Author: Andy Ogbarmey-Tettey

  • Ex-lover arrested over murder of Zimbabwe activist

    Police in Zimbabwe say they have arrested a man on suspicion of murdering an opposition activist whose mutilated body was found in a well weeks after she went missing.

    The suspect has been identified as Pius Jamba, who police previously described as an ex-lover of the victim Moreblessing Ali.

    Ms Ali was reported missing following an argument with Mr Jamba.

    She was a member of the opposition Citizens Coalition for Change (CCC) party.

    The suspect has not commented on his arrest and police have said they will issue a detailed statement later.

    The police had previously said they were treating the case as a domestic issue rather than something that was politically motivated.

    Chaos broke out at Ms Ali’s funeral earlier this week after ruling Zanu-PF party supporters allegedly attacked mourners.

    Source: BBC

  • Ethiopian children suffer ‘deadliest’ malnutrition

    The charity Save the Children is warning that about 185,000 Ethiopian children are suffering from the deadliest form of malnutrition.

    It says children, especially small ones, are suffering the most from famine, with much of Ethiopia gripped by the worst drought for 40 years.

    Save the Children’s country director, Xavier Joubert, says the expanding drought is wearing down their resilience, already weakened by conflict and Covid.

    With four rainy seasons already missed, and a fifth likely, the charity says 30 million Ethiopians need humanitarian assistance.

    Parts of neighbouring Kenya and Somalia are also affected by drought.

    Source: BBC

  • Ukraine war: Thousands of civilians trapped in Severodonetsk

    Thousands of civilians are trapped in the Ukrainian city of Severodonetsk with essential supplies running out, the United Nations is warning.

    Many of them are sheltering in bunkers beneath the city’s Azot chemical plant.

    The last bridge leading out of the city was destroyed in fighting earlier this week – effectively trapping its 12,000 remaining residents inside.

    For weeks capturing Severodonetsk has been a top military goal for Russia, which now controls most of the city.

    “The lack of water and sanitation is a big worry. It’s a huge concern for us because people cannot survive for long without water,” spokesperson for the UN’s Humanitarian Affairs office Saviano Abreu told the BBC.

    Mr Abreu added that food supplies and health provisions were also running out in Severodonetsk, which is in Ukraine’s eastern Luhansk region.

    The UN is hoping to provide aid to those trapped in the city, but continued fighting means its agencies cannot get access or assurances to safely reach the civilians still there, including women, children and the elderly.

    The warning followed Russian promises to open a humanitarian corridor earlier on Wednesday to evacuate civilians trapped beneath the Azot plant.

    But so far there has been no confirmation that the planned safe route – which would have evacuated civilians into Russian-controlled territory to the city’s north – had actually gone ahead.

    On Wednesday a pro-Russian separatist official accused Ukrainian forces of “completely thwarting” the evacuation of civilians trapped in the chemical plant.

    “At Azot, militants are trying to disrupt the evacuation! From the territory of the plant, the militants have begun firing from a mortar and a tank,” Rodion Miroshnik, the “ambassador” to Moscow of the self-proclaimed Luhansk People’s Republic, said on Telegram.

    The BBC has not been able to verify this claim.

    Russian media outlets also blamed Ukrainian forces for the fact that civilians were trapped alongside its fighters in the plant – accusing them of using local residents as “human shields”.

    Gazprom-owned NTV suggested there may be as many as 1,200 people, including children, trapped underneath the plant.

    While civilians took shelter below the Azot complex, Russian and Ukrainian forces battled for control of the city above ground.

    Capturing Severodonetsk would give Moscow command over almost all the Luhansk region, much of which is controlled by Russian-backed separatists.

    In an update posted on Telegram the city’s mayor said that Ukraine was still in control of Severodonetsk’s eastern district.

    “Efforts are being made to push the enemy back towards the city centre. It’s a permanent situation with partial success and tactical retreat in places,” Oleksandr Stryuk said.

    Source: BBC

  • Isaac Dogbe will always fight for Ghana – Rising Star Africa Promotion debunks nationality switch claim

    Rising Star Africa Promotion has refuted reports indicating that boxer Isaac Dogbe ceases to be a Ghanaian.

    The Ghanaian-British boxer remains a Ghanaian and will fight for the country, according to his team in a press release dated June 15.

    In view of this, Ghanaians have urged to disregard reports suggesting a switch of nationality.

    “He has and will always fight for Ghana and has not issued any communication or granted any interview on a nationality switch. Kindly disregard any such information.”

    The false report on a nationality switch by Isaac Dogbe comes at a time when the boxer is set to face American boxer, Joet De Jesus Gonzalez.

    On Saturday, May 23, the North American Boxing Federation (NABF) champion will battle Joet De Jesus Gonzalez at the Grand Casino Hinckley.

    Meanwhile, Rising Star Africa Promotion has called on Ghanaians to rally behind Isaac Dogbe as he seeks to clinch the number 1 title contender position.

    Source: The Independent Ghana

  • Muslim Conference of Ghana demands apology from India over insulting comments by two politicians

    The National Muslim Conference of Ghana has joined Muslims across the world to call on the Indian government to render an unconditional apology for insulting comments made by the two political figures.

    Condemning the remarks, it said the remarks were not isolated effusions of two political figures but rather a reflection of an escalating pattern of hatred that called for violence and sometimes even genocide against Muslims in India.

    In a statement issued in Accra yesterday, the group called on the Indian government to take active measures to stem the tide of Islamophobia in the country.

    It bemoaned the delay by the government in sanctioning the two individuals, which occurred only after condemning statements were issued by some Islamic countries.

    Presently, the statement said there were incessant and incendiary utterances by people in authority which bordered on hate speeches, hostile harassment, and rampant violence against Muslims.

    As a nation that was a signatory to most international conventions on the protection of human rights, which protected the rights of freedom of religion, and proscribed discrimination on grounds of ethnic or religious origin, such volatile acts that sought to erode the very foundations of the international community ought not to be countenanced.

    The statement said the group was equally concerned about incitements to violence that have assumed alarming proportions in recent times under the current government.

    It described as Islamophobic the prohibition of Muslim head coverings in schools and the imposition of Hindu dietary preferences on Muslims

    Additionally, the Citizenship Amendment Act, which made faith a basis for granting Indian citizenship, the statement said, were all driven by the Islamophobic attitude and was in blatant violation of their fundamental human rights.

    The group also raised concerns about the leverage of a new mass culture dominated by cinema, poetry, and music which were all loaded with inflammatory content and hateful anti-Islam lyrics.

    These, the statement said, were purposely designed to politically mobilise the majority of Hindus against Muslims.

    “This religious polarisation and well-oiled ecosystem of hate which the current government has nurtured has found frightening expression in the Indian mass media where the overwhelming majority of news outlets have, lock, stock, and barrel, become the echo chambers and cheerleaders of such bigotry,” the statement added.

    The statement warned that co-opting the media for the purpose of spreading hatred for political gain was not sustainable and urged the government to address the emerging problem.

    Source: Ghanaweb via ghanaiantimes

     

     

     

  • Today’s Weather Forecast: Wednesday, June 15, 2022

    The southern part of the country will remain cloudy in the morning and afternoon, Ghana Meteorological Agency (GMet) says.

    The Agency in a press release today noted that there is the possibility of rain and thunderstorm.

    Parts of northern Ghana will be cloudy this morning. However, cases of thunderstorm and rain are expected from the afternoon into the evening, the Agency added.

    Although parts of the country are expected to be cloudy, it would be sunny at some point in the afternoon.

    Below is the weather forecast for today:

    Source: The Independent Ghana

  • Kenya ‘regrets’ presence of Somaliland flag at event

    Kenya has written to Somalia to express “regret” at the “inadvertent and inappropriate presence” of the flag of the breakaway state of Somaliland at an event hosted by President Uhuru Kenyatta.

    Somalia’s ambassador to Kenya, Mohamud Ahmed Nur, is reported to have walked out of Tuesday’s annual diplomats conference in Kenya’s capital, Nairobi.

    In its letter, Kenya’s foreign ministry said it reaffirmed “its recognition of the sovereignty of one Federal Somali Government and the integrity of the Federal Somali State”.

    Somaliland declared independence from Somalia in in 1991 although it has not been recognised internationally.

    It functions like a nation state – with its own passport, currency, flag, government and army.

    In a response on Twitter, its ministry of foreign affairs said “it was disappointed about the actions taken by the ambassador of Somalia” at the event.

    “The Republic of Somaliland is a sovereign, independent and democratic country that aspires to line in peace and tranquillity with our neighbouring countries, that includes Somalia,” the statement said.

    Source: BBC

  • Zimbabwe opposition MPs arrested after protest

    Two opposition MPs have been arrested in Zimbabwe following violent protests over the killing of an opposition member in Chitungwiza near the capital, Harare.

    Political tensions have been rising in the community after Moreblessing Ali’s severed remains were found in a well, close to three weeks after she was reported missing.

    MPs Job Sikhala and Godfrey Sithole were arrested on allegations of inciting public violence, according to their Citizens Coalition for Change (CCC) party.

    The police have also confirmed the arrest of Job Sikhala, accusing him of being connected to “orgy of public violence” in Nyatsime area, Chitungwiza – about 30km (18 miles) from the capital, Harare.

    Source: BBC

  • Rwanda ‘not deterred’ after asylum flight cancelled

    Rwanda is “not deterred” after the first flight due to take asylum seekers from the UK to the country was cancelled, according to the government spokesperson.

    Up to seven people had been expected to be removed to the east African country.

    But the flight was stopped after a late intervention from the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) led to fresh challenges in the UK courts.

    “We are not deterred by these developments. Rwanda remains fully committed to making this partnership work. The current situation of people making dangerous journeys cannot continue as it is causing untold suffering to so many,” said Rwandan government spokesperson Yolande Makolo.

    “Rwanda stands ready to receive the migrants when they do arrive and offer them safety and opportunity in our country.”

    Rwanda asylum flight cancelled after legal action

    Source: BBC

  • US appoints Zambia envoy years after gay rights row

    Zambia is getting a new US ambassador years after the last one was forced out following a diplomatic row over his remarks on gay rights in the country.

    The newly appointed ambassador, Michael Gonzalez, is expected to arrive in the country next month following his confirmation by the US Congress.

    In 2019, the US recalled its then ambassador Daniel Foote after he said that he was “horrified” that a judge had sentenced a gay couple to 15 years in prison.

    Zambia accused Mr Foote of trying to dictate policy, and the president at the time, Edgar Lungu, declared him persona non grata.

    On Tuesday, Zambian President Hakainde Hichilema bade farewell to the outgoing US chargé d’affaires Martin Dale, assuring of a commitment to strengthen the long-standing relations between the two countries.

    Source: BBC

  • Tigray forces ‘ready’ for Kenya-mediated peace talks

    Tigrayan forces who have been at war with the Ethiopian government for more than 18 months say they are ready to send a high level delegation to talks mediated by the Kenyan government.

    A letter signed by the head of the Tigray People’s Liberation Front, Debretsion Gebremichael, did not set out any preconditions – unlike previous statements about possible negotiations.

    Earlier on Tuesday, Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed said his government favoured the idea of peace talks to end the war.

    The two statements have raised hopes that the conflict that has forced more than two million people from their homes can be brought to an end through dialogue.

    Source: BBC

  • Rwanda asylum flight cancelled after legal action

    The first flight due to take asylum seekers from the UK to Rwanda was cancelled minutes before take-off after legal rulings on Tuesday evening.

    Up to seven people had been expected to be removed to the east African country.

    But the flight was stopped after a late intervention from the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) led to fresh challenges in the UK courts.

    Home Secretary Priti Patel said she was “disappointed” but added: “Preparation for the next flight begins now.”

    However, James Wilson from campaign group Detention Action said the rare intervention from the ECtHR “shows how potentially dangerous” the Rwanda removals are.

    He said the court had recognised no one should be forced on to a plane until the policy was fully scrutinised in a High Court hearing next month.

    The Rwanda asylum plan, announced by the government in April, sees some asylum seekers who cross the Channel to the UK given a one-way ticket to Rwanda to claim asylum there instead. The government said the scheme would discourage others from crossing the English Channel.

    The cancellation of the flight followed days of arguments in UK courts, ending with the home secretary getting the go-ahead to begin transporting some of the asylum seekers.

    A Boeing 767, chartered at an estimated cost of £500,000, had been due to take off at 22:30 BST from a military airport in Wiltshire.

    But a judgement from the ECtHR in Strasbourg halting the deportation of one of the men arrived just after 19:30, and triggered a series of legal challenges in London courts. By 22:15 all the passengers had been removed from the plane, which then returned to Spain.

    The Strasbourg human rights court – part of the Council of Europe, which still counts the UK as a member, rather than the European Union – said an Iraqi man known as KN faced “a real risk of irreversible harm” if he remained on the flight.

    Whereas the High Court in London had found that KN could be returned to the UK if his bid to overturn the Rwanda transportation policy succeeded, the ECtHR said there was no legally enforceable mechanism to ensure he could come back from east Africa.

    Source: BBC

  • Cement prices to hit ¢66 per bag from today

    The price of a 50-kilogram bag of Cement is expected to be increased by more than ¢5 from today to hit ¢66.

    This is what JoyBusiness has picked up from some of the major manufacturers of the product in the country. Sources say the expected increase may hit consumers in Accra the hardest.

    This is because some manufacturers are looking to offset parts of the cost of products being transported outside the metropolis to other regions in the country.

    One of the manufacturers told JoyBusiness; “we can control the factory price, but we are not sure about the  retail price in the markets in other regions.”

    However, we will try out best to take some of the cost of reducing the margin of increase after the transport charges and other related costs are added to the product.

    Reasons

    According to the manufacturers, the increment can be attributed to a myriad of issues most of which they have tried to manage for a long time.

    They argue that the increment has been influenced by the recent depreciation of the Ghana cedi, hikes in prices of petroleum products, and transport fares.

    They also maintained that their situation has been compounded by supply challenges for their production inputs and difficulties with importing some raw materials due to developments in Russia and Ukraine.

    The manufacturers have also raised issues with some of the port charges, which they say leave them with no choice but to pass down to consumers.

    Impact on the economy

    The development may impact the prices of houses in the short term and the personal budget of many individuals who are currently putting up houses in the country.

    It could also impact on the cost of some of the ongoing construction projects in the county. The adjustments may also increase the cost of doing business and influence the rising inflation rate in the country.

    Source: MyJoyOnline

  • Don Bortey wants Asante Kotoko to sign Hearts of Oak trio Barnieh, Mohammed Alhassan and Muntari for Africa

    Former Ghana winger Bernard Don Bortey has called on the management of Asante Kotoko to sign Hearts of Oak trio of Daniel Afriyie Barnieh, Mohammed Alhassan and Sulley Muntari ahead of the Africa campaign.

    The Porcupine Warriors will be representing Ghana in the 2022/23 CAF Champions League season after merging as winners in the 2021/22 Ghana Premier League campaign.

    In the bid to make impact, the former Hearts of Oak star has entreated Kotoko to sign the trio for Africa.

    “Kotoko should go to Hearts and sign Daniel Afriyie Barnieh and Mohammed Alhassan, if they can they should also add Sulley Ali Muntari to help them in Africa ” he told Oyerepa FM.

    Don Bortey, who helped Hearts of Oak to win Africa during his spell with the club has come under intense pressure after joining Kotoko to celebrate their league triumph at the Baba Yara Stadium last Sunday.

    Source: Football Ghana

  • Ghanaian winger Nana Opoku Ampomah starts pre-season at Fortuna Dusseldorf

    Ghanaian international, Nana Opoku Ampomah, has started pre-season with his German Bundesliga 2 side Fortuna Dusseldorf.

    The player has returned to the club this month after ending his long loan stay in Belgium.

    The once highly-rated forward joined Royal Antwerp on a two-year loan deal in 2020.

    Unfortunately, what he hoped for at Royal Antwerp is not what he got. His stay at the club in the last two seasons saw him warming the bench for the most part as he grew frustrated.

    With his two-year loan deal coming to an end this month, Nana Opoku Ampomah has returned to Fortuna Dusseldorf, a club he joined for a record here million euros.

    Now back in Germany, the forward is determined to fight for a place in his team. He wants to be a regular for Fortuna Dusseldorf in the 2022/23 football season to try and help the team to gain promotion to the German Bundesliga.

    On Monday, the forward was spotted working his socks off in a bid to merit a place in the starting eleven of the team for upcoming games in pre-season.

    Now 26-years old, the forward still has more years ahead of him and can turn his career around.

    Source: Football Ghana

  • Bagbin gives Defence & Interior Committee one week to probe Islamic SHS disturbance

    The Speaker of Parliament, Alban Bagbin, has handed down a one-week ultimatum to the Defence and Interior Committee to embark on a fact-finding mission to Kumasi over the incidence of alleged police brutality at the Islamic Senior High School (SHS).

    A protest in the school turned chaotic when police met students with force, leading to several persons sustaining injuries.

    Member of Parliament for Asawase, Muntaka Mubarak, raised the matter on the floor of Parliament on Tuesday, June 14, 2022.

    The Speaker, in giving the directive, said: “I will direct the committee on Defence and Interior to take this matter up and report next week. In other words, the committee members should visit the IGP to the regional police commander and the school in question, visit the injured persons and report by Tuesday with the findings and await the final investigations and if there is the need for us to take any further action, we will do that.”

    Some students of the Islamic Senior High School, Abrepo, Kumasi, took to the streets on Monday and blocked sections of the road to demonstrate against frequent motor traffic accidents in front of their school.

    http://backend.theindependentghana.com/2022/06/islamic-shs-police-clash-no-live-bullets-were-fired-ministry-of-education/

    In a bid to help open the road to normal traffic flow, police responded by firing warning shots and opening tear gas and pepper spray on the students.

    “The students pelted the police with stones and the police used pepper spray and fired warning shots in an attempt to disperse them,” police said in a statement.

    Some students were injured following the disturbances and were rushed to the hospital for treatment.

    According to the police service, although nobody died during the disturbances, the way its officers handled the situation was poor and fell short of standard operating procedures on crowd control.

    Police clinical psychologists were subsequently deployed to visit the school to offer psychosocial support to the student body.

    http://backend.theindependentghana.com/2022/06/islamic-shs-shooting-deputy-regional-police-commander-removed-2-senior-officers-interdicted/

    The Ghana Police Service has removed its Deputy Ashanti Regional Commander, DCOP Kwasi Akomeah Apraku and has also interdicted two other senior officers over the incident.

    The Ministry of Education says calm has returned to the school.

    Deputy Education Minister, John Ntim Fordjour, after a visit to the school on Monday night, said all the injured students are currently safe and responding to medical treatment.

    He also said: “Out of the thirty-eight (38) students hospitalised, twenty-two (22) have been discharged and have joined their colleagues on campus.”

    Source: Citinewsroom

  • Our handling of Islamic SHS road accident demonstration poor Police

    The Police administration has admitted that its officers at the Ashanti Regional Police Command deployed to maintain law and order among protesting students of Islamic SHS failed to follow laid down procedures.

    In a press statement dated June 13, the Police stated that the “handling of the incident was poor and fell short of our standard operating procedure on crowd control.”

    To ensure students who had blocked a section of Abrepo Junction-Barekese road return to their classrooms on Monday morning, the Police officers used pepper spray and fired warning shots.

    This was after the students of Islamic SHS pelted stones at the Police for intervening in their quest to ensure speed bumps are constructed to end the many road carnages involving teachers and students.

    According to the Police, no student was hit by a bullet, however, some sustained minor injuries.

    Some police officers also sustained injuries.

    http://backend.theindependentghana.com/2022/06/islamic-shs-police-clash-no-live-bullets-were-fired-ministry-of-education/

    The Police disclosed this when it announced the interdiction of acting Deputy Ashanti Regional Commander, DCOP Kwasi Akomeah-Apraku, over his inability to ensure the necessary crowd control measures were followed.

    He was interdicted together with two other officers, ACP Mr George Ankomah, the Regional Operations Officer and ACP Mr Alex Cudjoe Acquah, the Suame Divisional Police Commander.

    Also, the Police Professional Standards Bureau (PPSB) has commenced a full-scale investigation into the conduct of the officers who were responsible for the Police response.

    The Police has also ensured that psychologists have been deployed to the school to offer psychosocial support to the student body.

    Meanwhile, the Inspector-General of Police, Dr George Akuffo Dampare has paid a visit to the injured who were admitted to Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital, Kwadaso S.D.A. Hospital and South Sunkyereso General Hospital.

    Source: The Independent Ghana

     

     

  • Chief of Gyengyen shot by unknown assailants in Krachi West Municipality

    The Chief of Gyengyen, Nana Quansah Kpebu II, is reported to have been shot by unknown gunmen at his residence.

    According to JoyNews reports, the attack took place on June 13, during a period of power outage in the Gyengyen community in the Krachi West Municipality of the Volta Region.

    It is said that he was shot in the groin.

    He is currently receiving treatment at the 37 Military Hospital after being transferred from the Krachi West Municipal.

    Meanwhile, officers from the Krachi West Police Command have been deployed to the community to ensure calmness and order.

    Source: The Independent Ghana

     

     

  • Kabuga fit to stand Rwanda genocide trial – UN court

    A United Nations tribunal has ruled that a man alleged to be one of the main financiers of the 1994 genocide in Rwanda is fit to stand trial in The Hague, where he is currently detained.

    Félicien Kabuga is accused of funding and arming the Hutu militias who slaughtered some 800,000 ethnic Tutsis and moderate Hutus in the genocide.

    His lawyers had previously sought to halt proceedings against the 87-year-old on health grounds.

    Mr Kabuga had been on the run for 26 years until his arrest in 2020 in Paris, where he had been living under a false identity.

    He denies all the charges against him.

    In 1997, he was indicted by the International Criminal Court for Rwanda on seven counts including genocide and crimes against humanity.

    How Félicien Kabuga evaded capture for 26 years

    Wealthy businessman Félicien Kabuga outwitted prosecutors of the Rwandan genocide tribunal for more than two-and-a-half decades by using 28 aliases and powerful connections across two continents to evade capture.

    The 84-year-old had been on the run for so long that the international tribunal set up to bring to justice those responsible for the 1994 genocide had ceased to work.

    But he was eventually hunted down last weekend to a hideout in a suburb of the French capital – thanks to an investigation relaunched by Serge Brammertz, a UN war crimes prosecutor heading the body which handles outstanding war crimes cases for Rwanda and Yugoslavia.

    “We knew already a year ago that he was very likely to be in the UK, France or in Belgium and we concluded only two months ago that he was in France,” the chief prosecutor for the UN’s International Residual Mechanism for Criminal Tribunals’ (IRMCT) told the BBC.

    “The French authorities located the apartment in which he was hiding, which led to the operation.”

    One of the major reasons he was able to be on the run for so long was “the complicity of his children”, he said.

    He is known to have at least five children – two of his daughters were married to sons of Rwanda’s former President Juvénal Habyarimana, whose death when his plane was shot down 6 April 1994 triggered the genocide.

    French investigators spied on Mr Kabuga’s children to track him down to his third-floor flat in the Paris suburb of Asnières-sur-Seine, where he had been living under a false identity using a passport from an unidentified African country.

    According to Col Eric Emeraux, who heads a special French police unit fighting war crimes, the coronavirus pandemic also helped as the lockdown in France paralysed many operations across parts of Europe, freeing up time to focus on the man accused of being the main financier of the genocide.

    In just 100 days in 1994, about 800,000 people were slaughtered in Rwanda by ethnic Hutu extremists – who Mr Kabuga, a man who had made his fortune in the tea trade, is said to have backed.

    They were targeting members of the minority Tutsi community, as well as their political opponents, irrespective of their ethnic origin.

    The United States had offered a $5m (£4.1m) reward for information leading to Mr Kabuga’s arrest.

    But it was puzzling that for so many years one of the most wanted fugitives in Africa, with a $5m (£4.1m) US bounty on his head after being charged with seven counts of genocide and crimes against humanity in 1997, managed to live in subterfuge and evade law enforcement across countries and continents.

    Was he harboured in Kenya?

    Mr Kabuga is alleged to have lived in many countries in East Africa, including Kenya, where he and his family had business interests.

    Kenya was for long said to be harbouring the fugitive, with powerful politicians accused of thwarting efforts to arrest him.

    In 2006, the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda said it had evidence that Mr Kabuga either visited or resided in Kenya, where he carried out business interests.

    Three years later, Stephen Rapp, then US ambassador-at-large for war crimes, accused successive Kenyan governments of refusing to hand over Mr Kabuga.

    There was evidence that Mr Kabuga even attended functions attended by influential persons, he said – allegations Kenya has always denied.

    There is no dispute that the Kabuga family owned assets in Kenya as one property became the subject of a court case in 2015 when his wife, Josephine Mukazitoni, who co-owned it, tried and failed to regain access to it.

    Known as Spanish Villas, it had been seized because of a UN resolution requiring member states to trace and freeze Mr Kabuga’s assets.

    Wild goose chase

    Media reports pointed to Mr Kabuga’s presence in Kenya at different points, though they never provided proof that he or his wife lived there.

    He is said to have escaped police dragnets multiple times in Kenya’s capital, Nairobi.

    In one raid in Nairobi on 19 July 1997, when police arrested seven other Rwandan genocide suspects, Mr Kabuga allegedly escaped thanks to an earlier warning from a senior officer.

    For journalists on his tail it proved a dangerous business.

    On 16 January 2003, freelance reporter William Munuhe was found dead in his apartment in Nairobi.

    His brother Josephat Gichuki says after his death he discovered that Munuhe was planning a sting operation with the FBI to arrest Mr Kabuga by posing as a businessman.

    “To our surprise, police said Munuhe’s death was a suicide [from carbon monoxide poisoning] after inhaling fumes from a charcoal stove,” Mr Gichuki told the BBC.

    “While at the mortuary, I personally saw a bullet wound in his head, and blood in his room.”

    Eight years later journalist John Allan Namu believes he was deliberately misled by a source in Kenya to out the wrong person, an unsuspecting businessman, as Mr Kabuga.

    He feels this was done because some were unhappy about what his investigations had unearthed, including evidence that Mr Kabuga had a Kenyan bank account through which he was conducting business.

    The whole affair became so messy that he and his family were forced to go into hiding for months because of the death threats he was receiving.

    “Where he was arrested is a proof that Kabuga survived as a fugitive for such a long time because of the connivance of people across the globe, not least in Kenya,” Namu told the BBC’s Great Lake Service.

    The hunt

    In the immediate aftermath of the genocide, Mr Kabuga fled to Switzerland but was not allowed to stay, and reportedly came back to Africa via Kinshasa, capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo.

    Most evidence points to his presence in Kenya, though Mr Brammertz says there had also been sightings of him in Madagascar and Burundi.

    But such information was always “reactive”, so the operation that led to his arrest took “a sophisticated, co-ordinated operation with simultaneous searches across a number of locations”, he said.

    It took at least two years, starting from his last known location – in Germany where he had last been sighted when he went for surgery in 2007.

    Extensive analysis of telephone and financial data eventually led them to Paris.

    “It is difficult to imagine he could have escaped into French territory without the help of accomplices,” says Patrick Baudoin of the International Federation for Human Rights.

    The mystery about his whereabouts for so many years has prompted Human Rights Watch to call for an investigation into how and who made this possible.

    Pre-lockdown walks

    His Paris neighbours say the elderly man had lived there for about three to four years.

    Olivier Olsen, head of the association of homeowners in the building where he lived, told the AFP news agency that Mr Kabuga was “very discreet” and someone “who murmured when you said hello”.

    Before the lockdown he was often seen going out for walks, he said.

    Mr Kabuga is now confined to La Santé Prison in central Paris, where he will stay until he is transferred into the custody of the IRMCT.

    Mr Brammertz says this could take weeks or months and it could take a year before a trial begins – either in The Hague or the Tanzanian city of Arusha, where the ICTR sat.

    However, Mr Kabuga’s lawyers have stated that he would prefer to be tried in France.

    Genocide survivors hope such procedures will not delay the justice they seek.

    After his arrest Valerie Mukabayire, the leader of the Rwanda widows’ group Avega, told the BBC: “Every genocide survivor is happy he is arrested. Everyone has been waiting for this news. It is a good thing that he is going to face justice.”

    Source: BBC

  • Cuba protesters jailed for up to 25 years

    Cuba has sentenced 381 people for taking part in rare anti-government protests last summer – with some jailed for up to 25 years.

    The attorney general’s office said 297 had received prison terms, for crimes of sedition, public disorder, assault or robbery.

    A minority were given the option to complete community service instead.

    Thousands of Cubans took part in the demonstrations across the Communist-run island, chanting for “freedom”.

    The protests, the largest in decades, came amid a severe economic crisis with protesters voicing anger over price increases, and shortages of food and medicine.

    Unauthorised public gatherings are illegal in Cuba, and more than 1,000 people were arrested. Images on social media showed what appeared to be security forces detaining, beating and pepper-spraying some of the protesters.

    Those sentenced included “16 young people aged 16 to 18”, according to the country’s public prosecutor on Monday.

    In 2021, Cuba‘s President Miguel Díaz-Canel blamed the US – which has a decades-long history of tensions with Cuba – for the turmoil.

    He claimed the protesters were mercenaries hired to destabilise the country, and called on supporters to go out and defend the revolution – referring to the 1959 uprising which ushered in Communist rule.

    This round of jail terms isn’t the first linked to the protests. In March, more than 100 people who took part were sentenced to between six and 30 years’ imprisonment.

    The US and EU have criticised the trials for lacking transparency, and called for the release of those affected.

    Source: BBC
  • London-Lagos biker receives Chieftain title in Nigeria

    The London-Lagos biker, Kunle Adeyanju, has been conferred the Are Aniyikaiye of Offa Land in his state of origin, Kwara State, Nigeria.

    Adeyanju announced the reception of the chieftaincy title conferred on him by the Olofa of Offa on his verified Twitter page on Monday.

    The member of Rotary Club International wrote, “I was conferred the chieftaincy title of Are Aniyikaiye of Offa Land, by his majesty the Olofa of Offa. So when next you see me, please call me Chief Kunle.”

    Adeyanju, who embarked on a London-to-Lagos journey on a motorbike to raise money #EndPolio campaign, arrived in Nigeria on May 29 after 40 days.

    The heroic biker who has been recounting his experiences on his 12,000km journey has been applauded for his adventure locally and internally.

    Speaking on why he embarked on the journey and its outcome, Adeyanju said, “Doing this was basically to achieve two purposes of raising awareness of end polio message by seeing how we can see the level of vaccines acceptance. The second objective was to raise funds.

    “For me, the two had been accomplished because everybody is now aware of polio. Polio has got a renewed drive as we have the vaccines to end the virus.

    “I am very happy that the message has taken a global dimension.”

    Source: Ghanaweb via Saharareporters 

  • Musk to hold first meeting with Twitter staff this week

    Elon Musk will speak to Twitter employees on Thursday for the first time since launching his $44bn (£36.2bn) bid for the company in April.

    The multi-billionaire Tesla boss is expected to take questions from Twitter’s workers at the meeting.

    Mr Musk has warned he may quit the deal if the firm fails to provide data about fake accounts on the platform.

    The event was announced by Twitter’s chief executive Parag Agrawal in an email to staff on Monday.

    Mr Agrawal told employees they could submit questions to Mr Musk in advance of the meeting.

    Elon Musk puts Twitter deal on hold over fake account details

    The news, which was first reported by Business Insider, was confirmed to the BBC by a spokesperson for Twitter.

    The all-hands meeting will be the first time Mr Musk will have spoken directly with the company’s workforce since launching his takeover bid.

    Earlier this month, he threatened to walk away from the deal, accusing the social media company of “thwarting” his requests to learn more about its user base.

    In a letter filed with regulators, Mr Musk said he was entitled to do his own measurement of spam accounts.

    The letter formalised a dispute that had simmered for weeks after he declared the deal “on hold” pending further information.

    Analysts have said that Mr Musk might be using the issue to try to renegotiate the price or even walk away from the deal. They said his decision to raise the matter on social media was unconventional, making it difficult to establish how serious he was.

    Elon Musk threatens to walk away from Twitter deal

    When Mr Agrawal defended the company’s process for identifying fake accounts in a series of tweets, Mr Musk responded with a poo emoji.

    The company’s shares stood at $37.03 each at the end of New York trading on Monday, well below Mr Musk’s offer price of $54.20.

    Source: BBC

  • January 6 hearing: Trump slams inquiry as ‘Kangaroo Court’

    Former US President Donald Trump has blasted the congressional inquiry into the Capitol riot as a “Kangaroo Court”.

    In a 12-page statement, he said the investigation was designed to distract Americans from the “disaster” of Democratic-led governance.

    It came after the committee held two public hearings accusing Mr Trump of an attempted coup to remain in power.

    The panel on Monday detailed evidence of divisions among Trump aides over whether to accept his election loss.

    Supporters of Mr Trump stormed Congress on 6 January 2021 in a bid to thwart certification of Joe Biden’s election victory. A separate ongoing criminal investigation has led to more than 800 arrests in nearly every state.

    “Seventeen months after the events of January 6th, Democrats are unable to offer solutions,” Mr Trump, a Republican, said in a statement released through his Save America PAC.

    “They are desperate to change the narrative of a failing nation, without even making mention of the havoc and death caused by the Radical Left just months earlier,” he continued, alluding to the rioting that erupted during US racial justice protests over the summer of 2020.

    “Make no mistake, they control the government. They own this disaster. They are hoping that these hearings will somehow alter their failing prospects.”

    Mr Trump accused the “unselect pseudo-committee” of treason, referring to the Democratic-led House of Representatives select committee that has been conducting the inquiry for the past year.

    For much of the statement, Mr Trump relitigated his unsubstantiated allegations of voter fraud. A handful of such cases, representing a tiny number of ballots overall, has been prosecuted since the November 2020 election, but nothing on any scale that could have tipped the election in Mr Biden’s favour.

    Mr Trump labelled the current president as “Basement Biden”. “Our country is in a nosedive,” he concluded, dismissing the congressional inquiry as a pretext to prevent him running again for the presidency in 2024.

    Earlier on Monday, the House committee was shown video testimony on its second day of public hearings from former campaign manager Bill Stepien, who said the aides had split into two teams after the election.

    He described a “team normal” of those who accepted the results of the election, and “Rudy’s team”, who followed the claims of election fraud peddled by Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani.

    Both Mr Stepien and another witness, former Trump adviser Jason Miller, testified that Mr Giuliani appeared to be inebriated on the night of the election.

    Mr Miller said that even with results still coming in, Mr Giuliani suggested that Trump “go and declare victory and say that we’d won it outright”.

    Through a spokesman on Monday, Mr Giuliani denied that he was intoxicated on election night, adding that he did not know why Mr Miller would “make such a false claim”.

    In videotaped testimony also aired at Monday’s hearing, former Attorney General Bill Barr said he had repeatedly told Mr Trump there was no basis to claims of rigged voting machines or ballot “dumps” – which he referred to as “crazy stuff”.

    Mr Trump, however, refused to acknowledge these concerns and continued to spread fraud claims, Mr Barr said. He testified that he was “demoralised” by his boss’ claims.

    “I thought, ‘Boy if he really believes this stuff, he has lost contact with – he’s become detached from reality, if he really believes this stuff,’” he said.

    The 6 January select committee is seeking to show that the ex-president’s election fraud claims led directly to an attack on the US Capitol.

    But the panel will not refer Mr Trump or anyone else to the justice department for criminal prosecution, committee chairman Bennie Thompson, a Mississippi Democrat, told reporters on Monday.

    “If the Department of Justice looks at it, and assumes that there’s something that needs further review, I’m sure they’ll do it,” he said, according to CNN when asked about the chance of prison time for Mr Trump or his inner circle.

    Republican vice-chairwoman of the committee, congresswoman Liz Cheney, seemed to contradict Mr Thompson moments later by tweeting that the committee “has not issued a conclusion regarding potential criminal referrals”.

    “We will announce a decision on that at an appropriate time.”

    The committee is scheduled to hold more hearings on Wednesday and Thursday later this week.

    Source: BBC

  • Islamic SHS/ Police clash: IGP in Kumasi to assess situation

    The Inspector General of Police, Dr George Akuffo-Dampare, has paid a visit to the Islamic Senior High School at Abrepo to assess the outcome of a clash between students of the school and the Police.

    It was reported on Monday morning that about 30 students were injured after police officers fired tear gas to disperse a student crowd protesting a hike in road accidents involving students and teachers of the school.

    Police intervention became necessary when the angry students blocked a section of the Abrepo Junction-Barekese to ensure the construction of speed rumps to address the menace.

    But the Ashanti Regional Director of Education, Mrs Mary Owusu Afriyie, has revealed that no casualties have been recorded following the clash.

    According to her, some students have been admitted to some health facilities in Kumasi.

    After assessing the magnitude of the incident, the IGP and his team proceed to the Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital, Kwadaso S.D.A. Hospital and South Sunkyereso General Hospital to visit injured persons, according to the Police in a Facebook post.

    The IGP and his team interact with students of Islamic SHS:

    Source: The Independent Ghana

     

  • Armed robber sentenced to 16 years imprisonment with hard labour

    An armed robber who was arrested by the Police at Sefwi Nketieso in the Western region has been handed a 16-year jail term.

    The convict, Isaac Addae on May 29, 2022, visited his victim, a gold buyer, under the pretense of selling him some gold.

    When the victim took him to his room to weigh the said gold, Isaac Addae pulled out a knife, stabbed him, robbed him of an amount of GH¢15,000.00 and a mobile phone.

    On June 9, 2022, he was given 16 years imprisonment in hard labour by the court after he pleaded guilty to the charges brought against him.

    In a Facebook post, the Police published his photo and urged the public to report to the nearest Police station if they can link him to any other crime.

    Armed robber sentenced to 16 years imprisonment with hard labour

    “Because he has been duly convicted and is no longer a suspect, we have displayed his image in line with our new standard operating procedure.

    “Any member of the public who can recognise him in connection with other crimes, should kindly contact the nearest Police station for further action.”

    The Police assured the public that it will continue to fight crime and bring criminals to justice.

    Source: MyJoyOnline

  • Islamic SHS/Police clash: No casualties recorded – Ashanti Regional Director of Education

    The Ashanti Regional Director of Education, Mrs Mary Owusu Afriyie, has revealed that no casualties have been recorded following the clash between students of Islamic SHS in Kumasi and the Police.

    Speaking to the media on Monday in the local parlance, she urged concerned guardians and parents who besieged the school to remain calm as the authorities investigate the matter.

    On Monday morning, students of the Islamic SHS took to the streets to register their displeasure on the hike in road accidents involving students and teachers of the school.

    To ensure the construction of speed rumps to address the menace, the angry students blocked a section of the Abrepo Junction-Barekese.

    Their actions resulted in officials of the Police Service intervening, a reaction that reportedly led to officers firing tear gas to disperse the crowd.

    It is feared that about 30 students have been injured.

    But in a video shared by Ghana News Agency, Deputy spokesperson for the Ministry of Education, Mr Yaw Opoku Mensah, has assured the safety of the students.

    According to him, some students who were sent to health facilities in the locality have returned to the school.

    Meanwhile, the Ashanti Regional Director of Education says she will be visiting some students who have been sent to Sunkyereso and Manhyia hospitals for treatment.

  • Asante Kotoko officially crowned champions of 2021/22 Ghana Premier League season

    Ghanaian giants, Asante Kotoko have been officially crowned Champions of the 2021/22 Ghana Premier League season.

    The Kumasi-based club at the end of last season made arrangements to strengthen the squad of the team.

    In addition, the club appointed Coach Prosper Narteh Ogum as the new head coach of the team.

    With the changes and investments made paying off right from the start of the new league season, Asante Kotoko have been crowned champions of the Ghana Premier League today.

    The coronation ceremony took place at the Baba Yara Sports Stadium where the team defeated Elmina Sharks 3-0 in the last but one match of the season.

    On the matchday, the team based in Kumasi dominated play and led at halftime. It was all thanks to talented left-back Imoro Ibrahim who curled in a free-kick from long range.

    The goal scored in the 24th minute saw Asante Kotoko stay in the lead for a long time before a brace from Georges Mfegue propelled the team to secure a narrow 2-0 victory at full-time.

    Courtesy of the league triumph this season, Asante Kotoko are set to represent Ghana in the next edition of the CAF Champions League.

    Source: Football Ghana

  • Switzerland score in first minute to beat Portugal

    Haris Seferovic scored the fastest goal in the Nations League’s short history to give Switzerland victory over Portugal in Group A2.

    The Benfica forward headed in after just 55 seconds in Geneva to get the hosts off the mark in this campaign.

    He saved from Danilo Pereira, made a smart stop to deny Goncalo Guedes and thwarted Bernardo Silva’s from range.

    Joao Cancelo curled over and Diogo Jota’s header was also saved by Omlin as Portugal – without Cristiano Ronaldo, who was rested – tried and failed to pull level.

    They slip to second in the standings after Spain’s victory over the Czech Republic.

    Source: BBC

  • Spain beat Czech Republic to go top of group

    Spain saw off the Czech Republic at La Rosaleda Stadium in Malaga to move into top spot in Nations League Group A2.

    Valencia midfielder Carlos Soler slotted in from Marco Asensio’s pass to open the scoring before substitute Pablo Sarabia doubled the hosts’ lead.

    The 30-year-old tapped in from close range after Barcelona winger Ferran Torres flashed a ball across goal.

    Spain were dominant, enjoying 72% of possession, and Sarabia curled another narrowly wide from the edge of the box.

    The visitors did have chances of their own in the first half, but Vaclav Cerny and Jan Kutcha both failed to convert.

    Victory for Luis Enrique’s side saw them leapfrog Portugal, who were beaten by Switzerland.

    Source: BBC 

  • Darwin Nunez: Liverpool reach agreement with Benfica for Uruguay striker

    Liverpool have reached a deal with Benfica to sign Uruguay striker Darwin Nunez, the Portuguese club have confirmed.

    Benfica say a fee of 75m euros (£64m), rising to a potential 100m euros (£85m) with add-ons, has been agreed.

    Nunez, 22, scored 34 times in 41 appearances across all competitions for Benfica last season.

    Liverpool’s record transfer is the £75m paid to sign centre-back Virgil van Dijk from Southampton in 2018.

    Premier League rivals Manchester United were reportedly also interested in signing Nunez, who cost Benfica 24m euros (£20.5m) when he signed from Spanish side Almeria in 2020.

    The striker, who has 11 caps for Uruguay, scored 26 goals in 28 league games in 2021-22 – with 25 of those goals coming in the 24 league matches in which he started.

    He also scored six times in 10 Champions League games last season, including against Liverpool in both legs of their quarter-final in April.

    Liverpool won the FA Cup and Carabao Cup last season – along with finishing as Premier League runners-up and losing in the Champions League final.

    Portuguese 19-year-old Fabio Carvalho became Liverpool’s first signing of the summer transfer window in May, with the forward set to officially join from Fulham on 1 July.

    The Reds have rejected a deal worth £30m from Bayern Munich for Senegal forward Sadio Mane who, like the club’s Egyptian star Mohamed Salah, is set to become a free agent next summer if an agreement over a new contract cannot be reached.

    Brazil forward Roberto Firmino, another key part of Liverpool’s attack during Klopp’s tenure, has also entered the final 12 months of his current deal, while Japan international Takumi Minamino is attracting interest from a number of clubs.

    Source: BBC

  • Nigerian ‘hero’ who drove a tanker on fire to safety

    A Nigerian man who has been hailed a “hero” for risking his life by driving a burning fuel tanker away from a densely populated suburban area in Warri Delta State has recounted to the BBC the scary ordeal.

    “‘There was just one thought on my mind and that was to plunge the burning tanker into a river nearby’,” Ejiro Otarigho said.

    ”My [assistant] was the one who alerted me to the fact that our tanker was on fire. It was a scary ball of fire,” he continued.

    Mr Ejiro said he had just offloaded some of the contents of the tanker and was heading towards another point when tragedy struck.

    With no time to waste, he told his assistant to get off and he sped off in the burning tanker amidst shrieks of fear and dismay from onlookers.

    In the dangerous incident, any slight error of judgement from Mr Otarigho or, a sudden explosion, could have resulted in total disaster.

    “My intention was to drive to the river. When I got there the car steering got stuck and I couldn’t move any further,” he recounted.

    “I said if I drive straight, the truck may fall and that may cause another problem. So I just have to park in the open space.”

    Mr Otarigho finally got the tanker to safety and onlookers can be seen in one of the videos dragging him away.

    Mr Otarigho is safe and sound save for some smoke inhalation and a few bruises.

    Tanker fire accidents are common in Nigeria and many lives have been lost with accompanying damage to properties.

    Source: BBC

  • Missing Zimbabwean opposition activist found dead

    A Zimbabwean opposition party says the remains of a missing supporter have been found in a well, ending a widely publicised search.

    Moreblessing Ali was reported missing following an argument with a former boyfriend, Pius Jambo.

    Mr Jambo, who’s been described by the opposition Citizens’ Coalition for Change as a ruling party supporter, is alleged to have dragged her from a bar in May.

    The ruling party, Zanu PF, has denied involvement in the killing and asked that police be allowed to do their investigations.

    Ms Ali’s mutilated body was found dumped in a well south of the capital, Harare.

    Police have previously said they were treating the case as domestic rather than politically motivated.

    But an opposition spokesperson Fadzayi Mahere said Mr Jambo was linked to previous violent attacks against opposition supporters. She called for a swift, impartial investigation.

     

    Source: BBC

  • Most young Africans want to leave continent – Survey

    A new survey suggests that two thirds of young African people are not optimistic about the direction of their country or continent – but remain positive about their personal futures.

    Researchers conducted more than 4,000 face-to-face interviews across 15 countries for the African Youth Survey.

    More than half said they wanted to emigrate in the next few years, while nearly 80% planned to start their own business.

    They said governments should prioritise creating well-paid jobs, reducing corruption and fighting climate change to help Africa progress.

    About three quarters of the participants said they saw China as the strongest foreign power on the continent eclipsing the US which had previously held the role.

    Source: BBC

  • Ukraine war: Evidence shows widespread use of cluster munitions in Kharkiv

    Russia has killed hundreds of civilians in the north-eastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv using indiscriminate shelling and widely-banned cluster munitions, according to new research by Amnesty International.

    Amnesty said it had found evidence of Russian forces repeatedly using 9N210/9N235 cluster bombs, as well as “scatterable” munitions – rockets that eject smaller mines that explode later at timed intervals.

    The BBC visited five separate impact sites in residential neighbourhoods in Kharkiv and saw evidence of a distinctive, symmetrical spalling effect associated with cluster munitions. We showed images from the sites to three weapons experts, who all said the impacts were consistent with the controversial weapons.

    “Those impacts are from cluster munitions, it’s a classic signature,” said Mark Hizney, a senior researcher in the arms division of Human Rights Watch, a campaign group.

    “And in one image you can see a remnant of a stabiliser fin from one of the submunitions,” he said.

    CCTV footage passed to the BBC by a resident at one of the sites showed successive clustered detonations – “a very strong indicator of submunitions from a cluster weapon,” said Hamish de Bretton Gordon, a former British Army colonel and Cambridge University weapons expert.

    An apparent submunition impact from a cluster bomb in a Kharkiv residential neighbourhood
    Image caption, The spalling pattern created by cluster bomb impacts, seen in a Kharkiv residential neighbourhood (Joel Gunter/BBC)

    Cluster munitions are controversial because they detonate in the air and release a cluster of smaller bombs which fall indiscriminately over a wide area, potentially putting civilians at risk.

    The smaller bombs also often fail to detonate on impact, posing a threat for years to come. More than 120 countries have signed a treaty prohibiting the use of the weapons – though neither Russia or Ukraine are signatories.

    At the site of one apparent cluster munition strike in Kharkiv, around a housing estate and playground in the Industrialnyi neighbourhood, the spalling effect was visible around three separate impacts on three sides of a playground.

    Ivan Litvynyenko’s wife Oksana was badly wounded in the strike and later died.

    Litvynyenko, 40, told the BBC the couple was walking through the playground with their five-year-old daughter when the munitions hit. Their 14-year-old son was inside their apartment.

    “Suddenly I saw a flash and I heard the first explosion,” Litvynyenko said. “I grabbed my daughter and pressed her to a tree. My wife was about five metres away and she just dropped.”

    An impact site next to where Ivan Litvynyenko's wife was hit by shrapnel. (Joel Gunter/BBC)
    Image caption, An impact site next to a playground where Ivan Litvynyenko’s wife was hit by shrapnel. (Joel Gunter/BBC)

    Oksana, 41, was hit by shrapnel that penetrated her back, chest and abdomen, puncturing her lungs and damaging her spine.

    She was in intensive care for two months, until Sunday, when she died from complications from her injuries and diabetes, Litvynyenko said.

    “Doctors operated on her several times but her body could not survive it,” he said, speaking just hours after her death.

    Describing the strike, Litvynyenko said he saw a “series of explosions, lots of bombs one after another”.

    Two other residents who were inside their apartments at the time of the strike told the BBC they heard successive detonations when the attack happened. “You could hear explosions over several minutes,” said Danya Volynets, 26.

    “When we came outside I could see the burning cars. It looked like everything was on fire.”

    Tetiana Ahayeva, a 53-year-old nurse, was standing in front of her building when the munitions hit. “There was a sudden sound of firecrackers everywhere, lots of them, all over,” she told Amnesty.

    “We dropped to the ground and tried to find cover. Our neighbour’s son, a 16-year-old boy called Artem Shevchenko, was killed on the spot. He had a hole 1cm wide in his chest. His father had a shattered hip and a shrapnel wound in his leg.”

    Oksana Litvynyenko with her daughter. Oksana was badly wounded in April and died on Sunday. (Family handout)
    Image caption, Oksana Litvynyenko with her daughter. Oksana was badly wounded in April and died on Sunday. (Family handout)

    Doctors at a central Kharkiv hospital said that among the victims brought in after the playground strike they saw penetrating wounds to the abdomen, chest and back, and they collected metal fragments which matched the types of pellets found in 9N210/9N235 cluster munitions.

    According to Amnesty, the strike on the Industrialnyi neighbourhood killed at least nine civilians and wounded 35, detonating over an area of 700 square metres.

    At another residential building, in Kharkiv’s Haribaldi Street area, a munition landed in the entranceway to the building, killing two elderly women and gravely wounding another. The tell-tale spalling effect could be seen around the doorway and on the path nearby.

    “There was a series of explosions one after another,” said resident Nadia Kravchuk, 61. “I came out and saw a woman lying here face down and another other woman lying here, and next to them was Lena, who lost both her legs. She was crying out, ‘I have lost my leg.’”

    Tetiana Bielova and Olena Sorokina were sitting on a bench outside when a munition detonated nearby.
    They got up to enter the building but a second munition landed right in the entranceway, killing Bielova and another woman called Tetiana who was with them. Sorokina lost both her legs in the blast.
    Nadia Kravchuk looks down at damage from a munition that killed two of neighbours (Joel Gunter/BBC)
    Image caption, Nadia Kravchuk looks down at damage from a munition that killed two of her neighbours (Joel Gunter/BBC)

    In total, over two weeks’ field research, Amnesty investigated 41 strikes in Kharkiv in which at least 62 civilians were killed and 196 wounded, the charity said. They found evidence of cluster munitions and unguided rockets killing people who were shopping, queuing for food aid, or simply walking down the street.

    “These weapons should never be used,” Donatella Rovera, Amnesty’s senior crisis response adviser, told the BBC. “They cannot be pinpointed. They are area weapons. And they have a devastating effect and cause a lot of civilian death and injury.”

    Use of the weapons was “tantamount to deliberately targeting civilians,” Rovera said. “Russia cannot claim it does not know the effect of these types of weapons,” she said. “And the decision to use them shows absolute disregard for civilian life.”

    Russia has previously denied using cluster munitions in Ukraine and insisted that Russian forces have only struck military targets.

    Source: BBC

  • Ghana is battling three outbreaks – GHS announces

    The Ghana Health Service (GHS) has indicated that the country is currently battling three diseases.

    Director-General of the GHS, Dr Patrick Kuma-Aboagye, during a press conference on Wednesday, June 8, revealed the three as Covid-19, Influenza A(H3) and Monkeypox.

    Covid-19

    Covid-19 was first recorded in March 2020 and since then the government has been battling the pandemic. About three to four months ago, the country recorded low cases of the virus.

    But recently, the GHS has seen a surge in the number of cases. Over the last month, Dr Kuma-Aboagye said there has been a gradual increase in the number of Covid-19 cases in Accra.

    Active cases as of June 6, stood at 452. No critical or severe cases have been recorded. 

    The GHS has recorded 1,445 related deaths since the emergence of the virus in 2020. Since March, according to the GHS, no deaths have been recorded.

    The Service believes this is due to the efficacy of the Covid-19 vaccines.

    Ghana’s total confirmed cases is 162,002. According to the Service, 160,105 who fell prey to the virus have recovered.

    Influenza A(H3)

    The country recorded its first case of Influenza A(H3) in January in the Eastern Region.

    In April, there was a surge in the number of cases. So far, 773 Influenza A(H3) cases have been recorded. 

    The Eastern Region recorded 33.1%, Greater Accra (29.5%) and Volta (11.9%) of the confirmed cases. 

    The Upper East, Upper West and North East Regions have not recorded any cases. 

    Pandemic Influenza H1N1 and the H3N2 are among sub-types of the Influenza.

    Monkeypox

    According to the Ghana Health Service, Ghana has recorded five cases of the monkeypox virus.

    These cases were confirmed in the Eastern, Western and Greater Accra regions.

    The GHS Director-General noted that the cases were identified through the testing of 12 suspected cases, including one case that was reported from the Western Region.

    The virus can be transmitted from person to person through direct contact with body fluid or monkeypox lesions.

    Persons who contract the virus are said to be subjected to the following symptoms; fever, swollen lymph nodes, headaches, muscle and back aches.

    Persons could also suffer general bodily weakness and rash with blisters on face, hands, feet, body, eyes, mouth or genitals.

    How to prevent catching any of the diseases

    The Ghana Health Service has admonished citizens to observe social distancing, wearing of nose masks, washing of hands regularly and using of sanitizers.

    Citizens have also been entreated to avail themselves for Covid-19 jabs. The GHS says booster shots will enable one to be immune to the Covid-19 virus.

    Source: The Independent Ghana

  • Modric signs one-year extension with Real Madrid

    Croatia midfielder Luka Modric has agreed a one-year contract extension with Real Madrid.

    The new deal keeps Modric at the Santiago Bernabeu until June 2023.

    The 36-year-old, who won the Ballon d’Or award in 2018, joined from Tottenham in 2012 and has since made 436 appearances for Real.

    A World Cup runner-up with Croatia in 2018, Modric has won three La Liga titles and five Champions League trophies with Los Blancos.

    He made 28 appearances as Carlo Ancelotti’s side secured the league title this season and he played 13 times in Europe as Real claimed their 14th Champions League victory.

    When Modric won the 2018 Ballon d’Or, he became the first player other than Lionel Messi or Cristiano Ronaldo to claim the award in more than a decade.

    Source: BBC

  • COVID-19: Ghana’s active case count surges by over 800% in 3 weeks

    Ghana’s COVID-19 active case count has risen to 396 from 47 three weeks ago, with eight regions now having active cases.

    The surge in active cases comes three weeks after the active case count dropped to 47 with all cases recorded in the Greater Accra region.

    Regional breakdown

    Per the figures on the Ghana Health Service COVID-19 portal as of June 3, 2022, eight out of the 16 regions have active cases. Greater Accra has 344 cases, Volta region has three cases, the Eastern region has 29 cases, the Western region has 11 cases, Western North has five cases, the Ashanti and the Savannah regions have one case each and the Bono East region has two cases.

    However, no new deaths have been recorded within the period with the death toll at 1,445.

    Reasons

    The Presidential Advisor on Health, Dr Anthony Nsiah Asare has attributed the recent surge to the onset of the rainy season.

    “For the past one month or so, there were no active cases in 15 of the 16 regions except Greater Accra Region, but as you are aware, what is happening now is that in every year around July, from now when the rain starts up to July, we have a flu-like respiratory tract infections,” Dr Asare said in an interview on Asaase Radio.

    “We have a testing site, the site where we take samples from and Noguchi tests them… so we picked a few increase in influenza infections, and some of them, because influenza and COVID are family, we also tested them for COVID-19 and we had positive cases identified among these COVID-19 cases,” he said.

    “But the most important thing is that most of them are mild to moderate cases which are being treated at home,” he said.

    The easing of COVID-19 preventive measures including the wearing of facemasks in public places was announced on March 27, 2022, by President Akufo-Addo.

    However, Dr Asare wants Ghanaians to make the personal choice to wear facemasks in enclosed, crowded places.

    “We are also entreating people to reintroduce the use of nose masks within areas where there are a lot of people who are going to meet, especially in corporate organisations when they are having meetings in air-conditioned rooms which are enclosed.

    “We entreat them to wear their masks and in schools because we are having flu-like illness. We also entreat the teachers to allow the children or to ask the children to wear nose masks while they are in class or on the school compound,” Dr Asare said.

    Source: Graphic online

  • Tiger Woods to miss US Open to give himself time to ‘get stronger’

    Tiger Woods has confirmed he will not play at next week’s US Open, but still plans to compete at the 150th Open Championship at St Andrews next month.

    It follows the 15-time major winner’s withdrawal from the US PGA Championship in May after three rounds.

    “I will not be competing in the US Open as my body needs more time to get stronger for major championship golf,” Woods, 46, said on Twitter.

    However, the event will include players from the LIV Golf Invitational Series.

    The US Open begins on 16 June in Brookline, Massachusetts.

    Woods added: “I do hope and plan to be ready to play in Ireland at the JP McManus Pro-Am and at The Open next month. I’m excited to get back out there soon.”

    The veteran American returned to competition at the Masters in April, 14 months after a serious car crash, from which he had to be “extricated from the wreck” by firefighters and paramedics.

    The severity of Woods’ injuries saw him embark on a long road to recovery and initially raised questions over whether he would even be able to compete again at the highest level.

    He played his third worst round in a major at the US PGA Championship last month, with a nine-over 79, that left him joint last on 12 over.

    He also made five consecutive bogeys for the first time in a major since turning professional in 1996.

    On Monday, Woods’ great rival Phil Mickelson was added to the field for the first event in the Greg Norman-backed LIV Golf Invitational Series, which takes place in Hertfordshire and starts on Thursday.

    In an interview with the Washington Post, Norman said Woods had been offered a “mind-blowingly enormous” deal to take part in the series.

    USGA allows LIV players to compete

    Players taking part in the LIV Golf Invitational will be allowed to take part in the US Open, the United States Golf Association (USGA) has ruled.

    There had been questions over the issue, as the PGA Tour has threatened sanctions and bans against players signing up for the Saudi-backed LIV Golf series.

    However, the majors are not run by the PGA Tour, with the US Open being staged by the USGA.

    The USGA said its qualification criteria was set prior to entries opening earlier this year and that it would not be appropriate or fair for those who have earned a spot to change those rules.

    It said: “Regarding players who may choose to play in London [at the LIV event] this week, we simply asked ourselves this question – should a player who had earned his way into the 2022 US Open, via our published field criteria, be pulled out of the field as a result of his decision to play in another event?

    “And we ultimately decided that they should not.”

    Source: BBC

  • Former Mozambique minister loses extradition appeal

    A South African court has rejected the Mozambican government’s request to appeal against a decision to extradite former Finance Minister Manuel Chang to the US.

    Last November, a Johannesburg court ordered Mr Chang’s extradition to the US, where he is accused of corruption, fraud and money laundering.

    But the Mozambique government petitioned the South Africa’s constitutional court for authorisation to appeal against the sentence.

    On Tuesday, the court dismissed the request.

    The government in Mozambique had wanted him to be extradited to Maputo, where 19 suspects are on trial on similar charges.

    The crimes against Mr Chang relate to loans taken by Mozambique during his tenure as finance minister.

    Mr Chang signed off more than $2.7b in loans to set up a sophisticated tuna industry – to buy trawlers and military patrol boats, but much of it was allegedly diverted to corrupt officials.

    He denies accepting $7m in bribes. He was arrested in December 2018 at the request of the US, where investors were affected by the scandal.

    The former finance minister has been in a South African prison since his arrest following an indictment in a New York district court.

    He was arrested while he was on transit to the United Arab Emirates, according to court documents.

    Source: BBC

  • Judge stops Kenya from taxing church tithes – Report

    A high court in Kenya has stopped the tax authority from demanding tax on tithes, donations and offerings given to churches, the Daily Nation newspaper reports.

    The Kenya Revenue Authority had demanded 5.5 million shillings ($47,000; £37,000) from Thika Road Baptist Church in unpaid taxes, arguing that it failed to produce a tax exemption certificate.

    Churches in Kenya are exempted from paying taxes on tithes, but the KRA had insisted they must get the exemption, the newspaper reports.

    “I, therefore, find and hold that since tithes, offering and freewill donations are not income chargeable with income tax, it was not necessary for the church to seek an exemption,” Justice David Majanja is quoted as saying.

    Last year, the tax authority said it would be be viewing the social media profiles of targeted individuals to reconcile their lifestyle with their tax compliance.

    Source: BBC

  • South Africa and UAE in talks over Gupta brothers’ future

    High-level talks have begun between the governments of South Africa and the United Arab Emirates to bring two brothers from the wealthy Gupta family to justice.

    Atul and Rajesh Gupta were recently arrested in the Gulf state.

    They are accused in South Africa of profiting from their close links with former President Jacob Zuma and exerting unfair influence.

    All three deny any wrongdoing.

    The wealthy Indian-born brothers, who are accused of fraud and money laundering, are expected to apply for bail in the next few days.

    Rajesh and Atul, along with their brother Ajay Gupta – who has not been arrested – fled South Africa in 2018, around the same time former President Jacob Zuma was forced to resign following a string of corruption allegations against him.

    The Guptas have been accused of using their association with Mr Zuma to cash in on huge government contracts by paying bribes.

    The United States placed the Guptas on a sanctions list in 2019, after they were accused of being members of a significant corruption network.

    South Africa successfully negotiated an extradition treaty with the United Arab Emirates last year, but it could take years before the accused are successfully extradited to face justice in South Africa.

    Source: BBC

  • New details about US weapons sent to Ukraine

    New details have been released of the total amount of US weapons and equipment sent to Ukraine since the conflict started on 24 February.

    More than $4bn-worth of military hardware has been given to Ukraine and much of it now is in the country. The US is by far the biggest contributor.

    Donated weapons include:

    • 6,500 Javelin anti-tank missiles
    • 20,000 light anti-armour weapon
    • 1,400 Stinger surface to air missiles
    • 108 M777 howitzers with 220,000 shells
    • 4 HIMARS multiple launch rocket systems
    • 121 Phoenix Ghost and 700 Switchblade attack drones
    • 200 armoured anti-personnel carriers
    • Several hundred Humvee vehicles
    • 20 Soviet made Mig-17 helos
    • 7,200 firearms with 50m rounds
    • 3 AN/TPQ-36 counter battery radars

    Equipment mostly ends up in Donbas in the east, where the focus of the fighting is taking place.

    Kyiv has repeatedly asked for more weapons to fight off attacks by Moscow, attacks which are being better supplied given their close proximity to Russia’s border.

    Source: BBC

  • Suspect, two victims dead in Tamale robbery Police

    The Ghana Police Service has indicated one of the suspects in an alleged armed robbery in Tamale in the Northern Region has died.

    The Police say two other victims lost their lives in the process at Kalariga.

    According to a statement, the incident which happened on Tuesday evening also saw two others sustain various degrees of injury.

    “Two others including one of the alleged robbery suspects and one other victim sustained gunshot wounds and are receiving medical attention,” the police posted on Twitter.

    The release, however, fell short of describing how the incident occurred.

    But JoyNews sources say it happened when the suspected robbers attacked a mobile money vendor in the area who happens to be one of the deceased.

    Two others including one of the alleged robbery suspects and one other victim sustained gunshot wounds and are receiving medical attention.

    They added that “we are working around the clock to bring the perpetrators to justice.”

    Source: MyJoyOnline

  • Appiatse Support Fund has received over GH¢42M so far Lands Minister

    The Appiatse Support Fund, which was set up to mobilise adequate funds to rebuild the community destroyed by a fatal explosion, has received over GH¢ 42 million in donations so far.

    This was disclosed by the Lands and Natural Resources Minister, Samuel Abdulia Jinapor.

    Mr. Jinapor said the money raised so far includes donations from individuals and corporate institutions.

    The Lands Minister called for more donations as he broke down the figures.

    “As of Monday, June 6, 2022, the Committee had received cash donations of GH¢42,527,380.2. This amount includes the four instalment payments made by Maxam Ghana Limited.”

    “Out of this amount, GH¢1 million has been advanced to the Appiatse Reconstruction Implementation Committee to complete temporary structures to accommodate the victims of the incident, ending the reconstruction as well as undertake preparatory works for the construction.”

    He indicated that the committee has also received non-monetary contributions such as “wood, cement, clothing and food items.”

    The Appiatse Support Fund was established following an explosion that occurred when a truck carrying explosives for mining was involved in an accident in the town.

    14 people have so far died from the incident, while over a hundred people suffered various degrees of injury.

    The community was razed by the explosion, compelling the government to establish the Fund to support the rebuilding efforts.

    Source: Citinewsroom

  • We wont allow consumers to bear demands of utility providers PURC

    The Public Utility Regulatory Commission (PURC) is assuring consumers that it will not grant some of the demands made by utility providers.

    The Electricity Company of Ghana and the Ghana Water Company Limited are demanding over a 100% increment in tariff to meet what they call operational cost.

    The PURC is currently meeting all stakeholders across the country before announcing new tariffs.

    The Chairman of the Technical Committee of the PURC, Ishmael Edjekumhene said “PURC is considering the proposals presented by the utility providers, after which we will make a decision.”

    “What I am certain of is no way will consumers be made to bear the outrageous cost.”

    The Electricity Company of Ghana had proposed that its tariffs be increased by 148% for 2022 and with 7.6% average adjustments between the periods of 2023 to 2026.

    The proposed sharp increment, according to ECG, is due to the gap between the actual cost recovery tariff and PURC-approved tariffs as well as the cost of completed projects.

    The GWCL also argued that while the average tariff per cubic metre in 2019 was 1.27 USD, the same was reduced to USD 1.13 as a result of cedi depreciation.

    The GWCL said this has affected its ability to carry out repairs and replacements of aged and obsolete equipment and pipelines.

    Source: Citinewsroom

  • All encroachers on CSIR lands will be dealt with Henry Quartey

    The Greater Accra Regional Minister, Henry Quartey has bemoaned the rate at which individual developers are taking over lands belonging to the Animal Research Institute of the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research.

    He assured that government will not relent in its effort to demolish buildings on such lands.

    The institute has over the period complained about the increasing level of encroachment of about 1000 acres of their lands and the attacks on staff by land guards.

    While its efforts to evict these encroachers have proven futile, the institute has made several calls to government for assistance.

    The institute says workers are living in fear due to the activities of land guards on its lands.

    In an interview after inspecting the boundaries of the institute, Mr. Quartey vowed to ensure that the situation is dealt with in no time.

    “I have received complaints by some government officials that government lands are being encroached. An example is what we see at CSIR. It is sad that people have the effrontery to take over government property.”

    “REGSEC will meet soon and I will take a decision in no time. I will ensure that the situation is dealt with in no time.”

    Source: Citinewsroom

  • Apple announces buy now pay later, among iOS 16 plans

    Apple is planning a buy now pay later (BNPL) service as part of its new operating system, iOS 16.

    Apple Pay Later will allow users in the US to spread the cost of a purchase into four payments over six weeks, without paying interest or fees.

    It forms part of a range of new iPhone features, including the ability to edit iMessages and a feature intended to help people in abusive relationships.

    The features were unveiled at WWDC, the firm’s annual developers’ conference.

    BNPL services – which are currently unregulated in the UK – have been criticised for the way they are used by low-income groups.

    Panorama reported in December 2021 that an estimated 15 million adults of all ages in the UK are actively using BNPL, with the main operators offering the service in the UK being Klarna, Clearpay, Laybuy and PayPal.

    Concerns have been raised over whether people are relying on it too much, after Citizens Advice found in March that one in 12 people are using BNPL services to cover essentials such as food and toiletries.

    Citizens Advice also said young people, people in debt, and people claiming Universal Credit, were at least twice as likely to have used BNPL for these basic costs than other groups.

    The BBC has approached Apple for comment on whether it intends to bring its BNPL service to the UK.

    New iOS 16 features

    The new version of iOS 16, due to be released in the Autumn, will bring a range of additional features to the iPhone.

    The iPhone lock screen will have a significant shake-up, with users now able to do more than simply change the background image.

    It will become possible to change how the clock locks, and introduce widgets for showing information on weather, the user’s activity rings and more, as is currently possible on Apple Watch.

    This will also introduce the ability to choose between different lock screens with different functionalities – for example, a lock screen for exercising which has activity monitors.

    Other significant announcements include the ability to edit and “unsend” iMessages that were sent using Apple’s Messages app, and the introduction of a feature Apple calls Safety Check.

    It says Safety Check is intended to “protect individuals in abusive relationships”, by giving users the ability to view and quickly remove all the permissions given to someone else on their phone.

    That includes removing other peoples’ access to passwords, as well as Find My Phone.

    Apple said this also included a “emergency reset”, that allowed people to sign out of iCloud on all devices, and only allowed one device to send and receive messages.

    Apple has been praised online for this feature, with one person saying it is “going to help so many people“, and the director of Cybersecurity at the Electronic Frontier Foundation calling it a “good thing for survivors of intimate partner abuse”.

    Source: BBC

  • Mali junta decrees two-year delay before democracy

    Mali’s military leaders have confirmed there won’t be a return to civilian rule for two years.

    The interim President, Colonel Assimi Goïta, has signed a decree fixing the length of the transition period.

    The army initially seized power in 2020 and has been under international pressure to hold elections sooner.

    Mali is struggling to deal with crippling sanctions imposed after it failed to hold a planned vote in February.

    Over the weekend, the West African regional grouping, Ecowas, decided to keep the measures in place.

    It will examine the situation again during its next extraordinary summit next month.

    The bloc had asked Mali to review its two-year transition period, considering 12 or 18 months to be reasonable.

    Source: BBC

  • Germany: 2 dead in supermarket shooting, police say

    Two people were found dead after a shooting in a supermarket north of Frankfurt, authorities said Tuesday.

    According to local police, gunfire was reported at the premises in Schwalmstadt at around 1 p.m. local time (1100 UTC).

    Police said the motive behind the shooting wasn’t yet clear and that there was no further danger to the public.

    The Hessische Niedersächsische Allgemeine newspaper reported that there was a heavy police presence at the scene.

    Schwalmstadt is a rural mid-sized town of just under 20,000 people roughly 90 minutes’ drive north of Frankfurt.

    Source: DW.com

  • Total announces 67 pesewas per share dividend for shareholders

    Total Petroleum PLC has announced the payment of a final dividend of 67 pesewas per share to shareholders for the financial year ended December 31, 2021.

    According to a circular from the Ghana Stock Exchange, all shareholders registered in the books of the firm at the close of business on Friday July 1, 2022 will qualify for the final dividend.

    In view of the foregoing, the ex-dividend date has been set as Wednesday, June 29, 2022.

    Consequently, an investor purchasing Total shares before this date will be entitled to the final dividend.

    However, an investor buying Total shares on or after Wednesday, June 29, 2022 will not be entitled to the final dividend.

    The final dividend will be paid from Friday, July 15, 2022.

    Source: MyJoyOnline