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Mon, 08 Nov 2021
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Attention

Protesters clash with police amid hostage crisis in Yerevan, Armenia

Yerevan hostage protesters police
© Asatur Yesayants / Sputnik
Civil activists angered by the current political situation and the arrests of several dozen people protest in Yerevan.
Dozens of protesters have taken to the streets of the Armenian capital, attempting to march on a police station which was seized by armed men over the weekend. Protesters clashed with officials after failing to comply with warnings not to proceed with the march. Some 100 people gathered in central Yerevan on Monday, according to Interfax.

They were led by opposition activist David Sanasaryan, TASS reported, saying that the activist has been calling on Yerevan citizens to take to the streets in an anti-government protest. "I am against armed struggle, but a good deed has been launched, so let's join them," Sanasaryan reportedly said, calling on protesters to march towards the seized police station.

The head of Yerevan's police force, Ashot Karapetyan was at the scene and warned the protesters that the gathering was unlawful and they would not be allowed to proceed with the unsanctioned march. Armenia's deputy police chief, Unan Pogosyan also addressed the gathering, saying that a confrontation is being "provoked" in Yerevan, and calling on people not to "exacerbate the situation."

Arrow Down

Yoked to NATO: Canada's Liberal gov't joins NATO's war escalation in eastern Europe

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in Ukraine

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in Kyiv on July 11, 2016 (PMO photo by Adam Scotti)
Canadians who hoped the federal election last October 19 would usher in change to the aggressive foreign policy of the defeated Conservative government are wondering what happened to their wishes. The transition in imperialist foreign policy from the Harper Conservatives to the Justin Trudeau-led Liberals has been utterly seamless, if not predictable.


Comment: For Canadians, it was another example of "meet the new boss, same as the old boss" (Harper).


In the Middle East, Canada's support to 'regime change' in Syria stands. The Liberals stirred controversy during the election when they promised to end Canada's participation in the U.S.-led military intervention in northern Iraq. But surprise: while the Liberals did carry out a promised withdrawal of the six fighter jets that weren't doing much anyway in the skies over Syria and Iraq, they ended up tripling the presence of Canadian soldiers on the ground in Iraq, to approximately 200.

Pistol

Armed group identified as terrorists seize police station in Armenia capital

Yerevan Armenia hostage police
© Associated Press
Officers securing the area around a police building in Yerevan, Armenia, on Sunday that was attacked by militants.
One person was killed and least three wounded as an armed group seized a police station in Armenia's capital Yerevan. At least six hostages are still being held by the attackers, TASS reports citing police. The hostage takers are being described as terrorists by local authorities.

"During the ongoing negotiations authorities are trying to convince the terrorists to refrain from any movements that can endanger people's lives, to free hostages, give up their arms and surrender to the officials," the statement published by the Armenian National Security Agency reads.

The local police chief, Valery Osipyan, is among the hostages, authorities confirmed to Armenian news agency Arminfo. Troops have been dispatched to the area, and the head of the country's security forces, Vladimir Gasparyan, is on the scene as well. "SWAT police units and other law enforcers are in a combat-ready state, but they have not received the order to begin a special operation so far," Unan Pogosyan, Armenia's vice-police chief said as quoted by RIA news agency.

Attention

Russian foreign policy advisor: 'We are smarter, stronger and more determined'

Relations between Russia and NATO are deteriorating. Kremlin foreign policy advisor Sergey Karaganov speaks with SPIEGEL about the risk of war, NATO's aggressive posturing and the West's inability to understand Russian values.

ergey Karaganov (Russian: Серге́й Караганов)
© Unknown
SPIEGEL: Sergey Alexandrovich, NATO is boosting its presence in Eastern Europe in reaction to recent Russian advances. Western politicians have warned that the two sides could stumble into a situation that might result in war. Are such warnings excessive?

Karaganov: I was already speaking of a prewar situation eight years ago.

SPIEGEL: When the war in Georgia broke out.

USA

Second American revolution not likely - The futility of an armed revolt'

"A standing military force, with an overgrown Executive will not long be safe companions to liberty."—James Madison
American Revolution
© A Government of Wolves
America is a ticking time bomb.

All that remains to be seen is who—or what—will set fire to the fuse.

We are poised at what seems to be the pinnacle of a manufactured breakdown, with police shooting unarmed citizens, snipers shooting police, global and domestic violence rising, and a political showdown between two presidential candidates equally matched in unpopularity.

The preparations for the Republican and Democratic national conventions taking place in Cleveland and Philadelphia—augmented by a $50 million federal security grant for each city—provide a foretaste of how the government plans to deal with any individual or group that steps out of line: they will be censored, silenced, spied on, caged, intimidated, interrogated, investigated, recorded, tracked, labeled, held at gunpoint, detained, restrained, arrested, tried and found guilty.

For instance, anticipating civil unrest and mass demonstrations in connection with the Republican Party convention, Cleveland officials set up makeshift prisons, extra courtrooms to handle protesters, and shut down a local university in order to house 1,700 riot police and their weapons. The city's courts are preparing to process up to 1,000 people a day. Additionally, the FBI has also been conducting "interviews" with activists in advance of the conventions to discourage them from engaging in protests.

Make no mistake, the government is ready for a civil uprising.

Indeed, the government has been preparing for this moment for years.

A 2008 Army War College report revealed that "widespread civil violence inside the United States would force the defense establishment to reorient priorities in extremis to defend basic domestic order and human security." The 44-page report goes on to warn that potential causes for such civil unrest could include another terrorist attack, "unforeseen economic collapse, loss of functioning political and legal order, purposeful domestic resistance or insurgency, pervasive public health emergencies, and catastrophic natural and human disasters."

Subsequent reports by the Department of Homeland Security to identify, monitor and label right-wing and left-wing activists and military veterans as extremists (a.k.a. terrorists) have manifested into full-fledged pre-crime surveillance programs. Almost a decade later, after locking down the nation and spending billions to fight terrorism, the DHS has concluded that the greater threat is not ISIS but domestic right-wing extremism.

Fire

The revolt of the proles and the appeal of Donald Trump

Trump US flag
© GrAl/Shutterstock
"For the past 25 years, the center-left has told the bottom 60% of the income distribution in their countries the following story: "Globalization is good for you. It's awesome. It's really great. We're going to sign these trade agreements. Don't worry, there will be compensation. You'll be fine. You'll all end up as computer programmers. It'll be fantastic. And, by the way, we don't really care because we're all going to move to the middle because that's where the voters are, and they're the ones with the money, and they're the only ones we really care about...and you basically take the bottom 30% of the income distribution and you say, "We don't care what happens to you. You're now something to be policed. You're now something that has to have its behavior changed. We're going to nudge you into better parts...

It's a very paternal, patronizing relationship. This is no longer the warm embrace of social democracy, arm in arm in solidarity with the working classes. They are to policed and excluded in their housing estates, so you can feel safe in your neighborhoods and private schools.

So once this has evolved over 20 years, you have this revolt, not just against Brexit. It's not about the EU. It's about the elites. It's about the 1%. It's about the fact that your parties, have sold you down the river."

(Excerpt from Mark Blyth's Brexit on YouTube)
Liberals and progressives love to point across the aisle and accuse their opponents of racism, misogyny and xenophobia, but that's not what the Trump campaign is all about. And that's not what Brexit was about. While it's true that anti-immigrant sentiment is on the rise in Europe and the US, the hostility has less to do with race than it does jobs and wages. In other words, Brexit is a revolt against a free trade regime in which all the benefits have accrued to the uber-rich while everyone else has seen their incomes slide, their future's dim and their standard of living plunge. As Vincent Bevins of the Los Angeles Times said:
"Both Brexit and Trumpism are the very, very wrong answers to legitimate questions that urban elites have refused to ask for thirty years"..."since the 1980s the elites in rich countries have overplayed their hand, taking all the gains for themselves and just covering their ears when anyone else talks, and now they are watching in horror as voters revolt."

Comment: Whitney has nailed Trumps appeal, for better or worse. He is the glittering illusion of success that has been put out of reach for the 99%.


Light Sabers

EU warns Turkey that death penalty reinstatement would end Turkey's accession to EU

turkish coup
© Vasilis Ververidis / Reuters
Two of the eight Turkish soldiers who fled to Greece in a helicopter and requested political asylum after a failed military coup against the government, are brought to prosecutor by two policemen in the northern Greek city of Alexandroupolis, Greece, July 17, 2016
Reinstating the death penalty in Turkey would end EU accession talks, a German government spokesman has stated. Meanwhile, EU Foreign Policy Chief Federica Mogherini also warned that no country can become an EU member that has capital punishment.

"Introduction of death penalty would mean immediate suspension of accession talks," German government spokesman Steffen Seibert said on Monday.

Turkey is part of the Council of Europe and is bound by the European Convention on Human Rights, the EU Foreign Policy Chief noted.

"No country can become an EU member state if it introduces the death penalty," she said. "Turkey is an important part of the Council of Europe and is bound by the European Convention on Human Rights, which is very clear on the death penalty."

It is wrong to make a hasty decision about the death penalty, Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim said, adding that, at the same time, Turkey cannot ignore the demands of its own people, Reuters reported.

Folder

United Nations observers: Another misleading UN human rights report focused on Ukraine

Eastern Ukraine shelled by Ukrainian armed forces

Aftermath of shelling of neighbourhood in eastern Ukraine shelled by Ukrainian armed forces (UNHCR photo)
Five days ago, the United Nations Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) released another in a long line of reports purporting to provide an overview of the human rights situation in Ukraine. This latest report is titled "Accountability for killings in Ukraine from January 2014 to May 2016".

Red Flag

Less provocative? Germany blocked flying NATO's flag during Anaconda 2016 war games

NATO headquarters in Brussels
© AP Photo/ Geert Vanden Wijngaert
NATO has not flown its white-on-blue flag during the course of its massive Anaconda-2016 war games aimed at demonstrating European solidarity and unity in the face of a purported "Russian threat," suggesting that there are deep divisions within the alliance over the portrayal of Moscow as an enemy.

The drills, with over 30,000 personnel from 24 nations participating, are the largest event of its kind since the end of the 20th-century Cold War. Following Kremlin observances that the maneuvers near Russian borders threaten regional security, the US called for a bigger military buildup.

US Army Europe Commander Gen. Ben Hodges lamented that the war games were not big enough, saying that all the troops involved in the drills would not fill an average soccer stadium.

Rocket

S. Korea military reports North Korea fired 3 ballistic missiles

North Korea missle launch
© KCNA / Reuters
Pyongyang launched three missiles Tuesday morning in the latest in a set of controversial ballistic tests, according to South Korea's military, which claimed the projectiles had a range of up to 600 kilometers (360 miles).

The three missiles were launched from the North's east coast into the sea at between 5:45am and 6:20am local time.

Previously, South Korea's Ministry of Unification warned that the North was "fully prepared" and could conduct a fifth nuclear test.

"North Korea seems to be fully prepared to carry out a nuclear test at any time (when the order is given by its leader Kim Jong-un). South Korea is closely monitoring every move at the North's test site in close cooperation with the United States," unification ministry spokesman Jeong Joon-hee said at a regular press briefing.

Comment: Looks like N. Korea is following up on its threats: Deployment of THAAD in South Korea: Reaction and potential consequences