-
Posts
14688 -
Joined
-
Days Won
226
Posts posted by bust
-
-
Such a circus buy hey, at least nobody is talking about the Epstein Files 🤔
-
1
-
-
Klinger's cleaning lady who hes stopped from becoming a hooker
-
3 hours ago, Old Hippie said:
Probably when I’m back in Bangkok…
You are very luck man....5555
-
17 hours ago, Old Hippie said:
Anyway, now I feel bad about slagging on all of them…should pass in a few more days…
Give it time. I'm sure one of their fellow countryman will reinstate your original feelings shortly
-
Forget the LA riots. I'm looking forward to the large-scale military Trump Birthday parade.
Experts estimate the tanks will do $100m plus damage to roads if it proceeds.
-
MeidasTouch host Ben Meiselas reports on how Donald Trump was screwed by his own FBI Director Kash Patel who refused to defend Trump on a podcast appearance with Joe Rogan.
-
1
-
-
A simple google search also gives you all you need to know about Hanna 😊
-
1
-
-
Israel says body of Thai hostage Pinta Nattapong has been retrieved from Gaza
Israel says it has retrieved the body of a Thai hostage kidnapped by Palestinian militants and taken to Gaza during the October 7, 2023, terror attacks.
Pinta Nattapong, 35, was living in Israel as a farm worker in 2023 when he was kidnapped from Kibbutz Nir Oz, according to Israeli defence minister Israel Katz.
Israeli officials believe he was killed in captivity near the start of the war by members of the Mujahideen Brigades, a breakaway faction of Fatah that operates independently of Hamas in Gaza.
Mr Katz said on Saturday that Mr Pinta's body had been returned to Israel in a special military operation carried out by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) and Shin Bet, Israel's internal security agency, near the city of Rafah.
The news came two days after the bodies of two Israeli-American hostages taken from the same kibbutz were retrieved.
Fifty-five hostages remain in Gaza, of whom Israel says 20 are likely alive.
Thais were the largest group of foreigners held captive by Hamas and other militants after the October 7 attack, with many Thai agricultural workers living in compounds on the outskirts of southern Israeli kibbutzim, which militants overran first.
A total of 46 Thais have been killed so far during the conflict, according to Thailand's foreign affairs ministry.
At least 22 people killed in Gaza overnight
The retrieval of Mr Pinta's body came as Israel continued its military campaign across the Gaza Strip, killing at least 22 people overnight, according to Palestinian health officials.
One Israeli strike hit an apartment, killing seven people including a mother and five children. Their bodies were taken to Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City.
Israel said on Saturday that it was continuing to respond to Hamas's "barbaric attacks" and was dismantling the terror group's capabilities.
It said the IDF follows international law and takes all feasible precautions to mitigate civilian harm.
More than 54,000 Palestinians have died in the war so far, with international experts estimating about 80 per cent of those casualties to be civilians.
-
I think I said give it 3 months
-
1
-
-
Deneice Kumagai over hot lips
-
1 hour ago, Old Hippie said:
Always wanted to fuck her…
So did Frank
Wonder how far he got in their tryst broadcast through the public address to the entire 4077th
-
Hamas are as fucked up as the IDF however as always the innocent pay the price. My understanding is Gaza and the West Bank were once Palestinian territories. Maybe wrong but regardless Norman makes a good point.
-
Yeah I saw that but had no idea how it happened and how to fix it.
Thanks 🙏
Can clearly see what a pack of C#nts they are
-
Palestinians gunned down while trying to reach food aid site in Gaza, hospital says
Witnesses say Israeli forces opened fire on people near distribution point run by Israel-backed foundation. More than 30 Palestinians were killed by Israeli fire on Sunday as they went to receive food at an aid distribution point set up by an Israeli-backed foundation in Gaza, according to witnesses, and a hospital run by the Red Cross confirming it was treating many wounded.
Witnesses said Israeli forces had opened fire as Palestinians headed toward the aid distribution site in Rafah run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF).
“My brother went to receive aid from the American distribution points in Rafah when the bullets started raining down on them,” Yarin Abu al-Naja, 44, said. “The Israeli soldiers had started shooting at the people there. My brother went with two of his friends. One of them was critically injured in the head, the other was killed, and my brother was shot in the back.”
“He was transported to the hospital by a donkey cart – no ambulances can reach the area, and there were dozens of injured and dead,” Naja added. “We saw him placed on the ground. There were no available beds due to the large number of casualties and dead arriving from the same location. The scenes were horrific – people missing limbs, hands or legs, others decapitated, or with open abdomens.”Media reports said dozens of people were being treated at the hospital after the latest incident at the controversial site in Rafah. Officials at the field hospital did not say who opened fire but added that another 175 people were wounded.
The International Committee of the Red Cross said (ICRC) its field hospital in Rafah received a “mass casualty influx” of 179 people, 21 of whom were declared dead upon arrival. “All patients said they had been trying to reach an aid distribution site,” the ICRC added, describing it as “the highest number of weapon-wounded in a single incident since the establishment of the field hospital over a year ago”.Local health authorities said at least 31 of the dead were taken to Nasser hospital.
The Red Crescent also reported a further 14 Palestinians were injured near a separate aid distribution site in central Gaza.
The Israeli forces denied “firing at civilians”. However, an Israel Defense Forces official admitted that Israeli soldiers fired “warning shots toward several suspects who advanced toward the troops on Saturday”, near the aid distribution site, without specifying who the suspects were.
The Israeli-backed aid foundation claimed that it delivered aid “without incident” early on Sunday and has denied previous accounts of gunfire around its sites, which are in Israeli military zones where independent access is limited.
Israeli forces had given orders that no one should approach the hub before 6am local time. Multiple witnesses said people had begun lining up from 5am, and dozens were said to have surged forward and started running towards it. When the crowds reached the Flag Roundabout, about 0.6 miles (1km) away, Israeli forces started shooting at the crowd, witnesses said.
“I went with my brother Shuhada to get food for our children,” Hani Baraka, 43, said. ‘‘The area was very crowded. At the start, a quadcopter drone came and gave orders, saying it was still too early to open the gates and that they would open them at 6am. It seems people moved forward earlier than the time set by the army. The soldiers panicked and began firing at the crowd. My brother was shot in the head and killed instantly.”
“On its way back, the drone hit a hanging wire and fell to the ground,” Baraka added. “People rushed toward it, and then the Israeli soldiers opened fire on us. Army snipers surrounded the area and started shooting at the crowd.”
The GHF has hired private security firms, but according to witnesses, the private contractors did not open fire on the crowd.
“Inside the gate, there were armed American soldiers, but they did not fire at us,” Baraka said. “They only threw plastic stun grenades in the square to scare people and clear the area once the aid ran out.”
Reuters footage showed ambulance vehicles carrying injured people to Nasser hospital. Other clips emerged showing people running and ducking, with apparent gunfire audible in the background. One piece of footage seems to have been filmed in the Salah al-Din Road, just south of an aid distribution site in the Netzarim corridor.
Doctors at Nasser hospital reported chaoticscenes, with dozens of bodies being brought in Bodies of Palestinians arrive at Nasser hospital. “The situation in the hospital is catastrophic, due to the massacre of the hungry in Rafah city, near the aid distribution centre,” said Dr Marwan al-Hams, 53, a medic in the emergency department at Nasser hospital. “Most injuries were shot in the upper parts of the body – the head, chest, and abdomen – as the Israeli army was reportedly firing from high altitudes using aircraft or quadcopters. A witness on the scene said that shots were also fired from a crane and from tanks.”
The hub is part of a controversial new aid system.
On 28 May, Hamas accused Israel of killing at least three Palestinians and wounding 46 near one of the GHF’s distribution sites, an accusation the group denied. The Israeli military said its troops fired warning shots in the area outside the compound to re-establish control as thousands of Palestinians rushed to an aid distribution site.
Israel imposed a blockade on all supplies in March, saying Hamas was seizing deliveries for its fighters, which the group denies. Earlier this month, a global hunger monitor said half a million people in the strip faced starvation.
The IPC estimated that nearly 71,000 children under the age of five were expected to be “acutely malnourished”, with 14,100 cases expected to be severe in the next 11 months.
The UN and other humanitarian organisations have rejected the new system for food distribution, saying it would not be able to meet the needs of Gaza’s 2.3 million people and allowed Israel to use food as a weapon to control the population.
The latest incident took place as Hamas and Israel exchanged blame over a faltering effort to secure a ceasefire.
Hamas said on Saturday it was seeking amendments to a US-backed ceasefire proposal, but Donald Trump’s envoy Steve Witkoff rejected the group’s response as “totally unacceptable”.
Reuters and Associated Press contributed to this report
-
-
Inside the mission to stop Putin's 'ghost ships' wreaking havoc on the seas
NATO divers prepare to survey the seafloor off the coast of Lithuania, amid increasing Russian aggression.
On Christmas Day last year, Finland and Estonia got an unwanted shock.
A power line that ran along the seabed between the two countries was damaged, slashing electricity flow by two thirds.
The next day, Finnish police boarded and seized a ship carrying Russian oil bound for Turkey on suspicion of cutting the line along with four nearby internet cables.
The Cook Islands-registered ship, named the Eagle S, was later found to have dragged its anchor along the ocean floor for more than 100 kilometres.
European Union leaders labelled it sabotage and levelled blame at Russia's so-called "shadow fleet" or "ghost ships" which Moscow uses to avoid Western sanctions imposed on its cargo exports.
The incident has sprung NATO allies into action, with joint forces from 11 member nations signing up to tackle sabotage at sea.
The HNLMS Snellius is an important part of the NATO missions.
The ABC gained rare access to the mission and headed out with Dutch and Belgian crews on the Baltic Sea off the coast of Lithuania — a former Soviet country that is now a key Western ally.
Taking off from London before dawn, it took two flights and all day to reach the small port city of Klaipeda where we met the convoy.
Undersea cables are a vital part of global infrastructure, carrying electricity and data between countries and continents. There are hundreds of them around the world.
Commander Erik Kockx has been charged with overseeing this operation in the Baltic Sea.
"There have been some incidents with pipelines and cables. We are here to prevent that from happening again," he told the ABC.
"The consequences of cutting an underwater sea cable, first of all, it's very expensive to repair it, secondly if it's an energy or data cable, you cut people off from energy or information."
Commander Erik Kockx scans the Baltic Sea during the mission.
Since Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered his country's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, Finland and Sweden joined NATO, making Russia the only country bordering the Baltic Sea without membership of the security alliance.
Since then, multiple cables have been cut or damaged.
"Anybody who has any intentions of inflicting damage or harm to any infrastructure in the Baltic Sea region should be aware that it will be observed, it will be monitored, it will be reported, and it will not remain without consequence," Commander Kockx said.
Russia's second-largest city and port of St Petersburg is the country's main access point to the Baltic Sea's critical shipping corridor.
Further south and wedged between Lithuania and Poland, is the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad, which also hosts strategic port capacity but more crucially is home to a large military build-up of Kremlin forces.
The NATO missions are designed to be a deterrent, with a bigger military presence on the surface and eyes underwater inspecting for sabotage.
Small underwater drones, remotely operated vehicles and divers are being sent down to build a map of the seabed.
Merte Peeters is the commanding officer of the Dutch ship, the Snellius, which is the lead vessel in the mission.
"I think it's a two-legged solution, one we show people who basically aren't paying attention sailing around the Baltic, hey someone's looking at you, you are being noticed," he said.
"And to the other countries in the vicinity you show that we are present."
Commanding Officer Merte Peeters says the mission has multiple objectives.
Most of the accusations of sabotage involve a ship dragging its anchor along the seabed for long distances, in some cases hundreds of kilometres.
Two lines were severed within 24 hours of each other in the month before the Christmas Day incident.
The Arelion cable between the Swedish island of Gotland and Lithuania was severed and then the C-Lion 1 cable was damaged between the Finnish capital, Helsinki, and the German port of Rostock.
A Chinese ship, the Yi Peng 3, is suspected of dragging its anchor over both the cables in a separate act of Russian sabotage.
In October 2023, another Chinese ship, the Newnew Polar Bear, was identified as the main suspect for rupturing a gas pipeline between Finland and Estonia.
The Chinese government admitted the ship was at fault but rejected the suggestion it was intentional.
"If I would drop my anchor for this vessel, I would notice, of course," Commanding Officer Peeters said.
Divers have been mapping the seabed in a bid to pinpoint where the cables were cut.
The Yi Peng 3 and the Eagle S are both suspected Russian ghost ships which have become a pivotal tool in Moscow continuing oil exports in defiance of Western sanctions.
By mid-2024, this clandestine armada was responsible for shipping more than 70 per cent of Russia's oil and its by-products.
The European Union last month slapped more sanctions on the covert ships and increased the number of banned vessels to 342, although some experts predict the fleet consists of more than 700.
Continuing oil exports through undercover means has been critical to keeping Russia's economy afloat and funding its war efforts in Ukraine.
Some estimates predict Moscow has spent more than $15 billion building up the fleet, which are often old and rundown ships, which sail without insurance and flags, allowing them to evade detection and sanctions.
They also "go dark" by disabling their tracking transponders, making it difficult for authorities to follow their movements.
The Kremlin has repeatedly denied the use of shadow ships and rejected claims it was responsible for damaging undersea cables in the Baltic.
As part of the mission, mines were detonated in the Baltic Sea.
With investigations ongoing, NATO isn't keen to point fingers or inflame tensions but some countries in the region including Estonia, Finland and Germany, have blamed Russia's shadow fleet.
But what started as covert shipments to prop up an ailing economy has morphed into a so-called "hybrid war" or "shadow conflict", which are actions taken to destabilise democracies and cause chaos and fear.
On another vessel in the NATO mission, Commanding Officer of Belgian ship, Lobelia, Gill Priem tells the ABC his crew have adapted to battle this new type of conflict.
"NATO has to adapt to the evolving geopolitical situation in the world," he said.
"Since the increased presence of NATO in this region ... we did not have any accidents occurring in this particular region."
Commanding Officer Gill Priem is part of Belgium's contribution to the mission.
The alleged acts of sabotage fall short of all-out military action but force countries to react and beef up security measures.
While the mission until now has been focused on protecting the hundreds of kilometres of critical cables crisscrossing the seabed, Russia last month upped the stakes.
When a suspected Russian shadow ship, named the Jaguar, and under sanction by British authorities, entered Estonian waters, the navy attempted to stop it.
The crew on board refused and then the Estonian warship was then met with a Russian fighter jet, which flew into NATO airspace for close to a minute.
"They entered the NATO airspace, this is serious," Lithuania's Foreign Minister Kestutis Budrys told the ABC.
"They escalated in the military way, from now on, we cannot say that it is civilian activities.
"They were showing their intent to use this force."
Lithuania's Foreign Minister Gabrielius Landsbergis has raised the alarm about Russian aggression.
It was the first time Russia has shown support for an alleged shadow ship.
"This reckless use of hundreds of vessels for the purpose to fuel the war machine of Russia, it put us in an explosive mix, and we have to control all of it," he said.
"We see how one authoritarian regime wants to avoid the sanctions and is just exploiting all the weak parts of it."
The minister, who's been highly critical of the West's response to Russian aggression, has no doubt of Moscow's intentions in the region.
"Russia is preparing itself for long-term confrontation and conflict with the West," he said.
"If we are weak, if we are not resilient and if we are not resolute, it means we are increasing the opportunities for Russia to use the capabilities for their intent."
Intent and sabotage combined make an explosive mix which is sparking fears of a broader European conflict.
Undersea cables are a vital part of the global power and communications infrastructure.
-
Off the wagon
Musk's black eye
Was Musk flirting with Brigitte Macron
The possibilities are endless.
-
Hot Lips
-
2
-
-
I reckon Musk would get on well with Hunter S. Thompson but would lack the stamina
-
1
-
-
The I ❤️ Faisal Town Markets T-shirts they were wearing probably had something to do with it.
-
That brings back memories. I learnt to drive with a 3 on the tree 😀
-
Not a fan at all of Piers Morgan however I did watch an interview with Norman Finkelstein and Benny Morris.
Benny Morgan grinned like a Cheshire Cat every time the dying and starving children was mentioned.
Morgan raised the point of how the IDF strategy has failed and should be considered as one of the worst military failures in history and compared it to the successful Hezbollah attack where all the pagers simultaneously exploded.
Norman Finkelstein rejected Morgan's comment and claimed the complete opposite was evident. Sure all the hostages have not been released but 90% of housing in Gaza has been destroyed, 80% of infrastructure destroyed, 60-70% of all hospitals destroyed, 60-70% of all schools destroyed and on it went. He believes Netanyahu's objective is to make Gaza so uninhabitable the Palestinians will have no choice. It is also why the food relief depots have been strategically located closer to the borders with neighboring countries. This is Israel's plan of controlling aid distribution through blockades in the north to drive most of the population out of the area thus making it difficult for them to return. It's like a cattle drive to them.
He also raised the disgusting practice of using Palestinian children for target practice by IDF troops, something that has been brought up often by humanitarian agencies. I once worked with a former IDF member who confirmed it's common practice and has been for decades. Again Benny Morris laughed it off.
His final point was how many rats are jumping of the "sinking ship" namely Isreal.
As I have said before "Pack of C#nts"
-
-
Pack of C#nts
Israel-Gaza
in Non-Thailand News
Posted
Standing alongside the UK, Canada, New Zealand and Norway, Australia issued sanctions against two of the most controversial members of Israel's government, Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich.
A handful of nations, including Australia, are imposing sanctions on Itamar Ben-Gvir (left) and Bezalel Smotrich. C#nts