"I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life"

Father God, thank you for the love of the truth you have given me. Please bless me with the wisdom, knowledge and discernment needed to always present the truth in an attitude of grace and love. Use this blog and Northwoods Ministries for your glory. Help us all to read and to study Your Word without preconceived notions, but rather, let scripture interpret scripture in the presence of the Holy Spirit. All praise to our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.

Please note: All my writings and comments appear in bold italics in this colour

Tuesday, October 21, 2025

Corruption is Everywhere > Especially in China's military

 

Chinese president fires 9 top military officers,

citing corruption

   
Chinese soldiers march during a military parade commemorating the 80th anniversary of victory over Japan and the end of World War II, in Tiananmen Square, Beijing, China, on Sept. 3. On Friday, President Xi Jinping fired nine of his top military officers for corruption. File Photo by Kremlin Press Office
Chinese soldiers march during a military parade commemorating the 80th anniversary of victory over Japan and the end of World War II, in Tiananmen Square, Beijing, China, on Sept. 3. On Friday, President Xi Jinping fired nine of his top military officers for corruption. File Photo by Kremlin Press Office | License Photo

Oct. 17 (UPI) -- Chinese President Xi Jinping has expelled nine of his top military generals from the People's Liberation Army for what China says is corruption, including the country's number two general.

Gen. He Weidongone of the two vice-chairs of the Central Military Commission, was fired by Xi. He was the third in command of the PLA and a member of the Chinese politburo.

"The removal of He Weidong is one of the biggest shake-ups within the PLA in decades," said Lyle Morris, an expert on the Chinese military at the Asia Society Policy Institute, the Financial Times reported. "He was on a fast track to become the next senior vice-chair of the [Central Military Commission], possibly replacing Zhang Youxia, and skipped a grade when he was elevated to the CMC during the 20th Party Congress."

Another high-ranking official removed in the purge is Miao Hua, the army's top political officer. He had been suspended in November 2024.

A statement from Xi said those removed are suspected of "grave official misconduct, involving exceptionally large sums of money. The nature of their offenses is extremely serious, and the impact is profoundly detrimental," Newsweek reported.

Eight of the nine removed were members of the Central Committee, which is scheduled to meet next week to discuss the coming five-year development plan.

When Xi took over the party in 2012, he launched a sweeping corruption probe, and more than 4 million members have been investigated. The campaign accelerated in 2023 as it began focusing on the military and procurement.

Though the crackdown is popular in China, it has also allowed Xi to expel his rivals, Newsweek reported.



Economics in Europe > US sanctions on Balkans will lead to serious economic problems; Germans resent Germany's generous welfare for Ukrainians

 

Serbia is one of many landlocked Balkan countries with no seaport with which to import gas and oil. America's sanctions are heartless and will lead to economic collapse in the Balkans if not all of Europe.


US sanctions on Balkan nation’s oil imminent – president  

Serbia is facing a fuel crisis as a new last-minute waiver on Russian ownership of the NIS company is unlikely, Aleksandar Vucic has said
US sanctions on Balkan nation’s oil imminent – president











Serbia is unlikely to receive another US waiver from sanctions targeting its oil sector due to its partial Russian ownership, Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic said on Sunday, adding that the nation could soon face a fuel crisis.

Washington has granted Belgrade several temporary exemptions from additional restrictions it imposed in January on the NIS oil company, in which Russia’s Gazprom and Gazprom Neft together hold a majority stake. The most recent waiver, issued on October 1, is valid for just one week.

Vucic said on national television on Sunday he believed that no last-minute reprieve was forthcoming, unless he nationalized NIS – a path he said he was reluctant to take.

“We have been working on it for 10 months, we are trying to find a solution and still there is none,” the Serbian leader said. Should a crisis unfold, he added, the country would face a gasoline price hike, but the situation would not be as dire as in the 1990s, when people had to “pour fuel from bottles or buckets.”

Serbia has resisted Western pressure to fully align its foreign policy with that of the European Union, even as it seeks membership in the bloc. Brussels and Washington have repeatedly nudged Belgrade to sever its energy ties with Moscow, a key historical partner. The Vucic government has also accused Western nations of fueling mass protests in Serbia.

Several EU states, including Hungary and Slovakia, have voiced similar concerns over Brussels’ pressure to reject Russian crude. Tensions escalated earlier this year after Ukrainian forces struck sections of the Druzhba pipeline network that supplies oil to eastern Europe.

In January, Hungary and Serbia announced they would speed up the connection of Serbian consumers to the Druzhba system.



Most Germans oppose welfare payments for Ukrainians – poll


66% of respondents are against granting Ukrainian migrants unemployment benefits, an INSA poll has found
Most Germans oppose welfare payments for Ukrainians – poll











A majority of Germans oppose granting social welfare payments to unemployed Ukrainian migrants, according to an INSA survey commissioned by Bild newspaper.

The poll, published on Saturday, found broad dissatisfaction with government policy towards Ukrainian migrants. Only 17% of respondents say Ukrainians who fled to Germany after the escalation of the conflict with Russia should receive payments under the ‘Burgergeld’ scheme (citizens’ income), while 66% oppose the idea.

According to Bild, Germany spends around €6.3 billion ($6.8 billion) annually on Burgergeld for 700,000 Ukrainians. Only one in three Ukrainians living in Germany has a job, the paper said, adding that many of those who arrived since 2022 have not integrated into the labor market.

Burgergeld is Germany’s central welfare scheme which provides income support to adults unable to sustain themselves through work or insurance-based programs. Often described as a last-resort measure, it pays around €563 ($610) per month for a single adult, while rent and utilities are covered separately.

The INSA survey also suggested that 62% of Germans believe able-bodied Ukrainian men who entered Germany after the escalation of the conflict should return to their homeland, with 18% taking the opposing view. In an attempt to address manpower issues on the front, Ukrainian officials have urged these men to return and join the fight – but EU states, including Germany, have refused to deport them.

More than 4.3 million people who fled Ukraine hold temporary protection in the EU, according to Eurostat, with Germany hosting around 1.2 million, the largest number in the bloc.

Faced with high expenses associated with migrant support, the German government is planning to reduce costs for newly arriving Ukrainians by moving them from Burgergeld to the lower-paying Asylum Seekers’ Benefits Act, a measure expected to cut payments by €100 per person each month.



Monday, October 20, 2025

Latin America Rising > New Bolivian President to abandon socialism; Trump stops funding to Colombia; Brazil in serious trade deficit with USA

 

Centrist outsider Rodrigo Paz wins Bolivian presidency, ending socialist rule

Americas

Centrist senator Rodrigo Paz won Bolivia’s presidential election on Sunday, preliminary results showed, in a surprise victory that ended 20 years of dominance by the left-wing Movement Toward Socialism party. His win reflected growing anger over the country’s deepening economic crisis, fuel shortages and soaring inflation.

Centrist senator and presidential candidate Rodrigo Paz of the Christian Democratic Party (PDC) shows his ballot to the media before casting his vote, during the presidential runoff election.
Centrist senator and presidential candidate Rodrigo Paz of the Christian Democratic Party (PDC) shows his ballot to the media before casting his vote, during the presidential runoff election. © Sara Aliaga, Reuters

Rodrigo Paz, a centrist senator who had never been a nationally prominent figure until now, won Bolivia’s presidential election on Sunday, preliminary results showed — galvanising voters outraged by the country’s economic crisis and frustrated after 20 years of rule by the Movement Toward Socialism (MAS) party.

“The trend is irreversible,” said Óscar Hassenteufel, the president of the Supreme Electoral Tribunal, which released early results showing that Paz, 58, secured more than 54 per cent of the vote. His rival, former right-wing president Jorge “Tuto” Quiroga, took just over 45 per cent.

Paz and his popular running mate, former police captain Edman Lara, gained traction among working-class and rural voters disillusioned with the unrestrained spending of the long-ruling MAS party but wary of a radical turn away from its social protections.

Although Paz plans to end Bolivia’s fixed exchange rate, phase out generous fuel subsidies and cut back public investment, he has pledged a gradual approach to free-market reforms in hopes of avoiding a sharp recession or a spike in inflation that could further anger the public.

Quiroga, by contrast, advocated turning to the International Monetary Fund for a shock-therapy package of the kind Bolivians came to know and fear in the 1990s.

Paz’s victory sets this nation of 12 million on a sharply uncertain path as he seeks to enact major change for the first time since the 2005 election of Evo Morales — the founder of MAS and Bolivia’s first Indigenous president.

Since 2023, the Andean nation has been crippled by a shortage of US dollars that has locked Bolivians out of their own savings and hampered imports. Year-on-year inflation soared to 23 per cent last month — the highest rate since 1991 — while fuel shortages have paralysed the country, with motorists often waiting days in line to fill their tanks.

Both Quiroga and Paz vowed to break with the budget-busting populism that has dominated Bolivia under the MAS party.

“We are closing one cycle and opening another,” Paz told supporters as he cast his ballot in his hometown of Tarija alongside his father, former president Jaime Paz Zamora, earlier Sunday.

Some voters said they felt energised by the promise of change as they lined up to vote.

“Since 2005 we haven’t had any real options, so this is exciting for me,” said Carlos Flores, 41, a secondary school teacher waiting to vote for Paz.




Trump to cut US funding to Colombia,

calls its president an 'illegal drug leader'


Americas

President Donald Trump on Sunday referred to Colombian President Gustavo Petro as “an illegal drug leader” and said he would slash US funding because Petro did "nothing to stop" drug production in his country. Earlier on Sunday, Petro accused Washington of assassination after the latest US attack on alleged drug trafficking in Caribbean waters.

Colombia's President Gustavo Petro speaks during a meeting of leaders of the Amazon Cooperation Treaty Organization in Bogota, Colombia, Aug. 22, 2025.
Colombia's President Gustavo Petro speaks during a meeting of leaders of the Amazon Cooperation Treaty Organization in Bogota, Colombia, Aug. 22, 2025. © Fernando Vergara, AP

President Donald Trump said Sunday he would slash US funding to Colombia because the country’s leader “does nothing to stop” drug production, in what is the latest sign of friction between Washington and one of its closest allies in Latin America

In a social media post, Trump referred to Colombian President Gustavo Petro as “an illegal drug leader” who is “low rated and very unpopular”. He warned that Petro “better close up” drug operations "or the United States will close them up for him, and it won’t be done nicely”.

Trump, while at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida, wrote on his Truth Social platform that Petro is “strongly encouraging the massive production of drugs, in big and small fields” across Colombia, which the Republican president initially misspelt as Columbia before deleting his post and replacing it with the correct spelling of the country. “Petro does nothing to stop it, despite large scale payments and subsidies from the USA that are nothing more than a long term rip off of America,” Trump said.

AS OF TODAY, THESE PAYMENTS, OR ANY OTHER FORM OF PAYMENT, OR SUBSIDIES, WILL NO LONGER BE MADE TO COLOMBIA,” Trump said. He also said Petro had “a fresh mouth toward America".

Petro responded later Sunday by saying Trump was being "fooled by his lodges and advisers" in announcing an end to US aid to his country.

Earlier Sunday, Petro accused the US government of assassination and demanded answers after the latest US strike in Caribbean waters. The US said on Saturday it was repatriating to Colombia and Ecuador two survivors from that attack, the sixth since early September. At least 29 people have been killed in strikes that the US has said are targeting alleged drug traffickers.

In September, the Trump administration accused Colombia of failing to cooperate in the drug war, although at the time Washington issued a waiver of sanctions that would have triggered aid cuts. Colombia is the world’s largest exporter of cocaine, and the cultivation of the critical ingredient of coca leaves reached an all-time high last year, according to the United Nations. 

More recently, the State Department said it would revoke Petro’s visa while he was in New York for the UN General Assembly because of his participation in a protest where he called on American soldiers to stop following Trump’s commands. “I ask all the soldiers of the United States’ army, don’t point your rifles against humanity” and “disobey the orders of Trump”, Petro said.

Petro said a Colombian man was killed in a September 16 strike and identified him as Alejandro Carranza, a fisherman from the coastal town of Santa Marta. He said that Carranza has no ties to drug trafficking and that his boat was malfunctioning when it was hit.

“US government officials have committed murder and violated our sovereignty in territorial waters,” Petro wrote on X. “The Colombian boat was adrift and had a distress signal on, with one engine up. We await explanations from the US government.”

Petro said that he has alerted the attorney general's office and demanded that it act immediately to initiate legal proceedings internationally and in US courts. He continued to post a flurry of messages into early Sunday about the killing.

“The United States has invaded our national territory, fired a missile to kill a humble fisherman, and destroyed his family, his children. This is Bolívar’s homeland, and they are murdering his children with bombs,” Petro wrote.

Meanwhile, Noticias Caracol, a Colombian news programme, reported that the man injured in the most recent strike was hospitalised after he was repatriated and remains in serious condition. 

It quoted Colombian Interior Minister Armando Benedetti as saying that the Colombian “will be prosecuted, he will be received – forgive the harsh expression – as a criminal, because so far what is known is that he was carrying a boat full of cocaine, which in our country is a crime, and despite the fact that it was in international waters, his repatriation will be as if he were being prosecuted in the United States".

Petro said the man had been aboard a “narco submarine".

Ecuador’s ministry of the interior confirmed in a statement sent to The Associated Press on Sunday that the US had repatriated an Ecuadorian man injured in the most recent strike. Officials identified him as Andres Fernando Tufino Chila and said a doctor found him to be in good health.

The ministry noted that two prosecutors met with Tufino Chila and determined he had not committed any crimes within the country’s borders and that there was no evidence to the contrary.



Brazil's exports to the U.S. fall 20.3% in September

The sharpest declines in shipments to the United States in September included coffee, Brazilian government figures show. Photo by Andre Borges/EPA
The sharpest declines in shipments to the United States in September included coffee, Brazilian government figures show. Photo by Andre Borges/EPA

Oct. 17 (UPI) -- Brazil's exports to the United States fell 20.3% in September compared with the same month last year and totaled $2.58 billion, according to official data from the Foreign Trade Secretariat of the Ministry of Development, Industry, Trade and Services.

It was the second consecutive monthly decline since new tariff surcharges imposed by the Trump administration took effect. The measures added duties of up to 50% on several Brazilian products, including coffee, meat and manufactured goods.

The sharpest declines in shipments to the United States in September were in boneless beef, which fell 66% year over year; green (unroasted) coffee, down 29%; and prepared beef products, which dropped 20.5%.

Exports of beef tallow also dropped 7.1%, while shipments of semi-manufactured iron and steel products fell 7.7%.

In the same month, U.S. imports rose 14.3%, from $3.8 billion in September 2024 to $4.35 billion. The increase in imports, combined with the export decline, left Brazil with a $1.77 billion trade deficit -- the ninth straight monthly shortfall with the United States and the largest so far this year.

From January to September, Brazil's imports from the United States totaled $34.32 billion, up 11.8%, widening the country's trade deficit to $5.1 billion in 2025.

According to the Brazil-U.S. Trade Monitor by Amcham Brasil, Brazilian products subject to the new tariffs fell 25.7% year over year, while those exempt rose 12.3%, driven by higher shipments of oil and petroleum products.

The federal government has launched a credit support program for affected exporters, with 30 billion reais from the Export Guarantee Fund and additional resources from the BNDES development bank.

The Foreign Trade Secretariat's monthly report said that despite lower exports to the U.S. market, Brazil's total exports grew 7.2% in the same month, reaching $30.53 billion.

That growth was driven by increased sales to other markets. The largest increases were in shipments to Singapore (up 133.1%), India (up 124.1%) and Bangladesh (up 80.6%).

In South America, Brazilian sales rose 29.3%, driven by Argentina, where exports increased 24.9% from September last year to September this year.