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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/13/2017 4:11:46 PM


Image Source: NASA Goddard

Colossal iceberg finally breaks free in Antarctica, and now the real crisis begins

July 12th, 2017 at 9:40 AM


Scientists and the public in general have been keeping a very close eye on the crisis unfolding on the Larsen C ice shelf for months. A massive crack in the shelf has threatened to unleash a state-sized chunk of ice into the ocean for a long time, but a recent increase in the speed of the cracking (called “calving”) captured the attention of the world. Well, the massive iceberg finally set itself free, and while this might sound like the end of the saga, the real danger is only just beginning.

The iceberg, which is estimated to weigh around one trillion metric tons, is now loose in the ocean, creating a serious hazard for the shipping industry which will need to keep a very close eye on its progress. It’s hard to tell at this point what the chunk of ice will do — whether it will remain in one piece or break into small, potentially even more dangerous icebergs — or where it will go.

If the ice heads north towards warmer waters it will obviously increase the speed of its melting, but if it continues to break down into smaller chunks, it could create a very dicey situation for commercial vessels as well as expeditions around the Antarctic peninsula.

Researchers have long feared that the icebergs departure could further destabilize the ice shelf it broke off from, possibly accelerating the rate at which additional calving occurs, though it’s too early to predict how that will play out.


(bgr.com)

More here


"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?
7/13/2017 4:46:47 PM



Iraqi Federal Police celebrate in the Old City of Mosul (Ahmed Saad)

Islamic State tightens grip on village near Mosul after defeat

By Ghazwan Hassan

By Ghazwan Hassan

TIKRIT, Iraq (Reuters) - Islamic State has captured most of a village south of Mosul despite losing control of its stronghold in the city, an Iraqi army officer and residents said, deploying guerrilla-style tactics as its self-proclaimed caliphate crumbles.

Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi declared victory over Islamic State in Mosul on Monday, marking the biggest defeat for the hardline Sunni group since its lightning sweep through northern Iraq three years ago.

But the militants, armed with machine guns and mortars, have now seized more than 75 percent of Imam Gharbi, a village on the western bank of the Tigris river some 70 km (44 miles) south of Mosul, and reinforcements are expected, the Iraqi army officer said.

Islamic State launched its attack on Imam Gharbi last week, in the kind of strike it is expected to deploy now as U.S.-backed Iraqi forces regain control over cities the group captured during its shock 2014 offensive.

Mosul resident Hind Mahmoud said by telephone that she had heard exchanges of gunfire in the Old City and seen an Iraqi army helicopter firing on Islamic State militants on Tuesday.

The top U.S. general in Iraq said that security forces would still need to clear Islamic State hideouts in Mosul, where as many as a couple of hundred fighters could remain, and would rest before fighting against the group in Tal Afar.

Lieutenant General Stephen Townsend told a news briefing in Washington that some Islamic State militants in Mosul had offered to surrender.

In one instance yesterday, Townsend said, an Islamic State commander had told Iraqi forces that a group of fighters were willing to surrender. However, the militants wanted to surrender as a large group, which was rejected by Iraqi forces who believed it could be a trap.

"We saw then later in the day, a wave of suicide attacks come out and we assess that was actually a ploy, a desperate ploy by an ISIS leader to actually get the Iraqi security force to allow a large group of fighters to come out and allow them to get close before they sprung an attack," Townsend said.

Some militants had offered to surrender today as well, but Townsend did not know the results of those negotiations.

Stripped of Mosul, Islamic State's dominion in Iraq will be reduced to mainly rural, desert areas west and south of the city.

Islamic State also faces pressure in its operational base in the Syrian city of Raqqa, where U.S.-backed Syrian Kurdish and Arab forces have seized territory on three sides of the city.

The campaign to retake Mosul from the militants was launched last October by a 100,000-strong alliance of Iraqi government units, Kurdish Peshmerga fighters and Shi'ite militias, with a U.S.-led coalition providing key air and ground support.

Abadi's government in Iraq now faces a difficult task managing the sectarian tensions which enabled Islamic State to gain supporters in the country among fellow Sunnis, who say they were marginalized by the Shi'ite-led government.

The U.S.-led coalition warned that victory in Mosul did not mark the end of the group's global threat.

"Now it is time for all Iraqis to unite to ensure ISIS (Islamic State) is defeated across the rest of Iraq and that the conditions that led to the rise of ISIS in Iraq are not allowed to return again," Townsend said in a statement on Monday.

(Writing by Michael Georgy; Additional reporting by Idrees Ali and Phil Stewart in Washington; Editing by Gareth Jones and James Dalgleish)


(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?
7/13/2017 5:18:26 PM

Body of judge in unsolved boy's death found with bag on head

ELAINE GANLEY

FILE - This Oct. 30, 1984 file photo shows French judge Jean-Michel Lambert during the reconstruction of the murder of Gregory Villemin, 4, in the Vologne river in Lepanges-sur-Vologne, France. The body of a 65-year-old retired judge — the first to investigate the still-unsolved 1984 death of a four-year-old boy that transfixed France — has been found with a plastic bag over his head. The prosecutor of Mans, the town where Judge Jean-Michel Lambert lived, said Wednesday, July 12, 2017 that an autopsy would be needed to determine the "precise" cause of death. (AP Photo, file)

PARIS (AP) — The body of a 65-year-old retired judge — the first to investigate the still-unsolved 1984 death of a four-year-old boy that transfixed France — has been found with a plastic bag over his head.

It was the latest macabre development in the cold case that took off anew in recent weeks.

The prosecutor of Mans, the town where Judge Jean-Michel Lambert lived, said Wednesday that an autopsy would be needed to determine the judge's "precise" cause of death. A statement said no traces of violence or disorder were found in the judge's home, where his body was discovered the previous evening.

Prosecutor Fabrice Belargent has ordered a police investigation into the death.

Lambert was at the center of the much-criticized probe into the drowning of Gregory Villemin, whose body was found in a river, hands and feet bound.

The complex case of the boy's death ricocheted around the village in the Vologne Valley near Epinal, where the Villemin family lived —and quickly became the center of French media attention.

"It's an affair that has accompanied me throughout my career and my life," Lambert said in a 2014 interview, parts of which were aired Wednesday on BFM-TV.

Untangling family rivalries in the Villemin family — fed by anonymous letters and phone calls — was a prime task for the judge. Lambert at one point charged and jailed Bernard Laroche, the cousin of Gregory's father, only to free him months later.

But months later, suspicions pushed Gregory's father to kill Laroche.

Lambert later suspected Gregory's mother, jailing her before she was finally released and declared innocent.

The moves fueled claims that Lambert was orchestrating a judicial fiasco.

The unsolved "petit Gregory" case took on new life recently with charges against at least three family members, two of whom have been allowed to remain free.

Another woman, a teenager in 1984, remains jailed after being charged for allegedly having knowledge of the kidnapping of Gregory. Murielle Bolle had claimed early on that brother-in-law Laroche was Gregory's killer before retracting that version — a retraction that another cousin now claims was obtained through a beating by family members.

In a 2014 interview with the daily Le Figaro, as Judge Lambert was promoting a book on his career, he called the killing of Laroche a "tragedy within a tragedy" and reproached himself for not having time "to say he (Laroche) was innocent."


(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?
7/13/2017 5:46:15 PM

Senate panel weighs bill to cut U.S. funding to Palestinians over payments to terrorists

video

With momentum growing in Congress to support legislation that could cut U.S. aid to the Palestinian Authority over its payments to convicted terrorists and their families, a senior White House official told Fox News that the administration won’t reward terrorism.

The Senate Foreign Relations Committee heard testimony Wednesday on a bill known as the Taylor Force Act in hopes of bringing it forward and out of committee. It is named for Taylor Force, a 28-year-old graduate of the U.S. Military Academy and Army veteran who was fatally stabbed by a Palestinian terrorist last year as he walked with friends in Tel Aviv on a tour of Israel.

While the White House official would not say if President Donald Trump would sign the bill if it reached his desk, he warned that the U.S. “is not wedded to a deal at all costs.”

The bill’s sponsor, Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., told the committee that the idea of U.S. tax money going to the Palestinian Authority had to be painful to Force’s parents.

Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., who sponsored a similar bill in 2014 that didn’t make it past committee, said there’s no use “nibbling around the edges.”

“People sense weakness and, you know, cut it all, cut every last penny of it. If you want to restart some of it, restart it when they change their behavior,” he said.

The committee’s ranking member, Sen. Benjamin Cardin, D-Md., said the Palestinians simply must end payment to terrorists. “It’s an incitement to violence,” Cardin said.

“President Trump helped convene a meeting in Saudi Arabia to stop the financing of terrorism. Well, what the Palestinian Authority is doing is financing terrorism. That must end and the United States must use every opportunity to bring that to end,” he said.

The Palestinians spend about $300 million a year – nearly eight percent of their annual budget -- on payments to convicted terrorists and their families. Just last week Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas said he would never stop the payments.

“I think what’s really tragic here is the complete lack of leadership by President Abbas, who is defending these payments. I think he has an opportunity to explain this to the Palestinian people and he has instead dug his heels and he's defending the system,” said Elliot Abrams, a former senior official under President George W. Bush.

Also testifying was former U.S. Ambassador to Israel, Daniel Shapiro, who served under President Barack Obama.

Shapiro asserted that the payments incentivize murder. He added that the Palestinians are sensitive on the international stage, so diplomatic pressure against the payments could be effective.

“The Palestinian leadership is, I think in many ways, is more sensitive to its international reputation than to suspensions of aid. So Ambassador Haley, who has been very outspoken at the United Nations, should raise this in the Security Council, [and] European and Arab governments should be lobbied to raise the same concerns about prisoner payments,” he said. He was referring to Nikki Haley, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations.

One Middle East expert who has worked closely with Congress on Israel and Palestinian issues said the Obama administration blocked any serious effort in Congress to hold the Palestinians responsible.

“For the Trump administration, stopping Palestinian terror payments is near the very top of their list of concerns. Certainly they're not going to lobby on behalf of the Palestinians like the Obama team used to do. So Congress is now going to take the actions against Palestinian terror incitement that lawmakers on both sides of the aisle have long wanted to take.

Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.), chairman of the committee, said his panel would be voting very soon on the Taylor Force Act.

Ben Evansky reports for Fox News on the United Nations and international affairs. He can be followed @BenEvansky

(foxnews.com)



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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/13/2017 6:21:26 PM

Nigeria: 15 killed in suicide attacks in Borno state

At least 15 people were killed and 21 wounded when four female suicide bombers attacked four areas in Maiduguri.



Maiduguri is the centre of the eight-year-old
fight against the armed group, which is trying to enforce its own version of Islamic law [AP]


(YESTERDAY) Suicide bombers have killed at least 15 people and injured 21 in the northeast Nigerian city of Maiduguri, police officials confirmed.

Tuesday night's incident is the latest in a spate of suicide bomb attacks on the city in the past few weeks. Borno, of which Maiduguri is the capital, is the Nigerian state worst affected by eight years of attacks by the Boko Haram group.

Borno state police commissioner Damian Chukwu told reporters that most of the victims were civilians manning security posts.

READ MORE: 'Alarming' rise in Boko Haram child suicide bombers

"The bombers detonated IEDs (improvised explosive devices) strapped to their bodies at different locations of the area, killing 19 people, including the bombers," he said.

"A total of 23 people were injured."

Bello Danbatta, a spokesman for the Civilian Joint Task Force (JTF) group and chief security officer at the Borno State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA), said it appeared his men were the targets.

Two of the bombers blew themselves up at checkpoints manned by JTF members, who assist the military with security and sometimes accompany soldiers on operations against Boko Haram jihadists.

"In all we lost 12 of our gallant JTF," he said.

Waiting for burial

SEMA operatives in face-masks and white overalls were on Wednesday seen removing body parts from the scene of the attacks. Victims were covered with rugs awaiting burial as local people looked on.

At least 20,000 people have been killed and more than 2.6 million made homeless in northeast Nigeria since the start of Boko Haram's armed campaign in 2009.

Nigeria's government and military maintain that Boko Haram is a spent force, but intermittent attacks and suicide bombings pose a constant threat, particularly in remote areas.

INTERACTIVE: Explore our map to examine the violent attacks in and around Nigeria from 2009 to 2016.

Young women and girls have frequently been used to attack security checkpoints, as well as civilian "soft targets" such as mosques, markets and bus stations.

Nine people were killed in a string of suicide bomb attacks in the city last month around the Eid al-Fitr holiday marking the end of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

The University of Maiduguri, which lies on the edge of the city, has become a frequent target since the start of the year, as it teaches the "Western" education despised by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS) affiliate Boko Haram.

Boko Haram this week released a video showing executions and amputations, suggesting it still holds territory in some areas.

Boko Haram: Regional responsibility?


Source:
News agencies


(
aljazeera.com)

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

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