Fifth Column |
New DA for Multnomah County (which includes Portland), @DAMikeSchmidt, announced his office will not prosecute felony riot |
2020-08-12 |
[PUBLISH.TWITTER]
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Fifth Column |
Peter Wilson Curtis, a 40-year-old transvestite, was at the violent antifa protest in Portland tonight. He was previously arrested and charged at a different antifa protest |
2020-08-02 |
[PUBLISH.TWITTER]
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
UN security team came under fire in Syria's Douma: UN official |
2018-04-19 |
[EN.ZAMANALWSL.NET] A UN security team was fired at on Tuesday while on a reconnaissance mission in the Syrian town of Douma to prepare the deployment of experts investigating an alleged chemical attack, officials said. "Shots were fired yesterday at a UN security team doing a reconnaissance in Douma," a UN official told AFP. "They were not injured and returned to Damascus." The experts from the OPCW chemical watchdog were awaiting the green light from the security team before beginning their on-site investigation in Douma of the alleged attack. The suspected April 7 gas attack on Douma, near Damascus, reportedly left more than 40 people dead and was blamed by Western powers on Syrian ![]() Pencilneckal-Assad Despoiler of Deraa... 's forces. British Ambassador Peter Wilson told news hounds in The Hague that the security team on Tuesday traveled to two sites in Douma, escorted by Russian security police. The officials were greeted by a "large crowd" of protesters at one site, forcing them to withdraw while at the second site "they were subject to small-arms fire and an kaboom," Wilson said, citing information from the OPCW director general. Ahmet Uzumcu, the head of the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, told ambassadors in The Hague that it was unclear when the fact-finding mission will be able to deploy to Douma, Wilson added. The UN official, who declined to be named, said the security team would remain in Damascus with the OPCW experts for the time being. |
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Africa Subsaharan | |
Adama Barrow sworn in as Gambia's president in Senegal | |
2017-01-20 | |
![]() ... The Gambia is actually surrounded by Senegal on all sides but its west coast. It has a population of about 1.7 million. The difference between the two is that in colonial days Senegal was ruled by La Belle France and The Gambia (so-called because there's only one of it, unlike Guinea, of which there are the Republic of Guinea, Equatorial Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, New Guinea, the English coin in circulation between 1663 and 1813, and Guyana, which sounds like it should be another one) was ruled by Britain... in support of Adama Barrow, shortly after the new Gambian president called for international backing following his inauguration in neighbouring Senegal ... a nation of about 14 million on the west coast of Africa bordering Mauretania to the north, Mali to the east, and a pair of Guineas to the south, one of them Bissau. It is 90 percent Mohammedan and has more than 80 political parties. Its primary purpose seems to be absorbing refugees... Longtime ruler Yahya Jammeh, who came to power in a 1994 coup, has refused to step down ... Hell no! The money's too good!... despite losing a disputed December 1 presidential election to Barrow, deepening a political crisis. In a statement, Senegal's army said on Thursday that forces from ECOWAS, West Africa's regional bloc, had begun strikes as part of an operation aimed at upholding the result of last month's vote. Colonel Abdou Ndiaye did not specify the type of strikes, but said "significant" land, air and sea resources had been made available . Earlier on Thursday, Barrow, who had recently sought shelter in Senegal, took the oath of office in a hastily-arranged ceremony at Gambia's embassy in the Senegalese capital, Dakar. "This is a day no Gambian will ever forget in a lifetime," Barrow said in a speech immediately after being sworn in. Not long after his inauguration, the United Nations ...an organization originally established to war on dictatorships which was promptly infiltrated by dictatorships and is now held in thrall to dictatorships... Security Council unanimously adopted a resolution backing Barrow and called for a peaceful transer of power. "The people of The Gambia spoke clearly at the elections in December. They chose Adama Barrow to be their president. Their voice now needs to be heard and their will needs to be heeded by just one man," Peter Wilson, the UK deputy ambassador to the UN, said. Earlier this week, Jammeh had declared a national state of emergency , while the parliament extended his term in office by 90 days. He has not been heard from since his mandate expired at midnight. Gambia’s vice president steps down amid growing political crisis [Iran Press TV] The Gambia’s vice president has resigned amid a growing political crisis in the West African country, triggered by the refusal of incumbent President Yahya Jammeh to step down despite his election loss to opposition leader, Adama Barrow. Isatou Njie Saidy, the highest-level official to abandon Jammeh’s camp, announced her decision on Wednesday, hours before president’s mandate expires. She had been vice president of the Gambia since 1997. The Gambia’s Minister of Education Abubacar Senghore had also resigned earlier on the same day, becoming the eighth cabinet minister to leave the government this month. Jammeh had initially accepted the results of the December 1, 2016 election, in which Barrow was declared the winner, but later reversed his position and filed a complaint with the Supreme Court over election irregularities.
Jammeh, however, has offered to step aside once before but changed his | |
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Arabia |
UK envoy: Houthi violence caused crisis |
2015-04-06 |
[ARABNEWS] Britannia's Deputy UN Ambassador Peter Wilson said Britannia continues to support Saudi-led military action against the Houthis in response to "a legitimate request" from President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi. Wilson said it's extremely important to remember that the current crisis was caused by the Houthis repeatedly violating cease-fires and taking military action instead of genuinely engaging in political talks. "The only way out of this crisis is a return to genuine political talks on an equal basis and not using force," he said. His remarks came as Russia urged the UN Security Council to call for a "humanitarian pause" in the conflict in Yemen ...an area of the Arabian Peninsula sometimes mistaken for a country. It is populated by more antagonistic tribes and factions than you can keep track of. Except for a tiny handfull of Jews everthing there is very Islamic... to help diplomats and civilians caught in the fighting. |
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Science & Technology |
The Air In There: Contagious Disease And Open Windows |
2007-02-27 |
Preventing the spread of disease in a hospital may be as simple as opening a window, an international team of researchers reported on Monday. The low-tech solution could help prevent the spread of airborne infections such as tuberculosis -- and ironically, old-fashioned hospitals with high ceilings and big windows may offer the best design for this, they reported. They worked better than modern "negative pressure" rooms, with expensive design aimed at pumping out infected air, the researchers report in the Public Library of Science journal PLoS Medicine. "Opening windows and doors maximizes natural ventilation so that the risk of airborne contagion is much lower than with costly, maintenance-requiring mechanical ventilation systems," wrote Rod Escombe of Imperial College London and colleagues in their report. "Old-fashioned clinical areas with high ceilings and large windows provide greatest protection. Natural ventilation costs little and is maintenance free," they added. For their report, Escombe and colleagues tested the air in eight hospitals in Lima, Peru. Wards built more than 50 years ago, with large windows and high ceilings, had better ventilation than modern rooms that relied on natural ventilation. And they were also superior to the mechanically ventilated rooms, they reported in their study, available online at http://medicine.plosjournals.org/perlserv/?request=get-document& doi=10.1371/journal.pmed.0040068. Tuberculosis is spread by bacteria that can float in the air and the researchers calculated what their findings might mean for the spread of TB. They estimated that in mechanically ventilated rooms, 39 percent of susceptible people would become infected after 24 hours of exposure to an untreated TB patient. This compared to a 33 percent infection rate in modern rooms with windows open and 11 percent in a pre-1950-style room. "We found that opening windows and doors provided median ventilation of 28 air changes/hour, more than double that of mechanically ventilated negative-pressure rooms ventilated at the 12 air changes an hour recommended for high-risk areas," they wrote. Experts are looking at these factors in trying to prepare for a pandemic of influenza. "The current practice of sealing in the local environment is probably the wrong route for hospital wards," Peter Wilson of University College London Hospitals added in a commentary on the study. Doctors and scientists are looking for "any trick in the book". |
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Britain | ||||
Scotland tops list of world's most violent countries | ||||
2005-09-19 | ||||
A UNITED Nations report has labelled Scotland the most violent country in the developed world, with people three times more likely to be assaulted than in America.
The attacks have been fuelled by a âbooze and bladesâ culture in the west of Scotland which has claimed more than 160 lives over the past five years. Since January there have been 13 murders, 145 attempted murders and 1,100 serious assaults involving knives in the west of Scotland. The problem is made worse by sectarian violence, with hospitals reporting higher admissions following Old Firm matches.
Scotland was eighth for total crime, 13th for property crime, 12th for robbery and 14th for sexual assault. New Zealand had the most property crimes and sexual assaults, while Poland had the most robberies. Chief Constable Peter Wilson, president of the Association of Chief Police Officers in Scotland, questioned the figures. âIt must be near impossible to compare assault figures from one country to the next based on phone calls,â he said. âWe have been doing extensive research into violent crime in Scotland for some years now and this has shown that in the vast majority of cases, victims of violent crime are known to each other. We do accept, however, that, despite your chances of being a victim of assault being low in Scotland, a problem does exist.â | ||||
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Afghanistan/South Asia |
Ershad's Estranged Wife Faces Money Laundering Charge |
2005-06-18 |
![]() Bidisha, 38, has been in police custody since June 4 after the one-time military strongman, now 77, lodged complaints with police. In addition to the money laundering charge, she is accused of theft, criminal damage, forgery, bigamy, and threats to kill, said another member of her legal team, Sarah Hossen. Two days after Bidisha's arrest, her husband left the country telling reporters she was a bigamist. He said he believed she was still married to her former husband Peter Wilson, of Britain, because she named him as her spouse in a 2002 passport application. |
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Afghanistan/South Asia | ||||||
Ex-Bangla dictator lands wife in court, flies out amid hoots of derision | ||||||
2005-06-07 | ||||||
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Iraq-Jordan | |
How Iraqi judge cornered Sadr | |
2004-04-17 | |
Found this via the Command-post excuses for the length of the article but I have no time for snips or comments, please delete if this is a repost Journalist of the Year Peter Wilson is the first reporter to obtain a brief charging Moqtada al-Sadr with killing a pro-Western rival THE radical young cleric Moqtada al-Sadr is today holed up in Iraqâs sacred city of Najaf, trying to negotiate a face-saving compromise after failing to ignite a general uprising among the nationâs Shiâite Muslim majority. But Sadrâs future does not rest with the clerics and other go-betweens who are hoping to avert a bloody showdown between his 1000-strong militia and the 2500 US troops ringing Najaf. The fate of Sadr - the A detailed summary of the case against Sadr, which has been obtained by The Weekend Australian, shows that the prosecuting judge, Raid Juhy, has laid a much wider range of charges against the radical cleric than was previously known. Prosecutors had announced that Sadr was charged with the murder last year of rival cleric Abdul Majeed al-Khoei, the alleged theft of religious funds from several mosques, and the murder by his guards of an Iraqi family. But Sadr has also been charged with ordering several other murders, setting up illegal courts and prisons, inciting his followers to violence, and other breaches of the Iraqi penal code. The barrage of charges and evidence amassed by Juhy, a Najaf-based judge, means that even if Sadr can distance himself from the killing of Khoei, he will still face serious problems in court. The brief shows that the judge, who is responsible under Iraqi law for overseeing the gathering of evidence, has found eyewitnesses to back the charges that Sadr personally authorised the murder of Khoei, a moderate rival. According to Colonel Mike Kelly, an Australian army lawyer serving in Baghdad as a legal adviser to the coalition forces, the first that coalition lawyers knew of Juhyâs investigation was when they heard last June that he was well advanced with the case. "He is a very professional forensic sort of lawyer who says he doesnât care about politics, he just wants to ensure nobody is above the law any more in Iraq," Kelly says.
Sadr then left the mosque and returned to his office, whereupon his followers drew AK-47s from their robes and started firing in the direction of Khoei and his group in the Khaladaria, an area in which the offices of the mosque clerics are located. Khoeiâs bodyguard was armed with a pistol and returned fire. "During the course of the firefight Khoei suffered an injury to his hand, losing a couple of fingers. When the Khoei group ran out of ammunition, Riyadh Nouri, a key Sadr lieutenant, called out on a megaphone for a ceasefire," the brief says. "He offered Khoei a hearing to defend himself in Sadrâs nearby office. Khoei agreed, but as they emerged from the Khaladaria in the mosque, the Sadr mob descended upon them and began beating and stabbing them. At the entrance (of the mosque), Haider al-Kaliedar (Khoeiâs bodyguard) died from the knife attacks. At this point, Khoei and two of his group broke free and ran to the office of Sadr, suffering from many stab wounds and the beatings. Sadr refused to open the door to the office. At this point, a merchant from across the street came and collected the three persons, helping them into his shop. There Khoei passed out from his stabbing and gunshot wounds. Two clerics from the Sadr office came into the shop and tested Khoeiâs pulse. They then left and reported to Sadr. The mob gathered outside the shop and Sadr left his office. "There is a (third) eyewitness who can testify that Sadr gave the direction to take him (Khoei) away and âKill him in your own special wayâ. Khoei was dragged from the shop and down the street by his feet, with his head banging on each of the stone steps down to the next street level. He was dragged up that street to about 50 metres from the entrance to the Imam Ali mosque, and there a Sadr follower produced an AK-47 and shot Khoei in the head. The other two persons who were left in the shop when Khoei was dragged out escaped to the coalition forces compound in Najaf and subsequently left the country." It is those two survivors of the fight that the judge has flown to London to interview. According to Kelly, 12 of Sadrâs followers -- the stabbers and shooters -- were arrested soon after the killings, and warrants were issued in August for Sadr and several of his more senior followers. Attempts to arrest those followers, and the closure of Sadrâs newspaper for inciting violence, were met by his call for all Shiâites to rise against the coalition forces. When there was no general uprising, Sadr said through intermediaries he was willing to stand trial but only after the coalition hands power over to Iraqis on June 30. "We have done no deals along those lines," Kelly says. "The only thing we would do is guarantee his safety, a fair trial and the provision of a defence lawyer if he needs one." Sadrâs insistence that he be charged after the June 30 handover carries a particular danger for him. The coalition authorities last year struck down Iraqâs death penalty, meaning he would not risk execution if his case began before June 30, but Iraqi officials are widely expected to restore the death penalty once they regain sovereignty. | |
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