Puppet Masters
Citing "evidence" from the ground, Rebiya Kadeer, president of the Germany-based World Uyghur Congress (WUC), accused the Chinese authorities of a cover up of what she called a "massacre" of Uyghurs in Yarkand (in Chinese, Shache) county in Xinjiang's Kashgar prefecture on July 28.
Chinese state media had at first said "dozens" of people were killed but revised upwards the death toll to 96 this week, saying the riots erupted after a "gang" of Uyghurs attacked a police station and government offices in Yarkand's Elishku township and that the authorities reacted with "a resolute crackdown to eradicate terrorists."
But Kadeer told RFA's Uyghur Service that information the WUC received from the area was "absolutely different than the accounts provided by Chinese official narrative."
"We have evidence in hand that at least 2,000 Uyghurs in the neighborhood of Elishku township have been killed by Chinese security forces on the first day [of the incident] and they 'cleaned up' the dead bodies on the second and third day during a curfew that was imposed," she said.
"We have recorded voice messages from the people in the neighborhood and written testimonies on exactly what had taken place in Elishku township of Yarkand county during this massacre," she said, adding that the victims were mainly from villages No. 14, 15 and 16 in the township.
"We can share these facts without releasing the source of the information as their security and safety is at risk," said Kadeer, who has been in exile in Washington since being released from a Chinese prison in 2005.

Samaritan's Purse medical personnel spray disinfectant on a person who died from the Ebola virus in the Case Management Center in Foya, Liberia in this undated handout photo courtesy of Samaritan's Purse.
According to recent statistics from the World Health Organization (WHO) released just last week, at least 672 people have died out of a total of 1,201 cases so far this year in West Africa. However, seven days later the number of fatalities has jumped to 887, a spike of over 200 deaths in just the last few days.
Because the incubation period may last ten days while the infected victim may not even be aware of any illness, the virus is highly contagious. Then what begins like typical flu symptoms of fever, later vomiting as the virus spreads rapidly inside the body causing people to succumb often within days of its onset. Victims literally die from internal bleeding that in the final stages can flow out of every orifice. It has the trappings of a ghastly zombie science fiction nightmare come true.
There is no standard treatment (other than isolating the infected and quarantining those at risk). Nor is there yet an official vaccine, although Reuters just announced that as early as next month the US government will commence testing an experimental Ebola vaccine on humans after positive results were found on primates. It has been reported that the National Institutes of Health (NIH) infectious disease unit and the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) will be running vaccine trials "as quickly as possible."
The Department of Defense and Centers for Disease Control (CDC) classify the Ebola virus as a biowarfare agent. Reports of up to 90% of humans infected die within a very short time. Therefore, it is a very real, extremely potent potential weapon of mass destruction.
It only took one day for the subject to become the occasion of two major articles, one an op-ed in the Los Angeles Times and the other a major story in Germany's Der Spiegel. Both are pessimistic that the unprecedented breach can be swiftly, if ever, repaired.
The op-ed in the Los Angeles Times, written by Jacob Heilbrun, was entitled "The German-American Breakup." The word "breakup" is unequivocal, or almost. After an overview of various German commentaries, Heilbrun ends with this admonition:
"If Obama is unable to rein in spying of Germany, he may discover that he is helping to convert it from an ally into an adversary. For Obama to say Auf Wiedersehen to a longtime ally would deliver a blow to American national security that no amount of secret information could possibly justify."
If Heilbrun seems to have little hope that his viewpoint will be heard in Washington, it pales before the lead article in Der Spiegel on the same date. The long article is entitled "Germany's Choice: Will It Be America or Russia?" One section of the article is entitled "The Last Straw." It cites not someone on the left or someone who has long advocated closer relations with Russia. It cites instead a conservative advocate of the free economy and of rocksolid relations with the United States, who chairs an organization called Atlantic Bridge. In a tone of desperation, he says: "If [the latest allegations about spying] turn out to be true, it's time for this to stop." Note that the article says it's time for it to stop, not that it's time for further discussions or negotiations about it. Just stop.
The Washington Post recently reported that:
The cargo will include third-generation main battle tanks of the M1A1 Abrams type. This new, heavier equipment will replace trucks and personnel carriers which were previously stored in the mountain bunkers of Central Norway.
Local defense sources, cited by the Norwegian Aftenposten newspaper, say that the US' decision to change war equipment stored in Norway was made on the basis of experiences from Iraq and Afghanistan.
In an interview with state-run RT, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov lamented how he felt U.S. officials were quick to blame his nation for everything awry in Ukraine and to insist Moscow can unilaterally solve it all. Lavrov said that while those in Ukraine's east and south who defiantly oppose the Kiev-based government are "not puppets" of the Kremlin, such a characterization would describe the relationship between Ukraine's leadership in Kiev and the United States.
"(Americans) have, I think, overwhelming influence," he said. "They act in a much more open way, without any scruples, compared to the Europeans ... You cannot avoid the impression that they are running the show very much, very much."
"They said that they are studying this issue and will do everything possible to resolve it. It's not easy. It depends not only on the Red Cross, which has such mandate but of course it depends on authorities' response," Lukutsova said.
The Russian Red Cross is not alone in its efforts to facilitate the opening of a humanitarian corridor in Ukraine. Russian Human Rights Commissioner Ella Pamfilova and number of Russian human rights organizations have made the same appeals to the EU, the OSCE, Kiev authorities and people's republics of Donetsk and Luhansk.
"Putin expressed his sympathy to the Indian Republic's President Pranab Mukherjee and the Republic's Prime Minister Narendra Modi on the loss of so many lives due to the floods in the state of Maharashtra," the Kremlin said in the official telegram.
Last week, a large part of a hill collapsed on the village of Malin after a heavy rainfall, covering a densely-populated area with mud and levelling some 40 homes. The latest death toll stands at 109 people, with at least 50 feared to still be trapped under the rubble, according to officials.
According to the Kremlin statement, the Russian leader also voiced his condolences to those bereaved and wished the affected to get well soon.
Fighting between Kiev's army and self-defense forces intensified on Tuesday, with the Ukrainian military using heavy weaponry around Donetsk in eastern Ukraine. According to witnesses, the Ukrainian army resorted to multiple rocket launchers, including Uragan launchers and cruise missiles, RIA Novosti reported citing local militia.
Cruise missiles were spotted flying over the city of Gorlovka on Tuesday, while Uragan launchers were seen near the town of Snezhniy, witnesses told the news agency. Explosions reportedly caused by airstrikes were also heard within the city of Donetsk.
Multiple twitter accounts from #Donetsk reported at least 2 air strikes in the city within the last 45 min. #Ukraine
- Natalia Melnychuk (@pravolivo) August 5, 2014

Russian President Vladimir Putin has extended his condolences to his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping.
"The head of the Russian state has offered his words of sympathy and support to the families and friends of the victims to Chinese President Xi Jinping and also wished a speedy recovery to all the injured. The Russian president expressed the country's readiness to assist in relief operations in case of emergency," the statement read.
The 6.1-magnitude earthquake hit China's southwestern province of Yunnan on Sunday. The shocks were registered at 4.30 p.m. (08:30 GMT). The epicenter was 11 kilometers (9 miles) from Wenping and 29 kilometers from Zhaotong. The quake struck at a depth of about 10 kilometers.
The death toll from the quake, the strongest to hit the province in the past 14 years, has surpassed 380, with about 1,900 injured.













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