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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
6/17/2017 10:26:40 AM

JIHADI ARRESTS IN EU ALMOST DOUBLE WITH WOMEN AND CHILDREN MORE ACTIVE IN PLOTS


BY


Arrests of radical Islamist suspects in the European Union rose for the third year in a row, almost doubling in two years, with women and children more involved in plots, according to a new report released by Europol.

Europe’s law enforcement agency said that police across the EU arrested 718 jihadi suspects in 2016, up from 687 in 2015 and 395 in 2014.

The number of jihadi attacks in the EU last year dropped to 13, from 17 in 2015. Six of the 13 attacks had links to the Islamic State militant group (ISIS). The attacks killed 142 people and injured 379 others.

Women and children are also playing an increasingly prominent role in the operations, the report says.


Spanish police arrest a Moroccan man suspected of recruiting ISIS members via the internet, Valencia, June 7, 2016.JOSE JORDAN/AFP/GETTY IMAGES

"Female militant jihadists in the West perceive fewer obstacles to playing an operative role in a terrorist attack than men, and successful or prevented attacks carried out by women in Western countries may act as an inspiration to others," the report said.

Last year, French authorities arrested several women involved in plots centered on the southern city of Nice and the Notre Dame cathedral in Paris. A quarter of suspects arrested in Britain were women, an 18 percent increase, Europol said.

France, which has been hit the hardest by radical Islamist attacks, also saw the the highest number of arrests. Out of 1,002 counter-terror arrests in the EU in 2016, 456 were in France. Almost a third of suspects arrested in France were under 25.

As it becomes harder for jihadis to travel to join ISIS in Iraq and Syria, security services across Europe have warned of stay-at-home jihadis and returning ISIS fighters raising the domestic threat.

Europol director Rob Wainwright told Newsweek in December 2016 that at least 5,000 European passport holders went to fight in Syria and Iraq in recent years, and only about a third of them have returned. Many more of them could try to come back to Europe.

In 2016, Germany experienced the first attacks claimed by ISIS on its territory—two in Bavaria and one in Berlin. This year, Britain has experienced three such attacks—two in London and one in Manchester—resulting in the national threat level being raised to “critical” for the first time in 10 years.

In Manchester, a young man of Libyan origin detonated a suicide bomb in a backpack. Security services are concerned by the increasing ease with which potential attackers can learn bomb-making methods and develop explosive devices.

“The kind of attacks that ISIS have used in the conflict zone, including car bombs perhaps and others, if that technical capability is known within the organization then clearly there's potential for that to be transferred into a European scenario,” Wainwright told the Associated Press following the report’s release. “Although one shouldn't underestimate, either, the difficulty in doing that on a consistent basis.”


(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?
6/17/2017 10:45:49 AM

Chinese kindergarten blast that killed 8 being investigated as criminal act

Dozens also hurt as parents were picking up children when explosion occurred near school's entrance

The Associated Press Posted: Jun 15, 2017 9:25 AM ET Last Updated: Jun 15, 2017 8:30 PM ET


Medical workers transport a person injured in an explosion outside a kindergarten into a hospital in Fengxian County in eastern China early Friday local time. (Li Xiang/Xinhua via AP)


Authorities are investigating an explosion at the front gate of a kindergarten in eastern China as a criminal act, while the death toll rose to eight.

The official Xinhua News Agency said Friday that police have identified a suspect in the explosion. It was unclear if anyone was arrested, and no further details were provided.

Dozens were injured in Thursday's blast at the Chuangxin Kindergarten in Fengxian as relatives were picking up their children at the end of the school day.

Xinhua says two people died at the scene and six died after being taken to a hospital. Eight people remained in critical condition.


Authorities say a makeshift bomb was set off outside this kindergarten in eastern China. (Greg Baker/AFP/Getty Images)


"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?
6/17/2017 11:05:06 AM



California Man Facing Prison After Uploading Deadpool Movie to Facebook

Deadpool broke records last year when it became the highest-grossing R-rated film in history, raking in$783 million at the box office.

According to a statement released by the United States Attorney’s Office for the Central District of California:

“Franklin is charged in a one-count indictment returned by a federal grand jury on April 7 with reproducing and distributing a copyrighted work, a felony offense that carries a statutory maximum penalty of three years in federal prison.”

Federal prosecutors allege that “more than 5 million people were able to view the film copyrighted by the Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation.”

Attorney Roger Bonakdar told local ABC outlet KFSN-TV that social media cases can be more challenging for prosecutors to argue than traditional copyright ones. “You can track how many clicks, but there will be a question as to who watched the whole thing,” Bonakdar he said. “What’s the real damage?”

Given the length of the investigation, it’s evident the FBI is taking this case very seriously. “They are trying to send a message with this case,” Bonakdar said. “To the community to warn them that there are very serious consequences to something they think is innocuous.”


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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
6/17/2017 11:14:47 AM

China says bomber died in kindergarten blast

Matthew KNIGHT

Police found material to make a homemade explosive device at an apartment rented by the 22-year-old suspect (AFP Photo/GREG BAKER)

A bomb blast that killed eight people and injured dozens outside a kindergarten in eastern China was the work of a 22-year-old introvert who was among the dead, authorities said Friday.

The public security ministry said in a statement that the suspect was a man with health problems who rented a room near the school in Fengxian, where Thursday's blast occurred.

Police found material to make a homemade explosive device at the apartment, which had the words "die", "death" and "destroy" written on the wall.

The statement said the man, surnamed Xu, suffered from dysfunction of the autonomic nervous system, a disorder that can cause heart and blood pressure problems.

Liu Wenxiang, a police investigator, said on CCTV state television that Xu worked at a restaurant in Fengxian after he was suspended from school in May 2016.

Liu described Xu as "introverted and withdrawn" when interacting with others.

The motive was not immediately known and police did not say whether the kindergarten was the target, but schools have been attacked by knife-wielding assailants in the past.

The explosion in Jiangsu province left victims bleeding and weeping, with images posted on state media showing some had their clothes torn off by the force of the explosion.

A survivor told broadcaster CCTV from her hospital bed that the school gate had just opened for kids to leave, though none had come out when the fireball erupted.

The woman, who was holding a baby during the interview as she sat on her bed, said she blacked out and only woke up while being treated.

The Fengxian county government said class had not yet been dismissed and that no teachers or students were among the casualties.

At least eight people were killed and 65 injured, including eight seriously, according to authorities.

- 'So scary' -

Pictures of the scene showed more than a dozen people outside a building, many lying on the ground and some appearing to be unconscious, including a small child.

Locals said hundreds of students attend the school and that the victims were thought to be people waiting to pick up the children.

"It's so scary," said a man surnamed Meng, who learned about the explosion online.

Investigators concluded that the blast was caused by an explosive, ruling out previous news reports suggesting it was an accidental explosion of a food stall's gas cylinder.

On Friday, police officers wearing blue plastic around their shoes scoured the scene of the explosion in front of the kindergarten.

The education ministry later urged schools to strengthen security risk prevention.

- History of attacks -

There have been several cases in China of disgruntled individuals setting off explosions or starting fires in revenge for perceived wrongs.

In May, a school bus packed with kindergarten pupils erupted in flames inside a tunnel in eastern Shandong province on May 9, killing 11 children, a teacher and the driver.

Officials later said the fire was intentionally set by the driver, who was angry at losing overtime wages.

A 29-year-old man with gambling debts tossed explosives in Shanghai's main airport last year, injuring four people.

In 2015, an unemployed man set off an explosion at a public park in the eastern province of Shandong, killing himself and another person and wounding 24.

In 2013, a wheelchair-bound man detonated a homemade bomb at Beijing international airport as a protest at alleged police brutality.

There have also been knife attacks at schools in recent years, the most recent being in January, when a man armed with a kitchen knife wounded 11 children at a kindergarten in southern China.


(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?
6/17/2017 11:30:49 AM

Southwest US preps for 120 temps: Water, water, more water

JOHN ANTCZAK

A man runs through the desert at sunrise, Friday, June 16, 2017, in Phoenix. A record heat wave is rolling into Arizona, Nevada and California, threatening to bring 120-degree temperatures to Phoenix by early next week. (AP Photo/Matt York)

LOS ANGELES (AP) — When bracing for 120 degrees, it's all about the water.

Drinking it, splashing in it to stay cool, and drinking it some more. A lot more.

That's what officials were urging and residents were planning Friday as a potentially record-shattering heat wave started enveloping the Southwest United States and threatened to bring temperatures of more than 120 degrees to parts of Arizona and California next week.

People in places like Palm Springs and Phoenix are used to seriously high temperatures, but 120 degrees becomes all the talk around the water cooler. And with the health dangers of heat and dehydration, that's where authorities hope they keep coming back.

Teresa Flores in Phoenix said she will make sure her two sons and daughter stay hydrated.

"Water, water, water, water," Flores said. "So even when they think they're not thirsty, they're drinking water."

Jennifer Vollmann brought her 2-year-old daughter to a public pool in downtown Phoenix, where the temperature hit 108 Thursday. With 121 degrees predicted Tuesday, "we'll be here, she'll be in the pool," Vollmann said as her daughter ate a blue ice pop.

Strong high pressure building over Western states is bringing the hot onslaught.

Officials warned of excessive heat across southern portions of Arizona and Nevada, and throughout the 450-mile length of California's Central Valley. Almost the entire Golden State was predicted to simmer above normal temperatures, easing just short of the coast.

With up to 122 on the horizon, Palm Springs will have cooling centers in community centers and libraries, and Phoenix and nonprofit groups are planning water stations to help the homeless and others.

Palm Springs has soared above 120 several times, most recently hitting 122 on June 29, 2013.

The National Weather Service in Phoenix said the last time the temperature topped 120 was 1995, at 121. The record high is 122 degrees, set on June 26, 1990.

In the Arizona desert near the U.S.-Mexico border, the heat can be so deadly that the Border Patrol reassigns agents and resources to areas that are especially dangerous for immigrants.

"It is physically impossible for the average person to carry enough water to survive several days of walking through the desert," the agency said in a statement.

The area saw more than 1,400 rescues and 84 deaths last fiscal year, according to statistics provided by the agency. Through April, agents in the Tucson Sector have rescued 160 people and reported 14 deaths.

Las Vegas and nearby cities also are preparing for the first heat wave of the season with extra cooling stations. Tuesday's high was expected to hit 115.

With the three-day outdoor Electric Daisy Carnival music festival kicking off Friday, organizers used social media to encourage attendees to stay hydrated. It was providing free water during the nighttime event, which has drawn more than 130,000 people in past years.

In California, forecasters said prolonged heat would make snow melt faster in the Sierra Nevada, where massive winter storms coated towering peaks after years of drought. Waterways could flood, with vacationers warned to be cautious near water and avoid camping close to streams.

Camp counselor Sabrina Chu, 17, said she and others in San Francisco were having kids drink lots of water while playing outdoors. The city was expected to have a high of 82 Sunday, well above the normal upper 60s.

"Compared to other places in California, the Bay has pretty consistent weather, so this is unusually hot for the area," Chu said.

In Southern California, inland valleys, mountains and deserts would likely bear the brunt of the heat wave. Cities such as Redlands and Fontana east of Los Angeles planned to use community facilities as cooling centers.

Back at the pool in Phoenix, Vollmann sounded a note of optimism about temperatures "cooling down."

"It'll be 110 soon," she said.

___

Associated Press Writers Clarice Silber and Angie Wang contributed to this report from Phoenix. Sally Ho and Regina Garcia Cano reported from Las Vegas. Linda Wang contributed from San Francisco.


(Yahoo News)


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

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