Society's Child
Pointing to a sharp rise in the number of attempted crossings from Africa along with the emergence of increasingly sophisticated ways of trafficking people across borders within the EU, the NCA revealed authorities in Europe are struggling to deal with smuggling gangs and immigration-related crime.
Criminal networks are making profits of up to £6 billion a year from charging would-be migrants, the majority of whom are from Africa, said Tom Dowdall, the agency's deputy director of organised immigration crime.
According to the Daily Mail, the crime agency chief reported that attempted crossings to Spain and Italy have risen 75 per cent from last year while the Italian government's crackdown on NGO boats has resulted in a "bottleneck" of 700,000 migrants currently in Libya who are waiting to get to Europe.
Currently, the SAA is only 4km away from ISIS pocket in the western Daraa countryside. Furthermore, only 3km of the border line is still under the control of the terrorist group.

President Donald Trump introduces U.S. Circuit Judge Brett M. Kavanaugh as his nominee to the United States Supreme Court during an event in the East Room of the White House July 9, 2018 in Washington, D.C.
"Trump's SCOTUS pick Brett Kavanaugh is an enemy of net neutrality and has sided with big cable companies in the lower courts," noted Demand Progress on Twitter following Trump's official selection of Kavanaugh Monday night, citing his previous argument that net neutrality rules violate the free speech of internet service providers.
Comment: Understandably, something to be concerned about but the days of mass surveillance are already in full swing and 'net neutrality' isn't exactly as 'neutral' as you think it is. In other words, not much is really going to change in that regard. See also: Trump nominates conservative Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court
Juan Carlos Hernandez-Caseres, 37, was arrested Saturday morning for the murders of Ann Farrin, 41, and Neidy Roche, 39. Both women, police said, were prostitutes.
Farrin's body was found by paramedics Wednesday morning in the 3000 block of Northwest 25th Avenue, between Northwest 38th Street and Northwest 37th Street. Hernandez-Caseres told police he had picked Farrin up in his car for the purpose of paying her for sex, but sometime during intercourse, he became "enraged" and punched her in the throat and neck.
Surveillance footage taken at the time shows a black vehicle coming to a stop between Northwest 38th Street and Northwest 37th Street. The driver gets out, removes a body from the passenger side and leaves it on the sidewalk.
Because of those epithets, Sanderson was charged with "ethnic intimidation." Insulting the officers in such terms was an anti-white hate crime, from the perspective of the authorities. Sanderson had made bias-motivated "terroristic threats," they claimed. The alleged motivation increased the seriousness of Sanderson's crime from a first-degree misdemeanor to a third-degree felony.
That's according to The Appeal's Joshua Vaughn, who reports that Pennsylvania residents were charged with hate crimes for making offensive statements to police at least three other times. In each of these cases, including Sanderson's, the hate crime charges were eventually dropped. But the threat of a hate crime conviction can still hurt. Defendants might plead guilty to other offenses, for instance, if prosecutors agree to drop a hate crime charge.
YouTube announced the initiative on Monday, and says it aims to make "it easier to find quality news" and improve "the news experience on YouTube." The initiative forms part of a wider, $300 million Google program aimed at "helping journalism thrive in the digital age."
In the coming weeks, videos posted about breaking news events will be accompanied with a link to carefully vetted news article about the events, as well as a reminder that breaking news can rapidly change. YouTube will also highlight breaking news videos from reputable news organizations on its homepage, and recommend that viewers watch similar videos following the ones they were watching.
Comment: If Western governments and mainstream media outlets would actually tell the truth, then there'd be no need for companies like Google, Facebook, and Youtube to act as thought police on their websites.

Fire crews from Williamsburg and James City and York counties worked to contain the fire Sunday afternoon and through the night.
"[The helicopter] departed the Williamsburg-Jamestown airport around 4:30 p.m. [Sunday]. The pilot was the only person on board," National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) investigator Doug Brazy said during a Monday afternoon press conference. "We don't know the destination of the flight yet."
The helicopter crashed into the Bristol Commons Townhomes -- about one mile from the airport on Settlement Drive -- minutes after takeoff.
"The pilot -- who we believe was on board -- held a commercial pilot certificate," Brazy said.
"We have seen a small but significant improvement in the condition of Charlie Rowley. He is in a critical but stable condition and is now conscious," the hospital said in a statement.
The two fell ill on June 30 and authorities later determined they had been exposed to Novichok, a deadly nerve agent developed by the Soviet Union and used in the poisoning of former Russian double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter, Yulia, in March.
Police suspect Rowley and Sturgess were accidentally exposed to some residual Novichok left over from the March incident. The Skripals have recovered, but the death of Sturgess prompted Defense Minister Gavin Williamson on July 9 to accuse Russia of committing an attack on British soil. The Kremlin rejected the allegations, calling them absurd.
The poisoning of the Skripals prompted a major diplomatic crisis, with London, and many of its allies, expelling diplomats, and Moscow responding in kind.
Comment: See also:
- In the shadow of Dawn Sturgess
- A Tale of two Novichoks: UK police unable to say if 'Amesbury nerve agent' is same as 'Salisbury nerve agent'
- Hysterics on repeat: British MP, establishment journalists rush to blame Russia after Amesbury chemical death
- UK police say woman exposed to nerve agent in Amesbury has died
31-year-old Kristian Saucier served a year in federal prison for taking photographs of classified sections of the submarine he worked on. In the suit, filed in Albany, New York, on Monday, he argues that the same officials who threw the book at him went much easier on Hillary Clinton for using a private email server to handle classified State Department documents.
The US Department of Justice, former FBI Director James Comey and former President Barack Obama are named as some of the defendants in Saucier's complaint.
Comment: Saucier has a point but no skin in the bigger game. He got his pardon.
See also:
- A sailor, pardoned by Trump, to sue Obama and Comey for letting Clinton go
- Sailor pardoned by Trump says 'he was made scapegoat to take the heat off Hillary for mis-handling classified information'
- Navy sailor uses Clinton case as precedent in asking for leniency from court
- Trump pardons submariner who took photos of classified sub and used 'Clinton emails' defense
- Sailor pardoned by Trump is suing Obama and Comey for going easy on Hillary Clinton while sending him to prison for photographing nuclear sub
Police Commissioner James O'Neill told reporters on Tuesday that the NYPD's intelligence bureau cleared De Blasio to go back and forth from his holiday in Quebec, Canada, using the $3 million Cessna 208 Caravan. He had taken time out from his week-long break to attend a memorial for a slain police detective.
"Bottom line, the mayor came back to go to a street-renaming for a detective that was brutally murdered a year ago," O'Neill said, according to the New York Post.













Comment: No, it's still a migrant crisis but staged as a political one where only certain people benefit - and it's not the citizens of the country. See also: