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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
10/30/2016 3:03:54 PM

Shiite militias join Iraqi forces in Mosul offensive

By Eric DuVall | Updated Oct. 29, 2016 at 5:38 PM


Iraqi Kurdish Peshmerga fighters are shown in Mount Zardak, about 25 kilometres east of Mosul, the last Iraqi stronghold of the Islamic State. On Saturday, Shiite militias that have largely sat out the fight engaged to the west of the city, opening a new front in the fight to retake Mosul. Photo by Shvan Harki/ UPI | License Photo

BAGHDAD, Oct. 29 (UPI) -- A group of Shiite militias largely absent from the Iraqi offensive to retake Mosul from the Islamic State jumped into the fray Saturday, opening a new front on the west of the embattled terrorist stronghold.

The militias, known as the Popular Mobilization Units and backed by Iran, had not to this point played a significant role in the 100,000-plus troop force organized by Iraqi and Kurdish military leaders and backed by the United States. Al Jazeera reported the support received from the militias is more than most military leaders in the region expected.

Iraqi and Kurdish forces have approached Mosul from the north and southeast, but the western edge of the city had largely been uncontested prior to Saturday's offensive by PMU fighters. Roads leading through the area are of strategic significance. If they fall under the PMU's control, it would cut off the ability for IS fighters to flee over the Syrian border.

A spokesman for the militias said 11 villages to the west of Mosul had been "liberated" from Islamic State control.

The emergence of the Shiite militia forces is not entirely welcome news for U.S.-backed interests in the region. Government forces have worried that such groups, which do not fall under U.S. or Iraqi control, could turn an anti-terrorist offensive into a humanitarian crisis if the Shiite militiamen begin targeting Sunni civilians for violence in villages they overtake. Many Sunnis view the PMU as equally threatening as the Islamic State.

Elsewhere in Iraq, a suicide bomber killed eight and wounded nearly a dozen more after he detonated himself in a section of western Baghdad. No group had claimed responsibility for the attack.

(UPI)

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

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
10/30/2016 4:58:29 PM

Americans Preparing For Strong Possibility Of Violence On Election Day

"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?
10/30/2016 5:32:40 PM

U.S. orders families of consulate workers in Istanbul to leave

BY | Updated: Oct 29, 2016 at 5:18 PM


Turkish flags, with the control tower in the background, fly at half mast at the country’s largest airport, Istanbul Ataturk, following yesterday’s blast in Istanbul, Turkey, on June 29, 2016. REUTERS/Murad Sezer

WASHINGTON — The State Department is ordering family members of employees posted to the U.S. Consulate General in Istanbul to leave because of security concerns.

In a statement issued Saturday, the State Department says the decision is based on security information indicating extremist groups are continuing aggressive efforts to attack U.S. citizens in areas of Istanbul where they reside or frequent.

The Consulate General remains open and fully staffed. The order applies only to the U.S. Consulate General in Istanbul, not to other U.S. diplomatic posts in Turkey.

The travel warning issued Saturday updates a warning last week of increased threats from terrorist groups throughout Turkey. U.S. citizens were advised to avoid travel to southeast Turkey and carefully consider the risks of travel to and throughout the country.

The State Department said international and indigenous terrorist organizations in Turkey have been targeting U.S. as well as other foreign tourists.

Anti-American sentiment runs high in Turkey despite its status as a NATO ally and a member of the anti-ISIS coalition.

In addition to the terrorist threat, friction between Washington and Ankara has increased since a failed July coup in Turkey, which Turkish officials blame on a U.S.-based cleric who lives in self-exile in Pennsylvania. Turkey has requested his extradition, but the U.S. has yet to make a decision.

(
pbs.org)

"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?
10/30/2016 5:52:50 PM
‘I own you’: Australian parents sentenced after abusing daughter for 15 years


The first time it happened, she said, she was 5 years old.

Her mother was in the hospital — having just given birth to the girl's newest sibling — when her father slipped into her bedroom and raped her, starting a 15-year cycle of sexual, physical and emotional abuse, according to the Sydney Morning Herald.

Her father tied her up and locked her in an old chicken coop — or sometimes a small storage box — for days at a time, and surrounded her with barbed wire to keep her from attempting an escape.

He held her underwater and threatened her with a chain saw,according to the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. He made her stand on ant hills, swallow hot chilies and eat her own vomit,the Herald reported.

And her mother stood by and let it happen, the court said.

Now 24, the victim told the Downing Center District Court in Sydney last month that her parents kept her in a “living hell.”

“My father inflicted evil,” she said, according to the Sydney Morning Herald. “He abused me in such ways that I thought I was going to die. My mother didn't stop him and did not protect me. My childhood was lost and I can never get it back.”

The woman's 59-year-old father, who was convicted in June of 73 offenses, was sentenced to 48 years in prison; her 51-year-old mother, who was convicted of 13 offenses, was sentenced to 16 years behind bars, according to the Associated Press.

Their names were not released for legal reasons.

Judge Sarah Huggett said the couple, who had backgrounds in teaching and coaching elite sports, “hoodwinked” their community — appearing as dedicated parents, training their children for competitions both in Australia and abroad, according to the Sydney Morning Herald. The father would threaten his daughter, telling her if she did not win, “she would be taken to the shed,” the newspaper reported, citing court documents.

“He deliberately conditioned his daughter using physical, emotional and psychological means to the point she would have come to expect he would abuse her as and when he wished,” Huggett said, according to the newspaper.

“From an early age she thought the conduct of the sort she was experiencing at the hands of her father was normal."

But, Huggett added, the mother abused her role in the “greatest way,” according to the Sydney Morning Herald.

The judge told the court that when the victim was 8, her mother instructed her on how to sexually please her father.

“The mother told the victim it is better to make noises during sexual intercourse, with her mother saying, 'It would make it better for you and Dad,' " Huggett said in court, according to theAustralian Broadcasting Corporation.

The Herald reported that one Father's Day when she was 10, she was forced to take her father his coffee and perform sexual acts; he called her a “good girl,” according to court documents.

“The incident stuck clearly in her mind,” according the court documents, “as it was rare for the offender to ever say things like 'good girl' to her and it was all she wanted to hear from him.”

By the time she was 14, her father became concerned that she might be pregnant so he started a new “training” method — dropping a medicine ball 60 times on her stomach, according to the Herald.

She suffered in silence, burying bloody underwear around her parents' property and carving her fears in the wooden frame to the shed where she was held prisoner: “trapped,” “dad,” “mum is coming.”

The judge in the case said she once wrote a plea “in her own blood.”

“If you ever tell anyone what happens here I will kill you,” her father told her, according to evidence cited by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. “It is no one's business. I own you.”

At 17, the victim attempted suicide and was taken to a mental health facility; when she was released, however, her parents would not allow her to seek counseling or take prescribed medication, according to the Sydney Morning Herald.

She escaped again the next year and spent six months in the hospital, then her father instructed her to return home. “How dare you tell people, you're a liar,” he said, according to the newspaper. “I've only ever tried to be a good dad.”

In 2011, the victim filed a complaint with police. Two years later, her parents were arrested for their crimes.

During her impact statement, the 24-year-old victim said she still “struggles to function … maintain normal daily activities,”according to the Sydney Morning Herald.

“My focus, my goal throughout my childhood was to survive and to satisfy [my father's] needs so that he wasn't angry,” she said. “If that meant [competing at sport] or pleasing him in sexual ways, that is what it meant.

“Now, on this day and every day for the rest of my life, I have to find some way to move on from his abuse.”

Australian authorities said that another one of the couple's daughters had also been abused by their father.

The father can be considered for parole after serving 36 years of his sentence; the mother can be considered after serving 11 years, according to the Associated Press.

“Speaking out and telling the truth has given me strength and closure beyond words, but I will never forget,” the 24-year-old said. “I will never forget,” the 24-year-old said. “I will never live a day of my life where the abuse I suffered does not haunt me.”

Lindsey Bever is a general assignment reporter for The Washington Post.
Follow @lindseybever



(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?
10/30/2016 11:49:09 PM

Civilian toll in fight to break Aleppo siege appals UN



Rebel fighters from the Jaish al-Fatah (or Army of Conquest) brigades get in a vehicle in the neighbourhood of Dahiyet al-Assad, southwest of Aleppo, on October 29, 2016 after they retook control of the area (AFP Photo/Omar Haj Kadour)

Aleppo (Syria) (AFP) - Syria's regime and rebels engaged in fierce fighting Sunday in Aleppo's western edges, where 41 civilians have been killed in an opposition offensive the UN warned could amount to war crimes.

Rebels have unleashed car bombs and salvos of rockets and shells to break through government lines and reach the 250,000 people besieged in the city's east.

Syrian state media on Sunday accused them of firing shells containing toxic gas into government-controlled districts.

State news agency SANA reported that 35 people were suffering from shortness of breath, numbness, and muscle spasms after "toxic gases" hit the frontline district of Dahiyet al-Assad and regime-held Hamdaniyeh.

The head of Aleppo University Hospital, Ibrahim Hadid, told state television that "36 people, including civilians and combatants, were wounded after inhaling toxic chlorine gas released by terrorists".

Two days of heavy rebel bombardment have killed 41 civilians, including 16 children, and wounded 250, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

The civilian toll was slammed by UN peace envoy to Syria Staffan de Mistura, whose office said he was "appalled and shocked by the high number of rockets" fired by rebels.

"Those who argue that this is meant to relieve the siege of eastern Aleppo should be reminded that nothing justifies the use of disproportionate and indiscriminate weapons, including heavy ones, on civilian areas and it could amount to war crimes," his office said in a statement.

- Civilians 'have suffered enough' -

"The civilians of both sides of Aleppo have suffered enough due to futile but lethal attempts of subduing the city of Aleppo," De Mistura said.

Syria's second city Aleppo has been ravaged by some of the heaviest fighting of the country's five-year war which has killed more than 300,000 people.

Intense fighting on Sunday rocked western districts, battered by hundreds of rebel rockets and artillery fire, according to Observatory head Rami Abdel Rahman.

In a new toll Sunday, the monitor said fighting had also killed 55 regime and allied fighters, as well as 64 Syrian rebels.

Fighting lasted all night and into Sunday, with air strikes and artillery fire along the western battlefronts heard even in the eastern districts, an AFP correspondent there said.

Plumes of smoke could be seen rising from the city.

About 1,500 rebels have massed on a 15-kilometre (10-mile) front along the western edges of Aleppo since Friday, scoring quick gains in the Dahiyet al-Assad district but struggling to push east since then.

"The advance will be from Dahiyet al-Assad towards Hamdaniyeh," said Yasser al-Youssef of the Noureddin al-Zinki rebel faction.

Hamdaniyeh is a regime-held district directly adjacent to opposition-controlled eastern neighbourhoods.

An AFP correspondent saw about a dozen civilians, including women and children, fleeing Dahiyet al-Assad on Sunday.

- 'Massive, coordinated' assault -

They brought belongings stuffed into plastic bags, hoisting them on top of their heads or dragging them along the dusty road.

A pro-regime military source told AFP that the rebel assault was "massive and coordinated", but insisted it was unable to break into any neighbourhoods beyond Dahiyet al-Assad.

"They're using Grad missiles and car bombs and are supported by foreign fighters in their ranks," he said.

Those engaged in the assault include Aleppo rebels and reinforcements from Idlib province to the west, among them the jihadist Fateh al-Sham Front, which changed its name from Al-Nusra Front after breaking ties with Al-Qaeda.

Aleppo's front line runs through the heart of the city, dividing rebels in the east from government forces in the west.

Much of the once-bustling economic hub has been reduced to rubble by artillery and air bombardment, including barrel bombs -- crude unguided explosive devices that also kill indiscriminately.

In late September, government troops launched an assault to recapture all of the eastern rebel-controlled territory, backed by air strikes from Russia, which began an air war in 2015 to support President Bashar al-Assad's forces.

That onslaught spurred massive international criticism of both Moscow and Damascus.

Last week, Russia implemented a three-day "humanitarian pause" intended to allow civilians and surrendering rebels to leave Aleppo's east, but few did so.

Moscow says it will continue a halt on its air strikes over Aleppo, in place since October 18.


(Yahoo News)


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

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