Puppet Masters
Authorities in Yemen have charged a local man with spying for Israel and he will soon be put on trial in Aden, officials said on Friday.
Named as Ibrahim al-Dharahi, 24, a computer engineer, he was said to have confessed to spying on behalf of Israel's Mossad intelligence agency.
A local newspaper said he had admitted to visiting Israel and various Arab countries.
"The man carried two ID cards - one Yemeni, one Israeli," Reuters quoted a security official in Aden saying.
Al-Dharahi was arrested in the country weeks ago, local media had reported on Wednesday.
He was arrested by Yemeni security in the Taizz province, then transferred to an Aden prison two weeks ago, where he has been undergoing investigation under a veil of secrecy.
"it would send 2,500 troops to support Malian government soldiers in the conflict against Islamist rebels. France has already deployed around 750 troops to Mali, and French carriers arrived in Bamako on Tuesday morning.....So this is the official narrative of France and those who support it. And of course this is what is widely reported by the mainstrem media.
We will continue the deployment of forces on the ground and in the air.....
We have one goal. To ensure that when we leave, when we end our intervention, Mali is safe, has legitimate authorities, an electoral process and there are no more terrorists threatening its territory." [1]
France is supported by other NATO members. US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta confirmed that the US was providing intelligence to French forces in Mali. [2] Canada, Belgium, Denmark and Germany have also publicly backed the French incursion, pledging logistical support in the crackdown on the rebels. [3]
If we are to believe this narrative we are misled again about the real reasons. A look at Mali's natural resources reveals what this is really about.
It raises challenging questions: this is a woman who has admitted wanting to kill homeless people, and who has shown to take pleasure in torturing her family pets, so why is she being released from prison after serving just eight-months, and what can be done about it? How do we protect ourselves and our communities against people who feel no remorse for their actions, and experience none of the moral constraints that prevent them from committing terrible crimes?
This story strikes a nerve with me because my 2011 book The Vanishing Track is about a male version of Ms. Bourque. In this mystery novel, set in the Downtown Eastside of Vancouver, a young man named Shawn Livingstone graduates from juvenile delinquency to torturing and killing animals, stealing cars, burning down a neighbourhood grocery store to stalking and killing the homeless.
Sean is a psychopath - a human abomination incapable of feeling the most basic emotion: empathy - and that makes him capable of committing the most heinous crimes without feeling any remorse. He, like all psychopaths, is intelligent and superficially charming, but he lacks the ability to feel. He can mimic normal human emotions, but as Dr. Richard Hare of the University of British Columbia, and the world's foremost expert on psychopathy, says "he knows the words but not the music."
This kind of exercise applies to any kind of organization, be it public or private, or public/private.
You can read more about Dr. Hare's excellent work in his own webpage: http://www.hare.org/.
In order to obtain a so-called spectator pass the Olympic guests will need to log their info with a new national database, the state ID, containing the owner's passport information and even bank details, the R-Sport news agency reports.
"A person who wants to buy a ticket will be requested to voluntarily register on the database. It's confirmation that he is a well-behaved fan. He joins a sort of Sochi 2014 fan club," the source quotes the head of the organizing committee Dmitry Chernyshenko.

Rabbis from the Jewish orthodox Chabad Lubavitch of New York in Mumbai, India
The move comes shortly after the Magnitsky Act, which saw US legislators attempting to exert pressure on Russia's judicial system. A court in Washington is now attempting to penalize Russia for its possession of a collection of books, manuscripts and other Judaic documents.
According to the ruling, Russia would be required to pay $50,000 a day to Chabad Lubavitch, an Orthodox Jewish movement headquartered in New York City, until it releases the Schneerson Library, of which the Jewish group claims rightful ownership.
"It is outrageous that a Washington court has taken this unprecedented step fraught with most serious consequences as the imposition of a fine on a sovereign state," the Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement on Thursday.
Rebutting the Republican talk show host, Mukasey said that President Barack Obama's executive orders so far have been legal, as much as he finds them distasteful. He even expressed agreement with the Supreme Court's finding that the Affordable Care Act is constitutional, leaving Hannity looking perplexed.
Speaking about the president's most significant executive actions thus far, Hannity exclaimed: "It seems me to be, by definition, abuse of power. A power grab if you will... Is it then unconstitutional in some instances?"
"I don't think it's unconstitutional in the sense that I don't think it's something you could get a court to find unconstitutional," Mukasey replied. "We could have a debate about whether it's consistent with the constitution or not, but there is a limited number of things that will get you into court to have that decided, and I don't think any of the things you've enumerated are among them."
Campaign group Human Rights Watch is expected to uncover "disturbing evidence of police failure" in a 200-plus page report after a two-year investigation into law enforcement practices in the US capital.
But although shocking, the situation in Washington is far from isolated. There are widespread examples across the US of the police routinely neglecting crimes of sexual violence and refusing to believe victims.
"This is a national crisis requiring federal action. We need a paradigm shift in police culture, because rapes and sexual assaults are being swept under the rug, and too many victims are being bullied," said Carol Tracy of the Women's Law Project, a legal advocacy group that specialises in sexual violence cases.
Washington has demonstrated that it has no respect for its own laws and Constitution, much less any respect for international law and the law and sovereignty of other countries. All that counts is Washington's will as the pursuit of hegemony moves Washington closer to becoming a world dictator.
The examples are so numerous someone should compile them into a book. During the Reagan administration the long established bank secrecy laws of Switzerland had to bend to Washington's will. The Clinton administration attacked Serbia, murdered civilians and sent Serbia's president to be tried as a war criminal for defending his country. The US government engages in widespread spying on Europeans' emails and telephone calls that is unrelated to terrorism. Julian Assange is confined to the Ecuadoran embassy in London, because Washington won't permit the British government to honor his grant of political asylum. Washington refuses to comply with a writ of habeas corpus from a British count to turn over Yunus Rahmatullah whose detention a British Court of Appeals has ruled to be unlawful. Washington imposes sanctions on other countries and enforces them by cutting sovereign nations that do not comply out of the international payments system.
Last week the Obama regime warned the British government that it was a violation of US interests for the UK to pull out of the European Union or reduce its ties to the EU in any way.













Comment: Doublespeak: "It's not a policing measure... but it is done for security reasons."