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Wednesday, 14 January 2015

EU nations wasting no time intensifying police state actions since Paris shootings


Governments throughout Europe have responded to the attacks on in France by moving quickly to push through a raft of anti-democratic measures. They are exploiting the shock and confusion generated by the event in Paris to take actions that have long been prepared, but that have so far encountered resistance.

Immediately after the attacks, the police presence at airports, in front of embassies, government buildings, newspaper offices and public places was reinforced by thousands of security forces in European capitals and major cities.


Heavily armed and camouflaged military troops have been deployed throughout Paris and elsewhere in France, including at the Eiffel Tower and in all public places. Parts of the city resemble a war zone.


On Monday, the Ministry of Defence in Paris announced the deployment of 10,000 troops to maintain peace and order and protect public buildings. In addition, the government has provided 4,700 police officers and gendarmes to guard Jewish schools and synagogues that are considered particularly vulnerable.


After a cabinet meeting on Monday, Defence Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian spoke of a permanent threat. Prime Minister Manuel Valls promised more money for the secret services and more effective surveillance.


At a security summit last weekend in Brussels, the European powers agreed that a European-wide passenger data system must be adopted as soon as possible. Airlines will be obliged to retain the records of their passengers for up to five years. US General Michael Hayden, the former director of the CIA and chief of the NSA, also took part in the meeting. Hayden has been responsible for implementing and expanding much of the illegal and unconstitutional spying programs developed in the United States.


Individual countries throughout Europe are planning their own measures. In Germany, Chancellor Angela Merkel (Christian Democratic Union, CDU) has called for better international intelligence cooperation.


Interior Minister Thomas de Maizière (CDU) stressed on Monday that one of the most important measures in Germany was the deployment of more intelligence staff for the monitoring of Islamic fundamentalist groups. For this, funding would have to be significantly increased, he said.


De Maizière and others have called for the reintroduction of data warehousing. In 2010, the Supreme Court ruled that the mass storage of telephone, e-mail and internet traffic data of all users for several months, without any grounds of suspicion, was legally questionable.


Last year, the European Court of Justice ruled that such monitoring and collection of personal data was illegal. It explained that the storage of communications could not abrogate professional secrets, including those of journalists. Now, in the name of defending the freedom of the press, the German ruling class is pushing to rapidly implement these anti-democratic measures.


Also on Monday, Justice Minister Heiko Maas (Social Democratic Party, SPD) said that individuals accused of traveling to participate in terrorist activity will face even harsher punishment. Up to now, only those attending a terrorist camp in order to prepare an attack could be punished. In the future, it will be a criminal offence to travel abroad with the intention of participating in attacks or to train as a terrorist. It will make no difference whether the accused individual actually arrives at the terrorist camp.




According to political weekly domestic political affairs spokesman Burkhard Lischka (SPD) complained that there are cases in which someone expressed their intentions in a letter or on a social network, but could not be prosecuted. In the future, these individuals could be detained in Germany or abroad.

The Minister of Justice also wants to create a specific criminal offence of financing terrorism. Donations of all sizes supposedly aimed at supporting terrorist activities would be punishable. In the US, such laws have been broadly applied and used to target groups that are not directly connected to any Islamic fundamentalist organizations.


Later this week, the government in Germany will consider a bill that provides for the withdrawal of identity cards from "potential attackers." It is already possible to withdraw a suspect's passport under certain conditions.


In Britain, Prime Minister David Cameron has announced a drastic expansion of Internet surveillance. He wants to ban encryption programmes and news services like WhatsApp.


Cameron said that there must be no "means of communication" that "we cannot read." Previous governments have hesitated in taking such steps, Cameron said, but they are necessary so that, "in extremis," any communication could be obtained with a signed warrant from the Home Secretary.


The "Snoopers Charter", as these proposals came to be known when they were first introduced, failed to pass parliament in 2012. They would require communications companies to retain details of their entire communication traffic for twelve months. Any person who communicates using encryption or sends encrypted files would be required to provide government officials access to cryptographically-protected information. Those refusing to hand over their password could face up to two years in prison.


The Italian government under Prime Minister Matteo Renzi (PD, Democratic Party) has also announced a significant expansion of state powers. Interior Minister Angelino Alfano has announced that he will introduce a bill in the Council of Ministers that will enable the police to withdraw the passport of any terrorism suspect.


In addition, Alfano will provide the police and judiciary with extraordinary powers that will allow increased Internet surveillance. The government is planning to shut down suspicious websites. Internet service providers must cooperate in the future, to "track messages in the network that contribute to radicalization," Alfano said. The government would prohibit providers "from accepting websites that incite terrorist behavior."


The main purpose of this coordinated offensive by the European powers is not the fight against an alleged "Islamist threat." The ruling elites are increasingly turning the continent into a police state as popular resistance against the European Union and its policies is growing. The military employed in the streets of Paris, the building up of the intelligence apparatus and the assault on democratic rights are directed above all at the growing opposition in the European working class to austerity at home and unending war abroad.


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North Korea proposes to suspend nuclear tests - U.S. rejects offer

north korea

© Reuters / KRT via Reuters TV

A Taepodong-2 rocket is seen being launched from the North Korean rocket launch facility in Musudan Ri.



Pyongyang is ready to suspend nuclear tests if the US cancels annual military drills with South Korea, according to North Korea's deputy ambassador to the UN, who once again reiterated the North's offer.

"We the government of the DPRK propose to the US to temporarily suspend the joint military exercises which it conducts every year in South Korea. And if this is the case, we will respond by temporarily suspending nuclear tests which the US is concerned about," An Myong Hun said in New York, as quoted by .


The deputy ambassador was also quick to blame Washington for the "division of the nation," calling US foreign policy "hostile" towards the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK), as every year the US conducts "dangerous military exercises" near the North Korean border.


"For this, the largest scale war exercises undertaken every year in South Korea, jointly by the US and South Korea, must stop immediately," he said.


The North Korean envoy said it is "very important" to avoid the "danger of war," as the US continues to permanently station 30,000 troops in South Korea.


Meanwhile, a two-day joint naval drill on South Korea's east coast started on Tuesday and includes two US destroyers and several South Korean vessels. The and the , each with around 280 sailors on board, are leading the anti-submarine warfare drill. The drill also includes the South Korean destroyer , a submarine, anti-submarine aircraft, and two helicopters. The maritime exercise is reportedly aimed at boosting the allies' readiness to fend off any potential threats from the North, which is believed to have some 70 submarines.


Last Friday, the communist North offered to suspend nuclear tests if Washington agreed to halt this year's drills.


"The DPRK is ready to take such a responsive step as temporarily suspending the nuclear test over which the US is concerned," KCNA said.


The US rejected the proposal with State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki replying on Saturday that nuke tests and US-led drills are two separate issues.


"The DPRK statement that inappropriately links routine US-ROK [South Korea] exercises to the possibility of a nuclear test by North Korea is an implicit threat," Psaki told reporters, calling on the North to "immediately cease all threats, reduce tensions, and take the necessary steps toward denuclearization needed to resume credible negotiations."




North Korea insisted on Tuesday that the official proposal was made through "appropriate channels" and was "meaningful and significant."

"By refusing to accept our proposal ... the United States has shown once again that they will continue to increase attack military capabilities in South Korea while requesting us not to have our own national defence capabilities," the envoy said.




Since 2006, North Korea has conducted three separate nuclear tests, the latest in February 2013. It has threatened to hold more tests in response to a United Nations resolution condemning human rights in the country.

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Father and son turned away from 'Muslim-free' shooting range for being brown-skinned


© JanMorgan.com

Gun Cave Indoor Shooting Range owner Jan Morgan



A father and son say they were turned away from a "Muslim-free" Arkansas shooting range because they are brown-skinned.

The duo, who are not Muslim but are South Asian, said they were questioned about their religion and background while filling out paperwork at the Gun Cave in Hot Springs, reported the Arkansas Times.


The men told a woman at the counter they were from Hot Springs, and she informed them the business was "a Muslim-free shooting range," and if they didn't like that rule they should leave.


The younger man told the newspaper that they were not Muslim, but his father asked about the ban and they discussed the rule.


"Then, all of a sudden, I don't know what went wrong, but she stopped us from filling out the paperwork and said, 'I don't think you guys should be here,'" the younger man said. "She told us to leave or she'd call the cops on us."


The men decided to leave to avoid additional trouble, he said.


"We're brown - I don't know if she assumed we were Muslim," said the younger man, who asked to keep his name out of the newspaper. "When she first asked us, she said, 'I would hope if you were Muslim you guys wouldn't be cowards and would be up front about it.'"


The man said he was born in the U.S. and lived in Hot Springs for 10 years, and he and his father had gone to the shooting range to enjoy "guy time" before he went off to college elsewhere in the state.


He said the shooting range had changed owners since then, and current owner Jan Morgan claims she has thoroughly studied the Quran and found "109 verses commanding hate, murder and terror against all human beings who refuse to submit or convert to Islam."


"Since I have no way of discerning which Muslims will or will not kill in the name of their religion and the commands in their (Quran), I choose to err on the side of caution for the safety of my patrons," Morgan posted on her website.


The newspaper said a call to the gun shop seeking comment was "rewarded with a swift hangup."


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Over 50 anti-Muslim incidents in France since Charlie Hebdo attacks

french police

© Reuters/Youssef Boudlal

French police stand next to the entrance of Paris Mosque as French Muslims arrive for Friday prayers in Paris January 9, 2015.



More than 50 anti-Muslim incidents have happened across France - including shootings - in less than a week since the deadly attack on satirical weekly , according to the nation's Muslim community, which is calling for heightened security.

Among the 54 anti-Muslim incidents, there have been 21 reports of shootings and grenade throwing at Islamic buildings, as well as 33 cases of threats and insults, said Abdallah Zekri, president of the Collective Against Islamophobia in France (CCIF). CCIF is a monitoring body within the Central Council of Muslims.


The figures were provided by the Interior Ministry, Zekri said, and do not include Paris, its suburbs, or the Poitiers mosque fire on Sunday.


Zekri said he has "never seen" so many attacks in such a short time, and has called for heightened security at Muslim places of worship, as well as increased monitoring of social media.


French Prime Minister Manuel Valls told local BFM TV on Monday that there is a need to protect not only "synagogues, Jewish schools, but also mosques," as there have been a number of attacks against Muslims. Earlier on Monday, Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve sent almost 4,700 extra police officers to protect Jewish sites and threatened religious communities.


The Collective Against Islamophobia in France has also launched a campaign on its website to help protect worshippers, calling on the government to raise security awareness.


Seventeen people were killed in Paris last week. Twelve of those died in the shooting at the office of satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo by gunmen claiming they were jihadists. Five others died in the aftermath, as gunmen took people hostage.


Three terrorists were killed in police operations. However, authorities believe as many as six terror cell members may still be at large.


"The work on these attacks, on these terrorist and barbaric acts continues...because we consider that there are most probably some possible accomplices," Prime Minister Manuel Valls told BFM television.


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Political chokehold: Congress may force Palestinian unity govt to recognize "Jewish" Israel in order to receive aid

haniyeh abbas

© Hatem Moussa/AP/The Times of Israel

Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, left, and Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh from Hamas, right, raise their linked arms as they move through the crowd at a special session of parliament in Gaza City, March 17, 2007.



Congress has passed provisions that immediately end funding to the Palestinian Authority in the event of a unity government with Hamas, or a joint government where Hamas exercises "undue influence." Though, there is one exception. If a supposed unity government recognizes Israel as a Jewish state, the aid will continue.

The limitation to the Palestinian Authority's assistance became law on December 16, 2014 as a section in the U.S.'s annual budget on bilateral support. The Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2015 requires a series of redlines to be met on support to the Palestinian government. Notably, no funds "may be obligated for salaries of personnel of the Palestinian Authority located in Gaza," and no funds can go to a "power-sharing government of which Hamas is a member, or that results from an agreement with Hamas and over which Hamas exercises undue influence."


The exemption in the law states a unity government can continue to receive American support, which today runs at $430 million per year, if they: "publicly acknowledged the Jewish state of Israel's right to exist," and re-commit to the Bush administration's Roadmap outlined in 2003, which details a process for a two-states solution.


Language regarding Hamas and U.S. bilateral support was first added by congress to the foreign aid budget following Hamas's 2006 ascension to power in the Gaza Strip. "Congress has put itself very clearly on the record when it comes to Hamas participation in a Palestinian government," noted Americans For Peace Now's Lara Friedman. From that time incremental restrictions have made their way into congressional appropriations, but it was not until 2014 that U.S. elected officials incorporated all of the cut off points to Palestinian Authority aid and added the note about recognizing Israel as a Jewish state. Those restrictions were first outlined in June 2014, two months after the Palestinian leadership announced a merger with Hamas officials in forming the National Consensus Government.


However, the Palestinians have a loophole. There is no "unity government" per se, the arrangement they have today is a "National Consensus Government" that does not accept Hamas as a partner.


"There are no political parties in the National Consensus Government," said the Palestinian Liberation Organization's spokesperson Xavier Abu Eid. He added the overarching Palestinian government is one of technocrats where membership by any party - Hamas or Fatah - is banned. Officials in the government enter as individuals with no recognized affiliation. Of course leaders who are in Palestinian political parties fill the government. But the current and expected future arrangement is that their party relationships stay outside of the consensus authority's doors.


Limiting the U.S.'s annual allocations to the Palestinians, which has been close to $400 million since 2008, has been a longstanding U.S. policy. In the 1980s language was added to the foreign aid omnibus on immediately ending support to the Palestinians if they join any international agencies, which includes the International Criminal Court. However, Palestinians have already tested the waters on America's willingness to suspend funds when they joined UNESCO in 2011. At that time Congress delayed the Palestinian Authorities regular disbursements, but did not axe funding altogether.


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Lost migrating bird makes rare visit to Mankato,Minnesota


© Chad Heins.

This male varied thrush was photographed from a window in the home of Gerald and Jill Binstock of rural Rapidan.



Neighbors probably wondered what's up at Jill and Gerald Binstock's place lately.

People with binoculars - one man stood in their backyard for an hour Saturday - have been showing up outside the rural Rapidan couple's home, obviously looking for something.


Area birdwatchers have been hoping to catch sight of a rare avian visitor to Minnesota. A male varied thrush first started to show up at the Binstocks' feeders Thursday.


"I was watching for the little wanderer," said one of the birders, Chad Heins, who is a biology instructor at Bethany Lutheran College in Mankato.


After an hour or so, Heins got his chance to observe the bird who resembles its cousin, the American robin, but has distinct orange markings near its eyes.


"He was eating cracked corn, but they will eat berries, suet or whatever they find."


Varied thrushes generally travel a winter route from Denali National Park in Alaska down through British Columbia and states on the West Coast, Heins said. A solitary type of bird, the Binstocks' guest probably got in with a bunch of robins during his migration south.


"It's tough to go against the flock," Heins said, offering an explanation of how the thrush traveled all the way to southern Minnesota instead of Oregon.


Most likely, the bunch of birds settled for the night in rural Rapidan, but when the robins left in the morning, the thrush stayed in the protective pines near the Binstocks' deck.


Jill Binstock was the first to notice the different-looking bird eating along side the cardinals and chickadees who regularly dine at her feeders. She called her husband to come take a look.


"That's not a robin," Gerald Binstock said.


A friend's husband suggested the stranger was a varied thrush. He recommended the couple contact Heins.


This week's sighting is the fourth made in Blue Earth County in the past 10 years, Heins said.


"He was either off cycle or lost," said Marty Moen with the public relations department at the University of Minnesota's Bell Museum of Natural History.


Moen suggests the website moumn.org for people interested in recent rare bird sightings in the state.


Jill Binstock said their little visitor is pretty skittish and usually comes to the feeder once or twice a day. The couple's daughter was able to spot the thrush Sunday, but he was a no-show for a man who came looking for him Monday.


The couple does not plan to serve anything special to encourage their special visitor to stick around and they don't keep a list of who they serve at their feeders.


"We just like birds," Jill Binstock said.


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30-foot sinkhole opens up in Lafayette, Colorado


A massive sinkhole suddenly opened up on a street in Lafayette on Monday morning, collapsing into an old mine shaft and nearly swallowing an SUV.

The 30-foot by 15-foot hole on East Cleveland Street near Foote Avenue is between 15 and 20 feet deep and partially filled with water.


A man who lives in the area had an extremely close call when his car almost fell in early this morning.


"In the moment, my truck was almost on top of me," said Lafayette resident Aurelio Zambrano.


Zambrano's white Jeep was trapped on the edge of the massive sinkhole.


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Holding back tears, Zambrano told 7NEWS reporter Marc Stewart he kept thinking of his wife and three daughters during the ordeal.

"I was scared because I was thinking, I'm going inside the hole with my truck," said Zambrano.


He quickly called police as the gap seemed to be growing.


"The problem is the bottom -- it was still open and then I heard water in the bottom," Zambrano said.


Eventually, rescuers threw Zambrano a rope. While his legs were temporarily numb from fear, he climbed to safety.


When paramedics first treated Zambrano, they said his blood pressure was high, but once he had a chance to calm down his numbers improved.


"All I could see that was holding him up was the front bumper and the back bumper," said neighbor Donna Carbone. Both of the tires were in the hole, there was no pavement. He was as calm as calm could be. Of course, you're sitting there and you don't want to be jumping around, just in case."


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