Tuesday, October 3, 2017

Catalan Referendum: Catalonia has ‘won right to statehood’ – VIDEO

    The Catalans are a Romance ethnic group formed by the people from, or with origins in, Catalonia and/or the Catalan countries, who also form a nationality in northeastern Spain.
    Catalonia’s government said 90 percent of those who voted in an unauthorized independence referendum chose to split from Spain.
    On a day marred by clashes between police and voters, 2.26 million people took part in the referendum,  regional government spokesman Jordi Turull said. That represents a turnout of  42.3 percent of Catalonia’s 5.34 million voters.
    Of those who took part,  2.02 million Catalans voted “yes” to the question: “Do you want Catalonia to become an independent state in the form of a republic?”
    The preliminary results pave the way for the region’s leader to declare independence in the coming days, despite the Spanish government ruled the referendum illegal.
    The brutal scenes of police cracking down on the referendum plunged the EU into a new crisis after hundreds of people were injured in the violent stand-offs with Spanish police.
    In violent scenes beamed around the world, officers in riot gear fired rubber bullets into crowds and beat would-be voters with batons as they queued at polling stations.
    The Catalan government claimed 844 people were injured.
    There was widespread condemnation of the Spanish government’s attempt to crack down on the vote, which Catalan authorities had called despite the courts ruling it illegal.
    However, the European Union remained conspicuously silent on the police tactics, which saw masked officers smash their way into polling stations and forcibly remove ballot boxes.
    Carles Puigdemont, the Catalan leader, said the region had “won the right to an independent state” after “millions” turned out to vote in a banned independence referendum.
    “With this day of hope and suffering, the citizens of Catalonia have won the right to an independent state in the form a republic,” he said in a televised announcement after polls had closed.
    Before the results were announced, he said he would keep his pledge to declare independence unilaterally within 48 hours of the vote if the “Yes” side won the referendum.
    “Today the Spanish state wrote another shameful page in its history with Catalonia,” he said, adding that he would appeal to the European Union to look into alleged human rights violations during Sunday’s vote.
    Violence broke out across Catalonia as armored police moved in to break up the vote.
    Video footage showed officers from Spain’s national police – 4,000 of whom had been brought in by the government to help quash the ballot – fighting with elderly voters, some of whom were left bleeding, and dragging young women away from polling stations by their hair.
    Amid tense scenes, uniformed Catalan firefighters appeared to act as human shields to protect voters from advancing lines of police.
    Responding to the unfolding crisis, Boris Johnson, the Foreign Secretary, told the Daily Telegraph last night: “Obviously we are very anxious about any violence. We hope that things will sort themselves out, though clearly you have to be sensitive to the constitutional proprieties.”
    He added: “As I understand it the referendum is not legal, so there are difficulties.”

    Nicola Sturgeon described the Foreign Office’s statement as “shamefully weak”.

    “A true friend of Spain would tell them today’s actions wrong and damaging,” Scotland’s First Minister said.
    Andrew Rosindell, a Tory MP who sits on the Foreign Affairs Select Committee, said he believed the European Union’s response would have been much stronger if such scenes were playing out in other EU countries.
    He told the Daily Telegraph the European Union was “showing itself again to be completely hypocritical”.
    Mr. Rosindell accused the Spanish government of trying to “bully the people” and that the violence “shows both Spain and the EU in a very bad light”.
    He said: “For years the Spanish have used the Guardia Civil to make life as difficult as possible for Gibraltar and they are using the same police force again to attack the people of Catalonia.
    “In other circumstances, there is no doubt the EU would be coming down like a tonne of bricks. They are demonstrating double standards: If this was happening in Hungary or another country there would certainly be a different reaction.”
    While some MEPs including Guy Verhofstadt – the parliament’s Brexit negotiator – condemned the police violence as ‘disproportionate’, the European Commission said it would not respond to the crisis until Monday.
    European leaders were also noticeably silent. The only voice emerging from Brussels was that of the Belgium prime minister, Charles Michel.
    On Twitter, he called for political dialogue to resolve the crisis, insisting: “Violence can never be the answer!”
    Spain, meanwhile, did not waver in its assertion that the referendum – which was ordered suspended by the Spanish constitutional court – is illegal, and that its hand has been forced by a Catalan government it claims is engaged in a coup.
    Spain’s foreign minister Alfonso Dastis said the violence was “unfortunate” and “unpleasant” but “proportionate”, blaming the violence exclusively on Mr. Puigdemont and his regional government.
    Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy last night said: “We did what we had to do”, describing the ballot as a “premeditated attack on the legality of the Spanish state faced down with serenity by the forces of order”.
    Making no mention of the large number of people injured in police charges outside polling stations, Mr. Rajoy said: “Democracy won today because the Constitution was upheld”.
    He said the police ‘performed their duty’ in Catalonia.
    The Spanish deputy prime minister, Soraya Sáenz de Santamaría, blasted the Catalan government’s “irresponsibility” in insisting on holding an “illegal referendum with no democratic guarantees”, demanding that they end what she described as a “farce”.
    The Catalan government contends it has been forced to go ahead with the unilateral poll, saying it has been left no other option after the central government consistently refused substantive negotiations over the region’s status.
    In the event of a “Yes” vote, Mr. Puigdemont plans to make a unilateral declaration of independence 48 hours after the results, which are expected to be announced Monday.
    He told The Telegraph last week that he would then be seeking dialogue with Spain and the European Union, insisting that Europe could no longer “keep looking the other way”.
    Mr. Puigdemont insisted Sunday that the poll had been carried out successfully despite the police crackdown, with voting taking place in 95 percent of polling stations.
    “Batons against ballot boxes, violence against public spirit,” he said, claiming “the shame will stay with (Spain) forever”. Security concerns even had an impact on Sunday’s football.
    FC Barcelona initially suspended its home match against Las Palmas as a precaution, but ended up playing behind closed doors after Spain’s RFEF federation rejected the postponement.
    The European Commission, the EU’s civil service, has repeatedly backed the Spanish government and constitutional court’s stance that the vote is illegal.
    Yesterday the EC told The Telegraph it had nothing to add a statement made by Jean-Claude Juncker on Friday, when he backed “the rule of law” in Spain.
    But human rights groups and politicians from around the world contended that regardless of the legality of the poll, the heavy-handed response went beyond what was unacceptable in a 21st-century democracy.
    Andrew Stroehlein, of Human Rights Watch, said that despite the court suspension, the government had a duty to protect the rights to peaceful assembly and freedom of expression.
    The EU would “have to say something more soon,” he suggested. Catalans have expressed particular concern about the use of rubber bullets, which the Catalan police force are banned from using, and which left one person needing eye surgery yesterday.
    There were suggestions from several quarters that the Commission was taking a much laxer stance on Spain, a valued member of the EU core with an important stake in Brexit negotiations, then it would against other member states.
    “The fundamental rights of EU citizens are being damaged by this disproportionate use of violence against peaceful citizens,” Amadeu Altafaj, the permanent representative of the Catalan government to the EU in Brussels told the Telegraph.
    “For some countries like Poland there are strict standards but when it comes to Spain, there seems to be a lot of complacency.”
    Reported by: The Telegraph

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    Facebook tightens ad policies after ‘Jew-hater’ fiasco

      Facebook has apologized for letting advertisers use phrases like “Jew-haters” as a targeting criteria and for not noticing it until it was pointed out.
      The company is also tightening policies and tools that let businesses target advertisements to its 2 billion users, hoping to ensure that this doesn’t happen again.
      The move follows a ProPublica report that found advertisers could use terms such as “how to burn Jews” to target ads to people with those terms in their profile.
      Sheryl Sandberg, Facebook’s chief operating officer, wrote in a post on Wednesday that the company “never intended or anticipated this functionality being used this way—and that is on us.”
      It hasn’t been a good month for Facebook. The ad-targeting fiasco follows news that the social media giant has unwittingly allowed groups backed by the Russian government to target users with ads. The chairman of the Senate intelligence committee said Tuesday that Facebook should testify as part of its probe into Russian meddling in the US election, the company “seems to have been less than forthcoming” with Congress.
      Sandberg said Facebook is taking steps to ensure that material violating its community standards cannot be used to target ads. This includes anything that attacks people on the basis of race, religion, sexual orientation, disability and other categories.
      The company says it is also adding more manual oversight to its automated processes—a sign that as much as Facebook wants to rely on artificial intelligence to solve its problems, it is not quite there yet. And Facebook is adding a program to encourage users to report abuse of its advertising systems.
      “Seeing those words made me disgusted and disappointed—disgusted by these sentiments and disappointed that our systems allowed this,” Sandberg wrote. “Hate has no place on Facebook—and as a Jew, as a mother, and as a human being, I know the damage that can come from hate.”
      Reported by: YNET News

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      19 ISRAELIS TO HAVE CITIZENSHIP REVOKED FOR FIGHTING WITH ISIS

      BY 
       
       AUGUST 22, 2017 22:29
       

      Some 60 Israeli citizens have traveled to Syria or neighboring Iraq to fight with rebel groups including the Islamic State.

      2 minute read.





      A MEMBER of ISIS waves the group’s flag in Raqqa recently
      A MEMBER of ISIS waves the group’s flag in Raqqa. (photo credit:REUTERS)
      The Interior Ministry has begun the process of revoking the citizenship of 19 Israelis who went to fight for Islamic State.

      The Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency), according to Channel 2, provided the Interior Ministry a list of 20 Israelis who had joined the jihadist group, after a law proposed by Interior Minister Arye Deri went into effect this week allowing him to strip Israelis of their citizenship if they are members of foreign terrorist organizations.


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      One man on the list is said to have died in fighting for the group as the list was compiled.

      The 20, who are mostly Israeli Arabs, also include two who were born Jewish and converted to Islam. The two, a 28-year-old woman from Ashdod and a 32-year-old man from Lod, were born in the former Soviet Union and immigrated to Israel at a young age. They are said to have converted to Islam as adults and traveled to Syria to join the jihadist group.

      The others on the list included an Israeli Arab who served as a combat soldier in the IDF and residents of the towns of Fureidis, Kafr Kassem, Jaljulya and Bueina, and of east Jerusalem, among others.
      New ISIS video threatens Israel
      ISIS video threatens Israel in January 2016

      Then-defense minister Moshe Ya’alon declared ISIS an illegal organization in 2014, and Israel has so far largely avoided attacks by the terrorist group, though several Arab Israelis have been arrested on suspicion of links with ISIS and plans to carry out attacks inspired by the Sunni extremist organization.

      In October 2015, authorities broke up the first known case of an ISIS plot in Israel and indicted seven Israeli Arabs on charges of belonging to an ISIS cell planning to attack military targets.

      The first deadly attack believed to have been inspired by the jihadist group was in January 2016, when an Israeli Arab went on a shooting spree in Tel Aviv killing three people; six months later two Palestinians shot dead four Israelis at Tel Aviv’s Sarona Market.

      In February, Anes Haj Yahia, 35, a resident of Taibe, east of Kfar Saba, was arrested by the Shin Bet after being in contact with terrorists online, on suspicion of planning attacks in Israel such as on a bus in Tel Aviv or against soldiers.

      According to the Shin Bet, some 60 Israelis have traveled to Syria or Iraq to fight with rebel groups including Islamic State. Several are reported to have been killed and fewer than 10 are estimated to have returned to Israel, either by their own accord or after being caught by Turkish authorities while trying to cross the border and deported back to Israel.

      In March 2015, the jihadist group posted a video online that showed a young boy shooting an Israeli Arab identified as Muhammad Musallam from Jerusalem.

      ISIS accused Musallam of having joined the group to spy for the Mossad. In the video, Musallam is seen saying that he had been encouraged by his father and elder brother to spy on the group and report on weapons caches, bases and Palestinian recruits.

      His family said that he had gone to Turkey for a tourist trip and went missing, but according to a report by Reuters at the time, an Israeli security official said that he went to fight for the terrorists in October 2014.

      Dozens of Israeli Arabs have also been arrested by the Shin Bet and Israel Police for seeking to join the jihadist group in Syria and Iraq over the past few years.

      ISRAELI EXPERTS POINT AT A NEW ISIS TREND: POISON IN MALLS

      BY 
       
       SEPTEMBER 7, 2017 01:04
       

      ISIS operatives venture further into cruel and unusual punishment.

      1 minute read.





      A MEMBER of ISIS waves the group’s flag in Raqqa recently
      A MEMBER of ISIS waves the group’s flag in Raqqa. (photo credit:REUTERS)
      If you thought Islamic State had already come up with every horrific and creative way to hurt people, you were wrong.

      ISIS is now campaigning and providing instructions to its “lone wolf” supporters for carrying out terrorist attacks with poisons in crowded malls, International Institute for Counter Terrorism Deputy Director Eitan Azani told a press briefing on Wednesday.


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      Azani made the comments along with ICT Director Boaz Ganor ahead of the IDC Herzliya institute’s conference next week on terrorism.

      The deputy director described the new tactic as part of a more general trend in which ISIS is upping its push on social media for followers “to carry out jihad on enemy land, which is the opposite” of “when ISIS called for recruits to come” to Syria and Iraq.

      The shift represents ISIS’s acknowledgment that it is near defeat in terms of holding territory and that its best chance to maintain influence is with foreign ISIS-inspired attacks, Azani said.

      Ganor explained that ISIS-inspired attacks are situations where “the terrorist says he is with ISIS” and “ISIS takes credit for the attack,” but these are both self-serving, false claims.

      In truth, with ISIS-inspired attacks, the organization provided no direct orders, guidance or planning to the terrorist and did not even know about the attack until it occurred, said Ganor.

      However, both ISIS and the attacker want to capitalize on connecting to each other.

      Ganor explained that part of beating terrorism is identifying how terrorists think.

      He displayed photographs of terrorists in a wide variety of situations, with the sole unifying factor that “they are all smiling” because they “believe what they did was beneficial and honorable.”

      Just because ISIS-inspired lone wolves evaluate their costs and benefits differently than most people, does not mean their thinking cannot be diagnosed and, one hopes, used to de-radicalize potential attackers.

      Azani said that Western countries have not been smart enough in fighting radicalization in the stage before potential recruits become hardcore jihadists.

      “The radicalization of attackers in Spain” connected to the recent attacks there “took a long time, but no one noticed they were getting radicalized.”

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