138th Self Immolation in Protest of Chinese Rule in Tibet

138th Self Immolation in Protest of Chinese Rule in Tibet
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[BRIEF] Tibetan student Lhamo Tashi self immolated outside of a police office in Tsoe city, Kanlho TAP–the first self immolation in Tibet since April. Tashi is the seventh self immolation in Tibet this year, and is the 138th self immolation in and around Tibet since 2009, when the wave of Tibetan self immolations began in protest of Chinese rule over Tibet.

Tashi self immolated at midnight, September 17.

ScreenHunter_943 Sep. 22 12.51The news was reported Saturday by Jigme Ugen, president of the Tibetan National Congress.

Security police informed the family of Tashi of his death. The family reside in Drukdo village, Amchok township, Kanlho Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture.

Family members traveled to Tsoe to request the body of Tashi, but were told that the body had already been cremated. Some ashes were given to the family.

It is not currently known whether Tashi left a testament or said anything during his self immolation.

Tashi, 22, was a student in Tsoe.

By Day Blakely Donaldson

Brazilian Policeman Shoots Street Vendor Dead When Man Tries to Grab Pepper Spray Can From Police Officer [graphic video]

Brazilian Policeman Shoots Street Vendor Dead When Man Spray Paints Police Officer [graphic video] (2)
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In Sao Paulo, Brazil, a paramilitary police officer shot dead a street vendor when the vendor attempted to grab a can of pepper spray held by the officer. The officer was in the process of arresting another man on the sidewalk with three other officers when the incident occurred.

The vendor tried to grab the can from the officers hand, and in the process of grabbing the can, pepper spray was released from the can. The officer fired his pistol at the vendor, who ran approximately 20 feet before falling dead in a pool of blood.

The vendor, Carlos Augusto Muniz Braga, was lamented by his wife.

“Why does the government deploy police unprepared to deal with the people–and how will I now take care of my three children?” said Claudia Silva Lopez.

Also among the bereaved are three children, aged 4, 9 and 12 years.

Claudia Lopez was not allowed to view her husband’s body.

Carlos Lopez was not working at the time of the incident. Reportedly, he was just passing through on his way to pick up one of his children from school when he noticed the three officers arresting another vendor.

The officer has since been arrested, according to the mayor of the city.

Brazil is known for having a high incidence of death during arrest. In comparison with the United States, where 1 in 32,000 arrestees are killed by police, Brazil has a rate of 1 in 229.

The number is considered to be higher still, however, as many people go missing unaccounted for. In 2013, over 5000 people went missing in Rio de Janeiro.

By James Haleavy

Russia Launches Case Against Ukraine for War Crimes, Cites “Irrefutable Evidence”

Russia Launches Case Against Ukraine for War Crimes, Cites Irrefutable Evidence
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Citing “irrefutable evidence” obtained by the Russian Investigative Committee, Russian authorities have launched a criminal case against Ukraine for its use of prohibited means and methods of warfare.

“We have witness testimony provided by Ukrainian refugees and intend to file a motion that the witnesses be recognized as the injured parties in this case,” stated a representative from Trunov, Aviar and Partners law firm, Igor Trunov.

“I appealed to the Investigation Committee with the application and the answer came to me that the case is initiated,” said Trunov.

The Russian firm is alleging that Ukraine used prohibited means and methods of warfare in Donetsk and Luhansk. The law in question is Article 356 of the Russian Criminal Code, which deals with prohibition in warfare.

“The case was initiated by the crime under Part 1 of Article 356 of the Criminal Code upon application by unidentified servicemen of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, armed members of the National Guard of Ukraine and militants of the right sector and regards prohibited means and methods of war in the breakaway Donetsk and Lugansk people’s republics,” said Trunov.

Russian authorities are basing the case on Ukraine’s alleged use of phosphorous bombs in its campaign against the pro-Russian separatist movement in eastern Ukraine.

“During an inquiry into the alleged use of prohibited means and weapons of war, the Main Investigative Department of the Russian Investigative Committee discovered irrefutable evidence of prohibited weapons being used against civilians,” said the official spokesman of the Investigative Committee, Vladimir Markin, last month when the report was completed.

The Investigative Committee found that, based on chemical analysis of soil samples taken from areas where eyewitnesses reported shelling from Ukraine, there was evidence of combustion byproducts of H-17 incendiary liquid commonly used in the production of landmines and air bombs.

“People in the affected areas will suffer horribly and will often die an awful death. If not, they experience severe psychological trauma,” said Markin.

Pro-Russian separatists in eastern Ukraine have repeatedly accused Ukraine of using phosphorous bombs.

Additionally, Trunov is alleging that Ukraine used weapons against its civilian population and civil objects in violation of the Geneva Convention. Trunov based these claims on a commission formed by the Russia Red Cross to investigate for instances of war crimes in Ukraine.
Trunov stated that these crimes must be investigate by the International Criminal Court (ICC)

State Duma lawmaker Roman Khudyakov has asked the Investigative Committee to provide its evidence for the case.

Trunov said that in the near future he intends to ask the UN Security Council and to the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court at The Hague to address the case.

Engineering Team Builds Sail Twice as Effective, Twice as Powerful as the Sails You Are Familiar With: the Wind Wing

Engineering Team Builds Sail Twice as Effective, Twice as Powerful as The Sails You Are Familiar With The Wind Wing (10)
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The Greenbird Wind Wing was designed and built under two San Francisco-based entrepreneurs, and has been proposed as a means of cutting down on the over $1 million tax dollars San Francisco spends on its inefficient diesel-powered ferry system. The engineers behind the project have said that the project has demonstrated that it could save 30-40 percent of the ferry fuel bill.

The entrepreneurs, Jay Gardner, president of Wind Wing Technologies and British engineer, Photon Composits Inc. president and yacht sailor Richard Jenkins, have experience in sail engineering. In 2009, Greenbird set the America’s cup landsailing speed record for a wind-powered craft, and is currently pursuing the ice craft speed record.

The ferry system in San Francisco Bay is seldom used by commuters–primarily its is used when emergencies Engineering Team Builds Sail Twice as Effective, Twice as Powerful as The Sails You Are Familiar With The Wind Wing (12)knock out the Bay bridge. The ferries are also very costly and inefficient.

Twenty-five government-subsidized ferries use over a million dollars worth of fuel per year–some of them use 300 gallons per hour of use–according to Jenkins. The diesel produces greenhouse gasses, and the Wind Wing has been proposed as a greener, cleaner, cheaper option.

“Traditional sails are basically one side of a wing,” said Gardner. “The benefit of the Wing is that you have two sides, and its a very precise shape.

Engineering Team Builds Sail Twice as Effective, Twice as Powerful as The Sails You Are Familiar With The Wind Wing (4)
Jay Gardner

“So an equal sized soft sail and a Wing–the Wing is going to be about twice as effective, twice as powerful.”

“The Wing is 45 feet tall,” said Jenkins. “Front to back is 10 feet. It weighs roughly 600 pounds [272 kilograms]. It’s a very light structure, so it will be insignificant to the weight of the ferry.

Engineering Team Builds Sail Twice as Effective, Twice as Powerful as The Sails You Are Familiar With The Wind Wing (5)
Richard Jenkins

“And it’s potentially very powerful. These ferries are travelling along at 30 or 40 knots sometimes, and it can produce six or seven tons of force at full speed, if required.

“The Wing also has, inside of it, a brain,” explained Gardner. “It has a GPS system. It has a satellite tracking system. It has a vessel data recording system. It knows where it is. It knows where you’re going. All we have to do is turn the Wing on and off.”

Engineering Team Builds Sail Twice as Effective, Twice as Powerful as The Sails You Are Familiar With The Wind Wing (9)The engineers are not marketing the Wind Wing to sailors.

“The people who drive big ships are not sailors,” said Jenkins. “So, there’s kind of discontinuity between wind-power systems and the people on the boat, who are just not going to use those systems.

“What this Wing does is completely autonomous. The crew doesn’t need to know anything about the Wing or how it works. There’s literally an on-off system.

“We do that by having a feathering tail system. The tail on an airplane controls the pitch and the lift. We have a vertical tail that controls the wing and hence the power that the wing produces.

“If it can make power for the boat it will do. If it can’t, it just feathers and its kind of a benign thing on the ship.

Engineering Team Builds Sail Twice as Effective, Twice as Powerful as The Sails You Are Familiar With The Wind Wing (11)“The ferries in the area, they use certainly over a million dollars worth of fuel per year. Twenty-five ferries. We’ve demonstrated that we can save 30 to 40 percent of the fuel costs.”

The designers spoke about the future of the Wing. The future depends on policy- and lawmakers to adopt to environmental demands.

“Are they going to insist that the technology is included in the next generation of ferries?” Jenkins asked.Engineering Team Builds Sail Twice as Effective, Twice as Powerful as The Sails You Are Familiar With The Wind Wing (8)

The Greenbird Project is a partnership between Ecotricity and British engineer Richard Jenkins, to push the boundaries of wind technologies for zero carbon-emitted, wind-powered transportation.

In Sweden, Thousands Protest as “Fascists and Racists” Enter Parliament in Rising Numbers

In Sweden, Thousands Protest as "Fascists and Racists" Enter Parliament in Rising Numbers
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In Sweden, the far-right Swedish Democrats party, often called fascist and racist for its nationalist and anti-immigration policies–as well as for public scandals such as racist comments posted online and photos of swastika-wearing candidates–has become the third largest party in the nation. Thousands demonstrated against the outcome of the vote in Stockholm.

“We want to organize immediately,” said Jazz Munteanu, an organizer of the protests. “I would not want be home on the couch, sad over election results–that we have fascists and racists who have come into our parliament.”

More than 3,000 people congregated at the Stockholm’s main square in response to Munteanu’s call.

The Swedish Democrats party now occupies 49 seats of Sweden’s 349-seat parliament.

In 2010, the party made it to parliament with 5.7 percent of the vote, or 20 seats.

A leader of the Swedish Democrats party, Jimmy Ståhl, responded to the demonstration.

In Sweden, Thousands Protest as Fascists and Racists Enter Parliament in Rising Numbers“We have had an election in a democratic spirit,” said Ståhl, “so I think it’s really strange that you cannot accept the rules of democracy.”

“As I see it, we have one of the best migration policies–to call us racists is just ridiculous.”

In the election, 13 percent of Swedes voted in favor of the Swedish Democrats, despite several pre-election scandals, including the stepping down of one candidate after a photo was publicized of her wearing a swastika armband, and another candidate received public criticism after posting racist and anti-immigrant comments on the internet.

The rising number of voters who supported the Swedish Democrats also did so despite news that the young leader of the party, Jimmie Akesson, gambled the equivalent of approximately US$70,000 online.

Immigration is becoming an increasingly hot issue in Sweden. Sweden currently grants automatic residence to all refugees fleeing the Syrian conflict. This year, approximately 80,000 people are expected to apply for asylum.

Analysts believe Sweden’s rising support for the Swedish Democrats stems from the party’s stance on immigration.

“Islamism is the Nazism and communism of our time. It has to be met with disgust and much stronger resistance than has so far been the case,” said Akesson in August on the issue of increasing Mulsim immigration.

Akesson has been vocal about his criticisms of what he has called “mass immigration.” He has stated that the labour market and school system are particularly affected by immigration.

The party is nationalist, but has stated that it maintains a zero tolerance policy towards racism.

Elsewhere in Europe, nationalist parties are also gaining popularity, such as France’s National Front, which moved into the political mainstream recently.

Moscow Students Organize Demonstration, Wear Ukraine’s Blue and Yellow, Peace Signs

Moscow Students Organize Demonstration, Wear Ukraine's Blue and Yellow, Peace Signs
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[Brief] In Moscow, a group of teenage students organized and carried out a demonstration that included Ukrainian colors and peace symbols.

The children were reportedly responding to comments made earlier by the school’s head mistress, who had responded to an American Eagle t-shirt worn to school by one 7th grade student by saying that the shirt was American propaganda.

The students organized a demonstration in which they came to school wearing Ukraine’s blue and yellow and painted their arms and faces with peace symbols.

The student demonstration was posted to Facebook by a mother of one of the students, Maria Kniazena, who wrote of the action, “I can certainly tell you that I am proud of the children in the class. They have their own opinions, and are not afraid to voice them.”

(Click image for full size)

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Beijing May Turn Grievances Caused By Repressive Ethnic Policies Into Stronger Ethnic Hatred, Leaving Xinjiang More Vulnerable to Jihadism

Beijing May Turn Grievances Caused By Repressive Ethnic Policies Into Stronger Ethnic Hatred, Leaving Xinjiang More Vulnerable to Jihadism
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Beijing has taken a variety of actions in its efforts to tame ethnic unrest in Xinjiang. While there are plans targeting economic inequalities between Han Chinese and Muslim Uighur–plans which would likely improve ethnic relations–many policies impose increased restrictions on Uighurs, which may further escalate tensions. Particularly, some rallies and policies resemble the tactics used in the Chinese Cultural Revolution era, and they may deepen the mistrust and the divide between the government and Uighurs.

Massive migration of Han Chinese into Xinjiang from other parts of China has been encouraged for the past few decades. Equally massive investments into infrastructure and industrial development have greatly increased the economic output of Xinjiang, ranking it among the top performing provinces in China. But jobs created have gone overwhelmingly to Hans, who now make up more than 40% of the province’s 22m people.

Besides economic inequality, Uighurs grievances have been exacerbated by officials’ intolerance of Islamic traditions and their emphasis on Chinese instruction in schools. For example, during Ramadan, officials put pressures on teachers, students and civil servants not to observe fasting rituals.

The most recent unrest in Kashgar prefecture on July 28, the end of the holy month of Ramadan, is the bloodiest in Xinjiang since the riots in 2009. More than 100 people died and more than half of these deaths were alleged terrorists gunned down by police. Beijing blamed terrorists for this action, but Uighurs activists abroad claimed it was sparked by the enforcement of bans against fasting.

After this tragedy, one city in early August temporarily banned people who donned certain Muslim clothing from taking public buses during a sporting event hosted by the city. Public signs illustrated the banned styles, and portrayed women in full and partial veils and headscarves and men with full beards and even modest goatees. It is worth noting, however, that is was a city-level policy and not publicly endorsed by the central government. It is possible local officials enacted such rules to impress Beijing. Even before the July 28 incident, the capital Urumqi had banned bus passengers from carrying items ranging from cigarette lighters to yogurt, with restrictions similar to those of airlines.

There is a rising concern that Chinese policies include excessive use of deadly forces in controlling Uighur militants. In some cities, patrolling SWAT units have already been authorized to shoot dead suspected terrorists without warning. A recent Associated Press review of articles by China’s state media found that at least 323 people have died in Xinjiang-related violence since the escalation of the unrest started in last April. Almost half of those deaths were inflicted by police gunning down alleged perpetrators.

The government’s increasingly repressive security measures make it difficult to clearly understand what fueled the July 28 incident and whether the deaths of alleged perpetrators in associated episodes are justifiable. Police routinely stop foreign journalists from approaching trouble-spots. Social media are rigorously censored. Kashgar police stop motorists going into and out of Uighur sections of the city, checking identity cards and belongings. Crimes meriting detention can include carrying too much petrol–the substance could be used for bomb-making.

Beijing likes to claim that Uighurs live in harmony with Han Chinese. In reality, while Uighurs resent Hans for the economic inequality and cultural restrictions, Hans often feel that Uighurs are ungrateful to the generous provided by Beijing. Wang Lixiong, a Chinese scholar and minority rights activist who sees tensions in Xinjiang as rapidly descending into “Palestinization,” in which there is mutual ethnic hatred between groups.

Despite the strikingly amateurish appearance of most of the attacks (rarely do perpetrators use anything other than knives), Beijing’s rhetoric on every violent episode is focusing on the “rare minority” terrorists who practice jihadism and the external influence of Islamist militancy seeping across the border from Afghanistan and Pakistan.

The Economist cautioned Beijing in its coverage of the July 28 tragedy that in making jihadism the core of the Uighurs’ militancy, China may risk changing the current home-grown grievance into the complex religion-embedded conflicts that are much harder to settle. As seen in recent months, the violence has been morphing, spreading beyond the region itself and taking on some of the hues of jihadism elsewhere—through suicide-attacks and indiscriminate killing of civilians.

People are put into jails on terrorism-related charges. Singapore Asia One reported that some mass public sentencings are reminiscent of China’s Revolutionary-Era rallies. Authorities have encouraged neighbors and friends to inform on each other. Urumqi policy in May posted rewards for tips on everything from terrorism training to growing long beards. Last Thursday, China’s state media revealed the newest rewards scheme, offering up to one million Yuan (US$160,000) for terrorism-related tips.

Such grassroots security monitoring is undeniably important in preventing further damages, but this kind of spying is risks deepening the mistrust between Han Chinese and Uighurs as well as causing the deterioration of relationships even within exclusive communities. Alleged terrorists are called “People’s Enemy.” This term was last used over 50 years ago during the Revolution-Era for landlords, counter-revolutionaries, vagabonds, prostitutes, capitalists, marketeers, foreigners and intellectuals. That movement to crush landlords in the countryside consequently disintegrated the close-knit communities that had previously existed.

While the damage to Uighur-Han Chinese relationships from these rewards-for-tips schemes are speculative, the real damage was done on July 30, when Ilham Tohti, a prominent Uighur scholar, was charged with separatism. Mr. Tohti is widely considered a moderate advocate for better treatment of Uighurs (never called for separation or violence). His prosecution will silence moderate Uighurs who hardly embrace jihadism but are still angry about the ethnic policies. However, this estranges Uighurs further and leaves them more vulnerable to fall prey to extremists.

Opinion by Tina Zhang

Guatemalan Protesters Effect Change–10 Days of Protests Convince Congress to Reverse GMO Patent Exclusivity Law

Guatemalan Protesters Effect Change--10 Days of Protests Convince Congress to Reverse GMO Patent Exclusivity Law
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Ten days of widespread street protests led to a Sept. 4 move by Guatemala’s congress to repeal legislation that would have given a small group of transnational corporations exclusive rights to patented seeds in a nation where the majority of the population is engaged in small-scale agriculture, and in one that suffers from significant poverty and malnutrition.

Demonstrations were concentrated around the Congress and Consitutional Court in the capital. Defending food sovereignty, several communities and organizations demanded court injunctions to stop their president, Otto Perez Molina, from allowing new legislation that had been approved in June take effect.

The law, named the “Monsanto law” after the biotech giant, had been approved without discussion, information or participation by the people of Guatemala.

Guatemalan demonstrators demanded a complete cancellation of the law–although such an outcome is uncommon in the nation.

The law purposed to give exclusivity on patented seeds to a small group of transnational companies. Demonstrators asserted that the law violated the Constitution of the Mayan people–particularly, their right to traditional cultivation of the land.

If passed, natural seeds may have been displaced by genetically modified seeds. Also, an imbalance between local Guatemalan producers–70 percent of the significantly impoverished population are engaged in small-scale agricultural activities–and transnational companies.

The law, was cancelled by a decision of congress.

One activist, Lolita Chavez of the Mayan People’s Council, said of the protests, “Corn taught us Mayan people about community life and its diversity, because when one cultivates corn one realizes that there is a variety of crops such as herbs and medical plants depending on the corn plant as well. We see that in this coexistence the corn is not selfish, the corn shows us how to resist and how to relate with the surrounding world.”

By James Haleavy

Canadian Army Testing Drones in Arctic

Canadian Army Testing Drones in Arctic
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Canada’s Department of National Defense is testing unmanned aerial vehicles in the nation’s arctic territories.

“Experimental missions like CAFJAE are important in our quest to find new ways to meet the demands required to successfully carry out military operations in Canada’s Arctic,” said Dr Marc Fortin, the assistant deputy minister for science and technology at the Canadian Department of National Defense.

The department stated that 34 tests had been conducted in August by the Canadian Armed Forces Joint Arctic Experiment Scientific Team (CAFJAE) at Canadian Forces Station Alert.

Included in the project were experiments purposed to provide information about such military interests as deployment of assets in the northern environment, technology performance, and information regarding how the Canadian Air Forces operational ability could be extended by drones.

“This experimental mission in Alert clearly demonstrates the potential opportunities and challenges that come with operating this technology. It greatly benefits not only the Canadian Armed Forces, but also our government partners in the North,” said Fortin.

“Unmanned systems offer many potential benefits to the Canadian Armed Forces,” commented Dr Simon Monckton, a lead scientist at CAFJAE, “but we must carefully study the strengths and weaknesses of these technologies before moving forward.

“Our CAFJAE experience in Alert has shown that this technology could support some difficult tasks the CAF might need to complete in the Arctic.”

Specific details of the military project have not been disclosed.

By Sid Douglas

10,000 Russian Dead and Wounded in ATO Zone

10,000 Russian Dead and Wounded in ATO Zone
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In the ATO zone in eastern Ukraine, the total Russian dead and wounded currently sits at 10,00, according to the Ukrainian Information Centre of the National Security and Defence Council. Andriy Lisenko, a spokesman for the organization, referred to the information gathered through operational intelligence in statement in the September 12 briefing of the Information Center of NSDC on developments in Ukraine.

The Russian troops killed had served in 18 detachments of the Russian army, and came from 10 regions, according to Lisenko.

“The situation in the ATO is tense during the day. The ceasefire was preserved in general, but there were several cases where it was violated,” Lisenko said of the current peace agreement, and made references to several specific incidents.

In addition to the Russian casualties, since the fighting broke out in the ATO 873 Ukrainian fighters have died and 3275 have been wounded, Lisenko said.

Russian authorities responded to the figures claimed by Ukraine Friday, calling them “nonsense.”

“The Russian Military Department considers ‘nonsense’ the statement by Andrey Lysenko, who said, citing data from ‘operational intelligence’ that thousands of Russian troops died on the territory of Ukraine,” the Russian Defense Ministry’s official representative, Igor Konashenkov, said in a statement.

Also Friday, the US imposed new sanctions against Russia, including new VISA bans and asset freezes. The new sanctions also blocked support or technology for Arctic and offshore exploration by five Russian energy firms: Gazprom, Lukoil, Rosneft, Surgutneftegaz and Transneft.

“Given Russia’s direct military intervention and blatant efforts to destabilise Ukraine, we have deepened our sanctions against Russia today, in concert with our European allies,” said US Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew.

Russian President Vladimir Putin, who for past months denied that any Russian soldiers were fighting in Ukraine, commented on the new sanctions, “I don’t even understand what these latest sanctions are about. Maybe someone is unhappy that the process is taking a peaceful path.”

NATO said that Russia currently has about 1,000 armed troops in eastern Ukraine and about 20,000 more soldiers and much military equipment amassed near the border.

Putin last week admitted that there were Russian soldiers fighting in Ukraine, but said that those fighting were “volunteers.”

Family members of Russian soldiers, such as those unified under the influential group Soldiers’ Mothers, have made assertions that Russia was paying soldiers to fight in Ukraine, and that Russian soldiers were being sent to fight an “undeclared war” in Ukraine, while family members could not obtain information as to where their wounded and killed sons were returning from.

Read more: Head of Russian Soldiers’ Mothers Group Denounces Putin for Sending Soldiers to “the Bloody Battlefields” in Undeclared War

Poroshenko said of the recent agreement by the EU and Ukrainian parliament for simultaneous ratification of an association agreement, “Never was such a decision approved in such a short term.” The simultaneous ratification is set to take place Sept. 16.

Meanwhile, Russia has prepared a second “humanitarian convoy” of white freight trucks, which is currently positioned on the Russian side of the border.

Lisenko also made mention of a recent statement by Poroshenko referring to Ukraine and Europe, that there was a need in the world “to develop a new security strategy in the world.”

Russia Denies Reports That a Russian Spy Satellite Exploded Over US

Russia Denies Reports That a Russian Spy Satellite Exploded Over US
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[BRIEF] Following reports by US and Russian media outlets that a Russian reconnaissance satellite may have exploded over the skies of Colorado and Wyoming September 2, Russia’s defense ministry Tuesday denied that the satellite or part thereof had re-entered the atmosphere in US airspace.

The reports cited the American Meteor Society and said that at least 30 eyewitnesses in the two states observed a fireball in the sky that was suspected to be the satellite.

Russia Denies Reports That a Russian Spy Satellite Exploded Over USEyewitnesses in Wyoming and Colorado reported observing a blast in the air Sept. 2, which was thought to have been Russia’s Kosmos-2495 imaging reconnaissance satellite. The eyewitnesses observed a fireball at around 10:30 p.m. local time.

Tuesday, a spokesperson for Russia’s defense ministry, Igor Konashenkov, denied the claims, stating that “the Russian satellite group functions normally and is being constantly monitored by Russian Aerospace Defense Forces.”

Konashenkov also said that “most likely, the true motive” behind the reports was an attempt by US intelligence agencies to spot the location of the Russian satellite again after they had lost track of it.

Russia also claimed to have a video that a video showed the satellite re-entering the atmosphere over Kazakhstan.

Russian Soldier’s Mothers, Declared Foreign Agent, Applies to Be Removed From List

Russian Soldier's Mothers, Declared Foreign Agent, Applies to Be Removed From List
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Soldiers’ Mothers, an influential Russian non-profit group composed of the family members of Russian soldiers and purposed to act as a watch dog over the use and abuse of Russian soldiers, was labelled “foreign agent” by the government in August after criticizing the government for sending Russian troops into Ukraine to fight an undeclared war, and the group is now applying to be removed from the list.

“In making this appeal, we do not contest Justice Ministry’s actions. We merely ask to be excluded from the register in light of the fact that we do not fall under the category of ‘foreign agent,'” said a spokesperson for the group, Alexander Peredruk.

The group was put on the list after its leaders made certain comments on the conflict in Ukraine in August. The chairman of Soldiers’ Mothers and a member of the Kremlin’s human rights council, Ella Polyakova, made statements on an independent television channel regarding 100 injured Russian soldiers who had been transported to a hospital in St Petersburg. She noted that the government had given no information about from where the injured soldiers had been transported, and hinted that it was Eastern Ukraine, citing information collected by Soldiers’ Mothers on the matter.

Read more: Head of Russian Soldiers’ Mothers Group Denounces Putin for Sending Soldiers to “the Bloody Battlefields” in Undeclared War 

Polyakova referred to the information of other Soldiers’ Mothers and said that Russian soldiers in Dagestan had been paid the equivalent of $7000 to fight in Ukraine.

Soldiers’ Mothers had been on Russia’s watch list since March, when its leaders made statements that were viewed as constituting “political activity” by the Russian Justice Ministry. The group received grants from organizations based overseas, according to Russian news agency Kommersant.

Read more: Russian Soldiers Families to Russian Government: “Give Us Back Our Children” Killed in Undeclared War [with video] 

According to a 2012 Russian law, any NGO that receives foreign funding and conducts political activity must register as a “foreign agent.”

Soldiers’ Mothers appealed the inclusion on the registry, saying that they had stopped receiving foreign funding in May, and had since June been relying exclusively on the Russian government.

“This does not mean we agree with decision [of the Justice Ministry] to include us on the list, of course,” said Peredruk. “That matter will still be challenged in court.”