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Attention

World conflict has forced 2 million people to flee as refugees this year, says UN

refugees
© AFPIn this picture taken on October 1, 2017, Rohingya Muslim refugees line up to receive food at a distribution area at Balukhali refugee camp near the Bangladeshi town of Gumdhum in Cox's Bazar.
UN High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi says conflicts, violence, and persecution across the world, including in Myanmar, South Sudan and Syria, have forced over two million people to flee as refugees this year.

Speaking at the UNHCR's annual Executive Committee meeting in the Swiss city of Geneva on Monday, Grandi called for more international cooperation and support to address the crisis.

"The despair of millions of men, women, and children driven from their homes, cast adrift into a life of uncertainty, is a stain on our collective conscience," he said.


Comment: It is a stain. The West, led by the United States, is responsible for much of the conflict in these regions. The UN hasn't done a thing about it. Grandi talks about such suffering in too far-removed of a way. He should hang his head in shame.


The UN refugee chief also pointed to the dire needs of more than half a million persecuted Rohingya Muslims who have fled into Bangladesh from Myanmar's Rakhine state since August 25.

Handcuffs

HRW & Amnesty International demand Egypt end 'crackdown' on gay men

gay rainbow flag homosexual
Two international rights groups have called on Egyptian authorities to end their crackdown on people suspected of homosexuality and to "immediately and unconditionally" release at least 11 men detained in the past week.

The latest crackdown began after a group of people were seen raising a rainbow flag at a September 22 concert in a rare display of support for the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) communities in the conservative Muslim-majority country of 95 million people.

While taboo in Egypt, homosexuality is not explicitly banned by law. Still, gay men are often arrested in police raids on private parties, public baths, restaurants, and bars.

Pistol

Terrorism in the UK: Should British police be routinely armed?

UK police
© Peter Nicholls / Reuters
Although the UK is often revered for being one of the few nations in the world where police maintain law and order without carrying guns as standard, the ongoing terrorism threat has reopened the debate on whether arming all officers would make Britain any safer.

In the wake of five terrorist attacks this year alone, police forces are again asking whether all officers should be routinely armed, not just specialist firearms units.

According to recent surveys, a majority of the public and a third of rank and file officers would back routine arming of British Bobbies. But would arming all officers really make Britain any safer, or merely give the veneer of readiness?

David Videcette, a former Scotland Yard counterterrorism detective, debunked claims the routine arming of police could stop terrorist atrocities, telling RT it is a "total misconception."


Comment: London's "0" kill statistics tell the story.
See also:


Pirates

Moscow: ISIS sleeper cell foiled by FSB

sleeper cell arrest
© RT
The Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) has detained "all members" of an Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) terrorist sleeper cell in Moscow, suspected of plotting attacks on public places. Homemade explosive devices and other weapons have been seized. "Following investigative activities conducted in the Moscow Region on September 30, 2017, the FSB has foiled illegal activity of a deeply clandestine cell of the IS international terrorist organization," the security service said in a statement Monday.

It was established that the cell members planned to carry out "high-profile" terrorist attacks in September, including blasts in crowded places and on the transport infrastructure, the FSB stated. "All members" of the cell have been detained, the statement said, without elaborating on the exact numbers. Two powerful ready-to-use improvised explosive devices were found, along with Makarov pistols and hand grenades.

The cell was headed by "foreign emissaries," according to the FSB, who also revealed that Russian citizens were among its members. They acted under "increased conspiracy measures," the report said. At least two suspects have been taken into custody, RIA Novosti reported Monday, citing sources at a Moscow court.

The detained suspects reportedly worked as night guards at a construction site of a residential compound in the north of Moscow, RIA Novosti previously reported, citing sources. "They behaved quietly, tried not to draw attention. They left [the site] at 9am, came back at night, having been secretive and not communicating with anyone," a source said to be working at the same site told the news agency.

In late August, the FSB detained IS members who were planning to carry out attacks in public places in the Moscow Region on September 1, which is Knowledge Day in Russia, marking the beginning of the school year.

Play

Horrific footage shows crazy cop sexually assault and brutalise handcuffed woman

las vegas police abuse
Las Vegas, NV - Former Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department (LVMPD) officer Richard Scavone pleaded guilty this week in federal court to assaulting a handcuffed woman in his custody. After the plea, authorities released the body camera footage of the assault. It is nothing short of infuriating and shows the level of violence a woman-abusing cop was willing to take to assert his authority.

Scavone now faces up to a year behind bars and a $100,000 fine on one count of deprivation of rights under color of law in connection with the encounter.

The encounter happened in January of 2015 after this abusive cop thought he had nabbed himself a prostitute.

The woman had done nothing wrong and was walking down the sidewalk drinking a coffee when Scavone attacked her for no reason. She was entirely compliant during the stop even though this sadistic predator kept abusing her.

2 + 2 = 4

It's not just the West: Boys in the Middle East are falling behind in school

boys girls education middle east
© Ashley Seil Smith
Jordan has never had a female minister of education, women make up less than a fifth of its workforce, and women hold just 4 percent of board seats at public companies there. But, in school, Jordanian girls are crushing their male peers. The nation's girls outperform its boys in just about every subject and at every age level. At the University of Jordan, the country's largest university, women outnumber men by a ratio of two to one-and earn higher grades in math, engineering, computer-information systems, and a range of other subjects.

In fact, across the Arab world, women now earn more science degrees on a percentage basis than women in the United States. In Saudi Arabia alone, women earn half of all science degrees. And yet, most of those women are unlikely to put their degrees to paid use for very long.

This is baffling on the most obvious levels. In the West, researchers have long believed that future prospects incentivize students to invest in school. The conventional wisdom is that girls do better in school as women acquire more legal and political rights in society. But many Middle Eastern women do not go on to have long professional careers after graduating; they spend much of their lives working at home as wives and mothers. Fewer than one in every five workers is female in Jordan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Oman.

Comment: Society's failure in preparing boys to become responsible men is a global phenomena. It is striking to see such similar outcomes in both the West and in the Middle East. The underlying influence appears to be an overarching disregard toward the development of boys. It appears that even the highly 'patriarchal' governments in the Middle East have ironically adopted some of the flawed tenets of the West's feminism.

This doctrine teaches that males are uniquely and inherently defective. It also implies that society provides males with so much power and privilege, that further attention to their development is unwarranted and unnecessary. It's little wonder that boys become disengaged from society, favoring escapes like video games and pornography. Left with little to no guidance, they become guided by more immediate comforts and pleasures. The end results are detrimental to both the individual and society as a whole.


Info

Best of the Web: Catalonia heads to the polls for independence referendum amid violent police measures - UPDATES

catalonia police
© PAU BARRENA / AFP - Getty Images
Some people in Catalonia, a rich and culturally distinct area in north-east of Spain, want to secede from the larger country. According to polls (pdf) less than half of the people in the area support the move. The local government prepared for a referendum and called for a local vote.

Polling stations were set up for today. But Spanish laws do not allow for such polls or a separation. Catalonia, like other Spanish regions, already has a good degree of autonomy. If Catalonia were to secede the Basque areas in the north would likely follow. Spain would fall apart. Under Spanish law the referendum is illegal. The central government sent police to prevent the procedure. Street melees ensued.

Comment: Spanish police have been filmed firing rubber bullets on unarmed civilians (more videos here). Another video shows a police officer slamming a young woman to the ground. The Catalan government says 38 people had been treated for injuries inflicted by police early this morning, pinning the responsibility on Spanish leader Mariano Rajoy. A few hours later, that number was 337. The reaction should have been predictable. Catalan leader Carles Puigdemont made that clear:
"The unjustified, disproportionate and irresponsible violence of the Spanish state today has not only failed to stop Catalans' desire to vote ... but has helped to clarify all the doubts we had to resolve today".
Police have destroyed at least one polling station, and seized ballot boxes in an attempt to stop the referendum. But 90+% of polling stations are open, according to Catalan sources (Spain says it shut down 50%). Would-be voters have been forcibly removed from polling stations by police.


Puigdemont says Catalonia could declare independence within 48 hours if "yes" wins. Jeremy Corbyn and Belgium's PM have condemned the Spanish police's violence.

Julian Assange has been tweeting about Spain's tactics:









Update: The number of injured is now over 460, 2 seriously injured.


Update: Catalan police defended polling stations and were forced into several standoffs with Spanish police. Catalans showed an outpouring of support for the Catalan police, bringing some of them to tears. At the end of the day, over 840 Catalans were injured by Spanish police (more footage here). The Spanish FM defended the police actions, calling them "proportionate":
"You may think people were peacefully exercising their right to vote but the problem is this so-called referendum had been ruled illegal by the Constitutional Court," Alfonso Dastis told SkyNews on Sunday.

Dastis denounced the referendum as "sham voting," accusing the organizers of bringing in rigged ballot boxes, full of pre-planted votes. The official did not provide any proof for the allegations, though.

Spain's FM dismissed allegations of excessive police violence. "I don't agree with you that this is an extraordinary level of violence," Dastis said.
...
The lack of reaction towards the referendum clashes on the part of EU leaders, according to Dastis, is due to them waiting on "reliable information" as evidence of the violence to be distributed by the "defenders of the so-called" referendum, and which might contain "fake photos." The official urged to "wait and see" until this "reliable information" of sorts emerges.

When asked about the Spanish government reaction should the Catalonia actually declare independence, the official took on the same expectative approach, stating that it should happen first and then talk about it.
It's pretty stunning how detached from reality Dastis is. We guess all those videos of Spanish police beating grannies at the polling stations were fake. Spain's PM journeyed even deeper into La La Land, announcing that "no referendum has been held in Catalonia today". He too defended police, saying they "performed their duty", apparently unable to foresee the internet memes that will undoubtedly result from such a statement. He added that voting (in the referendum that didn't take place) only damaged Spain's "coexistence" and "served to sow division". Police beating grannies no doubt played no part in that.

By contrast, the Catalan government's responses look sane:
Announcing a two pronged response strategy, officials added that a process to institute anti-Madrid sanctions in the EU is already underway.

"We will initiate formalities to activate the mechanisms of sanctions... We think that the actions of the Spanish state that the whole world is witnessing, put the image of the EU as a guarantor of democracy and human rights at risk," Catalan Minister of Foreign Affairs, Raul Romeva told a news conference in Barcelona Sunday.

Catalan officials have initiated contact with various EU institutions, including the European Parliament and the European Commission, along with representatives of EU member states "in order to launch measures to penalize and control" Madrid, he added.

The minister referred to the EU's Article 7, a law that can suspend a member state's voting rights and impose sanctions on a country believed to have fundamentally violated human rights.

Having accused Spanish authorities of such violations, another Catalan government official, Jordi Turull told reporters that Madrid should be held accountable in international courts for its actions during the poll.
The referendum now complete, Puidgemont says the official results will be announced in a few days. His message: "On this day of hope and suffering, Catalonia's citizens have earned the right to have an independent state in the form of a republic."

Despite Puidgemont's statement, however, the Catalan government has already issued results (we assume they are preliminary results, and that official ones are forthcoming):
Over two million Catalans, or 90.9 percent of those who voted said 'Yes' in Sunday's referendum, regional authorities said. Only 7,87 percent, or 176,565 voters said 'No' when asked if they want to attain independence from Madrid.

The Catalan government said the result reflects only the ballots that "were not seized" during police raids on polling stations throughout the day.

"What kind of a democracy steals ballot boxes?" asked Vice President Oriol Junqueras, standing next to government representatives, Raul Romeva and Jordi Turull.
...
Of Catalonia's 5.34 million voters, this represents a turnout of around 42.3 percent, excluding those whose ballots were confiscated and people who were prevented from voting by police.

The massive police crackdown "prevented" an estimated 770,000 people from voting, Catalan government board member Turull said during the vote result announcement.
Update (Oct. 2): Madrid has vowed to do "everything within the law" to prevent Catalonia from declaring independence:
Asked if the central government would use Article 155 of the Spanish constitution, which would allow it to practically suspend the autonomous powers of the northeastern region, Catala said: "That is a tool that is there."

"We have always said that we will use all the force of the law, all the mechanisms that the constitution and the laws grant the government," he added.

"We are not here to divide Spaniards, we are here to serve the general interest, therefore if we have to use certain measures that worry us and may hurt, we will do it. It is important to guarantee that Spain has rule of law, that laws are fulfilled," he said.
The European Commission finally commented on the police crackdown:
"We call on all relevant players to now move very swiftly from confrontation to dialogue," the European Commission said in a statement on Monday.

"Violence can never be an instrument in politics," it said, adding that it is incumbent on Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy "to manage this difficult process in full respect of the Spanish Constitution and of the fundamental rights of citizens enshrined therein."
...
Some EU Parliament parties have already decried the violence during the Catalonian referendum. The Confederal Group of the European United Left/Nordic Green Left wants to raise the issue during the Monday meeting, calling on the body to protect the rights of Catalans.

The president of the GUE/NGL group in the European Parliament, Gabi Zimmer, said that the EU cannot ignore "the shocking scenes" and tolerate "attacks on democracy."

Greens in the European Parliament also strongly condemned the attacks on peaceful voters.

The UN also responded to the violence in Catalonia on Monday as High Commissioner for Human Rights Prince Zeid bin Ra'ad called on the Spanish government to resolve the Catalan question "through political dialogue with full respect for democratic freedoms." He also wants the authorities to investigate "all acts of violence" related to the referendum.
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Most leaders of EU member states have not offered any reaction to the situation in Catalonia. Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon was among the earliest to condemn the police brutality, saying it was "shocking" and "unnecessary" and calling on Madrid to let people"vote peacefully."
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On Monday, Germany also stressed the necessity of dialogue between Spanish central and regional governments, urging the sides to "keep calm." "The images that reached us yesterday from Spain show how important it is to interrupt the spiral of escalation," German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel said, according to Reuters.
As Republican Left leader on the Barcelona City Council Alfred Bosch told RT:
The fact is that they have prevented - in a very hostile manner - people from voting. They have prevented people from voting who want independence; however, they also prevented those who wanted to vote 'No' to independence and were against independence like themselves. That is very undemocratic.
...
It is backfiring right now. Just look at how people have been voting in the thousands, they have been showing up in all the voting stations. Just look at how the international press is covering what is going on here. And just see how people back in Russia, or Europe or anywhere in the world are watching these shocking images and thinking what on earth is going on in Spain? Has this government of Mr. Rajoy turned absolutely crazy? Have they gone back to the Middle Ages? Or to General Franco's military dictatorship?
Like the local police, local Catalan firemen stepped in to protect voters and polling stations from Spanish police. The local response? They were greeted as heroes. Again, the Spanish government seriously miscalculated the public perception of their response to the vote.

The Catalan government plans to set up a commission to look into Spain's violation of fundamental rights. (893 people were injured, 72 of whom have filed formal complaints against Spanish police.)
Puigdemont demanded the withdrawal of the National Police and Civil Guard from the territory of Catalonia, and said that his government will be taking steps to carry out their mandate for independence in the next few days, following the victory of the 'yes' vote.
...
Barcelona's mayor, Ada Colau, while not a supporter of the independence movement, has echoed Puigdemont's calls for a thorough examination and explanation of what happened on Sunday, accusing police officers of carrying out not only beatings but sexual assaults. Colau has also called on Prime Minister Rajoy to resign, arguing that the EU should take over the talks.

Meanwhile students have been holding a silent protest against the brutality that took place on Sunday at the Plaza de Cataluna, the central square in Barcelona, while other protesters gathered outside the Palau de la Generalitat de Catalunya which houses the Catalan government.


A general strike has been called in Catalonia on Tuesday as two of Spain's biggest unions, the Catalan National Assembly (ANC), a powerful pro-independence civil association, and 41 other groups have called on their supporters to protest against "the grave violation of rights and freedoms." As a major hub of the Spanish economy, the strike could have significant ramifications across the whole country.
Despite pre-vote polls showing a fairly even split between yes/no (both sides failing to show a clear majority), it looks as if yes sentiments surged in past weeks as Spain's heavy-handed tactics were put into effect. See this last-minute poll published by the National:
catalonia poll
Update (Oct. 3): As Catalonians strike and protest today, France's president Macron took heat for siding with Spain. A source says he "underlined his support for Spain's constitutional unity" directly to Spanish PM Rajoy. No comment on whether or not he condemned the Spanish police response to the referendum.

Meanwhile, hundreds of Spanish police were evicted from hotels in Catalonia today. Hotel owners made the call after Sunday's police brutality:
A lawyer acting for the police has pledged legal action against the hotel owner and local council he claimed had pressured him into serving the expulsion order, a claim town hall chiefs have angrily denied. ...

Police have claimed on social media that waiters at some of the hotels they were staying at called in sick after being pressured to skip work, prompting staff shortages.

They also said some distributors had cut food supplies to the hotels "off their own backs or because they were being pressured".

One message, said to be circulating on a closed police WhatsApp group but flagged up by several Spanish newspapers, said: "The director of the hotel I was staying at received several calls, one of them saying that they were going to burn it down, others threatening to kill his parents and reminding him that he had young children."
Right, "pressure". Couldn't have anything to do with the fact that you guys royally messed up and are now hated by more Catalonians than did just a few days ago.

To evade authorities and avoid violence, one priest allowed activists to use his church to count ballots there:
I have a very good relationship with the neighbors and before the violence in other towns, I offered the temple to them,"he explained.

"It was also bigger and so more people could follow the scrutiny. I'm happy to have welcomed them."



Info

What gender propagandists won't discuss: Gender reversal surgeries are rising

Transgender reversals
© RFAnecdotal reports suggests the number of so-called 'reversals' are on the rise
Around five years ago, Professor Miroslav Djordjevic, the world-leading genital reconstructive surgeon, received a visit at his Belgrade clinic: a transgender person who had undergone surgery at different clinic to remove male genitalia - and since changed their mind.

That was the first time Prof Djordjevic had ever been contacted to perform a so-called gender reassignment "reversal" surgery. Over the next six months, another six people also approached him, similarly wanting to reverse their procedures. They came from countries all over the western world, Britain included, united by an acute sense of regret.

At present, Prof Djordjevic has a further six prospective people in discussions with his clinic about reversals and two currently undergoing the process itself; reattaching the male genitalia is a complex procedure and takes several operations over the course of a year to fully complete (at a cost of some €18,000).

Comment: Feelings change but the body doesn't: A sobering look into transgenderism and medical malpractice
We have known changing genders leads to suicides from reports in the late 1970s that provide a telltale glimpse into the consequences of ignoring the science. Endocrinologist Dr. Charles Ihlenfeld warned about the suicides and unhappiness of transgender clients based on his experience treating more than 500 transgender patients with hormones over a six-year period at colleague Dr. Harry Benjamin's gender clinic.

Ihlenfeld observed that the gender change led to poor outcomes, and concluded that 80 percent of the patients who want to change their physical appearance this way shouldn't do it. Ihlenfeld blew the whistle a little louder when he said, "There is too much unhappiness among people who have had the surgery. Too many of them end as suicides."
See also:


USA

The reason why America acts so goddamn crazy

crazy ugly americans america
© Pokket Mowse
I just finished reading what may be the single best takedown of the US establishment's Russia narrative that anyone has published so far. In an article, titled "Russia-gate's Shaky Foundation" Consortium News' Daniel Herman meticulously goes over many of the major glaring plot holes in the official story about Russia's involvement in the 2016 presidential election after reminding us of America's extensive and well-documented history of using lies, false flags and propaganda to manufacture public support for war.

It's a very thorough beatdown on the way the American people are being asked to swallow a collection of extremely grave charges with unfathomably dangerous implications about being "at war" with the planet's only other nuclear weapons superpower based on amazingly flimsy evidence provided by known liars and manipulators. I highly recommend reading it and sharing it widely, even though the response from many Americans will be to put their fingers in their ears and hum the latest Pepsi jingle to escape the cognitive discomfort of realizing they've been completely wrong about everything and having their entire worldview ripped to shreds.

Russiagate is bullshit. We're seeing nothing other than the boring repetition of the same tired old patterns we've been seeing from the American war machine for the entirety of living memory, repackaged in a shiny new 2010s wrapper with pictures of hackers and Twitter bots on it. The US power establishment is working to manufacture support for escalations with Russia for the same exact reason it has worked to manufacture support for escalations with all the other governments that it has bullied into submission over the years: to prevent the rise of any global power that could weaken the hegemony of the US plutocracy.

Handcuffs

Britain's forgotten prisoners: 4,000 people languishing behind bars indefinitely under abolished IPP laws

prison, jail
© AZemdega / Getty Images
Twelve years into a three-year jail term, Ian Hartley is languishing behind bars indefinitely. With no release date, he is one of almost 4,000 prisoners in Britain serving a tortuous indeterminate sentence.

Hartley, 44, was sentenced in 2005 for robbery under the controversial imprisonment for public protection (IPP) program. Despite serving four times his sentence, and the scheme being abolished five years ago, there is no release date in sight.

"It would be more humane to give them the death penalty - at least they will know there's an end," Hartley's partner Joanne Hibbert told RT.

"It is mental torture. It's the not knowing. The government wants it to be forgotten about - and it is being forgotten about."