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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/27/2016 1:29:24 PM

‘Third Man’ In Brussels Airport Blasts Arrested, Charged With ‘Terrorist Murder’


by REUTERS26 Mar 2016

A third man caught on CCTV footage with two bombers who attacked Brussels airport on Tuesday was named as Faycal Cheffou in Belgian media on Saturday.

The federal prosecutor’s office could not immediately be reached for comment.

In a statement on Friday, it had named as “Faycal C” one of three men police had detained near the federal prosecutor’s office, the heavily guarded center of the investigation effort.

It did not say, however, whether he was the third man, seen on CCTV footage wearing a hat and a light jacket at Brussels airport with two other suspects believed to have blown themselves up.

Le Soir newspaper said Faycal C was identified by a taxi driver who drove the attackers to the airport. Earlier it had quoted police sources as saying it was highly likely Faycal Cheffou was the third man.

Other media also carried similar reports and said Cheffou was a freelance journalist.

Nine people in total have been arrested since Thursday in Belgium and two in Germany, as European authorities swoop on Islamic State militants they link to the Brussels bombings that killed 31 people and to the attacks in Paris last November that killed 130.

From Reuters

(BREITBART)

"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?
3/27/2016 1:41:34 PM

Brussels Attacks: Nuclear Officer Found Dead, Security Pass Stolen


by NICK HALLETT26 Mar 2016

Belgium is on high alert after a security officer for a nuclear plant was found dead with his work pass stolen.

The concerning development, which occurred on Thursday but was only reported today byDernière Heure, comes after concerns the Brussels bombers had been plotting to create a radioactive “dirty bomb” that would scatter nuclear material in a crowded public place.

The security officer was reportedly shot dead as he walked his dog in the city of Charleroi. Authorities quickly cancelled his pass.

While the motive for the murder remains unknown, police are looking into the theory he was killed to steal his pass and gain access to a nuclear facility.

Breitbart London reported yesterday that eleven nuclear workers have had their security passes revoked amid fears the Brussels attackers wanted to steal nuclear material to build a dirty bomb.

Seven workers at the Tihange nuclear power station had their passes cancelled, with a further four revoked after being reviewed by a committee composed of intelligence and security agencies.

Police discovered hidden camera footage of a senior nuclear worker while they were searching the flat belonging to the girlfriend of Mohammed Bakkali, a key figure in both the Brussels and Paris bombings.

The footage was from a camera planted opposite the home of an executive at the Centre for the Study of Nuclear Energy in the town of Mol. Police fear the attackers may have wanted to kidnap or capture him in order to obtain radioactive material.

Belgian authorities are facing increasing criticism of their handling of terror intelligence, after it emerged soldiers were not deployed to protect nuclear facilities until two weeks after the footage was found.

Interior Minister Jan Jambon initiallysaid: “Nothing indicates a specific threat to nuclear power plants… This is why we are not planning any military support.” He soon changed his mind, however.

Mr Jambon offered his resignation after this attacks this week, but this was rejected by Prime Minister Charles Michel.

Follow Nick Hallett on Twitter: or e-mail to: nhallett@breitbart.com

(BREITBART)



"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?
3/27/2016 1:57:45 PM

WHY BRUSSELS? THERE ARE TOO MANY REASONS

BY ON 3/26/16 AT 1:35 PM

The Brussels Philharmonic Orchestra plays on the steps of the old stock exchange building in Brussels March 25 following Tuesday's bombings. VINCENT KESSLER/REUTERS

On Friday morning in Brussels, police sirens screamed throughout the capital as officers raced to hunt down the suspects behind the devastating March 22 bombings. On that Tuesday morning, two explosions ripped through Brussels airport, bringing the roof down on fleeing travelers and killing 11 people. An hour later, a bomb exploded on a train leaving Maalbeek station for the city center. This proved the most deadly attack, killing 20 people.

At the time of writing, 300 victims were still in hospitals, 61 of them with critical injuries. Armed guards patrolled the streets, incongruous in their bulky camouflage. Police were still launching raids on the neighborhoods of Molenbeek and Schaerbeek, while others stopped commuters at metro stations to sift through their bags.

Beneath the grief of Brussels residents was anger. Their government had been warning for weeks of an impending attack—previous raids on militants’ safe houses had unearthed guns and traces of explosives. Perhaps most damning of all, police were aware of two of the assailants, the el-Bakraoui brothers, one of whom Turkey had even arrested in July 2015 and warned Belgium about. In the minds of many Belgians, it was clear: The government had failed.

But answering the question, “Why Brussels?” requires more than just looking at the leads security services missed. Counterterrorism experts who spoke with Newsweek noted the economic deprivation of neighborhoods with a high Muslim population; radicalization in the country’s prisons; the convoluted Belgian governance system; and a lack of European integration as factors that could also explain why ISIS sympathizers found Brussels an easy target.

For the past few years, Belgium has struggled with extremism. Since 2012, it is estimated that close to 500 Belgians have traveled to Syria and Iraq to join militants there. Per capita, it has the largest number of foreign fighters in Europe. Some of these militants are believed to have come from the district of Molenbeek, close to central Brussels. Around 25 to 30 percent of its population identifies as Muslim and more than 20 mosques serve the neighborhood. Contrary to some media reports, it is not a “no-go zone” nor a ghetto. The day after the attacks, people in Molenbeek were going about their business as usual. The area seemed ordinary if a little run down—public housing is abundant and rubbish litters the streets.

“It is not dangerous to live here,” says 30-year-old Hicham who runs a bodega a few doors down from where police arrested Paris attack suspect Salah Abdeslam on March 18. (Hicham asked that Newsweek not use his last name.) “These guys [who join ISIS] are young. They have been manipulated by the true radicals. They’re just seeking someone to teach them religion and to guide them.”

A dearth of opportunity is one of the factors pushing these young men toward radicalizers promising them a better life. Unemployment in the district is around 30 percent, compared with the national average of 8.5 percent.

“There’s a strong social disparity in areas like Molenbeek,” says Pauline Massart, deputy director, global and security Europe, at the think tank Friends of Europe. “People have been parked in ghettos; unemployment is rife. No investment has been made in public infrastructure.”

One resident of Schaerbeek—another “problem” area—who asked to remain anonymous told Newsweek that radicalizers target the disfortunate. “I went to give food to the poor at the Gare du Nord [in Brussels],” he says. “While I was there, a person was going round trying to convince them to go to Syria.”

Those who can resist the extremists’ messages may still turn to petty crime in order to earn an income. If they are caught and sent to prison, experts warn that it is here that some are being radicalized.

The mastermind of the Paris attacks, Abdelhamid Abaaoud, spent time in a Belgian prison where he met, and possibly recruited, Abdeslam. The el-Bakraoui brothers had also spent time behind bars.

Outside Brussels’s Forest prison, Nicolas Cohen, co-president of the monitoring group the International Observatory of Prisons, further explained the problem. “There is no public information on the level of radicalization in Belgian prisons,” he says. “We know that they are looking for it; prison authorities have asked the guards and imams to report any sign of it.” In France, which has tried to measure the problem, it is believed that 15 percent of all radicalized people were converted in prison.

But Belgium’s prison authorities are preoccupied with other problems besides extremism. Earlier in March, the human rights organization the Council of Europe published its annual report on European penal systems. It found that Belgium’s prisons were dangerously overcrowded, with 129 inmates per 100 places. Forest is particularly bad, Cohen says: “Everything is broken, everything is rotten. Of the four wings, one has been closed since the end of 2015. Some prisoners are sleeping on mattresses on the floor of cells.”

Though authorities are supposed to keep prisoners accused of terrorist activities separate from the rest of the prison population, it is easier said than done. “All the Belgian prisons have a problem with radicalization,” says Denis Bosquet, president of the Oversight Commission of Forest Prison. “Authorities think it is impossible for the radicals to communicate. All they think about when they’re in isolated cells is how to make contact.”

While these young men, and it is almost exclusively young men, make prime targets for radicalization—be they unemployed, in jail or angry at their socioeconomic standing—Belgium has also suffered from extremism as a result of its policing and governance systems.

In Brussels alone, six police forces protect the capital, Massart says. Government is split at a communal, state and federal level, while each section has a French-speaking and Flemish-speaking department. Unsurprisingly, facilitating effective communication between the various levels and departments can prove challenging.

“We need greater coordination to make sure every level is addressed by the right power,” says Serge Stroobants, the Brussels representative for the Institute for Economics and Peace, a think tank.

But, Massart says, communication isn’t the only problem. “I think there’s been a failure at government level to stop radical groups from recruiting,” she says. “[Security services] don’t have the necessary resources—Arabic speakers, people who speak the language of the communities where these extremists come from,” she adds.

In the aftermath of the Brussels attacks, intelligence agents—speaking anonymously—have said that their departments are underfunded and understaffed. Alain Winants, head of the Belgian intelligence service from 2006 until 2014, said Belgium was one of the last countries in Europe to buy modern intelligence-gathering tools such as phone taps.

Belgian security services, stymied by bureaucracy and shoestring budgets, say there is a desperate need for greater coordination between EU nations to counter extremism. At the moment, Massart says, a small international database exists between nations, but it is not comprehensive enough.

“I don’t think this problem is too big to solve,” adds Stroobants. “But what Europe needs to do is become a more integrated continent, working better on a daily basis.”

This seems particularly important given the clear links between the Brussels and Paris attackers. Khalid el-Bakraoui, one of the Brussels bombers, rented a house in the southwestern suburb of Forest for Abdeslam. Police also found DNA of three of the Paris gunmen and a possible suspect in the Brussels assaults, Najim Laachraoui, in the same apartment in Schaerbeek.

“This is a problem that everyone faces,” says Massart, referring to attacks in Madrid in 2004, London in 2005 and Paris in 2015. “We have to look outside Belgium and work more closely with the rest of Europe.”

The problems that Belgium faces are many and varied—and security officials know that the fight is far from over. Three days after the attacks, the terrorist threat level in Brussels remained at its highest, with police warning that more assaults could follow.

Staving off another tragedy, Massart says, will require government investment into deprived communities and intelligence services as well as fundamental changes to its functioning and how security services operate. “We’re in this for the long haul,” she says. “Our citizens need to be as protected as possible, and that means stopping the breeding of extremism.”

(Newsweek)

"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?
3/27/2016 2:08:55 PM

TO REDUCE ISIS THREAT, U.S. SHOULD PULL OUT OF THE MIDDLE EAST

BY ON 3/26/16 AT 3:52 PM

Belgian flags at a street memorial service near the old stock exchange in Brussels March 23 after the bomb attacks. When deciding what the West should do, the author writes that we should not forget that ISIS is an unintended, albeit not unforeseeable, consequence of the wrong-headed Iraq War. CHRISTIAN HARTMANN/REUTERS

This article first appeared on the Cato Institute site.

Just four days after Salah Abdeslam, the mastermind of last fall’s Paris attacks, was finally captured, the Islamic State group (ISIS) claimed responsibility for the attacks in Brussels. The attacks, which have killed more than 30 and wounded almost 200, provide another chilling reminder of how dangerous the world can be.

As Brussels tends its wounds, the simple question looms: How should Europe and the United States respond?

In and around official Washington, the script is becoming sadly predictable. Immediately following the news, administration officials assert their resolve and commitment to combatting terrorism: “Attacks like these only deepen shared resolve to defeat terrorism around the world.”

Close on their heels, administration critics line up to fearmonger, launch cheap insults at President Barack Obama for not paying enough attention to the extremism and to talk tough about striking back at ISIS.

All the Republican candidates criticized Obama for staying in Cuba. Donald Trump took the opportunity to point out that he has long been in favor of closing up the border, while Ted Cruz called on the president to recognize that “radical Islam is at war with us” and for “empowering law enforcement to patrol and secure Muslim neighborhoods before they become radicalized.”

Finally, both Europe and the United States are likely to ratchet up the war on the ground against ISIS. To date, this approach has borne decidedly mixed fruit. On the one hand, ISIS has certainly lost significant ground over the past year. On the other hand, very little of that success can be traced directly to U.S. or French military efforts.

Rather than go through the motions focused on short-term political gains, both Europe and the United States should pursue a long-term strategy. That strategy might take many forms but at heart a sound long-term approach needs three fundamental components.

First, a long-term strategy requires an enduring commitment to openness and tolerance. Both Europe and the United States benefit tremendously from immigration, both economically and socially, and from a vigorous marketplace of ideas sustained by diverse religious, racial and ethnic populations.

The costs of closing borders, polarizing society along ethnic and religious lines, and limiting civil liberties will far outweigh whatever benefits they might bring in the short run.

Second, a long-term strategy must emphasize a law enforcement approach to combatting terrorism rather than a military one. The notion that Europe and the United States can fight a “war” against terrorism is ridiculous. Terrorism is a tactic, not a disease or an organization. No amount of military adventurism will eliminate the ability of violent individuals to cause pain. Nor will destroying ISIS be enough to ensure some kind of victory.

The root causes of violence in France, Belgium and San Bernardino, California, stem from the sweeping unhappiness and anger within the Arab and Muslim worlds. Until those issues are settled, Europe’s and America’s entanglement in Middle East affairs will continue to spawn attacks in the West.

This is why destroying Al-Qaeda didn’t solve the problem but instead just produced the next incarnation of the threat. Simply put, killing more militants will not produce long-term security in Europe and the United States.

The third component is to pull back from the region. Our over-involvement in the Middle East has not only engendered anger among many Muslims in the region; it has also worked directly against our own security in other ways. ISIS, let us not forget, is an outgrowth of the Sunni insurgency that rose up to fight U.S. forces in our war of choice in Iraq (2003-2011). They are an unintended, albeit not unforeseeable, consequence of that wrong-headed war.

More bombs and boots now may have similarly counterproductive results down the line. In addition, our deep engagement in the region has resulted in apernicious, long-standing relationship with Saudi Arabia, which is the foremost exporter of the radical Wahhabist ideology that drives Al-Qaeda, ISIS and other anti-American militant groups.

The strategic importance of the Middle East has been greatly exaggerated. And pulling back from the region, although it would not necessarily yield positive results in the immediate term, is likely to have hugely beneficial long-term effects as far as securing us from the minor but real threat of terrorism.

A. Trevor Thrall is a senior fellow for the Cato Institute’s Defense and Foreign Policy Department. Thrall is an associate professor at George Mason University’s School of Policy, Government and International Affairs.

(Newsweek)

"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?
3/27/2016 2:20:48 PM
Mercury levels on the rise in California rivers could pose threat to wildlife and agriculture

Friday, March 25, 2016 by: S. Johnson


(NaturalNews) Mercury levels are on the rise in California, largely due to gold mining in the 19th century. Now, the same mercury used to extract gold decades ago, has been detected along the lower Yuba/Feather River system in the state's Central Valley, which could pose a threat to nearby wildlife.

The bulk of mercury used for gold recovery in California was derived from mercury deposits in the Coast Range on the west side of California's Central Valley. Between 1850 and 1981, the state's total mercury production exceeded 220,000,000 lb (pounds), reaching its production climax in the late 1870s. Most of the mercury was exported to western states; however, around 12 percent was used to extract gold in the sunshine state.

Mercury stays in dry river sediment for thousands of years, and can become a threat when subjected to dangerous weather. When flooding occurs, for instance, it can spark a process known as methylation, which converts inorganic mercury into toxic monomethylmercury. Methylmercury poisoning can damage both the brain and spinal cord, and even cause a form of cerebral palsy. Humans are most often exposed to methylmercury by eating fish. When consumed by wildlife, methylmercury can impair their cardiovascular and central nervous systems.

A flood of mercury

In a recent study, published in the journal Science of the Total Environment, a group of researchers at Santa Barbara examined how the magnitude and duration of flooding along the Yuba/Feather River will alter the chemistry of mercury deposits. The researchers discovered that nearly 5 percent of the total amount of mercury in the lower section has the potential to become toxic.

"First of all, it was really striking to find a riverine aquatic ecosystem exposed to mercury with no sign of any permanent wetlands nearby," Michael Singer, an associate researcher at UCSB's Earth Research Institute, who was involved in the study, said in a press release. "We had always thought mercury had to reach a big wetland area before significant methylation could occur, but our work indicates that this is not the case. It's important to note that most of the time this area is totally dry so no methylation occurs -- which underscores the importance of flood events as the hot moments of methylation."

Not only did the researchers discover dangerous levels of mercury toxicity in the ecosystem's fauna, but the study also discerned spatial patterns of flooding, which have the potential to spark mercury methylation.

"This work really allows us to visualize the landscape as a whole unit, rather than just studying one small plot, and points out how potential toxicity varies in space over several decades," Singer explained. "This is controversial because people aren't used to thinking about this kind of problem at the landscape scale and over timescales.

"Our modeling estimated methylmercury concentrations that are quite high, so the science community could be very shocked by the degree of mercury methylation that could be possible," Singer noted. "However, not all of this mercury will enter Central Valley food webs. Much of it will be converted back to a nontoxic form by bacteria."

Although there are no safe levels of mercury, the element is less toxic as an inorganic metal than it is in its organic form, methylmercury, which is produced by bacteria. However, these bacteria can only thrive in waters with low levels of oxygen. Oxygen can become depleted whenever floodwater squeezes air out of pore spaces in between sediment grains in the floodplains, which quickly depletes the oxygen in the stagnant water. Consequently, these low-oxygen levels enable bacteria to convert mercury in the sediments into monomethylmercury.

The researchers referenced historical flood records from the U.S. Geological Survey, as well as an Army Corps of Engineers software platform, to determine the impact flooding had on specific amounts of methylmercury. They reviewed 50 years worth of flood and hydrology, which stemmed back to a time when dams were first introduced to the system.

"We were able to identify the spatial patterns of the flooding based on the topography of the flood plain," Singer noted. "Then we were able to assign statistical frequencies of the flooding to each flood map we created, " he added.

Up the food chain

In addition to determining the frequency of flooding, the researchers investigated the impact multiple days of flooding had on the sediments. "It wasn't enough to know that this area was flooded 50 days out of the 50-year record," Singer explained. "We wanted to know whether that flooding occurred in two long floods or was spread out in 50 separate one-day floods. The longer the area was inundated, the more opportunity existed for methylation to occur."

The researchers also investigated mercury and methylmercury concentrations dotted across the Feather and Yuba rivers. The highest concentrations were found in lowly organisms like aquatic insects and local bait fish. As larger animals consume these smaller animals, mercury builds up and increases in concentration. As a result, high levels of mercury have been found in predatory fish like salmon.

Some scientists attribute methylmercury concentrations in the food supply to coal-fired plants, but the authors of the recent study believe mercury from gold mining is a more likely culprit. It's difficult to find a quick solution to this long-term problem. Too much mercury has probably accumulated in the sediment to be completely removed. The results of the study illustrate the toxic reverberations mercury can have when introduced into the environment. Other regions plagued by high levels of mercury in the remote past may need to be monitored in the near future.


Sources include:


HNGN.com

EurekAlert.org

Pubs.USGS.gov

LiveScience.com

ScienceDaily.com

Science.NaturalNews.com


Learn more:
http://www.naturalnews.com/053422_mercury_contamination_California_wildlife.html#ixzz4472utMeg



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