special Envoy on Syria Staffan de Mistura.

Kerry noted that the commitments agreed upon during the Munich meeting are only on paper and that the “real test” of progress will be to get all of the parties involved in the Syrian conflict to sign on and honor them.

Russia is counting on the US and other ISSG countries to put pressure on the Syrian opposition to cooperate with the UN, Lavrov said.

The main objective that everyone agrees on is to destroy Islamic State, Lavrov added. He also called the notion that the situation in Syria would improve if Assad’s regime was to abdicate an “illusion.”

READ MORE: Terrorists' supply routes from Turkey cut off during army offensive in northern Syria

Talk about the need to prepare ground troops for an invasion of Syria will only add fire to the conflict, Russia’s foreign minister stressed.

The aim now is to resume peace talks without preconditions between the Syrian government and the whole spectrum of the opposition, which is the only format in which they could be successful, Lavrov emphasized.

“The goal of resuming the negotiation process, which was suspended in an atmosphere where part of the [Syrian] opposition took a completely unconstructive position and tried to put forward preconditions, was stressed [at the ISSG meeting]. We noted [today] that the talks must resume as soon as possible in strict compliance with UN Security Council Resolution 2254, without any ultimatums or preconditions,” he said.

While Lavrov, Kerry and Mistura held a press conference to explain the results of the ISSG meeting, separate statements came from several EU leaders. Germany’s foreign minister, Frank-Walter Steinmeier, was quoted by Reuters as saying that the US and Russia should coordinate their military actions in Syria “more closely.”

Lavrov made clear that an end in hostilities in Syria would not mean a halt in anti-terrorist activities in the region. Operations against all groups designated by the UN as terrorists will continue, including the fight against Islamic State and Al-Nusra Front.

READ MORE: Russia’s cutting edge Su-35 fighters to be on 24-hour alert at Latakia base

Lavrov added that militants are the only ones fleeing from the Syrian city of Aleppo, stressing that they have been receiving support from Turkey.

Meanwhile, Kerry argued that the Syrian government’s military advances would not be enough to win the war and urged for a peaceful resolution to conflict, as well as continued efforts to fight terrorism in the region.



DETAILS: 2 US A-10 Thunderbolt II assault warplanes destroyed 9 facilities near Aleppo http://on.rt.com/7499


During the press conference, both Russian and American diplomats employed a more friendly rhetoric, complementing their mutual efforts in Syria when it comes to delivering humanitarian by air and working to achieve progress in peace talks.


“We welcome the readiness of the US and other countries to join in the Russian-Syrian government operation to disseminate humanitarian aid from planes into the Syrian city of Deir ez-Zour, the location of the biggest number of citizens without humanitarian aid,” Lavrov stated.


Other options agreed upon include parachuting aid into other residential locations in need, Lavrov explained, adding that most of the efforts would have to be concentrated on the ground.

In turn, Kerry stressed that it was not Russia or Iran who had interfered with bringing a halt to hostilities in Syria.

READ MORE: Russia can’t ‘unilaterally’ impose Syria ceasefire while opposition rejects peace talks – Churkin



Syria invasion plan? Turkey will defend its ‘Aleppo brothers' - PM Davutoglu http://on.rt.com/745c


Syria Support Group talks ran longer than expected on Thursday, beginning at 7 pm local time and running over five hours, before resuming again for the finalizing of a communique. The last Syria Support Group meeting was held in Vienna on November 14.

In the beginning of February, the United Nations temporarily suspended peace talks aimed at resolving Syria’s five-year civil war. The UN said that the process was to be resumed on February 25 and called on the sides involved to do more to acheive progress.

READ MORE: Saudi, US-backed Syrian opposition undermines peace talks – Russian FM spokeswoman

“I have concluded, frankly, that after the first week of preparatory talks, there is more work to be done, not only by us but by the stakeholders,” the UN mediator, Staffan de Mistura, said after meeting with the opposition delegation at a Geneva hotel.

The latest inconclusive Syrian peace talks were attended by representatives of the Syrian government, the Saudi-backed coalition, and the High Negotiation Committee (HNC), which sent 35 leading members, excluding Syrian Kurdish groups, along with some additional moderate opposition members supported by Russia. Turkey insisted on the exclusion of the Syrian Kurdish party, the PYD.

Russian PM warns against triggering ‘permanent war’ in Syria

Meanwhile, Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev has warned against the initiation of any sort of foreign land operations in Syria, arguing that it could unleash “yet another war on Earth.”


“All sides must be compelled to sit at the negotiating table, instead of unleashing yet another war on Earth,” Medvedev told Germany’s Handelsblatt newspaper. “Any kinds of land operations, as a rule, lead to a permanent war. Look at what’s happened in Afghanistan and a number of other countries. I am not even going to bring up poor Libya.”

The PM was commenting on recent statements from Saudi Arabia claiming that it was ready to send ground troops to Syria.

READ MORE: House of Saud losing its head over Syria (OP-ED)

“The Americans and our Arab partners must think well: do they want a permanent war? Do they think they can really quickly win it? It is impossible, especially in the Arab world. Everyone is fighting against everyone there,” Medvedev added.


(RT)


"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?
2/12/2016 4:26:24 PM

California Finally Stops Massive Gas

Leak -- At Least Temporarily


On Thursday, the Southern California Gas Company announced that they had "temporarily" controlled the flow of gas from its Aliso Canyon storage facility, a leak that has been referred to as the worst environmental disaster since the 2010 Deepwater Horizon BP oil spill.

The temporary halt to the leak is a massive first step to getting it under control permanently. To stop it, a relief well reached the base of the leaking well and officials are now pumping in "heavy fluids to temporarily control the flow of gas out of the leaking well." They must now fill it with cement to stop it permanently, and that may still take another few days.

Aliso Canyon Storage Facility Project
© AP PHOTO/ DEAN MUSGROVE/LOS ANGELES DAILY NEWS

"We have temporarily controlled the natural gas flow from the leaking well and begun the process of sealing the well and permanently stopping the leak," Jimmie Cho, senior vice president of gas operations and system integrity, said in a statement.

The massive gas leak was spewing some 110,000 pounds of highly flammable and toxic methane gas per hour from a cold-war-era storage facility. Currently 1,700 homes had been evacuated. The company had previously estimated that they will not be able to stop the leak until “late February or late March."

Once the leak is completely stopped, evacuated residents who had been temporarily relocated to leased houses and hotel rooms will have seven nights to move back to their homes, according to the terms of an agreement between the gas company and the Los Angeles city attorney's office. Democratic Representative Brad Sherman told the LA Times however, that he wants to try to get the 7-day window extended until the California Air Resources Board certifies that the air surrounding the Aliso Canyon field is free of natural gas.

One of the residents who was evacuated, Regina Maleki, told Sputnik News that she still has lingering concerns.

“At first they said people had 48 hours, but that was before they had evacuated thousands of residents and schools. People put up a fight, now they are saying we have eight days and seven nights, but that still doesn’t address the gas that is still lingering in the air and in people’s homes,” Maleki explained. “There are other concerns. I have heard reports that 15 other wells might also be leaking. They would not confirm or deny this. Plus, state regulators, including AQMD, are still not requiring proper safety valves to be installed to prevent this from happening again. Many residents want the whole thing shut down.”

Maleki stated that she is also still waiting for thousands of dollars in reimbursement costs for moving and meals. The gas company moved her into a furnished two bedroom apartment 45 minutes away from where she used to live.

“It’s worth noting that the type of gas involved in this leak is part of what makes it so sinister. Methane, the main component of natural gas, is 25 times more potent than carbon dioxide when it comes to climate change impact,” Melissa Cronin reported for Motherboard in December.There have been over 20 lawsuits filed over the leak, along with civil claims, including for wrongful death.



Read more: http://sputniknews.com/us/20160212/1034617730/california-stops-massive-gas-leak.html#ixzz3zyIMErXS

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

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