Society's Child
The incident happened on Friday near the town of Surif in Hebron, where dozens of Palestinians were protesting against the latest confiscation of land for the construction of Israeli settlements in the occupied territory.
Amarneh, who was covering the protest, was rushed to a hospital in Hebron after sustaining the injury. But doctors could not save his left eye.
The deadly explosion went off near a bus terminal on Saturday, causing the deaths and significant damage in the area. A video published by an Al Jazeera correspondent showed a chaotic scene with multiple small fires and what appears to be a large pool of blood on the ground.
The Turkish Defense Ministry has accused the "inhumane and uncivilized" Kurdish YPG militias for the bombing, saying the tactics showed that they were not different from the terrorist group Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL). The ministry wouldn't immediately explain how it attributed the responsibility.
Comment: As usual, no evidence required.
Clark County Sheriff Jason Watson arrested Terry David Bateman and Bradley Allen Rowland, both of Arkadelphia, Friday afternoon on charges of manufacturing meth and use of drug paraphernalia, the release said.
The release did not say whether investigators believe the two associate professors manufactured methamphetamine on campus, but said Arkadelphia police, a narcotics task force and Henderson State University contributed to the investigation.
The university's website listed Bateman as an associate professor and as the director of undergraduate research in the chemistry department. An online profile under Bateman's name said he has been working at Henderson State University since 2009.
While Andrew says he regrets spending time with the New York financier after he had been implicated in sex trafficking, the prince insisted in an interview with the BBC he did not recall ever meeting Epstein accuser Virginia Giuffre, who claims she was forced into sex with Andrew between 1999 and 2002, during the time she says Epstein kept her as a "slave."
I have no recollection of ever meeting this lady, none whatsoever.
Comment: Here's the full interview, if you can stomach it:
The royal family is screwed. But then, so is the whole British regime.
- Scrubbed Reports Uncover New Secrets Into The Prince Andrew-Jeffrey Epstein Relationship
- Willful ignorance or complicity? Newly released video shows Prince Andrew inside pedophile Epstein's mansion in 2010 - UPDATES
- A Royal mess? Prince Andrew may find himself deeper into investigation probe after Epstein's death
- Prince Andrew accused of groping minor at Epstein Mansion - court docs

Teller County Sheriff deputies lead Patrick Frazee out of the Teller County Courthouse in Cripple Creek, Colo., April 5, 2019.
Frazee is accused of attacking his fiancee Kelsey Berreth with a baseball bat at her Woodland Park, Colorado, home on Thanksgiving Day 2018 while the couple's 1-year-old daughter, Kaylee, sat in a playpen in a back room.
Prosecutors allege Frazee, who's on trial for murder, put 29-year-old Berreth's body in a black plastic tote and burned it on his property.
But the defense has stressed that a body and a murder weapon have never been recovered.
The broadcast was cut off on Thursday without any prior notice or explanation. The NTC's only comment was to tell its customers that the channel 778, which was the one carrying RT Spanish, is not included in the package anymore, and offer three sports channels instead.
RT has still not received any comment from the NTC and its reasons remain unclear. Last month, Interior Minister Maria Paula Romo blamed RT for the increased level of "violence" President Lenin Moreno faced in the media field during the massive protests that gripped the Latin American nation.
Comment: See also:
- Moreno & his neoliberalism are behind Ecuador's turmoil, ex-president Correa tells RT - UPDATE: Protestors storm parliament
- Ecuador: Protesters mobilize in mass over austerity & IMF loan, gov't cracks down and President moves personnel from capital
- State of Emergency declared: Ecuadorian cities paralyzed by mass protests
According to the Association of Professional Flight Attendants (APFA), they want to be fully versed on what has happened and why the plane is safe to fly now. The union said it will consider information from Boeing, US regulators, American Airlines, the carrier's pilots and others before making a final decision.
"I hear from some flight attendants every day and they are begging me to not make them go back up in that airplane," APFA President Lori Bassani told reporters. "We want to know without a doubt that it's safe to fly."
Boeing, which has been striving to end the MAX's worldwide grounding, said this week the US Federal Aviation Administration is on track to certify its redesigned flight-control software by mid-December. The manufacturer could then start delivering new MAX jets to the world's airlines.
Comment: How transparent will the company be with flight crews regarding safety this time? And with the ongoing malfunctions in various Boeing aircraft, it's no wonder people are reluctant to board them.
- Brand new Boeing plane literally falls apart over Rome: Engine fails, breaks off and rains debris on people, homes and vehicles
- More junk: US Air Force restricts Boeing KC-46 from carrying cargo and passengers
- 737 Max jets are 'flying coffins': Boeing CEO skewered by Congress for concealing deadly software problems
- More than 400 pilots file class action suit against Boeing over 737 MAX's 'unprecedented cover-up'

Emma Arbuthnot, senior district judge (chief magistrate), based at Westminster magistrates court.
Lady Emma Arbuthnot, the Westminster chief magistrate enmeshed in a conflict of interest, will no longer be presiding over the extradition proceedings of imprisoned WikiLeaks publisher Julian Assange, said WikiLeaks lawyer Jen Robinson, at an event in Sydney on Friday night.
"Yes, there was some controversy about her sitting on the case," Robinson said. "She won't be sitting on the case going forward." Robinson told Australian journalist Quentin Dempster at the event that she was "not sure" who would take over from Arbuthnot.
Comment: The deck has been stacked against Assange from the get-go. His "trial" is nothing but a sham.
See also:
- Judge who refused to drop Assange's warrant questioned over links to security services
- Assange lawyers' links to US govt & Bill Browder raises questions
- Killing Julian Assange: Justice denied when exposing official wrongdoing
- Assange health and mental deterioration spur lawyers to ask Australian government for help
- Don't railroad Assange to Virginia

Wi-Fi hacking tech operated from Intellexa's surveillance van. Dilian claims he can force any iPhone or Android device to connect to his Wi-Fi and from there he can start attacking the phones
He's dialing up the charm offensive over the two days he gives Forbes unprecedented access to the normally hidden, clandestine spy-tech industry, estimated to be worth $12 billion and rising. It's the first time Dilian has gone on camera, openly discussing the more controversial aspects of the industry, namely its ethics. This is, after all, a market that's been linked to snooping on murdered Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, not to mention attacks on human rights lawyers and activists in London, Mexico, the U.A.E. and beyond.
But first he wants to show off the power of his surveillance kit. His van, which costs between $3.5 million and $9 million, depending on how much spy tech the customer desires, is the A-Team truck spliced with a Bond car. To show what it can do, Dilian has posted a colleague 200 yards away. "We will trace them, we will intercept them and we will infect them," Dilian says, as if delivering a line from Ocean's 11. He forces the mock target's Huawei phone to connect to his Wi-Fi hub, and from there he hacks into the device, silently installing surveillance software. No clicks required from the victim. Inside the vehicle, seconds after they're sent, WhatsApp messages from the device appear on a monitor in front of Dilian.
Comment: A couple of questions are raised based on the information provided in the article:
- Under which country's laws and legislations do these surveillance companies, operate?
- And if an Israeli intelligence veteran is "playing around" with this type of technology, what kind of advanced technologies does the state of Israel operate with?
- Private eyes - obscure company enabling worldwide mass surveillance
- UAE government used Israel-based agency to hack phones of a prince, emir and other rivals
- Amnesty International reports employee targeted by 'hostile govt' using Israeli-made spyware
- Indian Army wants officers to deactivate Facebook accounts, avoid WhatsApp amid Israeli spyware disclosure
- Israeli ex-intel chief: The whole ME will be under Israeli surveillance by 2025
- Millions of Verizon customer records including phone numbers and account PINs exposed by Israeli technology company
- Globalization of Palestine: Israel is a world-wide testing ground for repression
Cypriot police have confiscated a van reportedly loaded with sophisticated surveillance equipment and have questioned its Israeli owner following media reports that the vehicle was being hired out to spy on people.
Police said Saturday that officers also searched the office of the Israeli's Cyprus-registered company that's being investigated on possible violations of privacy rights laws.
Police chief Kypros Michaelides told private radio station Astra that authorities are also questioning the Larnaca-based company's other Cypriot shareholders and are looking into how this van and other surveillance equipment was imported into the country.
Firefighters worked to extinguish the fire on the top floors of a six-storey building known as the Cube on Bradshawgate from about 8.30pm on Friday, with one witness describing the fire as "crawl[ing] up the cladding like it was nothing".
Paramedics treated two people at the scene, including one person rescued by crews via an aerial platform, as about 200 firefighters and 40 fire engines worked to tackle the blaze at its height.
Comment: As noted in the article, cladding of this kind, that has become prevalent with new buildings and refurbishments as a cheap way to make a building look more appealing, has been implicated in England's Grenfell tower block tragedy that killed 72 people.
See also:
- Grenfell Tower inferno, Götterdämmerung for UK regime? Brexit, Corbyn, and Britain's constitutional crisis
- London politicians warned 'several times' about cladding fire risk to Grenfell Tower but ignored experts and residents
- British govt report on Grenfell tower fire pins tragedy on... the firemen












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