GRAPHIC: SOUTH AFRICAN POLICE GUN DOWN STRIKING MINERS AFTER EXPLOSION

Rising tensions at a South African platinum mine exploded Thursday in grisly violence as police opened fire on striking miners.

Blood-stained bodies lay strewn about a field in a police response reminiscent of the ugly days of apartheid.

Police have not released a death toll, but a South African Press Association reporter counted 18 corpses. It’s feared more could be dead.

Witnesses described the scene as chaotic, making it seemingly impossible to determine who started firing on whom first.

The South African Police Service, though, issued a statement late Thursday indicating its members trying to “disarm and disperse a heavily armed group of illegal gatherers at Lonmin mine” when they were fired upon.

“The South African Police Service was viciously attacked by the group, using a variety of weapons, including firearms,” the agency said. “The police, in order to protect their own lives and in self defense, were forced to engage the group with force.”

Taurai Maduna was one of several journalists at the mine in Marikana who was told the weeklong strike was going to end Thursday.

“We waited and waited,” he told CNN. “Police started moving into the crowd.”

He said the police brought in barbed wire to fence in the miners, who were believed to be armed with guns, machetes and sticks, CNN affiliate E-TV reported.

Police fired tear gas and then used a water cannon to disperse the strikers congregating atop a hill. The mine workers retaliated by firing at police, and a storm of gunfire lasted about three minutes, E-TV said.

“There was a lot of commotion,” Maduna said. “There was tear gas everywhere. I haven’t seen anything like this.”

The situation remained tense Thursday night after what was the deadliest day in almost a week of violence at the Markinana mines.

With the situation “still unfolding” at that time, “senior officials from the Independent Police Investigative Directorate” were managing the scene, according to the South African Police Service. The commissioner of the national police agency, Gen. Riah Phiyega, was among those at the site.

Production at the world’s third-largest platinum producer came to a halt as workers, mostly rock drillers, embarked on a wildcat wage strike last Friday over a wage dispute. The miners who earn between $300 and $500 a month are demanding up to $1,500 a month in salary.

The violence was believed sparked by a rivalry between unions that wield a lot of power and influence in South Africa.

A statement from Lonmin said 10 people had died before Thursday’s incident — eight mine workers and two policemen, who were reported to have been hacked to death.

Roger Phillimore, the chairman of Lonmin, said his company regretted the loss of life “in what is clearly a public order rather than labor relations associated matter.”

“We are treating the developments around police operations this afternoon with the utmost seriousness,” he said.

The company had issued an ultimatum to the striking workers: Return to work by Friday or face dismissal. That was before Thursday’s bloodshed.

“The violence that has occurred cannot be condoned and has no place in the way that labor relations and inter-union relations should be conducted,” said Mildred Oliphant, the minister of labor. “The loss of life has been particularly tragic and unnecessary.”

Earlier this year, at least three people were killed during a six-week strike at the world’s second-largest platinum mine, Impala Platinum.

That violence also was blamed on union rivalry, though the two implicated unions, accused of trying to outdo each other in negotiating wages, deny instigating the clashes.

Frans Baleni, head of the dominant National Union for Mineworkers, said Monday that members were under siege.

“Our members have been attacked, and that cannot be said to be clashes or rivalry, it is pure criminality,” he said.

The newer Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union also denied any blame.

In response to the latest violence, a statement posted on South African President Jacob Zuma’s website on Thursday night said Zuma “is alarmed and deeply saddened at the manner in which (the) dispute … has degenerated,” calling the deaths “tragic” and “senseless.”

The president urged union and business leaders to use “dialogue without any breaches of law or violence” to resolve the “situation before it deteriorates any further,” adding that government authorities have a role as well.

“I have instructed law enforcement agencies to do everything possible to bring the situation under control and to bring the perpetrators of violence to (justice),” Zuma said.

From CNN

AFTER THE COLORADO MASSACRE: WHY IS AMERICA SO ATTACHED TO GUNS?

What is it about Americans and guns?

How much time do you have?

“I can tell you that I don’t think there’s any other developed country in the world that has remotely the problem we have,” New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg said, after the shooting rampage in Colorado.

There are an estimated 270 million guns in the hands of civilians in the United States, making Americans the most heavily armed people in the world per capita. Yemen, a tribal nation with no history of strong central government or the rule of law, comes in a distant second.

From Washington, D.C., to the well-stocked shelves of Walmart stores nationwide, guns are regarded in the United States as a commonplace if controversial consumer item for millions of law-abiding hunters, collectors and citizens concerned about their safety. They are also in the hands of thousands of killers too; a Washington-based anti-gun lobby says those guns shoot more than 100,000 people a year. In 2010, there were more than 30,000 deaths caused by firearms when the number of homicides, suicides and accidental deaths are tallied.

America’s collective memory — of the Wild West in the 1800s, the assassinations of John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King half a century ago and the front-page news from last week and is marked time and time again by guns.

“It’s undeniable,” writes Clayton Cramer, author of “Armed America: the Remarkable Story of How and Why Guns Became as American as Apple Pie.” “Guns are at the center of much of America’s history, its legends, and its horrors.”

There were guns in America long before the America we know today was even born. Early settlers in several states were required by law to own and maintain weapons as a matter of collective defense.

By the time the United States was established, its citizens had taken up arms not only against their Native American neighbors but the army of their own king. Their new constitution reflected that in its Bill of Rights, declaring that “A well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.”

For more than two centuries that remained an important but largely overlooked guarantee, subjected to a modest series of controls. But in 2008 and 2010 landmark Supreme Court rulings gave that constitutional right sweeping new power, dramatically diminishing the authority of state and local governments to limit gun ownership.

Gun-friendly lawmakers have been active, too. Roughly half of the 50 U.S. states have adopted laws allowing gun owners to carry their guns openly in most public places. About as many states have ‘stand your ground’ laws that allow people to kill if they come under threat, even, in some cases, if they can escape the threat without violence.

The laws are being driven by politics and the politics are being driven by groups such as the National Rifle Association. Once a relatively modest organization of gun enthusiasts and hunters, it has become one of the most powerful political groups in the country. The Washington Post estimates that the NRA succeeded in helping elect four out of every five candidates it endorsed in the most recent congressional election.

In addition to that extraordinary impact in Congress, it has also been working to overturn gun-control laws in the courts as well.

The NRA and other gun-rights groups have allied themselves with the Republican Party and, especially, a sector of the American public suspicious of government intrusions into private life and often flatly hostile to Washington.

Read Dana Bash: For Democrats, gun politics are bad politics

“When they tell you that a government ban on certain firearms will somehow make you safer, don’t you believe it, not for a second, because it’s a lie just like the lies they’ve told you before,” NRA CEO Wayne LaPierre told a recent gathering of his members. “Their laws don’t work.”

“America stands alone in its historic and cultural attachment to guns. America stands armed.” Jonathan Mann

Poll results suggest most Americans wouldn’t agree. CNN and Gallup surveys going back years suggest that Americans are split between those who approve of current gun-control laws and respondents who would like to see them made more restrictive. Americans who’d like no controls at all are a small minority.

But even after the rampage in Colorado, American attitudes and laws aren’t likely to change much. Last year’s nearly fatal shooting of Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords didn’t move her state or federal colleagues to adopt any new gun control measures.

Both President Barack Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney issued statements in the hours after the Colorado shootings, and Sunday, Obama flew to the state to visit with shooting victims and their families. But neither proposed any changes to American attitudes toward guns.

“You know, soothing words are nice, but maybe it’s time that the two people who want to be president of the United States stand up and tell us what they are going to do about it, because this is obviously a problem across the country,” said New York’s Mayor Bloomberg, who is both a declared ‘independent’ politically and a vocal proponent of gun control.

America is not unique. Norwegians are marking the first anniversary of a shooting massacre that took the lives of 69 people at a summer camp outside of Oslo. Eight more people were that day killed by a bomb in the Norwegian capital itself. The confessed killer is awaiting the verdict of his trial.

But America seems to be the place the whole world thinks of when apparently ordinary people use guns for grotesque acts of violence. America stands alone in its historic and cultural attachment to guns. America stands armed.

From CNN.com

Posted by Ngo Okafor

KANO POLICE STATION ROCKED BY EXPLOSION AND GUN FIRE ATTACK

Kano, Nigeria’s second city and the largest in the north, was the site of Boko Haram’s deadliest attack yet, when coordinated bombings and shootings left at least 185 people dead in January.
The Islamist group’s insurgency, concentrated in Nigeria’s mainly Muslim north, has killed more than 1,000 people since mid-2009.

KANO  (AFP) – Gunmen with explosives attacked a police station on Tuesday in the northern Nigerian city of Kano, previously targeted by Islamist militant group Boko Haram, a police source said.

“Goron Dutse police station is under attack by gunmen using explosives and guns,” a senior police official said on condition of anonymity.
An AFP journalist heard five blasts and saw smoke in the area of the police station. The explosions later halted, and the extent of the damage remained unclear as well as if there were casualties.

PICTURE OF THE DAY: GET A GOOD LAUGH OUT OF THIS!!

Who hasn’t felt like this about the scale? With all the bad news in news today, I thought that this image of a woman pointing a gun at the scale will make you laugh. Enjoy

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Posted by Ngo Okafor

The most downloaded black male model

Nigerian American black male model photo gallery and blog

www.getingo.com

 

 

 

SLASH PROVES ON PIERS MORGAN THAT WHEN IT’S YOUR TIME TO DIE, YOU DIE

There are ads all over CNN, showing Piers Morgan asking the question, “how did Slash, former Guns’N'Roses guitar player, survive 10 years of heavy drug and acohol use while several others died”. Slash survived binges which included non-stop days of heavy drug and alcohol binges that could have killed the mere mortal. But yet he lived and continues to live. Hearing stories like that help me come to terms with the death of my youngest brother, Ogbogu, at the young age of 29. He didn’t live anywhere near the wild sort of life that Slash did, but he lost his life. It was his time to go. That’s just the way it is. I have had to come to terms with that. My entire family has had to come to terms with his death. It’s been a year and it still hurts. We just have to keep putting one foot in front of the other on the journey to healing.

The truth is that if it’s not your time to go, it’s not your time to go. If it’s not your time to die, you cannot die. There are so many stories of men and women surviving situations in which most others would have died. It just further proves that it wasn’t their time to die. More power to Slash. He proves that there is a God watching over all of us. He calls up when our time is up.

By

Ngo Okafor

The most downloaded black male model

Nigerian American black male model photo gallery and blog

www.getingo.com