Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Alemania podría colapsar el euro: George Soros


El multimillonario advierte que la economía alemana está arrastrando a sus vecinos a la deflación que podría poner en peligro a la propia democracia.

Berlín, 23 de junio.- La política de ahorro presupuestario de Alemania podría destruir el proyecto europeo e incluso provocar el colapso del euro, dijo el multimillonario George Soros en una entrevista publicada este miércoles por el semanario alemán Die Zeit.

"La política alemana es un peligro para Europa, podría destruir el proyecto europeo", dijo Soros, que en 1992 ganó mil millones de dólares apostando en contra de la libra esterlina.

Soros dijo al diario que no descartaba "un colapso del euro".

"En este momento, los alemanes están arrastrando a sus vecinos a la deflación, que amenaza con una larga fase de estanflación (estancamiento económico e inflación). Y eso lleva a su vez al nacionalismo, descontento social y xenofobia. La propia democracia podría estar en peligro", apuntó.

"Alemania está globalmente aislada (...) ¿por qué no dejan subir los salarios? Eso ayudaría a remontar a otros miembros de la UE", señaló.

excelsior.com

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Testigos de ejecucion aseguran que los sicarios eran extranjeros

Juárez.- Testigos del crimen ocurrido al medio día de este miércoles frente a las instalaciones de la Subprocuraduría General de Justicia en el Estado, aseguran que el grupo de sicarios que acribillaron a un oficial de la Secretaría de Seguridad Pública Municipal eran extranjeros debido a su físico, vestimenta y lenguaje.

Los hechos ocurrieron frente a la Subprocuraduría Gnerald e Justicia ubicada sobre Avenida Juan Gabriel.

Los hombres asesinados habían ingresado a un negocio de conveniencia de Rapiditos Bip Bip.

Los dos hombres viajaban en una camioneta Chevrolet Trailblazer, blanca, cuando fueron acribillados.

Las dos víctimas quedaron lesionados a bordo de la unidad.

Agentes ministeriales cruzaron al calle y acudieron a la escena del crimen, pero los sicarios nunca fueron perseguidos por ninguna autoridad.

Testigos vieron como los sicarios descendieron de una camioneta Explorer blanca y bajaron a varios conductores para paralizar el tráfico los cuales fueron descritos como rubios y con acento sudamericano.

Extraoficialmente se dijo que la persona que resultó muerta fue Oscar Monrreal Lopez, capitan de la Policia Municipal del Distrito Aldama, el cual había sido despedido en el año 2007 y vuelto a recontratar.

El ahora occiso tripulaba una camioneta con placas sobrepuestas de un vehículo Plymouth que aparece registrado a a nombre de Liliana Monrreal.

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

USA government finally admits the real reason of the Afghanistan invasion. As if we needed them to.


Reported by The New York Times

WASHINGTON — The United States has discovered nearly $1 trillion in untapped mineral deposits in Afghanistan, far beyond any previously known reserves and enough to fundamentally alter the Afghan economy and perhaps the Afghan war itself, according to senior American government officials.

The previously unknown deposits — including huge veins of iron, copper, cobalt, gold and critical industrial metals like lithium — are so big and include so many minerals that are essential to modern industry that Afghanistan could eventually be transformed into one of the most important mining centers in the world, the United States officials believe.

An internal Pentagon memo, for example, states that Afghanistan could become the “Saudi Arabia of lithium,” a key raw material in the manufacture of batteries for laptops and BlackBerrys.

The vast scale of Afghanistan’s mineral wealth was discovered by a small team of Pentagon officials and American geologists. The Afghan government and President Hamid Karzai were recently briefed, American officials said.

While it could take many years to develop a mining industry, the potential is so great that officials and executives in the industry believe it could attract heavy investment even before mines are profitable, providing the possibility of jobs that could distract from generations of war.

“There is stunning potential here,” Gen. David H. Petraeus, commander of the United States Central Command, said in an interview on Saturday. “There are a lot of ifs, of course, but I think potentially it is hugely significant.”

The value of the newly discovered mineral deposits dwarfs the size of Afghanistan’s existing war-bedraggled economy, which is based largely on opium production and narcotics trafficking as well as aid from the United States and other industrialized countries. Afghanistan’s gross domestic product is only about $12 billion.

“This will become the backbone of the Afghan economy,” said Jalil Jumriany, an adviser to the Afghan minister of mines.

American and Afghan officials agreed to discuss the mineral discoveries at a difficult moment in the war in Afghanistan. The American-led offensive in Marja in southern Afghanistan has achieved only limited gains. Meanwhile, charges of corruption and favoritism continue to plague the Karzai government, and Mr. Karzai seems increasingly embittered toward the White House.

So the Obama administration is hungry for some positive news to come out of Afghanistan. Yet the American officials also recognize that the mineral discoveries will almost certainly have a double-edged impact.

Instead of bringing peace, the newfound mineral wealth could lead the Taliban to battle even more fiercely to regain control of the country.

The corruption that is already rampant in the Karzai government could also be amplified by the new wealth, particularly if a handful of well-connected oligarchs, some with personal ties to the president, gain control of the resources. Just last year, Afghanistan’s minister of mines was accused by American officials of accepting a $30 million bribe to award China the rights to develop its copper mine. The minister has since been replaced.

Endless fights could erupt between the central government in Kabul and provincial and tribal leaders in mineral-rich districts. Afghanistan has a national mining law, written with the help of advisers from the World Bank, but it has never faced a serious challenge.

“No one has tested that law; no one knows how it will stand up in a fight between the central government and the provinces,” observed Paul A. Brinkley, deputy undersecretary of defense for business and leader of the Pentagon team that discovered the deposits.

At the same time, American officials fear resource-hungry China will try to dominate the development of Afghanistan’s mineral wealth, which could upset the United States, given its heavy investment in the region. After winning the bid for its Aynak copper mine in Logar Province, China clearly wants more, American officials said.

Another complication is that because Afghanistan has never had much heavy industry before, it has little or no history of environmental protection either. “The big question is, can this be developed in a responsible way, in a way that is environmentally and socially responsible?” Mr. Brinkley said. “No one knows how this will work.”

With virtually no mining industry or infrastructure in place today, it will take decades for Afghanistan to exploit its mineral wealth fully. “This is a country that has no mining culture,” said Jack Medlin, a geologist in the United States Geological Survey’s international affairs program. “They’ve had some small artisanal mines, but now there could be some very, very large mines that will require more than just a gold pan.”

The mineral deposits are scattered throughout the country, including in the southern and eastern regions along the border with Pakistan that have had some of the most intense combat in the American-led war against the Taliban insurgency.

The Pentagon task force has already started trying to help the Afghans set up a system to deal with mineral development. International accounting firms that have expertise in mining contracts have been hired to consult with the Afghan Ministry of Mines, and technical data is being prepared to turn over to multinational mining companies and other potential foreign investors. The Pentagon is helping Afghan officials arrange to start seeking bids on mineral rights by next fall, officials said.

“The Ministry of Mines is not ready to handle this,” Mr. Brinkley said. “We are trying to help them get ready.”

Like much of the recent history of the country, the story of the discovery of Afghanistan’s mineral wealth is one of missed opportunities and the distractions of war.

In 2004, American geologists, sent to Afghanistan as part of a broader reconstruction effort, stumbled across an intriguing series of old charts and data at the library of the Afghan Geological Survey in Kabul that hinted at major mineral deposits in the country. They soon learned that the data had been collected by Soviet mining experts during the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan in the 1980s, but cast aside when the Soviets withdrew in 1989.

During the chaos of the 1990s, when Afghanistan was mired in civil war and later ruled by the Taliban, a small group of Afghan geologists protected the charts by taking them home, and returned them to the Geological Survey’s library only after the American invasion and the ouster of the Taliban in 2001.

“There were maps, but the development did not take place, because you had 30 to 35 years of war,” said Ahmad Hujabre, an Afghan engineer who worked for the Ministry of Mines in the 1970s.

Armed with the old Russian charts, the United States Geological Survey began a series of aerial surveys of Afghanistan’s mineral resources in 2006, using advanced gravity and magnetic measuring equipment attached to an old Navy Orion P-3 aircraft that flew over about 70 percent of the country.

The data from those flights was so promising that in 2007, the geologists returned for an even more sophisticated study, using an old British bomber equipped with instruments that offered a three-dimensional profile of mineral deposits below the earth’s surface. It was the most comprehensive geologic survey of Afghanistan ever conducted.

The handful of American geologists who pored over the new data said the results were astonishing.

But the results gathered dust for two more years, ignored by officials in both the American and Afghan governments. In 2009, a Pentagon task force that had created business development programs in Iraq was transferred to Afghanistan, and came upon the geological data. Until then, no one besides the geologists had bothered to look at the information — and no one had sought to translate the technical data to measure the potential economic value of the mineral deposits.

Soon, the Pentagon business development task force brought in teams of American mining experts to validate the survey’s findings, and then briefed Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates and Mr. Karzai.

So far, the biggest mineral deposits discovered are of iron and copper, and the quantities are large enough to make Afghanistan a major world producer of both, United States officials said. Other finds include large deposits of niobium, a soft metal used in producing superconducting steel, rare earth elements and large gold deposits in Pashtun areas of southern Afghanistan.

Just this month, American geologists working with the Pentagon team have been conducting ground surveys on dry salt lakes in western Afghanistan where they believe there are large deposits of lithium. Pentagon officials said that their initial analysis at one location in Ghazni Province showed the potential for lithium deposits as large of those of Bolivia, which now has the world’s largest known lithium reserves.

For the geologists who are now scouring some of the most remote stretches of Afghanistan to complete the technical studies necessary before the international bidding process is begun, there is a growing sense that they are in the midst of one of the great discoveries of their careers.

“On the ground, it’s very, very, promising,” Mr. Medlin said. “Actually, it’s pretty amazing.”

Friday, June 11, 2010

Osama Bin Laden, that mythical half-man, half-goat master of escapism is reported to be in Iran.



It figures. Except that he's dead.

From The Huffington Post

Osama Bin Laden is in Iran, asserts Alan Howell Parrot, the director of The Union for the Conservation of Raptors (UCR), who for many years served as a Falconer for the rulers of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and members of Saudi Royal family. In that capacity he was a regular guest in the seasonal Falconry-hunting camps and had access to all participants. Parrot has been offering evidence of Bin Laden's sighting in Iran since November 2004 to a great number of U.S. government officials at the Department of Defense, the FBI, Senators and even to the former Director of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) Gen. Michael V. Hayden. Government officials who asked to remain nameless confirmed Parrot's contact with the government. Still, no one responded.

Parrot's passion to save the falcons led him and his expert team to bin Laden.

In November 2004 a UCR field operator in Iran happened to meet bin Laden. Parrot brought the very detailed and seemingly convincing evidence to my attention. I then introduced him to former senior US military officials. Between November 2004 and January 2009 Parrot says he has "diligently reported UCR meetings with Bin Laden in Iran to U.S. government agencies. At no time did the Bush Administration request interviews with any of the UCR field operators who tracked and met bin Laden in Iran." Parrot provided accounts of bin Laden's movement and details of six meetings UCR's operators had with bin Laden in Iran; some were held near Zehedan, in Southern Iran, others in a safe house North of Tehran and in Mashhad. This information was confirmed during a debriefing by an expert interrogator on march 2008.

Falconry is so popular in the Middle East that the founder of the Saudi kingdom, Abdul Aziz bin Abdul Rahman Al Saud, was known as "the Falcon of the Peninsula" (Al Saqr al Jazira). Saudi Prince Fahd bin Sultan described Falconry as the Arabs' "form of golf, a place to relax and conduct business.''

Falconry is a 2,000-year-old tradition among Arabs, especially princes and sheikhs. They gather several times a year in well- equipped hunting camps in the Arabian deserts, Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Iran, among other places, to hunt with falcons that cost $100,000 and in some cases more than $2 million. Not surprisingly, the illegal trade in falcons is valued at more than $300 million annually.

Bin Laden is also known as an avid Falconer. Former White House counterterrorism advisor Richard Clarke told the 9/11 Commission that in 1999 the U.S. "planned to bomb a Falconry camp in Pakistan when Osama bin Laden was present." That raid, however, "was scrubbed because a minister from the United Arab Emirates was a member of the hunting party."

Parrot's story is as unconventional as he is. A Falconer who, in 1974, just 18 years old, began his career training hunting falcons for the Shah of Iran. He excelled in his work and was retained by wealthy Arabs in Kuwait and the Gulf States who flew him regularly from Ithaca, NY -- he studied biology at Cornell University -- to the Middle East. He left school after 3 years in favor of trapping and training falcons for UAE president and Abu Dhabi's ruler Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan al-Nahayyan. From 1981 - 1991 he continued to work for Zayed, who hosted him in his many palaces, where Parrot met and befriended many of the ruler's guests. Sheikh Zayed's recommendation opened doors to employment with other Arab leaders. Parrot also worked for Saudi Crown Prince -- now King -- Abdullah bin Abdulaziz.

A true bird lover, Parrot could not tolerate the illegal smuggling and abuse of falcons he witnessed the world over. Thus, from 1978 -1984 he volunteered to participate as a civilian undercover agent in "Operation Falcon," conducted by the US Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) and the Canadian Wildlife Service (CWS), to stop the multi-million dollar international smuggling of North American falcons to the Middle East. That operation resulted in the arrest of 300+ falcon smugglers the world over. Parrot also helped stop Prince Bandar, the former Saudi Ambassador to the U.S., from smuggling falcons from the U.S. on board a Royal Saudi Airlines charted plane. Bandar paid his $150,000 fine to the Department of Justice, from his Washington DC Riggs Bank account. It was the same account which Bandar's wife used to pay two of the 9/11 hijackers. True to form, Bandar threatened the U.S. government with oil sanctions if the story leaked; not surprisingly, the public remained in the dark.

In praise of his work in Operation Falcon, Parrot received two letters of commendation from the Canadian government. Together with a dedicated team of like-minded falcon lovers, Parrot continued to collect evidence on falcon smuggling throughout Central Asia, Russia, China, and the Middle East. In 2001 he established The Union for the Conservation of Raptors (UCR), a 501(c) 3 non-profit organization. Its mandate pertains "to the conservation and sustainable management of raptors, with specialized expertise on Middle East falconry practices and smuggling cartels with operational linkage to al-Qaeda."

Over the years, Parrot witnessed how the Secretariat for the U.N. Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) has violated its own mandate to protect the birds by licensing illegal trade in sport-falcons to Arab rulers and sheikhs. This led to the creation of 'five star' tented cities erected throughout the Middle East, Central Asia, and Afghanistan, like the royal falconry camp that served as Al Qaeda's de-facto 'Board room,' referenced in the 9/11 Commission Report.

Encouraged by president-elect Barack Obama's statement on January 14, in an interview with CBS News anchor Katie Couric, that his "preference obviously would be to capture or kill him [Bin Laden]", Parrot sent a letter to the Rewards for Justice program at the State Department detailing his efforts to track Bin Laden and providing information of bin Laden's whereabouts. Parrot also noted that he had discussed the matter with Iranian officials and that "a negotiated and political (i.e. not-military) solution is available" with the Iranian leadership. The letter was sent on January 20, but Parrot has yet to hear from Washington.

Parrot claims that he has negotiated with Iranian officials the transfer of bin Laden from Iran "to the custody of the Saudi Minister of Foreign Affairs Prince Saud al Faisal, whom I know personally," he said.

Since no one seems to know where bin Laden is located, why not explore Mr. Perrot's claims?

Banco Mundial aprueba préstamo por 450 mdd a México


El crédito del organismo mundial es para desarrollo de políticas públicas para fomentar la adaptación al cambio climático en el sector del agua.

El Banco Mundial aprobó un crédito a México por 450 millones de dólares para el desarrollo de políticas públicas para fomentar la adaptación al cambio climático en el sector del agua.

El organismo multilateral informó que el crédito tiene un plazo de pago de 18 años, con una tasa de interés variable Libor de seis meses y una comisión de apertura de 0.25% sobre el monto total.

Además, con el crédito se espera elevar de 36% a 60% el porcentaje de tratamiento de aguas residuales y tener un aumento en la productividad de programas de irrigación.

El Banco Mundial expuso que otros objetivo son el desarrollo por parte de la Comisión Nacional del Agua de planes de gestión en principales acuíferos y tener una mejora de la información disponible sobre el estado del recurso hídrico en el país.

"Este préstamo apoyará las prioridades que el gobierno ha establecido en la agenda del sector del agua, en particular, su adaptación al cambio climático.

"El país implementa hace tiempo políticas sobre cambio climático que buscan enfrentar efectos negativos en los principales sectores económicos del país, y por ende consolidar su desarrollo", dijo Gloria Grandolini, directora del Banco Mundial para México y Colombia.

Agregó que el proyecto consolida el rol de liderazgo internacional de México y establece una estrategia de control de los impactos en el ciclo hidrológico. "Es un esfuerzo que se debe destacar", puntualizó la funcionaria.

El Universal

Sunday, June 6, 2010

"Narcoterroristas" tienen al barbas, segun "especialista"


Nota de El Agora

Distrito Federal— Especialistas consideran que detrás del secuestro del ex candidato presidencial Diego Fernández de Cevallos existe la hipótesis de la autoría del Ejército Popular Revolucionario (EPR) o de algunas de sus escisiones, así como los signos de que el narcoterrorismo “ha iniciado ya en el país”.

José Antonio Ortega, quien preside el Consejo Ciudadano para la Seguridad Pública y la Justicia Penal, advirtió en conferencia de prensa que el móvil primario de la desaparición del “Jefe Diego” es económico, pero que la finalidad real es la presentación con vida o los cuerpos de Edmundo Reyes Amaya y Gabriel Alberto Cruz Sánchez, líderes del EPR, así como la investigación de su desaparición.

“Por un lado, un grupo violento está desafiando frontalmente al Estado y, por el otro, hay signos de que la temida convergencia entre terrorismo y crimen organizado se ha iniciado ya en el país”, consideró.

“Es nuestra responsabilidad profundizar en la hipótesis de que fue un grupo terrorista; ¿cuál de ellas? no hay certeza, pero conforme a la información disponible la autoría del secuestro parece recaer de mayor a menor probabilidad en a) el Ejército Popular Revolucionario b) La Tendencia Democrática Revolucionaria (Ejército del Pueblo, escisión del EPR) y c) el Ejército Revolucionario del Pueblo Insurgente (ERPI, otra escisión que alega móviles políticos para su acción criminal)”, puntualizó Ortega.

El especialista indicó que es primordial garantizar la vida de Diego Fernández de Cevallos y apuntó que con este hecho la situación de inseguridad se torna crítica y se produce un salto cualitativo en la dinámica de la violencia organizada.

“Por un lado, un grupo violento está desafiando frontalmente al Estado y, por el otro, hay signos de que la temida convergencia entre terrorismo y crimen organizado se ha iniciado ya en el país”, consideró.

De acuerdo con Ortega, el plagio de Fernández de Cevallos tiene similitudes con el de Alfredo Harp Helú en 1994, cometido por lo que hoy es el núcleo duro del EPR.

Dijo que situaciones como esta pueden llevar al Estado al colapso y al país a la ingobernabilidad.

Diego “está vivo”

Sin ofrecer detalles, funcionarios de alto nivel señalaron que en el gabinete del presidente Felipe Calderón causó molestia la declaración del rector de la Escuela Libre de Derecho, Fauzi Hamdan, de que el ex candidato presidencial panista fue privado de su libertad por “un grupo de poder muy importante, con poderío; una gran organización con grandes recursos”.

Las fuentes consultadas lamentaron los comentarios del abogado y también ex senador Hamdan; aseguraron que “no sabe lo que dice; él no tiene información” para elucubrar tales conclusiones.

En un comunicado, la Procuraduría General de la República señaló que las declaraciones de Hamdan no tienen ningún efecto jurídico; reiteró además que mantiene suspendidas las investigaciones sobre el caso.

Según los funcionarios consultados, hay evidencias de que Fernández de Cevallos sigue vivo, y sugirieron que habría un avance en la negociación que llevan a cabo los familiares. Reiteraron que mantendrán discreción y atenderán respetuosamente la petición de la familia para no entorpecer el proceso, porque el objetivo común es preservar la vida del abogado.

Friday, June 4, 2010

Goldman Sachs sold $250 million of BP stock before spill


As reported by RawStory.com

Firm’s stock sale nearly twice as large as any other institution; Represented 44 percent of total BP investment

The brokerage firm that’s faced the most scrutiny from regulators in the past year over the shorting of mortgage related securities seems to have had good timing when it came to something else: the stock of British oil giant BP.

According to regulatory filings, RawStory.com has found that Goldman Sachs sold 4,680,822 shares of BP in the first quarter of 2010. Goldman’s sales were the largest of any firm during that time. Goldman would have pocketed slightly more than $266 million if their holdings were sold at the average price of BP’s stock during the quarter.

If Goldman had sold these shares today, their investment would have lost 36 percent its value, or $96 million. The share sales represented 44 percent of Goldman’s holdings — meaning that Goldman’s remaining holdings have still lost tens of millions in value.

Bilderberg 2010 Barcelona , as whitewashed by the english Times


As whitewashed by The Times

Splash! Could that be the sound of Lord Mandelson hitting one of the Dolce hotel’s four pools? Or Robert Zoellick of the World Bank? Paul Volcker of the US Economic Recovery Advisory Board? Or merely the euro taking another dive?

That is the thing about the Bilderberg group’s top secret meetings: you never know quite what is going on behind the police checkpoints.

Across the world, secretaries to the rich and the powerful have blocked out the next three days in their bosses’ calendars for their annual gathering, this time at the Dolce in Sitges, one of Spain’s most exclusive resorts.
Normally, every minute of their working lives is accounted for but, each year, a couple of hundred of the world’s financial elite and the more business-friendly members of the political class disappear from view; supposedly to save the planet from the dangers of parochialism, the nationalist genie.

It is all terribly confidential — breathe a word about it and you’re out of the club — but the Bilderberg watcher Daniel Estulin claims to have a copy of the agenda. The big question this time around is whether the euro will survive. “They are afraid that the countries in trouble will leave and the euro will fall apart,” said Mr Estulin. “The biggest nightmare is if EU members return to nationally orientated policies.”

That would certainly explain why the keynote address is being given by José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, the Spanish Prime Minister. The Piigs — Portugal, the Republic of Ireland, Italy, Greece and Spain — are of concern to the Bilderbergers. After all, the club was set up in 1954 by a Polish exile, Joseph Retinger, to create a European bulwark against the spread of communism. It provided the germ of the European idea; Franco-German reconciliation, the entry of West Germany into Nato, the Maastricht treaty — all were cooked up in annual fireside chats.

Now, according to Mr Estulin’s information, the Bilderbergers are nervous that the erosion of the euro could nudge the world back into recession while public services cuts could trigger unrest and radicalise the political climate.

Plenty to talk about at the Dolce, then. The Bilderberg protesters, sure that they can smell a good oldfashioned capitalist conspiracy, will be holding fringe meetings in the town. The hunt will be on to find a chambermaid ready to ransack hotel litter bins for evidence that evil work is afoot. It has been easier to get nuggets of information out of Bilderberg since hotel staff started to read Dan Brown and talk about the illuminati.

Could it be, though, that the Bilderbergers are simply having fun, away from their spouses, on their annual jamboree? The secret of Bilderberg could be that there is no secret. Certainly, the hotel offers plenty of distractions for stressed CEOs: qi-gong courses, excellent fish, fine wines and bicycle tours.

Henry Kissinger, 87, the former US Secretary of State, and David Rockefeller, 95, the former chairman of the Chase Manhattan Bank, are the elder statesmen of Bilderberg — but the leaked invitation list reveals that the gathering is made up primarily of elderly white gents.

Remember Richard Perle, 68, George Bush’s erstwhile Prince of Darkness? He could perhaps form a Prince of Darkness sub-group with Lord Mandelson. Paul Wolfowitz, 66, formerly of the World Bank? Mario Monti, 67, EU commissioner for the single market between 1995 and 1999?

Only the possible attendance of George Osborne, 39, the British Chancellor, will reassure hotel staff that they are not dealing with a Saga Holidays tour. Other members of this clandestine coven include Queen Sofia of Spain and Queen Beatrix of Holland. No doubt their views will be sought on the Swedish royal wedding later this month. Is it right, for example, that a young princess should marry her personal trainer? Fortunately, the Dolce has a team of personal trainers on hand ready to chip into the debate.

Last year Bilderberg held its meeting at the Nafsika Astir Palace hotel in Greece and apparently failed to spot how close their host country was to melting down. Watch out, Spain!

The weather forecast is for three days of sunshine — time for the Bilderbergers to slink out of the shadows.

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Continua la centralizacion de la seguridad publica: aprueban creacion de policia unica. Ya veremos que clase de loco queda al mando.


Ciudad de México.- El PRI, PAN, PRD y PVEM en el Senado coincidieron en que la propuesta de la Conferencia Nacional de Gobernadores (Conago) de desaparecer a las policías municipales y crear una policía única en las entidades federativas es un paso fundamental en el reordenamiento del sistema policial mexicano.

Mencionaron que estarán en espera de que la Conago les envíe un proyecto de iniciativa o que los congresos locales, que también tienen la facultad de iniciativa, lo envíen.

El senador del PRD Carlos Navarrete, presidente del Senado, dijo que tiene información de que el gabinete del presidente Felipe Calderón comparte esta propuesta, por lo tanto, el Senado pronto deberá recibir una iniciativa formal del Ejecutivo para valorar la construcción de una policía estatal, con mando estatal y unificada.

A su vez, el coordinador de los senadores del PRI, Manlio Fabio Beltrones, consideró que ésta es la "ruta correcta" para evitar tanta dispersión policíaca que hoy existe en México.

Mencionó que estar hablando de la integración de 32 policías estatales y una nacional se logrará tener un mayor control sobre los efectivos de cada una de las policías, una mejor coordinación entre las policías estatales y la policía nacional, y los efectos los percibiría la población en el corto plazo, porque habría mucho más acción.

El senador Carlos Navarrete, coordinador del grupo parlamentario del PRD, indicó que durante la reunión de la Conferencia Nacional de Gobernadores en Morelia, además de que conoció la discusión de los mandatarios estatales sobre el tema, el gobernador de Nuevo León, Rodrigo Medina, quien es el encargado de la Comisión de Seguridad de la Conago, le informó que por unanimidad los gobernadores acordaron plantear una reforma constitucional para unificar los mandos policíacos en 31 policías estatales y una en el Distrito Federal.

"Los gobernadores con este resolutivo han tomado conciencia de la problemática del sistema policial mexicano y han establecido un paso a seguir, que tiene que ser correspondido por el Congreso, señaló el senador panista", Santiago Creel.

Recordó que el mayor número de policías en el país están en las policías locales y municipales, alrededor de 400 mil elementos que hoy están totalmente desorganizados, descoordinados y por eso el resolutivo de la Conago es un paso hacia delante.

PERMITIRÁ AVANZAR EN LA DEPURACIÓN DE CUERPOS DE SEGURIDAD: MARTÍ

El presidente del Sistema de Observación por la Seguridad Ciudadana (SOS), el empresario Alejandro Martí, avaló el acuerdo de la Conferencia Nacional de Gobernadores (Conago) para unificar las policías municipales y dar paso a la creación de un sólo cuerpo policiaco en cada una de las entidades del país, al considerar que es un avance.

Indicó que de concretarse esta estrategia, permitiría avanzar en la depuración de las policías municipales, pero sobre todo en la coordinación con la policía federal y para desarrollar una política unificada de combate a la delincuencia en todo el país.

"México SOS hace votos porque estos importantes acuerdos se traduzcan a la brevedad en una iniciativa de reformas legales y constitucionales, que sea atendida por los legisladores federales y locales", señaló a través de un comunicado.

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Israel ataca la tan publicitada flotilla humanitaria con destino a Gaza.


Al menos 14 personas murieron y decenas resultaron heridas en el asalto israelí hoy a la "Flotilla de la Libertad", un grupo de seis barcos que transportaba a más de 750 personas con ayuda humanitaria para Gaza, informó la televisión israelí Canal 10.

"La imagen que va formándose de los hechos es que hay catorce muertos, no dos como se habla en Turquía", reveló el corresponsal de asuntos militares del Canal, Chico Menashé.

El Canal 2 indica, por su parte, que el número de muertos asciende a entre dieciséis y veinte, pero la información exacta se desconoce porque está bajo "censura militar".

Según ese canal, el ministro israelí de Defensa, Ehud Barak, ha convocado esta mañana una reunión en Tel Aviv con todos sus asesores "ante los imprevistos resultados de un asalto que se esperaba que transcurriera sin víctimas mortales".

La operación, realizada esa madrugada en alta mar, la llevó a cabo una de las unidades de elite del Ejército que no tiene experiencia en manifestaciones civiles.

Testimonios desde los barcos hablan de que los soldados israelíes descendieron sobre las cubiertas desde helicópteros abriendo fuego.
La Policía israelí ha sido puesta en estado de alerta por temor a disturbios en Jerusalén Este.