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Bastián Vásquez viajó en 2013 a España y después se trasladó a la frontera entre Siria e Irak.

El diario El País de España confirmó este sábado la muerte de Bastián Alexis Vásquez, el joven noruego de padres chilenos que se hizo famoso por protagonizar un video del grupo radical autodenominado Estado Islámico en 2014.

El periódico señala que fuentes de las Fuerzas y Cuerpos de Seguridad de España lo identificaron como una de las 29 personas “con relación al país” (nacionales o residentes) que murieron combatiendo en las filas del grupo islamista.

De hecho, desde 2014 ya se rumoreaba que Vásquez, de 26 años, había muerto, pero hasta ahora el dato no se había confirmado. Sin embargo, se desconoce la fecha y la causa de su muerte.

La aparición de Vásquez (o Abu Safiyyah, de Chile, como se hacía llamar) en un video donde se declaraba que los terrenos de Irak y Siria tomados por EI eran considerados un “califato” y en el que el yihadista se atribuía la participación en varios asaltos, evidenció la internacionalización del grupo islamista y el alcance de su maquinaria de comunicaciones.

“El video, con sus llamativas imágenes y sus sorprendentes valores de producción, está diseñado para electrizar a sus seguidores”, dijo en su momento el corresponsal de la BBC en Irak, Paul Adams.

Y el hecho de que se describa a Abu Safiyya como chileno, simplemente agrega un elemento que los autores esperan que ahora sea el atractivo global de la organización”, agregó.

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Bastian Vásquez (o Abu Safiyya, como se hacía llamar) mostrando la destrucción en la frontera entre Irak y Siria.

Pero desde aquella “estelar” presentación, se le perdió el rastro. Noruega emitió una orden de captura contra Vásquez por su “participación en grupos terroristas” y nunca más se supo de él.

Hasta este sábado, que de acuerdo al diario El País fue identificado por las autoridades españoles como uno de los insurgentes muertos en medio de los combates.

Del hip-hop a Siria

Al conocer el video, BBC Mundo viajó hasta la población de Skien, ubicada unos 245 kilómetros al sur de Oslo, donde el joven noruego vivía con sus padres.

“Supe que como adolescente había formado parte de un grupo comunitario de músicos de hip hop. Y que hace cinco años ocurrió el cambio drástico en su vida cuando conoció a varios musulmanes radicales, uno de ellos era Mohyeldeen Mohammad, un joven noruego iraquí que pronto se volvió uno de los radicales de más alto perfil en este país”, le dijo a BBC Mundo Lars Akerhaug, periodista noruega que entrevistó a Vásquez varias veces.

En su pueblo lo recordaban así, como un joven apacible y callado en su juventud, que de repente tuvo una especie de conversión.

Sus padres, chilenos de nacimiento, se habían instalado en Skien en 1988 y Bastián fue su tercer hijo y el único que nació en Noruega. Durante años tuvieron una vida tranquila y normal.

“Se convirtió en musulmán cuando comenzó a conocer las injusticias que se cometían en contra de los civiles en Irak y Afganistán”, relató su abogado John Christian Elden al diario El Mercurio de Chile.

Pero fue precisamente cuando comenzó a radicalizar sus ideas, de la mano de Mohyeldeen Mohammad, que todo cambió.

De ser una persona silenciosa y que no se hacía notar, pasó a grabar un video en el cuarto en el que amenazaba al rey Haroldo V y al Parlamento y que publicó en las redes sociales.

Por ese motivo fue arrestado, pero fue liberado poco después. Sin embargo, cuando fue citado a juicio en 2013 para comparecer por sus amenazas, no apareció.

Huida a Siria

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Esta es la casa de la infancia de Bastian Vásquez en Skien, Noruega.

Nadie de su familia quiso hablar con BBC Mundo. Solo se conocen las declaraciones de uno de sus hermanos, que brevemente describió la situación de la familia: “Estamos conmocionados por lo que hemos visto y no queremos dar más declaraciones”.

En el momento de partir, Vásquez había dado un par de pistas sobre lo que haría: viajar a Siria.

Pero haría algunas escalas.

De acuerdo a las autoridades españolas, el joven islamista noruego viajó hasta Barcelona, donde frecuentó los círculos salafistas –considerados los más radicales dentro del islamismo- y contactó a varias personas con el ánimo de reclutarlas para que lucharan con Estado Islámico.

BBC Mundo pudo constatar cómo en su página de Facebook se registró en lugares turísticos de la ciudad durante varios días y meses: publicó su visita al estadio Camp Nou del FC Barcelona, equipo del que era fanático.

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El centro de la ciudad de Skien, en Noruega. Los Vásquez vivían en Gulset, un suburbio en el noroeste de la ciudad.

Estando allí adquirió su tarjeta de residente español, que ha sido el documento que permitió la identificación por parte de los cuerpos de seguridad españoles y que fue publicado por El País.

Sin embargo, después de su paso por Barcelona se le perdió todo el rastro.

El video de las fronteras

El Bastián Vásquez que aparece en el video es otro: una barba profusa cubría su rostro y, mientras se paseaba por una zona de la frontera entre Irak y Siria, explicaba su misión:

“No reconocemos esta frontera, nunca la reconoceremos. Y no será la última frontera que rompamos”, se escucha decir a Vásquez.

“En el mundo musulmán no hay fronteras y esperemos que solo tenga un imán –jefe religioso- que debe ser Abu Bakr al Bagdadi”, concluyó.

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AP

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John, el yihadista, fue otro de los hombres que salieron hablando en inglés en los videos de Estado Islámico.

La aparición de Vásquez ocurrió también por los mismos días en que se conoció el video de John, el yihadista (su verdadero nombre es Mohammed Emwazi), donde aparecía otro joven -éste con un pronunciado acento británico- decapitando a un periodista en frente de la cámara.

Ambos personajes se convirtieron en los rostros internacionales de Estado Islámico y la guerra en Irak y Siria que inició en junio de 2014.

Pero ambos acabaron con su vida en las filas de la organización: la muerte de Emwazi fue confirmada por el propio Estado Islámico y ahora, la de Bastián Vásquez, el yihadista llegado de Noruega.

Source Article from http://www.bbc.com/mundo/noticias/2016/01/160131_bastian_vasquez_chileno_yihadista_estado_islamico_amv

Robert Mueller’s report makes the stirring claim that “a fundamental principle of our government” is that no person, not even the president, “is above the law.”

But the special counsel’s ultimate legacy may well be the exact opposite — because of his controversial decision not to say whether Trump committed criminal obstruction of justice.

“We concluded that we would not reach a determination, one way or the other, about whether the president committed a crime,” Mueller said in his statement Wednesday, reiterating his report’s explanation.

It was the punt heard around the world. It may have been the crucial turning point in the saga of the special counsel probe, and perhaps the decision most likely to have ramifications for future presidents. It effectively “removes the president from the scope of generally applicable criminal laws,” Cornell law professor Jens David Ohlin recently told my colleague Sean Illing.

Essentially, Mueller has laid out a model that federal prosecutors can investigate the sitting president for crimes, but that they should not make any conclusion about whether he committed a crime. In a sense, this does seem to place the president above the law.

To be clear — this was Mueller’s own choice. Yes, he did conclude that existing department policy prevented him from indicting a sitting president. But before the special counsel wrapped up his work, it was widely believed that he might still issue a judgment on whether Trump committed a crime.

He did not do so, and this “took some constitutional scholars and Justice Department veterans by surprise,” the Washington Post’s Rosalind Helderman wrote Wednesday. Helderman quotes J. Michael Luttig, a former appellate judge and former Justice Department official, saying: “The fact that a president cannot be prosecuted does not foreclose a finding by a special counsel of whether a president committed a crime.”

Oddly, Mueller also went out of his way, both in his report and his statement, to opine that he did not have “confidence” that Trump didn’t break the law. And his legal analyses of certain incidents involving Trump sure seem to suggest he violated the law. But he refused to take the final step and outright come to a conclusion — something Attorney General William Barr has repeatedly said he expected the special counsel to do.

Mueller was also careful never to say that he couldn’t have issued a criminal finding about Trump. In the report, he writes several times that his office “determined” not to do this, and in his Wednesday statement he used the word “concluded.” Additionally, Barr proceeded to ignore this considered decision not to decide, quickly issuing his own conclusion that, in his view, Trump didn’t violate the law.

Still, Mueller’s decision-making around the highest-profile criminal investigation into a president in decades is unmistakably important, and could be viewed as a model for similar future investigations to follow. So we deserve more transparency about how it came about.

Mueller’s reasoning for choosing not to say whether President Trump broke the law

For a report that’s 448 pages long, Mueller’s decision to end his investigation of Trump with a punt is somewhat under-explained.

The special counsel lays it out quickly in the introduction of his report’s second volume. First, he writes, he “accepted” the Justice Department Office of Legal Counsel’s 2000 opinion that the department can’t indict a sitting president because it would undermine his capacity to carry out the work of the executive branch. Second, the report continues, the office determined that investigating the president “is permissible” anyway, to preserve evidence, and because the president wouldn’t have immunity from indictment after he leaves office. So far, that’s all as expected.

But then comes the punt. Though the office “considered” whether to evaluate Trump’s conduct under Justice Department standards about prosecution decisions, Mueller writes, it “determined not to apply an approach that could potentially result in a judgment that the President committed crimes.”

And his main reason is a curious one — that it would be unfair to the president, because the fact that he can’t be charged means he can’t clear his name with an acquittal at trial.

Fairness concerns counseled against potentially reaching that judgment when no charges can be brought. The ordinary means for an individual to respond to an accusation is through a speedy and public trial, with all the procedural protections that surround a criminal case.

An individual who believes he was wrongly accused can use that process to seek to clear his name. In contrast, a prosecutor’s judgment that crimes were committed, but that no charges will be brought, offers no such adversarial opportunity for public name-clearing before an impartial adjudicator.

Mueller reiterated this point in his statement Wednesday. “Beyond department policy, we were guided by principles of fairness,” he said. “It would be unfair to potentially accuse somebody of a crime when there can be no court resolution of an actual charge.” In the report, he refers to this as the “absence of a neutral adjudicatory forum” to review the report’s findings.

Mueller expresses another concern in the report as well — namely, that finding the president committed a crime in an internal report “could carry consequences that extend beyond the realm of criminal justice.” Specifically, it could “imperil the President’s ability to govern.”

So, Mueller said in his statement: “We concluded that we would not reach a determination — one way or the other — about whether the president committed a crime. That is the office’s final position.”

Mueller’s move sets a worrying precedent

Even though Mueller made clear this was his own decision, it will inevitably set a precedent for future investigations into presidents — a problematic one.

If Mueller’s approach is taken as a model, the Justice Department can investigate to their heart’s content, but at the end of the day, they not only won’t indict a sitting president, but they won’t even say whether he broke the law.

It’s the very definition of special treatment, and would essentially remove one potential check on presidential wrongdoing from within the executive branch. It would mean the department charged with investigating and charging violations of federal law won’t assess whether one particular person, the president, violated federal law.

Mueller’s concern about “fairness” to the president, who would lack a forum to clear his name after being accused, is particularly odd.

“That is completely absurd,” Ohlin, the law professor, told Illing. “The president doesn’t have a courtroom to vindicate his innocence only because the DOJ has decided that his office makes him immune from indictment in the first place. It’s a piece of circular reasoning that removes the president from the scope of generally applicable criminal laws.”

The special counsel appears to realize the implications of this position, so in an apparent attempt to mitigate it, he does offer an opinion on Trump’s conduct — that it’s, well, not obviously innocent.

“If we had confidence after a thorough investigation of the facts that the President clearly did not commit obstruction of justice, we would so state,” Mueller writes in his report’s final paragraph.

Indeed, many who have read the report closely have remarked that its legal analysis often seems quite damning for Trump. Lawfare’s Quinta Jurecic, for example, parsed the report’s language about several examples of Trump’s potentially obstructive conduct, with an eye toward whether it established all three legal elements of criminal obstruction of justice. For four examples, the report seems to do just that. Hundreds of federal prosecutors have also opined that Trump’s conduct as outlined in the report would merit charges if he wasn’t president.

But in the end, Mueller, the person who was charged with investigating whether the president of the United States violated the law, refused to outright make a judgment on whether he did. And if, in the future, Justice Department investigators are looking into a sitting president’s potentially criminal conduct, they might feel obligated to follow his example and do the same, rather than rocking the boat.

This wasn’t the obvious call — and Barr quickly made a different call

Again, Mueller did not conclude that he was prohibited from making a criminal finding about the president. He says he “considered” doing so. It’s just that he concluded that he wouldn’t.

This was far from a foregone conclusion, it certainly came as a surprise to me and others who have covered Mueller’s investigation for years.

Attorney General William Barr, for instance, testified that he was “frankly surprised” to learn this in March and that he “did not understand exactly why the special counsel was not reaching a decision.”

Indeed, Barr proceeded to do exactly what Mueller wouldn’t — evaluating the evidence and concluding that, in his view, it wasn’t sufficient to establish Trump committed a crime. So, in a sense, Mueller’s considered decision not to decide was immediately thrown out the window by his superior.

“The opinion says you cannot indict a president while he is in office,” Barr told CBS News this week. “But he could’ve reached a decision as to whether it was criminal activity.”

Mueller may have had other reasons for restraint

Perhaps hanging over all this is the fact that, if Mueller had submitted a report to Barr concluding that Trump committed a crime, it would have initiated a crisis.

Mueller would have been the man who threw the Justice Department into turmoil, as the department would inevitably have struggled with how to handle such an explosive conclusion. (Remember that Barr was not legally obligated to make Mueller’s findings public.)

Once the news inevitably got out, Mueller would likely have become the man who lit the impeachment fuse. Congressional Democratic leaders are having enough difficulty holding off their base’s desire to impeach Trump as it is. An unambiguous conclusion from Mueller that Trump violated the law would have led to pressure that may well have been impossible for them to withstand.

It’s possible Mueller believes that’s a decision that should be made by Congress, not a Justice Department prosecutor. The House of Representatives is essentially the “prosecutor” in the impeachment process — they can vote to kick-start a trial in the Senate. He might have envisioned his job as limited to gathering evidence and presenting some analysis.

But when Mueller’s report does reference impeachment, he seems concerned about interfering with that process. A “criminal accusation against a sitting President,” he writes, could “potentially preempt constitutional processes for addressing presidential misconduct.” (A footnote there makes clear he means impeachment). So essentially, Mueller has ceded the role of deciding whether the president committed a crime to Congress.

There may also have been features of the case itself that made Mueller prefer restraint. He didn’t establish an underlying conspiracy between the Trump campaign and the Russian government to interfere with the election. And despite all his troubling obstruction evidence, he lacked an indisputable smoking gun example, like Trump outright telling witnesses to lie to investigators or destroying evidence.

But his decision really deserves more transparency and debate

In the end, Mueller’s decision not to make a criminal finding one way or the other may be the most crucial decision he made during his investigation — and we should really get more transparency about it.

When did the special counsel decide on this approach, exactly? What was the debate over it like? How close was he to going in a different direction? What sort of internal analyses were written on this topic? Was his decision based on the particular circumstances of this case, or would his reasoning apply to all similar investigations? Should the new standard be that the Justice Department never opines on whether the president has violated the law?

It’s understandable that Mueller doesn’t want to testify before Congress about uncharged individuals and uncharged conduct, as per Justice Department practice. But this is a process call that could have major consequences for future investigations of presidents, and accordingly deserves a good deal more review and debate.

Considering how consequential this decision may have been, the few paragraphs about this in Mueller’s report simply aren’t enough — nor are his brief remarks this week. His decision poses the risk that future investigations of presidents will be hamstrung from the start. So he should give a better explanation of why he made this call.

Source Article from https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2019/5/31/18645173/mueller-report-barr-trump-obstruction

Media captionGreek police fire tear gas at migrants

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan says 18,000 migrants have crossed Turkish borders into Europe after the country “opened the doors” for them to travel.

The number is expected to hit 25,000 to 30,000 in the coming days, he said.

Turkey could no longer deal with the amount of people fleeing Syria’s civil war, he added.

Greece says it has blocked thousands of migrants from entering “illegally” from Turkey.

Greek authorities fired tear gas to attempt to disperse the crowds.

Turkey’s decision followed a deadly attack on Turkish troops by Syrian government forces in northern Syria this week.

At least 33 Turkish soldiers were killed in a bombardment in Idlib, the last Syrian province where Syrian rebel groups hold significant territory.

Syrian government forces, supported by Russia, have been trying to retake Idlib from jihadist groups and Turkish-backed rebel factions.

Turkey is hosting 3.7 million Syrian refugees, as well as migrants from other countries such as Afghanistan – but had previously stopped them from leaving for Europe under an aid-linked deal with the EU.

But Mr Erdogan accused the EU of breaking promises.

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AFP

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Turkey says up to 30,000 could cross into the EU in the coming days

“We said months ago that if it goes on like this, we will have to open the doors. They did not believe us, but we opened the doors yesterday,” President Erdogan said in Istanbul on Saturday.

He said that some 18,000 refugees had “pressed on the gates and crossed” into Europe by Saturday morning. He did not provide evidence of these numbers.

“We will not close these doors in the coming period and this will continue. Why? The European Union needs to keep its promises. We don’t have to take care of this many refugees, to feed them,” he said.

Brussels had not given full financial aid agreed in the 2018 Turkey-EU refugee deal, he said.

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AFP

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Greece says it stopped 4,000 attempts to enter its border

Greece said it had averted more than 4,000 attempts to cross into the country. There were further clashes between migrants and Greek police on Saturday.

“The government will do whatever it takes to protect its borders,” government spokesman Stelios Petsas told reporters.

The Turkish president also said that he had asked Russian President Vladimir Putin – a close ally of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad – to stand aside and let Turkey “do what is necessary” with the Syrian government by itself.

Russia and Turkey are backing opposing sides in the civil war. Turkey is opposed to the government of Bashar al-Assad and supports some rebel groups.

Media captionMigrants head for Turkey’s EU borders

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-51687160

A man wearing a T-shirt featuring pictures of President Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un poses near the Sofitel Legend Metropole hotel in Hanoi on Wednesday.

Ye Aung Thu/AFP/Getty Images


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A man wearing a T-shirt featuring pictures of President Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un poses near the Sofitel Legend Metropole hotel in Hanoi on Wednesday.

Ye Aung Thu/AFP/Getty Images

Despite snarled traffic and security cordons, residents of Hanoi have gamely stepped into their role as hosts for the second Trump-Kim summit, and businesses have cashed in on the event with parodic products, from food to haircuts.

“I believe that this summit will be better than the last one in Singapore,” declares 56-year-old T-shirt merchant Truong Thanh Duc. He adds: “And this summit will bring peace to the world. No more nuclear war.”

His street-side stall in downtown Hanoi is hung with shirts decorated with a beaming Donald Trump and an impassive Kim Jong Un, above the words “Peace Hanoi Vietnam 2019.”

Other garments celebrate a famous Vietnamese rice noodle dish and are emblazoned with logos such as Pho Real, What the Pho and iPho.

A worker removes T-shirts printed with portraits of President Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un at a custom T-shirt shop in Hanoi last week.

Hau Dinh/AP


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A worker removes T-shirts printed with portraits of President Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un at a custom T-shirt shop in Hanoi last week.

Hau Dinh/AP

Truong has set out a basket of free bread and water to feed the customers and crowds of tourists passing by his stall.

Elsewhere in the city, commuters waited at an intersection as a black Mercedes Benz limousine with North Korean flags cruised past. As soon as the motorcade was gone, swarms of motorcycles surged forward, creating massive gridlock.

Some barber shops are offering haircuts reminiscent of Kim’s and Trump’s. Others are shaving their visages onto the back of customers’ noggins.

Hanoi restaurants and bakeries, meanwhile, peddle cupcakes, burgers and pizzas adorned with the two men’s images.

Vietnam’s experience as a former wartime adversary of the U.S., which later mended fences with the U.S. and prospered economically, has been at the center of Trump’s message to Kim at the summit.

“I think that your country has tremendous economic potential. Unbelievable. Unlimited,” Trump told Kim, before the two men went for dinner at the French colonial-era Metropole Hotel.

“And I think,” he added, “that you will have a tremendous future with your country — a great leader. And I look forward to watching it happen and helping it to happen.”

As Vietnam’s capital gears up for the second summit between Trump and Kim, people are buying up off-beat souvenirs.

Vincent Yu/AP


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As Vietnam’s capital gears up for the second summit between Trump and Kim, people are buying up off-beat souvenirs.

Vincent Yu/AP

These matters are clearly on the mind of Tran That Thang, who has brought his young grandson to the Vietnam Military History Museum in downtown Hanoi, across the street from a statue of Russian revolutionary Vladimir Lenin.

Tran, accompanied by his wife, takes the young child past the remains of a downed U.S. B-52 bomber, a UH-1 “Huey” helicopter, and rows of unexploded American bombs and landmines.

“In order for my family to visit here today, we have gone through many years of fighting,” says Tran, who was a soldier in the North Vietnamese army from 1972-75.

“It will help people to understand the true value of peace. It’s a solemn and meaningful thing for every family,” he said.

Tran adds: “Now the U.S. and North Korea have chosen Hanoi for their summit to work for world peace, which is what we all want.”

He walks past a fighter plane shot down at Dien Bien Phu in 1954. That decisive defeat for the French, who preceded the Americans in Vietnam, marked the end of their colonial presence in Indochina.

Tran, it happens, was born that year, the son of a North Vietnamese soldier. His father gave him his name, which means “will be victorious.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/02/27/698544727/pho-real-hanoi-goes-all-out-for-summit-kitsch

AURORA, Colo. (KDVR) – Six teenagers were taken to the hospital after a drive-by shooting at Nome Park on Monday afternoon, the Aurora Police Department said.

The victims are between the ages of 14 and 18. Aurora Central High School, which is located at 11700 E. 11th Ave., has the perimeter of the school secured. All the victims are students at the high school.

One child is in emergency surgery, APD Chief Vanessa Wilson said. First responders applied a tourniquet to the child after being shot.

An 18-year-old victim with minor injuries got to the hospital on their own after the initial incident. Three of the victims are currently being treated at Children’s Hospital and two are at UCHealth.

Sources inside the school told FOX31’s Joshua Short that kids were locked in classrooms and quiet, which is the protocol for situations like these.

Wilson said there are multiple suspects at-large and no longer at the scene. The perimeter was expanded as police investigated the area.

One witness described hearing 30 to 50 gunshots, then kids scattering.

Aurora Public Schools sent out an email and automated message to communicate dismissal for students to all Central High School parents.

This is the latest of several violent crimes at Nome Park this year.

FOX31’s Data Desk discovered three aggravated assaults that occurred at the park prior to this incident this year, including one that was gun-related. Another three gun-related aggravated assaults occurred across the street.

Nome Park was the location of a gang-related shooting in 2019 in which teen Dangelo Domena was charged with attempted first-degree murder.

Aurora Mayor Mike Coffman made this statement on youth violence following the shooting:

A shooting today in a park by Aurora Central High School has left six young people hospitalized. My prayers are with the injured and their families. As the facts surrounding this incident become known, I look forward to hearing from our Chief of Police and from our District Attorney about what actions will be taken to apprehend and prosecute, to the fullest extent of the law, those responsible for this incident. The most important function of government is the protection of its people and I strongly believe that public safety must always be the top priority for this city.

 Aurora City Manager Jim Twombly leads day-to-day operations at the city said:

Our thoughts are with the victims and their families. Today’s incident is deeply troubling. Violence involving teenagers and young adults is distressing and is sadly a public health problem in communities across the nation. The safety of young people in our community is a priority and that is why we have joined with other metro communities in working collaboratively to address youth violence as a public health crisis.

Earlier this year, the city of Aurora launched the Youth Violence Prevention Program to develop a model inclusive of public health, prevention and intervention efforts that are based on national models and best practices to prevent and address youth violence in the short-term and the long-term. We also entered the Aurora/Denver Youth Empowerment Compact in Nov. 2020 to develop strategies and identify new and existing resources to combat youth violence with a public health approach in collaboration with the City and County of Denver.

Addressing youth violence is complex. We believe these efforts combined with robust, ongoing community input will help reduce the impact of youth violence across the region.

Wilson is asking the public to contact Metro Crime Stoppers at 720-913-7867 with any information or video of the incident.

Source Article from https://kdvr.com/news/local/aurora-shooting-nome-park/

Rusia veta en el Consejo de Seguridad de la ONU la creación de un tribunal sobre el MH17

Rusia, representada por el embajador permanente ante la ONU, Vitali Churkin, ha vetado en el Consejo de Seguridad el proyecto de resolución sobre la creación de un tribunal internacional que juzgue a los culpables de la tragedia del vuelo MH17 de Malaysia Airlines, derribado sobre territorio ucraniano el 16 de julio de 2014 y cuya investigación está en curso. “Nuestra posición consiste en que esta idea es prematura y carece de una base legal”, ha afirmado Churkin. 

Hallan un fragmento de avión que podría pertenecer al vuelo MH370 de Malaysia Airlines


REUTERS/Zinfos974/Prisca Bigot

En la costa de la isla francesa de la Reunión, en el océano Índico, se ha encontrado un fragmento de avión que puede pertenecer al vuelo MH370 de Malaysia Airlines, un Boeing 777, que desapareció de los radares el 8 de marzo de 2014 con 239 personas a bordo mientras volaba de Kuala Lumpur a Pekín. Posteriormente se ha confirmado que el número de serie de este fragmento coincide con el de un avión Boeing 777. El fragmento se ha enviado a Francia para ser analizado.

En cuanto al lugar del hallazgo, situado a miles de kilómetros de distancia del supuesto lugar del accidente, los medios señalan que desde el punto de vista científico es probable que los restos del avión llegaran hasta Reunión arrastrados por las corrientes. A su vez la inteligencia estadounidense ha sugerido que alguien de la cabina del piloto podría haber cambiado deliberadamente el trayecto del avión.

EE.UU.: 14 empresas de El Chapo son socias comerciales del Gobierno de Enrique Peña Nieto

Los informes del Departamento del Tesoro de EE.UU. han revelado que al menos 14 empreas pertenecientes al capo mexicano del narcotráfico Joaquín ‘El Chapo‘ Guzmán Loera, que se fugó de una prisión de máxima seguridad el 11 de julio, sin socias comerciales del Gobierno del presidente Enrique Peña Nieto mediante la asignación de contratos y concesiones. 

EE.UU. extiende las sanciones a más ciudadanos y empresas de Rusia

Las autoridades estadounidenses han ampliado las sanciones a otros 11 individuos y 15 empresas rusas en relación con la situación en Ucrania. En particular, en la lista de los sancionados aparece la planta mecánica de Izhevsk, el consorcio Izhmash, y una serie de puertos comerciales de Crimea, en concreto los de Sebastopol, Feodosia, Yalta y Kerch, las compañías filiales de Rosneft y el banco VEB.

El Ministerio de Exteriores ruso por su parte ha afirmado que Washington ha optado por agudizar la confrontación en lugar de estimular a Kiev a cumplir con los acuerdos de Minsk. Asimismo, Moscú ha indicado que este paso perjudica las relaciones bilaterales y ha prometido que habrá una respuesta. 

Puerto Rico, rumbo a un ‘default’ inminente


REUTERS

El sábado 1 de agosto vence el plazo para que Puerto Rico cumpla con el próximo pago de 92,7 millones de dólares a la Corporación para el Financiamiento Público de Puerto Rico, y, según anunció el jefe de gabinete del gobernador, Víctor Suárez, a principios de semana el país no dispone de suficiente flujo de caja para realizar el pago. La deuda de Puerto Rico supera los 70.000 millones de dólares, lo cual equivale a un 102% de su PIB.

Pese a que Suárez afirma que el impago de la deuda no supondrá un ‘default’, las agencias de calificación crediticias Standard & Poor’s y Moody’s afirman que consideran como tal un impago sobre los bonos de la Corporación para el Financiamiento Público.

Varufakis prepara un nuevo partido que desfía al sistema europeo


Yves Herman / Reuters

El exministro griego de Finanzas Yanis Varufakis estaría preparando un nuevo partido de alcance europeo con el fin de luchar contra las políticas de austeridad y reclamar más democracia dentro de las instituciones comunitarias, según ha comunicado un diario italiano. El movimiento, que probablemente se denominará Alianza Europea, será transnacional y se presentará a las elecciones griegas. Según el medio, este partido contaría con el apoyo de líderes políticos como el exministro de Finanzas alemán Oskar Lafontaine y de los economistas Paul Krugman y Joseph Stiglitz.

Una ‘luna azul’ ilumina el cielo, un fenómeno que no se repetirá hasta 2018


David Contreras Gomez

El pasado viernes 31 de julio se produjo un fenómeno denominado ‘luna azul’ que no se volverá a repetir hasta dentro de tres años. El término, que en realidad no tiene nada que ver con que la luna cobre un tono azulado, se refiere a la segunda luna llena ocurrida durante un mismo mes del calendario georgiano. El mes pasado, la primera luna llena se observó el 2 de julio.

Source Article from http://actualidad.rt.com/actualidad/181896-tribunal-avion-mh370-sanciones-puerto-rico

via press release:

NOTICIAS  TELEMUNDO  PRESENTS:

“MURIENDO POR CRUZAR,” AN INVESTIGATION INTO THE INCREASING NUMBER OF IMMIGRANT DEATHS ALONG THE BORDER, THIS SUNDAY, AUGUST 3 AT 6 P.M./5 C

Carmen Dominicci and Neida Sandoval present the Telemundo and The Weather Channel co-production

Miami – July 31, 2014 – Telemundo presents “Muriendo por Cruzar”, a documentary that investigates why increasing numbers of immigrants are dying while trying to cross the US-Mexican border near the city of Falfurrias, Texas, this Sunday, August 3 at 6PM/5 C.  The Telemundo and The Weather Channel co-production, presented by Noticias Telemundo journalists Carmen Dominicci and Neida Sandoval, reveals the obstacles immigrants face once they cross into US territory, including extreme weather conditions, as they try to evade the border patrol.  “Muriendo por Cruzar” is part of Noticias Telemundo’s special coverage of the crisis on the border and immigration reform.

 

“‘Muriendo por Cruzar’” dares to ask questions that reveal the actual conditions undocumented immigrants face as they try to start a new life in the United States,” said Alina Falcón, Telemundo’s Executive Vice President for News and Alternative Programming.  “Our collaboration with The Weather Channel was very productive. They have a unique expertise in covering the impact of weather on people’s lives, as we do in covering immigration reform and the border crisis. The result is a compelling documentary that exposes a harrowing reality.”

“Muriendo por Cruzar” is the first co-production by Telemundo and The Weather Channel.  Both networks are part of NBCUniversal.

Source Article from http://tvbythenumbers.zap2it.com/2014/07/31/noticias-telemundo-presents-muriendo-por-cruzar-this-sunday-august-3-at-6pm/289119/

Image copyright
TV4

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Un centenar de hombres amenazó a golpear a menores inmigrantes en el centro de Estocolmo.

Cerca de un centenar de hombres, vestidos de negro y enmascarados, se reunieron este fin de semana en el centro de Estocolmo, repartiendo folletos donde llamaban a atacar a jóvenes inmigrantes.

Pero la concentración, que se realizó en la noche del viernes, no fue sorpresiva.

La policía sueca había incrementado su presencia en el centro de la capital, emplazando unidades antimotines e incluso helicópteros tras conocer que elementos extremistas planeaban agredir a menores extranjeros.

Los enmascarados pedían dar “su merecido” a lo menores del norte de Africa a los que acusan de robos en lugares públicos muy concurridos, como estaciones de trenes y puentes.

Cuatro personas fueron detenidas por causar disturbios y una quinta por portar una manopla, según reportes de prensa.

Aunque la policía dijo que no se llegaron a producir ataques antiimigrantes, el diario Aftonbladet entrevistó a un joven de 16 años de edad, quien dijo que había sido golpeado en la cara cerca de la estación central de Estocolmo.

Image copyright
Reuters

Image caption

Las manifestaciones antiimigrantes se han incrementado en Suecia.

El periódico también citó a otro testigo que dijo haber visto a hombres golpear a personas que parecían tener un origen extranjero en medio de la plaza Sergelstorg de la ciudad, donde se produjo la concentración.

También se conoció que durante una manifestación contra los inmigrantes ese mismo viernes, terminó en forcejeos con las autoridades y a algunos arrestos.

“Tendencia perturbadora”

El ministro del interior de Suecia, Anders Ygeman, se apresuró a condenar a “los grupos racistas que amenazan y difuminan el odio en los lugares públicos”, y advirtió que “esta es una tendencia perturbadora en la sociedad”.

Las manifestaciones antinmigración se producen pocos días después que una joven trabajadora de un centro de asilo fuera asesinada a cuchillazos por un adolescente de 15 en un centro para menores refugiados sin padres cerca de Gotenburgo.

Suecia, con 10 millones de habitantes, recibió 163.000 refugiados el año pasado, el más alto per cápita de toda Europa.

Más de 35.000 menores no acompañados solicitaron asilo en el país el año pasado, de acuerdo a la información de la Agencia de Migración de Suecia.

Aproximadamente la mitad de ellos son adolescentes entre 16 o 17 años y al menos 23.000 menores provienen de Afganistán.

Image copyright
Reuters

Image caption

Miles de menores sin compañía de adultos llegaron a Suecia en 2015.

Y a su vez, el sitio de noticias The Local también señala que el número de amenazas o incidentes violentos en los refugios se incrementó de 148 incidentes en 2014 a 322 en 2015.

Nuevas restricciones

En los últimos meses los centros de asilo suecos se han convertido en blanco de ataques.

Al menos dos docenas de centros fueron incendiados intencionalmente el año pasado por personas opuestas a los inmigrantes, informó Aftonbladet.

El Comisario Nacional de la policía pidió más recursos al gobierno a causa de los incidentes.

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Reuters

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La policía y otras agencias del orden han pedido más recursos al gobierno para enfrentar el incremento de incidentes violentos en centros de asilo.

“Nos vemos obligados a responder a muchas perturbaciones en los centros de recepción de asilo”, dijo Dan Eliasson. “Este no era el caso hace seis meses, y significa que no vamos a ser capaces de responder con la mayor eficacia en otras áreas”.

Las crecientes tensiones obligaron al gobierno del primer ministro Stefan Lofven a anunciar a inicios de enero un nuevo sistema de identificación para pasajeros que lleguen por autobús, trenes y ferry desde la vecina Dinamarca.

Y la semana pasada, en un paso más drástico, el Ministerio del Interior reveló que elabora planes para expulsar del país a hasta 80.000 migrantes que sus aplicaciones de asilo fueron declaradas no aptas para permanecer en Suecia.

Suecia se alista para iniciar deportaciones masivas

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THINSTOCK

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Suecia es el país europeo con mayor número de inmigrantes percápita.

Y el país nórdico conoce que eso también puede traer consecuencias: en agosto, un hombre eritreo de 35 años asesinó a cuchilladas a una mujer de 55 años y su hijo de 27 en una tienda Ikea en la localidad de Vasteras.

El hombre, que no ha sido identificado, enfrentaba una deportación inminente tras habérsele negado el asilo.

Tensiones en Alemania

En Alemania se han reportado cientos de ataques contra centros de recepción de inmigrantes, que se incrementaron luego de que un centenar de mujeres reportaran robos y asaltos sexuales en vísperas de año nuevo en la ciudad de Colonia.

Sospechosos de ataques en Colonia eran inmigrantes

La policía alemana ha descubierto explosivos en allanamientos contra grupos neofascistas que planeaban ataques contra los inmigrantes. Uno de esos actos fue frustrado en octubre.

La política de brazos abiertos para los inmigrantes también ha tenido un alto costo para la canciller Angela Merkel.

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Reuters

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La popularidad de Angela Merkel ha caído en Alemania a causa de su política migratoria.

Una reciente encuesta indica que el 40% de los alemanes considera que su líder, quien hasta ahora había gozado de gran popularidad, debería renunciar a causa de su política migratoria.

Alemania ha recibido 1,1 millones de refugiados, sobre todo sirios.

Source Article from http://www.bbc.com/mundo/noticias/2016/01/160130_suecia_inmigracion_pandillas_ilm

Updated 8:12 PM ET, Sat June 19, 2021

(CNN)Captain Angelo Capurro started showing symptoms of Covid-19 on his second day at sea. Within five days, the 61-year-old skipper was confined to his cabin, unable to get out of bed.

    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2021/06/19/europe/italy-captain-capurro-intl-hnk-dst/index.html

    Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Secretary Ben Carson faced harsh criticism from Democrats on Tuesday, as he fielded questions at a Capitol Hill hearing on a proposed rule change that would strip public housing assistance for illegal immigrants.

    Some of the most intense grilling came from Rep. Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y., who claimed that Carson’s plan “would bring nothing but despair to thousands of American families.”

    NEWT GINGRICH: HUD CHIEF BEN CARSON PROTECTS POOR AMERICANS AND ENFORCES THE LAW  – WHY IS THAT A PROBLEM?

    “Quite frankly, I find it despicable,” Maloney said of the plan, which would eliminate government aid for families with members who are in the U.S. illegally, even if other family members, such as children, are citizens or legal residents. A HUD study found roughly 25,000 households are in this situation, including approximately 55,000 children with legal status.

    “Your plan to create vacancies by making 55,000 American children homeless is among the most damaging proposals I have ever seen,” Maloney said during the House Financial Services Committee hearing. “Where will they live?” she asked, wondering if Carson would have them stay in cages on the border.

    Carson was quick to defend and explain the proposal, which he said addressed Maloney’s concern.

    “If you read the rule carefully,” he said, “you will see that it provides a six-month deferral on request, if they have not found another place to live.” Carson said that deferral can then be renewed twice, “for a total of 18 months, which is plenty of time for Congress to engage in comprehensive immigration reform so that this becomes a moot point.”

    Committee Chairwoman Maxine Waters, D-Calif., also commented on the proposal during her opening statement, calling it “cruel,” and “inconsistent with HUD’s mission.”

    The proposal notes that existing law prohibits the government from providing housing assistance to those in the country illegally, and allows Carson to strip assistance from anyone receiving it improperly.

    The current system lets families of mixed immigration status receive a prorated amount of assistance for those who are citizens or legal residents. Carson said that while these families receive assistance, there are other families — where every member is in the country legally — who have to spend years on a wait list to get help. He noted that this includes “hundreds of thousands of children,” not to mention disabled people and the elderly.

    “If in fact you want to explain to the American citizens who have been on the wait list for several years in your district in New York why we should continue to support families who are not here legally, I would be happy to join you in helping explain that to them,” Carson told Maloney.

    DEAL REACHED FOR BEN CARSON, HUD TO HELP FIX NYC’S NOTORIOUS PUBLIC HOUSING SYSTEM

    According to the HUD analysis, most of the families who would be affected reside in New York, California and Texas.

    The proposed rule change, which was published on the Federal Register on May 10 and is now open to public comment, would require verification of immigration status for anyone under the age of 62.

    Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/carson-clashes-with-dems-over-proposal-to-block-illegal-immigrants-from-public-housing

    Abortion would immediately become illegal in at least 12 states if the Supreme Court were to overturn Roe v. Wade, and more would likely follow suit quickly.

    Why it matters: States have been preparing contingency plans for a post-Roe landscape while state Republicans ramped up efforts to get the landmark ruling overturned. And the future of Roe is on the court’s docket.

    Driving the news: The court on Monday will hear oral arguments in two cases challenging a Texas law effectively banning abortions after six weeks of pregnancy. Abortion providers and the Justice Department are both challenging the law.

    • A month later, the court will hear another major abortion case, challenging Mississippi’s ban on abortion after 15 weeks. The state is asking the court to overturn Roe.

    Where it stands: If the court were to ultimately overturn the precedents that established the constitutional right to an abortion, a patchwork of state laws would govern the procedure.

    • Oklahoma on Monday will become the 12th state to have a “trigger law” in place — an abortion ban that would kick in right away if the court overturns its precedents. Four states have even amended their constitutions to prohibit any protections for abortion rights.
    • Several other states don’t have trigger laws in place but would likely move quickly to ban or tightly restrict the procedure if the court clears the way: Florida, Indiana, Montana, Nebraska and Wyoming would be prime candidates, according to new analysis from the Guttmacher Institute, a reproductive rights research organization.
    • Alabama, Georgia, Iowa, Ohio and South Carolina have all enacted restrictive laws that were then blocked by federal courts. They could try to revive those policies in a post-Roe world.

    The other side: At least 15 states and Washington, D.C. have enacted laws that would automatically keep abortion legal if Roe is overturned.

    What they’re saying: Overturning Roe would mean that “for the first time in two generations, states can use the democratic process to debate, achieve consensus, and enact laws to protect unborn children and their mothers,” said Mallory Quigley, a spokeswoman for the Susan B. Anthony List, an anti-abortion advocacy group.

    Between the lines: While the Texas cases will not be directly addressing whether the high court overturns or weakens Roe and Planned Parenthood v. Casey, the procedural questions they are focusing on could affect how states handle abortion legislation.

    • “If the court were to hold that federal courts are powerless to stop state laws that prohibit the exercise of a fundamental federal constitutional right, then that gives states an easy avenue to get around Roe and Casey,” Marc Hearron, lead counsel for abortion providers in Whole Woman’s Health v. Jackson, said in a press call las week.
    • And the Mississippi case a month later does directly implicate Roe.

    Go deeper: Anti-abortion activists’ Supreme Court dreams are coming true

    Source Article from https://www.axios.com/roe-v-wade-repeal-supreme-court-texas-mississippi-fbf18076-8b9b-4243-bd8b-e75700671259.html

    Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez slapped back at ​British journalist Piers Morgan after he mocked the New York Democrat’s bartending past while defending Ivanka Trump for traveling to the G-20 summit.

    ​Morgan​ responded to a tweet Ocasio-Cortez posted late Saturday criticizing why the First Daughter and her husband, Jared Kushner — both unpaid White House advisers — attended the meeting of world leaders in Japan last week.

    ​”Could be worse​ ​… Ivanka could have been a bar-tender 18 months ago​,” Morgan, the winner of “The Celebrity Apprentice” in 2008, wrote Sunday in response to Ocasio-Cortez​’s tweet.

    ​The first-term House member tended bar and worked as a waitress at a restaurant in Union Square before her stunning defeat of incumbent Rep. Joe Crowley in the June 2018 Democratic primary race.

    Ocasio-Cortez that would “make government better – not worse.”

    ​”Imagine if more people in power spent years of their lives actually working for a living. We’d probably have healthcare and living wages by now​,” she said. ​

    Ocasio-Cortez slammed Ivanka for ​​​appearing at the G-20 summit with her father, saying that “being someone’s daughter isn’t actually a career qualification.”​

    “It hurts our diplomatic standing when the President phones it in & the world moves on,” she continued.

    Ivanka and Kushner were among the White House contingent that traveled to Japan for the summit where Trump met with Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese leader Xi Jinping.

    ​The married couple also accompanied the president to South Korea for his meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un during a historic ​visit to the Demilitarized Zone.

    Trump became the first sitting US president to cross the border into North Korea.

    Source Article from https://nypost.com/2019/06/30/aoc-slams-piers-morgan-for-slight-over-bartending-career/

    A high-powered CNN executive with close ties to embattled New York Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo could be the reason why the network has taken it easy on the “Cuomo Prime Time” namesake for his role in the governor’s ongoing sexual harassment scandal, according to Fox News contributor Ari Fleischer. 

    CNN continues to take heat for fawning over Gov. Cuomo before his swift fall from grace and failing it punish the network’s most-watched host, Chris Cuomo, for advising his big brother as allegations of sexual harassment poured in. CNN’s most-watched host offered his brother advice and even drafted a statement to respond to the allegations against him in February and isn’t allowed to cover his brother on air. 

    “CNN has a real ethical problem on its hands,” Fleischer said Wednesday on “American’s Newsroom.”

    CHRIS CUOMO MUM ON BIG BROTHER’S SCANDAL, OBSERVERS SAY CNN BOTCHED CHANCE TO SHOWCASE JOURNALISM STANDARDS

    Allison Gollust served as Gov. Cuomo’s communications director in 2012 (Getty Images / Youtube)

    “The fact that the upper management at CNN, starting with Jeff Zucker the president of CNN, has not disciplined Chris Cuomo, the anchor for his taking a hand in guiding his governor brother through all this, the fact that a CNN anchor actively helped cover up what the governor was doing and worked on message points for the governor to deliver, this is a real ethical problem and CNN is taking no action,” Fleischer continued. “One of the reasons why, and I just have to point this out to the viewers, do you know who is in charge of communications at CNN? Governor Cuomo’s former communications director Allison Gollust.”

    Gollust, now CNN’s executive vice president and chief marketing officer, was appointed Cuomo’s communications director in 2012 before bolting to join Zucker four months later at CNN.

    CNN’S CHRIS CUOMO ‘SHOULD RESIGN FROM COVERING POLITICS OR BE FIRED’: MSNBC COLUMN

    “She now runs the show, she’s the No. 2 to Jeff Zucker at CNN,” Fleischer said. “One of the reasons why CNN has not taken any disciplinary action against journalist Chris Cuomo is because of the relationship she has with Governor Andrew Cuomo.” 

    Gollust did not immediately respond to a request for comment. 

    Gollust became close to Zucker after a 15-year tenure at NBC before her work in the Cuomo administration and has since been floated as a candidate to eventually replace Zucker atop the liberal network. 

    Chris Cuomo was initially prevented by CNN when he joined in 2013 from covering his brother, but the network lifted the ban and allowed them to crack jokes and perform prop comedy during the early month of the coronavirus pandemic. The network reinstated the ban when the governor became wrapped up in multiple scandals. The ban puts CNN in a peculiar situation, as the host of the network’s 9 p.m. ET program isn’t allowed to cover one of the top political stories in the country.

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    Earlier this year, the “Cuomo Prime Time” host apologized to his CNN colleagues on air for putting them in a “bad spot” when his role in the governor’s scandal was first reported. CNN did not discipline him and he ignored the bombshell story on Tuesday following the state’s attorney general releasing a report that Gov. Cuomo sexually harassed 11 women. 

    Fox News’ David Rutz contributed to this report. 

    Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/chris-cuomo-isnt-only-high-powered-cnn-honcho-with-close-ties-gov-cuomo

    The estranged husband of a Connecticut mother who went missing after she dropped their five children off at school has been arrested in the case, along with his girlfriend, the police said.

    The two were taken into custody around 11 p.m. on Saturday in Avon, Conn., the police said. They are charged with hindering a prosecution and tampering with evidence in relation to the disappearance of Jennifer Dulos.

    Fotis Dulos, 51, and Michelle C. Troconis, 44, are being held on $500,000 bond and are scheduled to appear at Norwalk Superior Court on Monday, the police announced on Sunday morning.

    Ms. Dulos, 50, went missing on May 24 shortly after she had dropped off her five children at school. The New Canaan Police Department responded to a report of a missing person later that night. The authorities are still searching for Ms. Dulos and trying to determine whether she was the victim of foul play.

    Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/02/nyregion/jennifer-dulos-missing-new-canaan.html

    LONDON (Reuters) – WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange was arrested on Thursday by British police and carried out of the Ecuadorean embassy, where he has been holed up for nearly seven years to avoid extradition to Sweden over a sexual assault investigation.

    A video posted online showed an agitated, frail-looking man with white hair and a white beard being carried out of the central London building by at least seven men.

    “Julian Assange, 47, has today, Thursday 11 April, been arrested by officers from the Metropolitan Police Service (MPS) at the Embassy of Ecuador,” police said.

    Police said they arrested Assange after being “invited into the embassy by the Ambassador, following the Ecuadorean government’s withdrawal of asylum.”

    He was taken into custody at a central London police station and will be brought before Westminster Magistrates’ Court later.

    Assange took refuge in 2012 in Ecuador’s London embassy, behind the luxury department store Harrods, to avoid being extradited to Sweden, where authorities wanted to question him as part of a sexual assault investigation.

    Sweden later dropped the investigation, but Assange was arrested on Thursday for breaking the rules of his original bail in London.

    He feared being extradited to face charges in the United States, where federal prosecutors are investigating WikiLeaks.

    Assange’s relationship with his hosts collapsed after Ecuador accused him of leaking information about President Lenin Moreno’s personal life. Moreno had previously said Assange has violated the terms of his asylum.

    Moreno said that he had asked Britain to guarantee that Assange would not be extradited to a country where he could face torture or the death penalty.

    “The British government has confirmed it in writing, in accordance with its own rules,” Moreno said.

    WikiLeaks said Ecuador had illegally terminated Assange’s political asylum in violation of international law.

    To some, Assange is a hero for exposing what supporters cast as abuse of power by modern states and for championing free speech. But to others, he is a dangerous rebel who has undermined the security of the United States.

    Supporters of Assange had argued that living in the cramped conditions without access to sunlight had damaged his health.

    Sweden closed its preliminary investigation into a suspected rape in 2017 as there was “no reason to believe that the decision to hand him (Assange) over to Sweden could be implemented within a reasonable timeframe”.

    But then Chief Prosecutor Marianne Ny said at the time that the probe could be reopened should the situation change.

    Slideshow (2 Images)

    “If he at a later time were to make himself available, I can decide to immediately resume the preliminary investigation,” Ny, who has since retired, said in a 2017 statement.

    The statute of limitations for rape in Sweden is 10 years, unless it is deemed to be aggravated, in which case the ability to prosecute runs for longer.

    The Swedish Prosecution Authority had no immediate comment on Thursday regarding the news of Assange’s arrest or whether a probe could be reopened.

    Writing by Guy Faulconbridge and Kate Holton; Editing by Hugh Lawson

    Source Article from https://www.reuters.com/article/us-ecuador-assange/julian-assange-arrested-by-british-police-at-ecuadorean-embassy-idUSKCN1RN10R

    La Policía británica afirma que los ataques en el puente de Londres y
    en el mercado son “terroristas” .

    Si no puede ver el tuit haga click aquí

    “Seis personas murieron además de los tres atacantes abatidos por la policía”, dijo un portavoz de la policía frente a Scotland Yard, confirmando que hay además 20 heridos.

    “A las 22: 00 de ayer empezamos a recibir avisos de que un vehículo había atropellado a los transeúntes en (el puente) London Bridge”, dijo el portavoz.

    “El vehículo continuó conduciendo de London Bridge a Borough Market. Los sospechosos abandonaron el vehículo y un número de personas fue acuchillado”, añadió.

    “Policías armados respondieron rápidamente y de forma valiente, enfrentándose a los tres sospechosos varones, que recibieron disparos y murieron”, añadió.

    La muerte de los sospechosos se produjo “a los 8 minutos” de que la policía recibiera el aviso del incidente, se congratuló el portavoz.
    “Los sospechosos”, añadió, “llevaban algo que parecían cinturones explosivos pero luego se revelaron falsos”, concluyó.

    Si no puede ver la publicación, haga click aquí.

    Una testigo dijo a la BBC que ella vio a una van blanca que viajaba a alta velocidad desviarse de su curso y arrollar a los peatones. La testigo señaló que el vehículo invadió la vereda, arrollando a cinco o seis personas que caminaban por la zona en ese momento, lo que ha provocado el cierre del puente y de las inmediaciones, así como una fuerte presencial de agentes de policía armados en ese área.

    La fuerza de seguridad dijo que lidiaba con un incidente, pero no dio más detalles. Una reportera de Reuters cerca del lugar dijo que vio 10 vehículos policiales  acudiendo a toda velocidad al Puente de Londres.

    Un testigo que estaba en el lugar tras el incidente dijo a Reuters que vio a tres personas que parecían tener cortes en su garganta.

    Una reportera del citado canal de televisión que se encontraba en el puente en el momento del suceso, Holly Jones, reveló que el vehículo era conducido por “un hombre” que viajaba “probablemente a unos 80 kilómetros por hora”.

    De acuerdo con esa versión, el vehículo procedía del área del centro de la capital y se dirigía en dirección a la zona sur del río Támesis, donde “unas cinco o seis personas” recibían tratamiento médico.

    Jones señaló, además, que barcos de la policía inspeccionaban el río en busca de personas que podrían haberse caído del puente tras lo sucedido.

    La periodista informó más tarde que un hombre fue detenido por la Policía.

    La policía británica del Transporte indicó que se han registrado “varios heridos” como resultado del incidente.

    Por su parte, el Servicio de Ambulancias de Londres pedía en un mensaje de Twitter a los ciudadanos que “eviten” acercarse a ese parte de la ciudad y apuntaba que tienen desplegados “múltiples” efectivos atendiendo el incidente.

    Según otros testigos del incidente citados por la agencia de noticias local Press Association (PA), agentes de policía indicaron a los ciudadanos que se encontraban por la zona que “corrieran lo más rápido posible”.

    May.

    La primera ministra de Reino Unido, Theresa May, ya fue informada del incidente y se encuentra en contacto con las autoridades policiales.

    Sobre las 0:30 hora local acudieron al puente de Londres las fuerzas especiales contra-terroristas. Pocos minutos después, May dijo que el caso es un “posible acto de terrorismo”.

    La primera ministra presidirá mañana una reunión del comité de emergencia Cobra a raíz de los sucesos, anunció hoy Downing Street, su residencia y despacho oficial.

    Otros incidentes

    La Policía metropolitana informó que ocurrió otro incidente a pocas cuadras del puente de Londres, en el Borough Market. Al lugar acudieron efectivos armados. El hecho fue confirmado por un portavoz de Scotland Yard.

    El tercer caso ocurrió en el área del barrio Vauxhall y no estaría conectado con los otros ataques.

    La Policía de Londres ha pedido a la gente que esté en las áreas de la ciudad afectadas que busque un lugar seguro. En su cuenta de Twitter, ha pedido a los ciudadanos que, en caso de no saber adónde ir, se esconda y silencie el celular.

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    Source Article from http://www.elpais.com.uy/mundo/seis-muertos-atentado-londres-tres.html

    As Grace made landfall in Haiti, the authorities were still rushing to bring aid to the country’s southwest, which was devastated in the deadly earthquake just two days earlier.

    The quake has killed more than 1,400 people and injured nearly 7,000 others — a toll that is expected to rise. Thousands of homes have been destroyed, as well as dozens of schools, churches and health centers, according to reports by local authorities.

    Memories of the crippling 2010 earthquake — and the shambolic humanitarian response that followed — are still vivid in the minds of Haitians, and the government has promised a more effective reaction this time. But the shipping of aid to the southwest has been hampered by logistical issues and medical facilities are lacking in that part of the country.

    Prime Minister Ariel Henry said on Sunday that all aid received by the country would be handled by a single operations center in Port-au-Prince to avoid having humanitarian assistance arrive “in disorder,” as it often did in 2010, leaving many people excluded from rescue efforts.

    In the aftermath of the 2010 earthquake, the country earned the nickname “The Republic of NGOs” after nongovernmental organizations became the main channel for humanitarian assistance, essentially filling the void left by weak government institutions.

    Several countries, like Mexico, have flown aid to Haiti in recent days and the United States has sent a search-and-rescue team. On Tuesday, the European Union announced that it was allocating 3 million euros, about $3.5 million, in humanitarian funding to help affected communities.

    “The E.U. is quickly mobilizing support to this already extremely fragile country, where hurricanes and heavy rainfalls aggravate the dire situation even more,” Janez Lenarcic, the bloc’s commissioner for crisis management, said in a statement.

    Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/08/17/world/americas/haiti-hurricane-storm.html

    “Where, as here, a state enacts a blatantly unconstitutional statute, assigns enforcement authority to everyone in the world and weaponizes the state judiciary to obstruct those courts’ ability to protect constitutional rights,” the brief said, “the federal courts must be available to provide relief.”

    The cases, Whole Woman’s Health v. Jackson, No. 21-463, and United States v. Texas, No. 21-588, are focused on the novel structure of the Texas law, which was devised to avoid review in federal court.

    In December, the justices will hear arguments in a separate case, Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, No. 19-1392, which takes on a Mississippi law that bans abortions after 15 weeks. That case is a direct challenge to the constitutional right to abortion established by Roe v. Wade in 1973.

    The Texas law, which has been in effect since Sept. 1, makes no exceptions for pregnancies resulting from incest or rape, bars state officials from enforcing it and instead deputizes private individuals to sue anyone who performs the procedure or “aids and abets” it.

    The patient may not be sued, but doctors, staff members at clinics, counselors, and people who help pay for the procedure or drive patients to it are all potential defendants. Plaintiffs do not need to live in Texas, have any connection to the abortion or show any injury from it, and they are entitled to at least $10,000 and their legal fees if they win. Defendants who win their cases are not entitled to legal fees.

    The Supreme Court refused to block the law on Sept. 1 in a bitterly divided 5-to-4 ruling.

    Jonathan F. Mitchell, a lawyer who helped draft the law and who represents individuals who say they want to preserve their right to sue under it, also filed a brief, writing that the federal government was not entitled to challenge the law.

    “The constitutionality of the statute must be determined in the lawsuits between private parties,” he wrote, “not in a pre-emptive lawsuit brought against the sovereign government, which is not ‘enforcing’ the statute but merely allowing its courts to hear lawsuits arising under the disputed statutory enactment.”

    Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/10/27/us/politics/supreme-court-texas-abortion.html