Puppet Masters
Sukur says that he did not intend to target the president. However, prosecutors say that the tweets were "clearly related" to the Turkish president, the Dogan news agency reports, as cited by AFP. Erdogan's lawyer Ahmet Ozel said that it was evident Sukur was talking about the Turkish president and "it is understood that he committed the crime he is charged with," he added, according to Today's Zaman.
However, it is not known if Sukur is in the country. The 44-year-old responded to tweets, which claim he has moved to the US in order to open a sports academy, and it is unknown if he will be able to attend the trial.
The boy in the video posted by Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) supporters last month is identified as Abu Imara al Omri. It is claimed he targeted Syrian soldiers in the town of Ghazi by driving a truck laden with explosives into their midst.
In the video, set to traditional singing, the boy and his father inspect the car, fashioned with added armor at the front. This is before Abu says his final words, kisses his father's hand in a final blessing and both hug for the last time. There does not appear to be any regret exchanged at all, and the somber atmosphere is presented as a normal everyday occurrence.
The most fundamental problem modern Turkey is facing is the Kurdish question. It's a chronic problem, which threatens the integrity of Turkey and the Turkish elite perceives it as the largest security treat the country is facing. Turkish policies in Syria are determined by the Kurdish issue more than anything else. The change from the so called policy of zero problems with neighbors, which Erdogan and his government used to promote, came as a surprise to many and is directly related to the Kurdish issue and the events in Iraq after the disastrous US invasion.
Here, a little historical excursion is needed. When the modern Turkish state was created on the ashes of the Ottoman empire following defeat in WWI, it was seeking a new identity on which it could successfully establish itself. The new young Turkish elite chose the model of nationalism, at that time a progressive concept so popular in contemporary Europe.
The Syrian Foreign Ministry, along with the rebel 'High Negotiations Committee,"have announced that they intend to comply with the US-Russia brokered ceasefire deal, which is intended to go into place on Saturday. The announcements come just a day after the ceasefire deal was announced, but both sides insisted they have serious doubts that the pause will amount to much, and that they expect the other side to violate the ceasefire first.
The High Negotiations Committee only amounts to a portion of the Syrian rebellion at any rate. The group was established in Saudi Arabia among rebel factions invited to a Saudi-brokered effort to unite the rebels they're backing. The Saudi talks excluded a number of factions, however, and even those involved didn't uniformly endorse the committee.
There are still a few days for other factions to sign up for the ceasefire, but some rebels have already openly rejected the idea. So full participation, at least among the factions intended to be covered, is almost certainly out of reach.
Amnesty International also slammed Washington for continuing to detain alleged criminals without charge or trial at the Guantanamo Bay detention center.
"By the end of the year [2015], no action had been taken to end the impunity for the systematic human rights violations committed in the secret detention programme operated by the CIA, under authorization granted by former President George W. Bush after the attacks of 11 September 2001," the rights group said in its annual report 2015/2016.
The annual report targeted US law enforcement's repeated excessive use of force, such as using Tasers on unarmed victims, which has resulted in at least 670 deaths since 2001.
Washington's policies and violations of migrants', women's and prisoners' rights were also criticized by the Amnesty International.
On Tuesday evening, after easily winning the state's Republican caucus with 46% of the vote, Trump spoke at a rally at the South Point Hotel and Casino, and bragged — albeit bizarrely — about how diverse his base is.
"We won the Evangelicals," Trump said. "We won with young. We won with old. We won with highly educated. We won with poorly educated," he continued, "I love the poorly educated! They are the smartest people, the most loyal people."
His closest competitor in the Nevada race, Marco Rubio, came in 22 points behind the former reality television star, with 24%, while Ted Cruz came in third with 21%.
In remarks reflecting an abiding mistrust of Rouhani's rapprochement with the West, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said he was confident Iranians would vote in favor of keeping Iran's anti-Western stance on Friday in the first elections since last year's nuclear accord with world powers.
Rouhani's allies, who hope the deal will hasten Iran's opening up to the world after years of sanctions, have come under increasing pressure in the election campaign from hardliners who accuse them of links to Western powers including the United States and Britain.
"We believe the American people need to decide who is going to make this appointment rather than a lame-duck president," Senate Republican Whip John Cornyn (Texas) told reporters Tuesday after a special meeting of the committee.
Comment: The American people won't decide anything. The next president will nominate him/her and the Judiciary Committee will approve or disapprove.
Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) said members of the panel reached a "consensus" that there should not be hearings or a vote on President Obama's nominee.
"My decision is that I don't think we should have a hearing. We should let the next president pick the Supreme Court justice," he said after emerging from a meeting in Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell's (R-Ky.) office.

Large areas of Palestinians lands, and several homes, in the al-Meghraqa and Gaza Valley areas, in central Gaza, have been completely flooded after Israel opened its dams towards Gaza
Israel repeatedly opens its dams towards the besieged Gaza Strip during winter time, especially following heavy rain, inflicting serious losses and destruction in various areas of the coastal region, in addition to many injuries.
Comment: Israel's creativity in inflicting misery on the Gazan Palestinians is endless.
The settlement with Richmond University Medical Center and Eric Garner family is confidential, but court records obtained by the Associated Press disclosed the dollar amount. It is the maximum sum allowed under the hospital's insurance policy.
"The EMTs did not conduct the appropriate examination" of Garner at the scene and "failed to provide him with the necessary life-saving procedures," according to the court documents.
Garner, a 43-year-old African-American father of six, died during an arrest on July 17, 2014. Video of the arrest was widely circulated online and showed Garner yelling, "I can't breathe!" after the white police officer Daniel Pantaleo wrapped his arm around Garner's neck and wrestled him to the ground.
Emergency workers arrived after officers call 911, checked Garner's pulse and made sure he was breathing before placing him on the stretcher.Garner had repeatedly told officers he couldn't breathe as he was being subdued.
Hospital records filed with the court documents showed that Garner went into cardiac arrest on the stretcher. Medics tried to resuscitate Garner in the ambulance and doctors performed CPR at the emergency room before pronouncing him dead.
The medical examiner determined his death was caused by the chokehold and restraint by police, coupled with acute asthma, obesity and heart disease.
Comment: The below $72 million for ovarian cancer is insane relative to Garner's murder and low settlement amounts.
Court orders Johnson & Johnson to pay $72 million to family in ovarian cancer case














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