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Fri, 05 Nov 2021
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Polish court orders investigation into demolition of Soviet cemetery, hundreds of memorials destroyed since 1997

Russia poland flag
© Sputnik / Mikhail Voskresenskiy
Hundreds of monuments to Soviet soldiers who died liberating Poland in WWII have been dismantled without much pushback in recent years - until a district judge in western Poland sided with a group of citizens who complained.

In 2017, the mayor of Trzcianka in the Greater Poland Voivodeship ordered the demolition of the Mausoleum of Soviet Soldiers, where 56 Red Army members who died in the battles to liberate the town - then known as Schönlanke - were buried.

On Monday, Judge Marcin Mackowski ordered an investigation into the demolition, based on the complaint by two descendants of the deceased soldiers, represented by the Polish non-governmental association Kursk. The complaint claims that the mayor violated several laws, including interstate agreements between Russia and Poland signed in 1992 and 1994 on the protection of monuments and cemeteries.

Comment: See also:


Megaphone

Former security guard holds 30 people hostage in Manila mall, 1 injured, he later surrenders

Manila
© AFP / TED ALJIBE
Police SWAT team arrive after a hostage situation was reported at a mall in suburban Manila
Philippines police were scrambled to respond to a situation in a Manila shopping mall, where a gunman - said to be a "disgruntled" security guard - is holding about 30 people hostage.

The crisis began earlier on Monday when gunfire was heard at the V-Mall in the Greenhills commercial district, local media report. The shooting prompted numerous visitors, vendors, and staff to flee the mall just before it was sealed off.

At least one person was injured amid the chaos, while 30 others were taken hostage by the assailant, Francis Zamora, the mayor of San Juan - part of the Manila metropolitan area - told reporters.

Comment: Just a few weeks ago: Gunman kills one at Thai shopping mall, follows horrific mass shooting 10 days ago


Ambulance

Vast majority of UK doctors warn NHS woefully unprepared for outbreak of coronavirus

Coronavirus Western general hospital Edinburgh
© Jane Barlow/PA
A makeshift sign at the Western general hospital in Edinburgh.
An overwhelming majority of doctors fear the NHS is not well prepared to deal with a major outbreak of coronavirus, a survey has found.

More than 99% of 1,618 NHS medics questioned appear not to agree with the assurances given by Boris Johnson that the service will cope if it is hit by a surge in the number of people falling ill.

Doctors are worried that the NHS is already stretched and under heavy pressure, and especially that it has too few intensive care beds and that GP surgeries are struggling to meet patient demand.

"Yesterday Mr Johnson said he was 'very, very confident' the NHS would be able to deal with an outbreak of Covid-19. Our survey shows that frontline doctors don't agree," said Dr Rinesh Parmar, the chair of the Doctors' Association UK, which undertook the survey.

"The truth is the NHS has already been brought to its knees and many doctors fear that our health system simply won't cope in the event of influx of coronavirus patients.

"With nearly 10,000 doctor vacancies and 43,000 nurse vacancies [in the NHS in England] the NHS is already understaffed to deal with demand. A&E waiting times are the worst on record. Intensive care units are at capacity and are even struggling to admit patients who are critically unwell or awaiting cancer surgery."

Comment: Quite an understatement - the system has already been rationing services due to chronic under-funding and could be quickly overwhelmed.


Life Preserver

All of a sudden, people all over America are prepping like crazy

face mask

I can't remember a time when we have seen such widespread "panic buying" all over the nation. Today I spoke with someone that just visited the closest Wal-Mart in this area, and I was told that there are empty shelves all over the store. There are very few canned goods left, some of the most essential medications have been cleaned out, and there was nothing left in the long-term storable food section at all. Of course similar things are being reported at major retail stores all across the United States. All of a sudden, fear of COVID-19 has motivated thousands upon thousands of Americans to start prepping like crazy. But most of the population is still not taking this crisis seriously enough. As the number of confirmed cases all over the world continues to rise at an exponential rate, what are the stores going to look like when most of the country finally realizes that they should be prepping for an extended pandemic?

Over the past several days, this coronavirus outbreak has escalated significantly.

From Saturday to Sunday, the number of confirmed cases in Italy jumped by 50 percent...
Italy reported a 50% increase in coronavirus cases Sunday, as the US further restricted travel and the famed La Scala opera house closed.

Italy's Civil Protection Authority reported the country now has 1,694 confirmed coronavirus cases, up from 1,128 confirmed cases on Saturday. Thirty-four people have died.

Comment: If nothing else, most of the people prepping will have an extra store of supplies for when a much bigger, much badder virus rears its monstrous head. But just as important (if not more) is the amount of good information coming out on how one may naturally boost one's immune system.


Arrow Up

Wuhan closes one hospital built to respond to coronavirus amid steep drop in cases

Wuhan China makeshift hospital
The city at the center of China's coronavirus epidemic has closed one of 16 hospitals built to respond to the illness after the medical facility discharged the last of its recovered patients.

The closure of the hospital in Wuhan accompanied a steep drop in the number of cases of the virus in Hubei province, Chinese officials said, Reuters reported.

"The rapid rising trend of virus cases in Wuhan has been controlled," Mi Feng, a spokesman for China's National Health Commission, told a briefing Monday. "Outbreaks in Hubei outside of Wuhan are curbed and provinces outside of Hubei are showing a positive trend."

Comment: RT's timelapse footage showing construction of Huoshenshan field hospital in Wuhan, China:




Stop

US will cut number of Chinese state media journalists working in country, limit duration of stay

News crews
© Pixabay/Engin Akyurt
The US State Department is limiting the number of employees China's four largest state-run media outlets may hire in the US and the amount of time those journalists can stay, intensifying its crackdown on the Chinese press.

The number of journalists legally permitted to work in the US offices of Beijing's top four media organizations will be cut, while those journalists will see the amount of time they can stay in the US reduced, State Department officials told reporters on Monday. The move affects Xinhua News Agency, China Global Television Network, China Radio International, and China Daily Distribution Corp.

"For years, the [Chinese] government has imposed increasingly harsh surveillance, harassment and intimidation against American and other foreign journalists in China," a senior official was quoted as saying by Reuters. The announcement came after China's decision to expel three Wall Street Journal employees last month over an op-ed calling coronavirus-stricken China the "real sick man of Asia." However, the US had previously reclassified the same four media outlets (plus People's Daily Distribution Corp.) as "diplomatic missions," placing them under tighter government scrutiny.

Now some of the same reporters that Washington called "propaganda agents for Beijing" may find themselves unceremoniously hustled out of the country. As of March 13, the affected outlets will only be permitted 100 journalists, down from 160.

Binoculars

How the SHTF in Syria: What its REALLY like to survive a long-term war

Syria war
Did you ever wonder what kind of societal disruption occurs in the middle of a war? Do you wonder what life is like when you're stuck surviving in the middle of a warzone?

A couple of decades ago, Syria was clean, modern, and safe. Now it's filled with ruined buildings, death in a thousand brutal ways, hunger, and filth.

How did this happen? How did a city like Aleppo (or more specifically "East Aleppo,") once filled with markets, mosques, and beautifully kept ancient sites, turn into a place of devastation and despair? (For some before and after photos, check out this article. Most people don't realize what a beautiful place Syria was before the war.)

Some background on how it all began

In 2003, young Syrians sat in their living rooms and watched on television as the American military rolled into Iraq amid missiles, bombs, and the requisite "Shock and Awe." This was not the first experience their country had with America's military in the region but it was the first time this generation had seen the war with the eyes of adults. Iraq, after all, was not Afghanistan. It was practically next door.

Comment: See also:


Star of David

A divided society with a longing for change: Israelis go to the polls for THIRD time in a year

Israel ballot box march 2020
© Reuters / Ronen Zvulun
Voting has commenced in Israel's third election in a year
Israel's parliamentarian race that kicked off on Monday morning will be tight, polls show. Although Prime Minister Netanyahu is leading, the country's left-wing circles are determined to end his rule, and it's now up to ordinary Israelis to determine whether there will be a winner, or yet another round.

The raging Coronavirus, a warning to stay away from crowded places and the fact that this is the third time in less than one year that Israelis are going to the polls didn't keep them at home.

It is still early in Israel, but many have already cast their votes, and it seems that the country is just as divided as it was in the previous rounds.

Attention

Supply chain shift away from China picks up speed

chinese manufacturing line
© Noel Celis/AFP via Getty Images
This photo taken on February 28, 2020, shows workers wearing facemasks polishing eyeglass frames at the Azure Eyeglasses Company in Wenzho, China.
The manufacturing supply chain shift away from China, which commenced during the U.S.-China trade war, is gaining critical mass amid the coronavirus crisis.

Later this year, U.S. consumers will begin to see Microsoft Surface laptops and Google Pixel smartphones labeled "Made in Vietnam."

Despite calls by Beijing leadership to restart factories quickly, many production facilities are still lacking upstream supplies or workers as migrants are largely still quarantined due to the coronavirus outbreak. This supply chain constraint is one reason the Dow Jones Industry Average slumped 3,600 points last week, the worst weekly drop since the 2008 financial crisis.

Comment: China is currently the linch-pin of most of the world's manufacturing industries. Any disruption in the current just-in-time models of delivery will have serious knock-on effects.


Quenelle

Bereaved outraged as deadly Grenfell fire inquiry gets delayed

Grenfell tower
The Grenfell Inquiry was adjourned moments after Monday's hearings began, following an outburst from members of the public asking the chair: "Have you sold your soul yet, Sir Martin?"

People were heard shouting "why don't you ask the corporates to leave", "it's a disgrace" and "what's the f****** point" as inquiry chairman Martin Moore-Bick invited the day's first witness, Andrzej Kuszell, director of Studio E architects, to start giving evidence.

As the hearing resumed around 10 minutes later, another man in the room addressed Moore-Bick and said: "These people are not bereaved and survivors."

Several people were escorted from the hearing room during the break.


Comment: Naturally, the elite class in the UK would seek to postpone what should ultimately prove to be a damning case against those in positions of power who set the stage for the inferno.

See also: