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La guerra de Estados Unidos con Irán se está extendiendo al Indo-Pacífico. Eso podría dificultar su fin

Kraig Pakulski 0 21 Article rating: No rating

Análisis por Brad Lendon, reportero sénior de asuntos militares globales de CNN

El abordaje estadounidense de un petrolero en el Océano Índico el martes demuestra que Washington está cumpliendo su promesa de rastrear buques vinculados a Irán en cualquier parte del mundo, una extensión de su bloqueo de los puertos iraníes que aumenta la presión sobre Teherán.

Pero la expansión de la zona de conflicto a miles de kilómetros del golfo Pérsico podría ampliar la brecha que habría que superar en cualquier negociación de paz.

El general Dan Caine, presidente del Estado Mayor Conjunto de Estados Unidos, recalcó la semana pasada que los buques vinculados a Irán tendrían dificultades para eludir el alcance global de la Armada estadounidense.

En concreto, mencionó la zona bajo la jurisdicción del Comando Indo-Pacífico de Estados Unidos (INDOPACOM).

Los datos de seguimiento marítimo mostraron que el buque cisterna M/T Tifani (número de buque 9273337 de la Organización Marítima Internacional), con capacidad para transportar 2 millones de barriles de petróleo crudo, fue interceptado entre Sri Lanka e Indonesia, a más de 2.000 millas del golfo Pérsico, dentro del área de responsabilidad de INDOPACOM.

Según imágenes satelitales vistas por CNN, el buque se dirigía hacia el estrecho de Malaca, tras haber estado en la terminal petrolera de la isla iraní de Kharg, en el golfo, el 6 de abril.

Los datos de tráfico marítimo lo ubicaron en el golfo de Omán, fuera del Estrecho de Ormuz, el 10 de abril, viajando hacia el sureste.

El 21 de abril, poco después de pasar Sri Lanka, el buque cisterna cambió de rumbo bruscamente: primero un giro brusco de 90 grados hacia el sur, y luego otro giro brusco de 90 grados de regreso al este.

Poco después, Estados Unidos anunció la detención.

Un video difundido en las redes sociales por el Departamento de Defensa de Estados Unidos mostraba a tropas abordando helicópteros en un buque de guerra de la Armada estadounidense y aterrizando en el petrolero.

Ese buque de guerra, la base marítima expedicionaria USS Miguel Keith, tiene aproximadamente el tamaño de un portaaviones y puede dar apoyo a helicópteros y fuerzas especiales.

Su uso en la operación de abordaje en aguas abiertas del océano Índico da una idea de los vastos recursos con los que cuenta la Armada de los Estados Unidos para imponer un bloqueo y hacer cumplir las sanciones.

El Miguel Keith es uno de los cinco buques de su tipo en la flota estadounidense.

La interceptación, el fin de semana, del buque de carga iraní M/V Touska fue llevada a cabo por un destructor de misiles guiados (la Armada cuenta con 74 de estos) con infantes de marina de un buque de asalto anfibio, básicamente un pequeño portaaviones.

La Armada dispone de nueve de estos buques y once portaaviones, aunque no todos están listos para el combate en todo momento.

Los buques interceptados forman parte de la “flota oscura” que ayuda a transportar petróleo iraní y otras materias primas, incluidas aquellas con aplicaciones militares, por todo el mundo.

“Como ya hemos dejado claro, impulsaremos esfuerzos globales de control marítimo para desarticular redes ilícitas e interceptar buques sancionados que presten apoyo material a Irán, dondequiera que operen”, decía la publicación del Departamento de Defensa en redes sociales del martes.

“Las aguas internacionales no son un refugio para los buques sancionados”, añadió.

Los analistas también afirman que el océano abierto es un lugar más seguro para que la Armada estadounidense realice interceptaciones, ya que hay menos buques neutrales cerca y no existen ma

When parents kill: Forensic psychiatrists examine the motives behind unthinkable murders

Kraig Pakulski 0 14 Article rating: No rating

By Chelsea Bailey, CNN

(CNN) — Gunfire shattered the silence of the Cedar Grove community in Shreveport, Louisiana, just before dawn Sunday.

Moments later, a mother and her two children scrambled out of a window and onto the roof of an unassuming gray and white home on West 79th Street and frantically dialed 911.

“Units be advised,” a dispatcher relayed to officers, “the female is saying there’s nine subjects that live inside the residence.”

“(She’s) saying he may have shot them all.”

Police arrived at the home to discover a scene that officials were still struggling to describe days later. Eight children were dead.

The suspect, later identified as 31-year-old Shamar Elkins, shot and killed seven of his own kids; the eighth child was their cousin.

Elkins also shot his wife, Shaneiqua Pugh, and Christina Snow, the mother of three of his children. His sister-in-law and another child also sustained injuries in the attack.

Elkins later died after exchanging gunfire with police.

Sunday’s massacre in Shreveport marks the deadliest mass shooting in the United States in more than two years. The youngest victim, Jayla Elkins, was just 3, authorities said.

Shayla Elkins, 5; Kayla Pugh, 6; Layla Pugh, 7; Mar’Kaydon Pugh, 10; Sariahh Snow, 11; Khedarrion Snow, 6; and Braylon Snow, 5, were also killed in the shooting, according to the Caddo Parish Coroner’s Office.

As investigators struggle to piece together a motive for such a senseless tragedy, multiple family members told CNN Elkins had previously struggled with his mental health.

Local officials have called for prayers for the souls of the victims, and the strength of the survivors.

“There are no words … that can explain the weight of eight young lives taken far too soon,” Caddo Parish Sheriff Henry Whitehorn said at a news conference Monday.

“To the families affected our hearts are with you. … Your children mattered their lives mattered and their memory will not be forgotten.”

Child murder cases have long held the public’s fascination, from the Greek myth of Medea killing her children to get back at Jason, to the more recent cases of Andrea Yates, Jennifer Hart and Lori Vallow.

The horror of such cases lies in its utter incomprehensibility: How could a parent do such a thing?

Yet they do. Each year in the United States there are nearly 500 arrests for filicide – which is the legal term for when parents kill their children – according to an analysis of FBI data by Forensic Science International.

Experts caution these numbers are believed to be underreported.

The very idea of filicide is so unconscionable that many people assume anyone who commits this crime was driven by mental illness or had a previous history of violence. But research shows us that is not always the case.

Society has “deeply ingrained views about motherhood (and) fatherhood … this is really hard stuff for people to think about and hear about,” said Susan Hatters-Friedman, a forensic and reproductive psychiatrist with Case Western Reserve University.

“When I’m explaining it to lawyers or to the jury, I want them to understand that there’s been decades of scholarship (around the issue).”

Psychiatrists like Hatters-Friedman have spent years

Un fabricante de condones podría subir los precios debido a la guerra con Irán

Kraig Pakulski 0 20 Article rating: No rating

Por Kit Maher y David Goldman, CNN

Según una nueva entrevista con el CEO del mayor fabricante de preservativos del mundo, el sexo seguro podría encarecerse si la guerra de Irán continúa interrumpiendo las cadenas de suministro mundiales.

El CEO de Karex, Goh Miah Kiat, declaró a Reuters el martes que la empresa podría verse obligada a aumentar los precios entre un 20 % y un 30 %, dependiendo de la duración de la interrupción.

Las cadenas de suministro globales se han visto afectadas por la guerra desde finales de febrero y el bloqueo del estrecho de Ormuz, lo que ha interrumpido el suministro de algunos de los materiales utilizados en la producción de preservativos.

“La situación es sin duda muy delicada, los precios son elevados”, declaró Goh a Reuters. “No nos queda más remedio que trasladar los costes a los clientes”.

Con sede en Malasia, Karex fabrica preservativos, lubricantes personales, guantes, catéteres médicos y fundas para sondas.

La empresa produce preservativos masculinos de látex, incluyendo las marcas ONE, Trustex, Carex y Pasante, con una capacidad de producción anual superior a los 5.000 millones de unidades.

Según su sitio web, Karex también exporta a más de 130 países.

Goh declaró a Reuters que, además del aumento de los costes de fabricación y envasado de los preservativos, se están produciendo retrasos en los envíos.

“Estamos viendo muchos más condones en barcos que aún no han llegado a su destino, pero que son muy necesarios”, indicó Goh.

CNN se ha puesto en contacto con Karex para averiguar cuándo podrían producirse las subidas de precios. Mientras tanto, Goh declaró a Reuters que la empresa tiene suficiente suministro para varios meses.

Desde la guerra con Irán, los precios de la gasolina se han disparado, acaparando la mayor parte de la atención.

Los economistas temen que el aumento de los costos pueda provocar una disminución del gasto de los consumidores y que la escasez de petróleo obstaculice la producción. Esto es especialmente cierto en Asia, que depende en gran medida del petróleo de Medio Oriente como combustible.

Pero la guerra también ha perjudicado la industria de las llamadas materias primas: subproductos del petróleo que se utilizan para plásticos y otros materiales. Entre ellos: la nafta, que se utiliza para fabricar materiales de embalaje, y el aceite de silicona y el amoníaco, ingredientes clave en la producción de preservativos.

“Se habla mucho del petróleo crudo y de sus repercusiones en el diésel y la gasolina, pero también hay escasez de materias primas y productos petroquímicos”, declaró Angie Gildea, directora global de petróleo y gas de KPMG, en una entrevista aparte.

Por ejemplo, el 41 % de la nafta que se consume en Asia proviene de Medio Oriente, señaló Gildea. Si los países que fabrican los productos que compramos, incluida Malasia, no pueden acceder a las materias primas, tienen que subir los precios para compensar.

Pero las materias primas no son el único problema.

Algunos países, como Myanmar y Camboya, han comenzado a racionar el combustible. Algunas escuelas del sudeste asiático, incluyendo Vietnam, han ordenado que los estudiantes permanezcan en casa debido al elevado costo del transporte.

Los analistas del sector temen que esto también esté afectando

Sweeping Success! San Marcos brooms SB to capture 3rd consecutive Channel League crown

Kraig Pakulski 0 26 Article rating: No rating
ENT_0218
Entenza Design
Kalea Anderson had 6 kills for Royals

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT) - San Marcos made quick work of rival Santa Barbara as the Royals capture a third straight Channel League championship.

San Marcos swept the overmatched Dons 25-17, 25-10, 25-22 to finish off an undefeated 10-0 league season.

(The Royals will enter the CIF-SS playoffs with an impressive 25-2 record. Entenza Design).

Matteo Burdick led the way with 13 kills followed by Owen Willer with 9 and Koji Hefner tallied 8. The lone Royals senior Hefner was honored before the match.

Santa Barbara was led by five kills each from Hayes Costner and Kristian Dybdahl.

The Dons are CIF-SS playoff-bound with a 17-7 mark.

In other volleyball results, Dos Pueblos swept Ventura 3-0, Bishop Diego sweeps Foothill Tech 3-0 and Oxnard 3, Rio Mesa 0.

The post Sweeping Success! San Marcos brooms SB to capture 3rd consecutive Channel League crown appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

Palestinian schoolboy among two killed by Israeli settlers, amid spate of attacks on education in the West Bank

Kraig Pakulski 0 31 Article rating: No rating

By Zeena Saifi, CNN

(CNN) — Two Palestinians, among them a 14-year-old boy, have been shot and killed at a school in the occupied West Bank amid an attack by Israeli settlers, the Palestinian Health Ministry and multiple eyewitnesses said.

A video from the scene shows a man in military fatigues armed with a rifle advancing slowly on the village of Al-Mughayyir before crouching and firing at least eight rounds toward the school. Activists said the man was a known settler who has attacked the village in the past.

Residents say Al-Mughayyir is targeted by settler attacks on a near-daily basis.

The Health Ministry named the two Palestinians killed as Aws Al-Naasan, 14, and Jihad Abu Naim, 32, a parent at the school.

The killings are among a spate of attacks on Palestinian schools or schoolchildren in the West Bank in recent days, which have seen a school building razed to the ground and, in a separate incident, settlers putting up razor wire to block children as young as five from getting to school.

Students in schoolyard as gunfire starts

Bassam Abu-Assaf, the principal of the all-boys school that came under fire, said at least five armed settlers had approached the village of Al-Mughayyir, northeast of Ramallah, around noon. Some of the students were outside in the schoolyard when the gunfire began, he added.

The Israeli military claimed the incident had started after rocks were thrown at a vehicle carrying several Israeli passengers, including a reserve soldier, whom the military said, “exited the vehicle and opened fire at suspects in the area.”

The military said it had deployed soldiers to the scene and was “aware of the claim” that two Palestinians were killed and others injured, saying “the incident is under review.”

Video obtained by CNN shows the moment 14-year-old Aws, who was in ninth grade, was shot and killed. His friends can be seen rushing to him and carrying his body away.

The second Palestinian killed, Abu Naim, was a parent at the school who lived nearby. He rushed to the school when he heard the gunshots, and was then shot himself, Abu-Assaf, the school principal said.

“It was a disaster. Everybody was screaming. It was unbelievable. I’m still processing it. I don’t know how long it will take for the teachers and students to overcome the shock,” he said, adding that four others were injured, including students and parents.

Videos from in front of the school show the streets splattered with blood, gunshots sounding in the distance, and a flurry of men — young and old — frantically running around and calling for help. Injured boys and men, one with an exposed and bloodied torso, are seen being carried away.

The fatal shooting is the latest in a surge of increasingly brazen and violent attacks against Palestinians, waged by Israeli settlers and, at times, by soldiers as well. While the Israeli military frequently says it is investigating such incidents, it often fails to make any arrests or hold perpetrators accountable.

School bulldozed

In a separate incident, activists say settlers bulldozed a school in Hammamat al-Maleh in the northern Jordan Valley Monday evening, near the village of Tayasir, where a CNN team was detained and assaulted by soldiers last month.

The area has been targeted by settlers in recent months, forcing its Palestinian inhabitants there off the land, local activists told CNN.

Activists say the settlers are from the same group responsible for building an illegal outpost nearby and using it as a base from which to launch attacks on Palestinians.

Even though the school was withi

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