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Predators given a free pass: UN peacekeepers won't be charged despite rape accusations by over 100 children

UN peacekeepers central african republic rape
It was recently reported that UN peacekeepers will not be charged for sex crimes against children that they allegedly violated while they were stationed in the Central African Republic. The French Government investigated the French soldiers who were accused of the attacks, but they found no evidence of wrongdoing, as often happens when organizations investigate their own. French prosecutors claim that they had insufficient evidence to charge the soldiers, but over 100 children have leveled accusations against them. Do they expect the world to believe that all of these children are lying?

UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric said that the agency defers to local governments in situations like this.

"So obviously we'll keep an eye on this. But as we've said, it is the responsibility of member states to fully investigate and hopefully prosecute crimes. The fight against impunity for these horrendous actions has to be a partnership between the UN and member states,"Dujarric said.

There is a second investigation that is currently ongoing which involves UN peacekeepers and sexual assault in the Central African Republic. However, it is not clear whether or not this investigation is relating to the same accusations — or new crimes that have taken place since.

This is not the first time that UN workers have been accused of these types of crimes. After the UN has entered areas like Cambodia, Mozambique, Bosnia, Sudan and Kosovo, there was an explosion of sex trafficking and numerous reports of abuse. In the past several years, the UN was caught attempting to cover-up the fact that there were 231 people in Haiti who claimed they were sexually violated by UN peacekeepers, and were forced to perform sexual acts in exchange for food and supplies that were intended as relief packages.


Comment: There are so many instances where UN peacekeeping forces have been caught acting more like predators than protectors of human rights. Even more egregious is that their abuses are systematically covered up - which suggests these armies are being protected by the PTB to further their own agenda.


Comment: The above instances are only a few examples showing the depth of sexual deviancy that exists within elite circles, which have been systematically concealed for years. As the Pizzagate scandal threatened to expose the widespread nature of these practices, the ruling elites went into overdrive using the fake news meme in a desperate attempt to bury the story.


Info

Hypernormalisation: When fake reality is accepted as real

Bank failure in the 1920's
This past November, the filmmaker Adam Curtis released the documentary Hypernormalisation. The term comes from Alexei Yurchak's 2006 book Everything was Forever, Until it was No More: The Last Soviet Generation. The book argues that over the last 20 years of the Soviet Union, everyone knew the system wasn't working, but as no one could imagine any alternative, politicians and citizens were resigned to pretending that it was. Eventually this pretending was accepted as normal and the fake reality thus created was accepted as real, an effect which Yurchak termed "hypernormalization."

Looking at events over the past few years, one wonders if our own society is experiencing the same phenomenon. A contrast with what economic policy-makers term "normalization" is instructive.

Normalization is what has historically happened in the wake of financial crises. During the booms that precede busts, low interest rates encourage people to make investments with borrowed money. However, even after all of the prudent investment opportunities have been taken, people continue borrowing to invest in projects and ideas that are unlikely to ever generate profits.

Red Flag

ISIS is not the biggest killer of US troops in the Middle East - it's suicide!

suicide
Confirming once again that war, to those who are sent to fight them, is absolute hell, newly released Pentagon statistics show that suicide — not combat — is the leading killer of US troops deployed to the Middle East.

According to a report in USA Today this week, of the 31 troops who have died as of Dec. 27 in Operation Inherent Resolve, 11 have taken their own lives. Eight died in combat, seven in accidents and four succumbed to illness or injury.

These new numbers confirm a trend that's been in place since the beginning of the prolonged occupation of the Middle East.

Earlier this year, the DoD released a similar report from 2014 that revealed some startling numbers. In all of 2014, a total of 55 US troops, in both hostile and non-hostile situations, lost their lives in foreign occupations. The number of soldiers who killed themselves was nearly 5 times that amount.

According to the DoD report, in 2014, there were 269 deaths by suicide among active component service members (compared to 259 deaths by suicide in 2013).

Pistol

'Santas' attack nightclub in Istanbul - many killed and injured (UPDATES)

Istanbul Attack
© Umit Bektas/Reuters At least 35 were killed, 40 injured when shooters dressed as Santas attacked a nightclub in Istanbul.
Gunmen dressed as Santas have attacked a night club in Istanbul, reportedly killing and injuring scores of people, Turkish media report. Footage shows armored police vehicles surrounding the building as ambulances are rushed to the scene.

Some 39 people, including 15 foreigners, were killed and 69 injured when at least one gunman reportedly dressed as Santa opened fire in an Istanbul night club. The manhunt for one terror suspect is underway.

Turkey's interior minister, Suleyman Soylu, told Turkish media on Sunday morning that 21 victims have been identified so far, of whom 15 were foreign nationals and five Turkish citizens. Soylu said that the shooter is still at large. "The search operation for the terrorist is ongoing," the minister said.

The attack took place at the well-known Reina nightclub in the Ortakoy neighborhood, in Istanbul's Besiktas district.

A policeman and a civilian are reported to be among the two known casualties at the nightclub.

There were two attackers involved, according to NTV, but conflicting reports also described a lone gunman.

The gunmen were dressed in Santa Claus outfits, wielding assault rifles, Turkish media said.

Comment: President Tayyip Erdogan has dubbed the New Year's Eve shooting spree that left 39 people dead at an Istanbul night club "dirty games," vowing Turkey will fight to the end against all forms of terrorist attacks. A manhunt for the attacker is still ongoing.
"They are trying to create chaos, demoralize our people, and destabilize our country with abominable attacks which target civilians," Erdogan said in a statement, adding "we will retain our cool-headedness as a nation, standing more closely together, and we will never give ground to such dirty games."

"As a nation, we will fight to the end against not just the armed attacks of terror groups and the forces behind them, but also against their economic, political and social attacks," he promised.
Update (Jan. 1): The death toll has been revised to 39 (69 injured), 21 of whom have been identified. Among the foreigners killed: an 18yo Israeli woman, three Indians, a 26yo Lebanese, a Belgian, a Frenchwoman and her Tunisian husband, three Jordanians, and five Saudis.

The Reina club is described as a fairly exclusive venue, a "top party haunt of Turkey's elite":
Its clientele includes footballers from the top Turkish sides and stars from the country's much-watched soap operas. Every weekend their attendance at parties features in the gossip and celebrity pullouts in Turkish media.
According to the club owner, Mehmet Kocarslan, he had received a warning about a possible attack 7-10 days ago:
"The US intelligence warned about the terror attack. Increased security measures were taken here 7 - 10 days ago. So what? That has happened," Kocarslan told the Hurriyet newspaper.
The U.S. denies this, however:
The U.S. Embassy in Ankara said in a statement issued Sunday that "contrary to rumors circulating in social media, the U.S. Government had no information about threats to specific entertainment venues, including the Reina Club."
The White House was quick to express their condolences and condemn the "savagery" of the attack; Obama "directed his team to offer appropriate assistance to the Turkish authorities, as necessary, and keep him updated as warranted." No group has claimed responsibility at this time. (The PKK denies responsibility.)

The attacker is said by an Istanbul city governor to have used a "long-range weapon" (later described as a Kalashnikov). Turkey's PM denies the attacker was wearing a Santa suit. Witnesses say they heard the attacker(s) speaking Arabic. An eyewitness account from outside the club:
Mehmet Dag, 22, was passing by the club and saw the suspect shoot at a police officer and a bystander. He said the suspect then targeted security guards, gunning them down and entering the club.

"Once he went in, we don't know what happened. There were gun sounds, and after two minutes the sound of an explosion," Dag said.
More eyewitness accounts:
"We were having fun. All of a sudden people started to run," Sinem Uyanik, who was at the club with her husband at the moment of the attack, told The Hurriyet daily. "My husband said, 'Don't be afraid,' and he jumped on me. People ran over me. My husband was hit in three places."

According to Uyanik, there were at least two gunmen at the club who were shooting randomly at people. "It was so horrible. Someone was shooting. Two people were shooting at gunpoint," she claimed, as cited by Haber 7, adding that a strong smell of gunpowder was felt inside the club. "Then I fainted. When I woke up my husband was in blood. People were [soaked] in blood," she said, adding that she managed to push the people away and reach ambulances and police. In the hours after the attack, her husband, Lutfi Uyanık, was being treated in hospital for his injuries.

A club employee, who was working there as a waiter, said his friend was injured in the attack. The man told Hurriyet that they both managed to avoid death and escape from the club. "I brought my friend [to a hospital], we ran outside in panic...There're a lot of injured people inside. There were 500 to 600 people in the room. I don't know exactly," he said.

Another shocked witness described her making desperate phone calls until the police arrived and evacuated them. She said some people jumped into the sea to escape the shooting. "We watch [reports on terrorist attacks] on TV every day, but it is really bad when it comes to you. How will we live in this country? Bombs will explode, weapons will [be fired]," the witness said.

Turkish football player Sefa Boydas, who was at the club with his girlfriend, said that police "moved in quickly" after the carnage began. "I didn't see who was shooting but heard the gunshots and people fled. Police moved in quickly," he wrote on Twitter, as cited by Reuters. In the moments that followed the first shots, he also managed to save the life of his girlfriend. "My girlfriend was wearing high heels. I lifted her and carried her out on my back," he said.
According to the Guardian (citing Turkish officials), one of the attackers was killed, presumably by police. He apparently took a taxi to the club, and police are questioning the driver.

Update (Jan. 2): Daesh terrorist group has claimed responsibility for the deadly attack on an Istanbul nightclub on New Year's Eve, Reuters reports citing the group's statement.
In this statement, Daesh claimed that the perpetrator of the attack was its "soldier."

The manhunt is currently underway.
So we suppose that earlier report of the suspect being killed is false?

According to Turkish media, the killer shot a total of 180 bullets over a period of 7 minutes. Police believe he was a well-trained professional with war experience. He spoke broken Turkish (other reports have him speaking Arabic), wore a green shirt, dark pants, and black boots. He appeared to be around 25 years old, perhaps from East Turkestan. RT adds a few more details:
Eight individuals thought to have been involved in the nightclub attack were apprehended in Istanbul on Monday, Turkish Daily Sabah reported, citing police. Over the past week, nearly 150 people suspected of having ties to the Islamic State terrorist group have been detained, Turkey's Interior Ministry said, adding that 25 have been formally placed under arrest.

The gunman, who may be from a Central Asian country, is suspected of coming from the same cell responsible for carrying out a deadly gun-and-bomb attack on Istanbul's main airport back in June of last year, according to Turkish Hurriyet newspaper.
Turkish police are now saying that shooter may be from Uzbekistan or Kyrgizstan:
A citizen of Uzbekistan or Kyrgyzstan related to the Daesh terrorist group is suspected in the terrorist attack at Reina club in Istanbul, CNN Turk TV channel reported on Monday citing local police services.

The police reportedly arrested and interrogated 63 Daesh militants in different Turkish cities on December 28-31. They obtained information about a possible involvement of a citizen of Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan in the attack.
Update: The first images of the shooter have been released:
istanbul shooter
istanbul shooter


Update (Jan. 3): As with all major terror attacks, the looney fringe is claiming this one too is a "hoax". No, it isn't. Here are the pictures from the scene (warning: disturbing images).

According to press reports, the suspect was staying in a rented apartment in Konya before moving to Istanbul for the attack. One of the people detained after the attack is thought to be his wife, with whom he stayed in Konya with 2 children. Police have apparently made progress by talking with the taxi driver who took him to the club, and whose cell phone the shooter used to make some calls. (It's unclear whether this refers to Mashrapov, who was named as the suspect but who obviously isn't, or the man in the photos above.)

The main suspect was later named as Iakhe Mashrapov. His passport photo was also circulated. However, Kyrgyzstan says Mashrapov is NOT the suspect. He is alive and well in Kyrgyzstan, and has been questioned by Turkish and Kyrgyz authorities (he doesn't even look like man in the photos above):
The spokesman, Rakhat Suleymanov, said that Mashrapov, a Kyrgyz businessman who lives in the town of Kara-Suu in Kyrgyzstan's southern Osh Province, flew to Bishkek from Istanbul on January 3 using his passport, which is genuine.

Suleymanov said Mashrapov's flight from Istanbul was delayed one hour as Turkish police questioned him before clearing him to depart.

Mashrapov told Kyrgyz Internet news agency Turmush later on January 3 that he had no idea how a picture of his passport was placed on social media.
...

Turkish government spokesman Numan Kurtulmus said on January 2 that officials were close to identifying the gunman and had fingerprints they believed belong to the attacker.
Mashrapov also denied his involvement in an interview with AKIpress. (He says he only arrived in Istanbul on January 1: "They [Turkish police] explained that I was questioned because I slightly resembled the suspect in the photo. They apologized and let me board my plane," he said.) There's speculation the real culprit may have escaped to Syria.

Update: Turkish media are reporting that two foreigners have been arrested at Istanbul's Ataturk airport in connection with the Reina shooting. This brings the total number of people arrested to fourteen (other reports say sixteen). Police still speculate that the shooter was Central Asian, either from Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan or Xinjiang (China).

Update (Jan. 4): The identity of the Istanbul night club attacker has been established, the Turkey's interior minister has stated.
Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu made the announcement in an interview with the Anadolu news agency on Wednesday.
Twenty-seven people have now been detained in connection with the attack.

Update (Jan. 5): After Turkish authorities established the identity of the New Year's eve attacker, Deputy Prime Minister Numan Kurtulmus, in an interview with the Hurriyet Daily News, has suggested that external intelligence services could be involved in the terrorist act. Thirty nine people were killed and 69 wounded in the attack.
"I am of the opinion that it's not possible for the perpetrator to have carried out such an attack without any support. It seems like a secret service thing. All these things are being assessed," Kurtulmus told the publication, without speculating which state actor might be involved.

Kurtulmus expressed concern that with support from external intelligence other potential attackers could evade Turkish security radars. "As they are supported by some organizations with intelligence capacity, they can conduct terror acts in the way your security system may not even be able to think of," Kurtulmus said.
Update: The killer of 39 people at an Istanbul nightclub is probably of Uighur origin, Turkish Deputy PM Veysi Kaynak said. Turkish law enforcement has established his possible location and links, he added.
"The terrorist's identity has been established by security forces and his potential whereabouts have also been determined," Kaynak said speaking to broadcaster A Haber on Thursday.

The attacker is "probably of Uighur origin", he added, according to the Vatan daily.

"There was only one shooter. The act was carried out with one gun ... but there could have been helpers inside," Kaynak also said.

Turkish media suggest that the suspect comes from the Chinese province of Xinjiang and had flown to Turkey from neighboring Kyrgyzstan. According to Reuters' sources, he may have combat experience and could have been trained in Syria.

Special forces detained several people in Istanbul on Thursday, the state-run news agency Anadolu said. While the number of arrests was not disclosed, those detained are also said to be of Uighur origin.

The Uighurs are Turkic-speaking minority in far western China; their diaspora communities can be found in central Asia and Turkey. They mostly preach Islam.
Update (Jan. 8): Turkish police have named their prime suspect: Abdulgadir Masharipov, from Uzbekistan. (Curiously, the man previously identified as a suspect, see above, was named Mashrapov.) RT reports:
Istanbul Police Department said that Masharipov is of Uzbek origin and is known in terrorist circles as "Abu Muhammed Horasani," according to a number of Turkish news outlets.
...
Masharipov reportedly made his getaway via a taxi. Authorities believe the shooter was and is still being supported by an Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) cell based in the city of Konya. The attacker reportedly met with an IS "emir" named "Yusuf Hoca," who allegedly ordered the New Year massacre, in Konya days before the shooting.

The investigation also believes the IS cell in Konya provided Masharipov with the weapon used in the massacre. It is also suspects that the cell continued to provide logistical support to the terrorist after the Reina attack.



Heart - Black

Arrests, beatings and torture: World Wildlife Fund being investigated for human rights abuses in Cameroon

Baka pygmy women
© Brent Stirton / Getty ImagesMembers of the Baka Pygmy tribe, the original forest dwellers of the Cameroon forests, Kika, Cameroon.
The World Wide Fund for Nature is to be investigated for alleged human right abuses against native tribes in Cameroon. A complaint claims that WWF-funded poaching squads arrested, tortured, and even killed locals.

The complaint was filed by British group Survival, which champions the causes of tribal peoples around the world, to the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) in February 2016. But the OECD, whose mission is to promote policies improving economic and social well-being, did not agree to launch the investigation until this January.

Survival says that the complaint contains numerous examples of "violent abuse and harassment against Baka 'Pygmies' in Cameroon by WWF-funded anti-poaching squads."

Comment: Indonesian official compares WWF to thieves:
The willful blindness of groups such as the WWF and Greenpeace toward economically struggling nations around the globe is breathtaking. Their own, narrow agenda is the only thing that matters to these activists. The welfare of ordinary people who reside in those countries doesn't make it onto their radar.



Smoking

Anti-smoking fascism: Groups seek to ban smoking at US colleges and public housing

College student smoking and on phone
© Washington State Tobacco
New efforts are underway to make American college campuses and public housing off limits to cigarette smoking.

Twenty colleges in the United States recently received grants to help make their campuses tobacco free.

And in November, U.S. Housing and Urban Development Secretary Julian Castro announced that smoking will become illegal at all public housing over the next 18 months. The federal housing department has over one million homes.

"Every child deserves to grow up in a safe, healthy home free from harmful second-hand cigarette smoke," Castro said.

Comment: Be more informed about the reality of the benefits of smoking: More on the anti-smoking campaign:


Fire

Neighbors outraged at cops taking selfie in front of house fire

NYPD at house fire
© SanVic / YouTube
Two Long Island police officers are under fire after being caught on camera posing for a selfie outside a burning home in the suburb of Uniondale in New York.

Video footage of the smiling officers, who haven't been named, caused outrage among neighbors who described the act as "disgusting." The home was completely destroyed in the blaze on Thursday, although no injuries were reported.

"It's disgusting. I don't like that because it shows no concern about the people in the neighborhood," a neighbor said. "People in the neighborhood just lost a house, and you're going to sit there taking selfies."

Handcuffs

Whoops: Man jailed for days after cops mistake kitty litter for meth

kitty litter meth
Ross LeBeau, of Houston, was recently cleared of drug charges after he was arrested for possession of Methamphetamine. It turns out that LeBeau was actually in possession of kitty litter, not meth. However, this made no difference to the cops who kidnapped and caged him for it.

Considering that there was nearly a half pound of the substance in his vehicle, the police thought that they had conducted the bust of the century. They even put out a press release with LeBeau's mugshot to brag about the bust, after two faulty field tests determined that the substance was crystal meth. While LeBeau spent 3 days in jail, the kitty litter was sent to a forensics lab for further testing, and it was ultimately discovered that the substance was not meth.

USA

Flashback Smedley Butler: A message to mothers

Smedley Butler
Smedley Butler
Some mothers won't be seeing their boys this Christmas. They should have read USMC Major General Smedley Butler's "Message to Mothers":
Now, you mothers, particularly! The only way you can resist all this war hysteria and beating of tom-toms is by asserting the love you bear for your boy. When you listen to some well worded, some well-delivered WAR speech, just remember it's nothing but sound. No amount of sound can make up to you for the loss of your boy. After you've heard one of those speeches and your blood's all hot and you want to bite somebody like Hitler - go upstairs to where your boy's asleep.. . . Look at him. Put your hand on that spot on the back of his neck. The place you used to love to kiss when he was a baby. Just rub it a little. You won't wake him up, he knows it's you. Just look at his strong, fine young body because only the best boys are chosen for war. Look at this splendid young creature who's part of yourself, then close your eyes for a moment and I'll tell you what can happen...

Comment: More from Smedley Butler:
"I served in all commissioned ranks from a Second Lieutenant to a Major General. And, during that time, I spent most of my time being a high-class muscle man for Big Business, for Wall Street, and for the Bankers. In short, I was a racketeer for Capitalism."

Butler discovered that he was a tool of the world oligarchy. Many others have since discovered the fact that they were nothing more than pawns, albeit of a much lower level, after their youth and health was spent in the process of slaughtering innocent people. Many soldiers from the world wars, Korea, Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan have come to the same conclusion and, no doubt, a number of those who have participated in the attack on Libya, Iraq, and Syria will do the same.



Magnify

Brother of Fort Lauderdale airport shooting suspect says US government failed him

Esteban Santiago
© McClatchy
The brother of a man accused of killing five people at a Florida airport questioned Saturday why his brother was allowed to keep his gun after U.S. authorities knew he'd become increasingly paranoid and was hearing voices.

Esteban Santiago, 26, had trouble controlling his anger after serving in Iraq and told his brother that he felt he was being chased and controlled by the CIA through secret online messages. When he told agents at an FBI field office his paranoid thoughts in November, he was evaluated for four days, then released without any follow-up medication or therapy.

"The FBI failed there," Bryan Santiago told The Associated Press. "We're not talking about someone who emerged from anonymity to do something like this."