“Isolated events can escalate very quickly and require that we are ready in hours to act in the full spectrum – and when I say the full spectrum, I mean activating the full capabilities of the Air Force.” … Read More
Sinai: Egyptian hostages released – army spokesman
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Seven Egyptian security officers kidnapped in Sinai last week have been released – according to an army spokesman.
Ahmed Ali made the statement on his Facebook page.
It said: “The seven kidnapped Egyptian soldiers are on their way to Cairo after their release thanks to the efforts of Egyptian military intelligence in coordination with the elders of the tribes and families of Sinai.”
The men were seized by militants on the road between el-Arish and Rafah near the border with Israel on May 14.
Egypt stepped up its military presence in Sinai in response.
The peninsula has become increasingly unstable since the overthrow of former President Hosni Mubarak in 2011.
More about: Egypt, Egyptian army, Egyptian politics, Hostages, Israel, Israeli politics
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Gerald Celente Trends on Economic Crash, Depression, Currency Wars, WW3 & Unemployment
http://www.youtube.com/v/-swgXkpLIj0?version=3&f=videos&app=youtube_gdata Original article: Gerald Celente Trends on Economic Crash, Depression, Currency Wars, WW3 & Unemployment
US: Amateur video shows tornado panic
Amateur video uploaded to the Internet shows the tornado that hit the US state of Oklahoma on May 20.
A group of people filmed the twister approaching, before getting in their car to escape its path – and survey the damage.
More about: Tornado
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Israel contests France TV over Palestinian boy’s death
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Israel says there is new evidence that a French television report whose harrowing images helped inspire the second Palestinian uprising was unfounded.
The report in 2000 showed a father and son in Gaza caught up in Israeli-Palestinian crossfire. The 12-year-old was later pronounced dead – hit, said France 2, by Israeli troops.
Nearly 13 years later, the Israeli government-commissioned report says there is no proof Israel was responsible – adding that unbroadcast pictures suggest the two were perhaps not hit at all.
“The network has information in their own raw footage indicating that after he was allegedly dead, he moved and did it intentionally and on purpose which puts a lot of doubt on whether he was actually dead,” said the Israeli Ministry for Strategic Affairs, Yossi Kuperwasser.
Israel wants the TV report corrected, but in Gaza, Mohammed’s father denounced Israel’s claims as fabricated.
He has called for an international investigation into the shooting.
Afterwards Jamal al-Dura was reportedly treated for bullet wounds in Jordan. At his son’s graveside he said:
“Once they said Mohammed was alive and another time that he was killed by Palestinian gunfire. Also another time they filmed me and Mohammed as if we were Israelis and the Palestinians were shooting towards us. I told them, if Mohammed is alive, what happened to me?”
France 2 has offered to cooperate and to help exhume the boy’s body if necessary.
In France a long-standing defamation case by the France 2 TV reporter, Charles Enderlin, against Philippe Karsenty, a media analyst who said the item was staged, again comes to court this week.
More about: Controversy, France, Israel, Palestinian Territories
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Israel’s ‘illegal’ military entry permit bars selected tourists from West Bank – report
The requirement for military entry permits reportedly began at the beginning of 2013. However, not everyone is required to obtain the special pass – and no information has been published surrounding the selection process. Clerics from the US reportedly had to sign a declaration at Ben-Gurion International Airport recently, promising not to enter Area A without permits from the Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT). Area A includes all Palestinian cities and their surrounding areas, with no Israeli settlements. The area is fully controlled by the Palestinian Authority. COGAT is a military office which coordinates civilian issues between the Israeli government, the Israel Defense Forces, international organizations, diplomats, and the Palestinian Authority. “I understand that in the event that I enter any area under the control of the Palestinian Authority without the appropriate authorization all relevant legal actions will be taken against me, including deportation and denial of entry into Israel for a period of up to ten years,” the English-language version of the declaration reads. The clerics signed the document, but were not told how they could obtain the special permission. The clerics told Haaretz that they had been sent from their church to work with Christian communities in East Jerusalem and the West Bank. But their mission ended before it ever began because they were not told how to obtain the military entry permit. One of the clerics sought help from the US Consulate in Jerusalem – but none of the employees were aware of the restictions. The spokesman for the US consulate declined to answer whether Israel had informed the American authorities about the obligation to sign a statement, and did not explain the viewpoint of the US Department of State. According to Sabine Haddad, a spokeswoman for Israel’s Population, Immigration and Borders Authority, the Entry into Israel Law authorizes the interior minister to decide on the entry of foreigners to the State of Israel. In the case of Judea and Samaria, the Israel Defense Forces chief of general staff makes the determination with a permit from the coordinator’s office. “When a tourist or foreign national arrives at the international border crossings and it is believed that he wants to enter Judea and Samaria, he should be informed [of the procedure] and asked for his promise to receive a permit from the coordinator’s office before his entry – a permit that constitutes an essential condition [of entry to the Palestinian Authority controlled areas],” she said. But there is no mention of the existence of such a procedure on COGAT’s English website. The spokesman for the coordinator’s office said the matter of the procedure and the form is being examined. Meanwhile, lawyers are questioning the legality of the declaration. According to the Oslo Accords, citizens of countries which have diplomatic ties with Israel need only an entry permit for Israel and a valid passport to enter Palestinian Authority territories, Attorney Adi Lustigman said. The declaration “is not legal because it was formulated for an improper purpose – isolating the occupied territories – and in an improper manner. It makes the assumption that people who arrive in Israel as tourists, as clerics and for other purposes want to act in contradiction to the law, which may not have been explained to them clearly,” Lustigman said.“If there really is such a procedure, it should be publicized in a simple, clear and accessible manner…it seems there is no operative procedure, nor any procedure for submitting a request. We are left only with a prohibition, which, as we have mentioned, is invalid,” she added. The practice of requiring tourists to sign such declarations was first reported seven years ago, but was reportedly discontinued and renewed only at the beginning of this year. Several years ago, the Interior Ministry also began to limit the freedom of movement of tourists with work and family ties in the West Bank, in order to prevent their entry into Israel by means of a permit with the stamp “For the territories of Judea and Samaria only.” … Read More
Iran agrees to nuclear talks with world powers
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Iran’s chief nuclear negotiator, Saeed Jalili, has announced that he is prepared to pursue nuclear diplomacy with world powers.
Jalili met with the European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton in Istanbul. It follows a failed round of big power diplomacy in April, in the Kazakh city of Almaty.
Ashton oversees talks with Iran on behalf of the United States, Russia, China, France, Britain and Germany.
It is these six major powers that want Tehran to reassure the world it is not seeking nuclear weapons; a goal which Iran denies.
Iran’s chief negotiator, Saeed Jalili told the conference: “Either before or after presidential elections in Iran – because these talks are national issues and beyond political factions, which all the people and political factions have supported”
Jalili recently declared himself as a candidate in the presidential race. The conservative is known for his loyalty towards Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran’s Supreme Leader who decides nuclear policy. The final list of all candidates is expected to emerge on May 23.
The United States and Israel have not ruled out military action if Iran does not suspends its nuclear work.
For now however, any movement in the decade-old standoff looks unlikely until after Iranians vote on June 14 for a successor to President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
More about: Catherine Ashton, EU-Iran, Iran, Nuclear weapons
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