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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
5/1/2013 10:52:21 AM

Court seizes property to help Bangladesh victims


SAVAR, Bangladesh (AP) — A top Bangladesh court on Tuesday ordered the government to "immediately" confiscate the property of a collapsed building's owner, as thousands of protesters demanding the death penalty for the man clashed with police, leaving 100 people injured.

A two-judge panel of the High Court also asked the central bank to freeze the assets of the owners of the five garment factories in the building, and use the money to pay the salaries and other benefits of their workers.

The order came after police produced the building owner,Mohammed Sohel Rana, and the factory owners in court. The order did not elaborate but it was implied that the salaries of the dead victims would be paid to their relatives.

At least 386 people were killed and 2,500 people escaped with injuries when the illegally constructed eight-story Rana Plazacollapsed on April 24. According to one estimate, about 1,000 people are missing, indicating that the death toll could end up in the neighborhood of 1,400.

The collapse is the deadliest disaster to hit Bangladesh's garment industry, which is worth $20 billion annually and supplies global retailers.

Rescue efforts have now been suspended and authorities are using heavy machinery to clear the broken and crushed concrete slabs to get to the bottom floor, where emergency workers expect to find many more dead bodies.

On Tuesday, clashes broke out again between thousands of garment workers and police in Savar, leaving at least 100 people injured, the United News of Bangladesh news agency reported.

It said police attacked with sticks when the workers, who were demanding the death penalty for Rana and news of the missing people, tried to break the security cordon around the collapsed building. At least 22 of the injured were hospitalized, it said.

The protesters also smashed at least 20 vehicles in the area, the agency said.

Earlier, people had waited patiently at the site for news of missing relatives, holding their pictures and identity cards as they watched cranes lifting sections of ceilings and floors from the rubble. Emergency workers in hard hats used drilling and cutting machines to break up the slabs into manageable pieces.

Ratna Akhtar, looking for her husband at a nearby school ground, wailed: "Give me my husband back. At least I want to see his dead body if not alive."

Most of the bodies have been handed to families except 49 that have been kept at the morgue of state-run Dhaka Medical College Hospital for identification. Mahmud Ali of the Bangladesh Red Crescent Society said many more bodies are believed trapped under the rubble of the building, judging by stench of decomposing flesh still emanating.

Zillur Rahman Chowdhury, a Dhaka district administrator, put the number of missing at 100, based on the information received from the families of the missing.

But volunteers from the Social Welfare Club based at the Jahangirnagar University say the official tally is incomplete because people have little faith in the government and don't bother reporting their losses.

Ahsan Imu, a volunteer at the club, said that based on information gathered from families at the site, at least 1,000 people may be missing. However, he cautioned that there may be some duplication in the list.

On Monday, a magistrate gave police 15 days to interrogate Rana, the building owner. He was arrested on Sunday in a border town as he tried to flee to India. He is being questioned on charges of negligence, illegal construction and forcing workers to join work. The crimes he is accused of carry a maximum punishment of seven years. More charges could be added later. Rana had permission to build a five-story building but added three more floors illegally.

The death toll has surpassed the one in a garment-factory fire five months ago that killed 112 people and brought widespread pledges to improve worker-safety standards in Bangladesh. But since then, very little has changed.

"I think it is a wakeup call for the nation, a wakeup call for the industry and for the trade unions," said Shirin Akter, founding president of Karmojibi Nari, a Dhaka-based Bangladeshi group that lobbies for the rights of women in the workplace.

Bangladesh's garment industry was the third-largest in the world in 2011, after China and Italy, having grown rapidly in the past decade.

Among the garment makers in the building were Phantom Apparels, Phantom Tac, Ether Tex, New Wave Style and New Wave Bottoms. Altogether, they produced several million shirts, pants and other garments a year.

The New Wave companies, according to their website, make clothing for several major North American and European retailers. Britain's Primark has acknowledged it was using a factory in Rana Plaza. It said in a statement Monday that it is providing emergency aid and will pay compensation to victims who worked for its supplier.

"Primark notes the fact that its supplier shared the building with those of other retailers. We are fully aware of our responsibility. We urge these other retailers to come forward and offer assistance," it said.

Canadian company Loblaw Inc., which also got its Joe Fresh clothing line made in Rana Plaza, said Monday it will ensure that victims and their families "receive benefits now and in the future."

Spokeswoman Julija Hunter said the company is still working out the details, but plans to deliver support "in the best and most meaningful way possible."

Many workers had complained after the factory fire in November that they did not receive compensation in time.

Wal-Mart said none of its clothing had been authorized to be made in the facility, but it is investigating whether there was any unauthorized production.

___

Associated Press writers Gillian Wong and Chris Blake in Dhaka and Cassandra Vinograd in London contributed to this report.

"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?
5/1/2013 10:56:02 AM
Non-Muslim Arrested with Explosives, Media Fail to Notice















On April 8, eight days before the Boston Marathon bombing, 27-year-old Mykyta Panasenko was arrested on a New Jersey Transit train carrying two homemade explosives. Specifically, Panasenko was found on a train leaving Hoboken, New Jersey, and bound for Suffern in upstate New York, carrying two improvised explosive devices (IEDs) consisting of a cylinder filled with Pyrodex, a black powder.

That’s a lot of dangerous materials to be carrying on a commuter train traveling through densely populated areas of northern New Jersey and midtown Manhattan.

Panasenko has been charged with “recklessly creating widespread risk of injury or damage to a building which normally contains 25 or more persons by constructing the explosive devices.” But for all this, as Areej Elahi-Siddiqui points out, there was no mention of Panasenko until last week when the Jersey Journal reported on his hearing at the Central Judicial Processing court on Wednesday. Why hadn’t the Jersey City police reported about him earlier?

Panasenko was not Muslim, dark-skinned or Midde Eastern, and Elahi-Siddiqui asserts that this — not that anyone would admit it — was why his arrest was not reported till after three weeks. Even then, the whole incident “still failed to grab any headlines by the usual fear-mongering news channels.” Panasenko was indeed caught before his explosive devices detonated and no one was hurt. Elahi-Siddiqui comments:

However, both the Underwear Bomber and the Times Square Car-Bomber had made headlines across America — for days, as I can vividly recall — despite the fact that their attempts at terrorizing innocents, too, had been just as unsuccessful. However, unlike Panasenko, they were the kind of terrorists who the media wants you to put a face to.

A native of Kiev, Ukraine, Panasenko lives in Jersey City, New Jersey, and works as a mathematician for High 5 Games, which makes games for casinos. Someone who knew him reportedly tipped off authorities. Jersey City Police Deputy Chief, Peter Nalbach, says the Jersey City Policy Department’s Bomb Squad responded to Panasenko’s home after receiving information from the FBI and the NYPD. Materials used to make an explosive device were also found in his home.

Since media reports have appeared, Pashenko has been quoted in the Huffington Post as saying

“I decided, in a pretty foolish idea, to experiment with gunpowder and make little firework type things. I decided to take them to the woods somewhere where no one lives, and watch them explode, for fun – for lack of a better word. Of course this was a bad decision, I do admit that.”

Fireworks being illegal in New York and New Jersey, he could say “bad decision” quite a few times again.

According to a press release from Jersey City authorities provided late on Friday, “There is no indication at this point of the investigation that [Panasenko] intended to detonate a device in his building or on the transit system.” Panasenko was released without bail and now faces serious charges including creating a risk of widespread injury or damage, says Hudson County Assistant Prosecutor Gene Rubino.

The Hudson County prosecutor also says that Panasenko “would not have been released without bail if anyone in law enforcement thought he posed a threat to the public.” In the Huffington Post, Panasenko also said that “because of misinformation, I now have to explain to everyone that I have no links to terrorism, which is pretty ridiculous.” Both the county prosecutor and Panasenko are underscoring his having anything to do with being a “threat to the public” (despite carrying explosive substances in public places). Would he have even been able to say the whole incident is “pretty ridiculous” if his circumstances had been different?

Related Care2 Coverage

How Even A Terrorist Can Buy Explosive Powders Without A Background Check

The Boston Bombings, Chechnya and the Tsarnaev Brothers

5 Reasons Panic is Not the Right Response


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Photo via davidwhitewolf/Flickr



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"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?
5/1/2013 11:00:19 AM
National Parks Are Threatened By Oil And Gas Drilling














Written by Jessica Goad

Here’s another example of how “the score card shows that the industry is winning,” as the NY Times put it last year. The National Parks Conservation Association today released a new report warning of the risks that oil and gas drilling pose to national parks.

In “National Parks and Hydraulic Fracturing: Balancing Energy Needs, Nature, and America’s National Heritage” the group writes:

…these early indications of harm to America’s natural resources and national parks suggest the wisdom of a careful, considered approach to hydraulic fracturing, rather than blind complicity and a zealous rush toward monetary riches.

National parks are managed under a precautionary principle designed to err on the conservative side of any potentially negative impacts. The same principle should be applied to fracking activities on lands adjacent to our national parks.

One of the case studies on parks already impacted by drilling featured in the report is Theodore Roosevelt National Park in North Dakota. The Bakken oil boom has brought with it noise pollution, bright lights that ruin the night skies, and significant traffic on the way to the park. See a short video about those impacts here:


The ways that oil and gas drilling can affect our national parks enumerated in today’s report include:

- Noise from compressors, diesel engines, and traffic disturb the quiet we seek in parks

- Visual blight on the landscape, such as oil wells and rigs that can be seen from inside parks

- Lights from rigs, cell towers, and additional infrastructure that damage parks’ famous night skies

- New roads, pipelines, and well sites that make it difficult for wildlife to live in the area

- Massive amounts of water used in the fracking process that may affect surface and groundwater within parks

- Diminished air quality inside of parks from the hazardous chemicals that drilling produces like carbon monoxide, nitrogen dioxide, and ozone

In addition to pointing out the impacts of drilling on national parks, the group proposes a number of policy recommendations, such as a “measured, thoughtful approach to fracking,” making the National Park Service a formal cooperating agency in decisions about drilling around parks, and implementation of strong federal oversight in the Bureau of Land Management’s upcoming hydraulic fracturing rule and regulations to cut pollution from oil and gas wells under the Clean Air Act.

Not only is drilling around national parks worrisome, as today’s report points out, but already there are 12 park units that have drilling inside of their borders, and 30 others that could have drilling in the future:

Oil and gas companies benefit from more special treatment than just the ability to drill in and around America’s most special places. For example, they get $40 billion in tax breaks, low royalty rates on public lands, and continue to rake in astounding profits.

This post was originally published by Climate Progress.


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Photo: jimmywayne/flickr


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"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?
5/1/2013 11:02:12 AM

Russia bars planes from using Syrian airspace

Russia bars its airlines from flying over Syria after civilian plane reportedly faced threat

Associated Press -

This citizen journalism image provided by The Syrian Revolution Against Bashar Assad which has been authenticated based on its contents and other AP reporting, shows Syrian rebels, right, standing near a damaged warplane, at Abu Dhour military airbase after it fell due to clashes with rebels, in the northern province of Idlib, Syria, Tuesday April 30, 2013. In the north, rebels besieged military airport facilities, including Kweiras northeast of Aleppo city and the Nairab military base, adjacent to Aleppo's civilian airport, the country's second largest. Activists in Syria, who are part of the Observatory's network of informants, also reported clashes around an air base in northern Idlib province and near air bases in the provincial capital of Dier el-Zour in the oil-rich province in Syria's east, along the border with Iraq. (AP Photo/The Syrian Revolution Against Bashar Assad)

MOSCOW (AP) -- Russia has banned its airlines from flying over Syria after a civilian plane was reported to have come under an unspecified threat in Syrian airspace.

The ban was announced Tuesday by the state air transport agency, Rosaviatsiya.

The previous day, the Transport Ministry said the crew of a Nordwind charter flight carrying 159 people from the Egyptian resort of Sharm-al-Sheikh to the Russian city of Kazan saw war activities on the ground that endangered the plane. The aircraft landed in Kazan safely.

Russian officials did not describe Monday's threat, but Rosaviatsiya's statement noted that some airlines "continued to operate in the airspace of the country in which hostilities are using missiles."

Russia has steadfastly supported the regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad as it battles an armed rebellion.


"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?
5/1/2013 11:03:44 AM

School shooting parents urge NJ to limit ammo

Parents of Connecticut school shootings urge 10-bullet limit for ammunition magazines in NJ

Associated Press -

Mark Barden, right, reacts while standing next to his wife, Jackie Barden, during a news conference at the New Jersey statehouse, Tuesday, April 30, 2013, in Trenton, N.J. The Bardens lost their 7-year-old son Daniel during the school shooting in Newtown, Conn., and urged the New Jersey Legislature to limit the number of bullets in ammunition magazines. Family members of the Newtown victims joined gun control advocates to discuss need for New Jersey state Senate and Gov. Chris Christie to support Assembly-approved measure to limit ammunition magazines to 10 bullets. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez)

TRENTON, N.J. (AP) -- The parents of four of the 20 children killed in the Connecticut school shootings in December stood with the New Jersey Assembly on Tuesday to urge the Senate to limit the number of bullets in ammunition magazines.

Their plea came as a Senate committee considered several measures designed to strengthen state gun laws — but not a proposal to limit magazine capacity to 10 bullets, five less than state law now allows. The Assembly passed the bill in February.

Nelba Marquez-Greene, whose daughter, Ana, was among those killed at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, reminded lawmakers that 11 children were able to escape as shooter Adam Lanza reloaded. Assembly Majority Leader Lou Greenwald noted the 13th bullet in a magazine killed Christina-Taylor Green, the 9-year-old who died in the Tuscon, Ariz., shooting that wounded U.S. Rep. Gabby Giffords.

"I support the 2nd Amendment and I have no interest in taking away anyone's gun rights, but I know that outside of a shooting range, the only use for large capacity magazines is to kill as many people as possible," Marques-Greene said at a Statehouse news conference. "Limiting the sale of high-capacity magazines does not affect a hunter's ability to enjoy their sport. While there are many unanswered questions about Dec. 14, we know that lives have been saved when a shooter has had to stop and reload."

Although New Jersey already has the second-strictest gun laws in the country, behind only New York, each branch of the Democrat-led Legislature and Republican Gov. Chris Christie have proposed separate packages of gun violence bills designed to close loopholes in current laws, to address mental illness and gun ownership, and to strengthen penalties for gun trafficking. One of Christie's bills requires parental consent for a minor to buy or rent some violent video games; the Senate version proposes parents be educated about violent videos because some legal scholars say Christie's proposal won't stand up in court.

Only the Assembly has moved to limit magazine capacity. It's part of a 22-bill package the chamber fast-tracked within two months of the Newtown massacre.

Senate President Stephen Sweeney on Tuesday indicated his unwillingness to go along.

"Twenty years ago New Jersey implemented a limit on the size of ammunition (magazines). For two decades that limit has been effective," he said in a statement. "What we must focus on now is preventing guns from getting into the hands of those who should not have them. That means addressing issues of mental health, background checks, illegal guns, and straw purchases."

Greenwald has said the Assembly should not consider the Senate bills without the magazine limit.

Two North Jersey Democrats, Senate Majority Leader Loretta Weinberg and Sen. Nia Gill, have introduced legislation that would limit ammunition magazines to 10 rounds. But their bill is not part of Sweeney's package and it's not known whether the Senate president will agree to give the bill a hearing.

Christie hasn't said what he'd do if a magazine limit reaches his desk, but it was not among the recommendations of an anti-violence task force on which he based his recommendations.

National Rifle Association lobbyist Darin Goens, meanwhile, said the Senate hearing was typical of those he's attended in other states.

"You don't see the criminals. You don't the drug dealers (at the hearing)," he said. "They don't care what you pass. They're going to continue to break the law, no matter what we do today in this building. It's only going to affect the law-abiding citizen and it's going to do nothing to impact crime."

He said the Legislature's reaction was also typical: pass some bills so lawmakers can say they did something — even if their action will have no impact on violence.

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

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