News Burst 18 April 2020 – Live Feed ~ April 18, 2020


News Burst 18 April 2020

  • The news of the death of the Hessian Finance Minister Thomas SchΓ€fer (†54) shook all of Germany. Now there is said to have been another suicide in the vicinity of the ministry. According to Redaktionsnetzwerk Deutschland (RND), another high-ranking member of the Hessian finance department has apparently taken his own life. The official was found β€œlifeless in his office on Thursday morning. According to police reports, a self-inflicted suicide is to be assumed”, the RND quotes an internal mail from the Secretary of State for Finance, Martin Worms (65), to the employees of the Ministry of Finance in Wiesbaden.
  • Last time Jessica Meir, Andrew Morgan and Oleg Skripochka were on Earth, there were house parties, happy hours, handshakes, crowded concerts and no one was yet talking about the novel coronavirus that has reshaped daily life across the world. More than 200 days since they each embarked on their trip to space to the ISS, things are different. All three astronauts landed Friday morning near Dzhezkazgan, Kazakhstan.
  • The Vatican on Wednesday replaced the director of its financial watchdog agency, completing a coup that began in October with controversial police raids on the watchdog offices and an investigation into a London real estate deal. The Vatican secretary of state named a Bank of Italy official, Giuseppe Schlitzer, to head the day-to-day operations of the Financial Information Authority, known by its Italian acronym AIF. Schlitzer replaces Tommaso di Ruzza, who was suspended as part of the investigation. Seven months after the raids, neither di Ruzza nor anyone else has been charged. The delay and gaps in the prosecutors’ case suggest the investigation was sparked by a Vatican turf war over fears that AIF was being too aggressive in rooting out financial malfeasance that could have implicated high-ranking Vatican officials. Vatican prosecutors are investigating allegations of corruption in the Secretariat of State’s 2012 purchase of a stake in a luxury residence in London. The Vatican bought the other investors out at the end of 2018, but then realized it had taken on an onerous mortgage as well as Italian middlemen who were fleecing the Holy See of tens of millions of euros in fees, according to officials familiar with the deal.
  • Twitter on April 14 unsuspend the official account of the Chinese Embassy in Sri Lanka 24 hours after it had suspended it causing a stir on social media. The Chinese Embassy in Sri Lanka in a statement said that Twitter had contacted them on 14th April morning saying the suspension was a systematic mistake and had apologized over it. On 13th April, Twitter suspended the official account of the Chinese Embassy in Sri Lanka, without informing any specific reason.
  • Congregants from the Seattle-based Satanic Temple of Washington drew a crowd of prayerful onlookers Friday as they hoisted their pentagram and conducted a satanic ritual at the state Capitol Friday, March 6. Christian groups and followers caught wind of the Satanist celebrants and showed up to sing and pray in the name of Jesus. Some younger Christians held a sign that read β€œSatan has no rights.” Satanic Temple affiliates, such as Justin Harvey-John Ashby, said their event was about promoting religious plurality. He said he believes satanic beliefs have been misunderstood and viewed as β€œgrossly perverse,” and that their primary values are empathy, reason, bodily autonomy and justice.
  • Buffalo sighting propels biosecurity measures in Namibia. The Ministry of Agriculture, Water and Land Reform has instituted a set of biosecurity measures in some northern regions after an African buffalo was seen at a village in the Okongo constituency of the Ohangwena region last week. Veterinary officials from the agriculture ministry, alongside officials from the Ministry of Environment, Forestry and Tourism, have been pursuing the buffalo since Wednesday last week and the search for the animal is ongoing. β€œThe buffalo broke into a nearby farm unit before it could be put down by the rangers and fled into the thick bushes,” he said. β€œ The presence of a buffalo in livestock areas poses a high risk of transmitting FMD virus to livestock through close contact or contaminated grazing and water by the buffalo’s excretions and secretions such as faeces, urine, saliva and other bodily fluids,” Misika said.
  • Police have offered assistance to a group of day laborers found homeless at Chao Anouvong Park in Vientiane Capital, Laos. The laborers say they have no work, no food, and no home. Living with the group was a woman some seven months pregnant. The woman says she had been employed at a rubber factory at KM 52 and now had no place to sleep. The group of homeless people has been meeting at Chao Anouvong Park every day in the afternoon to receive food and handouts from charitable members of the public.
  • Professor Luc Montagnier, 2008 Nobel Prize winner for Medicine, claims that SARS-CoV-2 is a manipulated virus that was accidentally released from a laboratory in Wuhan, China. According to Professor Luc Montagnier, winner of the Nobel Prize for Medicine in 2008 for β€œdiscovering” HIV as the cause of the AIDS epidemic together with FranΓ§oise BarrΓ©-Sinoussi, the SARS-CoV-2 is a virus that was manipulated and accidentally released from a laboratory in Wuhan, China, in the last quarter of 2019.
  • ANA Holdings Inc. and Japan Airlines Co., Ltd. (JAL), Japan’s two biggest airlines, have cut around 90 percent of international flights but left their domestic networks relatively intact, industry data showed. The two normally fly around 800 or more domestic flights daily. They are currently flying around two-thirds of capacity with 10 percent of the usual demand, according to the airlines. That is despite Japan declaring a one-month state of emergency in major cities on April 7, which was expanded on Thursday to include the entire country.
  • Michael Cohen, the former personal attorney to US President Donald Trump, will be released early from prison because of the coronavirus pandemic, Cohen, who has served less than one year of a three-year sentence, will serve the rest of his time in home confinement.
  • A β€œwild feeding frenzy” is under way in China for medical equipment crucial to containing the spread of the deadly coronavirus around the world. Scalpers stake out factories with suitcases loaded with cash to secure millions of surgical masks hot off the production line. Dealers trade ventilators back and forth as if they were cargoes of coal, before they finally reach the end buyer carrying eye-watering mark-ups. Governments wire eight-figure sums of money for vital equipment only to lose out to another government that was quicker to produce the cash. We are slap bang in the middle of a gold rush for the year’s most sought-after commodities – masks, gloves, thermometers, ventilators, hospital beds, testing kits, hazmat suits, hand sanitiser and goggles – and according to those involved in the scramble, there are no holds barred.
  • Namibia has, over the last five years, spent N$1,2 billion on projects aimed at biodiversity conservation, climate change adaptation and combating land degradation. According to a report submitted to the National Assembly by environment minister Pohamba Shifeta in March and made available to Nampa recently, the funds were mobilised through the Green Climate Fund (GCF), Global Environment Facility and the Adaptation Fund. β€œThe interventions were aimed at making Namibian communities more resilient to climate change and other environment-related problems such as water insecurity, human-wildlife conflict, and poaching,” it said. In addition, pilot projects also found that solar-powered boreholes and the use of desalination technologies saved communities money and were effective in ensuring water supplies to communities, livestock and wildlife during droughts. As a result, solar-powered boreholes have become a central component of efforts to mitigate human-wildlife conflict. Other major successes include the installation of drip irrigation systems in community gardens and 54 schools to benefit 10 000 people, the report said.
  • Japan will offer a cash payment of 100,000 yen (US$930) to every resident, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe announced on Friday, as the coronavirus pandemic continues to decimate the world’s third-biggest economy. β€œWe are moving quickly to deliver cash to all people,” Abe said in a televised news conference to explain his decision to expand a state of emergency nationwide.
  • Moroccan internet users have launched a social media campaign responding to posts by alleged Emirati social bots that attacked Morocco’s Head of Government Saad Eddine El Othmani. The campaign, launched under the hashtag β€œThank You El Othmani,” aimed to highlight Morocco’s unprecedented measures to manage to COVID-19 crisis. The fake accounts reacted to posts about three different countries: Morocco, Qatar, and Turkey. Considering the diplomatic tension between the three countries and the UAE, it is highly possible that the social bots are led by Emirati people, he speculated. The social media hostility comes amid new rumors of tension between Morocco and the UAE. Earlier this week, the UAE threatened to impose restrictions on a list of countries, including Morocco, that cannot repatriate non-resident nationals to their countries of origin.

Sun Activity

Sunspot number: 0
Spotless Days
Current Stretch: 12 days
2020 total: 82 days (76%)
2019 total: 281 days (77%)

Strongest EQ in Europe M4.0 Greece
Strongest EQ in North America M3.7 California
Strongest EQ on the Planet 5.7 South Indian Ocean
Deepest EQ M5.7 513 km South of the Fiji Islands News Burst 18 April 2020

News Burst 16 April 2020 – Live Feed ~ April 16, 2020


News Burst 16 April 2020

  • A crack unit of elite marshals and detectives stopped an alleged plot to blow up Central Parkβ€˜s iconic Alice in Wonderland statute. Officers from the New York/New Jersey Regional Fugitive Task Force, a joint unit of the US Marshals Service and NYPD investigators, arrested 30-year-old Kevin Fallon at a hotel in the Theatre District on Saturday 11 April. Mr Fallon had allegedly threatened to blow up the famous New York landmark and kill his father and ex-girlfriends, saying β€œthis is going to hurt. None of you are safe. I am lethal”, according to a criminal complaint reported by The New York Daily News. Depicting characters from Lewis Carrol’s classic novel, the Alice in Wonderland statue has been a fixture of Central Park since 1959.
  • A source has told the New York Post that Smollet, 37, had a sexual relationship with alleged β€˜attacker’ Abel Osundairo. The insider claims the pair visited a Chicago bathhouse for gay men on multiple occasions, and that there should be records of their visits. Osundairo has previously denied an insinuation by Smollet’s lawyers that the pair were sexually involved; he sued for defamation but the case was dismissed. Osundairo and his brother, Ola, claim Smollet paid them to orchestrate an attack on him in January of last year. The case made international headlines and Smollet was later charged with lying to police but the case was dropped. A special prosecutor later picked up the chase and in February of this year Smollet was charged on six new counts of lying to police; he is awaiting trial.
  • Oil prices sank on Wednesday after the United States reported a 19 million-barrel increase in inventories, the biggest weekly build ever, while forecasts showed global demand crumbling to its lowest levels in a quarter of a century due to the chinavirus pandemic. The grim figures undercut the weekend agreement between numerous global producers to cut output in coming months, making clear that supply reductions would not be enough to prevent storage from filling and leaving numerous barrels stranded.
  • Rachel Maddow’s brother David Maddow works for Twist Bioscience. Twist Bioscience is owned by Boris Nikolic, Jeffrey Epstein changed his will before he died to make Boris Nikolic the executor. Bill Gates is one of his investors. Boris Nikolic, Managing Director, Biomatics Capital – Dr. Nikolic is a physician and investor who previously served as chief advisor for science and technology to Bill Gates, leading select for-profit and not-for-profit investment activities. His investments spanned the life science, information technology and health care sectors, including companies such as Foundation Medicine, ResearchGate, Schrodinger and Nimbus Therapeutics. Dr. Nikolic completed postdoctoral training in transplantation immunology at Harvard Medical School and served as an assistant professor of medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital/Harvard Medical School. He has authored more than 70 articles, patents and patent applications, and has co-founded several biotechnology companies that have since been acquired. Dr. Nikolic earned his M.D. from University of Zagreb School of Medicine in Croatia, and clinical training at University Hospital Centre in Zagreb.
  • [Petiton to the White House] We Call For Investigations Into The β€œBill & Melinda Gates Foundation” For Medical Malpractice & Crimes Against Humanity. As we look at events surrounding the β€œCOVID-19 pandemic,” various questions remain unanswered. On Oct. 18th of 2019, only weeks prior to ground zero being declared in Wuhan, China, two major events took place. One is β€œEvent 201,” the other is the β€œMilitary World Games,” held in none other than Wuhan. Since then a worldwide push for vaccines & biometric tracking has been initiated. At the forefront of this is Bill Gates, who has publicly stated his interest in β€œreducing population growth” by 10-15%, by means of vaccination. Gates, UNICEF & WHO have already been credibly accused of intentionally sterilizing Kenyan children through the use of a hidden HCG antigen in tetanus vaccines. Congress & all other governing bodies are derelict in duty until a thorough and public inquiry is complete. LINK 
  • A tone-deaf Microsoft ad featuring performance artist Marina Abramovic has been memory-holed after it was pilloried online. Was it her β€˜spirit cooking’ notoriety from the Podesta emails or are people just sick of wealth-flaunting? An ad featuring the Serbian performer’s latest project, a β€œmixed reality” installation incorporating Microsoft’s HoloLens virtual-reality platform, clearly touched a nerve before it was removed earlier this week. The video received over 25,000 β€œthumbs down” on YouTube before it was yanked and, while comments were turned off, it’s safe to say the reception was a frosty one.
  • Scientists in Australia have made a significant if somewhat strange breakthrough in the development of non-addictive, but equally effective, alternative painkillers to opioids… by using spider venom. Dr Christina Schroeder and her team of researchers at the University of Queensland have created novel tarantula mini-proteins by using the venom of a Chinese bird spider, β€œconsidered extremely aggressive and highly venomous.” The mini protein, called Huwentoxin-IV, binds to pain receptors in the body and has been engineered for greater potency and targeting of specific pain receptors. The experimental new pain-relief drug has thus far proven highly effective in trials on mice and could one day lead to the development of alternatives to morphine-like drugs, such as fentanyl and oxycodone, which have plagued countries like the US throughout the global opioid crisis.
  • Russian President Vladimir Putin instructed the government to provide direct gratuitous state assistance to small and medium-sized businesses in the amount of 12,130 rubles ($162) per employee. β€œIn addition to the support measures that are already being taken I propose providing small and medium-sized companies of the affected sectors with direct gratuitous financial assistance from the state,” Putin said at a meeting with members of the government. β€œThe amount of support for a particular company will be calculated taking into account the total number of its employees as of April 1 of this year, proceeding from an amount of 12,130 rubles per employee per month, β€œPutin stated.
  • Iran’s Revolutionary Guard fired two missiles at Ukraine’s flight 752 on January 8 in the wake of Iran’s missile attacks on Iraqi military bases hosting U.S forces. Iranian authorities took responsibility for downing the flight and killing 176 passengers and crew members onboard the plane after three days of denials and later claiming that β€˜human error” was responsible for shooting the plane. Radio Farda has learned that Iran has sent the draft of a memorandum of understanding (MoU) to the Ukrainian Foreign Ministry according to which Ukraine and the families of the victims are to accept β€œhuman error” as the cause of the crash. The said document also stipulates that Ukraine and the families of the victims should not pursue criminal and judicial action against Iran in return for the payment of compensation by Iran and releasing the plane’s flight recorder’s contents after they are analyzed.
  • One of Brazil’s most wanted people, an alleged drug baron accused of running international cocaine operations for the country’s biggest gang, has been arrested in Mozambique. Gilberto β€œFuminho” Aparecido dos Santos, believed to be the leader of the First Capital Command (PCC), was arrested in an international sting that included agents from Brazil, Mozambique and the US Drug Enforcement Administration. Mozambican police confirmed the arrest on Tuesday. He is accused of shipping tonnes of cocaine around the world, the Brazilian federal police said β€œThe accused was considered the largest cocaine supplier” for the PCC, and had been on the run for more than 20 years, it said. Dos Santos was arrested at the Montebelo Indy, a luxury hotel in Maputo, along with two Nigerian nationals. He had arrived in the southern African country in mid-March.
  • Google has been ordered to turn over all Hillary Clinton emails from a Gmail account believed to contain backups to communications from her personal server which her IT specialist, Paul Combetta, reportedly scrubbed using BleachBit. Combetta allegedly used the Google account to transfer Clinton’s emails from a laptop to a server at Platte River Networks, after which BleachBit was used to remove all traces from the device. On Wednesday, watchdog group Judicial Watch announced that Google had been served with a subpoena seeking all Clinton email from January 21, 2009 until February 1, 2013 from her time at the Obama State Department where she served as Secretary of State. The issue of Gmail backups was raised during an August, 2019 hearing by US District Court Judge Royce Lamberth, who ordered JW to β€œshake this tree” and pursue the issue. Lamberth referenced a report released by Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA) in which he said he had some β€˜very troubling information’ about Combetta – who was granted immunity by the Obama Justice Department.
  • Just as the premium between physical and paper precious metals prices was starting to fade a little, the US Mint has decided to temporally halt all production at its West Point facility in New York because of the risk to employees from COVID-19. The timing of the decision to halt supply could not come at a worse time with demand for both gold and silver coins soaring near record highs. The Mint had previously redirected some silver bullion production to its Philadelphia facility, Michael White, a spokesman, said in an email.

Sun Activity

Sunspot number: 0
Spotless Days
Current Stretch: 10 days
2020 total: 80 days (75%)
2019 total: 281 days (77%)

Active Weather

  • Tropical Depression Jeruto Sounth Indian Ocean WV 30 Kts 1004 hPa – Moving West-South-West 5 Kts

Strongest EQ in Europe M4.1 Greece
Strongest EQ in North America M3.9 California
Strongest EQ on the Planet 5.7 Colombia
Deepest EQ M4.1 130 km Nepal

After the strong M4.7 off the coast of Syria on April 15 early morning with an M4 swarm we have seen a M4.1 in Northern Greece yesterday afternoon. Today the seismic force reached Italy that was hit all along with M3s in the south, M2 in Central Italy and M3.6 in the northwest. France, Pyrenees and Spain will probably see some low M3 in the next few days.

News Burst 16 April 2020 - Europe 15 April 2020

News Burst 16 April 2020

News Burst 14 April 2020 – Live Feed ~ April 14, 2020


News Burst 14 April 2020

News Burst 14 April 2020

News Burst 14 April 2020. By Disclosure News.

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News Burst 14 April 2020

  • A massive garden stones, the largest of which weighs 9.8 tons, were excavated at the residence, in Kyoto Japan, of a shogunate family in the Muromachi Period (1336-1573), in what archaeologists believe was a demonstration of their immense power and influence. The largest stone is nearly 3 meters long and one of eight, seven of which are situated around the site of a pond in the former residence of the Ashikaga Shogunate. Experts said the unearthed stones, unusually huge compared with those found at other garden sites of ruling elites, were undoubtedly intended to show off the great power wielded by the shogun and his family.
  • Russian authorities have arrested a group of several dozen individuals who allegedly sold more than 1 billion counterfeit rubles (roughly $13.6 million in nominal value) for crypto assets over the dark web. The Russian Ministry of Internal Affairs has described the scale and scope of the operation as unprecedented. Small batches of between 10,000 ($136) and 150,000 ($2,400) fake roubles were sold for 30 cents on the dollar, while bulk orders of 500,000 ($6,800) or more were priced at between 10% and 15% of their nominal value. Buyers would make payments using an anonymous wallet and exclusively with cryptocurrencies, Kommersant reports. The bills would then be delivered to various hiding places for collection.
  • A man involved in the death of a 1-year-old child in 2015 has pleaded guilty to injury to a child causing serious bodily injury and has been sentenced to 20 years in prison. Charles D. Flournoy, who is now 26 years old, is a co-defendant in the case and was the mother’s boyfriend. In February 2020, 23-year-old Madison Rodriguez was found guilty of aggravated assault, domestic violence with a deadly weapon causing serious bodily injury. She was sentenced to 50 years in prison. Rodriguez was 18-years-old when she was initially charged with capital murder in 2015. She, along with then 21-year-old Charles Dillon Flournoy were both charged in connection with the death of 1-year-old Mason Rodriguez.
  • Tech giants Apple and Google have joined forces to develop an interoperable contract-tracing tool that will help individuals determine if they have come in contact with someone infected with COVID-19. As part of this new initiative, the companies are expected to release an API that public agencies can integrate into their apps. The next iteration will be a built-in system-level platform that uses Bluetooth low energy (BLE) beacons to allow for contact tracing on an opt-in basis. The APIs are expected to be available mid-May for Android and iOS, with the broader contact tracing system set to roll out β€œin the coming months.” β€œPrivacy, transparency, and consent are of utmost importance in this effort, and we look forward to building this functionality in consultation with interested stakeholders,” the companies said. The rare collaboration comes as governments worldwide are increasingly turning to technology such as phone tracking and facial recognition to battle the virus and contain the coronavirus outbreak. [Root your phone!]
  • Criminal activities have decreased drastically in Kathmandu Valley in the last 20 days due to the government-imposed nationwide lockdown from March 24. A comparative data of 10 days from March 14 to March 23 (before the beginning of the lockdown) and the last 20 days of lockdown shows that crime rate has decreased by 86 per cent during the lockdown. A study conducted by THT includes 12 types of crimes β€” rape, murder, attempt to murder, drug abuse and trafficking, cyber crimes, theft, social offence, banking offence, black marketing, swindling, vehicular accidents and kidnapping. Kathmandu valley had seen a total of 10 rapes in 10 days just before the lockdown, while there were only three reported cases of rape during the 20- day lockdown period. There was no record of murder during the lockdown while three murders were recorded in the 10-day time-frame prior to the lockdown.
  • Antarctica is now a harsh land of ice and snow, but has not always been that way. Earth’s southernmost continent long ago was home to temperate, swampy rainforests teeming with life, scientists said on Wednesday based on pristinely preserved forest soil they retrieved by drilling under the seafloor off Antarctica’s coast. The sediment core obtained by scientists working aboard the research icebreaker RV Polarstern in the Amundsen Sea near the Pine Island Glacier dated to about 90 million years ago during the Cretaceous Period when dinosaurs were the dominant land animals. The researchers estimated based on the soil content that this location, 560 miles (900 km) from the South Pole, experienced average annual temperatures of about 53-55 degrees Fahrenheit (12-13 Celsius) and average temperatures during the warmest summer months of about 68-77 Fahrenheit (20-25 Celsius). That is exceptionally warm for a location near the South Pole, where the average annual temperature now is around minus 40 Fahrenheit (minus 40 Celsius).
  • Jordanian authorities arrested Roya TV channel’s owner, Fares Sayegh, and its news director and presenter, Mohammad al-Khalidi, on Thursday, over broadcasting a report of Jordanians suffering financial difficulties due to the coronavirus lockdown. Both Sayegh and Khalidi will remain in custody for 14 days, local media reported. Jordan is a cash-strapped kingdom with a national debt standing at $42.6bn in January 2020. A general lockdown was imposed on 20 March in towns and cities, and businesses were asked to shut amid fear of coronavirus’ spread. Numbers of infected people and Covid-19-related deaths remain relatively low in the kingdom, with 372 confirmed cases and seven dead. But as in many countries, Jordanians are said to be feeling the economic pinch without the ability to work or secure income. Roya’s report showed one man and two women saying that they were going to be forced β€œto beg” and break the curfew orders, as they had been left without any income.
  • Kim Jong Un’s Sister’s Rise Continues. Kim Yo Jong was reappointed to North Korea’s politburo. She was appointed to North Korea’s politburo in 2017 but is believed to have been removed last year after a second Kim-Trump summit fell through. Now she’s been reinstated. Kim Yo Jong has long been a close aide to her brother, but is recently rising again within the country’s hierarchy, experts say. On Saturday, she was reappointed to the central committee’s political bureau as an alternate member; the Korea Herald describes it as the top policymaking body in the country and says Kim Yo Jong’s reappointment marks her β€œcomeback.” Other top officials were also reshuffled that day, with Kim Jong Un presiding over the meeting during which Kim Yo Jong’s appointment was confirmed. She was also recently appointed first vice-department director of the central committee of the ruling Workers’ Party, and just last month started issuing statements under her own name. Also at Saturday’s meeting, the party adopted a resolution to take β€œmore thorough state measures to protect life and safety of our people from the great worldwide epidemic disease” of COVID-19. North Korea officially claims zero coronavirus cases, but the Korea Times reports some observers think the country might be hushing up an outbreak.
  • Child sex abuse in Pakistan’s religious schools is endemic. Muhimman is just 11 years old and was a good student who had dreams of being a doctor. Earlier this year, a cleric at the religious school he faithfully attended in the southern Punjab town of Pakpattan took him into a washroom and tried to rape him. Muhimman’s aunt, Shazia, said she believes the abuse of young children is endemic in Pakistan’s religious schools. She said she has known the cleric, Moeed Shah, since she was a little girl and describes him as an habitual abuser who used to ask little girls to pull up their shirts. Dozens of police reports, known in Pakistan as First Information Reports, alleging sexual harassment, rape and physical abuse by Islamic clerics teaching in madrassas or religious schools throughout Pakistan, where many of the country’s poorest study. There are more than 22,000 registered madrassas in Pakistan, teaching more than 2 million children.
  • Seven illegal immigrants were arrested at Outjo on Sunday in a joint operation between the Ministry of Home Affairs and Immigration and the Namibian Police. According to the spokesperson of the Otjozunjupa police the operation, conducted by members of the police and immigration officials, resulted in seven illegal immigrants, five men and two women, from Zimbabwe being arrested without the necessary immigration permits or documentation.
  • From meditation to memory games, former political prisoners in Myanmar are dishing out tips on surviving isolation in a pandemic as the country once severed from the world again closes its borders. The south-east Asian state spent nearly half a century under a paranoid, secretive junta that violently suppressed dissent, jailed its critics and locked the country off as it drove the economy into ruin. Pro-democracy activist Bo Kyi (56) was one of thousands jailed, spending eight years behind bars in the 1990s. His punishment included 12 months in solitary confinement in a cell of 2,5 m by 3,5 m which was furnished with just a bowl for a toilet and a mat to sleep on. Last week he posted advice on Facebook about how to cope with isolation to his compatriots holed up at home, gripped by fears over the coronavirus in a country with a threadbare public health system.
  • A Brooklyn Center woman charged with duping several members of the Hmong community into investing in a nonexistent ginseng farm was arrested in Georgia after eluding authorities for more than two years. Mai Vu Vang, 51, was arrested and extradited to Minnesota over the weekend. Minnesota authorities allege that between 2012 and 2014, Vang persuaded nine Minnesota victims to give her more than $450,000 for a purported farm near Wausau, Wis. A couple who knew Vang from church gave her their life savings, the county attorney’s office said. Investigators discovered that in those two years, Vang spent an increasingly higher amount of money at Mystic Lake Casino buying chips or playing slot machines, eventually totaling more than a million dollars.
  • When Lion Air Flight 610 took off in clear skies a year ago, the 737 jetliner carried with it an anti-stall system designed by Boeing that would propel the plane into a nose-dive minutes after takeoff, killing all 189 aboard. But the plane was saddled with another safety burden. Flight 610 was operated by Lion Air, a low-cost Indonesian carrier that has benefited from its political connections to become one of the world’s fastest growing airlines, despite a questionable safety record. While Boeing has faced intense scrutiny after two fatal crashes in less than five months, Lion Air has escaped similar attention.

Sun Activity

Sunspot number: 0
Spotless Days
Current Stretch: 8 days
2020 total: 78 days (75%)
2019 total: 281 days (77%)

Strongest EQ in Europe M4.1 Albania
Strongest EQ in North America M3.2 29 km depth California – Nevada Border
Strongest EQ on the Planet 5.2 Peru
Deepest EQ M4.2 180 km Argentina News Burst 14 April 2020

News Burst 12-13 April 2020 – Live Feed ~ April 13, 2020


News Burst 12-13 April 2020

  • The Afghan radical movement Taliban (outlawed in Russia) plans to release 20 Afghan government prisoners on Sunday, who will be handed over to the International Committee of Red Cross, a spokesman for the Taliban’s Qatar office, Suhail Shaheen, said on Twitter. β€œToday, 20 prisoners of the Kabul Administration [Afghan government] will be released by the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan [Taliban] and handed over to ICRC in Kandahar,” Shaheen wrote.
  • George Pell admitted he is ashamed of his church’s handling of child sex abuse. The cardinal was released from jail on Tuesday after convictions were quashed.
  • Hackers have accessed the mailboxes of some employees at Italian state-owned bank Monte dei Paschi and sent emails to clients, according to a notice to customers seen by Reuters. Monte dei Paschi told clients in the notice that on March 30 some messages with voice mail attachments had been sent as a result of the cyber attack. The notice to customers made no mention of any breach of company data. It did not say what, if any, information had been asked for, or if any customers had suffered any loss as a result of the emails. The bank declined to comment.
  • The convicted celebrity lawyer Michael Avenatti has been granted temporary freedom from a New York City jail by a California federal judge who said the spread of the novel coronavirus was a compelling reason to release him. He may stay at a friend’s home during the 90-day release period.
    Avenatti must first be quarantined for 14 days at a Federal Bureau of Prisons facility, to ensure he does not have the coronavirus or symptoms, before moving to the home of Jay Manheimer in Venice, California. He would wear an electronic monitoring bracelet, have no internet access, and except for health emergencies be unable to leave Manheimer’s home without permission. Bond was set at $1 million.
  • Anti-5G fever spreads to the Netherlands as towers suffer β€œarson and sabotage”. Several 5G broadcasting masts across the Netherlands were damaged in what authorities have described as β€œa worrying development.” Similar acts of sabotage have previously been seen in the UK.
  • Up to 300,000 Spanish babies were stolen from their parents and sold for adoption over a period of five decades, a new investigation reveals. The children were trafficked by a secret network of doctors, nurses, priests and nuns in a widespread practice that began during General Franco’s dictatorship and continued until the early Nineties. Hundreds of families who had babies taken from Spanish hospitals are now battling for an official government investigation into the scandal. Experts believe the cases may account for up to 15 per cent of the total adoptions that took place in Spain between 1960 and 1989. It began as a system for taking children away from families deemed politically dangerous to the regime of General Franco, which began in 1939. The system continued after the dictator’s death in 1975 as the Catholic church continued to retain a powerful influence on public life, particularly in social services.
  • Prince Andrew secret indictment. Shunned by his mom, Queen Elizabeth, and his royal kin, disgraced Prince Andrew has been secretly indicted by a federal Grand Jury. Sources say Andrew’s only slim hope now rides on the legal skills of his pit bull lawyer, Claire Montgomery, London’s top extradition expert β€” who once saved one of the world’s most evil dictators β€” to keep from being shamefully hauled to America in shackles for trial. β€œThis is the hammer finally dropping on the playboy prince who’s been such a notorious womanizer he was nicknamed β€˜Randy Andy,’” Insiders say the 60-yearold Duke of York’s indictment is currently under seal and follows his snub of U.S. Attorney Geoffrey Berman, who wanted to grill Andrew about Epstein and his cohorts’ involvement in the sex trafficking of young girls. While Berman admits having contact with Andrew’s legal eagles, the prosecutor says the duke β€œcompletely shut the door on voluntary cooperation,” so he was β€œconsidering options” to get his story. But insiders believe another lawman beat him to the punch β€” and obtained an indictment against Andrew. However, details are scarce. Now, as damning evidence mounts and he’s squeezed by the law, Andrew’s become suicidal, sources say. As media reported, insiders claim the shamed prince had to have his stomach pumped after downing a bottle of pills in his palace apartment.
  • The Mexican Sinaloa Cartel cartel is staying in a town called Machiques de PerijΓ‘ under the complacent gaze of NicolΓ‘s Maduro’s regime. The dreaded Sinaloa Cartel, one of the most notorious criminal groups in the world, has found the perfect refuge in Venezuela to operate under the complacent gaze of NicolΓ‘s Maduro’s regime. In San Felipe, a village near Machiques de PerijΓ‘ in the northwestern state of Zulia, hearing Mexican accents has become routine. Local residents near the border with Colombia say that the presence of Mexicans is so strong the town has been unofficially renamed Sinaloa.
  • After four days of marathon talks, major global oil producers have finally inked an agreement to slash oil output by 9.7 million barrels per day (bpd), in a bid to boost the energy market amid the coronavirus pandemic. The members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and other oil-producing states outside of the cartel, known as OPEC+, reached the deal to cut their output for May and June, Kuwait’s Oil Minister Khaled Al-Fadhel announced on Twitter.
  • Nepal, Bara city: According to locals eyewitnesses, four goats were bitten to death by dogs at nearby jungle area this afternoon. β€œAround five dogs appeared in the area out of no where and killed the goats which were grazing around by chasing them down,” Anisha Lama, a local goatherd, said. After the incident, all the goats were buried in the nearby area. After the lockdown, most of the hospitals around the country are witnessing a surge in the number of animal bite cases in recent days.
  • Staff in food distribution, communications, sanitation and other non-essential sectors are now allowed to go to work in Spain. These workers will be able to return to work this Monday following a 14-day self-isolation regime that saw all industries – except for healthcare and food – shut down across all of Spain, local media reported. Back in late March, the β€œnon-essential” staff were sent on paid leave. With the lockdown partially lifted, schools, bars, restaurants, cultural and leisure facilities will remain closed.
  • A military aircraft has crashed during a routine mission near Gujarat, Pakistan’s Inter-Services Public Relations reported on Monday. According to a statement from the Air Force, Major Umer, an instructor pilot, and Lieutenant Faizan, a student pilot, died in the crash. This is the fourth major crash for the country’s Air Force this year and the second in just over a month after an F-16 crashed on 11 March while rehearsing for the β€œPakistan Day” parade in Islamabad.

Sun Activity

Sunspot number: 0
Spotless Days
Current Stretch: 8 days
2020 total: 78 days (75%)
2019 total: 281 days (77%)

Strongest EQ in Europe M3.9 Crete, Greece
Strongest EQ in North America M3.5 Idaho
Strongest EQ on the Planet 5.0 Philippines
Deepest EQ M4.2 291 km Northern Mariana Islands News Burst 12-13 April 2020

News Burst 11 April 2020 – Live Feed ~ April 11, 2020


News Burst 11 April 2020

  • Former Republican Congressman and Libertarian superstar Ron Paul is calling for President Donald Trump to fire β€œfraud” Dr. Anthony Fauci, the infectious disease specialist leading medical response to the coronavirus.President Trump’s medical response to the coronavirus. Paul asserted that if Trump doesn’t get rid of Dr. Fauci, β€œthe people have to fire him”.
  • Over the past few weeks, there has been a substantial reduction in air pollution over metropolitan parts of the Northeast United States, as communities across the country are under strict lockdown measures amid the pandemic. According to a Thursday news release by NASA, the average concentrations of atmospheric nitrogen dioxide in March 2020 in the Northeast US are the lowest of any March measured since 2005. The nitrogen dioxide concentrations are measured by the Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI) on Aura, the US space agency’s multinational research satellite in orbit around the Earth, studying the planet’s air quality and climate.
  • Sen. Rand Paul announced Tuesday that he has tested negative for COVID-19 just over two weeks after finding out he had been diagnosed with the virus, adding that he is now volunteering at a local hospital.
  • Krakatau volcano (Indonesia): Violent eruption, ash to 47,000 ft altitude. This seems to be the strongest eruptive phase since the violent phreatomagmatic activity following the partial collapse of the volcano on 22 Dec 2018, which had triggered a deadly tsunami that killed hundreds of people on Java’s west coast.
  • Harvey Weinstein charged with new sexual assault count in Los Angeles. The new charge against Harvey Weinstein comes as the Oscar-winning producer and Democratic party megadonor sits in a New York jail after being sentenced last month to 23 years following his conviction of raping a hairstylist and forcibly performing oral sex on a former Project Runway production assistant. Convicted sex offender Harvey Weinstein has been charged with a new sexual assault count in Los Angeles stemming from an incident that allegedly occurred in 2010, according to the county’s district attorney’s office. If convicted as charged in the amended complaint, Weinstein faces up to 29 years in state prison, according to the D.A.’s office.
  • Elon Musk’s mocked fears amid the COVID-19 pandemic, tweeting that β€œthe coronavirus panic is dumb”. The outbreak has sent global economy into turmoil, forcing many to work from home and many more into the unemployment lines while damaging markets worldwide. SpaceX and Tesla founder Elon Musk tweeted a meme showing an asteroid smashing into Earth while an astronaut on the moon exclaims: β€œOh God, The Economy!”, adding a mysterious β€œBut actually” caption. The meme is apparently dedicated to pointing out the absurdity of making money more important than human compassion amid the coronavirus outbreak. Musk’s tweet left some netizens guessing why the billionaire shared the meme using those precise words.
  • Woman who accused Biden of sexual assault files criminal complaint with police. Tara Reade, a former staffer to then-Senator Joe Biden, has reportedly filed a formal criminal complaint against the now-presidential candidate over an alleged sexual assault from the early 90s. The left-wing mainstream media has largely ignored the allegations against Biden, who once said on the issue of women coming forward with allegations of sexual misconduct, β€œFor a woman to come forward in the glaring lights of focus, nationally, you’ve got to start off with the presumption that at least the essence of what she’s talking about is real, whether or not she forgets facts, whether or not it’s been made worse or better over time.”
  • U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin told major airlines on Friday he wants them to repay some of the $25 billion in cash grants the U.S. Congress approved last month to cover payroll costs as airlines weather an unprecedented crisis due to the coronavirus, three industry officials briefed on the matter told Reuters. The Treasury said in a statement Mnuchin will not require passenger air carriers that will receive $100 million in payroll assistance or less to provide compensation and β€œfunds will be available promptly upon approval of their applications.”
    Reports earlier on Friday said that Treasury would not seek warrants from smaller regional carriers, which had urged the government not to demand compensation. Mnuchin spoke with the chief executives of major airlines in separate calls on Friday and told them the department was offering 70% of the aid in grants that would not need to be repaid, and 30% in low-interest loans for which the airlines would be required to offer warrants, the sources said.
  • Washington Post reporter Darran Simon was found dead Thursday in his apartment, according to a memo sent to staffers. The cause of death has not been announced. Simon covered government and politics at WaPo, according to a Jan. 30 announcement from WaPo. Simon previously worked as a senior news writer at CNN, the announcement noted.
  • Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano of Rome called on his fellow clergy to perform a mass exorcism on Holy Saturday, the day between Good Friday, Jesus’ crucifixion, and Easter Sunday, celebrating his resurrection. β€œIn these modern times of terrible tribulation, when the pandemic has deprived Catholics of Holy Mass and the Sacraments, the Evil One has gone into a frenzy and multiplied his attacks to tempt souls into sin,” ViganΓ² wrote in a letter shared by LifeSiteNews. β€œThese blessed days of Holy Week, which used to be the ideal time to go to Confession to prepare ourselves for our Easter Communion, now see us locked inside our houses, but they cannot stop us praying to Our Lord.”
  • Chloroquine for the 2019 novel coronavirus SARS-CoV-2. Chlorquine is the ionophore that gets the zinc into the cells. In vitro the zinc will destroy most viruses up to and including Hepatitis C. It’s actually the zinc that does the job. In the current episode of novel coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) emergence, we find a spectacular example of possible repositioning of drugs, particularly chloroquine. This drug has multiple activities. At the time of the severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS)-associated coronavirus epidemic in 2003, several molecules were tested to assess their effectiveness against this virus. Among these, teicoplanin , an antistaphylococcal agent, had proven efficacy in vitro, and this was also the case for chloroquine, at a 50% effective concentration. These findings ended up being forgotten because of the disappearance of SARS for reasons that are neither clear nor explained. The novel coronavirus currently isolated in China has been, with staggering speed, evaluated regarding its sensitivity to already used drugs. Thus, the new antiviral drug remdesivir as well as chloroquine, were found to be effective in preventing replication of this virus. Chloroquine is perhaps one of the most prescribed drugs in the world. As a matter of fact, all Europeans visiting malaria-endemic geographic areas for decades received chloroquine prophylaxis and continued it for 2 months after their return. In addition, local residents took chloroquine continuously, and treatment of malaria has long been based on this drug. In addition, hydroxychloroquine has been used for decades at much higher doses (up to 600 mg/day) to treat autoimmune diseases. It is difficult to find a product that currently has a better established safety profile than chloroquine. Furthermore, its cost is negligible. Hence, its possible use both in prophylaxis in people exposed to the novel coronavirus and as a curative treatment will probably be promptly evaluated by our Chinese colleagues. If clinical data confirm the biological results, the novel coronavirus-associated disease will have become one of the simplest and cheapest to treat and prevent among infectious respiratory diseases.

Sun Activity

Sunspot number: 0
Spotless Days
Current Stretch: 6 days
2020 total: 74 days (75%)
2019 total: 281 days (77%)

Strongest EQ in Europe M3.3 South Italy
Strongest EQ in North America M3.7 Nevada
Strongest EQ on the Planet 5.9 Luzon Strait
Deepest EQ M4.6 387 km South of the Fiji Islands News Burst 11 April 2020