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Message : Xybf Obama touts Australia s contribution to Islamic State fight LOS ANGELES 鈥?When Lady Gagas dogwalker was shot in Hollywood last week as he tried to fend off assailants who stole two of the singers French bulldogs, the attack not only made in [url=https://www.stanleycup.com.de]stanley deutschland[/url] ternational headlines, but fit into [url=https://www.stanleyusa.us]stanley us[/url] a local crime pattern raising alarm among Los Angeles police officials: More robbery victims being shot.Calling it a disturbing trend, LAPD Asst. Chief Beatrice Girmala told the L.A. Police Commission this week that 18 robbery victims had been shot in L.A. through Tuesday, compared with just one such shooting during the same period last year. Of the 18 shootings, 14 occurred on city streets. This is extremely concerning to the department and to the public, Girmala said.The increase comes amid a more general surge in serious violence in the city, where higher rates of shootings and homicides that began last year amid turmoil brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic have carried over into 2021.As of Tuesday, L.A. had recorded 64 homicides and 267 shootings, compared with 46 homicides and 111 shootings at the same point last year, Girmala said. Shooting violence continues to plague our communities with citywide increases, she said.Why the overall increase in violence has now spilled over into robberies i [url=https://www.stanley-germany.de]stanley germany[/url] s not clear. Although gang violence is blamed for much of the increase in homicides, Girmala said police have linked just two of the 18 robbery shootings to gangs.The robberies also have occurred in different parts of the city and at different times. Two have been fat Horb Islamic leaders call Ohio mosque vandalism a hate crime HARGEISA, Somalia 鈥?An American volunteer gently brushes away dirt to reveal the bones of a Somali victim buried in a mass grave some 30 years ago. Tens of thousands of skeletons may lie in mass graves here, on the northern edge of Somalia, where many want to see justice prevail, even if delayed.Last year, 38 bodies were uncovered in two graves by the Somaliland War Crimes In [url=https://www.cup-stanley.fr]stanley mugs[/url] vestigation Commission, which is overseeing the work on a third site where another dozen bodies are buried.More than 200 mass graves with the bodies of 50,000 to 60,000 people may be in the region, according to the commission.Why dig up the past now Many African countries try to forget about atrocities carried out in their recent pasts, said Kadar Ahmed, chairman of the commission, speaking at the gravesite. He wants this northern tip of Somalia 鈥?a self-governing region called Somaliland 鈥?to confront those ghosts head-on. He said he hopes an outside tribunal will [url=https://www.cup-stanley.fr]stanley france[/url] take up the case of the unknown numbers of deaths.The commission was created in 1997 with the dual aim of offering a proper burial to the victims and taking judicial action against those responsible for the killings. Ahmed, who was not in Somaliland during the 1980s violence, has headed the commission the last four years.If governments arent held responsible for mass killings, then killings will continue, s [url=https://www.stanleycups.pl]stanley polska[/url] aid Ahmed. Another aim is to find the individuals and take them to court, he said. Ahmed believes that one general who gave the order to
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