World News Random, Random
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ashkor87
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Re: World News Random, Random
All this is the legacy of the 'great powers' - Britain, France.. who drew some arbitrary lines and created nations out of nothing.. the hapless people there are paying for it, and will continue to pay forver.. the poor people of Syria will probably have to endure an Afganistan-like Islamic state now.. the current leader is supposed to be moderate but, as we all know, moderates seldom surive - it is the most ruthless who come out on top..sigh...'the centre cannot hold'
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ti-amie
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Re: World News Random, Random
Anonymous @youranoncentral.bsky.social
·
1m
Th plane allegedly carrying Assad dropped from an altitude of over 3,650 meters to 1,070 in minutes, just outside Lebanese airspace north of Akkar. Reportedly Lebanon denied the plane permission to land. Rumours are rife, no confirmation if that was his plane or the fate of those onboard.
·
1m
Th plane allegedly carrying Assad dropped from an altitude of over 3,650 meters to 1,070 in minutes, just outside Lebanese airspace north of Akkar. Reportedly Lebanon denied the plane permission to land. Rumours are rife, no confirmation if that was his plane or the fate of those onboard.
“Do not grow old, no matter how long you live. Never cease to stand like curious children before the Great Mystery into which we were born.” Albert Einstein
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Suliso
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Re: World News Random, Random
That is true BUT it's also not obvious what lines could have been drawn in this area. That is if the goal is homogeneity instead of Indian style living together.ashkor87 wrote: ↑Sun Dec 08, 2024 3:47 am All this is the legacy of the 'great powers' - Britain, France.. who drew some arbitrary lines and created nations out of nothing.. the hapless people there are paying for it, and will continue to pay forver.. the poor people of Syria will probably have to endure an Afganistan-like Islamic state now.. the current leader is supposed to be moderate but, as we all know, moderates seldom surive - it is the most ruthless who come out on top..sigh...'the centre cannot hold'
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ponchi101
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Re: World News Random, Random
Just like in South America, the fixation with the past remains strong in other parts of the world. It is NEVER our fault; nope, our corrupt, inefficient governments are not to be blamed, and our lack of long term planning, meaning setting up a long term goal like the Japanese and the Koreans did after WWII and the Korean war, are not the reason why we are third world.
Nope. It all goes back to something that happened over 200 years ago, at a time in which technological differences were way smaller than today.
It is not us, it was the Brits.
It is not us, it was the French.
It is not us, it was the Spaniards.
And we will never prosper and become productive, viable countries until we decide to think of the now.
Nope. It all goes back to something that happened over 200 years ago, at a time in which technological differences were way smaller than today.
It is not us, it was the Brits.
It is not us, it was the French.
It is not us, it was the Spaniards.
And we will never prosper and become productive, viable countries until we decide to think of the now.
Ego figere omnia et scio supellectilem
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ti-amie
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Re: World News Random, Random
Tears of joy and sadness as ‘disappeared’ Syrians emerge from Assad’s prisons
Men, women and children, many jailed for speaking out against regime, reunite with their families
Bethan McKernan
Sun 8 Dec 2024 19.29 GMT
Share
As Syrian rebels led by the Islamist group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) captured city after city on the road to Damascus, forcing Bashar al-Assad to flee the country, they also opened the doors of the regime’s notorious prisons, into which upwards of 100,000 people disappeared during nearly 14 years of civil war.
Many emerged frail and emaciated into the bright December sunlight, greeted by weeping family members who had no idea they were still alive. Some struggled to comprehend that Assad was gone; a few held even longer had never even been told that he had succeeded his father, Hafez, who died in 2000.
Verified videos from Damascus showed dozens of women and small children being held in cells, the rebels opening the doors telling them not to be afraid.
The prisons infamous for torture in and around Damascus itself – including Sednaya, the most notorious, where satellite imagery showed a new crematorium was built in 2017 to dispose of bodies – were broken open early on Sunday. There are conflicting reports of underground cell blocks yet to be reached.
The photos and videos of reunited families are bittersweet. The stories of the prisoners are astonishing; they will take years to be told in full, further grim evidence of the crimes the Assad family committed against so many of their own people.
Al-Arabiya broadcast footage of a family arriving in Damascus to meet their released son, the elderly mother’s voice breaking with emotion as she embraced him for the first time in 14 years.
Raghad al-Tatary, a pilot who refused to bomb the city of Hama during the uprising against Hafez al-Assad in the 1980s, was freed after 43 years; Tal al-Mallouhi, 19 when she was arrested in 2009 for a blogpost criticising state corruption, was found alive.
One shaven-headed, shaking man in Sednaya had been so ill-treated he had lost his memory and struggled to talk. His family said he had been 20 and a medical student when he vanished 13 years ago.
Thousands of protesters were arrested during the 2011 Arab spring revolution for speaking out against the government. Leaked documents showed the state security apparatus viewed imprisonment as a key way to crush dissent. As the war deepened, the vast network of security branches, detention centres and prisons grew notorious for their brutal torture methods, which rights groups said were applied on an industrial scale.
Many Syrians were over the years brusquely informed by authorities that their relatives had been executed, sometimes years earlier.
For many, there is still an agonising wait, hoping against the odds that loved ones will be found alive. At a large bus station in central Damascus, the activist Abdulkafi al-Hamdo, who fled Aleppo with his young family in 2016 for years in exile in Idlib, filmed himself meeting anxious families waiting for cars and buses that were dropping off freed prisoners on Sunday.
One woman said her son was 18 when he was seized in 2012; she has not heard or seen anything of him since. “All these families here have a lot of fear in their hearts that their sons are dead,” she said. “Some of them have a small hope, a window of hope, that their children will be alive.”
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/ ... ds-prisons
Men, women and children, many jailed for speaking out against regime, reunite with their families
Bethan McKernan
Sun 8 Dec 2024 19.29 GMT
Share
As Syrian rebels led by the Islamist group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) captured city after city on the road to Damascus, forcing Bashar al-Assad to flee the country, they also opened the doors of the regime’s notorious prisons, into which upwards of 100,000 people disappeared during nearly 14 years of civil war.
Many emerged frail and emaciated into the bright December sunlight, greeted by weeping family members who had no idea they were still alive. Some struggled to comprehend that Assad was gone; a few held even longer had never even been told that he had succeeded his father, Hafez, who died in 2000.
Verified videos from Damascus showed dozens of women and small children being held in cells, the rebels opening the doors telling them not to be afraid.
The prisons infamous for torture in and around Damascus itself – including Sednaya, the most notorious, where satellite imagery showed a new crematorium was built in 2017 to dispose of bodies – were broken open early on Sunday. There are conflicting reports of underground cell blocks yet to be reached.
The photos and videos of reunited families are bittersweet. The stories of the prisoners are astonishing; they will take years to be told in full, further grim evidence of the crimes the Assad family committed against so many of their own people.
Al-Arabiya broadcast footage of a family arriving in Damascus to meet their released son, the elderly mother’s voice breaking with emotion as she embraced him for the first time in 14 years.
Raghad al-Tatary, a pilot who refused to bomb the city of Hama during the uprising against Hafez al-Assad in the 1980s, was freed after 43 years; Tal al-Mallouhi, 19 when she was arrested in 2009 for a blogpost criticising state corruption, was found alive.
One shaven-headed, shaking man in Sednaya had been so ill-treated he had lost his memory and struggled to talk. His family said he had been 20 and a medical student when he vanished 13 years ago.
Thousands of protesters were arrested during the 2011 Arab spring revolution for speaking out against the government. Leaked documents showed the state security apparatus viewed imprisonment as a key way to crush dissent. As the war deepened, the vast network of security branches, detention centres and prisons grew notorious for their brutal torture methods, which rights groups said were applied on an industrial scale.
Many Syrians were over the years brusquely informed by authorities that their relatives had been executed, sometimes years earlier.
For many, there is still an agonising wait, hoping against the odds that loved ones will be found alive. At a large bus station in central Damascus, the activist Abdulkafi al-Hamdo, who fled Aleppo with his young family in 2016 for years in exile in Idlib, filmed himself meeting anxious families waiting for cars and buses that were dropping off freed prisoners on Sunday.
One woman said her son was 18 when he was seized in 2012; she has not heard or seen anything of him since. “All these families here have a lot of fear in their hearts that their sons are dead,” she said. “Some of them have a small hope, a window of hope, that their children will be alive.”
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/ ... ds-prisons
“Do not grow old, no matter how long you live. Never cease to stand like curious children before the Great Mystery into which we were born.” Albert Einstein
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ashkor87
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ti-amie
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Re: World News Random, Random
Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris has reopened. I have no idea why that man was there but the look on Madam Macron's face is all of us.

https://www.npr.org/sections/the-pictur ... cron-trump

https://www.npr.org/sections/the-pictur ... cron-trump
“Do not grow old, no matter how long you live. Never cease to stand like curious children before the Great Mystery into which we were born.” Albert Einstein
- mmmm8
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Re: World News Random, Random
I mean, she and Trump are both orange and should be in jail for sexual offences, so...ti-amie wrote: ↑Mon Dec 09, 2024 9:47 pm Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris has reopened. I have no idea why that man was there but the look on Madam Macron's face is all of us.
https://www.npr.org/sections/the-pictur ... cron-trump
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ti-amie
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Re: World News Random, Random
mmmm8 wrote: ↑Tue Dec 10, 2024 12:02 amI mean, she and Trump are both orange and should be in jail for sexual offences, so...ti-amie wrote: ↑Mon Dec 09, 2024 9:47 pm Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris has reopened. I have no idea why that man was there but the look on Madam Macron's face is all of us.
https://www.npr.org/sections/the-pictur ... cron-trump

“Do not grow old, no matter how long you live. Never cease to stand like curious children before the Great Mystery into which we were born.” Albert Einstein
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ti-amie
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Honorary_medal
Re: World News Random, Random
“Do not grow old, no matter how long you live. Never cease to stand like curious children before the Great Mystery into which we were born.” Albert Einstein
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ti-amie
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Honorary_medal
Re: World News Random, Random
“Do not grow old, no matter how long you live. Never cease to stand like curious children before the Great Mystery into which we were born.” Albert Einstein
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Owendonovan
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Re: World News Random, Random
I think Macron is explaining what happens in a church, what the cross symbolizes, and why there's a mostly naked man being elevated in said church.
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ti-amie
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Re: World News Random, Random
Anonymous
@youranoncentral.bsky.social
In Romania the pro-Russia fascist Calin Georgescu's right-hand man, leader to a terrorist group similar to the Proud Boys, who had planned to incite violence, has just been arrested at a Bucharest airport while attempting to flee the country.
Link is in Romanian.
@youranoncentral.bsky.social
In Romania the pro-Russia fascist Calin Georgescu's right-hand man, leader to a terrorist group similar to the Proud Boys, who had planned to incite violence, has just been arrested at a Bucharest airport while attempting to flee the country.
Link is in Romanian.
Legionarul Sechila, saltat de la Aeroportul Otopeni, el incerca sa plece din tara. Sechila avea ca destinatie o tara din Africa - Aktual24
Eugen Sechila, unul dintre indivizii acuzati ca planuiau sa provoace violente in Bucuresti de 8 decenbrie, a fost saltat joi seara de pe Aeroportul Otopeni. Sechila a fost luat pe sus de politisti si ...
www.aktual24.ro
“Do not grow old, no matter how long you live. Never cease to stand like curious children before the Great Mystery into which we were born.” Albert Einstein
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ti-amie
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Re: World News Random, Random
South Korea’s president reportedly defies summons in martial law inquiry
Report comes day after MPs voted to impeach Yoon Suk Yeol, who faces possible charges of insurrection
Sam Jones and agencies
Sun 15 Dec 2024 11.32 GMT
South Korea’s conservative president, Yoon Suk Yeol, has reportedly failed to obey a summons from prosecutors investigating him on charges including insurrection as he faces impeachment after declaring martial law.
Yoon, who was sent a summons on Wednesday requesting him to appear for questioning at 10am local time on Sunday, did not show up, according to the Yonhap news agency. Yoon and other senior officials are being investigated on possible charges of insurrection, abuse of authority and obstructing people from exercising their rights.
Yonhap said prosecutors – who are also seeking arrest warrants for senior military officials, including the head of the army special warfare command and the chief of the capital defence command – plan to issue another summons for the president.
The president’s reported failure to appear came a day after South Korean MPs voted to impeach him over the unsuccessful attempt to declare martial law almost two weeks ago that plunged the country into some of its worst political turmoil in decades.
In a late-night emergency television address to the nation on 3 December, Yoon announced he was imposing martial law, accusing the opposition of paralysing the government with “anti-state activities”.
The imposition of martial law – the first of its kind in more than four decades – lasted only six hours, and hundreds of troops and police officers sent by Yoon to the national assembly withdrew after the president’s decree was overturned. No major violence occurred.
Yoon’s powers have been suspended until the constitutional court decides whether to remove him from office or reinstate him. If Yoon is dismissed, a national election to choose his successor must be held within 60 days.
The court will meet to begin considering the case on Monday, and has up to 180 days to issue a ruling. But observers say a ruling could come faster. In the case of parliamentary impeachments of past presidents, Roh Moo-hyun in 2004 and Park Geun-hye in 2016, the court spent 63 days and 91 days respectively before determining to reinstate Roh and dismiss Park.
South Korea’s main opposition leader, Lee Jae-myung, has offered to work with the government to ease the political tumult as officials seek to reassure allies and markets after the impeachment vote.
Lee, who leads the Democratic party and who has led the political offensive against Yoon’s embattled government, is seen as the frontrunner to replace him. Lee has urged the constitutional court to rule swiftly on Yoon’s impeachment and proposed a special council for cooperation between the government and parliament.
The opposition leader told a televised news conference that a rapid ruling was the only way to “minimise national confusion and the suffering of people”.
Lee also proposed a national council where the government and the national assembly would work together to stabilise state affairs, and said his party would not seek to impeach the prime minister, Han Duck-soo, a Yoon appointee who is serving as acting president.
“The Democratic party will actively cooperate with all parties to stabilise state affairs and restore international trust,” Lee said. “The national assembly and government will work together to quickly resolve the crisis that has swept across the Republic of Korea.”
On assuming his role as acting leader, Han ordered the military to bolster its security posture against North Korea. He asked the foreign minister to inform other countries that South Korea’s main external policies would remain unchanged, and the finance minister to work to minimise potential negative impacts on the economy from the political turmoil.
On Sunday, Han had a phone call with the US president, Joe Biden, in which they discussed the political situation in South Korea and regional security challenges including the North’s nuclear programme. Biden expressed his appreciation for the resiliency of democracy in South Korea and reaffirmed “the ironclad commitment” of the US, according to both governments.
Opposition parties have accused Yoon of rebellion, saying a president in South Korea is allowed to declare martial law only during wartime or similar emergencies and would have no right to suspend parliament’s operations even in those cases.
Yoon has rejected the charges and vowed to “fight to the end”. He said the deployment of troops to the national assembly was aimed to issue a warning to the Democratic party, which he called an “anti-state force” that abused its control of parliament by holding up the government’s budget bill for next year and repeatedly pushing to impeach top officials.
Law enforcement institutions are investigating possible rebellion and other allegations. They have arrested Yoon’s defence minister and police chief and two other high-level figures.
Yoon has immunity from most criminal prosecution as president, but that does not extend to allegations of rebellion or treason. He has been banned from leaving South Korea, but observers doubt that authorities will detain him because of the potential for clashes with his presidential security service.
With Agence France-Presse, Reuters and the Associated Press
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/ ... aw-inquiry
Report comes day after MPs voted to impeach Yoon Suk Yeol, who faces possible charges of insurrection
Sam Jones and agencies
Sun 15 Dec 2024 11.32 GMT
South Korea’s conservative president, Yoon Suk Yeol, has reportedly failed to obey a summons from prosecutors investigating him on charges including insurrection as he faces impeachment after declaring martial law.
Yoon, who was sent a summons on Wednesday requesting him to appear for questioning at 10am local time on Sunday, did not show up, according to the Yonhap news agency. Yoon and other senior officials are being investigated on possible charges of insurrection, abuse of authority and obstructing people from exercising their rights.
Yonhap said prosecutors – who are also seeking arrest warrants for senior military officials, including the head of the army special warfare command and the chief of the capital defence command – plan to issue another summons for the president.
The president’s reported failure to appear came a day after South Korean MPs voted to impeach him over the unsuccessful attempt to declare martial law almost two weeks ago that plunged the country into some of its worst political turmoil in decades.
In a late-night emergency television address to the nation on 3 December, Yoon announced he was imposing martial law, accusing the opposition of paralysing the government with “anti-state activities”.
The imposition of martial law – the first of its kind in more than four decades – lasted only six hours, and hundreds of troops and police officers sent by Yoon to the national assembly withdrew after the president’s decree was overturned. No major violence occurred.
Yoon’s powers have been suspended until the constitutional court decides whether to remove him from office or reinstate him. If Yoon is dismissed, a national election to choose his successor must be held within 60 days.
The court will meet to begin considering the case on Monday, and has up to 180 days to issue a ruling. But observers say a ruling could come faster. In the case of parliamentary impeachments of past presidents, Roh Moo-hyun in 2004 and Park Geun-hye in 2016, the court spent 63 days and 91 days respectively before determining to reinstate Roh and dismiss Park.
South Korea’s main opposition leader, Lee Jae-myung, has offered to work with the government to ease the political tumult as officials seek to reassure allies and markets after the impeachment vote.
Lee, who leads the Democratic party and who has led the political offensive against Yoon’s embattled government, is seen as the frontrunner to replace him. Lee has urged the constitutional court to rule swiftly on Yoon’s impeachment and proposed a special council for cooperation between the government and parliament.
The opposition leader told a televised news conference that a rapid ruling was the only way to “minimise national confusion and the suffering of people”.
Lee also proposed a national council where the government and the national assembly would work together to stabilise state affairs, and said his party would not seek to impeach the prime minister, Han Duck-soo, a Yoon appointee who is serving as acting president.
“The Democratic party will actively cooperate with all parties to stabilise state affairs and restore international trust,” Lee said. “The national assembly and government will work together to quickly resolve the crisis that has swept across the Republic of Korea.”
On assuming his role as acting leader, Han ordered the military to bolster its security posture against North Korea. He asked the foreign minister to inform other countries that South Korea’s main external policies would remain unchanged, and the finance minister to work to minimise potential negative impacts on the economy from the political turmoil.
On Sunday, Han had a phone call with the US president, Joe Biden, in which they discussed the political situation in South Korea and regional security challenges including the North’s nuclear programme. Biden expressed his appreciation for the resiliency of democracy in South Korea and reaffirmed “the ironclad commitment” of the US, according to both governments.
Opposition parties have accused Yoon of rebellion, saying a president in South Korea is allowed to declare martial law only during wartime or similar emergencies and would have no right to suspend parliament’s operations even in those cases.
Yoon has rejected the charges and vowed to “fight to the end”. He said the deployment of troops to the national assembly was aimed to issue a warning to the Democratic party, which he called an “anti-state force” that abused its control of parliament by holding up the government’s budget bill for next year and repeatedly pushing to impeach top officials.
Law enforcement institutions are investigating possible rebellion and other allegations. They have arrested Yoon’s defence minister and police chief and two other high-level figures.
Yoon has immunity from most criminal prosecution as president, but that does not extend to allegations of rebellion or treason. He has been banned from leaving South Korea, but observers doubt that authorities will detain him because of the potential for clashes with his presidential security service.
With Agence France-Presse, Reuters and the Associated Press
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/ ... aw-inquiry
“Do not grow old, no matter how long you live. Never cease to stand like curious children before the Great Mystery into which we were born.” Albert Einstein
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ashkor87
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Re: World News Random, Random
Now Xi is purging high ranking officers in his military..people like Xi do crazy things when they feel threatened..this is a very dangerous time for the world..until Jan 20..the transition from a weak lame-duck US president to a crazy one...
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