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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/30/2016 6:19:06 PM
Shoe

Cultural warfare: US attempt to ban Russia from Olympics for 'cheating' is rank hypocrisy

© JONATHAN NACKSTRAND / AFP - Getty Images
Russian long jumper Darya Klishina
Now that some common sense has been restored and the International Olympic Committee has decided against banning the entire Russian team from competing in the 2016 Rio Olympics, I'd like to take a step back and look at the bigger picture. Western elites, via their paid shills in the media and the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA), attempted to block an entire country from participating in a worldwide, amateur athletic competition because they didn't want Russia to garner any public goodwill through its athletic performances, nor did they want to have to watch Russian athletes stand on the podium, receive their medals, and play the Russian national anthem in celebration of their athletic achievements.

Does that not sound absurd, and incredibly petty to you? It does to me. It comes across as wholly desperate too. It's like the Western elites have realized that Putin has beaten them in the geopolitical field so they have changed course to a different field, one much smaller and less important in the grand scheme of things. They have enlisted their agents in the media to act as judge and jury despite the fact that there is actually no real evidence of "institutionalized doping", a fact that's apparently insignificant to journalists who have apparently long ago abandoned integrity and objectivity.

This is what tool-of-the-elites WADA reported: During the Sochi Olympic Games in 2014, Russian athletes were all working directly with the FSB to pass drug tests. The FSB was apparently passing vials of urine through a hole in the wall to athletes. They also somehow were able to put the urine in sterile containers and add salt in the process. WADA does not actually have any proof of this. They are relying on testimony from Grigory Rodchenkov, a Russian national who defected to the USA after being fired for, you guessed it, doping fraud. Pot, meet kettle.

It's almost as if someone at WADA read a script from an aspiring screenwriter instead of a real report. No decent reporter would take this man's claims seriously. Part of journalism is investigating the person making the claims as much as the claims themselves. It doesn't appear any investigating appears to have been done, most likely because Rodchenkov is being 'influenced' by the West to say the things he's saying. Why else would the US hire him, a criminal, other than to lend legitimacy to his claims?

Now, it's fair to say that there probably are athletes in Russia who take performance-enhancing drugs. In the cutthroat world of Olympic competition, many athletes will look for any opportunity to give them a leg up on their fellow competitors. Olympic success can lead to quite the financial windfall for the athletes who medal and/or capture the attention of the public. There are plenty of reasons for athletes to cheat, which I'm sure some do. Do I believe Rodchenkov's story about cloak-and-dagger efforts by the FSB to hide doping by ALL of the Russian national team? Not for a second. The FSB surely has more important things to do. Would you believe the CIA worked secretly with American athletes to help them pass drug tests? It sounds just as ridiculous.

But back to the cheating. Would it surprise you to learn that athletes from other countries have been discovered doping in previous Olympics? Kenya has a "doping crisis" among its athletes. At least 20 runners have tested positive for steroids in the last two years. It did not surprise me to read that the NY Times calls Kenya's doping problem "inept, but not corrupt". The NYT actually has the gall to say, "There's no indication that the East African country has a state-sponsored conspiracy to hide cheating." One has to wonder why the Times has such a high threshold for evidence for one country with 20 known examples of cheating compared to Russia, where Maria Sharapova was roasted over the coals for testing positive for melodonium, a drug which only became illegal to use 6 months before she tested positive. Plus, there are many questions about how many athletes were even made aware of the rule change making melodonium a banned substance.

There's also the Jamaicans, whose sprinters won gold in 2008 and 2012, along with 2011, 2013 and 2015 World Championships. It turns out one of the runners on their famed 4x100 relay team, Nesta Carter, just last month tested positive after his tests at the '08 Beijing Olympics were re-tested and both 'A' and 'B' tests failed. In fact, when the IOC recently re-tested urine samples from the 2008 Beijing Olympics, it found a further 31 athletes from 12 countries had cheated. Another member of that world-class team, Asafa Powell, received an 18-month ban after testing positive in 2014 (it was reduced to 6 months on appeal). In 2013, 6 Jamaican athletes failed drug tests, and even more concerning was that the entire board of the Jamaican Anti-Doping Agency resigned that same year. The former head of WADA, Dick Pound, had this to say about the whole situation:
The Jamaican Anti-Doping Commission was doing almost no testing on their top-level athletes in the period leading to Beijing and London. You had a complete dominance of both of those competitions by those athletes. Such enormous dominance is of itself suspicious.
Kenyan runners routinely are among the best in the world at their sport, particularly in long-distance running where, since the 1960's, they have more record-holders and Olympic medalists than any other country. The Jamaicans have been the best in the world at sprinting and Usain Bolt in particular has caught the attention of the sports world. But if you ban Jamaica and Kenya, you ban the world's marquee sprinter and those amazing Kenyan runners. I have no doubt that the Olympic sponsors and television companies that have paid millions of dollars for Olympic rights would not hesitate to voice their displeasure over that decision. It's also worth noting that neither Kenya or Jamaica have stood up against the Empire the way Russia has, so they clearly have not had the sustained efforts to demonize them. The message is, it's OK as long as you don't stand up to the bully.

We live in the Age of Cheating. As far back as 1992, papers were written about how anti-doping regulations were no longer moral guidelines but barriers to be overcome. Even ultra-liberal rag The Guardian had to recently take a breather from its Russia-bashing to take stock of the fact that calling someone out for 'doping' in this day and age is like handing out speeding tickets on the Indy 500.

Fact: US athletes have also been been caught cheating. In fact, the rest of the world might just be following their lead. Marion Jones won three gold medals and two bronze medals at the 2000 Sydney Olympics, but was later stripped of her titles after admitting to steroid use in the widespread BALCO scandal that occurred in 2002. That scandal not only uncovered her doping, but also more than 20 top-level athletes, including Jones's ex-husband, shot putter C.J. Hunter, and 100m sprinter Tim Montgomery.

Surely the world has not forgotten about Lance Armstrong, a world-class cyclist who routinely won the most prestigious and well-known road race in the world, the Tour de France, and who eventually was discovered to have been the ringleader of "the most sophisticated, professionalized and successful doping program that sport has ever seen." In 2012 he was banned from ever participating in sports again and was stripped of all his major victories after 1998, including 7 Tour de France titles. A CNN articlelater called it "the epic downfall of cycling's star, once an idolized icon of millions around the globe," noting that it "stands out in the history of professional sports."

This is to say nothing of US professional sports and the widespread cheating that occurs there. The US pretends it has the moral high ground in this and other matters, but it actually doesn't. No other country is so corrupt across the board, so it very likely the worst offender when it comes to cheating in sports.

Imagine Russians' incredulity when told by Americans that they are cheaters. Like I said before, it's the pot calling the kettle black.

Sure, there are probably Russian athletes who cheat. And those athletes should not be allowed to compete. But the same should be said for any athlete from any country. If there are claims of an "institutionalized coverup of doping", as there is in the case of WADA's claims against Russia, then there had better be unassailable evidence to back up those claims.

But we were not given any such evidence, only the claims of one man, and ensuing derision from every propaganda rag in the West. Because of those baseless claims, they howl that anyone from Russia should be completely banned from competing. Luckily the IOC didn't fall for all the nonsense and issued a sensible ruling. But not before those same rags attempted to influence the outcome by running news articles in the days leading up to the ruling:
Daily Mail: ENTIRE Russian team of 387 athletes will be banned from competing at the Rio Olympics as punishment for their country's state-sponsored doping program
The Sun: GOOD RIDDANCE IOC set to announce ban on all 387 Russian athletes from Olympic Games in Rio today (The good riddance line is especially despicable)
Looks like these outlets need to get better sources before making themselves look like fools.

Other propaganda outlets took a different tack in trying to pressure the IOC. The UK'sTimes published a "Letter to the IOC":
Please ban Russia from the Rio Games
Germany's Bild announced that if Russian athletes were allowed to participate in Rio, Bild would have them "exempted" from its medal count and declare all Russian athletes' results "null and void". How very childish of them.

The Guardian published an article saying "there's no place for cheats" at the Rio Olympics: "If Russia is not excluded the world will not be able to believe in what it sees in the arena at the Olympic Games next month."

Maybe the Guardian should focus on its own athletes in the UK. A British doctor was recorded claiming he had doped up to 150 sportspeople over six years and the taxpayer-funded UK Anti-Doping Agency (UKAD) was given evidence about his activities two years ago and failed to act on them.

It should be clear by now that Russia in no way is the "black sheep" when it comes to doping in athletics. If the IOC wants to ban a country when some of its athletes test positive for banned substances, then they might as well go ahead and ban every country on Earth.
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Beau Christensen (Profile)

Beau Christensen, a Wisconsin native, has been a SOTT editor since 2006. A long-time non-believer in what we're told by the media and government, he is focused on exposing the lies and disinformation they feed us and studying the accompanying decline of civilization. When he's not waging information war online, Beau enjoys eating bacon and smoking cigars in the company of many animals and good friends.


(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?
7/30/2016 6:22:17 PM
Attention

Concern trolling the siege of Aleppo: Offering civilians safe passage is only good when the U.S. does it


Aleppo
Do you remember the outcry over the siege of Ramadi by Iraqi and U.S. forces? When those forces expressed little concern for the civilians who were not let go by the ISIS fighters occupying the city?

No? You do not remember those concerns? The outcry from Amnesty, HRW, the UN and other organization?

That is probably because there were none.

Dec 2 2015: Iraqi forces surround Ramadi, but it could be a long siege
Iraqi troops and militias backed by U.S.-led airstrikes have surrounded the key city of Ramadi and appear poised to launch a new attempt to wrest it from the Islamic State group.
...
On Monday, the Iraqi military dropped leaflets into the city,
...
But residents told The Associated Press on Tuesday that the militants have clamped down, setting up checkpoints across the city to monitor civilians' movements and prevent anyone from going.
...
When Maan was asked about the high number of civilians that could be trapped inside Ramadi once the fight gets underway, the Interior Ministry spokesman said he was confident they would be able to flee "to a safe place."

"We are focusing now on the enemy only," he added.
Today Ramadi is back in the hands of the Iraqi government.

But there is another big and outdrawn siege ongoing - this time of a large city in Syria. One where the population and the enemy are under constant bombardment. Where the population is prevented from leaving. Where mass casualties of civilians arecaused by misdirected airstrikes.

That city is Manbij.

June 11: Siege of IS bastion in north Syria traps thousands
Thousands of civilians were under siege Saturday in an Islamic State group stronghold surrounded by US-backed forces in northern Syria[...]
...
"Tens of thousands of civilians still there can't leave as all the routes out of town are cut," the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitor's head Rami Abdel Rahman said.
Six weeks on the siege of Manbij continues.

July 25: US-backed fighters renew offer for IS to leave Syrian town
U.S.-backed fighters in northern Syria renewed an offer Monday to Islamic State militants in Manbij, saying that if they allow civilians to leave the besieged northern town IS fighters will be allowed to leave too and will not be attacked.
...
Monday's offer by the SDF-linked Manbij Military Council came days after the extremists ignored an earlier, 48-hour offer to leave the town safely with just their "individual weapons."
Again, like in Ramadi, there is no protest from Amnesty, HRW, the UN or any other concern peddlers over the fate of the city and its people. There was and is no outcry over the siege or the casualties in Manbij by any of the usual subjects.

Now another, third siege happens and this one exposes the utter hypocrisy of the United States and the concern trolls organizations it controls.

July 28: US Envoy: Syrian Offer of Safe Passage for Aleppo Civilians 'Chilling'
US Ambassador to the United Nations Samantha Power condemned Syria's leaflets, urging civilians in rebel-held East Aleppo to flee and offering them safe passage and access to temporary shelters [as] "chilling," insisting that the civilians must never trust a government "that's bombed & starved them."

Syria's military has increased its control over the area surrounding Aleppo recently, controlling all roads leading into the east. Eastern Aleppo is controlled mostly by al-Qaeda's Nusra Front, ..
To the U.S. propagandists the siege of east-Aleppo and the offer to leave it is "chilling", while the siege of Manbij or Ramadi never created any such bad feelings. How come?

The insurgents in east-Aleppo, mostly of al-Qaeda in Syria, are preventing any civilians from leaving through the designated corridors the besieging forces offer.

Where is the condemnation of that?

Instead we hear a whole army of concern trolls, the IRC, the UN, Amnesty and various other propaganda shops demanding that civilians "are allowed" to stay(!) in the besieged area.

Hello?

Comment: This tweet says it all:

See also: Hilarious propaganda: U.S. concerned that Russian humanitarian op in Syria is actually humanitarian


(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?
7/31/2016 12:18:35 AM

Greenland lost a staggering 1 trillion tons of ice in just four years



Greenland ice loss has recently contributed to twice as much sea-level rise than in the preceding two decades. (Reuters)

It’s no news that Greenland is in serious trouble — but now, new research has helped quantify just how bad its problems are. Asatellite study, published last week in the journal Geophysical Research Letters, suggests that the Greenland ice sheet lost a whopping 1 trillion tons of ice between the years 2011 and 2014 alone. And a big portion of it came from just five glaciers, about which scientists now have more cause to worry than ever.

It’s the latest story in a long series of increasingly worrisome studies on ice loss in Greenland. Research already suggests that the ice sheet has lost at least 9 trillion tons of ice in the past century and that the rate of loss has increased over time. Climate scientists are keeping a close eye on the region because of its potentially huge contributions to future sea-level rise (around 20 feet if the whole thing were to melt) — not to mention the damage it’s already done. Ice loss from Greenland may have contributed as much as a full inch of sea-level rise in the last 100 years and up to 10 percent of all the sea-level rise that’s been documented since the 1990s.

The new study takes a detailed look at ice loss in Greenland between 2011 and 2014 using measurements from the CryoSat-2, an environmental research satellite launched by the European Space Agency in 2010. It relied on a type of measurement known as altimetry — basically, measuring how the surface of Greenland’s altitude changed over time in response to ice gains or losses.

“Simplistically, if the ice sheet’s going up, we can find that as evidence that the ice sheet is growing,” said lead author Malcolm McMillan, a research fellow at the University of Leeds. “And where we see that the ice sheet surface is lowering, we can find that the ice sheet is losing ice.”

But he cautioned that this is something of a simplification. The researchers also had to consider how other factors such as snowfall — which would be difficult to differentiate by satellite — might be affecting changes on the surface of the ice sheet.

“Snow and ice are at different densities, so they’re associated with a different amount of mass loss,” McMillan explained. “We used a regional climate model and a model of the surface of the ice sheet to really inform us and tell us about the nature of the changes that we’re seeing.”

Using this method — combining the satellite observations with modeling — the researchers found that the Greenland ice sheet lost mass at an average rate of about 269 billion tons per year from January 2011 through December 2014. Altogether, this comes to about 1 trillion tons of ice loss over the four-year period.

That said, there were some major fluctuations from one year to the next — an observation that University of Sheffield climate expert Edward Hanna (who was not involved in the new study) said is one of the paper’s most notable findings. The biggest losses were observed in 2012, when an unusually warm summer helped bring about a loss of more than 400 billion tons of ice. The next year, 2013, saw a comparatively modest loss of just over 100 billion tons.

“There’s not so many studies that do these sort of trend analyses or time studies for the latest few years,” Hanna noted. “So it’s really trying to assess how the ice sheet is responding to ongoing climate variability or change.”

Overall, the ice loss was particularly prevalent in the southwest, but the scientists noted that there were also losses observed in the cooler, northern parts of the ice sheet. Notably, the researchers also found that a solid 12 percent of all the ice loss came from just a handful of glaciers composing less than 1 percent of the ice sheet’s total area.

Each of these five glaciers flows outward into the sea, so that a combination of both rising air temperatures and ocean temperatures likely play a part in their ongoing retreat. Among these was the iconic Jakobshavn glacier, a well-studied location now famous for its recent massive ice losses. It’s been known to calve blocks of ice boasting several square miles in surface area, as measured from above.

Scientists were already fairly well aware of the massive losses being suffered by these glaciers, McMillan acknowledged. But the finding helps reinforce previous observations and drive home their disproportionate role in the ice sheet’s contributions to sea-level rise. “Also … it means that going forward, we’re able to kind of develop long-term and systematic records that we can [use to] regularly monitor these glaciers and see how they’re changing into the future,” he said.

In fact, the study’s results match up reasonably well with measurements taken by certain other satellites. After doing some comparisons, the researchers found that data from NASA’sGRACE satellites, for instance, suggest that Greenland is losing ice at a rate of about 287 billions tons per year. And according to Hanna, the results stand well with scientists’ overall estimates of recent ice loss in Greenland, which he says are consistently suggested to be around 250 billion tons annually for the past few years.

In this way, the study reinforces many beliefs that were already widely held about Greenland’s precarious condition. But the techniques used to do so may strengthen future measurements, which will be used to inform the climate models that help scientists make predictions about how the ice sheet will behave in the future — a crucial step in determining the amount of sea-level rise we might expect over any given time period.

“I guess the most significant or the most novel aspect of the study is really the resolution or the detail that we’re able to measure,” McMillan said. “Although satellite techniques give us a holistic view of how the ice sheet as a whole is changing, what we’re able to do by using this specific technique is identify specific regions that are changing. And that’s really important because it kind of gives us more of an idea of the processes that are causing the changes.”

(The Washington Post)

"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?
7/31/2016 12:33:23 AM

Children’s Hospital Bombed In Syria Amidst Massive Civilian Casualties From US Air Strikes


By
Matt Agorist

On Monday of last week, airstrikes, led by US coalition forces, killed 21 innocent civilians in Manbij’s northern Hazawneh quarter in Syria. On the following Tuesday, additional strikes in the region killed 56 more, including multiple children.

Prior to the strikes last week, more than 100 civilians have already been killed in Manbij in only a short time by US bombs — nearly half of them children.

On Friday, another tragic air strike hit the Save the Children-supported maternity hospital in Idlib. This hospital serves over 1,300 women and performs over 300 deliveries each month.

Save the Children said the strike hit the front of the hospital building, at a time when two operations were under way and a woman was in labor, according to Al Jazeera.

“Several babies were injured when their incubators crashed to the floor, and a woman who was six months pregnant had her leg severed,” Save the Children said in a statement.

“Two other women have shrapnel wounds to the stomach and a number of patients and staff have suffered light injuries.”

Also on Friday, immediately following the strikes on the hospital, more details surfaced on at least 28 civilians who have reportedly been killed and several wounded in US-led air strikes on the suburbs of Manbij, slightly northeast of Idlib.

Friday’s state-sponsored murder of civilians comes only one day after the US-led coalition announced it had enough evidence of civilian casualties from its attacks on the same area last week to launch a formal investigation.

Save the Children posted the following short video immediately after the attack on the hospital.

“The bomb hit the entrance to the hospital, which is the biggest in the area, serving over 1,300 women monthly,” a spokeswoman for the charity told Al Jazeera on Friday.

“Bombing a maternity hospital which is helping women living under the shadow of war to give birth safely is a shameful act, whether it was done intentionally or because due care was not taken to avoid civilian areas,” Sonia Khush, Syria director for Save the Children, said.

According to the spokesperson with Save the Children, the total number of casualties is currently unknown as well as who carried out the direct hit on an international charity hospital devoted to children.

However, the deaths of these innocent men, women, and children will, and likely already have been, written off as collateral damage in the war on terror.

The US military will claim that Islamic militants hide among the population to deliberately cause civilian casualties during coalition strikes. However, they conveniently ignore the fact that it is coalition bombs killing the civilians.

Before the assault on Syria from the west, Syria had vibrant, bustling marketplaces in the old cities of Damascus and Aleppo. The country boasted its own innovative IT industry despite economic sanctions imposed by the West.

Terror attacks were all but non-existent and the people certainly never feared bombs falling from the sky — especially onto children’s hospitals. However, all that changed after the ambitions of the military industrial complex became reality.

In depressing irony, the West continues to fail to realize the cause of terrorism and instead focus on fighting the symptoms. Americans, especially, continue to buy into the notion that the terrorists hate our freedom.

If you truly believe that terrorism exists as a revolt against the West’s freedoms, you’d do well to look around. If they actually hated our freedoms, then they must love us now as American’s lose freedoms now on a near daily basis.

However, this over-used and ill-conceived euphemism for the wholesale export of murder has been very effective at blinding Americans to the actual plight of war.

Only through educating ourselves and others about who is behind this theater of constant war and terror, will we ever begin to stop it. Continued dehumanization of Middle Eastern people and more war will only serve to fuel the flames of terrorism. It’s high time American citizens stand up and bravely say — no more war.

Matt Agorist is the co-founder of TheFreeThoughtProject.com, where this article first appeared. He is an honorably discharged veteran of the USMC and former intelligence operator directly tasked by the NSA. This prior experience gives him unique insight into the world of government corruption and the American police state. Agorist has been an independent journalist for over a decade and has been featured on mainstream networks around the world.

(activistpost.com)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/31/2016 10:30:07 AM

'DANGEROUS INFECTION' Russian biological warfare troops rushed to Arctic after outbreak of lethal anthrax hospitalises 40

It follows the death of 1,200 reindeer suspected of contracting the disease


BIOLOGICAL warfare troops have been rushed to the Russian Arctic amid growing concerns over a serious anthrax outbreak.

A total of 40 people – more than half of them children – are now hospitalised amid fears they may have contracted the deadly infection.

Biological troops have landed in Salekhard
WILL STEWART

Biological troops have landed in Salekhard

This follows the death of 1,200 reindeer suspected of contracting the disease after a contaminated corpse – buried at least 70 years ago – thawed because of a heatwave in the Yamal peninsula in northern Siberia.

Russian experts have blamed global warming for the prolonged high temperatures – of up to 35C – at the Tarko-Sale Faktoria camp, north of the Arctic Circle.

There were dramatic scenes as the Russian army’s Chemical, Radioactive and Biological Protection Corps, equipped with masks and bio-warfare protective clothing, flew to to regional capital Salekhard on a military Il-76 aircraft to deal with the emergency.

Anthrax is an infection caused by the bacterium Bacillus anthracis, which has been developed as an agent of warfare
WILL STEWART

Anthrax is an infection caused by the bacterium Bacillus anthracis, which has been developed as an agent of warfare
Russian army's Chemical, Radioactive and Biological Protection Corps are trying to deal with the situation
WILL STEWART

Russian army’s Chemical, Radioactive and Biological Protection Corps are trying to deal with the situation

They were deployed by Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu to carry laboratory tests on the ground, detect and eliminate the focal point of the infection, and to dispose safely of dead animals.

Eight new people were admitted for observation to hospital in Salekhard on Friday, bringing the total to 40, said officials, as reported by The Siberian Times.

“As of now, there is no single diagnosis of the dangerous infection,” said a spokesman for the governor of Yamalo-Nenets, Dmitry Kobylkin.

Those in hospital are all from a dozen nomadic families who herd reindeer in the far north of Russia.

1,200 reindeer have died in recent days
WILL STEWART

1,200 reindeer have died in recent days

Medics were taking precautions to hospitalise any of the ‘at risk’ group who showed any symptoms of ill health.

More than half those in hospital are children, some of them babies.

Other herders have been evacuated at least 40 miles from the scene of the outbreak, first identified a week ago.

Anna Popova, director of state health watchdog Rospotrebnadzor, warned: “We need to be ready for any manifestations and return of infection.”

The concern follows an outbreak of the Bubonic Plage in the Altai Mountains in southern Siberia earlier this month.

40 now hospitalised after anthrax outbreak in Yamal, more than half are children
WILL STEWART

40 now hospitalised after anthrax outbreak in Yamal, more than half are children

Professor Florian Stammler, of the University of Lapland, Finland, knows the site where the outbreak occurred and described it as a reindeer junction used by many herders.

“Due to the high mobility of herders using this site, utmost care has to be taken for preventing of anthrax being spread all over the Yamal Peninsula,” he said.

Venison from this region is exported to Britain and other EU countries but local officials insisted the precautions they are taking will prevent any threat to this lucrative industry.

A spokesman for the governor insisted: ‘This case won’t affect exports or the quality of meat.’

The army are trying to find the source of the outbreak
WILL STEWART

The army are trying to find the source of the outbreak
he Sakha Republic, east of this region, has some 200 burial grounds of animals that succumbed to anthrax in the past.
WILL STEWART

The Sakha Republic, east of this region, has some 200 burial grounds of animals that succumbed to anthrax in the past

Russian experts say the hot summer led to the frozen infection being “unlocked by the thawing of a diseased carcass from a long time ago”, reported the news website.

If correct, there is real concern of centuries-old infections reappearing in permafrost regions like Siberia.

The Sakha Republic, east of this region, has some 200 burial grounds of animals that succumbed to anthrax in the past.

Tarko Sale Faktoriya, the focus of the outbreak at Yamal Peninsula

WILL STEWART
9

Tarko Sale Faktoriya, the focus of the outbreak at Yamal Peninsula

The army unit deployed on Friday is equipped with military helicopters as well as off road vehicles.

They face what the region governor calls ‘an extremely challenging task of liquidating the consequences – and disinfecting the focus – of the infection.

“I think this perhaps will be the first in the world operation cleaning up a territory of mass deer mortality over such distances in the tundra,” he said.

Venison from this region is exported to Britain and other EU countries
WILL STEWART
9
Venison from this region is exported to Britain and other EU countries

Anthrax is an infection caused by the bacterium Bacillus anthracis, which has been developed as an agent of warfare.

Among its forms are inhalation, which leads to fever, chest pain, and shortness of breath.

The intestinal form presents with nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, or abdominal pain.

Until the 20th century, it killed hundreds of thousands of people and livestock each year.


(THE SUN)

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

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