#4
Dankie china. Ja, nie probleem nie, dit is veilig heir, quite safe. Vir die jonk soldier bid asseblief, hulle is skaars jonk kids. Verdwaal ons 9 dood dis maand. Mood hier is somber as you might imagine. I do old man stuff, they take good care of me. Ek eet te kos lol. Jy in Sweden now? Or still in the UK?
Beste, oud Besoeker.
#5
Besoeker Hey! I just got used to understanding JM.
Oil and water they are two very different people. Lech fought his way Obama was spoon feed his way(that's why I liked Trump a real fighter).
A real person versus a con artist. I have always been able to spot these people. I call it a gift. The tip off is what they actually deliver and how much money it will cost you. He will not change. It is his nature. Like a programed computer he will not grow and develop. When he crashes he just resets to default.
#6
Dale, if your Dutch or "Austrian language" heh German is rusty, just go here, copy/paste, and pick Afrikaans. Unfortunately, I don't think Google translate can do Joe Mendiola!
[Al Jazeera] Riot police firing rubber bullets and wielding truncheons have clashed with protesters as authorities cleared away a makeshift camp set up as part of a Spain-wide demonstration against the country's economic problems.
Friday's altercation left more than 100 people, including coppers, injured.
The trouble started when police tried to clear the protesters from a main square in Barcelona so sanitation workers could clean it up before possible celebrations after a soccer match on Saturday night.
Many of the protesters, who are angry about high unemployment, anti-austerity measures and politicians' handling of the economy refused to move.
TV images showed officers beating the demonstrators and dragging them on the ground. Some wound up with bloodied hands and heads, or broken limbs.
Match forced evacuation
Felip Puig, the front man for Catalonia's regional Interior Ministry, said 84 protesters and 37 police were maimed. Officers were seen hauling people away, but Puig did not say how many had been placed in durance vile and he didn't say how serious the injuries were.
He did say one protester had a broken arm. "I can assure you that there was aggression against the police with rocks, bits of wood, blows, shoves, with violence, with sprays," Puig said.
He said police had fired six rubber bullets, 12 unspecified "projectiles" and 236 rounds of blank warning shots.
The protesters were allowed to return to the plaza, which has been occupied by protesters for nearly two weeks, after it was cleaned. Reports say the projectiles were rubber balls.
Puig justified the authorities' action by saying the plaza had to be cleaned because soccer fans will gather there on Saturday night after the Champions League final between Barcelona and Manchester United in London.
Scuffles also broke out between authorities and protesters in the city of Lleida, west of Barcelona. Two people were reportedly placed in durance vile.
United behind the slogan "Real Democracy Now", tens of thousands of mostly young people have set up around-the-clock protest camps in cities and towns across Spain since May 15 to complain about the government's handling of the economic crisis and what they see as a corrupted political party system.
Growing debt, unemployment
Nearly two years of recession have left Spain with a 21.3 per cent unemployment rate, the highest in the Eurozone, and major debt problems.
The rate jumps to 35 per cent for people aged 16 to 29, and many young and highly educated Spaniards can't find jobs as the Eurozone's No. 4 economy struggles.
The biggest protest has been in Madrid's Puerta del Sol square, where tens of thousands of people held nightly protests for nearly a week before regional elections last weekend. On Friday, about 500 people were still camping in the plaza, but they indicated they might move on within several days.
Riot police have monitored the Madrid protesters, but have not intervened.
Alfredo Perez Rubalcaba, the interior minister, said he was reviewing a request by Madrid's regional government to dismantle the city's protest zone because of complaints by merchants that business is suffering in the key tourist area.
Continued on Page 47
Posted by: Fred ||
05/28/2011 00:00 ||
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#1
"angry about ... anti-austerity measures" Is this a typo in AlJ or is Spain growing a Tea Party?
Posted by: James ||
05/28/2011 21:21 Comments ||
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[Bangla Daily Star] A judge ruled yesterday that Bosnian Serb general Ratko Mladic, the alleged criminal mastermind of the Srebrenica massacre and other atrocities, was fit to face international justice at a war crimes court.
Court spokeswoman Maja Kovacevic said the transfer conditions had been met.
Gen Mladic's legal team says he is in poor health and that they will appeal on Monday. They have requested that he be admitted to hospital over concerns about his health.
Gen Mladic, tossed in the slammer on Thursday after 16 years on the run, faces genocide charges over the 1992-95 Bosnian war.
He was indicted in 1995 over the killings about 7,500 Bosnian Mohammedan men and boys that July at Srebrenica -- the worst single atrocity in Europe since World War II -- and other crimes.
Judge Kovacevic told news hounds outside the court that Gen Mladic's health was good enough for him to stand trial.
Continued on Page 47
Posted by: Fred ||
05/28/2011 00:00 ||
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A multi-volume chronology and reference guide set detailing three years of the Mexican Drug War between 2010 and 2012.
Rantburg.com and borderlandbeat.com correspondent and author Chris Covert presents his first non-fiction work detailing
the drug and gang related violence in Mexico.
Chris gives us Mexican press dispatches of drug and gang war violence
over three years, presented in a multi volume set intended to chronicle the death, violence and mayhem which has
dominated Mexico for six years.
Rantburg was assembled from recycled algorithms in the United States of America. No
trees were destroyed in the production of this weblog. We did hurt some, though. Sorry.