Society's ChildS


Bomb

At least 5 dead, many injured in explosion in Turkish capital Ankara

explosion at ankara turkey
An explosion hit the center of Ankara on Sunday evening, with a number of people reportedly killed and wounded.

The blast occurred near Guven Park in the city center.


Health

Gaza's new generation of children - and all they know

Children in Gaza
© Suhaib Salem / Reuters
If you keep depriving children from Gaza of everything, eventually some of them will join armed conflict and Israel will have no one to blame but themselves, Belal Dabour, a Palestinian doctor from Gaza, told RT.

The Israeli Air Force launched an airstrike on Hamas bases on Saturday, March 12, in which a 10-year-boy who lived next to one of the targets was killed, Gaza Health Ministry spokesman Ashraf al-Qudra said, according to AFP. His six-year-old sister died later of her injuries, local media reported.

RT interviewed Dr. Belal Dabour, who assisted many injured during Operation Protective Edge in 2014, for his take on the situation.

RT: Do you see many children injured by Israeli attacks and how are they affected by the situation?

Comment:




Bomb

RT media crew under fire while filming in Daraa city, Syria

tank
© www.youtube.comRT crew comes under mortar fire while filming in Daraa.
Mortars landed near to where an RT crew was filming in the city of Daraa in southwest Syria, RT's Lizzie Phelan reported after escaping from the scene. Journalists might have been the target of the attack, an accompanying military official said. "Two mortars [were] fired from opposition turf near where we were filming," Phelan said, reporting from the area close to the border with Jordan.

A mortar shell hit a building near to where RT journalists were working. No injuries have been reported following the incident. "We were in the streets of Daraa city talking to local people five years since the war began, and our work there was cut short when a mortar was fired from opposition territory, landing on a building very close to us," Phelan told RT by phone shortly after the incident. The crew had to cut short the interview, get into the car and leave the area.

"Just a few seconds after we got into the car, another mortar landed in the same area," she said. "The general in charge of the area believes that the attack was a targeted attack," the RT reporter said, adding that although there is no confirmation to prove or deny this allegation, the military official said that the area where RT was filming "is very rarely targeted by mortars."

"He believes that local people who support the opposition called fighters on the other side of the frontline to say that there was a media crew in the area," Phelan said, adding that according to the general "the opposition doesn't like media filming in government-held territories. We were somewhat successful," she added, saying that the crew managed to escape the scene and quickly get to Damascus.

Comment: Desperate times, desperate measures. As the Syrian government forces gain territory, the opposition apparently takes pot-shots where they can.


Pistol

Insanity! The same cop kills two men within the course of 10 days

Pablo Torres
Officer Pablo Torres was "justified" in killing Kenosha, Wisconsin resident Aaron Siler a year ago because the officer "reasonably believed" that the victim, who was "armed" with a five-gallon plastic bucket, posed a potentially lethal threat, according to Kenosha County DA Robert Zapf.

Zapf's ruling focused on Torres's subjective perception of a threat, maintaining that "the standard is what an ordinary, prudent, and reasonably intelligent officer would have believed in Officer Torres's position, having the knowledge and training that Officer Torres possessed, and acting under the circumstances that existed at the time of the shooting."

On the evidence of this incident — among countless other very similar ones — the "knowledge and training" provided to Torres represent a net subtraction from his ability to make reasoned, appropriate decisions, given that non-police witnesses on the scene clearly and accurately perceived that Siler did not pose a lethal threat.

Comment: Officer Torres behaves no better than a rabid dog. He needs to be removed from society before he can kill again. By continuing to support this mad man, the entire Kenosha police department, as well as the DA's office, have blood on their hands.


Red Flag

Eagles of Death Metal frontman retracts his statement on the Paris terror attacks

paris shooting retraction
Now you see, it now you don't. One minute Eagles of Death Metal frontman Jesse Hughes is speaking directly, clearly, honestly and spontaneously about what he organically saw with his own eyes, what he was feeling and thinking as suspicious security personnel behaved oddly the night before the Paris shooting. The next minute Hughes is pulling a "Michael Hess" post-9/11 style 180-degree artificial retraction on his testimony.

Of course the controllers realize that the first organic version of the story confirms foreknowledge on the part of security. That foreknowledge would fit perfectly with the lack of clear evidence of the official story version of the story. The retracted artificial NEW narrative attempts to conveniently remove this foreknowledge and suspicious behavior. But in the end notice that the actual odd behavior and the security personnel who were mysteriously not working that day is still factual, only now we're asked to chalk it up to coincidence. Now where have we heard this before?

Comment: Bombshell: Security detail was switched in advance of Bataclan theater attack, claims Eagles of Death Metals frontman


Eye 1

Paranoid UK: 4-yr-old Muslim boy who mispronounced 'cucumber' threatened with counter-terrorism program

Cucumber
© Jon Nazca / Reuters
A four-year-old Asian boy who mispronounced "cucumber" as "cooker bomb" was recommended for a de-radicalisation programme by staff at a UK nursery, the boy's family has said.

According to the child's mother, who has not been named, workers at the Luton-based nursery raised the suggestion after the boy drew a picture of a man with a large knife cutting the vegetable.

Alarmed at the sight of the knife, staff asked the child what he was drawing. They heard the child call it a "cooker bomb,"misinterpreting the boy's words as a type of improvised explosive device, when in reality it was a mispronunciation of"cucumber," the BBC reported.

Hourglass

One tribe's war against corporate greed: How the indigenous Penan people of Borneo are fighting to preserve their forest against the loggers

Penan tribe
© www.aljazeera.com
The Penan people of Sarawak state have been pushed out of their forests by dam projects [AP]
With the loss of their land, the Penan fear they will lose their independence.

In the damp, lush and humid rainforest of northern Sarawak, on Borneo, the indigenous Penan tribe who have lived on the island for centuries fight a daily battle against the logging juggernauts who want to raze their homes to the ground.

Living off the land and in tune with their natural environment, 12,000 of the hunter-gatherer Penan remain - some living nomadically, relying on the forest for their existence.

Having suffered decades of logging, plantation developments, massive dams and a government who have not protected their rights, the decimated Penan have finally decided to stand-up to the corporate giants by banding together to stand firm - and they have finally received recognition.

Comment: Good luck to the Penan people. We have seen the horrific destruction done to the Native people and the land they inhabit all over the globe in the name of progress and greed.

See also: Lone Indian man creates lush new forest ecosystem planting 1,360 acre forest


People

Banksy meme exposes divide and conquer tactic, goes viral

divide and conquer
Banksy is an England-based graffiti artist, political activist and film director of unverified identity. A newspaper investigation in 2008 and a study using geographic profiling in 2016 suggest that this highly influential street artist could be Robin Gunningham.

Banksy's work has inspired and uplifted the masses while simultaneously driving the establishment insane. His paintings and quotes have been reproduced countless times and in countless ways, leaving this artist's impression of peaceful political and social commentary on billions.

One particularly powerful quote, which is often attributed to Banksy is more relevant now than ever.
We were all humans until race disconnected us, religion separated us, politics divided us and wealth classified us.

Megaphone

Peru tribe frees government hostages after oil cleanup deal reached

peru oil spill hostage
© RPP
An indigenous tribe in Peru's Amazon jungle have released eight hostages and a military helicopter after national government agreed to include them as recipients of cleanup aid.

On Sunday members of the Mayuriaga community in the Datem del Marañon province of Loreto state detained a military helicopter and government officials to protest their exclusion from an aid package to clean up the areas affected by oil spills from state oil company Petroperu's Northern Peruvian Pipeline. The Wampis tribe in Mayuriaga detained eight officials from Petroperu, Peru's environmental protection agency OEFA, the mining and energy ministry and the military.

"We want to see reparations, and the Petroperu president to come and reach an agreement," a Wampis leader told El Comercio.

Arrow Up

Arizona congressman furious he cannot give sacred Apache land to copper mining company

Native American
© Photos Facebook
An Arizona congressman is angry that sacred Apache land will continue to remain listed in the National Register of Historic Places, according to Tucson Weekly.

Republican Rep. Paul Gosar and Sen. John McCain had joined forces with Democratic Rep. Ann Kirkpatrick in an effort to sell off the ancestral Native American land, known as Oak Flat or Chi'chil Bildagoteel to the Apache community, to mining firm Resolution Copper, owned by an Australian-British corporation.

The designation of Oak Flat as a National Historic Place could hamper the plan to construct a copper mine on the land. But ultimately nothing "guarantees that a historic property cannot be modified or even destroyed," said Stephanie Toothman, the National Register's keeper, in a letter to the two lawmakers.

Comment: See also: Sold down the river: Navajo activists protest Utah water rights as a bad deal