Archive for February, 2017

Libya rescues 120 migrants off Tripoli coast – News24

Tripoli - More than 120 migrants, including women and children, were rescued by Libyan coastguards on Sunday off the coast of Tripoli after their boat ran into trouble.

The migrants set off Friday from Sabratha - a town 70km west of Libya's capital that has become a staging ground for traffickers - but their boat's engine failed, a coastguard official said.

An AFP photographer at the scene of the rescue said the vessel was intercepted by a coastguard patrol boat around 20 nautical miles northeast of Tripoli.

The official said those on board were of various African nationalities and included 10 women and five children, including a baby.

Libya said on Saturday it had intercepted more than 400 migrants bound for Europe in recent days.

The announcement followed a meeting of European Union leaders in Malta where they agreed moves to curb mass migration from Libya.

The plan includes funding and training Libya's coastguard to make it better able to intercept migrant boats and helping neighbouring countries to close routes into Libya, according to a draft statement seen by AFP.

Lawlessness in Libya since a 2011 uprising that ousted longtime strongman Muammar Gaddafi has allowed smuggling networks to develop a lucrative trafficking trade.

Italy's coastguard said Thursday that more than 1 750 migrants had been rescued in the Mediterranean within 24 hours.

Around 230 people have died en route to Europe since the start of 2017, according to the United Nations.

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Libya rescues 120 migrants off Tripoli coast - News24

Libya rescues 120 migrants off Tripoli – Herald live

SAVED FROM THE SEA: A medic tends to the baby of a migrant after she was arrested by Libyan coastguards in Tripoli yesterday Picture: REUTERS

More than 120 migrants including women and children were rescued by Libyan coastguards off the coast of Tripoli yesterday after their boat ran into trouble.

The migrants set off on Friday from Sabratha a town 70km west of Libyas capital that has become a staging ground for traffickers but their boats engine failed, a coastguard official said.

A photographer at the scene said the vessel was intercepted by a coastguard patrol boat around 20 nautical miles northeast of Tripoli.

The official said those on board were of various African nationalities and included 10 women and five children, including a baby.

Libya said on Saturday it had intercepted more than 400 migrants bound for Europe in recent days.

The announcement followed a meeting of European Union leaders in Malta where they agreed on moves to curb mass migration from Libya.

The plan includes funding and training Libyas coastguard to make it better able to intercept migrant boats and helping neighbouring countries to close routes into Libya, according to a draft statement.

Lawlessness in Libya since a 2011 uprising that ousted longtime strongman Muammar Gaddafi has allowed smuggling networks to develop a lucrative trafficking trade.

Italys coastguard said on Thursday more than 1 750 migrants had been rescued in the Mediterranean within 24 hours.

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Libya rescues 120 migrants off Tripoli - Herald live

Ukraine, Libya and Dieselgate on EU agenda This WEEK – EUobserver

Ukraine and Libya will be in focus when EU foreign affairs ministers meet on Monday (6 February).

The fighting in eastern Ukraine escalated last week, in what many fear was a Kremlin test to see how the new US president would react.

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Donald Trump vowed on Saturday to work with both Kiev and Moscow to restore peace "along the border", even though fighting is taking place deep inside eastern Ukraine.

Uncertainty over future US policy will weigh on the EU ministers' discussion of the implementation of the EU-backed Minsk ceasefire agreement, which aims to stop Russian-controlled forces from waging war in eastern Ukraine.

They will also review Ukraine's efforts to fight corruption ahead of a meeting between Ukrainian prime minister Volodymyr Groysman and council president Donald Tusk on Thursday.

The foreign affairs council will review the political situation in Libya, one year after the formation of the UN-backed Government of National Accord (GNA).

Ministers will discuss how to work with Libya to stop migrants from trying to cross the Mediterranean after EU heads of state on Friday pledged to pay the GNA 200 million to reinforce its coastguard.

The European Parliament will also discuss Ukraine on Monday, as the subcommittee on security and defence hosts the country's deputy PM, Ivanna Klympush-Tsintsadze.

The EU special envoy to south Caucasus, Herbert Salber, and Georgia's EU ambassador, Natalie Sabanadze, will come to discuss the increasing Russian influence in the region.

On Thursday, the Dieselgate scandal will feature in two committee meetings, held simultaneously in the European Parliament.

EU industry commissioner Elzbieta Bienkowska will discuss how the cheating was made possible with members of the parliament's special inquiry committee into the affair.

Meanwhile, in the internal market and consumer affairs committee, MEPs will vote on a plan, tabled a year ago by Bienkowska, to increase EU oversight on national car approval systems.

More EU involvement is hoped to prevent further scandals, but it is unclear how far the European Parliament's committee intends to go. The vote has been delayed several times in an attempt to find compromises.

Also on Thursday, the parliament's civic liberties (Libe) committee will hold a discussion on the Schengen free-travel area.

Austria, Denmark, Germany, Sweden and Norway have asked to prolong for a further three months the temporary internal border checks they introduced in May 2016 in response to growing migration flows.

In the sidelines, the parliament's political groups will prepare for next week's plenary session, which will feature ratification of the controversial EU-Canada trade agreement (Ceta).

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Ukraine, Libya and Dieselgate on EU agenda This WEEK - EUobserver

Black Lives Matter to Attempt Disruption of Super Bowl Attendees … – Breitbart News

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Black Lives Matter organizers are planning a protest dubbed Stand Up, Fight Back: Super Bowl LI Protest March.

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It is time for the city government of Houston to see how diverse we are, organizers posted on Facebook. The grand claim was made that we are a welcoming city, but the treatment of the local homeless community, gentrification, lack clarity on where our elected leaders stand on Trumps policies and of course the issue of anti Blackness need to be addressed.

WE WILL MARCH UP FANNIN FROM HERMANN PARK TO NRG PARK. RAIN OR SHINE, organizers wrote.

The march is scheduled to coincide with the arrival of attendees to the Super Bowl. Attendees have been encouraged to use public transportation. Some of the seating capacity of these buses and trains could be taken up by protesters in an attempt to slow down the attendees arrival to the NRG Stadium. The protest is expected to end before game time.

A massive security operation is underway in advance of Sundays Super Bowl LI presentation. Additional resources have been brought in from local, state, and federal law enforcement agencies.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection is adding resources to the effort to maintain safety at the event. The agency tasked with securing our nations borders and ports of entry is providing aviation and electronic resources in addition to manpower. LOOK @CustomsBorder working with many partners @HoustonTX to ensure safe #SB51 #SEESOMETHINGSAYSOMETHING, the agency tweeted on Saturday.

Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner told Breitbart Texas in a conversation on Thursday he is pulling out all the stops to make sure the Super Bowl goes off without the kind of incidents of violence seen in other parts of the country.

Bob Priceserves as associate editor and senior political news contributor for Breitbart Texas. He is a founding member of the Breitbart Texas team. Follow him on Twitter@BobPriceBBTX.

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Black Lives Matter to Attempt Disruption of Super Bowl Attendees ... - Breitbart News

BPD chief: Lessons learned in 2014 ‘Black Lives Matter’ protests guided us during Milo demonstrations – Berkeleyside

The Berkeley Police chief has said he did not want a repeat of the 2014 Black Lives Matter protests (shown above), where police used tear gas to clear Telegraph Avenue and sparked extensive public outcry. Photo: Pete Rosos

Two years ago, the Berkeley Police Department used tear gas and force to disperse crowdsfrom Telegraph Avenue after an hours-longBlack Lives Matter demonstration, sparking months of public outrage and dialogue, and leading BPD to take an in-depth look at what it might have done differently.

The night of the tear gas use, Dec. 6, 2014, police said some members of the crowd attackedofficers with projectiles, and that the police force later becamesurrounded at Telegraph Avenue and Bancroft Way. That night, BPD gave many dispersal orders, which the departmentsaid itlater realized only served in the end to make the crowd larger. Police ultimately used an estimated 50 tear gas grenades and blast rounds to clear Telegraph Avenue, and some people reported being struck and clubbed by police at different times throughout the night.

Last week, a preliminary settlement was reached between the city andseven plaintiffs in a civil rights lawsuit that challenged how police respondedDec. 6, 2014. According to some reports, the city has agreed to a payment of $125,000, as well as policy changes that would require officers to document force better, and work toward equipping officers withbody cameras. (A Berkeleyside story is forthcoming.)

After last weeksdemonstrations, sparked by a campus visit by conservative provocateur Milo Yiannopoulos, Interim Berkeley Police Chief Andrew Greenwood said in a memo to city officialsthat the lessons learned in 2014 absolutely played a role in decision-making Wednesday night.

In the hours and days following Wednesday nights protests, many particularly outside the Bay Area decried the police response on campus and in the city of Berkeley. Two entirely separate law enforcement agencies handle those jurisdictions: the University of California Police Department, a statewide agency, handles securityon university property including campus, and the Berkeley Police Department, which deals with the rest of the city.

Berkeleyside had an in-depth conversation Friday with UCPD Police Chief Margo Bennett about how she handled Wednesdaysdemonstrations. And Berkeleyside has spoken with BPD about why the agency made no arrests and did little to intervene in intensive vandalism to more than a dozen Berkeley businesses. But, to this point,Berkeleyside had not heard from the BPD chief himself.

Chief Greenwood sent a 2-page memo to Berkeley City Manager Dee Williams-Ridleyon Friday outlining his thinking Wednesday night during what he called the Feb. 1 riot. Berkeleyside has obtained a copy of that memo from the city.

Greenwood told the city manager that the departments actions Wednesday night were informed significantly by our experience in the December 2014 riots. The departments thinking and approach has significantly evolved since those events, he said, andnew training and policies have beenput in place.

The departments focus during riots, he said, is life safety: I think this is not only in keeping with the values of our community, but with the best-informed practices of Law Enforcement across the country, in a time where community trust in our actions is absolutely essential.

He described crowd management as a complex challenge for law enforcement.

A large, leaderless crowd may appear to stand together on one hand to exercise their 1st amendment rights to assemble, and to speak freely, yet have different motives and intents throughout the course of a given demonstration. When such a crowd includes within it a faction of armed people intent on committing violence, as happened Wednesday night, safeguarding the communitys safety becomes particularly challenging.

Greenwood said he watched live-stream coverage of the protest on Sproul Plaza last week, as it was unfolding, and saw many who were peaceful, standing, singing, dancing, chanting, watching, playing music, and generally boisterously expressing their views. But they werent the only ones.

Into this crowd came a large group of armed, masked individuals, often referred to as black bloc anarchists, who brought projectiles, shields, explosive fireworks and other weapons. In a coordinated effort, this group carried out an organized, focused attack on UC Police, barricades and campus property. This action prompted UC officials to cancel the speaking engagement.

Eventually, after demonstrating on campus, the crowd moved into city streets and BPD became involved. BPD has said it initiallyassigned12 officers to oversee the demonstrationand provide traffic control. When tensions rose, the department pulled officers from patrol to help out, for a total of about 20 officers on protest duty.

Greenwood said BPD monitored the crowd continually. One BPD staffer was in the UCPD command post all night, and police also were watching open source livestream videos on the internet.

BPD responded to several people who were injured, but exercised caution when it did so, Greenwood told the city manager.

All this was done knowing that placingpolice officers into a potentially volatile crowd situation could have prompted a focused, sustained violent attack on police, thereby rapidly escalating the risk of harm to all involved peaceful protestors, violent actors, residents, businesses and police officers, he wrote.

Greenwood said BPD had to take that stance because it was clear some elements of the crowd were actively looking for a conflict with our officers. (UC Berkeley Police Chief Margo Bennett has made a similar point.)

In one case where officers came into view, they reported being seen by the crowd, and members of the crowd started to move towards them, even from hundreds of feet away, Greenwoodwrote.

Greenwood said BPD had seen the opportunistic rioters who attacked UCPD, and who were eager to provoke and escalate a police response to an already boisterous and potentially volatile crowd, thereby putting relatively peaceful protesters into harms way. The black bloc typically uses a peaceful crowd to shield their activities during a police response, and we kept this in mind.

He wrote that using force indiscriminately on the crowd can harm more people, including protesters who are not breaking the law.

Greenwood said no one has come forward to make an official report to BPD about any crimes or injuries Wednesday night. He asked people who are interested in that to call 510-981-5900 to do so. (UCPD is also attempting to collect these reports.)

In the memo, he also thanked Mayor Jesse Arregun for visiting BPD on Thursday morning to express his thanks and support of our folks.

Greenwood continued: None of our staff could recall when a Mayor had come by like that, and it meant a lot to our team.

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BPD chief: Lessons learned in 2014 'Black Lives Matter' protests guided us during Milo demonstrations - Berkeleyside