North korea hwasong-12 missile


North korea hwasong-12 missile
This photo, published by the state-owned Korean Central News Agency in mid-September, shows a test launch of North Korea's Hwasong-12 missile.KCNA via Reuters
Trump and Kim's provocations aren't helping
RUSI's report heavily cited Trump's ongoing provocations against North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. Earlier this month, the US president referred to Kim as "Rocket Man" in a speech to the United Nations, and Kim responded by calling Trump a "mentally deranged US dotard."

Trump also threatened that Kim and his foreign minister, Ri Yong Ho, "won't be around much longer." Ri said this was effectively a declaration of war.

Gass condemned these actions, saying any attempts to negotiate with North Korea peacefully "cannot be helped by name-calling and exchanges of ritual insults by the main two parties to the debate."

Morgan Freeman wants Trump to investigate the accusations of Russian collusion with his





Morgan Freeman wants Trump to investigate the accusations of Russian collusion with his staff
Even a Russian weatherman weighed in, claiming the the cannabis campaigner Freeman is suffering from "overwork and marijuana use".

A critic at Russia’s state-run television station TV Centre gave the video a serious viewing and deemed it Freeman’s "worst role".

Russian director Stanislav Govorukhin reportedly said: "Not all actors are idiots, but you will find some who are. It happens."

​Donald ​Trump​ and ​Vladimir ​Putin met for nearly an hour in second meeting
There’s even a Freeman-hating hashtag: #StopMorganLie.

Rolf Fredheim, a NATO analyst believes that the blanketing response “could be an example of some kind of Russian troll-farm output.”

It doesn’t look like Russia is going to let this go easily, either. In a post on Facebook, Zakharova says she anticipates a “spectacular finale” once her country’s authorities get to the bottom of Freeman’s two-minute video.

“I can’t wait,” she added.

Freeman has yet to comment on the negative comments.

Earlier this month Facebook agreed to hand over adverts bought by Russians to sway the 2016 campaign.

Mark Zuckerberg also pledged to beef up security, cooperate with federal investigators and enhance transparency on the site, the New York Post reports.

A version of this story originally appeared on the New York Post.

How Morgan Freeman became public enemy number one in Russia




How Morgan Freeman became public enemy number one in Russia

HOLLYWOOD actor Morgan Freeman has been blasted by the Kremlin after recording a video urging US President Donald Trump to investigate Russia’s alleged interference in the US election.

The Shawshank Redemption star appeared in a two-minute video on behalf of Rob Reiner’s organisation, the Committee to Investigate Russia.

 Oscar winner Morgan Freeman is urging the White House to investigate accusations that Russia targeted the US election
Oscar winner Morgan Freeman is urging the White House to investigate accusations that Russia targeted the US election
 Putin has angrily denied accusations the Kremlin tried to rig the US election
Putin has angrily denied accusations the Kremlin tried to rig the US election
In the video, Freeman references Russia’s alleged attempts to hack the US election, and implores Donald Trump to seriously investigate Russia’s influence on his victory and to confront Putin directly.

The video shows the Oscar winner accusing the former KGB spy of launching cyber attacks and spreading false information to weaken the US.

So the furious Russian media and officials launched a full-blown attack on the much-loved actor's character and sanity.

The BBC reports Putin’s press secretary Dmitry Peskov called Freeman a "fool".

He added: "Many creative people easily fall victim to emotional strain, and don’t have real information about the actual state of affairs."

Then, foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova took it to the realms of conspiracy, by stating that Freeman was "duped".

 Russian Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Maria Zakharova said the Hollywood star was 'duped'

Why Russia Fears America's Missile Defenses



Why Russia Fears America's Missile Defenses


In recent weeks, Russia has conducted a number of intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) tests with experimental payloads that are designed to penetrate advanced missile defenses. The idea is to ensure that Russian nuclear weapons can reach their targets even in the event that their targets are protected by a missile shield—even if such a defense system does not currently exist.

The Soviet Union and later Russia has been leery of missile defense systems even before President Ronald Reagan announced his Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI) in 1983. Both American and Soviet nuclear weapons experts have considered missile defense systems to be highly destabilizing since the 1960s when such systems were first envisioned. Most nuclear weapons experts in both the United States and Russia still hold to this view even though President George W. Bush withdrew from the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty in December 2001.

Under the theory of nuclear deterrence, a national anti-ballistic missile defense system such as the one envisioned by Reagan—coupled with a massive counterforce nuclear strike—could neutralize an adversary’s retaliatory second strike capability.

Recommended: The Case for War with North Korea

“The development of an ABM system could allow one side to launch a first strike and then prevent the other from retaliating by shooting down incoming missiles,” reads a U.S. State Department history of the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks Treaty I/II.

Indeed, such a missile shield could potentially invite an adversary to launch a preemptive strike or risking being disarmed. Then Defense Secretary Robert McNamara was one of the first to articulate the basic problem with anti-ballistic missile (ABM) defenses—it threatened the secure second strike capability needed to have stable mutual nuclear deterrence. McNamara’s ideas eventually led to what became the now-defunct Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty of 1972, which was ultimately signed under the subsequent Nixon Administration.

Senators are questioning Trump's strategy to halt North Korea's nuke program




Senators are questioning Trump's strategy to halt North Korea's nuke program

FILE PHOTO: North Korean leader Kim Jong Un watches the launch of a Hwasong-12 missile in this undated photo released by North Korea's Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) on September 16, 2017. KCNA via REUTERS
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un watches the launch of a Hwasong-12 missile in this photo released by North Korea's Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) on September 16, 2017.Thomson Reuters
WASHINGTON (AP) - A State Department official has acknowledged that U.S. intelligence agencies don't believe North Korea will ever pull the plug on its nuclear program.

Those findings have raised concern among lawmakers over the Trump administration's strategy for bringing a mounting crisis with Pyongyang to a peaceful close.

Susan Thornton, the acting assistant secretary of state for East Asia and the Pacific, says the U.S. is "testing" the conclusion reached by the intelligence agencies by ratcheting up "international isolation and pressure" on North Korea.

She says progress is being made to convince China that North Korea is a liability, not an asset.

But Sen. Bob Corker of Tennessee says North Korea views nuclear arms as its ticket to survival and won't give them up.

Thornton testified before a Senate committee on Thursday.

Trump To Travel To 5 Asian Nations In Nov. To Curb North Korea Nuclear Threat



Trump To Travel To 5 Asian Nations In Nov. To Curb North Korea Nuclear Threat

President Donald Trump waves before speaking about tax reform at the Farm Bureau Building at the Indiana State Fairgrounds, Wednesday, Sept. 27, 2017, in Indianapolis, Ind. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
WASHINGTON (AP) — The White House announced Friday that President Donald Trump will take a five-nation trip to the Asia Pacific region in November as the U.S. seeks to curb North Korea’s growing nuclear threat.

The White House said Trump will travel to Japan, South Korea, China, Vietnam and the Philippines from Nov. 3-14, a trip that will also include a stop in Hawaii. It will be Trump’s first visit to the region as president, and it comes as North Korea moves closer to its goal of having a nuclear-tipped missile that could strike the U.S.

The White House said Trump’s visit would “strengthen the international resolve to confront the North Korean threat and ensure the complete, verifiable, and irreversible denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula.”

Trump has offered fiery rhetoric and a tough stance against the North’s nuclear weapons program, declaring in a speech to the United Nations General Assembly last week that the U.S. would “totally destroy” North Korea if provoked. North Korea responded with pledges to take the “highest-level” action against the United States and warned that it might conduct the “most powerful” atmospheric hydrogen bomb test in the Pacific Ocean.

Trump is also expected to discuss trade and economic ties to the region and will attend the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in Vietnam and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations summit in the Philippines.

Even as Washington and Beijing grapple with that security crisis in North Korea, Trump has pressed China for more balanced trade with America.

Trump has been openly critical of China’s large trade surpluses with the United States and last month ordered an investigation into whether Beijing improperly pressures companies to hand over their technology in exchange for market access.

His trip to China will come weeks after Chinese leader Xi Jinping is expected to receive a second five-year term as the leader of China’s communist party. Trump has sought to forge a personal relationship with Xi, hosting the Chinese president at his Mar-a-Lago resort in April.

In a prelude to Trump’s trip to China, Trump met Thursday with Chinese Vice Premier Liu Yandong, who was attending the inaugural dialogue on people-to-people ties in Washington.

Diplomacy at work: Top N. Korean diplomat on US relations arrives in Moscow for talks



Diplomacy at work: Top N. Korean diplomat on US relation

© RT A still image taken from a video footage shows members of the North Korean delegation, who arrived for talks in Moscow, on September 29, 2017.
Senior Russian and North Korean diplomats have met in Moscow to discuss the crisis on the Korean Peninsula, media reports. It comes as Pyongyang's war of words with Washington threatens to escalate into all-out conflict.

Oleg Burmistrov, Russia's ambassador-at-large, met Choe Son-hui, director-general of the North American Department of North Korea's Foreign Ministry in the Russian capital on Friday, TASS reported. They met behind closed doors.

Commenting on the issue on the eve of the meeting, Heather Nauert, US State Department spokesperson, said that Washington "can't see that as a bad thing."

"Diplomacy is our preferred approach. If Russia can be successful in getting North Korea to move in a better direction, we would certainly welcome that," she told journalists on Thursday.

Also on Thursday, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova confirmed that the Russian and North Korean officials would meet to discuss the crisis.

Zakharova, however, declined to provide any further details, saying that the Russian Foreign Ministry would release a statement after the meeting.

The Moscow talks come as North Korea and the US continue to exchange barbs, threatening military responses.

In one of his latest statements on the crisis, US President Donald Trump said that Washington was prepared to strike North Korea if necessary with "devastating" consequences for the country.

On Sunday, North Korea released a doctored video in which a missile "destroys" US B-1B and F-35 jets, while a submarine targets America's aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson.

Russia and China are attempting to ease tensions between the states, calling for dialogue and stating that military options should be ruled out. They have long been pushing for a 'double-freeze' plan, in which Pyongyang suspends its nuclear and ballistic missile tests in exchange for a halt in joint US-South Korea military exercises. However, the US has rejected the proposal and continues to flex its muscles with allies in the region.
s arrives in Moscow for talks

Russia gets 'advance payment' from Turkey for S-400



Russia gets 'advance payment' from Turkey for S-400

Transferring technologies to Turkey as part of missile system not discussed yet, according to Russian presidential aide
Russia gets 'advance payment' from Turkey for S-400
Moscow has received an "advance payment" from Turkey for the S-400 missile defense system, Russian presidential aide said Friday.

"The contract has entered into force, the advance payment was made," Vladimir Kozhin said, according to Russia's official TASS news agency.

The issue of transferring technology of S-400 production to Ankara has not been discussed yet, he added.

On Sept. 13, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan indicated that Turkey went ahead with the purchase of Russia’s S-400 missile system because it was tired of waiting for another supplier.

Erdogan's remarks came a day after Kozhin confirmed that a contract had been signed, without giving an exact date.

"I can merely guarantee that all of the decisions made under this contract strictly agree with our strategic interests," he told TASS.

The deal, which is believed to have a value of around $2.5 billion, has caused concern among Turkey’s NATO allies, who say the Russian air defense system is incompatible with NATO systems.

However, the Kremlin has defended Turkey’s purchase of the S-400, saying: "No one has the right to criticize Russia and Turkey for military-technical cooperation, which is carried out in strict accordance with international law and is not directed against any third countries."

In recent years, Turkey has sought to build its domestic defense industry to reduce reliance on foreign suppliers.

The S-400 is Russia’s most advanced long-range anti-aircraft missile system and can carry three types of missiles capable of destroying targets including ballistic and cruise missiles.

It can track and engage up to 300 targets at the same time and has an altitude ceiling of 27 kilometers (17 miles).

On Monday, Turkish Defense Industry Undersecretary Ismail Demir said delivery of the missile system would begin within two years.

Russian Defense Ministry says 5 warlords responsible for attack on Russian military police in September killed in Syria





Russian Defense Ministry says 5 warlords responsible for attack on Russian military police in September killed in Syria -


© Ministry of defence of the Russian Federation / Sputnik
Five prominent Al-Nusra Front field commanders, who led an attack on Russian military police officers in Hama province earlier in September, have been killed in an airstrike in Idlib province in Syria, the Russian Defense Ministry said.

The airstrike targeted the commanders of Tahrir al-Sham, a group that was formed after the collapse of Al-Nusra Front terrorist organization, near the city of Idlib, Defense Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov said. Also, 32 militants were killed in the strike.

The attack on the Russian military police took place in Hama province, 80km from Idlib, on September 18, Konashenkov said.

"Special measures to find and destroy all the militants involved in the attack on Russian troops in Syria continue," he said.


Among the commanders killed in Idlib are a "finance emir," a chief of Idlib's southern sector, an adviser to the 'war minister,' a Sharia judge, and an aide of a spiritual leader.

The airstrike also destroyed a nearby "ammunition and explosives depot and six SUVs with large-caliber weapons," Konashenkov added.

The incident in Hama was earlier reported by the Russian General Staff, which said that militants from an Al-Nusra Front affiliate tried to capture a unit of the Russian military police, which have a mandate to monitor the ceasefire in the Idlib de-escalation zone.

The Russian command in Syria then ordered an operation to repel the militants' assault, including airstrikes and a ground offensive conducted by the military police and special operations forces. The Russian unit was successfully rescued. Three troops from the special operations forces were injured, but there were no fatalities, General Sergey Rudskoy, spokesman for the Russian General Staff, said at that time.

The offensive was stopped and the militants suffered losses, he added. The estimated losses include around 850 fighters, 11 tanks, three infantry fighting vehicles, 46 armed pickup trucks, five mortars, 20 freighter trucks, and 38 ammo supply points.

Russian strikes on U.S. allies seen as move for power in postwar Syria




Russian strikes on U.S. allies seen as move for power in postwar Syria

Russian-backed forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar Assad on Monday launched a heavy artillery attack near Syrian Democratic Forces' positions, their third airstrike against anti-Islamic State forces this month. (Associated Press)
With the U.S. consumed with domestic crises and a standoff with North Korea, Russia has quietly moved to press its advantage on the battlefield in Syria. A series of increasingly brazen Russian and Syrian airstrikes on U.S.-backed forces in Syria in recent days is the first step in a larger plan to co-opt American proxy forces fighting Islamic State and improve the Kremlin’s leverage to shape the postwar landscape, analysts say.

Russian-backed forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar Assad on Monday launched a heavy artillery attack in eastern Syria near positions of the Syrian Democratic Forces, the alliance of Kurdish and Arab paramilitary fighters battling Islamic State militants, coalition officials confirmed Thursday.

U.S. military officials said they immediately contacted the Russians “to prevent accidental targeting and to ease tensions” between the two sides in an increasingly complicated and crowded battlefield in eastern Syria, Col. Ryan Dillon, the top U.S. military spokesman in Iraq and Syria, told reporters at the Pentagon.

Coalition officials maintain that Monday’s attack was a case of “accidental targeting,” but it was the third such strike against anti-Islamic State forces this month and was less than a week after Russian warplanes struck SDF units in the Islamic State-held territory of Deir el-Zour.

Emboldened by the regime’s victory over anti-government forces in the rebel stronghold of Aleppo late last year, Mr. Assad and his Russian and Iranian allies have stepped up their offensive against Islamic State-held positions, increasingly setting their sights on the group’s stronghold in Deir el-Zour.

While the battle parallels the U.S.-backed coalition fight against the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, Russia and Syria are rushing to seize control of Deir el-Zour’s massive oil and gas resources, to improve Mr. Assad’s position in the jockeying for power after Islamic State is defeated, said James Phillips, senior research fellow for Middle Eastern affairs at the conservative Heritage Foundation.

“The Russians are primarily motivated by the desire to shore up the Assad regime,” Mr. Phillips said. “What they are really going for is not to go after ISIS, but to secure the gas and oil fields” in eastern Syria before U.S.-allied forces can.

The Russians struck SDF units Monday shortly after they reclaimed control of the Conoco gas field. The field is one of the largest oil and gas sources in Syria and the first to fall under the coalition’s control.

“We strongly condemn the aggressive attacks of the Russian forces and their allies on ground, which only serve terrorism and harm the war on terror,” said an SDF statement released shortly after the airstrike, which killed several fighters. “We will not stand indifferent about such attacks, and we will use our right of self-defense.”

But Russia’s recent moves reflect a much longer game Moscow is playing in the Middle East, Mr. Phillips said. Continued harassment of SDF and U.S.-backed forces is an attempt to drive a wedge between the paramilitaries and their American commanders, he said.

“It is going to be harder and harder to maintain the cohesiveness of the SDF” as the fight against Islamic State drags on, he said, noting that continued harassment of U.S. paramilitaries by Russian and regime forces could accelerate that erosion.

By keeping up the pressure on the SDF, Moscow is sending a clear signal that “the U.S. will not protect you,” Mr. Phillips said, adding that the message could “encourage factions of the SDF to seek other means of support,” particularly from Moscow

Okorocha blasts Charly Boy, says he was recruited against him, Buhari, APC NEWS





Okorocha blasts Charly Boy, says he was recruited against him, Buhari, APC NEWS
Published
By Cleo JosephRELATED TOPICS: Imo State Government has alleged that Charles Oputa aka Charly Boy was hired by the opposition to attack Governor Rochas Okorocha, the All Progressive Congress and President Muhammadu Buhari.


The state government also accused chairman of Owerri branch of the Nigeria Bar Association (NBA), Lawrence Nwakaeti of having joined in the attack on the governor.
A statement signed by Okorocha’s chief press secretary, Sam Onwuemeodo, said Charly Boy was recruited since 2014.

“He used his late father’s burial service in Oguta to launch his war against the governor after he had collected money from the government for the same father’s burial, and he has continued the unprovoked and unwarranted war.”

“The governor influenced construction of the road to Oputa’s house, built a court complex named after the Late Jurist, Justice Chukwudifu Oputa and gave money for his burial, which Charly Boy personally came to Government House to collect.

“He said before the burial, they told him that the former president had directed that he should not allow Okorocha to speak at the burial service not minding that protocol demands that he should talk.

“Acting on the script given to him, Charly Boy snatched the microphone from a sitting governor, who came to honour his late father and who also gave money for the burial and he did that to satisfy Okorocha’s opponents and see whether that could help them in the 2015 election, and, up till now, Charly Boy has not cared to apologise to the governor, in spite of the general outcry his action attracted then”.
Onwuemeodo said Charly Boy continued the war by visiting Owerri at the weekend to insult Governor Okorocha.

“He deceived some Human Rights people like Prof. Chidi Odinkalu into coming to Owerri over the relocation of Ekeukwu market without such innocent figures knowing he was recruited since 2014 against Okorocha”, the statement added.

Buhari reveals why he almost “ran away from Nigeria” NEWS



Buhari reveals why he almost “ran away from Nigeria” NEWS
Published
By Cleo Joseph
RELATED TOPICS: President Muhammadu Buhari has joked that he was already considering
what country “to run to”, but for the improved rainy seasons in the last two years.
Buhari stated this while receiving the National Council of Traditional Rulers, led by the Sultan of Sokoto Muhammad Sa’ad Abubakar III, at the presidential villa on Monday.


“We are lucky that last year and this year the rainy season is good. If it were not good I must confide to you that I was considering which country to run to,” he said.

“But God answered the prayers of many Nigerians the rainy season last year was good and this year with the report I’m getting is good. We thank God for that otherwise there would have been a lot of problems in this country.”
Buhari explained that rain has led to good harvest and prevented famine in the country.

He once again blamed the “mismanagement of national resources” over the years for the economic woes bedeviling Nigeria.
He said that he will continue to pursue programmes and projects “to better the lives of Nigerians in all spheres of life”.

2019: Buhari never told anyone he won’t run for second term – APC Chieftain, Oyalowo NEWS




2019: Buhari never told anyone he won’t run for second term – APC Chieftain, Oyalowo NEWS

By Cloe Joseph

RELATED TOPICS: A chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC) from Oyo State, Ayo Oyalowo, has said President Muhammadu Buhari never told anybody he would not run for a second term in office.

Oyalowo, who further challenged anybody with a contrary opinion to bring out the facts, said this when he appeared on Channels Television‘s Sunday Politics hosted by Seun Okinbaloye and monitored by DAILY POST.

According to the APC chieftain, who is also Deputy Director of Media at the Buhari Campaign Organisation, Nigerians should count themselves lucky to have President Muhammadu Buhari as their leader.

“Let me make it categorically clear, at least to the extent to which I know, President Buhari never told anybody he’s going to do only one term.”

“He never discussed that with anybody and if anybody has any contrary opinion, let them bring it out and bring the fact.

“People are just being mischievous; there was no reason for the president to tell us what will happen in 2019.

“He contested in 2015, he won an election, and he’s still running his mandate. If he wants to run again, by the time INEC lifts the bar on election, he will make his mind known. Why are people trying to be mischievous so that they can put the man in a tight corner?” he questioned.

Oyalowo, however, maintained that President Buhari should be voted into office for a second term if he desires to run in 2019, adding “He (Buhari) is a man who Nigerians should be grateful to God that he is a Nigerian.

“Yes, I am a Buharist, very proud one for that matter. I think he (Buhari) is a good person, I think he’s honest, I think Nigeria is blessed and lucky to have him as president,” he said.

“From 2011 I have been with the man, I supported him in 2011. I’m very happy that he finally got it in 2015 and if God wills and he wants to do it again, I will gladly support him.

“APC should be given a chance to continue with the nation’s governance, saying the party cannot afford to abort the efforts it has made in fixing the country.

“We have cleared a lot of the mess that we met on ground, a lot of work still needs to be done. We cannot allow the darkness of the past to come and overshadow the light that we’ve started to bring into the country,” he said.

What Buhari must do for Nigeria to remain out of recession – CACOL BUSINESS



What Buhari must do for Nigeria to remain out of recession – CACOL BUSINESS

By Cleo Joseph
RELATED TOPICS: Centre for Anti-Corruption and Open Leadership, CACOL, has advised the Federal Government to ensure that Nigerians begin to feel the impact of the country’s exit from recession.

CACOL said the government should ensure that the ordinary Nigerian, who felt the pain of recession was given “succor”, and the economy be diversified.

A statement signed and sent to DAILY POST by CACOL’s Media Cordinator, Wale Salami, quoted the bodies Executive Chairman, Debo Adeniran, as saying the country’s exit from economic recession was an important achievement that must be built on for the overall development of the country.

National Bureau of Statistics, NBS, had recently
declared that the country was out of recession.

Adeniran, who described the news as a welcome development said, “It is heartwarming that Nigeria is finally out of an economic recession that is arguably the worst that has ever hit the country, without any bit of doubt, the economy has made the conditions of living hard for majority of the citizens inadvertently.

“The government must ensure that the gains of this achievement immediately begin to impact on lives of ordinary citizens in terms of giving succor for the pains they have had to bear all the while when the country was in recession. This is the only way it can be meaningful and impactful on the masses beyond statistics, figures, percentages, data and so on.”

Urging Federal Government to ensure that the country does not slide back into recession, Adeniran said, “We know that it is fundamentally the rise in the international prizes of oil that has largely helped the country out which makes the economy to remain in a precarious situation based on the mono-economic practice of the past and present governments.

“The only way we can keep recession at bay is to concretely and consciously diversify the economy beyond the ‘the scratch-on-the-surface’ approach we have been and still witnessing. Even though the government talks diversification, it certainly appears unserious about it wholesomely.”

“How we do diversify massively into agriculture, solid minerals, Mines and Steel Development etc with the huge infrastructural deficits bedeviling the system? None of these sectors can flourish to level of moving the country away from oil-driven economy without good roads, constant electricity, railways, silos, storage facilities, water etc. This is the enabling environment that government must create across board (rural and urban) in the country to make a success of diversification.

“The government must halt its false pretenses at diversifying the economy and get real if it truly intends to match words with actions; funds must be ploughed into infrastructural development which will ultimately galvanize a very vibrant economy standing on multiple legs.”

How Buhari tackled recession caused by Jonathan in one year – Adesina POLITICS



How Buhari tackled recession caused by Jonathan in one year – Adesina POLITICS

By Cleo Joseph
RELATED TOPICS: The presidency yesterday said hard work and policies of President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration made Nigeria exit recession.

Presidential spokesman, Femi Adesina, who blamed the recession on mistakes of the past administration, said the government tackled the problem in just about a year.
Adesina made the remarks at a solidarity rally on Tuesday at the Presidential Villa in Abuja.

A statement by the State House Deputy Director (Information), Abiodun Oladunjoye, said the march was organised in support of the Federal Government by the Centre for Civil Society and Justice.

“You have chosen a very auspicious day for this solidarity rally. Earlier today, we were told that Nigeria had officially exited recession,” Adesina said.

“That shows that we have a government that is working for us, we have a government that is interested in our welfare, we have a government that is interested in our well-being.”
He assured the gathering that he would relay their message of support and solidarity on the unity of Nigeria to President Buhari.

“You know the President swore to uphold the Constitution and the Constitution recognises Nigeria as one indissoluble entity. The President has sworn to keep the unity of the country and whatever it takes; he will keep to that pledge,” he said.

The presidential aide advised those “beating the drums of separation” to keep their peace, reiterating government’s resolve to preserve Nigeria’s unity, cohesion and togetherness.
Convener of the rally, Mr Goodluck Obi, said the group wholeheartedly supports President
Buhari’s uncommon resolve to fix Nigeria.

He said, “We want to sound a note of warning to both organs of government, that we the
Nigerian people would no longer allow our collective destiny to be toyed with like a game.”

“We are more than ever ready to mobilise the people to do the needful within the ambit of the law; enough is enough.”

Why US monitored some of Jonathan’s associates – Buhari’s Minister, Onyeama POLITICS



Why US monitored some of Jonathan’s associates – Buhari’s Minister, Onyeama POLITICS


RELATED TOPICS: The Minister of Foreign Affairs, Geoffrey Onyeama, has said the current Federal Government was unaware that the United States, US, government was monitoring some Ministers who served under the administration of the immediate past President, Goodluck Jonathan.
Addressing State House Correspondents at the Presidential villa, in Abuja, yesterday, Onyeama said the US government was listening to the telephone conversations of some of Jonathan’s Ministers on some “suspicious” investments made in the country.
The Minister further noted that the current government was making efforts to recover stolen funds stashed away in foreign countries.

“On the issue of how much is stolen from the country, it’s an ongoing thing, we have been discovering all the time because you see the sophistication that there is today in hiding money around the world is amazing, even western countries themselves have a lot of

problems and it takes them a lot of time and they discovered about the Panama papers, nobody knew about all those funds illegally stashed until you suddenly have the revelations under the Panama papers. So it’s really an ongoing thing and then new ones coming up all the time.

“As you saw recently we never knew about the US eavesdropping on some telephone conversations of members of the previous government and private sectors talking about investments that were made in the United States, it just suddenly came out like that, so it’s an ongoing thing.”

How I rebelled against God, got pregnant at age 16 – Hilda Dakubo ENTERTAINMENT


How I rebelled against God, got pregnant at age 16 – Hilda Dakubo ENTERTAINMENT

RELATED TOPICS: Veteran actress, Hilda Dokubo has revealed how she rebelled against God and got pregnant after her father passed on when she was 9.
The youth advocate, who once served as special adviser on youth affairs to Ex-Governor of Rivers State Peter Odili, said this during an event at the Fresh Oil International Church.

According to the actress, she was forced to fend for herself.
Hilda said although she was born with a silver spoon, her father’s death forced her family to become poor as she had to fend for herself.
She said: “I was born with a silver spoon but death turned me poverty stricken after my
father died when I was just nine.

“I turned away from God at that point because I felt disappointed that despite how much my father loved and served God, He still died.

“After my dad died, my mother completely lost her mind. If she were in U.S, I am sure she would have been diagnosed as a mental case. You know in Nigeria, we don’t consider people mad until they have started eating from dustbin.

‘’ I rebelled against God at that point and stopped going to church at the age of nine.
“However, I was a very brilliant girl and I got admission into the university at the age of 16. I became rascal and did what girls like that do. I slept with a man and I became pregnant.’’

‘’It wasn’t the Holy Spirit that impregnated me. My mom was devastated and disappointed in me because of that. I was angry with her because her God killed my father and we stopped speaking to each other.”

Why Dangote is most humble person on earth – Foluke Daramola-Salako ENTERTAINMENT



Why Dangote is most humble person on earth – Foluke Daramola-Salako ENTERTAINMENT


RELATED TOPICS: Nollywood actress, Foluke Daramola-Salako has described Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote as the most humble person on earth.

In a post she shared via her Instagram page, the veteran actress expressed surprise that a man like Dangote, who competes with the world’s wealthiest persons could stand up to greet her at a public event and even sat and chatted with them “like the poorest.”
According to her, “I was standing when l was introduced to Dangote by Keyamo, but to my surprise, he stood up to greet me.

“The wealthiest human being on the continent of Africa stood up to greet me. What a rare humility!

“What an uncommon virtue from the golden man of Africa. He was the richest among us, but sat in our midst and interacted with us like the poorest.”

P-Square: Reno Omokri reveals reason for reported split ENTERTAINMENT




P-Square: Reno Omokri reveals reason for reported split ENTERTAINMENT


RELATED TOPICS: A former aide to ex-President Goodluck Jonathan, Reno Omokri, has connected the reported fight between members of a Nigerian music group, the P-Square to the call for separation and restructuring by several groups in the country.

According to Omokri, God is using the P-Square situation to teach Nigerians a lesson.
In a message he shared via @renoomokrion twitter handle, the former Presidential aide hinted that the real cause of the brothers fighting each other was because they needed restructuring from unitary partnership to true federalism.

He wrote, “Perhaps God is using@PeterPsquare & @rudeboypsquare to teach lessons onthe options before Nigeria-division, restructuring or family fight.

“Even P-Square wants to restructure from unitary form of partnership to true federalism. You are Peter, I am Paul. Together, we are P-Square!

“If Peter and Paul cant live in peace, is it our own little Republics that will automatically lead to peace? Restructuring is a better option.”

Killer of American rapper, Tupac Shakur revealed

Killer of American rapper, Tupac Shakur revealed


The Killer of American rapper, Tupac Amaru Shakur, also known by his stage names 2Pac and Makaveli have been revealed by two police officers who spent years investigating his death.

Two police officers, Tim Bennan and Robert Ladd who have on the matter years after his death, reveal that a Crips gang member identified as Orlando Anderson pulled the trigger from a car in Las Vegas in September 1996.

The case remains unsolved, and the singer’s death has been the subject of immense speculation, including the theory that he’s actually still alive.
However, the officers have stressed Anderson is to blame in explosive new documentary

“Who Shot Biggie & Tupac?”
One of the officers, Ladd told journalists Soledad O’Brien and Ice-T that “They had all these other theories going on, but it was a really simple gang one-on-one to Tim and I.

“We believe Orlando Anderson was the one who did it.”
The officers worked for Compton Police Department in California and had Anderson on their radar after he tried to shoot someone as part of a Crips gang initiation at the age of 15.
They were actually investigating him for a murder when the shooting of Tupac occurred.
Brennan and Ladd were called in to help Las Vegas Police Department investigate the death.
It is believed Anderson killed Tupac after he was publicly beaten by members of his crew.

In the immediate aftermath, informants told the cops that Anderson was boasting to people about killing Tupac.
On May 30 1998, Anderson was killed in a triple murder over drug money.

Drone inspections of natural gas pipelines may soon be reality triblive.




Drone inspections of natural gas pipelines may soon be reality
triblive.
David Yoel, founder and CEO of American Aerospace Technologies in Conshohocken, describes different types of drones during a presentation Sept. 28, 2017 at the Pennsylvania Aviation Conference in Greensburg.
David Yoel, founder and CEO of American Aerospace Technologies in Conshohocken, describes different types of drones during a presentation Sept. 28, 2017 at the Pennsylvania Aviation Conference in Greensburg.
Updated 29 minutes ago

Drones may be able to detect incipient leaks in underground natural gas pipelines, and even prevent them, once technical and regulatory hurdles have been resolved.

Officials cited corrosion as a factor in a natural gas pipeline explosion that rocked Salem Township last year. But Conshocken-based drone entrepreneur David Yoel, a presenter at this week's Pennsylvania Aviation Conference in Greensburg, noted most pipeline leaks are caused by a third party mistakenly digging into the line with heavy equipment.

Yoel's company, American Aerospace Technologies, is developing sensors for a long-range drone that could conduct a fly-by inspection of a pipeline corridor from a height of 1,000 feet or more, picking up signs of machinery digging too closely or of leaking methane.

“With an infrared camera, we can detect the heat signatures of active machinery, and we can see the machinery very clearly,” Yoel said. “We're also testing algorithms that can detect machinery.”

The specially equipped drone also can look for tire tracks and other signs of unwanted, potentially hazardous activity on a pipeline right-of-way.

“We're testing in the range between 1,000 and 2,000 feet,” he said. At that height, “You can get a wider field of view and can see the entire width of the corridor.”

According to Yoel, sensors that “sniff” leaking methane aren't much use beyond a few dozen feet above the ground. But he said his company is working with Princeton University to equip drones with a multi-spectral sensor that could spot the mid-range infrared glow of escaping methane.

“What we're working on, a little bit further out, is finding small leaks before they become big leaks,” he said.

Yoel's firm completed a trial pipeline inspection in Virginia last year, and he's hoping soon to bring his forward-looking drone applications home to Pennsylvania.

Because drones are required to remain within the line of sight of an operator, a manned chase plane followed the drone used in the Virginia test run.

Yoel acknowledged that's a hurdle to making the aerial inspection commercially viable, having a fuel-greedy plane along for the ride with the relatively lightweight, efficient drone.

He's looking forward to a change in Federal Aviation Administration rules, phasing in use of Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast equipment that will allow aircraft to detect each other in flight, using satellite signals. In 2020, that equipment will be mandatory for craft flying in most controlled airspace.

Yoel said he's most excited about the potential of using drones to assist in emergencies. In June, his company partnered with Verizon to deploy a mobile cell site on a drone, providing wireless communications for first responders in Cape May County, N.J., during a mock hurricane that would have disabled ground-based cell equipment.

He's hoping Pennsylvania's emergency responders will also want to try out the drone technology.

“I'd welcome the opportunity to work with them to develop an understanding of these capabilities and potentially use them in disasters in Pennsylvania,” he said.

More recently, one of his company's drones, equipped with a mapping and sensor payload, was used to review property damage from Hurricane Irma over a 100-mile stretch of the Florida Keys.

Behind the bombast: North Korea's genteel foreign minister




Behind the bombast: North Korea's genteel foreign minister

Photo
North Korean Foreign Minister Ri Yong-ho walks to speak to the media outside the Millennium hotel New York, U.S., September 25, 2017.
(Reuters) - The man who called Donald Trump "President Evil" last week at the U.N. General Assembly is actually a genteel intellectual who studies the memoirs of former U.S. presidents and has taste for fine whisky, according to ten people who know him.

North Korea's Foreign Minister Ri Yong Ho made headlines in the Sept. 23 speech to the 193-member General Assembly, and also two days earlier when he revealed to reporters outside his hotel that North Korea's next move might be to detonate a hydrogen bomb above the Pacific Ocean, in response to U.S. President Trump's threat to "totally destroy" his country of 26 million people.

While bellicose rhetoric often spouts from militaristic North Korea, it did seem out of character coming from what friends and colleagues described as a polite and softly-spoken career diplomat with a self-deprecating sense of humor and sharp debating skills.

"As a negotiation partner, Ri was a good one, whose status seemed quite secure and who had relatively greater leeway to exercise during the talks," said Wi Sung-lac, South Korea's former envoy at the now suspended six-party talks aimed at dismantling Pyongyang's nuclear program.

"He was flexible and fundamentally rational," said Wi, who met with Ri twice in 2011 in an effort to re-start the talks hosted by China, after they collapsed in 2008.

Ri has a reputation for translating North Korean propaganda into measured diplomatic language when interacting with Western diplomats, and has studied the works of former U.S. presidents in his spare time.

"He's not just (North Korean leader) Kim Jong Un's mouthpiece," said one source who knows Ri personally.

"He likes to read the memoirs of former U.S. presidents like Nixon and Bush. He also reads Kissinger. He tries to understand American thinking," the source, who requested anonymity, told Reuters.

"If there are any debates about U.S. policy in North Korea, he's usually the one who puts forwards new ideas and new tactics," the source said. "He's a strategist."

The North Korean government does not provide foreign media with a contact point in Pyongyang for comment by email, fax or phone. Ri declined Reuters request for an interview while he was in New York for the annual gathering of world leaders at the United Nations.

CLUBS & DEBATES

Born in 1956, Ri is the son of Ri Myong Je, former deputy director of the Organization and Guidance Department (OGD), a shadowy body within the ruling Workers' Party that oversees the appointment of key management positions within the state, according to South Korea's unification ministry.

His father was also an editor at the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA), the state media body that publishes Pyongyang's bombastic propaganda statements.

A fluent English speaker who studied at Pyongyang's prestigious University of Foreign Languages, Ri has for years held a number of high-level posts dealing with the West.

From 2003 to 2007, he was North Korea's ambassador in London, where he lived with his wife and daughter while his son stayed at home in Pyongyang.

"He had a good command of English and always struck me as pretty polished," said James Hoare, the U.K.'s former charges des affaires in Pyongyang, who met Ri frequently during his time in London and hosted him for dinner at his house. "He was willing to appear publicly and could cope with questions."

"I last saw him in Pyongyang in 2011, when he gave a lunch for (my wife) and me," Hoare said. By then, Ri had become vice foreign minister. "Although much grander, he was still the same polite and friendly person."

A keen debater, Ri spent time engaging with British intellectuals during his time in London. At the private members Reform Club on London's glitzy Pall Mall street, he charmed British academics over wine and lunch.

"He clearly had a good sense of humor and was never belligerent or combative when it came to articulating his government's perspective," said John Nilsson-Wright, a professor at the University of Cambridge and senior fellow at the Chatham House international affairs think tank.

Journalists caught a sample of that humor in Ri's most recent off-the-cuff marks, when they asked the foreign minister in New York what he thought of the nickname "Rocket Man" that Trump's has dubbed the North's leader.

"I feel sorry for his aides," Ri quipped.

In his U.N. speech he described Trump as "a mentally deranged person ... who is chastised even by American people as 'Commander in Grief', 'Lyin King', 'President Evil'..."

Evans Revere, a former senior diplomat who dealt with North Korea under President George W. Bush and met Ri on a few occasions, recalled that he exuded self-confidence and was at ease in any setting, likely reflecting his pedigree as the offspring of one of Pyongyang's elite families.

While affable and approachable, Ri could be also "tough as nails", and in meetings with Americans, he leaves no doubt that North Korea is determined to remain a nuclear-weapons state, Revere said.

"Behind the smile and the humor is a man who seems to believe strongly in the regime's line."

DIPLOMATIC ISOLATION

But the gregarious diplomat with an impressive rolodex of contacts has also faced increasing isolation, with the international community seeking to punish North Korea for its rapidly advancing missile and nuclear weapons programs.

He was spotted dining alone at a gala dinner during a gathering of foreign ministers at the annual Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) security forum in Laos in July 2016, while other ministers greeted one another and clinked wine glasses.

The delegate of one participating Western country switched seats to avoid sitting next to Ri, saying he "can't be seen in photos having dinner side by side with him," a South Korean diplomat said, declining to identify the nation.

This year's ASEAN forum in Manila in August came after the U.N. Security Council imposed fresh sanctions on North Korea for conducting two intercontinental ballistic missile tests in July. Ri was often observed silent and stone-faced, as he held meetings with only four of the 27 foreign ministers attending the forum.

Not talking to Ri at the U.N. General Assembly was a "missed opportunity" for Washington, given his close ties to the Kim family, said Joel Wit, director of the 38 North website and a former State Department official who first met Ri more than 20 years ago.

Following a rare ruling Workers Party congress in May 2016, Ri was appointed foreign minister and given a position in the party's powerful State Affairs Commission, a central decision-making body headed by Kim Jong Un.

It was the first time a career diplomat had been promoted to the politburo since 1998, said Cheong Seong-chang, a research fellow at the Sejong Institute south of Seoul.

In 2011, South Korea's former nuclear negotiator Wi met Ri in Beijing and took the North Korean delegation out to a Chinese dinner. Hearing that Ri had grown fond of whisky during his time in London, Wi's staff brought some Scotch for him -- which was then leaked to the press.

"So he came in and said 'Why do you have to tell every detail of our event to the media?'," said Wi, who told Ri "not to pay attention" and have "just one drink" with him.

"We ended up drinking quite a lot."

(This story has been refiled to correct second paragraph to make clear that Ri's reference to a hydrogen bomb test was made to reporters at not in the UN speech; edits for style.)

(Additional reporting by David Brunnstrom in WASHINGTON and Michelle Nichols at the UNITED NATIONS, Editing by Soyoung Kim and Bill Tarrant)

Israel scrambles military helicopters on Jordan




Israel scrambles military helicopters on Jordan
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meets with Yesha Council leaders at the Prime Minister's Office in Jerusalem on September 27, 2017. (Amos Ben Gershom/GPO)
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meets with Yesha Council leaders at the Prime Minister's Office in Jerusalem on September 27, 2017. (Amos Ben Gershom/GPO)
Israel scrambles military helicopters on Jordan border
The Air Force scrambles two fighter helicopters near the border with Jordan this evening on when an unidentified Jordanian plane approached close to the border, the army says.

The military determined the aircraft was a civilian one and did not pose any danger.

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Chinese government orders all North Korean firms t



Chinese government orders all North Korean firms to close in Chile

China's commerce ministry has ordered all North Korean companies based in the country to close as a result of UN sanctions over Pyongyang’s latest nuclear missile tests.

Chinese authorities said on Thursday that North Korean firms or joint ventures in China will be shut within 120 days of the UN decision, which was announced on 12 September.

The move comes amid intense international pressure on China to act to rein-in its neighbour.

Beijing had previously ordered banks to stop working with the North Korean regime amid US concerns the Chinese government wasn’t being tough enough on the North Korean nuclear threat.

This week, North Korea said it was “inevitable” that its rockets would hit the US mainland in future, and said remarks by Donald Trump amounted to a “declaration of war”.

At a news conference the US President had said: “We are totally prepared for the second option, not a preferred option. But if we take that option, it will be devastating, I can tell you that, devastating for North Korea. That's called the military option. If we have to take it, we will.”

Overseas Chinese joint ventures with North Korean entities or individuals will also be closed, the ministry said in a statement on its website, but it did not provide a timeframe, according to Reuters.

The UN Security Council voted unanimously on 12 September to increase sanctions on North Korea, banning its textile exports and capping fuel supplies.

The UN action was triggered by North Korea's sixth and largest nuclear test this month. It was the ninth Security Council sanctions resolution over North Korea's ballistic missile and nuclear programmes since 2006.

The decision will be welcome news to the Trump administration. The US President described China’s earlier move to prevent banks working with North Korea as “very bold” and “somewhat unexpected”, and he thanked Chinese President Xi Jinping.



Who Trump Is Really Talking to When He Talks to North Korea

“This is about China,” says David Petraeus.

Donald Trump meets Chinese President Xi Jinping in April.
David Petraeus has a theory about Donald Trump’s tough talk to Kim Jong Un concerning the North Korean nuclear-weapons program: The American president isn’t actually talking to Kim, at least not primarily. “This is about China,” which, in accounting for 90 percent of North Korea’s trade and . the North with oil, “controls the umbilical cord that literally keeps the lights on in Pyongyang,” said the former CIA director.

Under pressure from the Trump administration, China has committed to substantially reducing trade and financial ties with its neighbor, supporting two rounds of UN Security Council sanctions against the North. But it’s been reluctant to isolate North Korea to such an extent that it endangers its ally in Pyongyang, since the Kim government’s fall could lead to chaos and a refugee crisis along China’s borders, and a reunified Korean peninsula allied with the United States. In threatening to “destroy” the “Little Rocket Man” leading North Korea with unprecedented “fire and fury,” Trump may be trying to persuade Chinese leaders that he’s deadly serious about taking military action against North Korea if diplomacy and sanctions fail to curb its nuclear program—that a second Korean War on China’s doorstep should worry the Chinese more than the potential demise of Kim Jong Un.

Since the North Korean government seems hell-bent on acquiring nuclear weapons, Trump’s goal may be less to persuade Kim to shift course than to get “China’s attention” and impress upon Beijing that “you’ve got to help us stop [the North Korean nuclear program] where it is at the very least [and] get to some negotiations,” Petraeus told CNN’s Jake Tapper at the Washington Ideas Forum, which is sponsored by The Atlantic.

Still, Petraeus, who was once under consideration for the position of secretary of state in the Trump administration, expressed misgivings about how far Trump had gone with the approach.

“There is something” to the “madman logic” that Richard Nixon famously employed, he said. “Before you get into a crisis, it’s not all that bad if the other side thinks you’re a little bit edgy. Nixon had [his Secretary of State Henry] Kissinger go tell the Soviets, ‘Hey you know Nixon’s under a lot of pressure. He has a drink after dinner. Be careful. Wall on eggshells around this guy.’ And they sort of did. You avoid getting into a crisis.”

But the strategy can go from being an asset to a liability in the midst of a crisis, he added. “The problem is, if you do get into a crisis, you don’t want the other side thinking that you’ve taken the slack out of the trigger already and you’re going to do something that otherwise might be irrational, because they may do it to you first. That’s where my concern is. The rhetoric has to be modulated.”

“Certainly some of the statements are not ones that I necessarily would have advised,” Petraeus noted, in an apparent reference to comments by Trump.

Petraeus suggested that China and the United States launch a “strategic dialogue” to clearly communicate what each side views as acceptable and unacceptable ways to address North Korea’s nuclear program. He argued that China has a major interest in halting and rolling back that program since the failure to do so could spark a massive military buildup in Asia as other countries seek to protect themselves.

“When does South Korea ask for its own nuclear weapons” either through the return of U.S. nuclear weapons that were withdrawn in 1991 or through its own nuclear program? Petraeus asked. “What about Japan, which has already reinterpreted its [pacifist] constitution to allow at least collective self-defense with allies, [including] the U.S. … And then what happens with Vietnam? Do they need a nuclear program? The proliferation aspects to this, the strategic implications, are quite stark.”

Petraeus acknowledged that it’s unclear whether Chinese leaders have taken Trump’s message to heart; the latest statistics show that Chinese trade with North Korea actually rose in August to its highest level since December 2016. That’s “not the direction that we were hoping to go,” he said, but “this is going to play out over months.” The problem, however, is that the Trump administration may not have that kind of time. It takes a long time for economic sanctions to have an impact on their target. And North Korea’s nuclear-weapons program is advancing rapidly. As Joseph Dunford, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told the Senate Armed Services Committee on Tuesday, “Whether it’s three months, or six months, or 18 months,” North Korea will “soon” develop the capability to reach the United States with a nuclear-tipped long-range missile. “We ought to conduct ourselves as though it is just a matter of time and a matter of a very short time.”

Trump is “facing a reality that no other president has faced previously,” Petraeus said. Kim Jong Un, an “impulsive” leader who has exhibited exceptional brutality in dealing with opponents, “will have the capability to hold at risk a U.S. city at least on the West Coast, if not further in, with the combination of the intercontinental ballistic missiles he’s developing and [a] nuclear device that is miniaturized.”

Beyond North Korea, Petraeus backed Trump’s plan to send additional U.S. troops to Afghanistan, noting that in fighting terrorism in that country and elsewhere in North Africa, the Middle East, and Central Asia, “We’re engaged in a generational struggle here and we need to acknowledge that. … Anywhere that there are ungoverned spaces, extremists are going to go exploit them.”

He also voiced approval for the latest version of Trump’s travel ban, which includes new restrictions on travel to the United States from Chad, North Korea, and Venezuela. “I think there’s logic to this, frankly,” Petraeus said. “It includes some non-Muslim countries. The distinguishing feature of these countries is that we do not have the confidence in them with either the way they issue passports, or biometric data, or whatever it may be.” The list can expand or contract depending on how countries perform on those measures, he noted, and the ban is “not something that singles out countries because of their faith.”

Petraeus broke ranks with Trump, albeit gently, on the president’s criticism of athletes for kneeling or engaging in other forms of protest during the national anthem. The general said that he had spent decades in the military “to defend the rights, the freedoms that we hold so dear, including the freedom of expression,” and that he was “disappointed” that “now we have politicized football.” But he also appeared to call out players who are contributing to the politicization of sports. “Let’s just get back,” he said, “to enjoying football and people not having to make political statements at the beginning of the games.”

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Breaking: China Is Actually Helping the United States with North Korea






Breaking: China Is Actually Helping the United States with North Korea

China just made an unprecedented show of solidarity with U.S. President Donald Trump against North Korea today (Sept. 28).

Specifically, Beijing's Commerce Ministry ordered all North Korean businesses in the country, including joint firms between the two nations, to shut down within the next 103 days. That puts the deadline at exactly 120 days after China's agreement to the Sept. 11 UN sanctions.

This measure will seriously reduce the foreign revenue available to North Korea. At the time the sanctions were made, Beijing had been reluctant to support them because it didn't – and likely still doesn't – want to strain North Korea's economy too hard; a collapse in dictator Kim Jong Un's government would result in a refugee rush over the countries' shared border.

China
Chinese President Xi Jinping
That's what makes the Red Dragon's mandate today so extraordinary – it's unequivocal evidence that China is on board with the rest of the world's plan to strain Pyongyang's economy in an effort to pressure the regime into stopping its weapons tests.

The fact that China has embraced this plan in spite of its fear of a refugee surge indicates that Beijing is finally seeing sanctions as a path to a diplomatic solution and not a regime change in Pyongyang.

In short, China's confidence in a diplomatic solution to the North Korea crisis is growing…

China Really Does Prefer Diplomatic Means to a Long Sought-After End
A top government representative of Beijing said just that in a press conference today…

Beijing's Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang said, "We are opposed to any war on the Korean Peninsula," the BBC reported.

"Sanctions and the promoting of talks are both the requirements of the UN Security Council," he said. "We should not over-emphasize one aspect while ignoring the other."

This practical sentiment from China is sure to please President Trump, who has, in recent days, started showing signs of positivity over the dilemma – and toward China in particular.

On Sept. 22, he commended China for its move that day to prevent Beijing banks from transacting with institutions in Pyongyang.

"I want to just say, and thank President Xi of China for the very bold move he made today," Trump said that afternoon. "That was a somewhat unexpected move and we appreciate it."

Up Next: Rare Gold Anomaly
Money Morning Executive Editor Bill Patalon just caught something on his gold charts that he's only seen twice in the past 20 years. A $13 billion gold anomaly he calls the "Halley's Comet of investing."

It's very rare, and fleeting, and Bill sees things lining up perfectly to bring some very sizeable precious metal profits to well-positioned investors.

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US warns N/Korea'll be ‘destroyed’ if…


US warns N/Korea'll be ‘destroyed’ if…

sunnewsonline.com
Sep 18, 2017 9:49 AM
The Donald Trump’s administration ramped up the pressure on North Korea on Sunday ahead of a week of high-stakes diplomacy at the United Nations, warning Pyongyang will be “destroyed” if it refuses to end its “reckless” nuclear and ballistic missile drive.
With US officials and their allies scrambling to find ways to contain an increasingly belligerent Pyongyang, the US president will address the UN General Assembly on Tuesday and then confer Thursday with his Japanese and South Korean counterparts on the sidelines of the meeting.
Trump and South Korean President Moon Jae-In spoke by phone Saturday night and pledged “stronger pressure” on Kim Jong-Un’s regime, the South’s presidential office said, adding that the North must be made to realise that “further provocation” would put it on a “path of collapse.”
The Security Council last Monday imposed a new raft of sanctions on North Korea — but their impact depends largely on whether China, Pyongyang’s ally and main economic partner, will fully implement them and on Russia, which is hosting tens of thousands of North Korean workers.
Washington’s ambassador to the United Nations, Nikki Haley, kept up the rhetorical pressure ahead of the upcoming meetings in New York, asserting that if the North should pose a serious threat to the US or its allies, “North Korea will be destroyed.”
Trump’s earlier warning he would rain “fire and fury” on a recalcitrant North Korea, she said, was “not an empty threat.”
“None of us want war,” Haley added in an interview on CNN. “We wanted to be responsible and go to all diplomatic means to get their attention first. If that doesn’t work, General Mattis” — the US defense secretary — “will take care of it.”
As the US and its allies emphasize the diplomatic track, South Korea is also deploying a state-of-the-art US missile defense system. In their latest call, the White House said Trump and Moon had committed to “take steps to strengthen deterrence and defense capabilities” of South Korea, offering no details of how it might do so.
Analysts say that in the event of hostilities, millions of people in the Seoul area — as well as the 30,000 US troops in South Korea — would be vulnerable to attack by the thousands of artillery pieces the North has positioned near the border, with potentially staggering casualties.
So far, every effort to persuade the North to back away from its fast-developing nuclear and missile programs — including its most powerful nuclear test yet, on September 3 — has proved futile, at times even seeming to prompt new acts of defiance from Pyongyang.
The North’s latest show of resistance came when it launched a long-range missile over Japan on Friday, just four days after the UN Security Council had passed a tough new package of sanctions.
At the request of the United States, the Security Council will hold a ministerial-level meeting Thursday on ways to enforce the latest sanctions, which include an export ban on textiles, freezing work permits to North Korean guest workers and capping oil supplies.
Haley said sanctions had already provided a “punch in the gut” to Pyongyang but that strict enforcement was crucial.
Separately, Trump’s national security advisor, H.R. McMaster, agreed that “the critical thing is going to be to get all countries, every one, to do all they can to enforce those sanctions, to do everything they can, short of a military conflict, to resolve this problem.”
But if diplomacy and economic pressure fail, he added, “We have to prepare all options.”
Pyongyang, an insular country with few outside contacts, says it needs nuclear weapons to protect itself from “hostile” US forces and is determined to build the capacity to deliver a nuclear warhead that could hit the US mainland.
North Korea said Saturday it was bent on nothing less than military “equilibrium” with the United States.
As his administration continued its efforts to rein in the North, Trump himself gave a more unbridled account of his latest diplomatic contacts.
“I spoke with President Moon of South Korea last night. Asked him how Rocket Man is doing. Long gas lines forming in North Korea. Too bad!” Trump tweeted, apparently finding a new nickname for Kim (McMaster confirmed that that was probably Trump’s intention).
Whether there are gas lines is unclear; very few people own cars in North Korea, outside military and government officials. (

Man throws tradition out of the window, marries both mother-in-law and her daughter

Magora, who reportedly has four children with Sande, could not take it. She dragged him to court and accused him of abusing her and a...