Former Hearts of Oak attacker Charles Taylor has said it is impracticable for Asamoah Gyan to play with the Black Stars at the 2022 World Cup in Qatar.
Speaking on Angel FM, Mr Taylor explained that the former Black Stars captain would not be fit enough to join the club after not being active for a while after leaving Legon Cities.
He noted that although Gyan has a remarkable history with the senior national football team, much cannot be said about his recent performance with local clubs.
“We have regular fitness and match fitness. Even those who get injured and return struggle to hit the ground running. We are not talking about history, we’re looking at current performance. He has done his bit for the country,” he said.
Charles Taylor added that “A fit and firing Gyan will have a free ride to the World Cup but let’s ask what he is training for?”
Asamoah Gyan has said he wishes rejoin the Black Stars and feature in the 2022 World Cup which will be held in Qatar.
He made the disclosure during an  interview with the BBC.
Also, Emmanuel Agyemang-Badu, a former colleague of Asamoah Gyan has said Gyan would not be able to present a suitable physique when the tournament in Qatar commences.
On the matter, Qatar Legacy Ambassador, Samuel Etoo, has said though Asamoah Gyan is passionate about playing for Ghana, his ability to do so will be determined by head coach Otto Addo.
For Charles Taylor, he believes no competent coach would take back Asamoah to play for the Black Stars.
“I don’t think any competent coach will entertain this. We can’t take someone who is not playing for any club,” he said.
Abdul Manaf Umar has agreed to play for Real Tamale United (RTU)ahead of the new season which starts in September.
The former Hearts of Oak midfielder according to reports, has signed a one-year deal with a possible extension for a year.
Processes were completed after the 28-year-old passed his medicals.
Abdul Manaf Umar is expected to partake in RTU’s game against Samartex 1996 at the Aliu Mahama Sports Stadium in their opening game of the season.
Umar was released by Hearts of Oak following the expiration of his contract at the end of the 2021/22 season after failing to make a single appearance in the Ghana Premier League.
He made 31 appearances and scored three goals across the 2019-20 and 2020-21 seasons in the Premier League.
The 2022/23 betPawa Premier League season will kick start on the weekend of Friday, September 9 to Monday, September 12, 2022, across all nine league centers.
Sarpong is expected to play a key role for RTU as the club hosts newcomers Samartex 1996 at the Aliu Mahama Sports Stadium in their opening game of the season.
Michelle Sarpong spent last season loan at Elmina Sharks where he was one of the standout players at the club.
The 23-year-old became a mainstay at the Ndoum Sports Complex, featuring in almost all their matches but is unfortunate they had to suffer relegation at end of the season.
Paris St-Germain (PSG) thrashed Lille by seven goals to one during their Sunday clash.
Kylian Mbappe paved the way for the numerous goals on his side after he scored the goal during the first minute of the game.
Messi assisted with the first goal for PSG.
Later on, Messiadded a second (27th minute) and Achraf Hakimi hit a third (39th minute) before Neymar scored twice (43rd and 52nd minute).
But nine minutes after the beginning of the second half, Jonathan Bamba made the first goal for Lille.
Mbappe gave his second and final goals during the match in the 67th and 87th minute.
PSG’s biggest victory against Lille, who seized their French crown in 2020-21, means they are top of Ligue 1 after scoring 16 goals in their opening three wins in the defence of their title.
Lille drop to 12th place after this emphatic home defeat.
Robert Lewandowski on Sunday crowned his 34th birthday with his first competitive goals for Barcelona when club faced Real Sociedad.
The summer signee from Bayern Munich scored two goals within the first minute and 68th minute of the game.
His first goal was assisted by Balde MartÃnez, and the second Fati Vieira.
Barcelona scored four goals whereas Real Sociedad managed to secure a goal.
Ousmane Dembele secured the second goal while Ansu Fati added the fourth.
The handsome victory was welcome following Barca’s modest start to their campaign – a 0-0 draw at home to Rayo Vallecano.
Lewandowski joined Barca in the summer in a £42m deal from Bayern, where he only had one year left on his contract, while another of their new signings, Brazil’s ex-Leeds United forward Raphinha, came on as a second-half substitute.
However, Barcelona were unable to field France central defender Jules Kounde as he has still not been registered because of financial reasons following his transfer from Sevilla at the end of July.
Barca are fifth in La Liga and play Manchester City in a friendly on Wednesday, with their next competitive game against Valladolid at the Nou Camp on Sunday.
Former Special Prosecutor, Martin Amidu, has accused the Office of the Special Prosecutor (OSP) of unconstitutionality over its recent Labianca report.
According to Mr Amidu, the investigative report and the directive for the payment of GHC 1,074,627.15 do not form part of the mandate laid out for the OSP in the Office of the Special Prosecutor Act, 2017 (Act 959)
In an article, the former Special Prosecutor added that the report is also inconsistent with the 1992 Constitution.
“It constitutes an impermissible persecution of mere witnesses in the court of public opinion by the OSP instead of in a court of law,” part of the statement read.
Per Mr Amidu, the report “was purportedly made in pursuance of the exercise of the investigatory functions of the OSP into corruption and corruption-related offences in accordance with the functions of the Office contained in section 3 of the Office of the Special Prosecutor Act, 2017 (Act (959) and Regulations 5, 6, and 7 of the Office of the Special Prosecutor (Operations) Regulations, 2018 (L. I. 2374) dealing with preliminary inquiry, investigation, full investigation, and investigation panels. These are the only provisions of the law governing the mandate of the Office referred to in the OSP report on the Labianca case as grounding the report.”
On August 8, 2022, the OSP published an investigative report which revealed that Labianca Group of Companies, a frozen foods company owned by a member of the Council of State, Eunice Jacqueline Buah Asomah-Hinneh, evaded import duties in excess of ¢1.074 million.
The OSP contended that Ms Asomah-Hinneh used her position as a member of the Council of State and member of the Board of Directors of the Ghana Ports and Harbours Authority (GPHA) to get a favourable decision from the Customs Division.
But according to Mr Amidu, “the OSP Labianca report does not disclose the commission of any corruption and corruption-related offences upon which the suspects or accused were cautioned or charged, if they were indeed cautioned or charged.â€
He continued, stating that the OSP failed to ensure that “a person shall not be convicted of a criminal
offence unless the offence is defined and the penalty for it is prescribed in a written law.”
Mr Amidu revealed that the OSP is an investigatory, prosecutorial and a corruption prevention agency and not a
commission of enquiry “whose unchallenged adverse findings may after the constitutionally specified period of time be deemed to be a judgment of the High Court appealable to the Court of Appeal.”
Rising global oil prices and pollution has led to the creation of solar battery-powered buses by Nigerian entrepreneur Mustapha Gajibo.
This is a new feat for Mustapha Gajibo, the Managing Director of Phoenix Renewables, who produced the first ever electric vehicle in Nigeria in 2018.
Up until now, he has been converting petrol mini-buses into electric vehiclesat his workshop.
“We went into the design and building of electric buses. We first started by converting models. We get petrol powered vehicles at Semi Knock Downs and bring them in, assemble them, feed them with electric motors, lithium batteries to make it fully electric,†he said.
Mustapha Gajibo noted that in early 2021, the first prototype, a mini bus, could cover a distance of up to 100 and 150km on one charge.
Mustapha Gajibo is the Managing Director of Phoenix Renewables
After testing the converted modules of vehicles, he realized that the efficiency of the automobiles could be increased if they were assembled and designed by Phoenix Renewables.
“Petrol powered vehicles were not designed to be powered using electric motors and batteries. The weight and other things were not put into consideration when building these vehicles,†he explained.
The level 300-drop out from the University of Maiduguri noted that as a company driven by technology and innovation, and with a very good research and development team, “we sat down and came up with a design and started building these vehicles fully from scratch.â€
Mustapha Gajibo then built his first ever solar battery-powered bus, a 12-seater bus which can cover a distance up 200 km on one charge.
The vehicle comprises; an electric motor which drives the automobile, a battery (the storage system) that powers the electric motor, a motor controller (it controls the flow of the current in the electric motors), wire, retrofitting of screens, cooling system, which are locally designed.
Meanwhile, Phoenix Renewables has developed a solar powered charging station to charge the batteries.
On Thursday, FIFA noted that more than half a million of the tickets were sold from July 5-16, the last sales period.
“Fans living in Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the United States, Mexico, the United Arab Emirates, England, Argentina, Brazil, Wales and Australia led the way and the digital queues by securing the biggest number of tickets,” Fifa said.
According to the Association, largest number of allocated tickets were for group stage matches like Cameroon v Brazil, Brazil v Serbia, Portugal v Uruguay, Costa Rica v Germany and Australia v Denmark.
In late September, the launch date for the next sales phase will be announced.
Over-the-counter sales will also start in Doha after the launch of the last-minute sales phase, FIFA added.
The 2022 World Cup tournament is expected to commence on Sunday, November 20, instead of November 21, 2022.
Host Qatar and Ecuador will also be opening the tournament with their game in place of the Senegal and Netherlands game.
Initially, the Qatar vs Ecuador game was fixed as the third match in the Group A opener.
The changes follow a request from South American confederation Conmebol to Qatar and Ecuador indicating that it fits in with the tradition of either the hosts or the holders being involved in the opening match.
Ghanaian attacker Solomon Kessi has seal a deal with French Ligue 1 side RC Lens.
Solomon Kessi is on a one-year contract, according to reports.
He finalised the necessary processes following his medical examination.
On the back of successful negotiations between RC Lens and the representatives of the player, he has been signed this summer.
Last season, Solomon Kessie excelled in the Ghanaian lower-tier league where he played for Soccer Bridge Academy.
While reports indicate that Soccer Bridge Academy has earned good money from the transfer of the striker, official monetary details of the deal have not been revealed.
International reports have it that Manchester United are close to signing Casemiro, who plays for Real Madrid as a midfielder.
The Red Devils led by Erik ten Hag want to sign the 30-year-old for 60m euros (£50.7m) plus 10m euros (£8.5m) in add ons.
It is expected that negotiations will be completed in days.
Although Casemiro has a contract that runs to 2025, Real Madrid are mindful of the scale of United’s offer of a contract that could extend to 2027 once the option of an additional season is added on.Â
Casemiro has been with his current side since 2013 and has aided the club in winning three La Liga titles and five Champions Leagues.
The Brazil international ranked top for successful blocks, placed second for tackles made, behind Barcelona’s Sergio Busquets, and also came third overall for possession won. Real Sociedad’s Mikel Merino was first and Busquets runner-up in that latter category.
He also contributed to Real’s attacks, ranking fifth for forward passes and joint-sixth for shots among the league’s central midfielders.
One of the best defensive midfield players in the world, Casemiro has been effective in a team that drops deep when it does not have possession, which Real tend to do with Luka Modric and Toni Kroos in their team.
Casemiro’s impact can be seen by looking at Opta statistics to compare his figures against those of other central midfielders in La Liga last season.
Casemiro spent a season away from the Bernabeu on loan at Portuguese side Porto in 2014-15 but returned to Spain the following season after Real activated his buy-back clause.
He has made 222 appearances for the Spanish giants and scored 24 goals.
Manchester United have turned their attention to Casemiro after talks to sign Juventus’ Adrien Rabiot collapsed over the player’s demands.
United are bottom of the Premier League and want to strengthen their midfield.
Casemiro would become one of the United’s top earners if he completes the move and would sign a four-year contract with the option of an additional year.
He would arrive at United on a big salary in keeping with his status as one of 30 players nominated for this year’s Ballon D’Or, even if his place at Real is under threat from new arrival Aurelien Tchouameni.
Ghana Premier League club, Bechem Unitedhave gone into an official arrangement with Turkish Coach Kasim Gökyildiz.
Kasim Gökyildiz now becomes the club’s new technical director.
This forms part of the Ghana Premier League club’s effort to strengthen its technical bench ahead of the 2022/23 football season.
Gökyildiz worked in the background for the Bechem-based club last season but has now signed a contract to become an official member of the technical team of the Hunters.
He will be working closely with Bechem United head coach Kassim Mingle next season.
The club did well last season and could have easily finished the campaign with a trophy.
Unfortunately, a dip in form saw Bechem United missing out on the Ghana Premier League title before being beaten by Hearts of Oak in the finals of the MTN FA Cup.
Attacker, Doris Boaduwaa, has admitted that Black Princesses‘ output at the ongoing FIFA U20 Women’s World Cup in Costa Rica was nothing to write home about.
In a Twitter post, she admitted that the team’s sudden elimination has left many Ghanaians disappointed in Black Princess.
“The disappointment is huge after this elimination, we could not reach our goal. Nothing is ever easy, we keep fighting to prepare for the future and come back even stronger,” she wrote.
She also thanked Ghanaians for their unwavering support since the beginning of the tournament.
The Black Princesses bow out of the tournament after losing 4-1 to the Netherlands on Wednesday.
Ghana failed to record a win at the group stages, losing all three matches against USA (3-0), Japan (2-0) and The Netherlands (4-1).
The Black Princesses bow out of the tournament after losing 4-1 to the Netherlands on Wednesday.
The disappointment is huge after this elimination, we could not reach our goal.
Nothing is ever easy, we keep fighting to prepare for the future and come back even stronger ✊ðŸ¾ðŸ™ŒðŸ¾
Thank you for your unwavering support since the beginning of this World Cup #DB10 🥹😔😔 🇬ðŸ‡ðŸ™ pic.twitter.com/1p2sVArjiY
— Doris Boaduwaa 1ï¸âƒ£0ï¸âƒ£ (@BoaduwaaDoris) August 18, 2022
A middle-aged woman and her son have met their untimely death at Asokore Mampong in the Ashanti Region.
The identities of the deceased are currently unknown to the media.
On Wednesday, August 17, the duo was knocked down by Kia Rhino vehicle when its driver reportedly lost control of the steering wheel.
According to eyewitnesses, the mother was carrying her toddler on her back waiting to board a vehicle on the Buaban stretch of the Kenyase road when she saw the truck approaching.
In attempt to save herself and her son, she unfortunately found herself in the direction of the vehicle was moving to.
The two died on the spot, according to reports.
Meanwhile, a police team that arrived at the scene have conveyed the remains to the morgue. Also, the Kia Rhino vehicle has been towed from the scene.
The Asokore Mampong police are investigating the incident.
A 34-year-old woman who was kidnapped by armed robbers after an operation at her family apartment at Abuakwa Asenemaso on Tuesday has been rescued.
It took the swift intervention of the Ashanti Regional Police Command to locate her at an uncompleted building at Mmetiam near Abuakwa in the Atwima Nwabiagya municipality.
In ensuring that Lower Manya Krobo and Yilo Krobo municipalities are put back on the national grid, the Ministry of National Security has urged residents to cooperate with the Electricity Company of Ghana.
Communities in the municipalities have been without for several weeks following an alleged exchange of gunshots between the military and some residents at Nuaso.
The discomfort led to a number of protests in the affected areas. Following engagements, the ECG has noted that power will be restored in Lower Manya Krobo and Yilo Krobo municipalities.
As the ECG works to address the challenges, the National Security Ministry said “Residents of the Lower Manya Krobo and Yilo Krobo Municipalities (should) cooperate with the security agencies and the Electricity Company of Ghana to ensure law and order as electricity supply is restored to the affected areas.”
The challenges associated with power restoration necessitated a stakeholder meeting which involved the Ministry of National Security, the Electricity Company of Ghana, the Eastern Regional Minister and the Municipal Chief Executives of the Lower Manya Krobo and Yilo Krobo Municipalities on Thursday, August 11, 2022.
The stakeholders after discussions agreed that towards the restoration of power, there would be “a conduct of integrity tests on all power transmission lines and electricity infrastructure in the area and the resumption of the installation of prepaid meters following the restoration of electricity supply to the areas.”
Also, the stakeholders agreed on the following:
a. The deployment of security personnel to the said areas to ensure law and order during the installation of pre-paid meters;
b. The provision of technical assistance by the 49 Field Engineers Regiment of the Ghana Armed Forces to ECG technicians during the installation process; and
c. The arrest of persons whose conduct threatens to disrupt the exercise.
The Ghana Meteorological Agency (GMet) has clarified that there will be no heavy storm approaching the country tonight.
It has been reported widely on social media that Ghana would be hit with a heavy storm.
These reports pointed out that the source of this information was the Ghana Meteorological Agency.
But the Agency in a Twitter post today has denied making such announcements.
“Our attention has been drawn to an information making rounds on social media. The info does not emanate from the forecast office and the content is completely FALSE,” the GMet wrote.
According to the Ghana Meteorological Agency, members of the general public should disregard such reportage and look out for regular updates on the weather condition of the country from its outfit.
Our attention has been drawn to an information making rounds on social media. The info does not emanate from the forecast office and the content is completely FALSE. Kindly disregard the message and keep following us for regular updates. pic.twitter.com/shWRvd0A0s
The Agency earlier today reported that places over the middle and coastal sectors are likely to experience slight rain or drizzle this morning and in the afternoon.
“Thunderstorms or rain are expected over the northern sector and the transition zone in the late afternoon,” the GMet added.
The Office of the Special Prosecutor (OSP) spearheaded by Kissi Agyebeng has given an account of its activities during the first half of 2022.
The Half Yearly Report released in August 2022 names the specific corruption and corruption-related activities that have drawn the attention of the OSP.
Section 3(3) of the Office of the Special Prosecutor Act, 2017 (Act 959) mandates the Office of the Special Prosecutor to publish, on a half yearly basis, the list of corruption cases investigated and prosecuted by the Office and the number of acquittals, convictions and pending cases and the value of any recovered proceeds.
According to the 13-page document signed by Kissi Agyebeng, the OSP remains focused and innovative on its four-way mandate of investigating corruption and corruption-related offences, prosecuting suspected offenders, taking steps to prevent corruption, and recovering the proceeds of corruption and corruption-related offences.
The Office of the Special Prosecutor (OSP) has revealed that its outfit is currently investigating over 70 corruption and corruption-related cases.
In its Half Yearly Report published on August 1, 2022, the OSP indicated that the Airbus SE scandal, banking and financial sector crisis, recruitment to cadet officers training at the Ghana Police Academy, estate of Kwadwo Owusu-Afriyie and the Northern Development Authority (NDA) contract to A&Qs Consortium are among the cases it is currently investigating.
Section 3(3) of the Office of the Special Prosecutor Act, 2017 (Act 959) mandates the Office of the Special Prosecutor to publish, on a half yearly basis, the list of corruption cases investigated and prosecuted by the Office and the number of acquittals, convictions and pending cases and the value of any recovered proceeds.
Airbus SE
Airbus SE case looks at the alleged bribery by the European multinational aerospace corporation with regards to the sale and purchase of military aircrafts for the Republic.
It is alleged that Airbus SE swayed government officials and other decision-makers on airplane sales, boosting profit by more than $1 billion.
The corporation, per reports from Bloomberg, is facing a 300 million euro ($340 million) lawsuit from a group of investors over allegations it failed to properly disclose a sprawling corruption scandal and subsequent settlement.
According to the OSP, it is currently the INTERPOL and the central authorities of the United Kingdom and the
United States under the mutual legal assistance regime.
Banking and Financial Sector Crisis
Between August 2017 and January 2020, the Government embarked on a banking sector cleanup exercise to reinforce Ghana’s banking sector confidence.
The exercise led to the collapse of some banks and financial institutions.
In the 2020 budget statement, government stated that the clean-up cost GHS11.7 billion. There have been claims that some corrupt activities took place during the cleanup exercise.
On 25 January 2022, the Special Prosecutor announced the commencement of investigation into the banking and financial sector crisis.
The OSP is investigating some officials of the Bank of Ghana, banks, specialised deposit-taking institutions, and financial holding companies.
Recruitment to Cadet Officers Training at the Ghana Police Academy
The recruitment of Course 51 Cadet Officers into the Ghana Police Academy drew the attention of the Special Prosecutor, Kissi Agyebeng, following complaints that the personnel in charge, exhibited favouritism and other unacceptable conducts during the process.
On 17 March 2022, the Special Prosecutor commenced investigations into suspected corruption and corruption-related offences in respect of the recruitment exercise.
According to the OSP, its investigations target specific cases of alleged corruption and corruption-related offences of the use of office for profit, abuse of office, abuse of power, favouritism, nepotism, victimisation and the selection of unqualified persons.
Estate of Kwadwo Owusu-Afriyie alias Sir John
The will of Former Chief Executive of the Forestry Commission, Kwadwo Owusu Afriyie, popularly known as Sir John, came to light after it was reported that he had acquired some state lands before his passing.
Portions of the Achimota Forest and Ramsar catchment at Sakumono in Accra are among the properties claimed to be owned by Sir John.
The numerous properties owned by the late Kwadwo Owusu Afriyie became a subject for discussion earlier this year.
On 26 May 2022, the Special Prosecutor announced that his uniform has commenced investigations into the matter.
While investigation was ongoing, Mr Kissi Agyebeng directed the freezing of the estate of Sir John. On 9 June, 2022, the Special Prosecutor applied to the High Court, Financial Division, Accra for a confirmation of the freezing order.
The High Court refused the application, but on 19 July 2022, the Special Prosecutor filed a Notice of Appeal to the Court of Appeal, Civil Division, Accra against the decision of the High Court.
Northern Development Authority
The Office of the Special Prosecutor is investigating a contract awarded to A&Qs Consortium for consultancy services by the Northern Development Authority (NDA) under the Infrastructure for Poverty Eradication Programme (IPEP), especially in respect of the quantum of the contract sum.
Mr Kissi Agyebeng in July directed the Controller and Accountant General to immediately freeze payments arising from the contract.
Other Cases
The Office of Special Prosecutor is also investigating 70 other cases at various levels of consideration.
Information on these cases according to the Half Yearly Report, will be publicized should the Special Prosecutor
determines that they are within the mandate of the Office and “that they should be moved past the preliminary investigation stage.”
The decision by the OSP is meant to protect the privacy of individuals and the business operations of institutions and companies, and also to avoid unnecessary stigmatisation.
The Bank of Ghana (BoG) has revealed that new loans advanced by banks from January to June 2022 amounted to GH¢24.6 billion.
The Banking Sector Development Report by the central bank reveals that new loans have increased by 54% as against the same comparative period last year, which saw a growth of 1.0%.
“On a year-to-date basis, gross loans and advances increased by 17.5 percent in the first six months of this year, a recovery from the contraction of 0.5 percent recorded during the same period in 2021,” part of the statement added.
Per the report, the stock of gross loans and advances increased by 33.3 percent (year-on-year) to GH¢63.4 billion at the end of June 2022. This growth is substantial compared to the growth of 5.7 percent recorded in June 2021.
The largest share of credit, 34.1% went to the services sector. The commerce, finance and construction sectors had shares of 21.3% and 10.2% respectively.
“These top three sectors together accounted for 65.6 percent of total credit in June 2022, compared with 60.3 percent in June 2021. The other economic sectors accounted for the remaining 34.4 percent in various proportions in June 2022,” the report said.
The mining and quarrying sector remained the lowest recipient of the industry credit with a share of 2.1 percent.
The 2022 credit share received by the sector was less than the 2.2 percent share in the previous year.
Private and Public sector
Private sector credit grew by 33.7 percent to GH¢57.2 billion in June 2022, compared with a growth of 6.8 percent in the previous year.
Accordingly, the private sector share of total credit increased marginally to 90.2 percent in June 2022, from 89.9 percent in June 2021.
Public sector credit also recorded a growth of 29.3 percent to GH¢6.2 billion, compared to a contraction of 2.8 percent in the previous year.
The share of public sector credit, however, declined marginally from 10.1 percent to 9.8 percent on account of the lower annual growth rate in public sector credit relative to the growth in private sector credit in June 2022.
Manchester United boss Erik ten Hag has cancelled a planned day off on Sunday after the 4-0 humiliation at Brentford.
With no game until the visit of Liverpool to Old Trafford on 22 August, Ten Hag had intended to let his squad have the rest of the weekend off.
However, the manner of Saturday’s loss prompted him to revise his plans.
It is understood he was at Carrington early on Sunday to mull over the nature of a defeat that has drawn plenty of criticism from both fans and pundits.
The loss prompted a debate on Sky between Jamie Redknapp, who feels the players need to take more responsibility, and former United skipper Gary Neville, who called for the club’s owners to offer a public explanation for what has gone wrong.
Fans group MUST (Manchester United Supporters Trust), which is negotiating a share scheme with the Glazer family, has called for “urgent and radical change”.
But senior Unitedfigures, despite being aware of the scale of the anger, accept there is no quick fix to the present malaise.
They continue to try and bring in the new players that Ten Hag feels are essential to his rebuild and talks with France midfielder Adrien Rabiot are ongoing.
However, Ten Hag must bring about vast improvement in the players he has, with David de Gea’s pass to Christian Eriksen for Brentford’s second goal symptomatic of the problem.
Ten Hag wants his players to take responsibility and be brave in possession.
Having conceded an early opener because of De Gea’s blunder, rather than try to control the game to ensure the damage did not get worse, United carried on with their strategy of playing risky passes, resulting in Eriksen being robbed of possession inside his own penalty area for the second.
At least 41 people have died in a fire at a church in the Egyptian city of Giza, officials say.
An electrical fire broke out as 5,000 worshippers gathered for mass at the Coptic Abu Sifin church, security sources told Reuters.
The fire blocked an entrance, causing a stampede, the sources said, adding that many of those killed were children. Dozens are thought to be injured.
Fire services say the blaze has been brought under control.
The exact cause of the fire is not clear.
“People were gathering on the third and fourth floor, and we saw smoke coming from the second floor. People rushed to go down the stairs and started falling on top of each other,” Yasir Munir, a worshipper at the church, told Reuters.
“Then we heard a bang and sparks and fire coming out of the window,” he said, adding that he and his daughter were on the ground floor and able to escape.
Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi offered his “sincere condolences to the families of the innocent victims that have passed on to be with their Lord in one of his houses of worship”.
The prosecutor’s office said it had sent a team to the scene to investigate the cause of the blaze.
Giza lies just across the Nile from Cairo and is part of the Greater Cairo metropolis.
Coptic Christians make up at least 10 million of Egypt’s 103 million people.
Copts claims they face discrimination and play a lesser part in Egyptian public life than their numbers justify.
Russia is one of the world’s biggest exporters but Western nations have pledged to curb their dependence on the country for their energy needs.
According to Bloomberg, the Saudi oil giant’s figure represents “the biggest quarterly adjusted profit of any listed company”.
As well as the record profits, the state-owned Saudi energy giant announced it would keep its dividend unchanged at $18.8bn for the third quarter.
The company said it would keep expanding to satisfy demand.
“While global market volatility and economic uncertainty remain, events during the first half of this year support our view that ongoing investment in our industry is essential both to help ensure markets remain well supplied and to facilitate an orderly energy transition,” Aramco president and CEO Amin Nasser said.
“In fact, we expect oil demand to continue to grow for the rest of the decade, despite downward economic pressures on short-term global forecasts,” he added.
Oil prices were already rising before the Ukraine war as economies started to recover from the Covid-19 pandemic and demand outstripped supply.
The world’s biggest oil producers, including ExxonMobil, Chevron and BP, have all posted huge earnings this year – leading to growing calls on governments to impose a windfall tax amid an alarming rise in living costs.
In June, US President Joe Biden said Exxon had made “more money than God this year”.
Neymar scored twice as Paris St-Germain made it two Ligue 1 wins from two under new boss Christophe Galtier with a resounding defeat of Montpellier.
While Kylian Mbappe saw a first-half penalty saved, PSG went ahead through Falaye Sacko’s own goal.
Neymar scored from the spot and headed his second to put the hosts three up.
Wahbi Khazri and Enzo Tchato were on target for Montpellier but Mbappe and Renato Sanches goals ensured another emphatic win for PSG.
In Galiter’s first home game as boss, PSG dominated from the start, earning a 23rd-minute penalty after a Jordan Ferri handball.
While Mbappe was denied by Jonas Omlin, Sacko turned the ball into his own net before Neymar continued his fine form with a double either side of the break – having scored one and set up another three in last week’s 5-0 win at Clermont.
Former Sunderland forward Khazri pulled one back for Montpellier but goals from Mbappe and Sanches – either side of what would have been a Neymar hat-trick goal being chalked off for offside – put PSG 5-1 clear before Tchato’s superb consolation strike in added time.
Manchester United manager Erik ten Hag says the club “needs quality players” after conceding the standard of the squad is not good enough.
United were thumped 4-0 at Brentford – conceding four in the first 35 minutes – and have no points after two Premier League games.
Dutchman Ten Hag, who took over at Old Trafford in May, told Sky Sports the situation is a “difficult process”.
“We have to provide higher standards than what we did today,” he said.
“We are, as a team, in a difficult process. You expect a different start. It’s not what we expected.
“We need new players. We need quality players. We are working on that and we’ll do everything to convince them to come.”
United have been involved in a long-running hunt for fresh recruits since the transfer window opened, following a disappointing campaign last year and a shock defeat at home to Brighton last Sunday.
Barcelona midfielder Frenkie de Jong has been the main target for Ten Hag but the 25-year-old has reportedly indicated he would prefer to join Chelsea if he left the Nou Camp.
A move for former Stoke and West Ham striker Marko Arnautovic attracted negative reaction from fans and was abandoned, as did interest in Juventus midfielder Adrien Rabiot – a transfer that appears close, despite significant disapproval from United’s support.
“The team has to take responsibility. I feel really sorry for the fans – they did everything to support us but we let them down,” said Ten Hag.
“You have to take responsibility on the pitch as a team and as individuals, that’s what we didn’t do. What I asked them to do is play with belief and take responsibility for the performance. We have to work on that.
“The manager is responsible as well. He has the main responsibility and I’ll take that and work on that.”
‘I cost my team three points’ – De Gea
While Ten Hag felt the team as a whole had to take the blame for the humiliating display against Thomas Frank’s side, United goalkeeper David de Gea pointed the finger squarely at himself.
Nominating himself to do the player post-match interview, he told Sky Sports: “I’m just taking my responsibility today. I think I cost three points for my team. It was a poor performance from myself.”
The Spain international let Josh Dasilva’s strike from distance slip through his grasp, which kick-started Brentford’s goal rush.
“After the first mistake and then the second, it was very difficult for my team-mates,” De Gea added. “At the moment, it’s tough every time we concede a goal. I should save the first shot – [if I had] the result would be different.”
United have now lost four successive league games – a run that includes the end of last season – and seven successive away matches in the top flight.
Barcelona were frustrated in their opening La Liga game as Rayo Vallecano held on for a goalless draw.
Robert Lewandowski was among the summer recruits that were making their debuts, but he could not break the deadlock.
The Poland striker was adjudged offside with a first-half effort, and smashed the best chance after the break wide.
Sergio Camello nearly grabbed a winner for Vallecano, while Barca midfielder Sergio Busquets was sent off in stoppage time for a second yellow card.
Having registered four of their new signings to play only 24 hours before kick-off, there was a cause for optimism around the Nou Camp as the game began.
Barca had been unable to register new players because of La Liga financial regulations, but freed up funding with several “economic levers” which allowed Lewandowski, Andreas Christensen and Raphinha to start this game, while Franck Kessie was named on the bench.
The hosts had 21 shots to Vallecano’s four, but as the game wore on. tensions began to grow as the visitors remained resolute in defence.
Lewandowski, signed from Bayern Munich for £42.6m, had the best chance after the break when he spun his marker but could only fire wide as he failed to score on the opening day of a season for the first time in eight years.
With almost half of the results from Kenya’s presidential election now confirmed, the two main candidates are running neck and neck.
Deputy President William Ruto has taken a slight lead over ex-Prime Minister Raila Odinga – 51% against 48%.
The head of the electoral commission has admitted that announcing the result of Tuesday’s election is too slow.
The verification of results has been stopped several times after complaints by supporters of the main candidates.
On Saturday night, Mr Odinga’ssupporters entered a restricted area and accosted electoral officials, accusing them of tampering with the vote.
Amid the melee, Mr Odinga’s chief campaign manager was able to get to the lectern used by top electoral commission officials, where he criticised the result verification process.
“I want to announce to the nation that Bomas of Kenya is a scene of crime,” said Saitabao Ole Kanchory, before the microphone was switched off and he was led away. Bomas is the name of the cultural centre in the capital, Nairobi, which is being used as the main tallying centre.
Mr Ruto’s supporters accused their opponents of interfering with the tallying process.
Riot police have been deployed inside the building to reinforce security.
There have been calls for peace from several leaders and bodies including the Catholic church which asked for “patience and civility” and urged the main candidates to show “restraint and statesmanship” as anxiety grows.
“I want to become an instrument to bring peace, to heal, unite and keep the hope alive in our country,” Mr Odinga said on Sunday morning at a church service in Nairobi, his first public remarks since election day.
The results of 141 of the 292 constituencies have now been confirmed, according to a BBC tally of official announcements.
Media organisations have been releasing provisional tallies using official data from the 46,000 polling stations. They also show a tight race between the two candidates.
About 14 million votes were cast – a turnout of 65%.
The electoral commission has until Tuesday 16 August to declare the winner.
“We have to make adjustments” to quicken the process of verifying results, the head of the electoral body Wafula Chebukati said in his latest briefing on Saturday.
“It’s taking three to four hours” to process the result from a single constituency, he said. “Some of our returning officers have stayed here for three days sitting on chairs, which is totally unacceptable.”
Russia seized the plant in March and has been accused of turning it into a base from where it hits nearby towns.
Both countries have traded blame for shelling it in recent days, prompting UN warnings of a nuclear disaster.
Mr Zelensky says any Russian soldier who shoots at or under the cover of the plant will be a “special target”.
The six-nuclear reactor Zaporizhzhia station is located in the city of Enerhodar, on the eastern bank of the Dnieper River (Dnipro in Ukrainian) in southern Ukraine.
Russia invaded Ukraine on 24 February, seizing the plant within days. Moscow has kept Ukrainian personnel to operate the facility.
The UN has warned that continued hostilities around the station could lead to a nuclear disaster affecting much of Europe.
Russia has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing at the plant.
It says it seized control of the plant to prevent leaks of radioactive materials during fighting in the region.
During his video address late on Saturday, Mr Zelensky said Russia had engaged in “constant provocations” by firing on the plant and said forces stationed there had used it as a base to shell the cities of Nikopol and Marhanets – on the other bank of the river.
This was being done, the president said, to “blackmail our state and the entire free world”. But he stressed that “Russian blackmail only mobilises even more global efforts to confront terror”.
“Every Russian soldier who either shoots at the plant, or shoots under the cover of the plant, must understand that he is becoming a special target for our intelligence, for our special services, for our army,” the president said.
He added that “every day” of Russia’s occupation of the plant “increases the radiation threat to Europe”.
Ukraine’s defence intelligence agency also accused Russia of a provocation by parking a Pion self-propelled heavy artillery piece outside a nearby town and painting a Ukrainian flag on it, in an attempt to discredit Kyiv.
A BBC investigation revealed earlier this week that many of the Ukrainian workers at the site are being kept under armed guard amid harsh conditions.
On Thursday, foreign minsters from the G7 group of industrial democracies demanded that Russia withdraw from the site immediately.
Their warning echoed statements from the United Nations’ nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), which called for an end to “all military activities that endanger nuclear security”.
UN Secretary General António Guterres has warned that the situation at the plant could “lead to disaster”.
The current executive of the Ghana Journalists Association (GJA) has announced a rebranding agenda to enhance professionalism, protect journalists and give the national secretariat a facelift.
According to President of the Association, Albert Kwabena Dwumfour, the new crop of executives are committed to “righting the wrongsâ€.
Mr Kwabena Dwumfour made the statements in two separate meetings with the leadership of the Church of Pentecost and the Ashanti Foam Factory Limited (Ashfoam) in Accra this week.
A six-member delegation of the Church of Pentecost, led by its Chairman, Apostle Eric Nyamekye, paid a courtesy call on the executive, while the national executive also paid a courtesy call on Ashfoam.
On his part, Apostle Nyamekye said the church is willing and ready to support the Association for the collective good of the country.
Representing the GJA during the courtesy call on Ashfoam were the Vice President, Linda Asante-Agyei; the General Secretary, Edmund Kofi Yeboah; Organising Secretary, Dominic Hlordzi; Treasurer, Audrey Dekalu, and Public Relations Officer, Rebecca Ekpe.
The Marketing and Communications Manager, ASHFOAM Ghana Limited, Nana Yaw Ampem-Darko Antwi, who received the GJA delegation on behalf of his outfit called on journalists to fight issues such as cybercrime in the corporate world.
On behalf of the company, Nana Antwi said his outfit would remain committed to helping the GJA thrive.
Meanwhile, the Ghana Journalists Association has said it would be embarking on training and sensitisation workshops to ensure professionalism and reduce sensationalism.
The Association has also stated that it will sponsor journalists to pursue higher education to enhance their work.
The Ghana National Fire Service (GNFS) has revealed that over 200 wooden structures have been destroyed at Kofi Togo near Adjiringanor, a suburb of Accra, due to a fire outbreak.
The fire incident happened on Friday evening, August 12, 2022.
According to the Fire Service, no casualties have been recorded and the Service managed to save about 150 structures from being destroyed.
This was as result of the four fire appliances from Legon, Headquarters, Madina and Adenta fire stations used to fight the inferno.
Currently, it is unknown what may have caused the fire.
FIRE OUTBREAKS IN 2022
The Ghana National Fire Service has revealed that 20 fire outbreaks were recorded on a daily basis during the first half of the year.
In total, 3,678 fire outbreaks have been recorded, representing a 21.38% increase from 3030 fire cases recorded during the same period in 2021.
The Ashanti Region recorded the most cases (772), representing 19.63% of the total cases. With 690 cases, the Greater Accra Region ranked second. The Volta Region recorded the least figure with 16 cases.
Thirty-five lives have been lost so far this year to fire outbreaks, the National Fire Service said in a statement sighted by The Independent Ghana.
“I85 deaths were recorded through road traffic collision incidents as against 2022 for the same period in 2021. 17 lives also perished through other rescue missions (flooding, depths, and heights rescue) as against 14 for the same period in 2021,†the Service added.
The number of rescued cases also grew this year to 84 from 71 recorded in 2021.
According to the Service, the harmattan weather experienced from January to March played a role in the number of fire cases recorded as well as the non-adherence to fire safety precautions.
Causes of the fire outbreaks included “electrical faults which stem from circuit overload; arcing: short circuits; inferior cables; compromised or poorly done electrical installations; over-aged wires and earthing problems: Gas leakages; unattended cooking: unattended lit candles; mosquito coils: matches und poorly done hot works from welding and deliberate acts.â€
Kenya’s vote counting system has not been hacked amid a tense wait for results of Tuesday’s presidential election, a top poll official has said.
“Nothing like that has happened. It is misinformation,” said the electoral commission’s CEO Marjan Hussein Marjan.
Social media has been awash with allegations that fake results have been uploaded as the count is verified.
Media tallies show the two leading candidates – Raila Odinga and William Ruto – are neck and neck.
But it is only the electoral commission that can declare the winner – and it has seven days to do so.
“We anticipated that people would try to hack our systems… we assure the whole country that our systems are actually secure,” Mr Marjan told reporters on Friday afternoon.
Earlier electoral head Wafula Chebukati emphasised there was no need to panic when seeing differences in tallying numbers from various media groups as they would look similar in the end: “The results are from the same public portal; the approach [of each broadcaster] is different.”
Kenya presidential results 2022
In order to win in the first round, a candidate must get 50% plus one of the cast vote and at least 25% of the votes in 24 out of 47 counties.
LIVEÂ RESULTS
Last updated: 08/12/2022, 14:04:14 local time (GMT+3)
Provisional results from IEBC
Candidates
Vote
William Ruto
52.9%
5,350,472
Raila Odinga
46.4%
4,696,298
Â
Other Candidates
0.6%
66,835
What is happening at the main tallying centre?
Based at a cultural centre called Bomas in the capital, Nairobi, officials from the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) are busy verifying results.
On Friday, Mr Chebukati admitted he felt the process was taking too long, blaming party agents.
His officials are comparing photographs of result forms from more than 46,000 polling stations nationwide to physical forms being brought to centre by officials from each of the 290 constituencies.
This is to ensure that the results match.
This is witnessed by party agents from the main parties, who Mr Chebukati says keep stalling by turning a straightforward exercise into a “forensic” one.
He said officials should not take more than 15 minutes to verify a result.
Counting in some polling stations was also delayed and travel to Nairobi, especially by officials from far-flung areas, could be a further factor in slowing things down
Verification was also halted for a time on Friday after a scuffle broke out, allegedly involving someone without accreditation seen with a laptop – but the IEBC said it turned out not to be suspicious.
How are the media tallies compiled?
Teams of journalists working for various outlets have been engaged in the laborious task of uploading the figures received from each of the polling stations one-by-one.
Each media house is doing it a different speed and choosing the polling stations in a different order.
By Friday morning, local media had slowed down their count – though the reason is not clear, some saying staff were exhausted.
Mr Chebukati said he had hoped media groups would have clubbed together to tally the results, but they had decided to each go it alone.
How are Kenyans feeling?
There is a sense of anxiety in the country as disputed elections in the past have led to violence or the whole process being cancelled.
Following the 2007 vote, at least 1,200 people were killed and 600,000 fled their homes following claims of a stolen election.
In 2017, huge logistical errors led the Supreme Court to annul the result and order the presidential poll to be re-run.
The country often grinds to a halt during elections, activities across the country have slowed and schools remain closed at least until next week on Monday. In Nairobi’s central business district, the usually busy streets are mostly deserted.
Allegations of election rigging are as old as the country. It was part of politics even before multiparty elections were re-introduced in the 1990s, but the push for free and fair elections has never faltered.
After the violence that followed the 2007 election, political parties and activists argued for the use of technology instead of physical registers, which could be easily manipulated, to verify voters.
This year’s election is the third time technology has been used but it has yet to deliver an election that has not been challenged in the courts.
Meanwhile, a group of top civil servants told reporters on Friday that preparations for a smooth handover of power would get under way as soon as the electoral commission announced the president-elect.
When will we know the result?
It’s unclear when the final results will be known, but the electoral commission has started announcing verified counts from the 290 constituencies.
If there is a clear leader of the race, celebrations are likely to break out – but only the IEBC can make it official.
To win the presidential race in the first round, a candidate needs:
more than half of all the votes cast across the country
at least 25% of the votes cast in a minimum of 24 counties.
Otherwise voting goes to a second round which by law has to happen by 8 September.
The FBI seized top secret files in a search of former US President Donald Trump’s estate in Florida this week, according to a search warrant.
Agents removed 11 sets of documents, including some marked “TS/SCI”, a designation for material that could cause “exceptionally grave” damage to US national security.
It was the first time an ex-president’s home was searched in a criminal probe.
The list of items was made public on Friday afternoon after a judge unsealed a seven-page document that included the warrant authorising the search of Mr Trump’s Palm Beach residence, Mar-a-Lago.
It said more than 20 boxes of items were taken on Monday, including a binder of photos, a handwritten note, unspecified information about the “President of France” and a clemency letter written on behalf of long-time Trump ally Roger Stone.
As well as four sets of top secret files, the cache includes three sets of “secret documents” and three sets of “confidential” material.
The warrant indicates that FBI agents were looking into potential violations of the Espionage Act, which makes it illegal to keep or transmit potentially dangerous national security information.
The removal of classified documents or materials is prohibited by law. Mr Trump increased the penalties for the crime while in office and it is now punishable by up to five years in prison.
The warrant notes that the locations searched at Mar-a-Lago include an area called the “45 office” and storage rooms, but not private guest suites being used by Mr Trump and his staff.
The justice department had asked a court to make it public on Thursday, a move considered rare amid an ongoing investigation.
It was approved by a judge on 5 August, three days before it was carried out on Monday, 8 August.
On Friday night, Mr Trump’s office issued a statement maintaining that he had used his authority while president to declassify the documents.
“He had a standing order that documents removed from the Oval Office and taken into the residence were deemed to be declassified,” the statement said.
“The power to classify and declassify documents rests solely with the President of the United States.
“The idea that some paper-pushing bureaucrat, with classification authority delegated by the president, needs to approve of declassification is absurd.”
Legal experts have told US media it is unclear whether this argument would hold up in court. “Presidents can declassify information but they have to follow a procedure,” Tom Dupree, a lawyer who previously worked in the justice department, told the BBC.
“They have to fill out forms. They have to give certain authorisations. They can’t simply say these documents are declassified. They have to follow a process [and it is] not clear that was followed here.”
A spokesman for Mr Trump, Taylor Budowich, said the administration of President Joe Biden “is in obvious damage control after their botched raid”.
Mr Budowich accused the administration of “leaking lies and innuendos to try to explain away the weaponisation of government against their dominant political opponent”.
Mr Trump’s conservative allies have also condemned the raid as a political hit job as he considers another run for the presidency in 2024.
Law enforcement agencies around the country are reportedly monitoring online threats against government officials that have emerged in the wake of the FBI search.
US Attorney General Merrick Garland, who personally approved the warrant, defended federal agents on Thursday as “dedicated, patriotic public servants”.
“I will not stand by silently when their integrity is unfairly attacked,” he told reporters.
The Ghana National Gas Company is set to construct a 259km pipeline from Aboadze in the Western Region to Tema in the Greater Accra Region.
According to reports, the pipeline will be constructed within 2 years under a BOOT arrangement.
The 20-inch pipeline will have a maximum throughput of 320MMSCFD of lean gas at an inlet of 100 barg and discharge of 40 barg.
Communities earmarked as stations are Aboadze, Winneba, Cape Coast, Tema and Nsawam, where a mini-plant will be constructed.
Parliament is yet to receive the project documents and agreements for consideration and approval.
As Parliament awaits the documents, Majority Chief Whip and MP for Nsawam Adoagyir, Frank Annoh–Dompreh has said the project will help bring development into the country.
“As part of the project, eight distribution stations will be built, including one at Nsawam. The project will create employment for the locals,†he is quoted to have said.
Meanwhile, Ghana Gas, through government relations department, is engaging stakeholders in the communities that will feel the direct impact of the project.
The incident took place while the farmer, Kofi Atta, was fast asleep.
According to reports, Kofi Atta, while in his subconscious state believed he was cutting meat but to him, he was in reality cutting a part of his male genital.
The condition the farmer is believed to suffer from is referred to as parasomnia, a sleep disorder that involves unusual and undesirable physical events or experiences that disrupt your sleep.
The wife of the victim, Adwoa Konadu, told the media that this is not the first time her husband has carried out an activity while sleeping.
According to her, Kofi Atta often walks, talks and occasionally fights while sleeping.
Currently, the victim is in stable condition at St Francis Xavier hospital in Assin Fosu and has been referred to the Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital (KATH).
McDonald’s has announced plans to reopen outlets in Ukraine, which closed after Russia’s invasion in March.
The fast food chain said it hoped the move would help restore a “small but important sense of normalcy”.
There will be a phased reopening over the next several months in Kyiv and western Ukraine in areas deemed safe, the burger giant said.
McDonald’s had more than 100 restaurants in Ukraine before the conflict started.
The company has continued to pay wages to more than 10,000 staff since then.
“We’ve spoken extensively to our employees who have expressed a strong desire to return to work and see our restaurants in Ukraine reopen, where it is safe and responsible to do so,” senior vice president Paul Pomroy said in a message posted on the firm’s website.
“In recent months, the belief that this would support a small but important sense of normalcy has grown stronger. And Ukrainian officials have advised that businesses resuming operations will support the local economy and the Ukrainian people.”
Analysts expect the war to trigger a 35% or more economic decline in Ukraine this year, disrupting exports, devastating key infrastructure, and forcing shut thousands of businesses.
In June, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky spoke at a meeting of western business leaders hosted by Yale University and urged firms to invest in the country.
He has also celebrated the reopening of dozens of embassies in Kyiv, including the UK’s in April.
McDonald’s said it was working with suppliers and contractors to ensure the restaurants were ready for reopening.
KFC, Nike and Zara are among the other western brands whose stores are reported to be open in the country.
McDonald’s also suspended operations in Russia in March, and in May sold most of its Russian restaurants to a local licensee.
The Office for National Statistics (ONS) has revealed that the UK economy contracted by 0.1% in the second quarter of the year.
However, the figure recorded according to the ONS, was much better than the 1.3% fall predicted by economists.
For June alone, the ONS stated that the economy shrank by 0.6% due to the extra bank holiday to celebrate the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee.
But the ONS revealed that it had “little impact” on the quarterly figure.
Commenting on the 0.1% contraction, the ONS said that the biggest contributor was from “human health and social work activities” as COVID test and trace and vaccination programmes were wound down.
Areas such as tourism, bars and entertainment showed strong growth.
“Health was the biggest reason the economy contracted as both the test and trace and vaccine programmes were wound down, while many retailers also had a tough quarter,” said director of economic statistics at the ONS, Darren Morgan.
“These were partially offset by growth in hotels, bars, hairdressers and outdoor events across the quarter, partly as a result of people celebrating the Platinum Jubilee.”
The Chancellor, Nadhim Zahawi, told the BBC that these are “challenging times”.
“What the numbers show today is that the contraction is partly because of some of the COVID activities reducing but also real resilience in the private sector which actually in many ways bodes well… But nevertheless these are challenging times,” he said.
But Labour accused the Conservatives of “losing control of the economy”.
Shadow Chancellor Rachel Reeves said: “With the Bank of England forecasting a recession lasting the whole of next year, the Conservative leadership contenders need to stop playing to the gallery and start coming up with a serious plan to get Britain’s economy back on track.”
The Bank of England has forecast the UK will fall into recession towards the end of this year and the downturn will last for the entirety of next year.
Samsung heir Lee Jae-yong – convicted of bribery and embezzlement in 2017 – has been granted a special presidential pardon.
One of South Korea’s most powerful white collar criminals, Lee was twice imprisoned for bribing a former president.
South Korea’s government justified the move, saying the de-facto leader of the country’s biggest company was needed back at the helm to spearhead economic recovery post-pandemic.
This marks another swing in a struggle over how the country is run that has raged since mass protests took over Seoul six years ago and ousted a president from office.
Lee’s crimes were directly tied up in the corruption scandal that led to the imprisonment of former president Park Geun-Hye, in office from 2013-2017.
The “Crown Prince of Samsung” – as he was dubbed by protesters – paid $8 million (£6.6m) in bribes to President Park and her associate to secure support for a merger opposed by shareholders that would shore up his control of his family’s empire.
When it was revealed, millions of South Koreans turned out at candlelit protests every weekend in the 2016/2017 winter, demanding an end to Park’s government and the stitch-up between politics and business.
IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES Image caption, Millions of people attended the protests against President Park and her corruption
Korea’s parliament impeached Park and she was imprisoned in 2017 for 25 years.
Lee, who is also known as Jay Y Lee in the West, was jailed a year later for offences including embezzling company funds to buy a $800,000 (£650,000) horse for the president’s friend’s daughter.
A new president, Moon Jae-in swept into office with a mandate to clean up the mess. But he failed to make much headway. In his last days as president, he granted a pardon to his predecessor.
Now eight months later, under another new president, Samsung’s chief has also received the same clemency.
For those who have been fighting against corruption, it’s a dispiriting blow.
“It is a setback. And it means Korea retreats to the time before the candlelit demonstrations,” said Sangin Park, an economics and industrial policy professor at Seoul National University.
‘Octopus’ influence
Lee’s case reaffirms popular conception that business leaders are untouchable and above the law.
In Korea, giant conglomerates dominate the economy, with the top 10 accounting for about 80% of GDP. Known as chaebols, they are family-controlled empires which provide a span of services. LG, Hyundai, Lotte, and SK are among them.
But Samsung is the biggest and most powerful of them all.
IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES Image caption, Lee was first jailed for bribery and corruption in 2017 – but then was later released from jail twice.
As the world’s largest smartphone maker, it’s a global electronics brand. But at home it does much more – hospitals, hotels, insurance plans, billboards, shipyards and even theme parks.
Samsung and other chaebols are so omnipresent they’re known as “octopus” firms, says Prof YoonKyung Lee, a political sociologist at the University of Toronto.
And those tentacles have long wormed their way into the highest levels of Korean politics. Prof Lee was at the 2016 protests and says most of the anger was directed at President Park’s personal actions. But she said labour activists and others strove to highlight the chaebols’ outsize influence on government.
Chaebols were heavily supported by the government after the Korean War. They were given cheaper electricity and tax incentives, there was a “Buy-Korea” policy and even help in suppressing union movements.
But the resulting monopolies also crushed competition, stifled labour movements and their practices spawned decades of bribery and corruption cases.
In many cases, Prof Lee said, executives were given light or suspended sentences. In some cases judges said the economy might suffer if a chaebol leader was taken out of action.
Mr Lee’s own father, Lee Kun-hee was convicted of bribery and fraud in the 1990s when he was Samsung chairman. But he didn’t serve a single day of jail time.
So in 2017, when his son was hauled away to a cell on a five-year sentence, activists hoped the case would mark a turning point.
In and out of jail
Celebration however was short lived. Lee’s court battle dragged on for years with twists and turns worthy of the most dramatic Korean serials.
An appeals court released him, a higher court then ordered a retrial at which he was again found guilty and jailed.
But just a few months into his second jail term, the Moon government released him on parole, saying it was in the national interest.
Since then, he has returned as the public face of Samsung – in May greeting US President Joe Biden on a trade visit to South Korea.
IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES Image caption, Lee has largely resumed his public duties as a Samsung executive, meeting with the US leader in Seoul in May
Lee still faces criminal allegations – of rigging company valuations, accounting fraud and making Samsung business decisions in breach of his sentence conditions. Clemency means he will be able to fully resume his executive responsibilities.
It follows a pattern of convicted chaebol leaders having their slates wiped clean.
“When it comes to formal power, there’s the president’s office and the National Assembly – they’re making the laws,” Prof Lee said.
“But when it comes to political influence or cultural influence or even how people think about the importance of chaebol in Korean society, it’s really down to a coalition of conservative political and business elites who all have interests with each other.”
Divided reaction
The government’s pardon of Lee rests on the argument that chaebol leaders are needed for the economy. But numerous economists have pointed out this isn’t backed up by hard proof.
“The pardoning of chaebol controllers has not contributed to economic growth or turnaround historically,” said Prof Park.
Analysts say Samsung has fared perfectly well while Lee has been in and out of prison. Reform advocates say South Korea, where growth has been slowing for years, also needs to end its dependence on chaebols.
“Several studies have shown that it’s getting harder to get the ‘trickle-down effect’ – it’s time to move away from the old notion that any illegal acts done by chaebols are ‘forgivable’ if they do their jobs,” says Roh Jong-Hwa, a lawyer from an advocacy group Solidarity for Economic Reform.
Still the dismay among critics over Lee’s pardoning is not shared among the broader South Korean public. A recent public poll recorded 70% support for the pardon.
How to explain that support?
The desire to tackle corruption and chaebol influence remains, experts say. But it is mingled with fear and concerns over a looming recession – and residual pride over Samsung representing Korea on the world stage.
“There’s a core belief that if Samsung does well, Korea does well. And Koreans have lived with this myth for so many decades, it’s really hard for ordinary citizens to break out of it,” says Prof Lee.
“Right now, amid an economic downturn, people want to see some concrete sign that we are moving forward and Lee’s release is a sign of that.”
Also, the central bank has put up its 28-day monetary policy rate 9.5% percentage points.
The bank raised the rate by 8 percentage points two weeks ago.
“The rise in the policy rate will help reduce inflation expectations for the remainder of the year,” the bank said in a statement.
The country’s inflation rate has hit a 20-year high of over 70%. It is forecast to reach 90% by the end of 2022.
Controlling soaring prices, tackling high debt levels and reining in government spending in South America’s second largest economy are at the top of the agenda for Argentina’s latest economy minister, Sergio Massa.
Mr Massa hopes to calm inflation using a more conventional approach than his predecessors.
He is looking at raising interest rates and preventing the printing of more money to fund government spending.
In July, MartÃn Guzmán resigned as finance minister after being in the role for more than two and a half years. His successor Silvina Batakis lasted just a month in the post.
However, the impact of measures the government has to implement to meet the conditions of the deal is a major cause of concern for many in the country.
In recent weeks, protestors have taken to the streets of the capital Buenos Aires to demonstrate against President Alberto Fernández’ handling of the economy.
The Information Minister, Kojo Oppong-Nkrumah, has revealed that the Yendi Sports Stadium will soon be opened to the people of the Northern Region.
In a Twitter post on August 9, 2022, Mr Oppong-Nkrumah said “Work is ongoing on the Yendi Sports Stadium with construction at its final stages.”
According to him, when completed, the stadium will be a big boost for sports development in the Northern Region.
He disclosed the information at the time President Akufo-Addo toured the Northern Region.
In May 2018, government cut sod for the construction of the Yendi Sports Stadium.
#PresidentToursNorthernRegion: Work is ongoing on the Yendi Sports Stadium with construction at its final stages. When completed, the stadium will be a big boost for sports development in the Northern Region. pic.twitter.com/HK6O0LmqC6
Since work began, the Ministry of Youth and Sports, National Sports Authority, National Youth Authority and the Regional Coordinating Council have been at the site for inspection.
The almost USD 1.8million facility is to house a FIFA standard football pitch, eight-lane athletics lane, ICT/Entrepreneurship, Counseling Centres, tennis, basketball and volleyball courts, a modern restaurant, washrooms, maintenance unit and floodlights.
Author-illustrator Raymond Briggs, best-known for his 1978 classic The Snowman, has died at the age of 88.
His death was confirmed by his family, who said he “was much loved and will be deeply missed”.
“We know that Raymond’s books were loved by and touched millions of people around the world, who will be sad to hear this news,” they said, in a statement on Wednesday.
Francesca Dow, managing director of Penguin Random House Children’s, said: “Raymond’s books are picture masterpieces that address some of the fundamental questions of what it is to be human, speaking to both adults and children with a remarkable economy of words and illustrations.”
Briggs’ original wordless children’s picture book, The Snowman, finished the runner-up for the Kate Greenaway Medal from the Library Association, recognising the year’s best children’s book illustration by a British writer.
It has gone on to sell more than 5.5m copies in various formats around the world.
The TV film adaptation, which also received an Oscar nomination for best animated short film, told the story of a young boy, waking up after a heavy snowfall and building a large snowman who later magically comes to life.
IMAGE SOURCE,ALAMY Image caption, The Snowman was turned into a Bafta TV Award-winning animated TV film in 1982
It was first broadcast on Boxing Day 1982, Channel 4’s inaugural year, and has been shown every Christmas since.
The film, directed by Dianne Jackson and produced by John Coates, was wordless apart from the hit song taken from it, Howard Blake’s Walking in the Air, sung by St Paul’s Cathedral choirboy Peter Auty.
A recorded version performed by Welsh choirboy Aled Jones reached the UK top five in 1985.
Jones reacted to the news of Briggs’ death on his Classic FM radio show on Wednesday, telling listeners: “What a legacy he leaves behind. “His books have touched millions of people all around the world, and what a debt of gratitude I owe to his greatest creation of all,” he added. “Thank you, Raymond.”
Children’s authors Michael Rosen and Cressida Cowell both also paid tribute to Briggs online.
Rosen, who wrote We’re Going On A Bear Hunt, tweeted the late writer was “fantastic”. While How To Train Your Dragon author Cowell said: “His books brought so much joy and inspired so many, touching, hilarious and heartbreaking work.”
‘Magical Day’
Speaking of how the story had originally come about, Briggs said: “I remember that winter because it had brought the heaviest snow I had ever seen.
“Snow had fallen steadily all night long and in the morning I woke in a room filled with light and silence, the whole world seemed to be held in a dream-like stillness.
“It was a magical day… and it was on that day I made The Snowman.”
Briggs was born in London in 1934 and he attended Wimbledon School of Art and Central School of Art.
After undergoing national service he returned to study painting at University College London.
He became a professional illustrator, working in advertising, and then creating books as well as teaching illustration at Brighton College of Art.
His 1966 book of nursery rhymes, The Mother Goose Treasury, won the Kate Greenaway medal.
Image caption, Raymond Briggs, pictured in 2018
Briggs went on to become one of the country’s popular author-illustrators, with titles in the 1970s such as Father Christmas, Father Christmas Goes on Holiday, Fungus the Bogeyman and, of course, The Snowman.
The following decade he produced When the Wind Blows, The Tin-Pot Foreign General and the Old Iron Woman
His books have been translated into several languages and adapted into films, plays and TV animations.
In their statement, his family said they “would like to thank all of the team on Overton Ward at Royal Sussex County Hospital for their kind and thoughtful care of Raymond in his final weeks”.
The late writer’s literary agent, Hilary Delamere, added he would be remembered “for his stories of love and of loss”, adding:”I know from the many letters he received how his books and animations touched people’s hearts.”
“He kept his curiosity and sense of wonder right up to the last. He was fascinated by, and interested in us all and how we live our lives.”
Police in the US city of Albuquerque, New Mexico, say they have arrested their “primary suspect” in the killings of four Muslim men.
Muhammad Syed, 51, was held on Monday and is charged with the murders of two of the men. Multiple firearms were recovered from his home, say police.
Police say they are working with investigators to charge the Afghan with the other two deaths.
The deaths took place over the past nine months.
The last three killings happened in the past two weeks.
Police chief Harold Medina announced the breakthrough on Tuesday, saying they had tracked down a vehicle believed to be involved and detained the driver.
Investigators say the attacks may have been motivated by personal conflict.
The suspect came to the US from Afghanistan “in the last several years”, police said.
Three of the victims were originally from Pakistan and attended the same mosque. Officers said they were “ambushed with no warning, fired on and killed”.
A fourth man, Mohammad Ahmadi, originally from Afghanistan, was killed last November.
Kyle Hartsock, deputy commander of the police criminal investigations division, said the suspect was arrested after his car was stopped and his home was simultaneously searched by a Swat team.
He said that a tip from the public had led to his arrest just two days after police distributed a photo of the suspect’s vehicle.
IMAGE SOURCE,REUTERS Image caption, Muhammed Afzaal Hussain was killed in an ambush, police say
In a news release, police said during a search of Mr Syed’s home “detectives discovered evidence that shows the offender knew the victims to some extent and an interpersonal conflict may have led to the shootings”.
But in Tuesday’s press conference, law enforcement did not go into reports that the suspect was a Sunni Muslim who had targeted the victims because he was upset at his daughter marrying a Shia Muslim.
Mr Hartsock said: “We’re not really clear if that was the actual motive, if it was part of a motive, or if there’s a bigger picture that we’re missing.”
Albuquerque Mayor Tim Keller said in a statement that he hopes the “swift action brings an increased sense of safety for so many who are experiencing fear from the recent shootings”.
On Monday, US President Joe Biden said he was “angered and saddened by the horrific killings”, adding that “these hateful attacks have no place in America”.
Police have not said the attacks were hate crimes.
The search for the suspect had steadily grown in size over recent days after New Mexico Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham said she was sending additional law enforcement officers to the city to aid investigators.
Several organisations had offered significant rewards for information leading to the arrest and conviction of a suspect.
Ahmad Assed, a spokesman for the Islamic Center of New Mexico, told the BBC the killings have been horrific for the city’s Muslim community.
The 2022 World Cup tournament is expected to commence on Sunday, November 20, instead of November 21, 2022.
Host Qatarand Ecuador will also be opening the tournament with their game in place of the Senegal and Netherlands game.
Initially, the Qatar vs Ecuador game was fixed as the third match in the Group A opener.
The changes proposed follows a request from South American confederation Conmebol to Qatar and Ecuador indicating that it fits in with the tradition of either the hosts or the holders being involved in the opening match.
It is yet to be decided if the changes suggested would be implemented.
The final decision will be made by the bureau of the Fifa council, which comprises the six confederation presidents, plus Fifa president Gianni Infantino.
If it is approved as expected, it would not change the release dates for players, and Senegal against the Netherlands would be switched to 16:00 on the Monday, given only three games would be played instead of the present four.
England’s Group B match with Iran, which is being played at 13:00 on 21 November, would be unaffected, as would Wales’ opening match against the United States of America at 21:00 on the same date.
Shelling at Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant has violated virtually all seven nuclear safety and security pillars, the Director-General of the International Atomic Energy Agency, Rafael Mariano Grossi, has said.
However, IAEA experts believe the shelling hasn’t caused an immediate nuclear safety threat, based on information provided by Ukraine, Grossi says.
For days, Ukraine and Russia have blamed each other for attacks on the site, which is Europe’s largest nuclear plant and has raised concerns of a major accident.
The complex has been under Russian occupation since early March, although Ukrainian technicians still operate it.
“All military activities that endanger nuclear and security must be stopped,” Grossi has said.
G7 nations have condemned Russia’s occupation of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant and called on Moscow to “immediately hand back full control” to Ukraine.
Ukrainian staff operating the plant “must be able to carry out their duties without threats or pressure. It is Russia’s continued control of the plant that endangers the region,” the G7 foreign ministers said in a statement.
“The Russian Federation must immediately withdraw its troops from within Ukraine’s internationally recognized borders and respect Ukraine’s territory and sovereignty,” it said.
The G7 have said they remain “profoundly concerned by the serious threat” posed by Russia’s actions around Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant.
They say the actions of Russia’s armed forces are significantly raising the risk of a nuclear accident or incident and endangering the population of Ukraine, neighbouring states and the international community.
The G7 reiterate their “strongest condemnation” of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which they call an “unprovoked and unjustifiable war of aggression”.
They say Russia’s actions also undermine the ability of the International Atomic Energy Agency to monitor the safety of nuclear activities in Ukraine.
A new virus, Langya henipavirus (LayV), has found its way into eastern China and infected 35 people.
The Shandong and Henan provinces are the affected regions. Infected persons are showing symptoms such as fever, fatigue and a cough.
Scientists report that those infected may have contracted the virus from animals. Researchers detected the virus predominantly in shrews.
LayV was found in 27% of shrews tested, suggesting the mole-like mammals may be “natural reservoirs” for the virus. About 5% of dogs and 2% of goats also tested positive for it.
Currently, there is no evidence so far LayV can be transmitted among humans.
Langya henipavirus (LayV) was described in a letter written by researchers from China, Singapore and Australia and published in the New England Journal of Medicine this month.
One of the researchers, Wang Linfa from the Duke-NUS Medical School in Singapore, told China’s state-run Global Times that the cases of LayV found so far have not been fatal or very serious, so there is “no need to panic”.
However, Mr Wang said, there is still a need to be alert as many viruses that exist in nature have unpredictable results when they infect humans.
Taiwan’s Center for Disease Control said on Sunday it was paying “close attention” to the development of LayV.
LayV is a type of henipavirus, a category of zoonotic viruses which can jump from animals to humans.
Zoonotic viruses are very common but have attracted more attention since the start of the Covid pandemic.
The US Center for Disease Control and Prevention said scientists estimate that three out of every four new or emerging infectious diseases in people come from animals.
The United Nations had previously warned the world will see more of such diseases with increased exploitation of wildlife and climate change.
Some zoonotic viruses can be potentially fatal to humans. These include the Nipah virus which has periodic outbreaks among animals and humans in Asia, and the Hendra virus which was first detected in horses in Australia.
Other related henipaviruses have also been found in shrews, as well as bats and rodents.
Former inmates have spoken to the BBC about being systematically raped and tortured in Russian prisons.
Leaked footage of such abuse was circulated by an insider last year, and now victims have told the BBC why it happens and how they are fighting for justice.
Warning: This article contains graphic images and descriptions of sexual abuse and violence
Saratov prison hospital, in south-west Russia, came to public attention last year when videos of horrifying prisoner abuse were leaked to a human rights organisation and reported on by the international media.
Alexei Makarov knew its reputation before he was transferred there in 2018 as part of a six-year sentence for assault. Prisoners who are sent to Saratov from other jails in the region have complained that medical grounds were fabricated so they could be tortured behind closed doors.
Russian prisons have almost no independent oversight, and prison hospitals – with their health quarantine rules – even less so.
Makarov was genuinely unwell – he had been diagnosed with TB – and hoped he would be spared. But he says he was raped twice during his time there.
Victims and experts say the abuse – which Makarov and others have been subjected to – is always sanctioned by the prison authorities, and is used to blackmail inmates, intimidate them, or to force confessions.
Image caption, Graphic footage from bodycam film was leaked from Saratov prison last year
High-profile leaks of damning footage have forced the Russian government to respond to the country’s torture scandal. Torture was reported in 90% of Russia’s regions between 2015 and 2019, according to independent Russian media project Proekt.
But action has been slow.
The BBC has analysed thousands of court documents dating from that period and found that 41 members of the prison service were convicted in the most serious prisoner abuse trials.
But almost half of them were only handed suspended sentences. The BBC has spoken to ex-prisoners, including Makarov, about the ordeals they suffered in the Russian prison system.
The first time Makarov was tortured was in February 2020, he says. He refused to confess to a supposed plot against the prison administration and three men subjected him to continuous violent sexual abuse, he says.
“For 10 minutes they beat me, ripped my clothes. And for, let’s say, the next two hours they raped me every other minute with mop handles.
“When I fainted, they would splash me with cold water and throw me back onto the table.”
Two months later it happened again. He had been coerced into paying 50,000 rubles (£735) to his attackers and says he was raped in an attempt to keep him quiet about this.
Makarov told the BBC his prison torture had been videoed. Prisoners know the humiliating footage can be shared with the entire prison if they do not comply with the demands.
The rapists were other inmates, who – Makarov and others are certain – acted on prison bosses’ instructions.
Music would be played at full blast during torture episodes, Makarov says, to disguise the screams.
Last year’s leak of footage from Saratov was published with the help of another former inmate at the prison. Sergey Savelyev managed to smuggle out footage showing humiliation and violence against dozens of inmates. He also believes the torture is sanctioned at the highest levels as part of an organised system.
Savelyev had access to the footage because he was asked to work in the short-staffed prison’s security department. He was required to monitor and catalogue the footage from the bodycams normally worn by prison officers.
But he told the BBC that when it came to torturing a prisoner at Saratov, the officers would get inmates to do their dirty work – and ask them to wear bodycams to film to the abuse.
“I would get orders [to issue bodycams] from the head of security,” he says.
He was told to then save the recorded footage of some of these assaults to show to the security department, and on occasions transfer it onto a drive so it could be shown to more senior personnel.
After he discovered the horrors taking place behind closed doors, he started copying the files and hiding them.
“To simply walk past and do nothing is to recognise it as normal.”
In some of the clips the men carrying out the torture are seen using handcuffs – equipment, like the body-cams, that are only issued to prison staff.
Savelyev says the prisoners carrying out the abuse are, as a rule, those who have been convicted of violent crimes and are therefore serving long sentences. As such, they are interested in currying favour with the authorities in order to be treated better, he says. Such prisoners are sometimes given the nickname “pressovschiki”.
Image caption, Former inmate Savelyev blew the lid off a torture scandal last year when he published shocking footage
“They should be interested in doing well during this period, wanting the administration to be loyal, so that they can eat well, sleep well and have some privileges,” Savelyev explains.
Activist Vladimir Osechkin whose organisation Gulagu.net published the leaked videos, notes the chilling protocol followed by the torturers, captured in one particular clip, which suggests they are well-practised.
“They are giving signs to each other, acting in silent concert, understanding each other even without words because they are following a well-established system. [The man in shot] gives signs on how to twist or spread the man’s legs so that they can rape him.”
Following Savelyev’s leak of the evidence, six pressovschiki were arrested, but they denied being involved. Two months later the director of Saratov prison hospital and his deputy were also arrested – both denied any connection with the abuse shown in the videos.
Russian President Vladimir Putin replaced the head of the national prison service and announced that “systematic measures” were needed to bring about change. The country’s law was amended last month to introduce severe punishments for using torture as a means of abusing power or extracting evidence.
But human rights activists stress that torture as an independent offence is still not criminalised.
It is not the first time President Putin has promised change. He made a similar pledge, following the first shocking leak of such footage, in 2018, which showed guards carrying out mass beatings in a prison in Yaroslavl, north of Moscow.
Eleven Yaroslavl prison employees were given minimal sentences in 2020 and their two bosses were acquitted.
Lawyer Yulia Chvanova, who specialises in representing victims of torture, says the primary motivation for the organised abuse of prisoners is the authorities’ focus on confessions, regardless of guilt. As a result, officials responsible for investigating crime are the primary instigators of torture in Russian jails, she says.
“Confessions [are put] first and foremost.”
She is trying to win compensation for 22-year-old Anton Romashov, who was tortured in 2017 after refusing to admit to crimes he didn’t commit.
Romashov had been arrested for the possession of marijuana but the police were pressuring him to admit to dealing drugs – a much more serious offence. When he refused to confess, he was taken to a pre-trial detention centre in Vladimir, western Russia, in late 2016.
Image caption, Vladimir detention centre where Anton was tortured in its notorious cell 26
“I was taken to [cell] number 26. I knew exactly what kind of cell it was… because I heard screams coming from there, screams for days on end.”
There, two men were waiting for him. He says he was thrown to the floor, his hands and feet tied together behind his body, before being beaten for an entire day. When they pulled his trousers down, he said he would sign whatever they wanted. He was sentenced to five years in jail, despite telling the court that he had been tortured into the confession.
An investigation into practices at the Vladimir detention centre eventually took place after another prisoner murdered one of the pressovschiki threatening to torture him. Prison staff, asked to give statements, revealed that most of them knew what was happening in the infamous cell 26. The prison employee who was running the torture cell was convicted at a trial in which Anton and two other prisoners gave evidence.
Image caption, Anton Romashov says his torturers wanted him to confess to drug dealing
But the biggest torture scandal in the country to date took place in the Siberian region of Irkutsk. In the wake of a protest in spring 2020 at Prison 15 in Angarsk, near the city of Irkutsk, the authorities sent in the riot squad. Hundreds of prisoners were rounded up and taken to two detention centres where prison officers were waiting with pressovschiki.
One of those who says he was tortured in the centre, Denis Pokusaev, who was serving a three-year sentence for fraud, says the prison staff were open about why they were being punished.
“[They] told me: ‘Do you think we care whether you are guilty or not? You came from a riot – so you are going to be held accountable for that.’”
Lawyer Yulia Chvanova explains the common pattern of events.
Image caption, Lawyer Yulia Chvanova is trying to get compensation for several of her clients
“[Investigators] decide who to interrogate, which witnesses and what investigations to conduct… They then contact the prison staff with instructions: ‘I need a confession from a particular individual.”
Pokusaev says the persecution was relentless.
“The abuse went on for almost three months every day, except weekends.”
He says staff were involved in the torture sessions.
“They laughed, ate fruit… A person is being raped with all sorts of objects… And they just laugh, they enjoy it.”
The BBC asked the Russian prison service to comment on the allegations about torture and rape in the country’s jails and detention centres. It did not respond.
Human rights activists estimate at least 350 prisoners were tortured after the riots.
Image caption, Denis Pokusaev is determined to get justice for what happened to him
Pokusaev is among around 30 men who have won the right to be legally recognised as victims in the incident and one of the few prepared to testify in court. Several trials are expected to result from the investigation. In Denis’s case, he and a handful of other inmates are soon set to give evidence against two prison employees – neither of whom have accepted the charges against them.
Yulia and all those giving testimony in the case have been made to sign a non-disclosure agreement. It is unclear whether any of the findings will lead to meaningful reform.
Pokusaev says he is still haunted by what happened to him.
“I come to a forest next to our house almost every day. And I scream obscenities, shout this all out to avoid keeping it inside me.”
But he is determined to try to get justice. He believes that is possible if people are courageous enough to speak up.
“Right now, people [in Russia] are afraid to come out and say anything… that’s why people don’t achieve anything.”
The United States has announced that it will provide Ukraine $89m (£73m) to enable the country remove land mines set up by forces of Russia.
According to the US State Department, approximately five million Ukrainians are still residing in areas threatened by bombs planted by the Russians.
In a statement, the US Department said “Russia’s unlawful and unprovoked further invasion of Ukraine has littered massive swaths of the country with landmines, unexploded ordnance, and improvised explosive devices.”
These explosive hazards are reportedly blocking access to fertile farmland, delay reconstruction efforts, prevent displaced communities from returning to their homes, as well as maiming innocent civilians in Ukraine.
Since March, about 160,000 mines have been defused in Ukraine due to the ongoing war.
An official says Ukraine’s challenge to attempt to disarm unexploded ordnance “may be on a par” with similar efforts in Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos following the American war of the 1960s and 70s.
President of the Republic of Ghana, Nana Akufo-Addo, has denied reports indicating that he has pledged support for Peter Obi ahead of Nigeria’s 2023 elections.
Per the said report making rounds, President Akufo-Addo allegedly entreated Nigerians to give Peter Obi a chance and seek treatment for his health.
But in a Twitter post on August 9, President Akufo-Addo described the article as “completely false and mischievous”.
He wrote “My attention has been drawn to a disturbing post making the rounds on social media, where it is alleged I have written to the 2023 presidential candidate of the APC, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, to give Peter Obi a chance and seek treatment for his health. This is completely false and mischievous, with no iota of truth whatsoever in it.”
My attention has been drawn to a disturbing post making the rounds on social media, where it is alleged I have written to the 2023 presidential candidate of the APC, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, to “give Peter Obi a chance and seek treatment for his healthâ€. 1/3 pic.twitter.com/qdDkyNNbtz
According to the President, he has not put pen to paper to express such demands and neither will he do so in the near future.
He argued that Ghana and Nigeria boast of decades of cordial, strong and brotherly relations, thus “I am not going to be the one to interfere in the internal affairs and politics of Nigeria.”
Peter Obi is vying for the presidency on a Labour Party ticket. Nigerians will elect a new president in February 2023 to take over from Muhammadu Buhari.
International tabloids are reporting that Kenya’s 2022 Presidential election is seeing tight race between Deputy President William Ruto and former prime minister Raila Odinga.
Provisional results already indicate that it would not be easy-peasy for any of the candidates.
It is unknown who is in lead position but more 90% of results posted from thousands of individual districts, local tallies of the raw data suggest little separates the pair.
Mr Odinga, 77, who is a long-serving opposition leader, nicknamed Baba (“father”) by his supporters, is running for the fifth time. Outgoing president Uhuru Kenyatta is backing Mr Odinga.
Mr Ruto aged 55 is making his first move in the presidency race.
Two other candidates; David Mwaure and George Wajackoya are also in the race.
It could be several days before the official result is known.
This vote follows an intense campaign dominated by debates about living costs, unemployment and corruption.
Turnout is estimated at around 60%, well short of the 80% in the last election five years ago.
A largely peaceful election day was marred by logistical delays and a failure of the identification kit in some parts of the country.
The media, political parties and civil society groups have been compiling their own tallies using these final results declared at the more than 40,000 polling stations.
But only the electoral commission can declare the winner of the presidential election after verifying the physical and digital forms sent to the national tallying centre.
It has seven days to announce the result.
To win the presidential race in the first round, a candidate needs:
more than half of all the votes cast across the country
at least 25% of the votes cast in a minimum of 24 counties.
After counting the votes, local officials take a photo of the final tally sheet and send the image to both the constituency and national tallying centres.