Tensions surge in South China Sea as Philippines seizes Chinese boat

PHILIPPINES - Philippine police seized a Chinese fishing boat in the disputed South China Sea on Wednesday, an official told Reuters, the latest flare-up of tensions in the oil and gas-rich waters that are claimed wholly or in part by six Asian nations. Chief Superintendent Niel Vargas of the Philippine National Police Maritime Group said a maritime police patrol apprehended a Chinese fishing boat around 7 am on Tuesday off Half Moon Shoal. The boat has 11 crew and police found about 500 turtles in the vessel, some of which were already dead, he said, adding that a Philippine boat with crew was also seized, and found to have 40 turtles on board. Several species of sea turtles are protected under Philippine law. Maritime police are now towing the boats to Puerto Princesa town on the island of Palawan where appropriate charges will be filed against them, Vargas said. The incident is bound to raise the ire of Beijing, which claims almost the entire South China Sea, rejecting rival claims from Vietnam, the Philippines, Taiwan, Malaysia and Brunei.

 
Thailand court ousts PM Yingluck Shinawatra

THAILAND - A Thai court has ruled that Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra must step down over abuse of power charges. The Constitutional Court ruled that Ms Yingluck acted illegally when she transferred her national security head. The binding decision also orders nine cabinet ministers involved in the transfer to step down. The ruling follows months of political deadlock. Anti-government protesters have been trying to oust Ms Yingluck since November 2013. The move is likely to trigger protests by supporters of the government, which remains very popular in rural areas. Ms Yingluck had been accused of improperly transferring Thawil Pliensri, her national security chief appointed by the opposition-led administration, in 2011.

 
US experts join hunt for abducted Nigerian schoolgirls

NIGERIA - A team of US experts has been sent to Nigeria to help find more than 200 schoolgirls abducted last month by the Islamist militant group Boko Haram. US President Barack Obama said the team comprised personnel from military, law enforcement and other agencies. He said he hoped the kidnapping might galvanise the international community to take action against Boko Haram. Earlier, it emerged that eight more girls had been abducted in north-eastern Nigeria by suspected militants. On Monday, Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau threatened to "sell" more than 230 girls seized from their school, also in Borno, on 14 April.

The latest kidnapping happened on Sunday night in the village of Warabe in Borno state. The girls taken were aged between 12 and 15.

 
PM: ‘Jewish Israel’ law vital to counter assault on legitimacy

ISRAEL - Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu repeated his promise on Sunday to advance a constitutional Basic Law expressly identifying Israel as a Jewish nation-state. Speaking at the start of his weekly cabinet meeting, Netanyahu rebuffed criticism of the plan, saying the state currently lacked “adequate expression” of Israel’s “existence as the nation-state of the Jewish people” in the country’s set of Basic Laws.

Kerry on Religion: 'Not the Way I Think Most People Want to Live'

AFRICA - During a talk to the US embassy staff in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia at the first stop on his trip to Africa, Secretary of State John Kerry remarked about what he called the "different cross-currents of modernity" and the challenges they present on the African continent. The comments contain a veiled reference to religion, and the part that religion might be playing in some of the current conflicts in Africa: “This is a time here in Africa where there are a number of different cross-currents of modernity that are coming together to make things even more challenging. Some people believe that people ought to be able to only do what they say they ought to do, or to believe what they say they ought to believe, or live by their interpretation of something that was written down a thousand plus, two thousand years ago. That’s not the way I think most people want to live.”

Rare Earthquake Warning Issued for Oklahoma

USA - Mile for mile, there are almost as many earthquakes rattling Oklahoma as California this year. This major increase in seismic shaking led to a rare earthquake warning today (May 5) from the US Geological Survey and the Oklahoma Geological Survey. In a joint statement, the agencies said the risk of a damaging earthquake - one larger than magnitude 5.0 - has significantly increased in central Oklahoma.

 
Boko Haram 'to sell' Nigeria girls abducted from Chibok

NIGERIA - Nigerian Islamist militant group Boko Haram has threatened to "sell" the hundreds of schoolgirls it abducted three weeks ago. Militant leader Abubakar Shekau sent a video obtained by the AFP news agency, in which he said for the first time that his group had taken the girls. About 230 girls are still believed to be missing, prompting widespread criticism of the Nigerian government. The Boko Haram insurgency has left thousands dead since 2009. The girls were taken from their boarding school in Chibok, in the northern state of Borno, on the night of 14 April. The girls were in their final year of school, most of them aged 16 to 18.

 
Germany to thwart internal NSA probe

GERMANY - Following revelations that the NSA had been listening to Merkel’s telephone conversations for over a decade, Obama promised he would discontinue monitoring her communications. He was unwilling, however, to give similar assurances to other top ranking German officials. The fate of an NSA listening station based in the American Embassy in Berlin also remains unknown. Meanwhile, on Thursday the German government blocked former NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden from giving personal evidence in front of the parliamentary inquiry regarding the agency’s surveillance. In a letter to members of the panel obtained by Süddeutsche Zeitung, government officials said a personal invitation to the former NSA contractor would "run counter to the political interests of the Federal Republic," and "put a grave and permanent strain" on US-German relations.

 
China plans for North Korean regime collapse leaked

CHINA - China has drawn up detailed contingency plans for the collapse of the North Korean government, suggesting that Beijing has little faith in the longevity of Kim Jong-un’s regime. Documents drawn up by planners from China’s People’s Liberation Army that were leaked to Japanese media include proposals for detaining key North Korean leaders and the creation of refugee camps on the Chinese side of the frontier in the event of an outbreak of civil unrest in the secretive state. The report calls for stepping up monitoring of China’s 879-mile border with North Korea.

 
Non-white people almost 30 per cent of population by 2050

UK - Almost one in three people in Britain will be from an ethnic minority within a generation, a report suggests. Non-white people will make up between 20 and 30 per cent of the population by 2050, Policy Exchange says. The current share is around 14 per cent. The report could also raise questions about the future of the English national identity, which it found is primarily adopted by white people. The think tank, which has close links to the Conservative Party leadership, also highlights differences in the political leanings of different ethnic groups, advising politicians not to treat minority voters as a bloc. Over the past decade, the white population has remained roughly the same while the minority population has almost doubled, accounting for 80 per cent of population growth, it adds.

 
No UK trade benefit from EU membership - Civitas report

UK - Membership of the EU has not given the UK any "insider advantages" in trade with other European countries, social policy think tank Civitas says. In a study it finds "no discernible impact on UK exports of goods to other member countries" from membership of the EU or its single market. The study also questions claims that collectively negotiated EU free trade agreements (FTAs) benefitted the UK. It seems to contradict analysis by the Confederation of British Industry. The report concludes: "The evidence presented contradicts again and again those who wish to claim that the UK has enjoyed insider advantages in the single market."

 
Official Ceremony Remembering 2,495 Victims of Terrorism

ISRAEL - As detailed in a recent report released by the National Insurance Institute (NII), a total of 2,495 Israeli civilians have been murdered in terrorist attacks since the establishment of the State of Israel in 1948. Those victims have left behind 2,853 orphans - 99 of whom lost both parents in terrorist atrocities. 978 people were widowed as the result of terrorism. Perhaps the most painful statistic of all are the 800 parents in Israel today who have lost at least one child to terrorism. That number does not count parents who lost children but have since passed away themselves.

Video Reveals Fatah Committed to Terrorism, Not Talks

MIDDLE EAST - While the unity deal between Hamas and Palestinian Authority (PA) Chairman Mahmoud Abbas's Fatah faction have spelled the death of the peace talks, further evidence documents how Fatah's position mirrored that of Hamas even at the height of talks. Last December, while US Secretary of State John Kerry was planning a diplomatic "January offensive" to force Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu to submit to US peace plans demanding massive Israeli concessions, Fatah official Tawfiq Tirawi was busy expounding his own plans of another kind of "offensive."

Hamas Reiterates: We Will Never Recognize Israel

ISRAEL - Hamas will never recognize Israel and will not accept the conditions laid out by the Middle East peacemaking Quartet, according to the Islamist movement's deputy leader. Speaking late on Saturday, Mussa Abu Marzuq said Hamas, which recently signed a reconciliation deal with the Western-backed Palestinian leadership in Judea and Samaria, would never agree to recognize Israel. "We will not recognize the Zionist entity," he said at a press conference in Gaza City. Under terms of the deal, Gaza's Hamas rulers and the Palestine Liberation Organisation of Mahmud Abbas are to work together to form a new unity government which will prepare for national elections. Hamas won a landslide victory in the last parliamentary election, held in 2006, prompting a Western boycott of the Palestinian Authority.

 
California city looks to sea for water in drought

SANTA BARBARA, CALIFORNIA, USA - This seaside city thought it had the perfect solution the last time California withered in a severe drought more than two decades ago: Tap the ocean to turn salty seawater to fresh water. The $34 million desalination plant was fired up for only three months and mothballed after a miracle soaking of rain. As the state again grapples with historic dryness, the city nicknamed the "American Riviera" has its eye on restarting the idled facility to hedge against current and future droughts. This community can't conserve its way out of this drought as it currently has been unfolding - it's just been unprecedentedly dry.

 
“Just what is an APOSTLE?”
Just what is an Apostle?

Today we find the Church of God in a “wilderness of religious confusion!”

The confusion is not merely around the Church – within the religions of the world outside – but WITHIN the very heart of The True Church itself!

Read online or contact email to request a copy

Listen to Me, You who know righteousness, You people in whose heart is My Law: …I have put My words in your mouth, I have covered you with the shadow of My hand, That I may plant the heavens, Lay the foundations of the earth, and say to Zion, “you are My people” (Isaiah 51:7,16)