There is massive tension in Ukraine as at press time,it may be the beginning of the Third World War
By JULIE PACE,Abdulmumini Adeku,
A very deadly ancient church
secret which the Vatican is not willing to divulge may eventually lead to the
Third world war if the crisis of Russia ‘s present hold on Crimea is allowed to
spiral out of control.
In an exclusive
interview with Paedia Express Multimedia in his office in Lagos, Nigeria, an elder
in the Catholic Church who will not want his names in the prints because of the
sensitivity of the matter said that catholic monks were well aware of what was
happening.
He explained that there
were several church prophecies that have warned that if the Russian nation and the
west do not embrace God one day they will eventually turn against each other.
He noted that Russia was
formally known as a Godless nation but now things have changed and God will now
use them to punish America and Europe who are now Godless.
He added that Ukraine
was boiling at the moment because there has always been a battle for the soul
of that country.
A source at a not for
profit organization in Lagos, Nigeria told
Paedia Express Multimedia that the history of the current stand off between
Russia and the West can really be understood if an analysts goes back to the Crimean
war of 1856.
He urged the multinational
oil corporations of the world fondly called the seven sisters to be careful with
there manipulation of global politics to suit their selfish interests as it
will eventually boomerang one day.
He agreed that the Third world war may finally start in Ukraine by the annexation of Crimea by Russia but was indifferent about any spiritual prophecy.
He threw his full weight behind Russian President Vladimir Putin insisting that the former KGB Agent turned Politician has done nothing wrong admitting native Russians from Crimea into the Russian Federation via a referendum
According to part of a
Vatican diplomatic cables sent to Paedia Express Multimedia it was learned that there were some
very disturbing developments in global politics which were not made known to the
general public because of the possible effects.
The source reveals “tLucia
disclosed the message for the first time to Pope Pius XII whom, after reading
it, he sealed it and stored it away without making it public.”
“ Later Pope John XXIII
read it and, in the same manner as his predecessor, he kept it out of the
public eye because he knew that once he revealed; it will bring desperation and
panic to human kind”.
“Now the time has come,
and permission has been granted from Pope John Paul II to reveal it to the
children of God, in order not to create panic but to make people aware of this
important message so everybody can be prepared”
“. The Virgin told
Lucia: “Go my child and tell the world; what will come to pass during the
1950′s – 2000′s. Men are not practicing the Commandments that our Father has
given us. Evil is governing the world and is harvesting hate and resentment all
over. Men will fabricate mortal weapons that will destroy the world in minutes,
half of the human race will be destroyed, the war will begin against Rome , and
there will be conflicts amongst religious orders”
“God will allow all
natural phenomenon’s like smoke, hail, cold, water, fire, floods, earthquakes,
winds and bad weather to slowly batter
the planet. These things will come to pass before the year 2010. “
“Those who won’t
believe, this is the time,” your beloved mother told you, “those lacking
charity towards others and those who do not love thy neighbor like my beloved
Son has loved you, all, cannot survive. those who Austin, who lives in Fatima,
said that Pope Paul VI gave him permission to visit sister Lucia who is a
cloistered nun (she does not leave the monastery nor is allowed to receive any
visitors). Father Augustin said that she received him greatly overwhelmed and
told him: “Father, our lady is very sad because nobody is interested in her
prophecy of 1917, though the righteous are walking through a narrow path, the
evil ones are walking through an ample road that is leading them straight to
their destruction, believe me father, the punishment will come very soon.”
Many souls will be lost;
many nations will disappear from the earth. But, in the middle of all these, if
men reflect, pray and practice good deeds, the world can be saved. One of all
these, if men persist with its evil, the world will be lost forever.
In a related issue, Raising the stakes in an East-West showdown over Ukraine, President Barack Obama on Thursday ordered economic sanctions against nearly two dozen members of Vladimir Putin’s inner circle and a major Russian bank that provides them support. He warned that more sweeping penalties against Russia’s robust energy sector could follow.
Russia retaliated swiftly, imposing entry bans on American lawmakers and senior White House officials, among them Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, Obama senior adviser Dan Pfeiffer and the president’s deputy national security adviser, Ben Rhodes.
It’s far more than just a U.S.-Russia dispute. European Union leaders said they, too, were ready to close in on Putin’s associates, announcing plans to impose travel bans and asset freezes on more Russians involved in the territorial clash with Ukraine. The Western aim is twofold: to ratchet up the costs for Putin’s annexation of the Crimean Peninsula and to head off any further Russian military inroads into Ukraine.
“The world is watching with grave concern as Russia has positioned its military in a way that could lead to further incursions into southern and eastern Ukraine,” Obama said, speaking from the South Lawn of the White House.
Thursday’s volleys deepened the confrontation over Ukraine, a standoff that has become one of the biggest political crises in Europe since the Cold War. Putin, rather than backing off as the West warns of costs, has defiantly moved military forces into Crimea, backed a referendum in which the Crimean people overwhelming voted to join Russia and then signed a treaty formally absorbing the strategically important peninsula into Russia.
In Ukraine, pro-Russian forces seized three Ukrainian warships Thursday, and U.S. officials acknowledge privately that there is little chance of Russia giving up Crimea now. The more pressing concern is stopping Putin from pushing into other Ukrainian areas with large ethnic Russian populations. Thousands of Russian troops are currently positioned along Ukraine’s eastern border.
The Pentagon said Russia’s defense minister assured Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel that those forces have no intention of crossing into Ukrainian territory and are only in the region to conduct military exercises. The two men spoke by phone for an hour.
The U.S. had received similar assurances from top Kremlin officials, including Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, before Russian troops moved into Crimea.
The penalties announced Thursday by the U.S. and Europe build on an initial round of narrower sanctions levied earlier this week. While European officials did not immediately release names, the U.S. listed some of Putin’s closest associates.
Among the 20 individuals sanctioned were Sergei Ivanov, the Russian president’s chief of staff, as well as Arkady Rotenberg and Gennady Timchenko, both lifelong Putin friends whose companies have amassed billions of dollars in government contracts.
Also sanctioned: Bank Rossiya, a private bank that is owned by Yuri Kovalchuk, who is considered to be Putin’s banker.
Putin has not been personally targeted by the first two rounds of U.S. sanctions. In fact, American sanctions on heads of state are rare, largely reserved for instances where the U.S. is seeking a change in government leadership.
Russians have made light of previous U.S. sanctions on individuals, and targeted American lawmakers reacted In like manner on Thursday.
Said Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.: “I guess this means my spring break in Siberia is off.”
Obama also signed a new executive order that would allow him to sanction key Russian industries, actions that could have a harsher impact on that country’s economy. Senior administration officials said Russia’s energy, financial services and metals and mining sectors are among the industries that could be targeted.
“Russia must know that further escalation will only isolate it further from the international community,” Obama said.
The U.S. has so far acted in conjunction with the European Union, Russia’s largest trading partner. The EU’s close economic ties with Russia gives its penalties more bite, but also leave the alliance more vulnerable if the Kremlin retaliates.
European leaders, meeting in Brussels on Thursday, announced their own plans to scrap an EU-Russia summit scheduled for June. Like Obama, they warned that further provocations by Russia would result in deeper punishments.
“We need to prepare to take further steps and we need to do it together,” said Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt. “A strong Europe is the last thing that Putin wants. He wants to split us up.”
German Chancellor Angela Merkel said that beyond increasing the number of people affected by asset freezes and travel bans — initially 21 politicians and military commanders — the leaders would prepare for possible measures at a higher level, which would include economic sanctions and an arms embargo.
Russia’s economy has already taken a hit during the Crimea crisis. The country’s stock market fell 10 percent this month, potentially wiping out billions. Economists have slashed growth forecasts to zero this year, and foreign investors have been pulling money out of Russian banks.
The West’s dispute with Russia is expected to dominate Obama’s trip to Europe next week. He’ll chair a hastily arranged meeting of the Group of Seven, pointedly leaving out Russia, which often joins the U.S., Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Canada and Japan to comprise the Group of Eight.
Officials said the G-7 leaders will discuss what kind of financial assistance they can provide to the fledgling Ukrainian government. The G-7 nations have also suspended preparations for a G-8 summit that Russia is scheduled to host this summer in Sochi, site of the recently completed Winter Olympics.
Russia retaliated swiftly, imposing entry bans on American lawmakers and senior White House officials, among them Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, Obama senior adviser Dan Pfeiffer and the president’s deputy national security adviser, Ben Rhodes.
It’s far more than just a U.S.-Russia dispute. European Union leaders said they, too, were ready to close in on Putin’s associates, announcing plans to impose travel bans and asset freezes on more Russians involved in the territorial clash with Ukraine. The Western aim is twofold: to ratchet up the costs for Putin’s annexation of the Crimean Peninsula and to head off any further Russian military inroads into Ukraine.
“The world is watching with grave concern as Russia has positioned its military in a way that could lead to further incursions into southern and eastern Ukraine,” Obama said, speaking from the South Lawn of the White House.
Thursday’s volleys deepened the confrontation over Ukraine, a standoff that has become one of the biggest political crises in Europe since the Cold War. Putin, rather than backing off as the West warns of costs, has defiantly moved military forces into Crimea, backed a referendum in which the Crimean people overwhelming voted to join Russia and then signed a treaty formally absorbing the strategically important peninsula into Russia.
In Ukraine, pro-Russian forces seized three Ukrainian warships Thursday, and U.S. officials acknowledge privately that there is little chance of Russia giving up Crimea now. The more pressing concern is stopping Putin from pushing into other Ukrainian areas with large ethnic Russian populations. Thousands of Russian troops are currently positioned along Ukraine’s eastern border.
The Pentagon said Russia’s defense minister assured Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel that those forces have no intention of crossing into Ukrainian territory and are only in the region to conduct military exercises. The two men spoke by phone for an hour.
The U.S. had received similar assurances from top Kremlin officials, including Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, before Russian troops moved into Crimea.
The penalties announced Thursday by the U.S. and Europe build on an initial round of narrower sanctions levied earlier this week. While European officials did not immediately release names, the U.S. listed some of Putin’s closest associates.
Among the 20 individuals sanctioned were Sergei Ivanov, the Russian president’s chief of staff, as well as Arkady Rotenberg and Gennady Timchenko, both lifelong Putin friends whose companies have amassed billions of dollars in government contracts.
Also sanctioned: Bank Rossiya, a private bank that is owned by Yuri Kovalchuk, who is considered to be Putin’s banker.
Putin has not been personally targeted by the first two rounds of U.S. sanctions. In fact, American sanctions on heads of state are rare, largely reserved for instances where the U.S. is seeking a change in government leadership.
Russians have made light of previous U.S. sanctions on individuals, and targeted American lawmakers reacted In like manner on Thursday.
Said Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.: “I guess this means my spring break in Siberia is off.”
Obama also signed a new executive order that would allow him to sanction key Russian industries, actions that could have a harsher impact on that country’s economy. Senior administration officials said Russia’s energy, financial services and metals and mining sectors are among the industries that could be targeted.
“Russia must know that further escalation will only isolate it further from the international community,” Obama said.
The U.S. has so far acted in conjunction with the European Union, Russia’s largest trading partner. The EU’s close economic ties with Russia gives its penalties more bite, but also leave the alliance more vulnerable if the Kremlin retaliates.
European leaders, meeting in Brussels on Thursday, announced their own plans to scrap an EU-Russia summit scheduled for June. Like Obama, they warned that further provocations by Russia would result in deeper punishments.
“We need to prepare to take further steps and we need to do it together,” said Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt. “A strong Europe is the last thing that Putin wants. He wants to split us up.”
German Chancellor Angela Merkel said that beyond increasing the number of people affected by asset freezes and travel bans — initially 21 politicians and military commanders — the leaders would prepare for possible measures at a higher level, which would include economic sanctions and an arms embargo.
Russia’s economy has already taken a hit during the Crimea crisis. The country’s stock market fell 10 percent this month, potentially wiping out billions. Economists have slashed growth forecasts to zero this year, and foreign investors have been pulling money out of Russian banks.
The West’s dispute with Russia is expected to dominate Obama’s trip to Europe next week. He’ll chair a hastily arranged meeting of the Group of Seven, pointedly leaving out Russia, which often joins the U.S., Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Canada and Japan to comprise the Group of Eight.
Officials said the G-7 leaders will discuss what kind of financial assistance they can provide to the fledgling Ukrainian government. The G-7 nations have also suspended preparations for a G-8 summit that Russia is scheduled to host this summer in Sochi, site of the recently completed Winter Olympics.
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