Puppet Masters
The pilot, Wing Commander Abhinandan Varthaman, was transported to the border crossing in a military convoy which set out from the eastern Pakistani city of Lahore.
Cheering crowds have gathered on the Indian side of the border near Attari-Wagah to welcome the captured pilot. Residents waving India's national flag and holding a huge garland of flowers lined the road.
The footage released by Pakistani media showed Varthaman walking across the border into India, near the town of Wagah, just before 9pm local time (1600 GMT).
CCD released a statement Friday, declaring their government, which they have dubbed 'Free Joseon,' as "the sole legitimate representative of the Korean people of the north." A video of a woman dressed in a traditional black and white hanbok with her face blurred out reading out the group's manifesto was also released.
Joseon is an old name for Korea. The term is sometimes used by North Koreans and Koreans living in China based on a kingdom on the peninsula which lasted from 1392 - 1897. The group, named after a winged mythical horse, is believed to be harboring and protecting Kim Han-sol, the son of Kim Jong-un's assassinated brother, Kim Jong-nam, who was killed with VX nerve agent in Malaysia on February 7 2017.
An expert on the region told RT.com that he is highly skeptical of the group and suspects it is backed by South Korea or the USA.
Russia and China have seldom seen eye-to-eye during the course of the 20th century on the subject of India and Pakistan - with Russia historically favoring India, and China with Pakistan.
The Russian Federation and other external forces have concerns that the situation in the armed confrontation of two long-standing geopolitical opponents could get out of control. In India, the prime minister has nationalist views, and Narendra Modi is also soon awaiting parliamentary elections. Many pundits are explaining that India's moves are little more than a gambit to either distract from other issues where he is less popular, or to raise his support among his nationalist base which may have begun to question his commitment to nationalism in light of his previous inaction surrounding the February 14th terrorist attacks.
Last week the Haiti Information Project photographed heavily-armed Canadian troops patrolling the Port-au-Prince airport. According to a knowledgeable source I emailed the photos to, they were probably special forces. The individual in "uniform is (most likely) a member of the Canadian Special Operations Regiment (CSOR) from Petawawa", wrote the person who asked not to be named. "The plainclothes individuals are most likely members of JTF2. The uniformed individual could also be JTF2 but at times both JTF2 and CSOR work together." (CSOR is a sort of farm team for the ultra-elite Joint Task Force 2.)
What was the purpose of their mission? The Haiti Information Project reported that they may have helped family members of President Jovenel Moïse's unpopular government flee the country. HIP tweeted, "troops & plainclothes from Canada providing security at Toussaint Louverture airport in Port-au-Prince today as cars from Haiti's National Palace also drop off PHTK govt official's family to leave the country today."
The 7-1 ruling could also open other American-based international organizations to the threat of lawsuits over financing overseas development.
For the World Bank, it means that it now faces having to defend against a suit by members of a fishing community in Mundra, India, who contend that their homes and livelihoods were damaged by pollution from a coal power plant that was financed by the bank's private sector lending arm, the Washington, D.C.-based International Finance Corporation.
Bharat Patel, general secretary of the Association for the Struggle of Fisherworkers' Rights, one of the plaintiffs, welcomed the historic ruling, saying: "This is a huge victory for the people of Mundra [and a] major step towards holding the World Bank accountable for the negative impacts their investments are causing."
"President Maduro ordered to close the Lisbon office of PDVSA and move it to Moscow," Rodriguez said on Friday at the joint news conference with Russia's Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, during her visit to the Russian capital.
The decision comes as Venezuela expands energy cooperation with Russia's oil and gas giants Gazprom and Rosneft, according to the official. "It's the perfect time, as we are reshaping our relations," said Rodriguez.
Over recent months, there has been a battle over Venezuela's oil industry, which contributes greatly to the country's budget. The United States has sanctioned PDVSA in an attempt to cut off funds to the Maduro-led government while giving support to the opposition led by Juan Guaido. President Maduro broke diplomatic ties with the US after President Trump recognized Guaido as interim president.
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"Venezuela is worried about further sanctions and asset seizures of PDVSA," Mehmet Ogutcu, chair of the Bosphorus Energy Club, told RT. "Hence the decision to relocate its European headquarters to Russia so that the assets could not be risked."
According to the expert, the Venezuelan government is struggling to find new buyers for heavy crude, which had been previously sold to US refineries. The US purchased around 500,000 barrels oil per day from Venezuela before Washington introduced economic penalties against PDVSA, freezing $7 billion of the company's assets.
Ogutcu stressed that under the current circumstances, revenues from oil sales could easily be confiscated by the US.
As part of the recent sanctions, the White House blocked payments to PDVSA accounts with buyers of Venezuela's oil directed to deposit all transactions in a separate account, to which the company doesn't have access.
Russian energy corporations might easily purchase Venezuelan crude, aiming to further re-sell the shipments.
"Russia has already extended loans to Venezuela and has been receiving crude oil to compensate the debt repayment," Ogutcu said. "Russia could develop the same mechanism the European Union is trying to currently deploy not to halt trading with Iranian crude sector," the analyst told RT.
UK to fine Facebook & Google up to 4% value for not removing 'hate speech' & 'fake news' fast enough
An "independent tech regulator" would have the power to impose fines amounting to as much as 4 percent of a company's value if Facebook, Google, or any other social media platform is too slow to remove objectionable content, according to UK digital minister Margot James, who told Business Insider the new rules would be officially unveiled next month. The regulations are purportedly aimed at eradicating "illegal hate speech," along with child grooming and "problematic content" related to suicide and self-harm, but also target the Western governments' beloved punching bag, "misinformation."
While the new regulator is supposed to be independent of government, it will be up to ministers to decide whether to set up a brand new body or just hand the responsibility for censoring objectionable content over to Ofcom - the same regulator which was recently found to be colluding with a government-funded "think tank" to tie up RT in regulatory red tape with astroturfed "complaints."
Others are likely to follow.
David Garrard told newspapers he had already donated to the MPs who broke away from the opposition Labour Party and the ruling Conservative Party.
The Independent Group is expected to eventually register as a party.
Garrard has for many years been a major financial backer of Labour Friends of Israel, a front group for the Israeli embassy, and was recently appointed to its board.
Prior to left-wing Palestine solidarity activist Jeremy Corbyn becoming party leader in 2015, Garrard donated almost $2 million to Labour under former leaders Tony Blair, Gordon Brown and Ed Miliband.
Tulsi Gabbard: Trump-Kim summit failure no surprise as only nukes deter US regime change in N. Korea
Hawaii Rep. and Democratic presidential hopeful Gabbard sat down for a brief one-on-one with Fox News' Tucker Carlson on Thursday, relaying her thoughts on the summit between US President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, and lambasting the US interventionist political doctrine.
The summit, which wrapped up abruptly with Trump walking out of the talks after refusing to offer any relief of sanctions to Pyongyang, has been described as a flop, having done little to advance the denuclearization issue.
Gabbard said that although she was "deeply concerned" that the summit ended without any agreement, she was not surprised.
It looks like the US is considering a military intervention in Venezuela, Moscow's top diplomat said during a press conference with Venezuelan Vice President Delcy Rodriguez on Friday. In this scenario, Washington would be buying arms in Eastern Europe and sending them via cargo plane to locations near Venezuela's borders.
According to the information that we have, in the upcoming future the US is planning to buy light weapons, mortars, air-defense systems and other arms in one of the Eastern European countries and send it close to Venezuela using an airline from one of the Post-Soviet states absolutely loyal to Washington.On Thursday, Washington proposed a UNSC draft resolution blaming President Nicolas Maduro for causing an "economic collapse" in the country and calling for new elections. The bid was vetoed by Russia and China who accused the US of interfering in Venezuela's internal affairs. A rival Russian draft also failed.















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