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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/19/2016 3:00:38 PM



RNC paints picture of a dangerous America on opening night

Liz Goodwin
Senior National Affairs Reporter
July 18, 2016

CLEVELAND — The theme of the first night of the Republican National Convention was “Make America Safe Again,” but an alternative title could have been “America Is a Scary Place.” A series of grieving parents, politicians and law enforcement officers made the case that the country and the world are frightening and under siege from illegal immigration, crime and terror.

“Sadly, for a growing number of communities the sense of safety that many of us once took for granted has been shattered,” said David Clarke, the sheriff of Milwaukee, who strongly opposes criminal justice reform and the Black Lives Matter movement. “Americans no longer feel safe.”

Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani also hammered on the theme of an unsafe America, arguing that liberal politicians divide the country into white and black America instead of uniting as “one America.”

“What happened to it? Where did it go? How did it float away?” Giuliani asked.

“The vast majority of Americans today do not feel safe. They fear for their children and they fear for themselves,” he said.

The convention also heard wrenching personal accounts over the course of the night from seven parents who lost their children to war, terror attacks or incidents with undocumented immigrants. Pat Smith spoke about her son dying in the 2012 Benghazi attack, saying she personally blamed Hillary Clinton for his death. Jamiel Shaw Sr. described in detail the murder of his 17-year-old son by a gang member who lived in the country illegally. Mary Ann Mendoza described the death of her son by a drunk driver also in the U.S. illegally. Sabine Durden told the crowd about her son dying in a car accident caused by an undocumented immigrant. Karen Vaughn spoke of her Navy SEAL son Aaron’s death in Afghanistan. And Kent Terry and Kelly Terry-Willis addressed the crowd via video about the death of their brother, a Border Patrol agent, as part of Operation Fast and Furious.

Rep. Michael McCaul, R-Texas, the chair of the House Committee on Homeland Security, described the country as “under siege” by terrorism and illegal immigration. At one point McCaul asked if America was respected by the world. Republican delegates shouted, “No!”

Violent crime has been trending downward for several decades, but a spate of violent incidents in the past several weeks at home and abroad has dominated the news and national dialogue. This past weekend, three police officers were killed in Baton Rouge, La., following the death of five police officers in Dallas by a man who said he wanted to kill white officers. Before that, the killing of two black men by police spurred protests around the country, spurring the Black Lives Matter movement to demand policing reforms.

Abroad, a truck attack in Nice, France, last week by a terrorist killed dozens of spectators, the latest in a series of attacks in Western Europe, some of which have been linked to the so-called Islamic State, or ISIS.

Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn, another RNC keynote speaker on Monday, spoke of the threat of radical Islamic terror while images of ISIS flashed behind him on a giant screen. “What keeps me up at night is the sobering realization that evil exists,” Flynn said. (He later led a chant of “Lock her up!” — referring to Clinton.)

Trump’s appearance, introducing his wife, Melania, was a brief bright spot in a very dark night. He entered to a fog machine while “We Are the Champions” by Queen blared on the speakers. “We’re going to win so big,” he said.


(Yahoo 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?
7/19/2016 3:14:29 PM

NICE ATTACKER MOHAMED BOUHLEL WAS 'BISEXUAL,' INVESTIGATORS SAY

French authorities made the discovery on Bouhlel's phone after his truck attack on Thursday.



Mohamed Bouhlel, the truck attacker who the Islamic State militant group (ISIS) claims it inspired to mow down hundreds of revelers on Nice’s Promenade des Anglais on Thursday, was a bisexual who used dating apps to find new partners.

According to France’s BFMTV, investigators have gleaned that Bouhlel—who left at least 84 people dead in the French city—had a busy sex life, with pictures of both female and male conquests on his phone. Bisexuality, or homosexuality, is forbidden in Islam, although interviews with Bouhlel’s friends and relatives in Nicehave revealed that he did not behave, at least until recently, like a devout Muslim.

Investigators made a series of findings on the Tunisian national’s phone after the deadly attack, including a text message that reportedly called on another person to “bring more weapons,” according to BFMTV. The rest of the text read: “Bringing in 5,” according to judicial sources. The recipient of the text remains in French custody. One of Bouhlel’s earlier text messages read: “It’s good. I have the equipment.”

Bouhlel had one working gun, a pistol, while authorities discovered a series of fake arms and grenades in his truck after the attack.

Alongside a number of selfies and searches for gym addresses and salsa bars, the divorced father-of-three’s phone also showed searches for visits to violent sites where executions were displayed, it is unclear if these were ISIS-related or not.

Bouhlel’s family have painted a picture of a troubled man, with his father and sister confirming that he had to see a psychiatrist for a number of years and, between 2002 and 2004, he had a “nervous breakdown,” Mondher told AFP news agency.

"He would become angry and he shouted...He would break anything he saw in front of him," he said, speaking to reporters in his Tunisian hometown of Msaken on Saturday. Mateen also held a violent temper, according to his school records that show he had hit another student. School authorities disciplined him for six other incidents.

While the exact motive for Bouhlel’s mass murder remains unclear, the release of more details show that the attacker was a man that, as French Prime Minister Manuel Valls said in an interview with newspaper Le Journal du Dimanche on Sunday, was radicalized quickly, allowing ISIS to claim him as a “soldier” of their Caliphate.

(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?
7/19/2016 4:52:55 PM

Confessions of a captured ISIS fighter



Former ISIS fighter Thahir Sahab Jamel, (r.), claims to disavow the terror group, but Kirkuk Police Brig. Gen. Sarhad Qader Mohammad, (l.), said such conversions are common among prisoners facing hanging. (FoxNews.com)


EXCLUSIVE: He had a ringside seat for the entire, bloody rise of ISIS, and by his own count killed dozens of innocent men, women and children. Now facing likely execution, Thahir Sahab Jamel disavows the black-clad Islamist army, but his Kurdish jailers say they’ve heard it all before.

In a jailhouse interview with FoxNews.com in the Kurdish-held city of Kirkuk, Jamel, 27, detailed how he joined Islamic State in 2013, served as a foot soldier in the takeover of Mosul a year later and, he claims, eventually became disillusioned with the dark vision of his fellow fighters.

“At the beginning, ISIS told us we would all go to heaven,” Jamel said, speaking under the watchful eyes of Kirkuk police guards. “But now that I am in prison it means I am going to the fire. I am going to hell.”

Handcuffed and partially masked, Jamel, who has been in solitary confinement since his arrest two and a half months ago, said he joined the terror group like many other young Sunni Muslim men opposed to the Shia-led government in Baghdad.

“A man named Salam talked to me and got me connected to ISIS. He told me I needed to be a jihadist and fight the Shia government. He convinced me to fight the government,” Jamel said. “I started getting involved as they were planning operations to begin in Iraq and Syria.”

Canada
ISIS Strategy
Far Abroad Ring (Attack and Polarize)
Far Abroad Ring (Attack and Polarize)
Near Abroad Ring (Establish Affiliates and Increase Disorder)
Interior Ring (Defend and Expand)
-
+
As of March 28, 2016

Jamel lived with his mother and three brothers in Hawija, a smaller town just south of the oil-rich Iraqi city of Kirkuk. He had a decent, agriculture-related job, and his family did not understand why he wanted to throw in with the insurgents who would soon become the world’s most-feared terrorist army.

In the early days, Jamel said, most of the recruits were young men in their early 20s. But soon their ranks were swollen by experienced soldiers as old as 50 from Saddam Hussein’s old army. The battle-hardened men, also Sunni Muslims alienated by the Shia government, were experienced with small arms and heavy equipment.

The mission was to take over the nation, and kill infidels and fellow Muslims who stood in their way, he said.

“Everything was about setting the role of Shariah [Islamic law],” he said. “We have to have a world based on Shariah.

“We were told that yes, people here are Muslims, but they are not the right Muslims,” he said. “And to build the Caliphate we must control the economy, take over every oil field.”

Jamel was initially permitted to carry a gun, but as ISIS grew, orders came down that only senior leadership and mid-level commanders, known as “Amirs,” could carry arms when not in battle. But Jamel would not be without his weapon long: He was made an Amir in early 2015 and put in charge of a group of 70 fighters in the heavily-contested area of Baiji.

ISIS moved on the oil-rich city of Baiji, situated on the primary road to Mosul some 130 miles north of Baghdad, a week after overrunning Iraq’s second-largest city of Mosul in June 2014. With momentum from victory, and their ranks increased by a steady stream of foreign fighters, ISIS battled Kurdish and Iraqi government forces for the city, which is home to the nation’s largest oil refinery, the Baiji oil refinery and other crucial energy and money-producing facilities.

Over the next 18 months, the city would change hands repeatedly, its residents caught in a perpetual, bloody crossfire. The prized refinery that made Baiji so critical was so heavily damaged that it may not be operational again for years.

Jamel did not offer an estimate as to how many civilians and soldiers he and his men killed, but he admitted he willfully took part in the slaughter and also handed over prisoners to his ISIS superiors for torture and execution.

Now that he is facing trial at the hands of his enemies, Jamel carefully treads the line between repentance and resignation. He told FoxNews.com he never cared for the public beheadings and civilian murders his team carried out to instill fear in conquered villages. He simply obeyed orders, he claimed, even ones handed down from the shadowy, self-professed Islamic State Caliph Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.

“I got many orders from him,” Jamel said. “But he is a liar, he lied to us. His plan is all wrong.”

Jamel was arrested in May in a village near Kirkuk. Police in the government-controlled city had intelligence reports on him and arrested him and several associates. It was after the arrest, and as he faced justice in the Kurdish-run courts that Jamel’s conscience seems to have awakened.

“It haunts me that I am responsible for killing many people, we killed them for nothing,” he said.

Kirkuk Police Brig. Gen. Sarhad Qader Mohammad told FoxNews.com Jamel told authorities after his arrest that he had been planning to escape ISIS, a claim Mohammad said police hear nearly every time they capture a jihadist.

“When they are arrested they try to say they are no longer with ISIS, but most of the time it is not true,” Mohammad said. “And we know they are terrorists, but we have to complete a special investigation.”

This process typically takes a couple of months, during which the prisoner is held in isolation as police investigators and Kurdish security agents known as “the Asayish” interrogate them. Mohammed insisted that all captives are treated as “human beings” and are not subject to torture and other violations of international law.

Once this is complete, the prisoner is relocated and able to mix with other criminals and ISIS fighters. He or she also then faces court trial and sentencing – typically life behind bars, but sometimes a death sentence by hanging for acts of terror.

The Kirkuk Police Department currently has some 70 ISIS members awaiting trial. Since the militant group’s onslaught began just more than two years ago, some 60 fighters have been sentenced to death. Most are local men, but some are foreign fighters, Mohammed said.

“We have many operations and ways to arrest them,” he added. “We arrest them sometimes when they are sleeping, and sometimes we arrest terrorist men trying to hide by dressing as women.”

(foxnews.com)

"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?
7/19/2016 5:37:53 PM


There was a time when American politicians cared more about country than party. Government failure prompted real investigations, so leaders could identify the source of the problem and fix it. No more. Instead, “government oversight” has become code for political show trials, where millions of tax dollars are spent to gain a partisan advantage.

So when extremists killed four Americans in 2012 at the U.S. mission in Benghazi, Libya—one of the world’s most dangerous places—10 investigations played out over the next four years, some of them pure partisan hackery. None determined anything significant that wasn’t found by the first investigation. However, one investigation discovered Hillary Clinton used personal email for official business when she was secretary of state, which spawned an investigation by the State Department’s inspector general, which led to an investigation by the FBI, which is now being investigated by a Republican Congress. There have also been long and expensive investigations of oral sex in the Oval Office, of the failed Whitewater real estate deal, of the firing of attorneys general around the country, and on and on.

Each of these issues was worthy of a look-see, but so was the largest strategic blunder in American history: the 2003 invasion of Iraq to destroy weapons of mass destruction (WMD) that didn’t exist. More than 4,500 American soldiers have died in the past 13 years as a result. To this day, the world grapples with the consequences of this military folly of former President George W. Bush, which sparked a conflagration that has spread across the Middle East and contributed mightily to the creation of ISIS—the Islamic State extremist group filled with members of former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein’s military and Baath Party. The Senate investigated the prewar intelligence used to justify that decision, as did an independent commission. But with Republicans in control of Congress until 2006, no congressional committee or official body explored the obvious and politically sensitive question: Were there flaws in the decision-making process at the top of the Bush administration that led to this disaster, and, if so, what lessons can be learned?

Fortunately, there are still nations that take the investigation of government debacles seriously. Last week, the independent British committee established to delve into the blunders that led to that country joining the Iraq misadventure released a report astonishing for its breadth and sobriety. It is no easy read—with 2.6 million words in 12 volumes, it explores every detail of the processes and decisions that cost the lives of 179 British servicemen and women. And since the goal of the inquiry was to determine what went wrong across the board, it provides information no Republican politician would allow anyone on Capitol Hill to dig up. The report’s shocking conclusion is obvious: The White House, the Pentagon and, to a lesser extent, the State Department had no idea what they were doing. Incompetence permeates the tale, with Bush officials arrogantly waving aside warnings and pleas for better planning. The march toward war took on an unstoppable political momentum as evidence piled up that this invasion would be a colossal catastrophe. Preconceptions—such as blithe dismissals of a humanitarian and governmental role in the invasion for the United Nations, as well as a disregard for day-after-war preparations in favor of gut feelings and slogans—undermined the chance for success. Records show the British considered themselves indispensable to the effort, if only to counter the Bush administration’s reckless planning, which officials in Prime Minister Tony Blair’s government derided as fantastical.

American soldiers based in Iraq watched President Bush announce that he was committing another 20,000 troops in the ongoing attempt to secure Baghdad.JOHN MOORE/GETTY

First, an aside. The British report demolishes one of the certainties of some opponents of the Iraq War: that Bush lied his way into war. The report shows the president believed Saddam possessed WMD, although he and his administration were irresponsible in their use of the intelligence that led them to that conclusion. However, the report reinforces the suspicion that there was plenty of attention paid to which corporations would get to profit from the Iraq reconstruction, while the humanitarian needs after Saddam’s fall were given far less thought.

Based on the findings of the report, the Bush administration at first focused on missile defense as its priority, with Iraq and the Middle East far down the list of issues to address. But members of the British Foreign and Commonwealth Office also heard faint drumbeats—emanating from the Pentagon—about overthrowing Saddam.

By the summer of 2001, as the CIA sent reports to the White House about an impending Al-Qaeda attack on U.S. soil, the administration turned more of its attention to Iraq. (Senior Pentagon officials argued to Bush that the CIA was misreading the intelligence, and that Osama bin Laden was not a threat but instead was running a false flag operation for Hussein.) At the time, Western military planes were patrolling no-fly zones over Iraq as part of the U.N. arms control agreement signed by Iraq in the aftermath of the Persian Gulf War in 1991. Since Saddam’s military forces might shoot down the surveillance aircraft at any time, Bush gave the nod to a new plan on how to respond: Rather than merely launching a recovery mission, the American military would instantly mount a major offensive against the Iraqi capital. The British were stunned at the scope of the Baghdad bombing targets listed by the Americans. “We should strongly advise the Americans against their proposed strategy: It is politically and legally all wrong,” Stephen Wright, the Foreign and Commonwealth Office deputy under the secretary of state for defense and intelligence, wrote in a memo.

In the days leading up to 9/11, the British discovered that members of the Bush administration were already split over a strategy for Iraq. Defense Department officials told their British counterparts they wanted Saddam overthrown to prevent him from acquiring more WMD; State Department officials told the British Embassy to ignore the Pentagon’s goal as “much ado about nothing.” The British believed the State Department better reflected administration policy.

By early September, Sir Christopher Meyer, the British ambassador to the United States, believed the Bush administration was adrift, with few plans and little idea of what it wanted to accomplish on a range of issues, including Iraq. But that all changed after 9/11, when Bush decided to dedicate his time in office to fighting terrorism.

In the aftermath of the attack, the Pentagon cited Iraq almost immediately as being potentially linked to Al-Qaeda, a theory advanced by members of the administration—including Vice President Dick Cheney—for years to come. But a little more than two months after 9/11, the Joint Intelligence Committee of the British Cabinet Office—the group that directs all the national intelligence organizations of the United Kingdom—concluded the claim was far-fetched. “Ideologically, [Saddam] is poles apart from the Sunni extremist network linked to [bin Laden],” the intelligence group wrote in November 28, 2001, report.

In his State of the Union speech on January 29, 2002, Bush proclaimed that Iran, North Korea and Iraq made up an “axis of evil” seeking WMD and involved in terrorism worldwide. While the phrase played well in America, U.S. allies and enemies perceived it as a proclamation that war was inevitable, and it frightened some of them into believing Bush was too much of a cowboy to be trusted on war plans. Worse, it shut off potential cooperation against Iraq, particularly secret assistance by the Iranians. “It has been tough sometimes working with the Americans since 11 September,” Ambassador Meyer wrote in a February 11, 2002, memo. “It will be tougher still in 2002…. The backdrop is growing US/European mutual disenchantment. This puts the UK in an awkward spot.”

Blair feared Bush wasot thinking geopolitically but instead focusing on the single goal of overthrowing Saddam. Any effort on that front, he told Bush, had to be part of a broader strategy. Tackling the Arab-Israeli conflict was paramount; if that was ignored, “we could find ourselves bombing Iraq and losing the Gulf,’’ David Manning, a British foreign policy adviser, wrote to Blair. Records of an April 2002 meeting between Blair and Bush show that the prime minister stressed again and again that aggressively pursuing the Middle East peace process was fundamental to making any action against Iraq successful. But Bush largely ignored Blair’s pleas.

As months passed, the British grew concerned about a transformation in Bush that seemed to make him unable to acknowledge doubts or errors. Bush was “riding high” after declaring himself “Commander in Chief in the war on terrorism,” Meyer wrote in a telegram to Blair in April 2002, and Bush insiders were telling him an invasion was inevitable. In another telegram, Meyer wrote that Bush was saying “in effect, that destroying Saddam is a crusade against evil to be undertaken by God’s chosen nation…. The target of Bush’s messianic appeal was...the anxious and unconvinced in the country at large.”

While being urged throughout 2002 by the Bush administration to join the Iraq campaign, the British felt they had minimal influence over an American plan that appeared to be a “harebrained scheme,” as one senior British official wrote. Only Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, Cheney and a few others seemed to know what was going on, and the British officials were questioning their competence behind closed doors. They dismissed the Bush plan to impose a democratic government on Iraq as perilous, given that the country had no experience with such a political system and was in a region where the concept was almost anathema.

Jack Straw, the secretary of state for foreign affairs, was particularly brutal about the American plans in an assessment he sent to Blair in July 2002. The Bush administration, he wrote, was not taking serious action to address problems, and there was “no strategic concept for a military plan.”

People dressed as George W. Bush and Tony Blair protest in London after the Chilcot Report was published on July 6.REX/AP

“US military planning has so far taken place in a vacuum,” he wrote, with “weak intelligence analysis and a quite unrealistic assumption that Iraqi WMD would be easy to identify and destroy.” He also noted that there was “an assumption that Kuwait would host a large-scale US military effort for the 1-2 years probably necessary, that other Gulf states would provide necessary support, and that Syria and Iran would sit quietly on the sidelines.”

Worse, while Blair and others stressed the need for a comprehensive plan for dealing with Iraq after Saddam’s fall that would take months to develop, the Americans gave the issue almost no thought. British officials were astonished that the Pentagon was building its day-after strategy on unsupported assertions that Western military forces would be greeted as liberators. That naïve belief reflected a fundamental lack of understanding about the Middle East—enemies of the West and the Sunni supporters of Saddam would not disappear. Without the rapid establishment of security and repair of infrastructure, particularly the electrical grid, the danger of getting pulled into a quagmire or setting off a civil war was enormous. Saddam would be replaced by a swarm of terrorists who would see the Western occupation of Iraq as a battle against Islam. British intelligence issued a stark warning: A poorly handled invasion, without proper, realistic preparation for the aftermath, would prompt a flood of Muslims joining extremist groups, followed by years of attacks.

Weeks before the 2003 invasion, British officials attended what was called a Pentagon “Red Rock Drill,’’ intended to show how America would manage a postwar Iraq. It was a disaster. “The inter-agency rehearsal...exposes the enormous scale of the task,’’ reported a memo from the British Embassy in Washington, D.C., which included an “acknowledgment that this is beyond US capabilities.” “Private realisation by some that it will require a UN umbrella, but planning does not take account of this…. Overall, planning is at a very rudimentary stage, with the humanitarian sector more advanced than reconstruction and civil administration.” A record of a February meeting of top British officials who discussed the drill said it “revealed a large gap between the US’s ambitious plans and their ability to deliver. Our message, that they need the Coalition and, therefore, UN authorisation, appeared to hit home.”

Despite the obvious need for U.N. participation in administering a new Iraqi government, the Americans batted away the suggestions of the British. Despite their poor planning, U.S. officials insisted they would handle post-Saddam Iraq themselves.

The chaos of the American planning left Blair with two choices, which he detailed to his aides. He could either gamble on the U.S. effort or keep Britain out of the conflict and damage relations with America. He decided to take the risk, and he lost. His intelligence team was right. The Iraqi invasion set off a new wave of terrorism that has no end in sight. And the Americans—because of arrogance, poor planning and incompetence—were to blame.

(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?
7/20/2016 1:09:51 AM

Turkey post-coup purge: Licenses of 21,000 teachers revoked, 1,577 deans ordered to resign

Edited time: 19 Jul, 2016 19:03


People demonstrate outside Ataturk international airport during an attempted coup in Istanbul, Turkey, July 16, 2016. © Huseyin Aldemir / Reuters


Turkey has revoked the licenses of 21,000 teachers working in private institutions, an Education Ministry official told Reuters. It's the latest in a string of crackdowns on workers allegedly tied to the exiled cleric blamed for last week's coup attempt.

"The licenses of 21,000 teachers working in privately-run institutions have been cancelled. Tip-offs that these [people] are mostly linked with terrorist activities have been taken into consideration," a ministry official said.

An earlier report from the state-run Anadolu news agency stated the ministry had dismissed 15,200 education personnel.

Meanwhile, Turkey's High Education Board has ordered the resignation of 1,577 deans at all universities – both public and private – across the country, state broadcaster TRT reported. The news caused the Turkish lira to weaken beyond 3 to the US dollar.

In addition, 399 employees of the Ministry of Family and Social Polices were stripped of their responsibilities on Tuesday, and 257 people working at the office of the prime minister were also sacked, Anadolu reported.

Turkey's courts have also ordered that 85 generals and admirals be jailed pending trial over their roles in Friday's coup attempt. Among those arrested include former air force commander Gen. Akin Ozturk, who is alleged to be a ringleader of the uprising. Gen. Adem Hududi, commander of Turkey's 2nd Army, which is in charge of countering possible threats from Syria, Iran, and Iraq, was also detained.

Thousands of officials suspected of links to US-based cleric Fethullah Gulen – who the government blames for the coup – have also been purged from the judiciary and Interior Ministry.

The newest sackings and calls for resignation are the latest in a movement that Prime Minister Binali Yildirim says is aimed at removing the influence of Gulen “by its roots.” A total of 49,337 public sector workers – including military and police personnel – have lost their jobs since Friday, according to Hurriyet.

President Erdogan and his government blame Gulen for orchestrating the coup attempt on Friday in which over 200 people were killed and 1,400 injured. Ankara has called for Gulen's extradition from the United States, where he resides in the Pennsylvania town of Saylorsburg.

However, Gulen, 75, has rejected allegations that he was involved in the attempt, telling prosecutors in a statement that he is “not the person who planned or led the coup. Who planned it and directed it I do not know.”

He said that Erdogan may have staged it himself – a claim which the Turkish president has called “nonsensical.”

US Secretary of State John Kerry has said that Turkey would need to provide “evidence, not allegations” against Gulen in order to have him extradited to Turkey.


(RT)

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

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