Showing posts with label Border. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Border. Show all posts

Monday, March 31, 2014

Exclusive: Syrian forces trying to secure border areas in Idlib province

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Exclusive: Syrian forces trying to secure border areas in Idlib province

North and South Korea firing huge amounts of artillery across maritime border

By End the Lie


U.S. artillerymen with Battery I prepare to demonstrate the fire sequence of an M777A2 155 mm lightweight howitzer for Republic of Korea (ROK) Marines at the Rodriguez Live-Fire Complex during Korean Marine Exchange Program (KMEP) 13-8 on August 17, 2013 (Image credit: Lance Cpl. Kasey Peacock/U.S. Pacific Command/Flickr)

U.S. artillerymen with Battery I prepare to demonstrate the fire sequence of an M777A2 155 mm lightweight howitzer for Republic of Korea (ROK) Marines at the Rodriguez Live-Fire Complex during Korean Marine Exchange Program (KMEP) 13-8 on August 17, 2013 (Image credit: Lance Cpl. Kasey Peacock/U.S. Pacific Command/Flickr)



North and South Korea have exchanged artillery fire into each other’s waters a day after North Korea raised the possibility of more nuclear tests, according to reports.


Read our latest: “Reports: NSA spied on 122 world leaders, had over 300 reports on Merkel” and “Obama: Russia must move troops away from border with Ukraine


The exchange of fire came after North Korea carried out what CNN called “provocative live-fire exercises near the South Korean maritime border.”


North Korea began the drill just after noon Monday, semiofficial South Korean news agency Yonhap reported.


South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff confirmed that some ordnance fired by North Korea landed in the waters of South Korea and that they responded with fire.


The two countries fired almost 1,000 artillery shells total, with North Korea firing some 500 over more than three hours.


Some 100 of the North Korean artillery shells fell south of the water border, according to South Korean Defense Ministry spokesman Kim Min-seok.


South Korea responded by firing 300 artillery shells into the waters of North Korea, he said, according to the Associated Press.


While the firing of artillery shells can be seen as an escalation of tensions between the two countries, no shells by either side were fired at land or military installations.


Still, the spokesman said that North Korea’s actions are a provocation aimed at testing the security posture of South Korea.


In addition to firing the some 300 shells back into North Korean waters, South Korea dispatched fighter jets near the Northern Limit Line, the disputed maritime border between North Korea and South Korea.


When the defense spokesman was asked what South Korea was firing back at, he said, “We are not shooting at North Korea, just shooting into the sea.”


The North Korean exercise “appeared to be more saber-rattling from Pyongyang rather than the start of a military standoff,” according to Reuters.


This comes after North Korea said South Korea was guilty of “gangster-like” behavior for “abducting” a North Korean fishing boat.


South Korea, however, maintained tat they sent the boat back after drifting into its waters.


The actions by North Korea were criticized by the White House, who called them “dangerous and provocative.”


The White House said that North Korea’s threats and provocations are only acting to isolate it further.


“We remain steadfast in our commitment (to) the defense of our allies and remain in close coordination with both the Republic of Korea and Japan,” said White House National Security Council spokesman Jonathan Lalley, according to Reuters.


Residents of five of the front-line South Korean islands were sent to shelters during the North Korean artillery fire and the ferry service that links the islands to the mainland was stopped temporarily, according to an official with Ongjin county, which governs the islands.


No immediate comment was issued by North Korea, the AP reports.


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North and South Korea firing huge amounts of artillery across maritime border

Thursday, March 27, 2014

LibertyNEWS TV - "Nation Changer! The Border Busting Immigration Train Rolls On"

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LibertyNEWS TV - "Nation Changer! The Border Busting Immigration Train Rolls On"

Thursday, March 13, 2014

Drones over Down Under: Australia to spend $2.7bn on border UAV patrols

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Drones over Down Under: Australia to spend $2.7bn on border UAV patrols

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

After Annexing Crimea, Russian Troops Are Piling Up By The East Ukraine Border

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After Annexing Crimea, Russian Troops Are Piling Up By The East Ukraine Border

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

U.S. border patrol agent has standoff with armed Mexican soldiers after border crossing

U.S. border patrol agent has standoff with armed Mexican soldiers after border crossing
http://www.infowars.com/wp-content/plugins/wp-print/images/printer_famfamfam.gif


Brent McCluskey
guns.com
March 11, 2014


After a tense standoff with raised weapons, a U.S. border patrol agent turned back a pair of armed Mexican soldiers that had crossed the border on foot just outside Sasabe, Arizona, last January.


On the morning of Jan. 26, U.S. Border Patrol Agent David Olaya spotted two armed men walk onto U.S. soil nearly 2 1/2 miles west of the Sasabe Port of Entry. The lone agent confronted the subjects, who were wearing camouflage and appeared to be “Mexican personnel,” and after a harrowing standoff they lowered their Heckler & Koch G3 rifles and turned back towards Mexico, BuzzFeed reports.


The soldiers identified themselves as part of the Mexican military’s 80th Battalion, but the names they provided didn’t match the name on their uniforms. When Olaya questioned why they had crossed the international border, they said they “had been pursing [sic] three subjects that were seen in the area.”


Read more


This article was posted: Tuesday, March 11, 2014 at 3:44 pm









Infowars




Read more about U.S. border patrol agent has standoff with armed Mexican soldiers after border crossing and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Sunday, March 9, 2014

LibertyNEWS TV - ""Conservative Senators Board the Border Surge Bandwagon"

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LibertyNEWS TV - ""Conservative Senators Board the Border Surge Bandwagon"

Pro-Russia Troops Install Minefields, Border Markers in Crimea; Gazprom Ups Price of Natural Gas 37%, Calls in $2 Billion Gas Debt

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Pro-Russia Troops Install Minefields, Border Markers in Crimea; Gazprom Ups Price of Natural Gas 37%, Calls in $2 Billion Gas Debt

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Mexico Irate Over Border Patrol Use of Force Against Rock Attack


Jessica Vaughan
cis.org
February 25, 2014


Following the shooting death last week of a Mexican illegal alien with an extensive criminal record who assaulted a U.S. Border Patrol agent with rocks (one reportedly the size of a basketball), the government of Mexico is demanding that the Obama administration prohibit Border Patrol agents from using lethal force to protect themselves. Reports CNN:


“We also firmly reiterate that the use of lethal force in border control operations is unacceptable. The Government of Mexico expects the results of the investigations and that those responsible be held accountable,” the Secretariat of Foreign Relations said in a statement Thursday.



Assaults on Border Patrol officers are a serious problem. According to a recent DHS internal audit, the number of assaults reported was 549 in 2012, down from about 1,000 a year from 2007 to 2010. Nearly all of them occurred on the U.S.-Mexico border.


Read more


This article was posted: Wednesday, February 26, 2014 at 12:28 pm









Infowars



Mexico Irate Over Border Patrol Use of Force Against Rock Attack

Will Mexico’s capture of ‘El Chapo’ mean border instability? US agents on alert.


Lourdes Medrano
weeklystandard.com
February 26, 2014


The weekend capture of top drug lord Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán is being hailed as a major victory for Mexico, but some are cautioning that his arrest could unleash a wave of violence, particularly along the US-Mexico border.


Mr. Guzmán had control of, among other areas, the state of Sonora, which shares the international boundary with Arizona. Sonora is no stranger to violence triggered by disturbance to drug cartel leadership: In December 2009, when Mexican security forces killed Arturo Beltrán Leyva, a former Guzmán ally-turned-rival, the death ushered in a battle between factions in the city of Nogales, which shares its name with its US neighbor, and surrounding communities.


In one instance, a shootout left at least 21 people dead.


Read more


This article was posted: Wednesday, February 26, 2014 at 12:34 pm









Infowars



Will Mexico’s capture of ‘El Chapo’ mean border instability? US agents on alert.

Monday, February 24, 2014

DHS Denies Muslim Terrorists Crossing US Mexican Border – Local Reporter Finds Evidence to the Contrary

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DHS Denies Muslim Terrorists Crossing US Mexican Border – Local Reporter Finds Evidence to the Contrary

Taliban kill 21 Afghan soldiers in night raid on Pakistan border


Emma Graham-Harrison
The Guardian
February 24, 2014


The Taliban killed 21 Afghan soldiers on Sunday at a remote outpost near the border with Pakistan, and took at least five others prisoner, in a show of military strength just weeks before a critical election.


The night raid was one of the deadliest single attacks in recent years on the Afghan military, who are stronger and more disciplined than the police and less often targeted directly by insurgents.


President Hamid Karzai cancelled a planned trip to Sri Lanka to deal with the fallout from the deaths, and in a swipe at his neighbour condemned Islamabad for tolerating havens for the insurgents just inside its border.


Read more


This article was posted: Monday, February 24, 2014 at 1:32 pm










Infowars



Taliban kill 21 Afghan soldiers in night raid on Pakistan border

Sunday, December 29, 2013

Man mysteriously found dead in U.S. border control cell after being arrested for marijuana possession


Steven Keith even had moved to Thailand years ago but was visiting family in San Diego for the holidays when he diedDaily Mail


The cause of death of a man who collapsed in a San Diego Border Patrol holding cell on Christmas Eve after he was taken into custody for allegedly carrying three pounds of marijuana, is being investigated by the County Medical Examiner’s office.


U.S. citizen Steven Keith, 58, was stopped at a checkpoint on Interstate 8, near the Mexican border.  


He was arrested and taken to a holding cell at the Campo Border Patrol station after authorities said they found marijuana, drug paraphernalia and traces of methamphetamine in his car.


Steven Keith even had moved to Thailand years ago but was visiting family in San Diego for the holidays when he diedSteven Keith even had moved to Thailand years ago but was visiting family in San Diego for the holidays when he died


Several hours after sitting in a holding cell, officials said Keith became ‘incoherent and unresponsive.’


Border Patrol emergency medical technicians performed CPR on Keith while waiting on paramedics to arrive. Paramedics took over life-saving efforts but were unable to revive Keith, officials said.


Keith’s sister Janet, who lives in Texas, said Steven had moved to Thailand years ago but was visiting family in San Diego for the holidays.


Janet said the medical examiner told her an autopsy was done, but they couldn’t release the cause of death for 90 days while toxicology tests are being completed, reports ABC10.


Keith, pictured here in an old family photo, collapsed in a San Diego Border Patrol holding cell on Christmas Eve after he was taken into custody for allegedly carrying three pounds of marijuanaKeith, pictured here in an old family photo, collapsed in a San Diego Border Patrol holding cell on Christmas Eve after he was taken into custody for allegedly carrying three pounds of marijuana


Janet, a former police officer, said her brother was in good health. He had no partner or children.


‘I am a former police officer myself and I definitely want some answers and I’m going to get them,’ she told UT San Diego.


‘Customs and Border Protection’s San Diego Sector Border Patrol is cooperating fully with these investigators to ensure a neutral third party reviews all evidence and information surrounding this unfortunate death,’ said a statement released by the Border Patrol.


The Department of Homeland Security Office of Investigator General is also investigating the incident.


Alliance San Diego, a human rights organization, is monitoring the incident as well.


‘Border Patrol is under a whole lot of pressure to make sure their agents are properly trained and to make sure when cases like this happen information is properly given to the family,’ said Christian Ramirez with Alliance San Diego.


Video: Family wants answers after man dies in Border Patrol custody



Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2530720/Man-mysteriously-dead-U-S-border-control-cell-arrested-marijuana-possession.html#ixzz2ovBosLN9
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Man mysteriously found dead in U.S. border control cell after being arrested for marijuana possession

Thursday, November 7, 2013

Kurds protest against wall along Turkey"s border with Syria


Thursday, October 3, 2013

Border Patrol Loaning Predator Drones to Military, State, and Local Police


Joe Wolverton, II, J.D.
The New American
October 3, 2013


Think state and local law enforcement aren’t watching you with high-tech federally-owned drones? Think again.


In a new post, the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF)reports that Customs and Border Protection (CBP), a division of the Department of Homeland Security, released an updated list of “times the agency has flown its Predator drones on behalf of other agencies — 500 flights in total over a three-year period.”


Some of the more interesting revelations contained in the report — obtained by EFF as a result of a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit — include the fact that CBP drones flew more than 100 missions on behalf of the Department of Justice.


As the EFF story indicates, this level of cooperation between CBP and the Department of Justice “is in direct contradiction to a recently released DOJ Office of Inspector General (OIG) Report (pdf) that stated DHS had flown its drones on only two occasions for DOJ law enforcement components.”


Although many of the agencies borrowing CBP drones were revealed in earlier lists, there are a few new entries: “Grand Forks SWAT, the North Dakota Narcotics Task Force, the Bureau of Indian Affairs, the Arizona Department of Public Safety, the Minnesota Drug Task Force, and several branches of the military.”


Read that again: “Several branches of the military” are flying drone missions above the United States. For what lawful purpose could the armed forces be conducting such operations domestically? Furthermore, the likelihood is high that such activities run afoul of the Posse Comitatus Act, which prohibits the U.S. military from performing domestic law-enforcement duties.


In addition to the military and its fellow federal agencies, the CBP admitted that it is lending its drone fleet to “several county sheriff’s departments.” In the document provided to EFF, the CBP refused, however, to identify the names of the local law-enforcement departments borrowing these aircraft. CBP claims that to disclose the identity of the police departments or sheriff’s offices using its drones would “reveal that CBP is aware of the illegal activities taking place in a particular location.”


  • A d v e r t i s e m e n t


Seemingly, CBP believes (or claims to believe) that if it were to list these lenders, the criminals in those regions would be tipped off to the surveillance and would thus escape arrest.


Perhaps most fearful of all is that despite official recommendations and reprimands, the CBP refuses to promulgate any sort of code of conduct for drone flights that would explicitly protect the privacy rights of Americans protected by the Fourth Amendment.


The Fourth Amendment mandates:


The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.


As the Office of the Inspector General recognizes, drones are something apart from traditional surveillance aircraft and raise “unique concerns about privacy and the collection of evidence.” This distinction arises chiefly because of drones’ “pervasive tracking of an individual’s movements.”


Is there in fact a legal distinction to be made between the level of search conducted by the human eye (whether the searcher is on foot or in a helicopter) and that of a drone’s powerful never-blinking optics? Such an inarguable increase in police perception is not an insignificant decrease in the privacy expectation enjoyed by landowners and protected for centuries by timeless principles of Anglo-American law.


Given this encroachment into the formerly sacrosanct territory of individual liberty, Americans are right to resist the government’s apparent plan to fill the skies of our Republic with remote-controlled agents of the president and police.


In point of fact, a warrant becomes unnecessary when the search is being conducted using a drone. The target of the hunt will likely be unaware that he is being tracked and thus government (at any level) can keep a close eye on those considered threats to national (or local) security without having to permit the eye of the court to look over their shoulder.


Regardless, CBP has been running the loan-a-drone program for years.


Beginning in 2006, CBP began purchasing (as yet) unarmed Predator drones to purportedly aid in securing America’s southern border. According to a report written by the DHS inspector general, as of the end of 2012, CBP will have 12 of these aircraft in its arsenal with a total cost to taxpayers of nearly $ 200 million.


Inexplicably, the CBP took delivery of two drones in 2011 and 2012 despite the inspector general’s statement that “CBP had not adequately planned resources needed to support its current unmanned aircraft inventory.”


So, since they weren’t using the drones they already bought, why not buy more?


Although that spendthrift attitude is typical of government agency budgeting, perhaps the purchase of Predators is motivated by a goal a bit more sinister than either DHS or the Obama administration is willing to admit.


These other purposes are even hinted at in the DHS report. The tasks being performed by the CBP drones extend well beyond the patrolling of the border and into many other areas, a situation described by one reporter as “mission creep.” Here is a brief catalog of some of the ways CBP is farming out its drone fleet.


CBP Predators have been used to conduct missions for the following federal and state government agencies: U.S. Secret Service, Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE); Bureau of Land Management; Federal Bureau of Investigation; Department of Defense; Texas Rangers; U.S. Forest Service; and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).


With regard to ICE’s use of the CBP drone, the inspector general’s report indicates that the aircraft “provided surveillance over a suspected smuggler’s tunnel, which yielded information that, according to an ICE representative, would have required many cars and agents to obtain.” Yes, without the loan-a-drone program, the ICE surveillance mission would have required “many cars and agents,” as well as a warrant. With a drone, the government doesn’t need no stinkin’ warrant.


In a separate report issued in April 2012 by the Department of Defense, the Pentagon revealed the locations of over 100 new domestic sites that could soon serve as launch sites for military drones.


The list of present and proposed drone bases includes 39 of the 50 states, as well as Guam and Puerto Rico.


The EFF’s revelations concerning CBP’s willingness to keep its drones airborne on behalf of federal, state, and local law enforcement and other agencies are disturbing.


States, if they wish to protect their citizens from such constant surveillance, should follow James Madison’s advice and demonstrate their “refusal to cooperate with officers of the Union” in the latter’s effort to convert all citizens into suspects.


This article was posted: Thursday, October 3, 2013 at 11:08 am









Prison Planet.com



Border Patrol Loaning Predator Drones to Military, State, and Local Police

Border Patrol Loaning Predator Drones to Military, State, and Local Police


Joe Wolverton, II, J.D.
The New American
October 3, 2013


Think state and local law enforcement aren’t watching you with high-tech federally-owned drones? Think again.


In a new post, the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF)reports that Customs and Border Protection (CBP), a division of the Department of Homeland Security, released an updated list of “times the agency has flown its Predator drones on behalf of other agencies — 500 flights in total over a three-year period.”


Some of the more interesting revelations contained in the report — obtained by EFF as a result of a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit — include the fact that CBP drones flew more than 100 missions on behalf of the Department of Justice.


As the EFF story indicates, this level of cooperation between CBP and the Department of Justice “is in direct contradiction to a recently released DOJ Office of Inspector General (OIG) Report (pdf) that stated DHS had flown its drones on only two occasions for DOJ law enforcement components.”


Although many of the agencies borrowing CBP drones were revealed in earlier lists, there are a few new entries: “Grand Forks SWAT, the North Dakota Narcotics Task Force, the Bureau of Indian Affairs, the Arizona Department of Public Safety, the Minnesota Drug Task Force, and several branches of the military.”


Read that again: “Several branches of the military” are flying drone missions above the United States. For what lawful purpose could the armed forces be conducting such operations domestically? Furthermore, the likelihood is high that such activities run afoul of the Posse Comitatus Act, which prohibits the U.S. military from performing domestic law-enforcement duties.


In addition to the military and its fellow federal agencies, the CBP admitted that it is lending its drone fleet to “several county sheriff’s departments.” In the document provided to EFF, the CBP refused, however, to identify the names of the local law-enforcement departments borrowing these aircraft. CBP claims that to disclose the identity of the police departments or sheriff’s offices using its drones would “reveal that CBP is aware of the illegal activities taking place in a particular location.”


  • A d v e r t i s e m e n t


Seemingly, CBP believes (or claims to believe) that if it were to list these lenders, the criminals in those regions would be tipped off to the surveillance and would thus escape arrest.


Perhaps most fearful of all is that despite official recommendations and reprimands, the CBP refuses to promulgate any sort of code of conduct for drone flights that would explicitly protect the privacy rights of Americans protected by the Fourth Amendment.


The Fourth Amendment mandates:


The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.


As the Office of the Inspector General recognizes, drones are something apart from traditional surveillance aircraft and raise “unique concerns about privacy and the collection of evidence.” This distinction arises chiefly because of drones’ “pervasive tracking of an individual’s movements.”


Is there in fact a legal distinction to be made between the level of search conducted by the human eye (whether the searcher is on foot or in a helicopter) and that of a drone’s powerful never-blinking optics? Such an inarguable increase in police perception is not an insignificant decrease in the privacy expectation enjoyed by landowners and protected for centuries by timeless principles of Anglo-American law.


Given this encroachment into the formerly sacrosanct territory of individual liberty, Americans are right to resist the government’s apparent plan to fill the skies of our Republic with remote-controlled agents of the president and police.


In point of fact, a warrant becomes unnecessary when the search is being conducted using a drone. The target of the hunt will likely be unaware that he is being tracked and thus government (at any level) can keep a close eye on those considered threats to national (or local) security without having to permit the eye of the court to look over their shoulder.


Regardless, CBP has been running the loan-a-drone program for years.


Beginning in 2006, CBP began purchasing (as yet) unarmed Predator drones to purportedly aid in securing America’s southern border. According to a report written by the DHS inspector general, as of the end of 2012, CBP will have 12 of these aircraft in its arsenal with a total cost to taxpayers of nearly $ 200 million.


Inexplicably, the CBP took delivery of two drones in 2011 and 2012 despite the inspector general’s statement that “CBP had not adequately planned resources needed to support its current unmanned aircraft inventory.”


So, since they weren’t using the drones they already bought, why not buy more?


Although that spendthrift attitude is typical of government agency budgeting, perhaps the purchase of Predators is motivated by a goal a bit more sinister than either DHS or the Obama administration is willing to admit.


These other purposes are even hinted at in the DHS report. The tasks being performed by the CBP drones extend well beyond the patrolling of the border and into many other areas, a situation described by one reporter as “mission creep.” Here is a brief catalog of some of the ways CBP is farming out its drone fleet.


CBP Predators have been used to conduct missions for the following federal and state government agencies: U.S. Secret Service, Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE); Bureau of Land Management; Federal Bureau of Investigation; Department of Defense; Texas Rangers; U.S. Forest Service; and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).


With regard to ICE’s use of the CBP drone, the inspector general’s report indicates that the aircraft “provided surveillance over a suspected smuggler’s tunnel, which yielded information that, according to an ICE representative, would have required many cars and agents to obtain.” Yes, without the loan-a-drone program, the ICE surveillance mission would have required “many cars and agents,” as well as a warrant. With a drone, the government doesn’t need no stinkin’ warrant.


In a separate report issued in April 2012 by the Department of Defense, the Pentagon revealed the locations of over 100 new domestic sites that could soon serve as launch sites for military drones.


The list of present and proposed drone bases includes 39 of the 50 states, as well as Guam and Puerto Rico.


The EFF’s revelations concerning CBP’s willingness to keep its drones airborne on behalf of federal, state, and local law enforcement and other agencies are disturbing.


States, if they wish to protect their citizens from such constant surveillance, should follow James Madison’s advice and demonstrate their “refusal to cooperate with officers of the Union” in the latter’s effort to convert all citizens into suspects.


This article was posted: Thursday, October 3, 2013 at 11:08 am









Prison Planet.com



Border Patrol Loaning Predator Drones to Military, State, and Local Police

Sunday, September 8, 2013

French Government Employee Found Crossing Israeli Border With 334 Pounds of Gold, 1/2 Ton of Tobacco and More Loot


Photo: Wikimedia Commons

Photo: Wikimedia Commons



By JG Vibes
Intellihub.com
September 8, 2013

Last week a French consulate employee was arrested at a border checkpoint after a large quantity of gold, tobacco, checks and cellphones was found in his diplomatic vehicle. 


Following the arrest he was deported back to France with his belongings confiscated.  The french government has denied any involvement or knowledge about the shipment.


In an interview with FRANCE 24, Vincent Floriani, a spokesman for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Paris, said the driver was travelling on his own account, privately, and not on behalf of the embassy.


He insisted that the French and Israeli authorities had cooperated fully. “We have absolutely no tolerance for this kind of behaviour,” he said.


AFP reported that the driver was carrying “152 kg of gold, mostly in bars; 500 kg of tobacco; hundreds of new cell phones; and nearly $ 2 million in checks.”


Its difficult to speculate what exactly was taking place here.  Was it some sort of back end deal or clandestine shipment between governments?  Was it a robbery or the results of massive arms deal?  Leave your suggestions in the comments below.


Sources:


[1] French consulate worker arrested at Israeli border with 334 pounds of gold and $ 2 million in checks – Rawstory


Writer Bio:

VibesJG Vibes is an Intellihub.com investigative journalist, staff writer and editor. He is also the author of “Alchemy of the Modern Renaissance”, an 87 chapter e-book and is an artist with an established record label.

For media inquires, interviews, questions or suggestions for this author, email: vibes@intellihub.com or telephone: (347) 759-6075.

Read more articles by this author here.

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French Government Employee Found Crossing Israeli Border With 334 Pounds of Gold, 1/2 Ton of Tobacco and More Loot

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

[216] US Droning On in Pakistan, Extradition Hypocrisy, Terror on the Border?



Abby Martin Breaks the Set on Droning On in Pakistan, Terror on the Border, Extradition Hypocrisy, and the Role of Art and Imagination in Society. LIKE Break…
Video Rating: 4 / 5



[216] US Droning On in Pakistan, Extradition Hypocrisy, Terror on the Border?

India says five soldiers killed in attack on border with Pakistan

SRINIGAR, India (Reuters) – Five Indian soldiers were killed in an attack on their post along the disputed border with Pakistan in Kashmir, a senior Indian official said on Tuesday, just as the two countries were moving towards resuming stalled peace talks.



Reuters: Top News



India says five soldiers killed in attack on border with Pakistan

India says five soldiers killed in attack on border with Pakistan


NEW DELHI | Tue Aug 6, 2013 1:11am EDT



NEW DELHI (Reuters) – Five Indian soldiers were killed in an attack along the disputed border in Jammu and Kashmir, the state chief minister said on Tuesday, in an attack that comes just days after Pakistan proposed resuming stalled peace talks with India.


The talks were called off in January following an attack on the border in which one Indian soldier was decapitated.


“Was briefed early this morning about news that 5 of our soldiers had been killed on the LOC. My heartfelt condolences to their next of kin,” Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Omar Abdullah said in a Tweet, referring to the Line of Control dividing the two countries in the region.


“These incidents don’t help efforts to normalize or even improve relations with Pak & call in to question the Pak Govt’s recent overtures,” he said.



Reuters: Top News



India says five soldiers killed in attack on border with Pakistan