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Since banning Western imports, the Russians have produced $4bn worth of food

oranges
© Russia Insider
The "bounty" of the mutiny.
The introduction of a limited Western food embargo three years ago has increased domestic production, said the deputy head of the Russian Agriculture Ministry Yevgeny Gromyko. According to him, "almost $4 billion worth of Russian products have been produced as part of the so-called import substitution." That means, previously imported cheese, sausages, and other products have been replaced by domestic ones, Gromyko told reporters on Monday.

Moscow banned imports of agricultural produce, food and raw materials from some Western countries in 2014. The move was in response to EU and US sanctions against Russia over its alleged role in the Ukrainian crisis.

The sides have repeatedly broadened and extended the restrictive measures since then despite warnings to Western governments that their economies are suffering. Some policymakers and businesses say the measures have proven to be politically ineffective and economically harmful for both Russia and Europe.

Russian President Vladimir Putin recently said the country's reciprocal action in the form of an embargo on certain Western food products was good for Russia's economy and should last "as long as possible." He explained the ban was also in the consumers' interest, with high-quality domestic products at lower prices becoming more available.

Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev said it is necessary to develop agriculture and industry so that it will be competitive with the West. According to Medvedev, the measures were introduced to stimulate domestic production, and many Russian companies have been asking the government to keep them. "We have imposed the embargo not to annoy our Western partners but mainly to develop our economy. Russian businesses asked us not to cancel it because of the opportunities they have," said Medvedev.

Comment: 'Turning lemons into lemonade,' as they say -- one way to survive the 'international food fight.'


Cowboy Hat

Cane-wielding passenger comes to aid of Kansas City bus driver being attacked

Rodney Goldman

Rodney Goldman.
A man with a cane came to the aid of a Kansas City bus driver during a frightening attack and his heroic actions were all caught on camera.

Driver Lynne Judge was dealing with a confrontational passenger when he suddenly attacked her early Saturday morning.

A cane-wielding passenger, later identified as Rodney Goldman, came to her rescue, striking the suspect several times, allowing Judge to escape the suspect's grasp. Rodney Goldman kept the suspect down while Judge was able to call for help. But Goldman's cane eventually shattered and that's when the suspect ran off.

Police said they were able to quickly locate and arrest the suspect.

The bus driver and Good Samaritan were reunited on Monday. The Kansas City Transit Authority awarded Goldman a lifetime bus pass and two new canes to replace the one he broke protecting the bus driver.


Bell

Missouri middle schooler berated, beaten on school bus for Trump hat - then suspended

Gavin Cortina
© KMOV
Gavin Cortina
A Missouri middle school suspended a student who was pummeled on his school bus for wearing a Make America Great Again hat.

A video of the incident published by KMOV shows several students confronting 12-year-old Parkway School District student Gavin Cortina on a bus last Wednesday over of his red Make America Great Again hat.

One of the instigators yelled "you want to build a wall? You want to build a f**king wall!?" before throwing punches. "At one point he just got so frustrated he pushed me ... and then he kept hitting me and backing me up to my window of the bus, so I just had to push him out," Gavin said.

His mother, Christina Cortina, told the news site her son was suspended over the incident, and she doesn't think it's right. "As a parent it's so upsetting," she said. "I feel like my son was made an example of, it was a tricky situation, it was politically charged. I saw him being persecuted for having an opinion of his own. I saw him being berated, and bullied and beat, literally beat, because he felt strongly about the world today," she said.


Star of David

Warped society: Israeli supermarket chain glorifies army killer on grocery bag

Israel Palestine IDF

Translation: Bag is free. ELOR PAYS FOR US ALL. Happy birthday. Love from the nation of Israel
"What distinguishes us from our neighbors is that we denounce and condemn murderers in our midst and pursue them until the end, while they name public squares after child murderers", said Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu in August 2015, two days after the Dawabshe family in the West Bank town of Duma was torched by Jewish terrorists. He made the same claim a year earlier, after Muhammed Abu Khdeir, another young Palestinian, was burned to death in Jerusalem.

I have already provided a long list of Israeli streets named after Jewish terrorists, but now Netanyahu's contention is being challenged in the most unlikely of places — the grocery store.

Comment: Further reading: Israel hits Palestinian minors detained in January with thousands of dollars in "fines"
Last October, the committee reported that the "overwhelming majority" of Palestinian minors held in Israel's Megiddo and Ofer prisons are tortured during their detention and interrogation.

Rights groups have also widely documented the mistreatment, abuse, and torture of Palestinian minors in detention, and the harsh interrogation practices used to force their confessions.

Meanwhile, Palestinian NGO BADIL warned last year of an increasing trend of Israeli forces shooting Palestinian youth in a deliberate attempt to leave them crippled for life.



Alarm Clock

Indian farmer decapitates cheating wife with sword, carries head to police department

Narayan Singh

Singh, pictured carrying the head of his wife by the hair, arrived at the police station in India.
A farmer decapitated his wife with a sword and carried her severed head to a police station after he caught her with another man in one of his fields.

Narayan Singh, 38, was charged with murder after finding his wife Sarita, 28, rolling around with another man before he flew into a fit of rage, according to neighbours. Villagers claim the farmer - who claims to have caught his wife cheating before - took a sword and beheaded his wife and picked up her head.

Terrified locals claim they called police but before they arrived he walked five miles to the nearest police station - while clutching his wife's hair.

Singh, of Ghareli village in Ingoria, India, has been charged with murder and is due in court later this month. Local sources outside the station in Ghareli village in Ingoria, India said before he handed himself in, he told onlookers: 'My wife had broken my trust. This is the reason why I beheaded her. I had warned her twice before, but she wouldn't mend her ways.'

Attention

Over 900 children killed in Afghanistan during 2016

Afghanistan war children
More than 900 children were killed in Afghanistan's conflict last year, the United Nations said Monday, calling it the most violent year for children since it started keeping records.

The U.N. mission said the nearly 25 percent increase in child deaths from the previous year was largely caused by mines and munitions left over from decades of conflict. It documented a 66 percent increase in such deaths in 2016.

"Conflict-related violence exacted a heavy toll on Afghanistan in 2016, with an overall deterioration in civilian protection and the highest-total civilian casualties recorded since 2009, when UNAMA began systematic documentation of civilian casualties," the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan said in its annual report.

It said 3,498 people were killed in 2016, including 923 children, and that another 7,920 people were wounded. The overall casualty toll was slightly higher than the previous year.

Family

Workers' rights group says Labor Secretary nominee's company underpays employees

pudzer trump labor pick
© Democracy Now
Andrew Puzder, Trump Secretary of Labor pick
Worker advocates are questioning the fitness of U.S. Labor Secretary nominee Andrew Puzder to lead the agency, claiming that the restaurant company he has led for more than a decade does not pay employees a living wage.

In a report, the National Employment Law Project (NELP) contends that "low pay" and "lack of benefits" at the thousands of fast-food restaurants owned or franchised by subsidiaries of CKE Restaurants -- which include the Hardee's and Carl's Jr. burger chains -- have forced many employees to rely on public-assistance programs to put food on the table and pay for other necessities. The estimated cost to U.S. taxpayers: $247 million a year.

Puzder's Senate confirmation hearing, which has been repeatedly delayed, is now set for Feb. 7.

A spokesman for CKE, which is based in Carpinteria, California, said that as a matter of policy the company doesn't comment on employee matters. White House press secretary Sean Spicer didn't respond to an email request for comment on NELP's findings.

To arrive at its $247 million price tag for public assistance to CKE workers, NELP relied on data from several sources, including public statements by Puzder about the number of CKE restaurants in the U.S. (2,920) and the approximate number of workers at each outlets (25), excluding general managers. Based on that information, NELP concluded that CKE's restaurants have about 73,000 "front-line" workers domestically.


No Entry

Greece: Refugees mob-block immigration minister from camp claiming to undergo a hunger strike

refugees greece
© Aristidis Vafeiadakis / Global Look Press via ZUMA Press
Angry protesting refugees at the Ellinikon camp near Athens would not allow a visit by Greece's immigration minister on Monday. Some of the asylum seekers have declared a hunger strike last week. The incident happened at the entrance gates of the abandoned Greek international airport that had been re-purposed by the Greek government to house refugees in autumn of 2015. Footage of the altercation showed a small crowd of protesters physically blocking Ioannis Mouzalas from entering the camp.

Some punches were thrown between the refugees and the minister's police escort and the confrontation was threatening to escalate into clashes, but Mouzalas left minutes after arriving, Proto Thema newspaper reported.

Reportedly more than 200 refugees at the Ellinikon camp announced a hunger strike on Sunday in a protest against what they call appalling living conditions at the site. They say they lack hot water, baby food, access to schools for children and hospitals for the sick. They also complain that Greek officials would not come to the camp in person and would only communicate with them via Skype, according to a pro-refugee movement KEERFA.


Comment: Desperate people do desperate things, especially those who have nothing left to lose.


Bullseye

Car belonging to Swedish police chief explodes in northern Stockholm

police car explosion sweden
A car belonging to the police chief of the Swedish city of Uppsala has exploded in northern Stockholm. No one was injured in the incident, but police are now investigating a possible link between the blast and the officer's activities.

The vehicle, parked outside the police chief's home in the northern part of Stockholm, blew up during the early hours of Monday morning, according to broadcaster SVT, citing investigators.

The police chief and his family are being cared for, and officials have launched a preliminary investigation on the basis of endangering public safety.

"We can't rule anything out just now, but we are working to try and find out what the motive could be for the detonation," Uppsala police spokesperson Lisa Sannervik told the TT news agency, as cited by the Local.

Comment: See also:


Calculator

File your U.S. taxes early - guards against refund fraud

tax forms IRS
© Brennan Linsley/Associated Press
Tax forms sit on a desk at the start of the tax season rush, inside the offices of tax preparation firm Infinite Tax Solutions, in Boulder, Colo.
Tax season is here, and while you have until April 18 to file your return, you may want to think about doing so sooner rather than later. Here are a few expert tips on why:

Identity theft

Filing early essentially beats criminals to the punch.

Identity theft is a growing problem and one often tied to tax refund fraud, said Mark Steber, chief tax officer at Jackson Hewitt Tax Service. Once your return is filed with the IRS, the information — in particular your social security number — is locked and cannot be used again by anyone else.

Steber suggests filing early to secure the information and your refund. It's one of the easiest forms of identity protection.

Faster returns

If you're due a tax refund, the sooner you file the sooner you'll get it.

Lisa Greene-Lewis, CPA and TurboTax expert, said that last tax season close to three out of four tax filers received a tax refund, and the average refund was about $2,800. That's a big boost to many households.

While some delays are expected this year for filers claiming the Earned Income Tax Credit or the Additional Child Tax Credit, the IRS still expects to issue more than nine out of 10 refunds in under three weeks from the day a return is received.