Family sues US police for tasering man

The family of a slain man is suing police in Georgia after officers used stun guns on the hand-cuffed man thirteen times and killed him.

The family has filed a lawsuit against the two former Atlanta-area officers who used excessive force against the 24-year-old Gregory Towns Jr., the family’s lawyer said on Thursday.

“It’s just heinous,” attorney Chris Stewart told AP. “This isn’t one of those cases where he punched an officer and they had to Taser him to calm him down.”

Stewart said some officers think any disobedience needs to be responded by extreme actions, such as what was used against Towns, a black man.

“In our case, it wasn’t about color, obviously, because the officers were black,” Stewart said. “It was about power. He didn’t walk when they said walk. He didn’t stand when they said stand. And he didn’t move fast enough when they said move.”

On April 11, former police sergeant Marcus Eberhard and former corporal Howard Weems brutally subdued Gregory Towns Jr., who apparently would not sufficiently follow police orders.

Eberhart and Weems approached Towns as he was leaving his son’s mother’s apartment complex following a domestic argument, according to the lawsuit.

Apparently, Towns ran when officers asked to talk to him but stumbled and was handcuffed by the officers.

The officers told Towns to get up and walk to a patrol car, but Towns said he was too tired because of the run he had just taken. He was threatened by the officers with a stun gun if he did not move, according to the lawsuit. Thus, he got up and started walking but soon fell again saying he was very tired. Then, the officers used the stun guns on him as 13 times in 30 minutes.

US police have under harsh criticism over its mistreatment of the black and minorities.

The issue has been a topic of contention particularly since the civil unrest in Ferguson, Missouri this month. Ferguson residents took to the streets to express anger over killing of an unarmed black teenager by a white police officer.

AT/GJH

‘Citizens of 81 states fighting in Syria’

A recent intelligence report has revealed that terrorists from over 81 countries are currently fighting inside Syria against the government of President Bashar Al-Assad.
 
New York-based intelligence firm, the Soufan Group, estimated in June that at least 12,000 terrorists from 81 countries, including some 3,000 European nationals, are fighting in Syria.

The number is said to be unprecedented in the history of armed conflicts in the modern age.

Other media accounts estimate that higher numbers of foreign mercenaries are involved in the Syrian war, including over 2000 Europeans and 100 Americans.

The ISIL Takfiri terrorist group has translated its recruitment videos into myriads of languages, including Urdu, Tamil, and Bahasa Indonesia.

Although the majority of foreign terrorists fighting inside Syria are still from Arab countries, European governments have become deeply concerned about the threat of extremism in their countries when those radicalized terrorists return home.

On Wednesday, German Chancellor Angela Merkel warned that at least 400 German citizens are fighting alongside the ISIL militants in Syria and Iraq.

The United Nations warned on Thursday that the violence by ISIL Takfiri terrorists against Syrian civilians has reached “a new level.”

Takfiri terrorists have been committing horrific crimes against innocent civilians since the outbreak of the crisis in Syria in March 2011.

ISIL terrorists have been behind many of the deadly bomb attacks targeting both civilians and government institutions across Syria over the past three years. They have also mass executed hundreds of people in Iraq and Syria.

The foreign-backed ISIL violence has spilled over to neighboring Iraq.

The terrorist group has links with Saudi intelligence and is believed to be supported by the Israeli regime.

ASH/NN/HRB

Isfahan Filmfest bell to ring at schools

The bell of 28th International Festival of Films for Children and Young Adults in the Iranian city of Isfahan is scheduled to ring at the city’s primary schools.

The festival’s bell celebration at schools will include various competitions, happy stage programs and entertainments.

Over 300 screen productions from 54 countries have been submitted to the festival so far.

The participated films are to represent the countries such as Poland, The United States, Belarus, Argentina, Denmark, Thailand, Germany, Russia and many other countries.

Rasoul Sadrameli (director), Feryal Behzad (director), Mohammad Ali Safoura (director) along with two cineastes Javad Hatami and Amir Esfandiari are the members of this year’s selection committee.

A large group of Iranian and international cineastes and children will flock to this annual festival to introduce their productions.

Founded in 1985, Isfahan’s children’s film festival was part of Fajr International Film Festival in its first three years.

The 28th Festival of Films for Children and Young Adults is scheduled to take place from October 3 through 6, 2014.

FGP/FGP

EU accuses Russia of Ukraine incursion



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Obama’s Europe trip warning to Putin

The White House says President Barack Obama’s next week trip to Europe is a warning to Russian President Vladimir Putin against “messing around” with the Baltic States.

President Obama will travel to Tallinn on Tuesday to meet with the leaders of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania.

The visit comes amid escalating tensions between Washington and Moscow over the crisis in Ukraine.

“Part of the message that the president will be sending is, we stand with you,” Charles Kupchan, the administration’s senior director for European Affairs, said on Friday.

“Article Five constitutes an ironclad guarantee of your security. Russia, don’t even think about messing around in Estonia or in any of the Baltic areas in the same way that you have been messing around in Ukraine,” he added.

He was referring to NATO’s Article Five that obligates all members of the alliance to come to the defense of any member country which that is targeted.

“In this new world that we live in, NATO or individual countries may be facing not armored columns coming across their border, which you can usually see in advance, but guys coming across in masks — you don’t know who they are, what we could call hybrid warfare or asymmetric warfare, and that requires a very different kind of military response than NATO has traditionally been focused on,” Kupchan said.

On Thursday, Obama threatened his Russian counterpart with new sanctions over Ukraine.

“Russia is responsible for the violence in eastern Ukraine,” Obama said. “The new images of Russian forces inside Ukraine make that plain for the world to see.”

Moscow’s actions “will only bring more cost and consequences to Russia,” Obama told reporters.

AGB/AGB

Russia rejects invasion allegations

Moscow has responded to accusations of a Russian invasion of Ukraine, saying there is no proof to support the allegations, Press TV reports.

“No facts about a Russian military presence on Ukrainian territory have ever been presented. There have been reports about satellite imagery exposing Russian troops’ movements, however they turned out to be images from video games. The latest accusations happen to be much of the same quality,” Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Friday, referring to accusations by Ukraine and a number of its Western allies.

Lavro’s comments came after the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) released satellite images allegedly showing Russian tanks and armored vehicles crossing into Ukraine from Russia. 

A Ukrainian civilian told the Press TV correspondent in the country, “This war is nothing but brothers killing brothers, if the people in the east want to be a part of Russia, it is their decision, Kiev should not tell them what to do.”

Meanwhile, Russian President Vladimir Putin called on the pro-Moscow protesters to allow Ukrainian soldiers trapped in Novoazovsk to flee the coastal town.

Alexander Zakharchenko, a leader of pro-Russia forces, also said that he had agreed to offer a “humanitarian corridor” for the Ukrainian troops to leave the battlefield in the restive eastern parts.

However, Zakharchenko added that Kiev’s forces should abandon their armored vehicles and ammunition before leaving.

Ukraine’s mainly Russian-speaking regions in the east have witnessed deadly clashes between pro-Moscow forces and the Ukrainian army since Kiev launched military operations to silence pro-Russians in mid-April.

Violence intensified in May after the two flashpoint regions of Donetsk and Luhansk held local referendums, in which their residents voted overwhelmingly in favor of independence from Ukraine.

SRK/MHB/MAM

Nigeria monitors 160 people over Ebola

Some 160 people have been placed under medical surveillance over the deadly Ebola virus in the Nigerian city of Port Harcourt in Rivers State.

“As of today, none of them has shown symptoms of any kind. We are in touch with them constantly and they also call us to tell us their condition,” Sampson Parker, the health commissioner of Rivers State, said on Friday.

The people who are being monitored had been in contact with a doctor who died from the virus.

The Nigerian government said on Thursday that the doctor, Ikyke Samuel Enuemo, was the country’s sixth person to die from the disease.

On Tuesday, Nigeria announced a delay in the start of the country’s school year by one month over concerns on the spread of the virus.

“All primary and secondary schools in private and public sectors are to remain closed until Monday, October 13,” Nigerian Education Minister Ibrahim Shekarau said.

“This is to ensure that adequate preventive measures are put in place.”

Ebola is a form of hemorrhagic fever whose symptoms are diarrhea, vomiting and bleeding.

According to the latest figures by the World Health Organization (WHO), some 3,070 infections and over 1,550 deaths of the disease have been reported in West Africa.

Ebola has mainly affected Guinea, Liberia, Nigeria and Sierra Leone, with Liberia reporting most deaths among the other countries.

The virus spreads through direct contact with infected blood, feces or sweat. It can also be spread through sexual contact or the unprotected handling of contaminated corpses.

It remains one of the world’s most virulent diseases, which kills between 25 to 90 percent of those who fall sick.

MSM/MHB/MAM

Galloway injured in London attack

British lawmaker George Galloway has been taken to hospital after being attacked in London.

Galloway was attacked by a pro-Israeli man in the western part of the city on Friday.

The MP was posing for a picture with some of his fans in Golborne Road, in Notting Hill neighborhood, when the attack took place.

Galloway’s spokesman said the attack appeared to be “connected with his comments about Israel,” adding that he sustained bruises and was in “a pretty bad shape.”

“George was posing for pictures with people and this guy just attacked him, leapt on him and started punching him,” the spokesman said.

The pro-Palestinian activist, who was taken to St. Mary’s hospital in Paddington, suffered from a suspected broken rib and severe bruising to the head and face.

A Metropolitan Police spokesman said, “Police were called at approximately 1940 hours to Golborne Road, W10, after a man was assaulted in the street. Officers attended. The suspect was found a short time later and stopped.”

“He was arrested on suspicion of ABH (actual bodily harm) and taken to the south London police station where he remains.”

Earlier this month, Galloway was put under police investigation for making anti-Israeli comments and declaring his area of Bradford an “Israel-free zone.”

Speaking at a meeting of Respect Party activists in Leeds on August 2, Galloway slammed Israel for the massacre of Palestinians in the Gaza Strip and urged party members to issue a boycott of Israeli goods, services, academics and tourists.

The MP was also attacked and injured while campaigning in an open-top bus in London in 2008.

NT/MHB/MAM

Scot voters to determine UK’s EU fate

The referendum on Scottish independence, due on 18 September, comes at a time of growing opposition in the UK to remaining in the EU. This is significant because Scotland is the strongest base of pro-European sentiment in the UK.

A poll conducted earlier this year determined that if a referendum on continued EU membership had been held in June in the UK as a whole, 47.1% would have voted to leave, with 39.4% voting to remain. But a poll in February 2014 showed that in Scotland, 48.7% would vote for the UK to remain in the EU, with 35.4% voting to leave. Of course, it is premature to draw any firm conclusions from these figures.

The referendum on exiting the EU that David Cameron has proposed may not take place, regardless of the success (whatever that may mean) of his promised “renegotiation” of the terms of British membership. But as a result of various ostensibly minor issues, the likelihood of a British exit seems to be increasing – which fundamentally alters the importance of the vote in Scotland.

For example, the appointment of the relatively unknown Jonathan Hill, the leader of the House of Lords, as the British member of the new European commission headed by Jean-Claude Juncker is just the latest in a long series of British EU errors. Cameron’s spokesman said in July that at his first meeting with the new commission president Cameron would seek a prestigious portfolio, such as the internal market, for Hill. Juncker’s office coldly replied that important portfolios in the new commission would go to major political figures, and that Juncker “does not owe [Cameron] anything”.

Given Cameron’s opposition to Juncker’s candidacy for commission presidency, the abuse to which Juncker has been subjected by the British press, and Hill’s lack of centrality within British politics, Cameron may be justifiably nervous when Juncker announces his appointments to the new commission. Juncker, after all, has many senior politicians to accommodate, and their approval by the European parliament is no minor matter. And, though it was perhaps unsurprising that Cameron should be unenthusiastic about Juncker’s candidacy, the vehemence of his opposition was extraordinary. Cameron no doubt wished to reassure those in his party who doubt his Eurosceptic zeal. Even so, his supposed remark that the UK was more likely to leave the EU if Juncker’s candidacy succeeded was strange and disquieting, not least because any renegotiation of the terms of British membership will be carried out primarily with other member states, not with the commission.

Cameron’s bid to thwart Juncker’s candidacy mirrored his unsuccessful attempt to prevent the adoption of the EU’s fiscal compact in 2012. He overestimated German chancellor Angela Merkel’s willingness and ability to support the British position. Many influential Germans are reluctant to help Cameron in what they regard as his self-created European problem. They will not allow Merkel much latitude here, even if she seeks it.

If Cameron’s advisers overestimated the support they might have received from Merkel and others, they clearly underestimated the power and effectiveness of the European parliament. For many months it had made it clear that it had specific ideas about how it would exercise its new powers, granted by the Treaty of Lisbon, over the commission presidency. But the rapid post-election agreement among the parliament’s major political groups to support Juncker caught Cameron off guard.

Far from enhancing British influence, threats of withdrawal have undermined the UK government’s credibility within the EU, as colleagues have become disinclined to engage in significant compromises with a UK that may not be a member in two years. Traditionally, EU heads of state and governments try to help one another with their domestic political problems. But there is a growing sense in the European council that Cameron is abusing this goodwill.

Thus, Cameron’s claim that Juncker’s election would make it more difficult to ensure the UK’s continued EU membership risks becoming a self-fulfilling prophecy. To present Juncker’s candidacy as a matter of high political principle, with Cameron heroically but unsuccessfully standing alone against the dark forces of federalism and centralization, could have only reinforced English feelings of alienation from Europe. That is less likely to be the case in Scotland.

If Cameron returns as prime minister after the general election in 2015, he will face an uphill battle in renegotiating the terms of British EU membership owing to resistance not only from his European partners, but also from his own party, which is close to advocating British withdrawal. Indeed, it is difficult to see how a re-elected Cameron could maintain the Conservatives’ unity without endorsing a no vote in the referendum on the outcome of his own renegotiation.

Britain’s EU membership will be one of the major issues at stake in next year’s election. It would be a tragedy if British voters cast their ballots without fully understanding the European implications of their choice. One thing, however, seems certain: if Scotland votes for independence in September, a referendum within the rump UK on continued EU membership would be even less likely to produce a victory for those who wish to remain.

SRK/MHB/MAM

Egypt alliance urges anti-gov’t demo

An anti-government alliance in Egypt has called on its supporters to hold a rally to protest the worsening situation in the North African country.

In a statement released on Thursday, the National Alliance to Support Legitimacy (NASL) urged its followers to stage a week-long demonstration, starting Saturday.
 
The alliance, established to support former President Mohamed Morsi, has held regular protest rallies since his ouster last year.

Morsi, Egypt’s first democratically-elected president, was toppled in a military coup led by Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, Egypt’s current president and the then army commander.

Sisi is accused of leading the suppression of Muslim Brotherhood supporters as hundreds of them have been killed in clashes with Egyptian security forces over the last year.

Rights groups say the army’s crackdown on the supporters of Morsi has left over 1,400 people dead and 22,000 arrested, while some 200 people have been sentenced to death in mass trials.

International bodies and rights groups have already denounced the rulings as a grotesque example of the shortcomings of Egypt’s justice system.

The UN Human Rights Council has also repeatedly expressed concern over the Egyptian security forces’ heavy-handed crackdown and the killing of peaceful anti-government protesters.

MSM/MHB/MAM