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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
4/2/2017 10:09:43 AM

World faces worst humanitarian crisis since 1945, says UN official


Twenty million people face starvation without an immediate injection of funds in Yemen, South Sudan, Somalia and Nigeria, warns Stephen O’Brien



(theguardian.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?
4/2/2017 10:33:25 AM

Severe droughts and floods to hit Indo-Gangetic plain, warn Indian, Chinese researchers

WORLD Updated: Mar 30, 2017 21:45 IST
Sutirtho Patranobis

File photo of a farmer in his dried up cotton field in Nalgonda east of Hyderabad in April 2016. (AFP)



The Indo-Gangetic plain, India’s most populous and fertile region, will face extreme climatic conditions such as severe droughts if the burning of fossil fuel continues unabated and government policies fail to intervene, a group of Indian and Chinese researchers has warned.

The droughts, a possible result of the reckless burning of fossil fuels combined with regional warming, will lead to a fall in agricultural produce, compromising India’s food security, the researchers projected.

That wasn’t the only conclusion - because of dependency on the intensity of monsoon and the variability of government intervention, “extreme wet events” or floods will be a probability too.

A two-year study was conducted by researchers attached to the prestigious Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) in Beijing, the Beijing Normal University and the University of Cambridge. The group comprised two Indians, five Chinese and one German.

“Dissecting the projected change led to the conclusion that not only will incidences of climatological and extreme drought increase dramatically in the future, but extreme wet events will also become more probable due to increased variability, indicating that extreme events, including droughts and floods, will become more common in the Indo-Gangetic Plain,” said Debashis Nath, one of the Indian reseachers.

The study, published in the scientific journal Earth’s Future in March, analysed climate data from the region between 1961 and 2012 and juxtaposed it against two scenarios till the end of this century. The first scenario was one where government and global policies led to increased irrigation and cut down the emission of greenhouse gases and the second whereby authorities failed to take those same steps and the region became vulnerable to climatic changes.

The situation is complicated by the fact that agriculture in India is mostly rain-fed.

The existing data analysed by the group was worrying in itself.

“We found that in the Indo-Gangetic Plain region, the probability of drought is 45% and the region has become drought-prone in recent decades. Cereal production has declined from the year 2000, which is consistent with the increase in drought-affected areas from 20% to 25% to 50% to 60% before and after 2000,” explained Reshmita Nath, one of the researchers attached to CAS.

The other Indian researcher, Debashis Nath, is also affiliated to CAS.

The team projected existing data on 27 different climate models followed by scientists across the world to look for future trends – and the result was consistent and grim.

“We found that the area affected due to drought events will be higher during the global warming scenario and the frequency of extreme drought events will increase dramatically in the future,” Nath said.

The researchers detailed several droughts and floods that have hit the region since 2000, which caused “considerable losses including death, crop failure and eco-system destruction”.

This study, they said in the published paper, should help the government to plan for “agricultural adaptation strategies, advanced water management, and (protecting) human health” in future.

What did the study cover?

The region studied included Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Chhattisgarh, Bihar, West Bengal and .parts of Madhya Pradesh and Orissa.

This region is home to approximately 40% of India’s population and yields approximately 50% of the country’s total agricultural production.

The climate and agricultural data were sourced from the National Sample Survey Office and the Food and Agriculture Organisation of the UN

The paper was published under the headline “Multimodel Projections of Extreme Weather Events in the Humid Subtropical Gangetic Plain Region of India”.


(hindustantimes.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?
4/2/2017 10:48:24 AM

DEPRESSION IS THE LEADING CAUSE OF DISABILITY AROUND THE WORLD


BY



More than 322 million people across the globe are suffering from depression, according to the World Health Organization (WHO), and the increasing number of people struggling with the debilitating disorder has caused significant economic damage.

The organization released updated figures depicting the severity of mental health issues around the world, citing an 18 percent spike in cases of depression between 2005 and 2015. The report, released leading up to World Health Day on April 7, is a part of WHO’s year-long “Depression: let’s talk” campaign.

“These new figures are a wake-up call for all countries to rethink their approaches to mental health and to treat it with the urgency that it deserves,” WHO Chief Margaret Chan said in a statement.

Governments, employers and households have faced economic losses from depression, which can cause lack of energy, drastic changes in sleeping and eating patterns, substance abuse, anxiety and other mental disorders. The depression epidemic has led to a drop in worldwide productivity, costing the global economy more than $1 trillion annually, the report said.

Depression has also led to an annual rate of 800,000 worldwide deaths per year.

“A better understanding of depression and how it can be treated, while essential, is just the beginning," said Dr. Shekhar Saxena, Director of the Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse at WHO. "What needs to follow is sustained scale-up of mental health services accessible to everyone, even the most remote populations in the world,” she said.Despite the ubiquity of the problem, there's a shortage of treatment options. More than 50 percent of depressed people don’t receive treatment, and WHO’s report said only three percent of government health budgets globally have invested in mental health.


(Neswsweek)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
4/2/2017 11:16:50 AM

Venezuela seeks to cool outrage over court power grab

By Andrew Cawthorne and Girish Gupta | CARACAS

Venezuela's pro-government Supreme Court revoked its takeover of the opposition-led Congress on Saturday after it drew international condemnation and protests against socialist President Nicolas Maduro.

"This controversy is over," Maduro said just after midnight at a specially convened state security committee.

The committee ordered the top court to reconsider Wednesday's court ruling, which effectively nullified the legislature and brought accusations the ruling Socialist Party was creating a dictatorship.

The tribunal duly erased two controversial judgments and its president, Maikel Moreno, met with both foreign envoys and journalists to explain the decision, insisting there had never been any intention to strip the National Assembly of its powers.

Maduro, 54, who had faced dissent even within government ranks over the Supreme Court's move, sought to cast developments as the achievement of a statesman resolving a power conflict beneath him. But foes said it was a hypocritical row-back by an unpopular government that overplayed its hand in a power grab.

"You can't pretend to just normalize the nation after carrying out a 'coup,'" said Julio Borges, leader of the legislature.

Borges publicly tore up the court rulings this week and refused to attend the overnight security committee, whose members include the heads of major institutions.

He led an open-air meeting of the National Assembly in a Caracas square on Saturday.

Having already shot down most congressional measures since the opposition won control in 2015, the Supreme Court went further with its Wednesday decision. It said it was taking over the legislature's role because it was in "contempt" of the law.

TEAR GAS AND PEPPER SPRAY

Although scores of dissidents have been detained during Maduro's four-year rule and the National Assembly stripped of power anyway in practice, the court's move was arguably the most explicitly anti-democratic measure.

Opposition supporters holding a Venezuelan flag protest against Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro's government during a rally in Caracas, Venezuela April 1, 2017. REUTERS/Carlos Garcia Rawlins

It galvanized Venezuela's demoralized and divided opposition coalition and sparked international condemnation and concern from the United Nations and European Union, as well as the United States and many neighboring countries.

The Supreme Court's flip-flop may take the edge off protests but Maduro's opponents at home and abroad will seek to maintain the pressure. They are furious that authorities thwarted a push for a referendum to recall Maduro last year and postponed local elections scheduled for 2016.

Now they are calling for next year's presidential election to be brought forward and the delayed local polls to be held, confident the ruling Socialist Party would lose.

Hundreds of opposition supporters marched in Caracas on Saturday. Police dispersed some with tear gas as residents banged pots and pans to support the demonstrators.

One opposition lawmaker said he was attacked three times by police using pepper spray. "Their violence does not stop us," said Miguel Pizarro, of the Justice First party.

In western San Cristobal, a hotbed of opposition support, about 80 people also marched with whistles and banners reading "Down with the dictatorship!"

"The Supreme Court is controlled by idiots. What they did is a crime, there was no justification, and now Nicolas Maduro backs off like a child," said pensioner Libia Zambrano, 77.

Also on Saturday, South America's MERCOSUR bloc met in Argentina with most of its members unhappy at Venezuela.

The hemispheric Organization of American States had a special session scheduled for Monday in Washington.

MADURO DECRIES "LYNCHING"

Maduro accuses the United States of orchestrating a campaign to oust him and said he had been subject this week to a "political, media and diplomatic lynching."

Some criticism even came from within government, with Attorney General Luisa Ortega rebuking the court in an extremely rare show of dissent from a senior official.

"It constitutes a rupture of the constitutional order," she said in a speech on state television on Friday.

Given past failures of opposition street protests, it is unlikely there will be mass support for a new wave.

Rather, opposition activists have said they hope ramped-up foreign pressure or a nudge from the powerful military may force Maduro's hand into bringing forward a presidential vote.

"Venezuela's grave situation remains the same," opposition leader Henrique Capriles said, calling on the government to free jailed activists, allow humanitarian aid into Venezuela, call elections and restore autonomy to congress.

Maduro, a former bus driver, foreign minister and self-declared "son" of late president and populist firebrand Hugo Chavez, was narrowly elected president in 2013. His ratings have plummeted as Venezuelans struggle with an unprecedented economic crisis, including food and medicine shortages and the world's highest inflation.

Critics blame a failing socialist system, whereas the government says its enemies are waging an "economic war." The fall in oil prices since mid-2014 has exacerbated the crisis.

The Supreme Court's move this week may have been partly motivated by financial conditions. The wording about taking over Assembly functions came in a ruling allowing Maduro to create joint oil ventures without congress' approval.

The OPEC nation urgently needs to raise money from oil partners to pay $3 billion in bond maturities due this month, analysts and sources say.

(Additional reporting by Diego Ore, Eyanir Chinea and Deisy Buitrago in Caracas, Anggy Polanco in San Cristobal; Editing by Bill Trott and Tom Brown)

(Reuters)

"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?
4/2/2017 4:08:56 PM

U.S. Is Dropping 500 Bombs Per Week On
Mosul










Several hundred civilians have been killed this month alone.



By: (ANTIWAR)

Brig. Gen. Matthew Isler, the deputy commander for the air war in Iraq and Syria, today offered details on the ever-growing scope of the air campaign over the massive, densely populated Iraqi city of Mosul, saying the US is in its “most kinetic” phase so far of the war.

In raw numbers, that means the US and its coalition partners are dropping an average of 500 bombs on the city of Mosul every single week so far in March. That number is growing, too, with the largest week seeing just over 600 bombs dropped.

Air Force officials insist all of the bombs being dropped on Mosul are being dropped “in support” of the Iraqi military’s ongoing invasion of the city. This increase in bombings is also leading to a substantial increase in the number of civilian deaths from US airstrikes as well, with several hundred civilians killed this month.

Isler insisted every single one of the 8,700 bombs dropped around Mosul since the invasion began was individually approved by an Iraqi general or a Kurdish Peshmerga figure. It is worth noting that Iraq has paused its Mosul offensive in recent days specifically because of the growing death toll of the US strikes, saying they could no longer conduct operations in the densely populated Old City under the current strategy.


Creative Commons / True Activist / Report a typo



Read More: http://www.trueactivist.com/u-s-is-dropping-500-bombs-per-week-on-mosul/



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

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