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MEAN STREETS MEDIA

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

Iraq ( AL-Qaeda fighters urged to leave Fallujah to avoid showdown )

BAGHDAD: Tribal leaders in the besieged city of Fallujah warned Al-Qaeda-linked fighters to leave to avoid a military showdown, echoing a call by Iraq’s prime minister Wednesday that they give up their fight as the government pushes to regain control of mainly Sunni areas west of Baghdad.
The warning came as gunmen attacked an Iraqi army barracks in a Sunni area north of Baghdad, killing 12 soldiers. Seven soldiers were wounded in the assault in Diyala province, authorities said.
The United Nations and the Red Cross, meanwhile, said Fallujah and nearby areas are facing mounting humanitarian concerns as food and water supplies start to run out.

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 Sectarian tensions have been on the rise for months in Sunni-dominated Anbar province as minority Sunnis protested what they perceive as discrimination and random arrests by the Shiite-led government. Violence spiked after the Dec. 28 arrest of a Sunni lawmaker sought on terrorism charges and the government’s dismantling of a year-old anti-government Sunni protest camp in the provincial capital of Ramadi.
Last week, Al-Qaeda-linked gunmen seized control of Ramadi and nearby Fallujah, cities that were among the bloodiest battlefields for US forces during the Iraq war. The militants overran police stations and military posts, freed prisoners and set up their own checkpoints.
The United States and Iran have offered material help for the Iraqi government but say they won’t send in troops.
Speaking in his weekly television address, Prime Minister Nouri Al-Maliki hinted of a possible pardon for supporters of Al-Qaeda’s local branch, the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, or ISIL, if they abandon the fight.
“The war that is being fought by the Iraqi security forces, tribes and all segments of Iraqi society against Al-Qaeda and its affiliates is a sacred war,” he said. “I call on those who were lured to be part of the terrorism machine led by Al-Qaeda to return to reason.”
In exchange, he promised that his government will “open a new page to settle their cases so that they won’t be fuel for the war that is led by Al-Qaeda.”
Iraq’s government has rushed additional troops and military equipment to Anbar and has been carrying out airstrikes in an effort to dislodge the militants.
Skirmishes between Iraqi forces and militants broke out on the outskirts of Fallujah and Ramadi again Wednesday, according to witnesses, and militants blew up a small bridge on the edge of Ramadi, officials in Anbar said. There was no immediate report of casualties.
At least four crew members were killed when a military helicopter crashed in Anbar, according to army and government officials in the province and state TV. The officials said the cause was poor weather conditions in the area and there was no indication militants brought it down. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to release the information.
Influential tribal leaders have been meeting to try to find a way out of the crisis and demanded that Al-Qaeda members holed up in Fallujah get out of town, said provincial spokesman Dhari Al-Rishawi.
“They agreed on expelling ISIL from Fallujah. The told them to withdraw ... or face an attack by the tribes and the army,” he said.
That message was echoed over mosque loudspeakers late Tuesday, which also called on fleeing families to come back.
Al-Rishawi and residents reached by phone in Fallujah said at least some of the militants had left the city, which is about 40 miles (65 kilometers) west of Baghdad.
It was not clear how many had gone, or whether they were taking up new positions in different parts of the city.
“We, the residents and the tribes, don’t want Al-Qaeda in the city. We don’t want to see the same violence we saw when the Americans were here,” said Ayad Al-Halbosi, a 22-year-old teacher in Fallujah.
Markets in the city began reopening Wednesday and some families returned to their homes, though residents complained of shortages of fuel and cooking gas. Civilian cars and trucks were seen on the road and traffic policemen were on the streets.
The militant gains in Anbar are posing the most serious challenge to the Shiite-led government since American forces withdrew in late 2011 after years of bitter warfare following the 2003 invasion that ousted Saddam Hussein’s Sunni-led regime and propelled the formerly repressed Shiite majority to power.
The UN envoy to Iraq, Nickolay Mladenov, warned that the humanitarian situation in Anbar is likely to worsen as military operations continue.
Food and water supplies in Fallujah are beginning to run out, and more than 5,000 families have fled to neighboring provinces to escape the fighting, he said.
“The UN agencies are working to identify the needs of the population and prepare medical supplies, food and non-food items for distribution if safe passage can be ensured,” Mladenov said in a statement.
The International Committee of the Red Cross also voiced concerns about the growing risks to Anbar residents, particularly in Fallujah. Patrick Youssef, head of the Red Cross delegation in Iraq, warned that ongoing power outages and dwindling medical supplies could leave health care facilities unable to provide proper care.
“We are ready to deliver more life-saving supplies and other humanitarian aid immediately to the areas hardest hit,” Youssef said. “But we need to be given easier access and the necessary security guarantees.”
Tensions have been simmering in Iraq since December 2012, when the Sunni community staged protests to denounce what they say is second-class treatment by Al-Maliki’s Shiite-led government.
Al-Qaeda militants, emboldened by the civil war in neighboring Syria, have sought to position themselves as the Sunnis’ champions against the government, though major Sunni tribes in Anbar and elsewhere oppose the group’s extremist ideology and are fighting against it.

Sports News ( Follow the bouncing ball ) Hmm


Japan ( 4,000 police hunt for rape suspect who escaped from prosecutors office )

 

A massive manhunt was underway in Japan on Wednesday with 4,000 police officers, 850 vehicles, sniffer dogs, helicopters and boats scouring Kawasaki for an escaped rape suspect.

4,000 police hunt for rape suspect who escaped from prosecutors office in KawasakiYuta Sugimoto, 20, was being questioned over claims he was part of a gang that raped and robbed a woman on the streets of Kawasaki on Jan 2.
According to police, Sugimoto was speaking to his lawyer on the sixth floor of the Yokohama District Prosecutors Office building. He asked to use the restroom on the 4th floor. A police officer removed his handcuffs but left a restraint attached to Sugimoto’s waist. In the few short moments when he was not being watched by the officer in charge, Sugimoto slipped from his bindings and escaped the building. The officer gave chase but lost him.
On Wednesday, police said that Sugimoto’s clothes were discovered in the garden of a nearby house.
Police in the area mounted the massive operation when the alarm was raised, flooding the streets with thousands of officers and a huge amount of equipment, the Sankei Shimbun newspaper reported.
Police say Sugimoto was arrested Monday along with another man. The case itself was not going to be made public, but that changed when the suspect vanished, the official said.
Local schools instructed students not to venture out alone. “It is frightening that he is still on the run,” one mother of an elementary school child told Fuji TV.

 

Venezuela ( Monica Spear 29 " killed in Venezuela with her husband " )

Police sources reported that the actress Monica Spear , 29 years old , was killed in Venezuela with her husband , the British Thomas Henry Berry.
The assassination of former Miss Venezuela was perpetrated on the Puerto Cabello- Valencia motorway 's central Carabobo state after 10:00 pm on Monday in an apparent robbery attempt. Globovision and private broadcasters Radio Union argued that the couple allegedly resisted a robbery.According to reports , the actress , her husband, and their daughter were shot when the three were waiting to be helped into the Toyota, 2002, in which they were traveling and stopped apparently by a technical malfunction . Both died at the scene .Media reports indicate that his daughter was gunshot wound in the leg. The actress was in Venezuela on vacation.Spear was the mother of a girl named Maya, five years.Her last novel was " Forbidden Passion " , which premiered on Telemundo in January 2013 and in which she starred alongside actor Jencarlos Canela and Rebecca Jones. The novel, which was recorded in Miami, came to a head when Bianca, the character played Spear, takes her own life .Spear was born in 1984 in the city of Maracaibo, Zulia state capital ( northwest) , won the beauty pageant Miss Venezuela in 2004 and the following year took part in the Miss Universe in Bangkok , Thailand , staying as fourth among the finalists .After that was done and actress participated in several soap operas , including " My cousin Ciela ", " Calle Luna , Calle Sol ", " The Perfect Woman ", " Wild Flower " and " Forbidden Passion " .Venezuela is one of the most violent countries in the world with 39 murders per 100,000 inhabitants, according to the said last week Interior Minister Miguel Rodriguez figures to rebut the NGO Venezuelan Observatory of Violence ( SVO ) which increased the rate to 79 per 100,000 inhabitantsRead more: http://www.elblogdelnarco.net/2014/01/matan-la-ex-miss-venezuela-la-actriz.html # ixzz2ppPFDgfaFollow us : @ MundoNarco on Twitter

Mexico ( Cop killed in raid of " Knights Templar " ) Drug Wars

Pakistan ( Woman awaiting " Execution " on false accusations of blasphemy ) Sharia law

Imprisoned Pakistani Catholic Asia Bibi writes to Pope Francis saying only God can free her

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Asia Bibi is in prison awaiting execution on false accusations of blasphemy. Only God can free her because Christians in the West don't dare to speak out on her behalf: "Talk about extreme, militant Islamists and the atrocities that they have perpetrated globally might undercut the positive achievements that we Catholics have attained in our inter-religious dialogue with devout Muslims." -- Robert McManus, Roman Catholic Bishop of Worcester, Massachusetts, February 8, 2013
So Asia Bibi and other Pakistani Christians accused of blasphemy have no friend, no protector, and no spokesman.
"Imprisoned Pakistani Catholic Asia Bibi Writes to Pope Francis Saying Only God Can Free Her," by Jeremy Reynalds for Assist News, January 4:
According to an article in the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines News Service (CBCP News) relying on a Dec. 31 report in the Italian daily Tempi, Asia Bibi said, "I also hope that every Christian has been able to celebrate the Christmas just past with joy. Like many other prisoners, I also celebrated the birth of the Lord in prison in Multan, here in Pakistan." She continued by saying that "only God will be able to free me" and made a point of thanking the 'Renaissance Education Foundation" that helped make her "dream come true" to live Christmas with her husband and children by bringing them to Multan.
"I would have liked to be in St. Peter's for Christmas to pray with you," she told Pope Francis, "but I trust in God's plan for me and hopefully it will be achieved next year."
Bibi is awaiting the conclusion of an appeals process after being incarcerated for four and a half years without trial.
Working as a farmhand in June 2009, she was asked to fetch water for some of her co-workers. She complied, but some of her Muslim colleagues refused to drink the water as they considered Christians to be "unclean."
CBCP News said arguments followed (there was already a running feud between Bibi and a neighbor over property damage), and witnesses maintain that Bibi verbally abused the two women, their religion, and the prophet Muhammad.
A few days later, complaints were made to a cleric about these alleged derogatory comments, resulting in a mob coming to her house and beating her and members of her family.
Bibi was rescued by the police but, under pressure from the crowd, they charged her under Section 295 C of the Pakistan Penal Code, the country's notorious anti-blasphemy law.
"I am very grateful to all the churches that are praying for me and fighting for my freedom," CBCP News said she continued in the letter.
Bibi added, "I do not know how long I can go on and on. If I am still alive, it is thanks to the strength that your prayers give me. I have met many people who speak and fight for me. Unfortunately still to no avail. At this time I just want to trust the mercy of God, who can do everything, that all is possible. Only He can liberate me."
Bibi was also grateful to all the people who work and raise funds for her cause. She then talked about her daily hardships.
"This winter I am facing many problems: my cell has no heating and no suitable door for shelter from the bitter cold," CBCP News said she told the Pope. "Also the security measures are not adequate, I do not have enough money for daily needs, and I am very far from Lahore so my family cannot help me."
She concluded by asking Pope Francis to accept her best wishes for the new year. "I know you pray for me with all your heart," she wrote. "And this gives me confidence that one day my freedom will be possible. Certain to be remembered in your prayers, I greet you with affection. Asia Bibi, your daughter in the faith."

Pakistan ( Taliban kill 6 men " While they pray at Holy place " ) Sharia Law ????

KARACHI: The bodies of six men with their throats slit have been found near a holy place on the outskirts of Pakistan’s largest city Karachi, police said Tuesday.
The corpses were lying near the grave of Ayub Shah Bukhari Three of the dead worked at the same place while the others were frequent visitors.
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Police said a note reading “Stop visiting shrines — from the Pakistani Taliban” was found at the scene along with a bloodstained knife.
In one of the bloodiest episodes, at least 50 people were killed in April 2011 in a suicide attack on a shrine in the city of Dera Ghazi Khan.
But senior police officer Amir Farooqi voiced caution over the note, said that he would not draw any conclusions until further investigation.
Police have detained some suspects and sent the bloodstained knife for forensic tests.
Karachi, Pakistan’s economic hub, has been plagued for years by ethnic, political, sectarian and criminal violence.