Israel accuses French consulate worker of smuggling 72 guns out of Gaza

A French consulate employee has been arrested by Israel’s security services for allegedly using a diplomatic vehicle to smuggle dozens of guns out of Gaza to Palestinian arms dealers in the occupied West Bank. 

Romain Franck, a 24-year-old worker at the French diplomatic facility in Jerusalem, allegedly used his diplomatic privileges to sneak 70 handguns and two assault rifles through Israel’s border crossing with Gaza.  

The Shin Bet, Israel’s equivalent of MI5, said that Franck had acted out of financial motivations and without the knowledge of his superiors at the French consulate. 

“This is a very serious incident in which the immunity and privileges granted to foreign diplomatic missions in Israel were cynically exploited to smuggle dozens of weapons that may be used for terrorist attacks against Israeli civilians and security forces,” the Shin Bet said. 

The French foreign ministry said it was taking the allegations “very seriously” and had ordered an internal inquiry. 

A photograph of Romain Franck released by the Israeli Shin BetCredit:
Shin Bet

The arrest of a French diplomatic worker on gun running charges is deeply embarrassing for France and the news comes days before Jean-Yves Le Drian, the French foreign minister, was expected to arrive for meetings in Israel.

An Israeli official said, however, that the arrest would not affect the “excellent” relations between France and Israel. The official said French diplomats were cooperating fully with investigators. 

Franck appeared in court in the southern city of Beersheba on Monday afternoon, where he was charged with arms trafficking, fraud and criminal conspiracy. He could face a significant prison sentence if convicted. 

Eight other people, including a Palestinian security guard at the French consulate, were also arrested as part of the case. 

Israel alleges that the Frenchman made five gun smuggling trips out of Gaza between December 21 and February 12. Prosecutors said he was paid around $7,600 for the work.

Nine people were arrested in the caseCredit:
AFP PHOTO / JACK GUEZ

The Shin Bet said that Franck collected the guns from a Palestinian working a French cultural centre in Gaza and then smuggled them out of the isolated Mediterranean enclave. 

Diplomatic vehicles receive less intensive checks at the Israeli security post at the Erez crossing from Gaza to Israel, allegedly allowing Franck to get the guns out unseen. 

He then allegedly delivered them to a contact in the West Bank who sold them on to Palestinian gun dealers. A Shin Bet official told Reuters that Franck appeared to been trying to make money rather than acting out of a political motivation. 

His Facebook page showed he had travelled in Palestinian areas and several photos showed him wearing a black and white keffiyeh, the scarf often associated with Palestinian nationalism.  Franck was arrested on February 15 and held without charge by Israeli authorities for more than a month. An Israeli court issued a gag order preventing local media from reporting on the case. 

The French ambassador to Israel reportedly visited Fracnk in prison after his arrest. 

More than 15 children hiding in school basement killed by ‘Russian air strike’ in Syria

Rescuers in Syria are searching for survivors of an air strike in besieged Eastern Ghouta which killed 15 children who had been hiding in the basement of a school.

The children, and two women who were also killed, had been hiding below ground in the Arbin neighbourhood to escape Syrian and Russian strikes which have pummelled the area for weeks.

The opposition National Coalition for Syrian Revolutionary and Opposition Forces alleged that the shelter had been deliberately targeted by Russian aircraft, and that they were responsible for a "massacre".

They posted pictures online showing the damage to the building’s infrastructure, saying a rocket had penetrated three floors before exploding in the basement.  

The United Nations said that some 50,000 civilians had fled the Damascus suburb to government-held areas in recent days, 70 per cent of whom women and children.

They said many were suffering from diarrhea and respiratory problems that can be deadly.

Russia, which backs the Bashar al-Assad regime, put the number at 79,000. This would leave around 300,000 residents trapped in the three rebel-held blockaded areas of Eastern Ghouta.

Some 1,500 have been killed since the government launched its offensive in mid-February, one of the most brutal of the seven-year war.

A wounded Syrian child waits to receive medical treatment at a hospital after Assad Regime's attacks over a market place in Eastern Ghouta's Kafr Batna town Credit:
Getty

Rebel leaders from Jaish al-Islam were said to have rejected a deal offered by the government – either to leave to opposition areas in northern Syria or settle their situation and become part of local pro-government militias that would maintain security.

Hours later the regime began bombarding the neighbourhood of Douma, the group’s largest remaining stronghold in the enclave, and clashes broke out between the two sides.

Some residents told the Telegraph that rebel fighters had prevented them from leaving through the government’s “humanitarian” corridors. Others said they feared arrest by regime forces.

Syrian civilians evacuated from the Eastern Ghouta enclave reach out to receive food distributed by Syrian soldiers as they pass the regime-controlled corridor opened by the government forcesCredit:
AFP

Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein, the UN human rights chief, told an informal meeting of the Security Council that the Syrian government’s five-year siege has involved "pervasive war crimes," use of chemical weapons and starvation as a weapon of war.

Mr Hussein was blocked from addressing a formal council meeting by a Russian procedural maneuver, but he delivered his hard-hitting speech to an open meeting anyway, decrying "mind-numbing crimes"

"The siege of eastern Ghouta by the Syrian government forces, half a decade long, has involved pervasive war crimes, the use of chemical weaponry, enforced starvation as a weapon of warfare, and the denial of essential and life-saving aid," he said.

Assad has grown increasingly confident of victory, with his forces likely weeks away from victory over the opposition in the suburb.

Over the weekend he appeared in a rare video which showed him driving a Honda Sedan through the streets of the capital Damascus to the frontlines near Eastern Ghouta.

He was seen visiting the area to congratulate his forces and shake hands with cheering residents, some of whom held up their children so he could kiss them on the cheek.

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“You are the sons of our country,” he said. “We will protect all the people of Ghouta.”

Flat-Earther blasts off into California sky in home-made steam rocket 

A self-taught rocket scientist has blasted himself high into the California sky using a steam-powered contraption he built in his garage, the first step in his long-term aim of proving the Earth is flat.

“Mad” Mike Hughes propelled himself 1,875 feet (571m) into the air above the vast Mojave desert in the homemade rocket before deploying his parachute and landing back to Earth with a bump.  

The madcap 61-year-old limo-driver-turned-daredevil was visibly dazed as he was carefully lifted from his seat and was checked over by paramedics as he lay exhausted on the ground following a hard landing which damaged the front of his rocket.

“Am I glad I did it? Yeah. I guess,” he told the Associated Press. “I’ll feel it in the morning. I won’t be able to get out of bed. At least I can go home and have dinner and see my cats tonight.”

The Flat-Earther, who has spent around $20,000 (£14,000) pursuing his rocket dream since 2016, admitted he was “relieved” to have finally achieved his goal following several aborted attempts and ridicule from some quarters when his plan captured the attention of the world’s media last year.

"Mad" Mike Hughes' home-made rocket launches near Amboy, CaliforniaCredit:
Matt Hartman via AP

“I’m tired of people saying I chickened out and didn’t build a rocket. I’m tired of that stuff. I manned up and did it.”

Acknowledging how dangerous the mission was, he added: “This thing wants to kill you 10 different ways … This thing will kill you in a heartbeat.”

"Mad" Mike Hughes is carried on a stretcher after his home-made rocket launched and returned to the ground near Credit:
Matt Hartman via AP

Last year, the California native was forced to postpone a take off attempt from an abandoned runway in the ghost town of Amboy, located about 200 miles (321.85km) east of Los Angeles, due to his motorhome-slash-rocket launcher breaking down and problems getting a permit.  

Mr Hughes has the support of the flat-Earth community, who helped fund the mission, and eventually wants to build a "Rockoon," – a rocket that is carried into the atmosphere by a gas-filled balloon – to take him about 68 miles up so he can photograph the planet from space.

The self-taught rocket scientist believes the Earth is flatCredit:
Facebook

“Do I believe the earth is shaped like a frisbee – or flat? I believe it is,” he said last year. “I cannot disprove it after my months of research. Do I know for sure? No. That’s why I want to go up into space 62 miles up to settle this thing once and for all for people who want to know.”

“My story really is incredible,” Hughes reflected after his mission. “It’s got a bunch of story lines – the garage-built thing. I’m an older guy. It’s out in the middle of nowhere, plus the Flat Earth. The problem is it brings out all the nuts also, people questioning everything. It’s the downside of all this.”

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Heineken pulls ‘lighter is better’ beer advert amid racism storm

Heineken has withdrawn a television advert after it provoked an online storm and accusations of racism.

Chance the Rapper was among those who complained about the ad which showed a bartender slide a bottle of low-calorie, reduced alcohol beer past three black people before it stops at the hand of a lighter skinned woman.

“Sometimes lighter is better,” reads the tagline.

The brewer said the slogan was a reference to the light beer but many observers thought otherwise.

“I think some companies are purposely putting out noticeably racist ads so they can get more views,” wrote Chance the Rapper, before dismissing the Heineken commercial as “horribly racist”.

Others said the skin colour of the people involved could not have been a coincidence or that it was tone deaf at best.

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The ad has since been deleted from Heineken’s YouTube channel.

For its part, the company said it was taking the reaction seriously.

“For decades, Heineken has developed diverse marketing that shows there’s more that unites us than divides us,” said a spokesman for Heineken US.

“While we feel the ad is referencing our Heineken Light beer, we missed the mark, are taking the feedback to heart and will use this to influence future campaigns.”

It is not the only company to have run into similar concerns.

Earlier this year H&M had to apologise for images showing a black child wearing a hoodie emblazoned with the slogan “coolest monkey in the jungle” across the front.

And in October last year Dove was forced to drop an advert that showed a series of images in which a black woman appeared to turn white after using its soap.

Experts Urge Feds To Approve Domestic COVID Vaccine Funding Amid China Delays

OTTAWA — The Trudeau government is being pressed to approve funding for a made-in-Canada COVID-19 vaccine to lessen the risk Canadians will have to line up and wait on a foreign-made pandemic cure.

For instance, health-care professionals have written to Innovation Minister Navdeep Bains to urge him make up his mind on a proposal submitted in April by Providence Therapeutics of Toronto. The company is seeking $35 million to establish whether its vaccine is effective in humans after successful animal trials.

They say Canada has no guarantee it will be at the front of any line for an internationally produced pandemic cure. They attribute government’s slowness to a long-standing public policy problem: reluctance to partner with pharmaceutical and biotech companies in the same way it has tried to bolster other sectors.

“When you’re dealing with a pandemic like this and the government has already spent millions of dollars on all sorts of things, an additional investment into another vaccine technology, to increase our shots on goal in Canada, to help ensure that we actually develop the best vaccine, the most efficacious vaccine, I think to me makes sense,” said Laszlo Radvanyi, the president and scientific director of the publicly funded Ontario Institute for Cancer Research.

The federal government has created a $600-million fund to support vaccine clinical trials and manufacturing inside Canada.

Providence has told the government it could deliver five million doses of its new mRNA vaccine by mid-2021 for use in Canada if it were able to successfully complete human testing.

The mRNA technology is new and untested but experts say it has potential.

Canadians could be forced to wait

Radvanyi and others say the research deserves support because there are troubling signs Canadians might have wait to receive a vaccine that is invented abroad.

Canada has already invested in a vaccine-development partnership between China’s CanSino Biologics and Dalhousie University in Nova Scotia but China has held up shipments it was supposed to send to Dalhousie researchers by the end of May to start human trials.

Canada-China relations are severely strained after the People’s Republic imprisoned two Canadian men, Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor, in apparent retaliation for the RCMP’s arresting Chinese high-tech executive Meng Wanzhou on an American extradition warrant in December 2018.

“This should have been flagged as an obstacle when contemplating doing this program. We’re not on the best of terms with the Chinese government,” said Radvanyi, who has collaborated with Providence on vaccine treatments for cancer and wrote to Bains to support the company.

He also stressed that his support is based purely on the merits of the science behind the proposal.

“With any new technology, one needs to be careful not to drink the Kool-Aid and let the data and the science speak for itself. But clearly there are really promising data emerging” from new mRNA vaccine tests, including from the American company Moderna Inc. and the German firm BioNTech SE, said Radvanyi.

Both those companies have been heavily funded through U.S. President Donald Trump’s “Operation Warp Speed” program to fast-track a vaccine for the novel coronavirus.

This week the U.S. committed to pay BioNTech and its American partner Pfizer $1.95 billion to produce 100 million doses if their vaccine candidate proves safe and effective in humans. In April, the U.S. agreed to pay Moderna up to $483 million to fund its research. Next week, Moderna is set to launch a 30,000-person final round of testing to test the strength of its vaccine candidate.

“The mRNA technology is a newer more experimental technology but completely worthy of being part of the actual analysis which is being undertaken and will be considered as part of the investment portfolio,” Canada’s chief public health officer Dr. Theresa Tam said Friday.

Tam said the government is carefully examining data, while trying to take an “accelerated approach not just on the regulatory and clinical trial front, but also an accelerated approach on looking at investments as well.”

 ‘A Canadian solution’ is needed

Providence’s chief executive Brad Sorenson said he has heard “crickets” from Ottawa since late May after his company submitted its proposal in April — after the government reached out to it as a possible vaccine-maker.

“We need a Canadian solution, a manufacturing solution in Canada. All of our (intellectual property), all of our manufacturing, all of the work we are doing is inside Canada,” said Sorenson.

The company wants to move forward with human trials because it has generated neutralizing antibodies in animals, with the same technology that BioNTech and Moderna have used, said Sorenson.

“We had identified space to do a manufacturing run for our vaccine in September. We’ve lost that space now because we didn’t get any support, and we couldn’t hold it indefinitely.

“The next opportunity for us to manufacture would be late October, early November. So literally, we’re ready to do it. We just need the co-operation.”

Government is reviewing applications: minister

Health Minister Patty Hajdu said vaccine applications are not “sitting around, gathering dust” and the government’s vaccine task force of experts was carefully reviewing them.

Bains spokesman John Power said he couldn’t comment on specific proposals, but said the evaluation process is ongoing.

Brad Wouters, executive vice-president of science and research at Toronto’s University Health Network, said the time has come for Canada to “hedge” its bets and support Providence, given the hold-up of the Chinese shipment.

“This, to me, is sort of a no-brainer to give these guys a shot, especially with the promising data coming out of the U.S. and other places,” said Wouters, who also wrote to Bains to support Providence.

The new mRNA technology is a departure from how vaccines have traditionally been made to counter the flu or polio, for example. The traditional approach involves taking some of the actual virus, rendering it safe or inactive and then injecting it into the human body to create an immune response.

Instead, the mRNA approach involves injecting a key fragment of genetic material from the virus so the human body can produce the viral proteins needed to mount an immune response, said Wouters.

One advantage of mRNA vaccines is they’re relatively inexpensive to produce, said Tania Watts, a professor of immunology at the University of Toronto, who is conducting a study on how long immunity to COVID-19 lasts in people who have recovered from infections.

“They’re chemically made so you don’t need to have live virus and you don’t have to grow cells. The first trials from Moderna look like two doses gave really great antibody responses,” she said.

But Watts said more research is needed to establish how effective the new vaccines are.

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Watts she said she doesn’t necessarily favour Providence or any other project that has succeeded in getting federal funding, but said it has one among many “promising platforms” for a vaccine.

Watts said the government should back a made-in-Canada vaccine because China, and even the U.S., can’t be relied upon to share one. She also said that multiple vaccines in multiple doses is the likely end-game scenario for the pandemic.

“We don’t know if vaccines made outside Canada are going to be available to us,” said Watts. “If you were the U.S., you’d probably want to make sure that your own supply was secured first.”

Radvanyi said the COVID-19 vaccine race has exposed the government’s flawed approach in collaborating with a private sector driven by profit motives.

“There has to be a motive to make money to sustain operations, but through a public-private partnership the government can help drive a new paradigm in terms of drug development and manufacturing.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 24, 2020.

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Atwater-Cosmos-Grove City Triangular

Atwater-Cosmos-Grove City Triangular

Atwater-Cosmos-Grove City 34 Pierz 21

Pierz 58 Litchfield 16

Atwater-Cosmos-Grove City 51 Litchfield 21
106 Rylan Molinaro (ACGC) Won by Forfeit
113 Sam Tibbitts (LITCH) Tech. Fall Brandon Holien (ACGC) 6:00
120 Logan Nelson (LITCH) Dec. A. J. Schmidt (ACGC) 13-9
126 Derek Fruetel (LITCH) Maj. Dec.Jacob Whitcomb (ACGC) 16-4
132 Tyler Jones (LITCH) Dec. Tyler Berghuis (ACGC) 11-4
138 Dylan Penk (LITCH) Fall Jeremy Nelson (ACGC) 4:36
145 Larry Bomstad (ACGC) Fall Connor Hoff (LITCH) 3:19
152 Logan Peterson (ACGC) Fall Cody Klabunde (LITCH) 4:49
160 Sheldon Rasmussen (ACGC) Won by Forfeit
170 Jordan Nelson (ACGC) Fall Joan Silverio (LITCH) 1:59
182 Maverick Whitcomb (ACGC) Won by Forfeit
195 Cody Berghuis (ACGC) Won by Forfeit
220 Jordan Fester (ACGC) Dec. Max Kaping (LITCH) 4-3
285 Lucas Damm (ACGC) Won by Forfeit

100th Win – Evan Woitalla, Pierz, 12th, 138 lbs

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Cody Takes A Shot On A Twitter User About His Time in Bullet Club

Ever since Cody Rhodes signed with ROH back in 2016, he has been making headlines all over the wrestling world and he has been making more money than he used to when he was still working for WWE. He is also more bigger and well known than he ever was especially when he immediately joined one of the most, if not the most popular and greatest factions ever in the wrestling world known as The Bullet Club. 
Unfortunately, The Bullet Club has been having problems within the faction as of late and a user on Twitter tweeted Cody Rhodes that since he joined the Bullet Club the group has been on a slow decline. Cody Rhodes didn’t take those comments lightly and he definitely didn’t agree. Cody immediately took to Twitter and took a shot on that Twitter user as he listed off a number of reasons why that person was incorrect such as Hot Topic, Funkos and  his title wins.
You can see the tweets from both the user and Cody below:

 

The bullet club started it’s slow death the day you joined
— Easy Peasy (@Stromblie) February 15, 2018

 

Totally agree. The unprecedented interest in the faction, the third party retailers who moved wwe merchandise so they could sell ours, the over ten internationally recognized titles amongst the faction…oh and the funkos.
It’s a grim tale.
Get the fuck outta’ here. https://t.co/3i5W6EIVlj
— Cody Rhodes (@CodyRhodes) February 15, 2018

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