Author: Andy Ogbarmey-Tettey

  • Monkeypox patients should avoid pet contact

    Monkeypox patients should avoid any contact with their pets for 21 days, according to new advice from the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA).

    So far, 106 people in the UK have been confirmed as infected with the virus.

    Gerbils, hamsters and other rodents could be particularly susceptible to the disease and the concern is it could spread in the animal population.

    The government said no cases have been detected in pets so far and the risk is still low.

    “The worry is the virus could get into domestic animals and essentially ping-pong between them and humans,” said Prof Lawrence Young, a virologist at the University of Warwick.

    “If you are not careful you might create an animal reservoir for the disease that could result in it spreading back into humans, and we’ll be in a loop of infection.”

    The guidance from the UKHSA and other health authorities recommends that pet guinea pigs, rats, mice and other rodents should be removed from the household of someone infected with monkeypox for 21 days, and be tested for the disease.

    There are thought to be two million households in the UK with a pet rodent of some kind, according to sales data.

    Other pets like dogs and cats should be placed under household isolation with regular vet checks to “ensure no clinical signs are observed”.

    Related advice from the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) says that “where possible” the patient should avoid preparing food or grooming their pet if this can be done by someone else in the household.

    England’s chief veterinary officer Christine Middlemiss said: “No cases of monkeypox have ever been suspected or reported in pets in the UK and the risk remains low.

    “We will continue to monitor the situation closely and work with veterinary and public health colleagues, both in the UK and across the world, to manage the animal health associated risks with monkeypox.”

    Reservoir risk

    Separate advice published by the European Centre for Disease Control (ECDC) this week said that rodent pets belonging to monkeypox patients should “ideally” be isolated in monitored facilities and tested for the disease before their quarantine period ends.

    The animals should only be put down as a last resort in situations where isolation is not feasible, the document said.

    Larger pets, such as dogs, could quarantine at home with regular checks on their health status.

    Guinea pigsIMAGE SOURCE, GETTY IMAGES
    Image caption, Guinea pigs, rats, mice and other rodents are thought to be most susceptible to the disease

    Scientists say little is currently known about how monkeypox might behave in the domestic pet population.

    But rodents and a particular species of squirrel are likely to be capable of catching and spreading the disease more easily than humans.

    The ECDC says a “spillover” event, where a human infects a pet animal, could potentially lead to the virus establishing itself in European wildlife, although it describes the risk as “very low”.

    The concern is that monkeypox could become what’s known as an endemic zoonoses, where a disease jumps between animal species and is constantly present in that new population.
    Source: BBC
  • Girls advised to reduce painkillers use during menstruation

    A Community Health nurse at the Jamestown Ussher Hospital, Christiana Bapore, has advised girls to minimise the use of painkillers during their menstrual period.

    Ignorantly taking frequent painkillers, she said, negatively affected the liver and other vital organs, which might give them some complications in the future.

    She advised girls to resort to exercising frequently and avoid taking spicy and sugary foods during their period to reduce the chances of cramping.

    “How long are we going to resort to painkillers? We need to accept that menstruation is part of us and has come to stay and so during this time, we only plead that painkillers be a bit minimal,” she said.

    Mrs Bapore further entreated girls who had very severe pain during their menstrual period to visit the nearest health facility to get themselves checked by a physician.

    She made the statement at a sensitisation campaign on menstrual hygiene at the Aayalolo Cluster of Schools in Accra yesterday.

    Campaign

    The campaign, organised by Hope for Africa Eco Village in partnership with Green Generation Ghana and Ashiedu Keteke Sub Metro, was to create awareness of good menstrual hygiene in commemoration of the world Menstrual Hygiene Day which falls on Saturday, May 28 this year.

    The children were drawn from the Richard Akwei Memorial School, Amamomo Junior High School and the Seventh-Day Adventist School, all in Jamestown.

    They were taught what menstruation was about and how to maintain good personal hygiene within the period.

    The students were also shown how to use sanitary and menstrual tools such as the sanitary pads and menstrual cups.

    The project coordinator for Hope for Africa, Vincentia Koranteng Asante, reiterated that menstruation should not be a thing girls and boys felt uncomfortable to talk about.

    She said it was important that children especially girls felt free to talk about menstruation among their peers, parents and teachers without fear or any intimidation.

    “Even though it is a natural thing, some become traumatised and stay home when they experience their period for the first time,” Mrs Asante said.

    Mrs Asante said some girls did not dispose of their used pads properly and urged private individuals, government and other stakeholders to help build toilet facilities in the communities with incinerators to burn used pads.

    Stigma

    The Executive Director for Green Generation Ghana, Anita Djandoh, said her outfit was interested in sanitation and hygiene, among other things, and menstrual hygiene was no exception.

    Source: Graphic online

  • Ghana must support and embrace initiatives for women’s empowerment and equality – Speaker

    The Speaker of Parliament, Alban Bagbin, has emphasised the need for citizens to support and strengthen equality and women’s empowerment initiatives in the country.

    He added that the Affirmative Action bill requires immediate attention and that the legislature is committed to working cohesively with the Executive branch to ensure that the draft bill is presented to the House in order to create a window of opportunity for women, the elderly, the disabled, and members of minority groups.

    “Given Ghana’s enviable democratic credentials in Africa, there is still a need to promote women’s sense of worth and their right to influence and lead developmental change,” he stated.

    He made these remarks in Accra to a delegation from the Canadian Senate led by the Senator and Co- Chair of Canada-Africa Parliamentary Association, Hon. Amina Gerba, who had paid him a courtesy call in Parliament to understand the delicate situation in which Ghana’s Parliament finds itself.

    In response to the concerns raised by the Rt. Hon. Speaker, the High Commissioner of Canada to Ghana, H. E. Kati Csaba, informed the group that Canada had approved a programme to assist Ghana’s Parliament in the areas of gender equality, equity, and inclusiveness.

    According to her, this action will foster and develop a relationship between Ghana and Canada that is mutually beneficial.

    Hon. Amina Gerba commended Speaker Bagbin for his commitment and service in carrying out his responsibilities to Mother Ghana and the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association with diligence.

    In addition, the Speaker stated that due to the nature of the Ghanaian Parliament, both sides of the House must commit to consultations and consensus building in order to gain public support.

    In reference to the current composition of Parliament, Mr. Speaker stated, “The glaring flaws in Ghana’s 1992 Constitution necessitate a review, and until its successful implementation, members of both parties must engage in strategic engagements and compromise.”



  • Dress ‘properly’ or be sent out of the Chambers – Speaker warns MPs

    Members of Parliament (MPs) have been reminded by Speaker of Parliament Alban Bagbin to dress properly as required by House rules.

    Alban Bagbin announced during Friday’s sessions that MPs who do not follow the House’s dress code will be asked to leave.

    He stated that offending legislators will not be allowed to contribute or make any submissions on the floor of Parliament.

    “The dress code mandates and enjoins us to come to this house formally dressed. They used the term decent but some of the things I see you wearing are singlets and when you wear singlet into the house you are naked and therefore you have difficulties in catching the eye of the speaker.”

    Alban Bagbin directed leaders on both sides of the House to ensure that their members are dressed properly before coming to the House.

    “Leaders please pick up the role so that the proper thing is done, particularly the Whips that is why you are there. That is your area of focus to maintain discipline and order.”

    “I have seen it for some days now, I will not recognize any naked person in this house, you will be seen as a stranger and you will be walked out of this house,” he iterated.

    Meanwhile, the Speaker, announced his decision not to wear the cloak of the Speaker on regular sitting days.

    This, he said is part of his resolve to change the dress code and code of conduct of parliamentarians. He said the cloak will be worn for ceremonial purposes.

    His decision, he said is to promote made in Ghana attire and help the market for locally produced items.
    “You may be seeing me more in traditional dresses. I may use that [the cloak] only for ceremonial occasions, which is what is in the literature of Ghana concerning that cloak and gown.”

    “We also have to provide the market for our produce. We cannot always rely on what others manufacture and sell to us when we are capable of manufacturing even better ones,” the Speaker said.

    Source: The Independent Ghana

  • Achimota Forest land: Lands Minister demands transaction information from Owoo family, others

    The Minister for Lands and Natural Resources, Samuel Abu Jinapor, has requested that the Forestry and Land Commissions, as well as the Owoo Family, furnish the ministry with information on all transactions surrounding the Achimota Forest. 

    The Minister wants to find out what exactly has happened since 1927 when about 1,185 acres of land were acquired by the State and later constituted as a Forest Reserve in 1930 under the name Achimota Firewood Plantation Forest Reserve.

    The CEO of the Forestry Commission, Mr. John Allotey, is expected to submit all leases granted by the Forestry Commission over the land, any amendment or variations to those leases, as well as any sublease or assignment granted over any part of the land.

    In a press statement dated May 26, Mr Allotey is to submit the documents within a week.

    Also, in a separate letter, James Ebenezer Dadson, the Executive Secretary of the Lands Commission, has been asked to provide the ministry with information on “de-gazetting, leases, subleases, assignments, and other transfer or disposition of any part of the lands in question, whether made by the Forestry Commission or any other person.”

    The Nii Owoo family, said to be allodial owners of the land, are expected to submit to his office all subleases and assignments granted by the Family to any person.

    They are also to provide the names and addresses of all beneficiary owners of any part of the land acquired in 1927, per the statement.

    The request follows the recent Achimota Forest brouhaha which involves declassification of the said land.

    Lands Minister, Samuel Abdulai Jinapor, in an Executive Instrument (E.I) 144 on behalf of the President stipulated that effective May 1, 2022, the land on which the Forest is located shall cease to be a forest reserve.

    He noted that portions of the land will be returned to the Owoo family and government will redevelop the remaining into the likes of “High Park of London and Central Park of New York, where Ghanaians can go and enjoy the beauty of nature.”

    It will be recalled that former Lands Minister, Inusah Fuseini said the Owoo family had been duly compensated by the British colonial government for the land.

    According to him, an amount of £4000 pounds was given to the family 1951. Also, he indicated that under his administration, about ninety to hundred acres of the land was released to the family.

    It was also reported that former late Forestry Commission CEO, Kwadwo Owusu Afriyie, owned some lands at the Achimota Forest but the Lands Commission has rejected claims that Sir John owned portions of the land.

    Following the alleged ownership of lands by Sir John, some Ghanaians are wondering if some public officials have acquired portions of state property.

    The documents to be presented to the Lands Ministry will help bring finality to the matter.

    Source: The Independent Ghana



  • Pregnant women at Nkyenkyemen carry water to delivery room

    Access to clean and potable water has become a headache for the people of Nkyenkyemen, a farming community in the Berekum West District of the Bono Region.

    Residents of Nkyenkyemen are therefore pleading with government to come to their aid and provide them with water which is needed desperately especially by the only health facility in the area.

    According to residents, patients including pregnant women are compelled to carry water to the health facility in the area due to the unavailability of water in the community.

    This, they say, is impeding effective health delivery.

    Sharing her ordeal, Madam Yaa Nketia, a resident of the community stated that, “there is no source of water at the facility so when you deliver here you have to go round looking for water which is not good. So we are appealing to the authorities to fix the situation for us.”

    The midwives of the health facility also described the situation as worrying.

    “The situation at our health facility is not encouraging at all because we do not have a source of water at the facility. The situation is so serious that pregnant women have to bring water when they come and deliver which is not good for their health and that of their unborn baby.”

    Source: The Independent Ghana

  • 6 disqualified aspirants cleared by National Appeals Committee to contest NPP Volta Regional Executives elections

    The National Appeals Committee of the New Patriotic Party (NPP) has cleared 6 out of 7 disqualified regional executive aspirants in the Volta Region.

    The committee took the decision after carefully considering the appeals of the 7 aspirants, who were disqualified by the Volta Regional Elections Committee after the vetting process.

    The In-charge of Corporate Affairs and Sustainability, Prestea Sankofa Gold Limited, Josephine Selasie Aku-Sika Ohene-Boateng, was cleared to contest the incumbent Regional Treasurer, Wisdom Gakpo.

    The incumbent Regional Organiser, Emmanuel Korsi Bodja, would compete with a former Ho West Constituency Organiser, Christo Wisdom Klutse, Kofi Agrah and Prince Shelter Adjorlolo who were all cleared, to retain his position.

    A Regional Youth Organiser hopeful, Markson Korku Seayor, was also cleared by the National Appeals Committee while Emmanuel Quarshie, failed to make a strong case to defend himself.

    He was, therefore, not cleared, pegging the number of aspirants for the Regional Youth Organizer position at 3.

    The Nasara Coordinator position would see competition between Mudashinu Adebayor, Abdulai Kamila, Suala Abdulai, and Zain-UL-Abideen Ballah Sulleyman who was also okayed to contest.

    A memorandum signed by the Director of Elections and Research, Evans Nimako, directed the Regional Elections Committee to ensure the cleared aspirants are reinstated and made provisions for on the ballot papers.

    The regional elections would be held on 28th May 2022 in Ho.

    Source: MyJoyOnline

  • Aston Villa agree deal to sign Diego Carlos from Sevilla for £26m

    Aston Villa have agreed a deal to sign Brazil centre-back Diego Carlos from Sevilla for £26m.

    The 29-year-old, who Newcastle United tried to sign in January, will travel to England on Thursday for a medical and to finalise personal terms.

    He would be Villa’s second signing of the summer following the arrival of Boubacar Kamara from Marseille on a free transfer.

    Carlos played six times at last year’s Tokyo Olympics where Brazil won gold.

    “Sevilla FC would like to thank the player for his work during all these years in Seville and wishes him the best of luck in his new journey,” a statement from the La Liga club read.

    Aston Villa manager Steven Gerrard recently confirmed central defender Ezri Konsa would miss the start of the upcoming season because of a knee injury.

    Villa, who finished 14th in the Premier League last season, also completed a deal for Philippe Coutinho to join on a four-year contract from Barcelona earlier in May.

    Source: BBC

  • Champions League final: How Kylian Mbappe fallout has affected Real Madrid’s build-up

    This was supposed to be a dream seven days for Real Madrid.

    Announce the signing of Kylian Mbappe – arguably the world’s most coveted player – at the start of the week, and win the Champions League at the end of it.

    That was the expectation from club president Florentino Perez, who had been ultra confident a deal for the World Cup-winning France forward would be done.

    That Mbappe chose to stay at Paris St-Germain has not gone down well. The Madrid press have been apoplectic, to the point that in the early part of this week all coverage was about the non-deal rather than the small matter of Saturday’s final against Liverpool.

    The fallout has involved Karim Benzema courting controversy, but may actually end up being good news for some of the Bernabeu club’s key players.

    Either way, it has certainly not been the build-up to their bid for a 14th Champions League title that Real Madrid had been expecting.

    Kylian Mabppe smiling at a press conference
    If Kylian Mbappe sees out his contract at PSG, he will have been at the club for eight years

    While Liverpool’s preparations for the Paris final have involved coming to terms with the disappointment of missing out on the Premier League title by a point to Manchester City, the Real Madrid squad have had an entirely different setback to contend with.

    There is certainly an element of disappointment coming from within their camp at the failure to sign Mbappe, because many of the group were looking forward to the chance of playing with him, not least because they had been assured his arrival was a done deal.

    The Madrid media felt the same, and the main reason for the subsequent furore is that all they had heard recently – or believed – was Perez’s version of events.

    According to sources close to the president, everything was agreed. Mbappe had started to look for a property in Madrid, his presentation to the adoring fans was already being organised and Perez had actually said in private meetings and dinners that it was all done.

    Perez told everyone the player was counting the days before he came and the rejection over the past eight months of a new contract offer from PSG only served to confirm their beliefs that this was in fact the case.

    But Mbappe always said unequivocally that he would make his decision at the end of the season.

    Real Madrid told him he had to choose between money and glory, and there has been plenty of talk this week that he opted for money.

    His motivation was certainly more than just financial, though.

    Despite what you may have read or heard, in Mbappe’s mind he did not say “no” to Real Madrid, but rather “yes” to PSG and to staying in his native France. That was clear to me when I met him in Paris this week to interview him for BBC Sport.

    In the end there was very little to choose between the offers on the table from both clubs, and the player firmly believes he has unfinished business in Paris.

    For the 23-year-old, money was of course a factor, but it is also about love – which he has in abundance in Paris – and power, the three things humans crave. The player will now become the focal point of the club and everyone is going to have to adapt to it. And yes, that includes Lionel Messi. Let’s see how that works.

    Mbappe is also more than aware of the fact that by the end of his lucrative new contract he will be just 26 and presumably at his absolute peak. Anything can happen then; never say never.

    Real Madrid’s current star man, Karim Benzema, is 37 and might not still be at the club when that deal expires. Perhaps that helps explain his bizarre Instagram posting of a picture of Tupac Shakur, with an image in the background of a ‘friend’ of the rapper who supposedly betrayed the artist before his murder in 1996. This was seen as a less-than-subtle signal to highlight Mbappe’s own ‘betrayal’.

    The pair are France team-mates, of course, and Mbappe was quick to point out that in his opinion this infantile response had more to do with the powers that be at Real Madrid making mischief than something that had emanated from Benzema himself.

    Certainly, Benzema has not been impressed with being embroiled in the saga and it actually took his intervention to change the mood this week.

    He effectively pressed the reset button on Tuesday during a Champions League media day, saying the moment was long gone for discussing these minor matters and it was now time to concentrate on the match.

    There are two people involved in Saturday’s final who probably won’t exactly be heartbroken at Mbappe’s no-show in Madrid, namely Vinicius Junior and Rodrygo.

    Vinicius has played more minutes than any other Real Madrid player this season and has been a standout performer in the Champions League. Rodrygo has been used less regularly, but delivered arguably European football’s moments of the season when he scored twice in the dying moments of their Champions League semi-final against Manchester City to keep the tie alive.

    More backing for Vinicius, who incidentally was told as a 16-year-old that the club were looking to him rather than Mbappe as its future, is now inevitable. Suddenly his potential importance to the Spanish champions has grown significantly. Vinicius will probably benefit from not having to look over his shoulder.

    New contracts for him and Rodrygo are being negotiated as I write. Neither are ‘an Mbappe’, but Real Madrid now realise this is the coat that they must cut their cloth to. They can no longer compete in the buying of superstars and will have to go down the road of signing prodigiously talented youngsters, like the aforementioned pair and also Eduardo Camavinga, turning them into superstars.

    The big question now is where does this whole off-field saga leave Real Madrid and its president?

    There is no doubt it is time for a reality check for Perez and the club as a whole. Neither are accustomed to coming off second best in any transfer negotiations, but even they have to accept the timing of these huge deals is now in the hands of the players, because Mbappe’s handling of this situation – letting his contract run down and waiting until the end of the season to announce his decision – has changed the transfer landscape.

    Perez is a supremely astute leader with a killer instinct, and previous dealings have shown the footballing world that what he and Real Madrid want, they invariably get.

    But not any more.

    Florentino Perez
    Real Madrid president Florentino Perez has had questions to answer this week after his confidence that Kylian Mbappe would join the club this summer proved misplaced

    The arrival on to the scene of state-linked clubs like Manchester City (Abu Dhabi) and PSG (Qatar) has brought a seismic change to European football. The pecking order has been transformed both on and off the pitch, with the game’s two young superstars deciding to trust their future for the time being at least to these clubs – Erling Haaland to Manchester City and Mbappe to PSG – rather than the likes of Real Madrid and Barcelona.

    Real Madrid’s inability to get the Mbappe deal over the line means they have not only lost weight and prestige in the market in the eyes of the watching world, but most importantly they have lost face. That is not a nice feeling for a club that regards itself as the most important in the world.

    But with all that said, the disappointment of missing out on Mbappe shouldn’t hide the fact Real Madrid are still very well run, with manageable debt despite rebuilding the stadium, with a squad that is evolving and which will get younger this summer.

    And let’s not forget they are one game away from completing a La Liga and Champions League double.

    When I spent time with them in Madrid on Tuesday they seemed to have the serenity of serial winners, the calm heads of those used to being in major finals. The players entered the biggest week of the season as if they were walking around a beach in flip flops. It is not arrogance. It is the feeling that, in a way, they have nothing to lose – but with the confidence they have a good chance to win.

    Yes, they lack that extra dimension that a Galactico would give them in the commercial world.

    But how much do they even need one on the pitch itself? We might find out against Liverpool on Saturday.

    Source: BBC

  • Senegal minister fired after babies die in fire

    Senegal President Macky Sall has sacked his Health Minister, Abdoulaye Diouf Sarr, after 11 babies were killed by a fire in a hospital on Wednesday.

    Mr Sarr will be replaced by Marie Khemesse Ngom Ndiaye, the ministry’s director general, following the tragedy in Tivaouane city.

    The blaze, which rapidly engulfed the newborn unit at the Tivaouane hospital, is being blamed on an electrical short circuit.

    President Sall declared three days of national mourning. He also ordered an investigation into the tragedy.

    He is expected to visit Tivaouane on Saturday to meet the babies’ relatives.

    Many observers say that Senegal’s health system is beset by staffing, infrastructure, equipment and funding problems.

    A series of other deaths also have raised concerns about maternal and infant health in the West African nation known for having some of the best hospitals in the region.

    Source: BBC

  • Amber Heard: It’s easy to forget I’m a human being

    Amber Heard says she felt humiliated and had faced hundreds of daily death threats after testifying at Johnny Depp’s trial against her.

    Speaking on the final day of the trial before closing statements, the actress said: “Perhaps it’s easy to forget, but I am a human being.”

    Mr Depp, 58, is suing Ms Heard, 36, over an article she wrote in which she said she was the victim of abuse.

    He has repeatedly denied her claims.

    Over more than a month of testimony, jurors have been presented with starkly different versions of incidents that took place throughout the couple’s troubled two years together.

    Both actors accuse the other of being the aggressor in the relationship and have called witnesses to testify on their behalf. A number of the witnesses called by Mr Depp’s team have directly contradicted Ms Heard’s claims.

    “I know how many people will come out and say whatever for him,” Ms Heard said in court on Thursday. “That’s his power. That’s why I wrote the op-ed. I was speaking to that phenomenon.”

    Ms Heard’s testimony on Wednesday also led to a tense exchange with Camille Vasquez – Mr Depp’s now viral lawyer – over an image of spilled wine. It is one of several pictures Ms Heard has presented, allegedly from a huge fight the couple had in 2016 which ended with Mr Depp assaulting her.

    At one point, Ms Heard turned to jurors and claimed the photos had been redacted or edited by Mr Depp’s lawyers to benefit her ex-husband’s case.

    “I’d appreciate if you wouldn’t be making arguments to the jury,” Ms Vasquez said sternly. “I didn’t ask you about anything.”

    Throughout her testimony, Ms Heard repeatedly denied accusations she was lying or misled jurors during the trial.

    Her testimony, she added, had led to “hundreds” of death threats on a daily basis and forced her to “relive the trauma” of her marriage.

    “This is horrible… this is humiliating for any human being to go through and perhaps it’s easy to forget, but I am a human being,” she said. “As I stand here today, I can’t have a career. I can’t even have people associate with me because of the threats and the attacks that they will have to endure.”

    Mr Depp is suing Ms Heard for $50m (£40m) for a 2018 comment article she wrote in the Washington Post in which she said she was the victim of abuse.

    While he wasn’t named, his attorneys have said it “incalculably” damaged his career. She has countersued him for $100m.

    Closing arguments will begin on Friday, followed by jury deliberations.

    Source: BBC

  • Twitter investors sue Elon Musk and platform over takeover bid

    Twitter investors are suing Elon Musk and the social media platform over the handling of the billionaire’s $44bn (£34.9bn) bid for the company.

    The case alleges he violated California corporate laws in a number of ways.

    It accuses the Tesla boss of “wrongful conduct” as his “false statements and market manipulation have created ‘chaos’ at Twitter’s headquarters in San Francisco”.

    Twitter shares are around 27% lower than Mr Musk’s $54.20 offer price.

    The lawsuit also claimed Mr Musk benefitted financially by delaying the disclosure of his significant stake in Twitter, and his plan to become a board member of the company.

    It also claimed that several tweets posted by Mr Musk, who is a regular Twitter user with more than 95m followers, were “misleading”.

    It included a post in which Mr Musk said his takeover bid for the social media firm was on hold because of his doubts over the number of fake accounts on the platform.

    The tweet on 13 May “constituted an effort to manipulate the market for Twitter shares as he knew about the fake accounts,” the lawsuit said.

    It also said Mr Musk “doubled down” on his allegations four days later, by stating on Twitter that the deal “cannot go forward”.

    On Friday, Frank Bottini, who is one of the lawyers representing the Twitter investors, told the BBC that the lawsuit was filed as Mr Musk “continues to disparage the company he wants to buy for $44bn in an effort to renegotiate the purchase price”.

    “The complaint we filed in San Francisco seeks to hold Musk liable for his unlawful conduct,” Mr Bottini said.

    Analysts have speculated that Mr Musk may be looking for ways to lower his takeover offer or walk away from the deal.

    He has tweeted several times that he was concerned about the number of fake accounts, or bots, on Twitter.

    A bot is a software programme that sends out automated posts and is often associated with misinformation on social media platforms.

    Mr Musk has also hinted that he may seek to pay less for Twitter than the $44bn agreed with the company’s board in March.

    Speaking at a technology conference earlier this month, he said striking a deal at a lower price was “not out of the question”.

    The proposed class-action lawsuit was filed this week at the US District Court for the Northern District of California by investor William Heresniak, who said he was acting “on behalf of himself and all others similarly situated”.

    A class-action is a lawsuit that has been filed or is defended by an individual acting on behalf of a group of people.

    Mr Musk’s lawyers and Tesla did not immediately respond to a BBC request for comment on Friday.

    Twitter declined to comment when contacted by the BBC.

    Earlier this month, Twitter confirmed that two of its bosses who had been leading its consumer and revenue operations were leaving the company.

    The firm has also paused most hiring except for “business critical roles”.

    Source: BBC

  • SA pupils die in suspected energy drink poisoning

    South African police have opened a murder case against a father for the death of three of his sons aged six, 13 and 16 after they consumed an energy drink that he allegedly gave them.

    Two of the siblings died at school and the third died on the way to hospital.

    A fourth child who consumed the drink is said to be in a critical condition at a local hospital. A fifth brother did not consume the energy drink and is fine.

    “We have a case of murder that has been opened with three counts and a case of attempted murder,” police spokesperson Brig Brenda Muridili said.

    The father is reportedly under guard in hospital after allegedly trying to poison himself.

    In a statement, the education department in Gauteng province expressed sadness over the deaths of the three siblings at Ratanda Primary and Khanya Lesedi Secondary Schools.

    County education official Panyaza Lesufi termed it “a deliberate act” when asked whether the deaths were as a result of contamination or poisoning.

    “It looks like it was a deliberate act because the information at our disposal is that the father also attempted to commit suicide. It’s an indication that indeed this thing was planned,” he told local TV station eNCA.

    “We also got unconfirmed reports that the mother is also hospitalised, but this is information that we need to verify.”

    The official said they would be visiting the schools and family on Friday.

    A psycho-social support unit has been sent to offer counselling to the bereaved family and the school community.

    Source: BBC

  • Uvalde shooting: Texas school gunman ‘walked in unobstructed’

    The gunman who attacked a school in Texas on Tuesday was able to enter the building unobstructed, police say.

    Texas Ranger Victor Escalon said no armed guard challenged the teenage attacker and it is unclear if the school door was even locked.

    Mr Escalon defended the police response amid mounting criticism of an apparent delay in confronting the gunman.

    Witnesses were quoted as saying police were hesitant to confront the killer inside Uvalde’s Robb Elementary School.

    The attacker shot dead 19 students and two teachers, and injured at least 17 more people.

    The latest details from police sharply contradict what was said at a news briefing two days ago.

    Mr Escalon said on Thursday that initial reports the gunman had shot a guard were incorrect, and there was in fact no guard inside the school when the shooter arrived.

    Mr Escalon said officers entered the school four minutes after the gunman went in at about 11:40.

    But it was an hour before the gunman was killed in a shootout, at 12:45, after US Border Patrol tactical teams arrived.

    “They [didn’t] make entry immediately because of the gunfire they were receiving,” Mr Escalon told reporters.

    Videos have emerged of police being urged by desperate family members to storm the building immediately.

    A father whose daughter died in the attack told the Associated Press news agency he had considered running into the school with bystanders out of frustration at the police response.

    One mother told the Wall Street Journal that she was briefly handcuffed, accused of impeding a police investigation, after demanding along with other parents that officers storm the building. Angeli Rose Gomez said she saw one frantic father thrown to the ground by an officer, another father pepper-sprayed and a third who was later tased.

    “The police were doing nothing,” said Ms Gomez, who was eventually released before she said she jumped over the school fence and ran inside to rescue her two children. “They [the police] were just standing outside the fence. They weren’t going in there or running anywhere.”

    Texas Ranger Victor Escalon gives a news conferenceIMAGE SOURCE, GETTY IMAGES
    Image caption, Texas Ranger Victor Escalon

    Mr Escalon – a Texas Ranger and spokesman for the Texas Department of Public Safety – said that during the time officers were outside the school they were calling in reinforcements and “also evacuating students, teachers”.

    “An hour later US Border Patrol tactical teams arrive, they make entry and shoot and kill the suspect,” he added.

    This deviates from guidance that became standard police practice after the 1999 Columbine High School massacre, which states that the first officers on the scene should do whatever they can, and as fast as they can, to stop an attack, without waiting for backup.

    After crashing his truck into a ditch near the school, the gunman emerged and began firing an AR-style rifle at two people who were exiting a funeral home.

    The suspect then jumped a fence and began firing “multiple, numerous rounds” at the school building, Mr Escalon said.

    As he approached the entrance he “was not confronted by anybody”, the ranger said.

    According to Uvalde County Independent School District Officers protocol, campuses are required to have staff “who patrol door entrances, parking lots and perimeters”. Teachers are told to keep doors locked at all times.

    “We will find out as much as we can why it was unlocked,” Mr Escalon said. “Or maybe it was locked. But right now, it appears it was unlocked.”

    Texas congressman Joaquin Castro has written to the director of the FBI to ask that agents investigate the law enforcement response to the attack as it was unfolding.

    Officials say they do not yet know how many bullets the teen fired during the rampage, but one law enforcement source told CBS News the gunman was carrying over 600 rounds of ammunition.

    That’s more than double what the average US combat soldier carries, the source said, adding that it appears the gunman was preparing for a massive gun battle with police.

    Investigators have found no indication the gunman had a history of mental illness or a criminal record.

    He legally purchased two AR-style rifles in the week before the attack, after turning 18.

    President Joe Biden and the US first lady will visit Uvalde on Sunday, the White House announced.

    Across the country, students staged class walk-outs on Thursday to protest against gun violence in schools.

    A father has told the BBC how his two terrified children hid as the massacre unfolded inside Robb Elementary.

    “My son ran up to me and said he didn’t think he was going to make it out – that he didn’t think he was going to see me or his mother again,” Jesse Jimenez said. “My daughter was lost, she didn’t know what was going on, she didn’t know if it was a drill or if it was real.”

    On Thursday, the husband of one of the two teachers killed in the attack died from a heart attack.

    Joe Garcia “passed away due to grief” two days after his wife of 24 years, Irma Garcia, family members said.

    Source: BBC
  • Akropong NPP Constituency elections halted as pro-MP supporters slap exercise with multiple injunctions

    The Akropong Constituency Executives elections of the NPP which was slated for Saturday May 27, 2022 has been called off.

    This comes after some party faithful filed for an injuction on the executive polls.

    They argued that their names did not appear in the album after they had filed to contest for a positions in the party.

    They believe that the disappearance of their names from the album was a deliberate attempt by the current Member of Parliament, Nana Ama Dokua Asiamah Adjei.

    One of the suits was filed ahead of the vetting of the Constituency Executive elections on Monday May 23, 2022 ahead of the vetting for Constituency Women Organiser and Organiser.

    On successful completion of the vetting, the Committee chaired by Prince Aboagye who is also the Deputy Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the Petroleum Commission sought legal advice from the party headquarters.

    Garry Nimako who is the Secretary to the Constitution and Legal Committee of the NPP advised that elections for the two main positions be withheld as the party battles the cases in court.

    So far, the possibility of executives in the Akropong Constituency taking part in the NPP Regional Delegates Conference slated for Saturday, May 27, 2022 may not be possible following the recurring legal tussle in the area.

    Source: The Independent Ghana

  • Assistant Headmaster of Bole SHS arrested for alleged rape

    The Assistant Headmaster of the Bole Senior High School in the Savannah Region has been arrested for allegedly raping a final year student of the school.

    The suspect, Issahaku Jeduah, is said to have forcefully had sex with the 21-year-old victim when he invited her to his office under the pretense of giving her past questions.

    According to the Savannah Regional Police Public Relations Officer, Chief Inspector Agyekum Owusu, the suspect was arrested Wednesday, May 25, after a medical examination on the victim.

    According to him, the victim reported the incident to her brother who subsequently made a report at the Bole District Police Command.

    “Her brother came to our station in the morning and reported that one of his junior sisters at Bole Senior High and information reaching him is that the said sister has been raped by one of the tutors.

    “So, the crime officer and other officials from the Ghana Education Service went to the school, took the girl to hospital for diagnosis to ascertain the fact of the case. So, yesterday, the tutor was arrested and detained,” he said.

    He said Issahaku would be put before court Thursday.

    Source: Graphic online

  • Pay players well to avoid betting on matches – Nii Lantey Vanderpuye to club owners

    Nii Lantey Vanderpuye, the MP for Odododiodoo Constituency, has urged local clubs to pay their players worthy salaries to prevent them from engaging in betting schemes and match fixing.

    Speaking on the floor of Parliament on Wednesday, Mr Vanderpuye expressed concern over the number of players who deliberately engage in match manipulation so they are able to earn some cash from betting companies.

    He noted that the meager salaries players are given by their management has contributed to the growth of match-fixing.

    “How do you expect the players to play in those matches? Because there are people with the betting companies who already know that a huge number of people have bet on a positive result for Kotoko or Hearts. So they tell those players and they also bet on the other side so when the result turns out, the players will be richer.

    “So players are no more playing for clubs because they love the clubs, game but because of their pocket.”

    Mr Vanderpuye therefore encouraged the various local clubs to incentivise their players adequately.

    “Mr Speaker, we must also insist that the clubs also take good care of their players. If a player is receiving GH500 a month, the player will definitely be interested. How do you expect the player to survive?

    “So it is important that our clubs also take a look at themselves (and) how they will be able to make sure that they take the welfare of the players very important to prevent those players from being influenced by these betting companies so they can influence the outcome of their matches.”

    Unlike Ghana where it is believed that players engage in betting, Europe, the MP said frowns upon such actions.

    According to him, players are sanctioned when found to be influencing the outcome of their matches or betting to earn extra cash from matches they are involved in.

    He cited the issue of Paul Scholes who was fined £8,000 for breaching the Football Association’s betting rules to buttress his point.

    “In Europe, betting is a very serious crime even though these betting companies are also sponsoring  teams. But because there are checks and balances to be able to know, they dare not try to influence results in matches outside the country.

    “In Europe if you are a player or a former player and you are caught betting in a game, you are banned. Recently an old player like Paul Scholes faced the hatchet for betting on the result of a match. But here we have players who are playing Hearts of Oak, Kotoko, Olympics and the rest betting on their own matches.”

    The former Manchester United midfielder placed 140 bets between August 2015 and 2019, contrary to FA rule E8.

    FA rule E8. 4.4 states that “a participant shall not use any information relating to football which the Participant has obtained by virtue of his or her position within the game and which is not publicly available at that time for or in relation to betting.

    One bet was on Valencia beating Barcelona and two other bets on matches involving Oldham, a month before he was appointed manager at Boundary Park, Sky Sports report.

    During the period, Scholes was a part-owner of non-League side Salford City.

    Scholes admitted fault, explaining that it was not a deliberate action since he believed there was no personal connection to the matches in question.

    “I accept last week’s ruling. I would like to apologise and I understand and fully accept the fine imposed by the FA. It was a genuine mistake and was not done with any deliberate intention to flout the rules.

    “I wrongly believed that as long as there was no personal connection between me and any of the matches that I bet upon then there would be no issue.”

    With regards to match fixing in Ghana, the Ghana Football Association discovered that Ashantigold SC had manipulated their 2020/21 Ghana Premier League Matchday 34 game against Inter Allies FC.

    The club has therefore been demoted from the Ghana Premier League to the Division Two League.

    Some players of Ashantigold SC including Stephen Owusu Banahene, Dacosta Ampem and Frank Akoto have been banned for 24 months each in accordance with 34.5(d)(i) of the Ghana Premier League Regulations 2019.

    Source: The Independent Ghana



  • Monkeypox virus not foreign, we can contain the outbreak – WHO

    The World Health Organisation has determined that the virus causing the monkeypox outbreak is no foreign virus, therefore, can be contained.

    Rosamund Lewis, the Head of Smallpox Secretariat at WHO, shared the information in a video shared by DW on its Twitter account on Thursday.

    Addressing the press, Rosamund Lewis noted that monkeypox is an emerging disease which has been surfacing for the last two or three decades.

    She noted that the outbreak of the virus can be contained by enhancing contact tracing and isolating affected persons.

    “The WHO is putting up guidance also on vaccines and immunization considerations, but the important thing right now is to realize that this outbreak can be contained due to/ with contact tracing and isolation.

    “This is an emerging disease, it has been emerging for the last 20/30 years, it’s not unknown, it’s very well described.”

    Currently, the WHO is putting up guidance also on vaccines and immunization considerations. The WHO earlier reported that vaccination against human smallpox is also effective against monkeypox. 

    Both species are related but human smallpox is a lot more dangerous, DW reports.

    Although the WHO says the outbreak can be contained, its findings have shown a concern. The virus has begun to spread among population groups, Rosamund Lewis noted.

    “But we have a new situation of this emerging disease which has now appeared, and has begun to spread among population groups which normally would not have this, and so this is why we are treating this as a concerning situation although individuals remain at very low risk.

    “So what we are seeing is a number of cases that are higher in certain countries where they have been gatherings recently and we are advising folks to be very mindful and very careful in the gatherings that are coming in the days ahead.”

    The UN Health agency has revealed that monkeypox is caused by a larger group of viruses known as the Orthopoxviruses Smallpox.

    The virus is said to cause rash and fever. Over 100 cases of the virus have been confirmed in Europe, America and Australia.

    Germany has ordered up to 40,000 doses of the Imvanex vaccine to be ready in case the outbreak worsens.

    But BBC reports that the virus is most common in remote parts of Central and West Africa.

    The United Arab Emirates (UAE), Czech Republic and Slovenia reported their first cases on Tuesday.

    Meanwhile, the Ghana Health Service (GHS) has rejected claims that the Western Region has recorded its first case of monkeypox.

    This comes after an individual in the Ahanta West Municipality reported to a health facility with blisters.

    The Western Regional Director of Health Services, Dr Yaw Ofori Yeboah, has noted that the said individual is not suffering from monkeypox.

    Source: The Independent Ghana



  • Agric Ministry offers support to local companies to produce fertilisers

    The Ministry of Food and Agriculture says the Akufo-Addo led government is working hard with local fertiliser producers to produce quality organic fertilisers on a large scale for farmers across the country.

    The mass production of quality organic fertilizer, according to Dr. Owusu Afriyie Akoto will prevent a possible food shortage in the country.

    “We will have a close collaboration with local producers of organic fertilisers to see how we maximise your businesses to help us bridge the fertiliser gap, if not completely, at least we make the effort to bridge a higher percentage of the fertiliser requirement.”

    Addressing the media following a stakeholder meeting with local fertiliser producers on the production and promotion of quality organic fertilisers domestically in Accra, the Agriculture Minister attributed the shortage of agro-chemicals and fertilisers to the Russia-Ukraine invasion.

    Mr Akoto mentioned that the international sanctions on Russia has also made global trading very difficult.

    “In a catastrophic situation, you have to be able to adapt and come out stronger. So we feel that we need to encourage the production of quality organic fertiliser domestically,”

    “And I believe we have been very successful with this programme in the last 5 years that I have been in charge of the ministry by targeting fertiliser and improved seeds for distribution to farmers.”

    According to the minister, the essence of the Planting for Food and Jobs (PFJ) is basically to grow farm productivity, especially on smallholder farms.

    However, he noted that the Russia-Ukraine invasion has also affected the PFJ programme.

    He says the impact has deprived more farmers of the benefit of modern technology of seed and fertiliser.

    Source: The Independent Ghana

  • Ashanti Region recorded 174 maternal deaths in 2021 GHS

    According to the Ashanti Regional Health Directorate, the region experienced 174 maternal fatalities in 2021.

    Dr. Emmanuel Tenkorang, speaking to the media at the beginning of a campaign to combat maternal mortality, stated that the majority of these deaths are caused by unsafe abortion.

    “We lose our women through maternal deaths. Last year, Ashanti Region recorded 174 maternal deaths, which means we lost 174 women due to complications of pregnancy. Globally, about 5 to 10 percent of women die through unsafe abortions.”

    He described the situation as concerning and stated that the GHS is committed to bolstering safe abortion to save more lives.

    Global figures estimate that 5 to 10% of women die each year as a result of unsafe abortion, according to the Ghana Health Service (GHS).

    GHS will also aim to reduce the stigma connected with safe abortion, according to Emmanuel Tenkorang.

    He believes that raising awareness about safe abortion will inspire young people, in particular, to seek help in the event of unwanted pregnancies.

    “In Ghana, we want to strengthen safe abortion services and then do away with unsafe abortions. We need to work together to empower them to know what to do in an event of unwanted pregnancy. The campaign will educate and empower them on what to do in the case of an unwanted pregnancy.”

    Source: The Independent Ghana

  • NDC to elect 2024 presidential candidate in November

    The National Democratic Congress (NDC) has slated November 2022 to elect its flagbearer for the 2024 general elections.

    A communiqué signed by the General Secretary, Asiedu Nketia, unveiled the roadmap for the conduct of its internal elections.

    Per the provisional timetable sighted by The Independent Ghana, the internal election will commence with the branch executive elections scheduled to take place on June 15 and end in July.

    The branch executive results, according to the General Secretary, will be collated to build data for the constituency executive elections to be held in September 2022.

    The constituency elections will be followed by the regional executive elections in October 2022 and the election of the national executive officers in November 2022.

    Among other aspiring presidential candidates, one name that has popped up is the former President, John Dramani Mahama who seeks to return and lead the opposition party battle for the Presidential seat come 2024.

    But, a recent report by the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) has predicted challenges if Mr. Mahama is elected to pick the mantle to lead his people into the Jubilee House.

    EIU noted that the NDC would win the 2024 polls if it elects a fresh candidate.

    Source: The Independent Ghana

  • Mohamed Salah: Liverpool forward will be at Anfield next season ‘for sure’

    Liverpool forward Mohamed Salah says he will be at Anfield next season “for sure” but would not be drawn over whether he will sign a new contract.

    Salah’s deal ends in June 2023, leading to speculation he could be sold if he did not sign a new one as he would leave on a free in a year’s time.

    When asked about his future before Saturday’s Champions League final, he said: “I don’t want to talk about that.

    “I just want to see Hendo [Jordan Henderson] with the trophy.”

    The Egypt striker, 29, added: “I don’t focus on the contract at the moment. I don’t want to be selfish.

    “I am staying next season for sure.”

    Salah’s team-mate Sadio Mane said he would announce his decision on his own future after the final against Real Madrid in Paris.

    The Senegal international, who has scored 120 goals in 268 games for the Reds, will also enter the last 12 months of his contract from June.

    He told Sky Sports News: “This question [about my future] I will answer after Champions League. If I’m staying or not, I’m going to answer after [the] Champions League.”

    Mohamed Salah and Sadio Mane
    Mohamed Salah scored 31 goals for Liverpool this season while Sadio Mane hit 23

    Liverpool boss Jurgen Klopp has dismissed suggestions the outcome of Saturday’s game will be a factor in whether some players decide to extend their contracts or not.

    “No, not at all,” he said. “What, if we win it they want to go? We are in talks with all the players, it is just not the moment to talk about the results of these talks. None of them are sitting there not knowing what we are planning.

    “There is just not the time, we play every three days. The players have this idea, we have this idea, sometimes they match immediately, sometimes not and then we work together.

    “We have known each other for ages.”

    Salah joined from Roma in 2017 and has scored 156 goals in 253 games for Liverpool.

    He has helped the club win the Premier League in 2019-20, the 2019 Champions League, the FA Cup and League Cup this season plus the Fifa Club World Cup and Uefa Super Cup during his time at Anfield.

    In March Klopp said it was up to Salah whether he signed a new contract.

    The former Chelsea forward has previously said he wants to stay but his future is in Liverpool’s hands and he is not asking for “crazy stuff”.

    On Sunday Liverpool were beaten to the league title by a point by Manchester City, ending their hopes of a quadruple that is unprecedented in England.

    Saturday’s match against Real Madrid in Paris will be a repeat of the 2018 Champions League final which the Spanish side won 3-1, with Salah going off injured in the first half after a controversial incident with Sergio Ramos.

    “I’m very motivated, motivated through the roof, after what happened last time [2018 final] and Sunday – everyone is motivated for this,” Salah added.

    “We fight for this and everyone is excited.”

    Source: BBC

  • Jose Mourinho: ‘A serial winner who has brought Roma to life’

    Jose Mourinho has enjoyed greater achievements in his glittering managerial career, but Roma’s Europa Conference League triumph reduced him to tears after the ‘Special One’ delivered the Italian club their first major European trophy.

    Europe’s third-tier club competition has been derided in some quarters, but for Mourinho the win over Feyenoord was every bit as important as his two Champions League triumphs with Porto in 2004 and Inter Milan in 2010.

    Mourinho becomes the first manager to win all three major European competitions after making it five wins in five European finals.

    “Football is about winning and Mourinho wins,” said former Manchester United midfielder Owen Hargreaves on BT Sport.

    “He’s a serial winner and he has brought this Roma team to life.”

    Box office Mourinho delivers again

    This was the 26th trophy of Mourinho’s managerial career – 19 years after he masterminded Porto’s Uefa Cup win in 2003.

    He was announced as Roma boss last May and was tasked with building the club up after a disappointing seventh-place finish in Serie A in 2020-21.

    “Mourinho said it wasn’t part of the plan [to win the trophy]. The plan was to build this team, it was the start of the project,” Joe Cole, who played under Mourinho at Chelsea, told BT Sport.

    Roma’s run to the final was not all smooth, with the Portuguese coming under fire after an embarrassing 6-1 defeat by Bodo/Glimt in the group stage in October.

    “The great thing about my career is that, aside from the Europa League with Manchester United, doing it with Porto, Inter and Roma is very, very, very special,” Mourinho said.

    “It is one thing to win when everyone expects it, when you made the investments to win, but it’s quite another to win when something feels immortal, that feels truly special.

    “This remains in the history of Roma, but also mine. I was told only I, Sir Alex [Ferguson] and Giovanni Trapattoni won trophies in three different decades. It makes me feel a little old, but it’s nice for my career.”

    Roma boss Jose Mourinho after his side defeated Feyenoord to win the Europa Conference League final
    Jose Mourinho was overcome with emotion during the celebrations on the pitch

    Mourinho has instilled a spirit and togetherness that has seen Roma bounce back and secure a first trophy for 14 years.

    The hard work, according to Cole, has only just started.

    “Roma have gone through a few managers, lost a direction and an identity. Jose’s loved in the city but there is a way to go,” he added.

    “These scenes now, especially for the lads who’ve come through the ranks at Roma – you cannot go to that city and not feel the club.

    “Football is a religion there and they will feel like heroes and be remembered, but this is the start of the journey. Jose will be back in the office, planning whether they can have a go at the Europa League and get closer to titles.”

    ‘He’s the best’

    This was Mourinho’s first trophy since winning the Europa League with Manchester United in 2017.

    Chris Smalling was part of the United side that defeated Ajax in Stockholm five years ago and the 32-year-old defender produced a man-of-the-match performance to help secure Roma a first trophy since 2008.

    “Even when I first came to Roma three years ago, it was a long time since they had won a trophy,” said Smalling.

    “So we knew how much it was going to mean for everyone at Roma to win something.”

    Roma players Chris Smalling and Tammy Abraham celebrate after defeating Feyenoord in the Europa Conference League final
    Chris Smalling (left) and Tammy Abraham celebrate after helping Roma win the Europa Conference League final

    Smalling’s post-match interview on the pitch with BT Sport was gatecrashed by team-mate and England forward Tammy Abraham.

    “He’s the best,” said a jubilant Abraham before planting a kiss on his Smalling’s cheek.

    Such has been Abraham’s impact since joining Roma from Chelsea for £34m last August that he finishes his first season in Italy with 27 goals, a European trophy and a place in Gareth Southgate’s England squad.

    “One thing I said when I came was I was going to help my team get to the final and win a trophy in my first season. Credit to my team-mates for excellent performances,” said Abraham.

    Source: BBC

  • Leiland-James Corkill case: Laura Castle jailed for baby murder

    A woman who murdered a baby boy she wanted to adopt has been jailed for at least 18 years.

    Laura Castle shook 13-month-old Leiland-James Corkill at her home in Barrow, Cumbria, in January 2021.

    She had admitted manslaughter but at Preston Crown Court was found guilty of murder and child cruelty. Her husband Scott Castle was cleared of causing or allowing the boy’s death.

    Castle, 38, was sentenced to life with a minimum term of 18 years.

    Dressed all in black, she wept loudly throughout the hearing especially when statements were read from Leiland-James’ birth mother Laura Corkill, who called her son’s killer a “monster”.

    Mr Justice Jeremy Baker said Castle had a “selfish desire” to keep Leiland-James even though she was struggling to bond with the baby and it was a “tragedy” the Castles did not end the adoption.

    Leiland-James moved in with the Castles in August 2020 when he was eight months old, having been taken into care by Cumbria County Council at birth.

    The court heard the couple struggled to bond with him and Castle sent her husband messages while he was at work criticising Leiland-James, calling him vulgar names and a “moaning whinge bag” and describing how she “absolutely leathered” him.

    At about 08:15 GMT on 6 January 2021, Castle called 999 to say Leiland-James was unconscious and breathing awkwardly after falling from the sofa.

    He died the following day at Alder Hey Children’s Hospital in Liverpool where doctors were highly suspicious of her account.

    Screen grab showing Laura Castle being interviewed by policeIMAGE SOURCE, CUMBRIA POLICE
    Image caption, After initially telling police Leiland-James fell from the sofa, Laura Castle answered no comment in subsequent interviews

    On the opening day of her trial she admitted manslaughter but said she did not mean to kill him.

    She told the court she “lost her mind” as the boy was crying and she shook him to try and silence him, accidentally hitting his head against the arm of the sofa.

    Neighbours said they heard a thud but no baby crying, with prosecutors claiming Castle “lost her temper” when Leiland-James spat out Weetabix.

    Pathologists said “severe” force would have been needed to cause the fatal brain injuries and believed his head had been struck against a hard surface.

    They said a fall from the sofa would not account for the extensive internal bleeding and likened his injuries to those suffered in a high-speed car crash.

    ‘Lack of candour’

    Cumbria County Council was aware of the bonding issues but not that Castle was using physical chastisement, with no marks or bruises seen on the boy, the court heard.

    A review of the placement was scheduled for early January after a social worker said she could not approve the continuation of the adoption without further training for the Castles, but Leiland-James was killed before that.

    Prosecutor Rachel Faux said Laura Castle’s “lack of candour” about using physical chastisement was an aggravating feature as, had the council known of her views, Leiland-James “would never have been placed with her”.

    Still taken from video of Leiland-James bouncing in baby chair cryingIMAGE SOURCE, CPS
    Image caption, The Crown Prosecution Service released videos shot by Laura Castle showing Leiland-James crying

    Ms Corkill said her son was taken from her “because of the risk of emotional and physical harm” but he had “actually suffered this” at the hands of his “adoptive” mother.

    In a statement read to the court, she said: “I was told he would be safe and would have a good life, I was fine with that.

    “Now my world is broken.

    “I can honestly say this would never have happened if he was with me. An innocent life cut too short.

    “It breaks me to think I will never see his face again.”

    In a letter issued by Cumbria Police, she said her “beautiful blue-eyed baby boy” was placed “in the home of a monster”.

    She said: “He was a precious baby, vulnerable and innocent, he had no voice, he could not defend himself.”

    Charlotte Day, who fostered Leiland-James from when he was two months old until his placement with the Castle, said her family was “heartbroken”.

    She said she was now questioning her fostering vocation as the “fear of ever being able to trust a prospective adopter again is such a concern”.

    She said Leiland-James was a “beautiful boy with the most contagious laugh” and the trial had been a “nearly daily struggle” as more information came out about what happened to him, including abuse from those “who should have been his forever family”.

    Picture of Laura Castle pulling a face at the sound of a crying childIMAGE SOURCE, CPS
    Image caption, Prosecutors showed jurors a self-shot video of Laura Castle pulling an exasperated face at the sound of a crying child while in hospital

    David McLachlan QC, mitigating, said Castle was alone and “broken” having been “isolated and ostracised in prison” following the guilty verdict, and faced the “likely end” of her marriage.

    But, he said, there was only one innocent party – Leiland-James – adding Castle knew “she only has herself to blame”.

    He said Castle went into the adoption process “hoping to do some good” but within weeks the “situation started to unravel”.

    Mc McLachlan said it was clear [Castle] had been struggling with her husband working nights and the “difficulty that national and local lockdowns brought”.

    But, he said, there were good days as well and Leiland-James was “clearly loved” by the Castles’ parents.

    He said this was not the “gratuitous kind” of abuse often reflected in headlines, with which the judge agreed.

    ‘Underplayed violence’

    The judge said Castle had “unrealistic expectations” for the adoption and though the couple discussed ending it, was “nothing less than a tragedy that [they] did not do so”.

    He said Castle “deliberately lied” about her attitude towards physical chastisement knowing if she told the truth the council “would never have entrusted the care of a looked-after child to you”.

    The judge said Castle saw herself as “something of a victim” and blamed Leiland-James “at least partly” for the struggles which left her shouting and inflicting “some degree of physical chastisement”.

    He said what exactly happened on 6 January may never be known as Castle “significantly underplayed” the violence she inflicted on Leiland-James.

    The judge said external injuries to the baby’s face and ear were “consistent with slapping, pinching and prodding” while wounds to his lip and mouth were caused when Castle “rammed” a bottle of milk in not, as she told jurors, in an “effort to comfort him” but “in anger”.

    He also sentenced her to 21 months for the child cruelty charge to be served concurrently and she will not be eligible for parole for 17 years.

    ‘Manipulative liar’

    Det Supt Dave Pattinson, who led the investigation, said it was an “horrific set of circumstances” and obvious to medical responders at the scene a fall from the sofa “didn’t add up with the nature of the injuries”.

    He said only Castle knew what happened that morning and had “never actually told anyone the truth”.

    He said she was “horrible human being” and a “manipulative liar”.

    Mr Pattinson said the messages she sent were “abhorrent” and called her “a bully”.

    Cumbria County Council said an independent review into the case was expected to conclude in July.

    Source: BBC

  • Eleven newborn babies die in Senegal hospital fire

    Eleven newborn babies have died in a hospital fire in the western city of Tivaouane in Senegal, the country’s president has said.

    The fire at Mame Abdou Aziz Sy Dabakh Hospital was in the maternity department, President Macky Sall tweeted.

    Initial reports suggest the fire was caused by a short circuit, according to Senegalese politicians.

    Three babies were saved from the fire, said the city’s mayor, Demba Diop Sy.

    The fire spread very quickly and emergency services were still at the scene, Mr Sy told local media.

    The hospital had been newly inaugurated, according to AFP, citing local media reports.

    “To their mothers and their families, I express my deepest sympathy,” President Sall wrote in a tweet.

    “This situation is very unfortunate and extremely painful,” Health Minister Abdoulaye Diouf Sarr said from Geneva, where he was attending a World Health Organization meeting.

    He said an investigation was under way and he would be cutting his trip short to return to Senegal immediately.

    The incident has sparked a wave of indignation on social media over the state of the country’s healthcare provision.

    Opposition MP Mamadou Lamine Diallo criticised the government, tweeting: “More babies burned in a public hospital… This is unacceptable”.

    Rights group Amnesty International has urged the government to create an “independent commission of inquiry to determine responsibility and punish the culprits, no matter the level they are at in the state apparatus,” country director Seydi Gassama said in a tweet.

    Amnesty called for all of Senegal’s neo-natal wards to be inspected after a similar incident occurred in the northern town of Linguère last year.

    Four newborn babies were killed there after a fire broke out at a hospital’s maternity ward. At the time, the mayor said there was an electrical fault in the air conditioning unit of the maternity ward.

    Wednesday’s tragedy also follows a national outcry over the death of a woman in labour, Astou Sokhna, who died while reportedly begging for a Caesarean during her 20-hour labour ordeal. Her unborn child also died.

    Source: BBC

  • Partygate: PM says he will not resign following Sue Gray report

    Boris Johnson has insisted he will remain as prime minister despite the “bitter and painful” judgement of a report into parties held in Downing Street during Covid restrictions.

    Excessive drinking, mistreatment of cleaners and security staff and Covid rule-breaking was highlighted in civil servant Sue Gray’s report.

    She said the leadership in No 10 “must bear responsibility” for its culture.

    Some opponents have repeated their calls for Mr Johnson to quit.

    However in a press conference on Wednesday, the prime minister ruled out resigning, saying: “I’ve got to keep moving forward.”

    Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer had earlier called on Conservative MPs to remove him, saying it was time for Mr Johnson “to pack his bags”.

    Addressing the Commons, Mr Johnson said he took “full responsibility for everything that took place on my watch”, had been “humbled” and learned lessons.

    He told MPs that when he had previously said “the rules and guidance had been followed at all times”, it had been “what I believed to be true”.

    He said he had attended events to wish staff who were leaving farewell and his attendance had not been found to be outside the rules.

    “But clearly this was not the case for some of those gatherings after I had left and at other gatherings when I was not even in the building,” he added.

    Mr Johnson said he had been “shocked” and “appalled” by some of Ms Gray’s findings, especially over the treatment of security and cleaning staff.

    At the press conference later on Wednesday, he said a lot of the report which he had only seen for the first time on Wednesday had been “news to me”.

    Source: BBC

  • Ukraine war: World Bank boss warns over global recession

    The head of the World Bank has warned that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine could cause a global recession as the price of food, energy and fertiliser jump.

    David Malpass told a US business event on Wednesday that it is difficult to “see how we avoid a recession”.

    He also said that a series of coronavirus lockdowns in China is adding to concerns about a slowdown.

    His comments are the latest warning over the rising risk that the world economy may be set to contract.

    “As we look at the global GDP… it’s hard right now to see how we avoid a recession,” Mr Malpass said, without giving a specific forecast.

    “The idea of energy prices doubling is enough to trigger a recession by itself,” he added.

    Last month, the World Bank cut its global economic growth forecast for this year by almost a full percentage point, to 3.2%.

    GDP, or Gross Domestic Product, is a measure of economic growth. It is one of the most important ways of measuring how well, or badly, an economy is performing and is closely watched by economists and central banks.

    It helps businesses to judge when to expand and recruit more workers or invest less and cut their workforces.

    Governments also use it to guide decisions on everything from tax and spending. It is a key gauge, along with inflation, for central banks when considering whether or not to raise or lower interest rates.

    Mr Malpass also said that many European countries were still too dependent on Russia for oil and gas.

    That’s even as Western nations push ahead with plans to reduce their dependence on Russian energy.

    He also told a virtual event organised by the US Chamber of Commerce that moves by Russia to cut gas supplies could cause a “substantial slowdown” in the region.

    He said higher energy prices were already weighing on Germany, which is the biggest economy in Europe and the fourth largest in the world.

    Developing countries are also being affected by shortages of fertiliser, food and energy, Mr Malpass said.

    Mr Malpass also raised concerns about lockdowns in some of China’s major cities – including the financial, manufacturing and shipping hub of Shanghai – which he said are “still having ramifications or slowdown impacts on the world”.

    “China was already going through some contraction of real estate, so the forecast of China’s growth before Russia’s invasion had already softened substantially for 2022,” he said.

    “Then the waves of Covid caused lockdowns which further reduced growth expectations for China,” he added.

    Also on Wednesday, China’s premier Li Keqiang said the world’s second largest economy had been hit harder by the latest round of lockdowns than it had been at the start of the pandemic in 2020.

    He also called for more action by officials to restart factories after lockdowns.

    “Progress is not satisfactory,” Mr Li said. “Some provinces are reporting that only 30% of businesses have reopened… the ratio must be raised to 80% within a short period of time.”

    Full or partial lockdowns were imposed in dozens of Chinese cities in March and April, including a long shutdown of Shanghai.

    The measures have led to a sharp slowdown in economic activity across the country.

    In recent weeks, official figures have shown that large parts of economy have been impacted, from manufacturers to retailers.

    Source: BBC

  • Texas shooting: Gunman sent messages before deadly attack

    The gunman responsible for a deadly school shooting in Texas sent messages about the attack minutes before it happened, the state governor says.

    Greg Abbott said gunman Salvador Ramos promised to shoot his grandmother and then “shoot up a school”.

    Meanwhile, reports have emerged that frustrated onlookers urged police to charge into the school to stop the attack, but that they did not do so.

    Texas officials say Ramos was there for 40 minutes before he was killed.

    Eyewitness Juan Carranza, 24, told the Associated Press that women shouted to officers to “go in there”.

    Javier Cazares, whose daughter was killed in the attack, told the agency he suggested running in with other onlookers because the police “aren’t doing anything”.

    The shooting, which left 19 children and two adults dead, has reignited a long-running US debate on gun control.

    Many have called for stricter gun buying laws, while others are sceptical that they would stop mass shootings.

    Thirty minutes before he began his attack, Ramos posted in a private message on Facebook that he planned to kill his grandmother. A later post declared he had done so, and in a final one sent 15 minutes before the shooting, he announced he would target an elementary school.

    No detail was given by investigators as to the motive of the attack.

    According to CNN, the private messages were sent to a 15-year-old girl in Germany who Ramos had met online.

    In a statement, Meta, Facebook’s parent company, said the “private one-to-one text messages” were “discovered after the terrible tragedy occurred”. It added that it was “closely co-operating” with investigators.

    Tuesday’s events in Uvalde – an unassuming town some 80 miles (129km) from San Antonio, America’s seventh-largest city – brought the discussion once again to the fore, even as members of the small community sought to make sense of the tragedy.

    Many there expressed divided attitudes about guns.

    “As a kid, I remember my uncles teaching me and training me on how to hold a gun,” Carlos Velasquez, a local resident, told the BBC.

    “The juxtaposition of good safety with what just happened is so nuanced. It’s not just a clean-cut thought – it’s a really sticky situation and sticky conversation to have now,” he said.

    Others, however, were shocked that Ramos, 18, was able to carry out an attack with an AR-15 style semi-automatic rifle.

    “This kid was just 18. You have to be 21 to drink. How?” asked Sandra Parra, who lives down the street from the school. “I hope there are changes,” she said, referring to gun laws in Texas. “I don’t have a gun myself, but if I did, it would be for protection,” she added.

    It is legal to buy a gun at 18 in Texas, and according to US media, the attacker bought his soon after his birthday.

    Described as a loner from a “fraught home life”, the gunman shot his grandmother before fleeing the scene in a battered truck carrying firearms and copious ammunition. He then drove erratically across town and crashed his car into a ditch near Robb Elementary School.

    An officer engaged with him, but failed to stop him from entering the school. He then proceeded to shoot 19 children and two teachers dead, before officers converged on the classroom and a border patrol officer who had responded while nearby killed him, according to Mr Abbott.

    A former classmate of the gunman, Ivan Arellano, 18, told the BBC that the shooter had always seemed “odd” and “anti-social” and bullied others, presumably to attract attention.

    “A lot of people who knew him, we knew he wasn’t mentally healthy,” Mr Arellano said. “And a lot of people could agree that we probably should’ve said something.”

    However, Mr Abbott disclosed during the news conference that there had been no history to suggest the gunman could be a danger apart from the social media messages, sent less than an hour before the killings.

    Speaking on Wednesday, US President Joe Biden said the idea that a teenager was able to legally purchase weapons that were “designed and marketed to kill, is just wrong”.

    “I’m just sick and tired of what’s going on and what continues to go on,” he said, calling for “action” on gun control.

    His comments followed an incident at Mr Abbott’s news conference, where the governor’s Democratic challenger for office, Beto O’Rourke, heckled the Republican for not doing enough on gun control.

    In response, Mr Abbott accused Mr O’Rourke of grandstanding.

    According to the Texas Politics Project, only 43% of Texans support stricter gun laws. Nationally, the figure is 53% in support, according to a 2021 Pew Research Center poll.

    Chart showing attitudes to gun laws in the US

    As more details of the mass shooting emerged, the Uvalde community grieved.

    The children killed were aged between seven and 10 years old. Teachers Eva Mireles and Irma Garcia also died in the attack. More than a dozen people were also wounded.

    Vigils took place for the victims of the shooting, while people have been laying flowers near the school campus as tributes.

    “The normality is not here anymore,” Ms Parra said.

    “Uvalde will be known for its mass shooting,” said Mr Velazquez. “That’s really unfortunate.”

    Source: BBC

  • Parliamentary Privileges Committee ban media from covering 3 absentee MPs hearing

    The issue of absenteeism in Parliament where three Members of Parliament (MPs) have been referred to the Privileges Committee of Parliament for absenting themselves without permission from the Speaker will be heard in camera.

    The committee will start hearing the three absentee MPs, with Henry Quartey for Ayawaso Central as the first person followed by Sarah Adwoa Safo for Dome Kwabenya and then Kennedy Ohene Agyapong for Assin Central.

    The hearings will start on Thursday, May 26, 2022.

    The Speaker of Parliament, Alban Sumana Kingsford Bagbin, referred the three New Patriotic Party (NPP) MPs to the Privileges Committee of Parliament for absenting themselves from the House for more than 15 sitting days without his permission.

    But at a meeting of the committee on Wednesday (May 25, 2022), the members concluded that the media would not be admitted to cover the hearing.

    This is contrary to previous meetings and hearings of the 31-member committee which had been covered by the media.

    The problem of absenteeism in the House without permission from the Speaker had been a long-standing issue which needed to be addressed holistically.

    Hence, when the recent one came to the attention of the Speaker, he referred it to the Committee of Privileges to look into it.

    The findings of the committee could lead to the expulsion of the absentee MPs from Parliament if the report suggests so and is adopted by the plenary.

    Explaining why the media has been banned from covering the proceedings, a member of the committee, Kweku Ricketts Hagan, NDC MP for Cape Coast South explained that “the nature of evidence as we’ve been hinted might be on medical grounds…”

    “And it is on that basis that the [Privileges] Committee came to that conclusion that it would be best that we give the opportunity for people to come and be able to come and be able to discuss with us, charged with that responsibility on what the reasons were or the evidence.

    “Of course, when we are done with our work, we will put a report together and seeing the report, it will establish the reason why we recommended that a member should have a legitimate reason to still stay in Parliament or not and I think that will become a public information,” Kweku Ricketts Hagan, a member of the Committee of Privileges said in a radio interview with Accra based Citi FM on Wednesday evening [May 25, 2022] monitored by Graphic Online.

    Pressed further on why previous meetings of the committee had been covered by the media and this time around the media is being prevented from allowing the public to witness the proceedings, Mr Hagan said: “You are querying me on a decision that has been taken by the committee.”

    “I’m telling you the committee’s decision is that, we didn’t think that it will be appropriate to discuss what is likely to be health matters, because we know that at least two of them or all three of them have been dealing with some medical issues and we thought that it will not be appropriate,” Mr Hagan added.

    Source: Graphic online

  • Gambia agrees to prosecute Yahya Jammeh, 13 others

    The Gambia has accepted a recommendation of its Truth, Reconciliation and Reparations Commission (TRRC), to prosecute its former leader, Yahya Jammeh and 13 others for the brutal, state sponsored extra-judicial killings of unarmed economic migrants from some ECOWAS countries in 2005.

    A Government of The Gambia whitepaper on the recommendations of the TRRC, issued Wednesday, agreed that a paranoid Jammeh sanctioned the executions, aided by the 13 others it called “enablers and accomplices”.

    Yahya Jammeh is currently in exile and is thought to be in Equatorial Guinea.

    The 13 others named to face prosecution are;

    1. Ousman Sonko
    2. Solo Bojang
    3. Malick Jatta (Alfidie)
    4. Sanna Manjang
    5. Kawsu Camara (Bombardier)
    6. Tumbul Tamba
    7. Bai Lowe
    8. Nuha Badjie
    9. Landing Tamba
    10. Alieu Jeng
    11. Omar A. Jallow (Oya)
    12. Buboucarr Jallow
    13. Lamin Sillah

    The 178-page Whitepaper of 600 paragraphs, accepted virtually all the 265 recommendations of the TRRC, set up in December 2017 to;

    1. create an impartial historical record of violations and abuses of human rights from July 1994 to January 2017, in order to –
    1. promote healing and reconciliation;
    2. respond to the needs of the victims;
    3. address impunity; and
    4. prevent a repetition of the violations and abuses suffered by making recommendations for the establishment of appropriate preventive mechanisms including institutional and legal reforms;

    b. establish and make known the fate or whereabouts of disappeared victims;

    c. provide victims an opportunity to relate their own accounts of the violations and abuses suffered; and

    d. grant reparations to victims in appropriate cases.

    On the specific case of the killing of the West African migrants, including a good number of Ghanaians, the Whitepaper copiously quotes the report of the TRRC, saying that on 22nd July, 2005, “over sixty-seven economic migrants (including 50 Ghanaians, 7 Nigerians, 2 Senegalese, 3 Ivoirians, and 2 Togolese) entered The Gambia hoping to get to Europe via the Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea,” having been advised by their agents to travel to The Gambia where a boat would be on standby to transport them to Europe.

    “However, upon arrival, their agent/smuggler abandoned them. Many of the migrants were subsequently detained, perceived as mercenaries, arrested, and executed by Gambian State Agents comprised of the Marine Unit, Police officers from the now defunct National Intelligence Agency (NIA), and the Junglers. The execution site was by an old well.”

    “On 23 July 2005, dead bodies were discovered in a forest at the Tanji Bird Reserve towards Tanji Village. The discoveries were reported to the Police by a passer-by.

    “Following local and international outcry from human rights activities/groups, and the Ghanaian Foreign Minister at the time Nana Akufo Addo’s meeting with President Yahya Jammeh, and his press statement on 16 August 2005, an investigation was launched in 2005 to investigate the killings of the West African migrants. The investigation panel was headed by Malamin Cessay, a former Commissioner of the Gambian Police Force. However, the investigation was blighted with falsehoods, cover-ups, and destruction of evidence.

    “Having conducted its investigation, the Commission found that the accounts provided by the witnesses relating to the arrests, enforced disappearances, and extrajudicial killings of the West African migrants in July 2005, and on Gambia soil, was consistent throughout and ought to be believed. The victims were economic migrants hoping to get to Europe via The Gambia, but were perceived as mercenaries by former President Yahya Jammeh’s regime.

    “The Commission found that on 21 July 2005, the West African migrants and victims, many of whom were from Ghana travelled on a boat from Mbour in Senegal and arrived near Barra in The Gambia on the morning of 22 July 2005. At least 5 or 7 migrants jumped off the boat, swam to the shore, and entered Banjul. The remaining migrants attempted to contact their agent without success. They were subsequently arrested by Police officers when they tried to find a boat that would take them to Banjul to join their connecting boat to Europe. The migrants were arrested without being informed of the reason for their arrest and taken to Barra Police Station. The migrants were transferred from Barra Police Station to the Navy Headquarters in Banjul. A large number of high-ranking officials were present at the Navy Headquarters that night, and included Biran Mbye (Police Operations Commander); Assan Sarr (former Navy Commander); Abou Njie (Deputy Inspector General of Police); Ngorr Secka; Foday Barry; Baba Saho; Saddy Gassama; as well as other senior NIA officials and Jungler Kawsu Camara (nicknamed Bombardier). Many of these officials would subsequently go on to participate in the cover-up of the massacre.

    “This incident coincided with the 22 July “Revolution Day” celebrations and while attending the celebrations in Banjul with other senior officials, President Jammeh was informed about the migrants’ apprehension. Yahya Jammeh, whose previous attempted coup against his regime left him paranoid, dealt with coupists brutally as a way of deterring others from launching coups against his government. With his history of paranoia, the Commission concluded that when he was informed about the migrants onshore, a sense of “fear and paranoia about a new possible coup gripped him, leading him to make a rushed decision, believing that the migrants were mercenaries or coup-plotters” – which the Commission believes “led him to give direct orders to the Junglers to summarily execute the defenceless harmless migrants.”

    “As attested by multiple witnesses who testified before the Commission, there was nothing in the appearances or behaviour of the migrants which suggested or might have suggested that they were something else other than migrants. The Commission asserts that, even if they were criminals or broke Gambian law in any way or form, due process should have been adhered to. Despite being economic migrants, the Commission affirms that former President Yahya Jammeh, in his fear and paranoia, backed by State Agents under his command, already made up their minds and the migrants were extrajudicially executed.

    “The Commission’s investigations revealed that the migrants were brutally tortured at the Navy Headquarters when additional officers and members of the Marine Unit, Police, the NIA, and Junglers arrived on site. They were later tied up with ropes, forced onto two pickup trucks and transported to a forest about two kilometres away from Yahya Jammeh’s residence in Kanilai. The Junglers included Solo Bojang, Malick Jatta, and Sanna Manjang. The Commission found evidence substantiating the fact that Solo Bojang was in regular contact with President Yahya Jammeh that night, and was ordered by the President to execute the migrants.

    “The Commission found that when the pickup truck transporting the migrants stopped in the forest, Martin Kyere, the only Ghanaian migrant that survived the massacre managed to escape by jumping off the back of the truck and making a run for it. The other migrants however did not survive as they were shot alternatively by the Junglers and pushed into a well. After their heinous act, they returned to Kanilai and President Jammeh was briefed by a Jungler as to what had taken place.

    “The Commission found that on 23 July 2005, the bodies of eight migrants were discovered near Brufut village and the Tanji Bird Reserve and reported to the Police. Many witnesses testified that they found blood coming from the mouths, noses, and ears of the migrants when their bodies were found. Further, their skulls were fractured, and they had facial injuries consistent with hacking.

    “Acting under the instructions of their Commander, two police officers from Ghana Town Police Station tried to conceal the evidence and buried two of the bodies at the Tanji Bird Reserve without investigating the identities of the victims and their cause of death. At the hearing, the Commission obtained evidence that two Ghanaian migrants escaped and sought refuge at Ghana Town near Brufut but were turned over to the Police by local leaders. The two escapees have not been heard from since.

    “The Commission learnt that the migrant who escaped reported the matter to the Ghanaian authorities. Following that report, Ghanaian authorities wrote to the Gambian authorities requesting a joint investigation. Despite accepting Ghana’s offer for a joint investigation, Gambian authorities set out to covertly conceal the evidence before the arrival of their Ghanaian counterparts. The Commission found that: “This was calculated and deliberate to mislead and conceal evidence so as to exculpate the culpability of Jammeh’s regime.”

    “The brutal killing of the West African migrants caused national and international outcry, and a demand for justice and accountability for the victims. The Commission found that, not only did the State sanction the gruesome execution of victims, but it also went to great lengths to cover it up including destruction of evidence such as the police diaries of the Police Stations where the victims were taken to and detained prior to their gruesome execution.

    “The Gambian authorities set up an investigation panel in 2005 however, the Commission found that the investigation panel was not interested in investigating the incident properly and bringing the killers to justice. Instead, it was a sham whose brief was to conceal evidence and refute Martin Kyere’s account that the victims were massacred following his return to Ghana. In his testimony before the Commission, Malamin Cessay confessed that he presided and directly participated in that sham and deceptive investigation, as well as fabricated the panel’s report that came from the investigation. Malamin Cessay admitted to the Commission that “it was all part of a collective and massive state-wide campaign aimed to cover-up and exonerate Yahya Jammeh’s regime from its responsibility for these brutal killings.”

    “Based on the evidence received by the Commission, the Commission concluded that the national task force was created solely to hamper the ECOWAS/UN investigation by deliberately misleading them. That former President Yahya Jammeh was responsible for the extrajudicial killings, enforced disappearance, and torture of the West African economic migrants. The Commission concludes that, in July 2005, President Jammeh gave the Junglers the direct orders to summarily execute the migrants. Further, the Commission holds Yahya Jammeh responsible for the subsequent mass cover-up designed solely to exonerate him for these heinous crimes.”

    The Government of The Gambia accepted the TRRC’s recommendation, along with several other recommendations, and made further proposals aimed at putting the matter to rest.

    Source: Graphic online

  • BBC apologises after ‘Manchester United are rubbish’ appears on screen

    The BBC has apologised after a message appeared on the news channel saying “Manchester United are rubbish”.

    The text mistakenly popped up on the news ticker at the bottom of the screen during a tennis update just after 0930 on Tuesday.

    Later in the morning, presenter Annita Mcveigh apologised to any Manchester United fans who may have been offended.

    She said the mistake had occurred as someone was learning how to operate the ticker and was “writing random things”.

    Another message which appeared on the ticker read simply: “Weather rain everywhere.”

    Mcveigh told viewers: “A little earlier, some of you may have noticed something pretty unusual on the ticker that runs along the bottom of the screen with news making a comment about Manchester United, and I hope that Manchester United fans weren’t offended by it.

    “Let me just explain what was happening: behind the scenes, someone was training to learn how to use the ticker and to put text on the ticker, so they were just writing random things not in earnest and that comment appeared.

    “So apologies if you saw that and you were offended and you’re a fan of Manchester United.

    “But certainly that was a mistake and it wasn’t meant to appear on the screen. So that was what happened, we just thought we’d better explain that to you.”

    An official BBC statement added: “There was a technical glitch during training with our test ticker, which rolled over to live programming for a few seconds.

    “We apologised for any offence caused on air.”

    BBC presenter and Manchester City fan Clive Myrie tweeted he “had nothing to do with this!!” with the hashtag MCFC, after City won the Premier League title on Sunday.

    Manchester United have struggled by their standards in recent seasons and missed out on a Champions League spot, coming sixth in the table. Their new manager and former Ajax boss, Erik Ten Hag, is United’s fifth permanent boss since Sir Alex Ferguson retired in 2013.

    Source: BBC

  • Ghana, Mozambique form alliance to address terrorist threats in sub-region

    President Akufo-Addo has appealed to President Felipe Jacinto Nyusi of Mozambique to join forces with Ghana in the battle against terrorist acts in the West African sub-region.

    In response to the rising tide of terrorism in West Africa, President Akufo-Addo remarked that both Ghana and Mozambique cannot turn a blind eye to the issue of terrorist acts in Africa, which is threatening the continent’s security.

    According to him, a cooperative effort between Ghana and Mozambique will not only strengthen security preparations, but also discover ways to decrease reliance on European countries.

    “Ghana will continue to collaborate with Mozambique to find solutions to challenges such as, the eradicate of widespread poverty, regulation of illegal migration, insecurity and human right violation, terrorist and violence extremism, human and drug trafficking as well as negative impact of climate changes on environment and livelihood.”

    President Akufo-Addo made these remarks when he welcomed President Felipe Jacinto Nyusi to the Jubilee House as part of his four-day visit to Ghana.

    The two Presidents also signed two bilateral agreements to deepen cooperation between the Ghana and Mozambique.

    The agreements are the Permanent Joint Partnership Commission for Cooperation and a Joint waiver on visa requirements and diplomatic service passports.

    Meanwhile, according to Edward Kweku Asomani, the Deputy National Security Coordinator, within the first quarter of 2022, Africa has experienced about 346 terrorist attacks in various countries. 49 per cent out of these, he noted, occurred in West Africa.

    These numbers emphasise the importance of such a collaboration in the battle against terrorism in West Africa.

    Source: The Independent Ghana

  • Im a member of the Owoo Family Nii Lantey Vanderpuye

    The Member of Parliament (MP) for Odododiodioo, Edwin Nii Lantey Vanderpuye, has said that he is a member of the Owoo Family; the said pre-acquisition owners of the Achimota Forest land.

    According to the MP, his great grandmother, Naa Kwarley Quartey, and her husband Nii Owoo were the owners of the land before it was taken over by the state.

    Vanderpuye, who was speaking in a Good Morning Ghana interview, added that his family began the fight to claim portions of the Achimota Forest land in the 1900s when the late ex-President Jerry John Rawlings was in power.

    “… the said land was acquired by Nii Owoo and my great grandmother, Florence Naa Kwarley Quartey Vanderpuye. After leaving Vanderpuye, she (Naa Kwarley) married Nii Owoo. She was quite rich, she owned a lot of lands and she gave a lot of lands out for public good.

    “I grew up to get knowledge (of this history) from my grandfather. So, in the cause of time, I felt that we the matrilineal side, the Vanderpuyes, we have not been treated fairly, so I contacted our cousins the Owoos and said [look the land was acquired by our great grandmother and our great grandfather, it looks like you have taken us out].

    “So, instead of litigating we joined forces to petition, in fact, we started from the days of Jerry John Rawlings… he (Rawlings) was so passionate, you know his mother also married into the family… he was so particular about this and he said I went to Achimota School and I will not allow even a quarter of this land to be taken away. He even got mad with the extension of the golf course to eat into part of the forest,” he said

    The MP, who is a former Minister of Sports, further stated that it was during the era of ex-President John Agyekum Kufuor that the state began to give peripheral portions of the Achimota Forest land back to his family.

    He said the Kufuor government agreed to give his family 90 acres of the land, after the strong appeal of the family which the John Dramani Mahama and Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo governments all increased after several petitions and negotiations.

    Vanderpuye added that he is particularly worried that even though his family members including himself have not gotten their share of the land because they were waiting for it to be declassified as a forest reserve it appears that some government officials have already acquired some acres of the land.

    Source: MyInfogh via Ghanaweb

  • 20-year-old mother dumps twin babies in well

    The Sunyani Police have arrested a 20-year-old mother, Ellian Zumeseh, for allegedly dumping her three-month-old male twins in a well deliberately.

    The police, in a graphic online reportage, said the well is in the house where the mother of the twins stayed at Abetifi Zongo, a suburb of Sunyani.

    The incident, which happened at about 1.30 a.m. Monday, threw the suburb into a state of shock and disbelief.

    The lifeless bodies of the twins were found floating in the well, which drew the attention of some members of the household.

    Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP) Augustine Kingsley Oppong, the Bono Regional Police Public Relations Officer (PRO), told Graphic Online that a businesswoman in the community, assisted by two policemen, arrested and sent the suspect to the Sunyani Police Station.

    “After the police had received a report on the dastardly act, a team was dispatched to the scene at Abetifi Zongo, where the team saw the bodies of the twins floating in the well.

    “The police retrieved the bodies, but a careful inspection of the remains revealed no signs of violence,” ASP Oppong said in the report.

    He added that there was a whitish foam from the nostrils of the babies.

    The officer noted that the babies were conveyed to the Emergency Ward of the Sunyani Regional Hospital, where a medical officer declared them dead on arrival.

    The Bono Police Regional PRO said the bodies had been deposited at the mortuary of the same hospital for preservation and autopsy.

    He said the suspect, Ellian Zumeseh, had been detained to assist in investigations into the case.

    Source: Ghanaweb

  • NPA fines 7 petroleum service providers almost GH¢3 million

    The National Petroleum Authority (NPA) has fined seven Petroleum Service Providers almost $3 million for illicit third-party trading of petroleum products.

    The NPA says the move is geared towards sanitising the sector and ensuring standard practice among businesses in the space.

    The authority in a statement said it has “taken notice of infractions by some Petroleum Service Providers (PSPs) who have engaged in illicit third-party trading of petroleum products and has accordingly applied the requisite sanctions.”

    It listed the affected companies and accompanying sanctions as follows:

    1. That Moari Oil Co. Ltd pays a fine of GHS50,000.00 comprising of GHS10,000.00 for engaging in Third-Party Supplies and GHS40,000.00 for the unlawful lifting of petroleum products.

    2. That Rodo Oil Co. Ltd pays a fine of GHS350,000.00 comprising of GHS10,000.00 for engaging in Third-Party Supplies, GHS340,000.00 for the unlawful lifting of petroleum products, and a one (1) month suspension of operations.

    3. That MBA Global Ltd pays a fine of GHS85,000.00 comprising of GHS 10,000.00 for engaging in Third-Party Supplies, GHS75,000.00 for the unlawful lifting of petroleum products, and one (1) month suspension of operations.

    4. That Cigo Energy Ltd pays a fine of GHS245,000.00 comprising of GHS10,000.00 for engaging in Third-Party Supplies and GHS235,000 for the unlawful lifting of petroleum products.

    5. That Torrid Global Ltd pays a fine of GHS550,000.00 comprising of GHS 10,000.00 for engaging in Third-Party Supplies and GHS540,000.00 for the unlawful lifting of petroleum products.

    6. That Naddif Co. Ltd pays a fine of GHS150,000.00 comprising of GHS 10,000.00 for engaging in Third-Party Supplies, GHS140,000.00 for the unlawful lifting of petroleum products, and one (1) month suspension of operations.

    7. That GAT Oil pays a fine of GHS120,000.00 comprising of GHS 10,000.00 for engaging in Third Party Supplies, GHS110,000.00 for the unlawful lifting of petroleum products, and one (1) month suspension of operations.

    “Any company that fails to comply with the rules and guidelines stipulated by the National Petroleum Authority will be subjected to appropriate sanctions,” it cautioned.

    Source: Citinews

  • No voters register available; 2 days to Ashanti Region NPP elections

    Four candidates in the upcoming elections to elect new executives to run the affairs of the governing New Patriotic Party (NPP) in the Ashanti Region, have petitioned the national executive body of the party to postpone the elections scheduled for Friday, May 27, 2022, so as to enable them deal with some irregularities.

    The four petitioners, all aspiring to be the Ashanti Regional Chairman of the NPP are Oheneba Kofi Adum Bawuah, Robert Asare Bediako, Odeneho Kwaku Appiah and Kwabena Owusu Aduomi.

    The incumbent Chairman, Bernard Antwi Boasiako has not endorsed the petition but in principle, all the four have endorsed the petition spearheaded by Oheneba Kofi Adum Bawuah.

    Bawuah presented the petition to the party national headquarters in Accra on Tuesday [May 24, 2022].

    Bawuah strongly called for a postponement until the issues are resolved as to him, it was unacceptable for example that with just two days to the elections, the electoral register is not available to each of the candidates.

    He has decided to advise himself and stay out of the elections as another form of protest, if the national headquarters does not resolve the issues and allow the elections to go ahead with the outstanding issues, something he said could have dire consequences for the party in the 2024 elections.

    The contest for the Ashanti Regional chairmanship of the NPP has gained momentum.

    Although there are other positions at stake in the upcoming regional delegates conference, the one that is being fiercely contested is the regional chairmanship, which has five party stalwarts battling it out in a who-is-who affair.

    The frontrunners are Chairman Odeneho Kwaku Appiah (COKA) and Bernard Antwi Boasiako a.k.a. Chairman Wontumi.

    Reasons for petition

    Among the reasons for the petition asking for the postponement is the unavailability of the voters register to aspirants for them to know the voters with two days to the elections on Friday.

    They have also raised issue with the venue for the elections – the premises of the Ashanti Regional Coordinating Council (RCC).

    The candidates are of the view that the venue, which is a place for running government business, does not sit well for the party to organise it’s regional elections there as it qualifies as incumbent government abuse in using state/government facility for political party event/activity.

    Their third issue is that of a conflict of interest argument, where they have accused the chairman of the Election Committee, Simon Osei Mensah who is the also Ashanti Regional Minister of conflict of interest.

    They have alleged that, Mr Osei Mensah is a relative of one of the candidates, Bernard Antwi Boasiako, who is the incumbent chairman seeking re-election and insists that Mr Osei Mensah has openly declared his support for Boasiako and has openly been campaigning for him, even though he is the chairman of the election committee.

    Chairman Wontumi before becoming Regional Chairman was constituency chairman for Bosomtwe where Osei Mensah also served as Member of Parliament. According to Bawuah, the two of them are known to have worked together very well and that it was fair that, Osei Mensah stays away as chairman of the election committee on grounds of conflict of interest.

    Kofi Adum Bawuah for instance has said they were only made aware that Mr Osei Mensah was chairing the election committee just last week [Saturday] hence their inability to challenge his position earlier.

    They want the leadership of the party at the national headquarters to intervene and postpone the election scheduled for Friday, May 27, 2022 as the “shenanigans” leading to the elections was embarrassing.

    With two days to the elections, the petitioners argued that, they don’t even have the electoral register.

    Ashanti Region has 47 constituencies.

    Each constituency has 17 representatives/voters when it come to the regional elections. It is made up the 10 elected constituency officers and seven others appointed by the constituency executives.

    There is also one representative each from all the recognised bodies of the party in the region such as NASARA and the Tertiary Education Confederacy (TESCON).

    All these delegates, the petitioners argue are supposed to be on the voters register [album] but they don’t have the register as of Tuesday night [May 24, 2022].

    To them, since they followed the constituency elections, there could be the assumption that they know each of the 10 elected officers from the constituencies but the remaining seven from each constituency appointed by the executives are not known, same as the representatives from the recognised bodies.

    “We can’t even contact them to send our campaign messages to them since we don’t know them with two days to the election,” Bawuah lamented.

    Bawuah for instance, speaking on the Boiling Point radio talk programme on Accra based Oman FM on Tuesday night [May 24, 2022] monitored by Graphic Online agreed the timing between the constituency elections and the regional one could be a factor since many of the constituencies are still in the process of appointing their seven representatives.

    But that is the more reason I think the election should be postponed, he said.

    With the exception of the incumbent Chairman Wontumi who has not raised any issue since, all of these seem be working out to give him an advantage, all the other aspirants are in on this one with me, Bawuah said.

    “If national does not act on this, I for instance will decide to advise myself and step aside and will not continue with the contest as a form of a protest,” Bawuah added.

    He said these are some of the reasons that accounted for voter apathy in the 2020 general elections in the Ashanti Region.

    Source: Graphic online

  • No monkeypox detected in Western Region Ghana Health Service

    The Ghana Health Service (GHS) has refuted the assertion suggesting that the Western Region has recorded its first case of monkeypox.

    In a press release signed by the Western Regional Director of Health Services, Dr Yaw Ofori Yeboah noted that an individual in the Ahanta West Municipality reported to a health facility with blisters but was misinterpreted as a monkeypox.

    After a thorough probe, he says, the case is not suggestive of the said disease, therefore, the reports of such condition purported should be disregarded.

    No monkeypox detected in Western Region - Ghana Health Service

    Dr. Ofori Yeboah further added that GHS is on high alert and will provide updates to the public about further developments.

    Meanwhile, the UN Health agency has revealed that Monkeypox is caused by a larger group of viruses known as the Orthopoxviruses Smallpox.

    So far about 237 cases have been confirmed in worldwide and assured that plans are ongoing to contain the virus.

    Source: The Independent Ghana

  • US closes loophole for Russian debt payments

    The US is cutting off another financial route for Russia to pay its international debts, a move that could push the country closer to default.

    The US Treasury Department said it would end a waiver that had allowed US bondholders to accept payments, tightening sanctions imposed over the war in Ukraine.

    Russia, which is rich from its oil and gas supplies, has the funds to pay.

    It has already signalled plans to contest any declaration of default.

    The country has almost $2 billion worth of payments that will be due up to the end of the year on its international bonds.

    While the new rules only apply to people in the US, they will make it difficult for Russia to make payments elsewhere given the role of US banks in the global financial system.

    The US had already barred Russia from using US banks to transfer payments.

    In comments last week, US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen warned the waiver for investors was likely to expire. She said the exemption had been intended to allow an “orderly transition”.

    Analysts have said they do not expect major ramifications from the move outside of Russia, with IMF chief Kristalina Georgieva saying in March that exposure to the holdings was “not systemically relevant”.

    Russia’s debt was already downgraded to”junk status” by major ratings agencies in March, a move that disqualifies it from purchases by major investors, making it difficult for Russia to raise money on international markets.

    Professor Philip Nichols of the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania said it’s not clear what Western holders of Russian bonds have done in the weeks since the invasion, whether rushing to offload them or holding on in hopes the situation will eventually normalise.

    A default would mark the first time Russia has failed to pay its government debt since 1998 – the economic crisis at the end of then President Yeltsin’s term in office.

    It would likely trigger a court case, opening up Russia to recovery proceedings from creditors.

    Inside Russia, any impact would be felt only over the long term as part of the country’s wider economic isolation, Prof Nichols said.

    “Russia just has a lot of oil and gas and that translates into a lot of money, but in the long-run, this is part of a web of instruments that are designed to make it far, far more difficult for Russia to wage war on its neighbours,” he said.

    “It’s going to be really interesting to see what happens,” Prof Nichols said.

    Source: BBC
  • FBI foiled terror plot to kill George W Bush

    The FBI claims that Mr Shihab told a confidential source, a purported people smuggler, that he belonged to a group known as Al-Raed – Arabic for thunder – which is based in Qatar.

    In conversations with the FBI source, Mr Shihab said he wished to murder Mr Bush for “killing many Iraqis” and “breaking apart” Iraq.

    He added that he hoped to take part in the operation personally “and did not care if he died, as he would have been proud to be involved”.

    Mr Shihab was allegedly seeking fake police badges and was inquiring about whether militants could be smuggled across the Mexican border to conduct the operation and then smuggled back out to escape.

    Two people he hoped to smuggle in to the US were described as former Iraqi intelligence agents with experience in assassination operations.

    Mr Shihab was also allegedly in touch with a second FBI source who claimed to be a client for the faux smuggler. Both informants recorded meetings with him.

    Mr Shihab allegedly told the sources he hoped to use the people smuggling service to bring Islamic State members into the US, though he is not accused of being a member of the terror group.

    In one instance, Mr Shihab and one of the informants drove to Dallas, Texas to take video of Mr Bush’s residence and the George W. Bush Institute.

    In March 2022, he allegedly held a meeting in a Columbus, Ohio hotel room to look at weapons and fake law enforcement uniforms.

    He now faces 10 years in prison for attempting to bring someone illegally into the US, and another 20 for aiding and abetting the attempted murder of a former US official.

    A spokesman for Mr Bush said the former president “has all the confidence in the world in the United States Secret Service and our law enforcement and intelligence communities”.

    The BBC has asked the FBI for comment.

    Source: BBC

  • Monkeypox: Cases detected in three more countries for first time

    The United Arab Emirates (UAE) has became the first Gulf state to record a case of monkeypox.

    The Czech Republic and Slovenia also reported their first cases on Tuesday, joining 18 other countries to detect the virus outside its usual Africa base.

    That number is expected to rise further still, but experts say the overall risk to the general population remains low.

    Outbreaks of the virus have been found in Europe, Australia and America.

    The symptoms often include a fever and rash – but the infection is usually mild.

    In the UAE, health officials announced a case had been detected in a traveller who had recently visited west Africa and is now receiving medical treatment.

    Authorities there say they are “fully prepared” to handle any outbreak, adding that early surveillance protocols for detecting the disease were in place.

    The World Health Organization (WHO) says the virus can be contained with the right response in countries outside of Africa where it is not usually detected.

    “We encourage you all to increase the surveillance of monkeypox to see where transmission levels are and understand where it is going,” the WHO’s director for Global Infectious Hazard Preparedness, Sylvie Briand, said at a conference on Tuesday.

    The outbreaks may not be normal but remain containable, she added.

    Outside Africa there are now 237 confirmed and suspected cases of monkeypox and health authorities around the world have announced plans to contain the virus.

    Germany says it has ordered up to 40,000 doses of the Imvanex vaccine – used to treat smallpox, but also effective against monkeypox – to be ready in case the outbreak worsens.

    Anyone already vaccinated with a smallpox vaccine years ago as part of a global bid to eradicate the disease should have existing immunity, German health officials said. But they added that the older treatment has more side-effects so is not suitable for fighting monkeypox today.

    graphic

    And in France, which has detected three cases, officials announced a targeted vaccination campaign of adults who had been recently exposed.

    Authorities there are recommending that a vaccine be given within four days of exposure, but up to 14 days afterwards if necessary.

    In England, officials announced on Tuesday that 14 more cases of the virus had been detected – bringing the total number of cases in the UK to 71.

    Monkeypox is usually associated with travel to Central or West Africa, but some of the cases which have been occurring outside these countries have had no travel link.

    It does not spread easily between people, but it can be spread through:

    • touching clothing, bedding or towels used by someone with the monkeypox rash
    • touching monkeypox skin blisters or scabs
    • the coughs or sneezes of a person with the monkeypox rash

    If you get infected with monkeypox, it usually takes between five and 21 days for the first symptoms to appear.

    Symptoms include fever, headache, muscle aches, backache, swollen lymph nodes, chills and exhaustion.

    A rash can develop, often beginning on the face, then spreading to other parts of the body. The rash changes and goes through different stages – a bit like chicken pox – before finally forming a scab, which later falls off.

    Source: BBC

  • North Korea fires missiles hours after Biden leaves Asia

    North Korea has fired three ballistic missiles early Wednesday morning, South Korea’s military has said.

    Authorities in Seoul said the missiles were fired in the space of less than an hour from the Sunan area in Pyongyang.

    It comes just a day after US President Joe Biden left the region, following a trip that saw him vowing to bolster measures to deter North Korea.

    North Korea has been test-firing a flurry of ballistic missiles since the beginning of this year.

    Japan confirmed at least two launches happened on Wednesday but acknowledged there may have been more.

    Japan’s Defence Minister Nobuo Kishi said first missile flew about 300km (186 miles) with a maximum altitude of around 550 km, while the second, reaching as high as 50 km, travelled around 750 km.

    Mr Kishi criticised the launches, saying they were “not acceptable” adding that it would “threaten the peace, stability and safety of Japan and the international community”.

    In a meeting convened after the missile launch, South Korea’s National Security Council called the test a “grave provocation”, the presidential office said.

    The launches came hours after US President Joe Biden departed for the US on Tuesday evening, after a five-day trip that saw him visiting South Korea and Japan.

    U.S. and South Korean officials had earlier warned that North Korea appeared ready for another weapons test, possibly during Biden’s visit.

    During his visit to Seoul over the weekend, Mr Biden and his South Korean counterpart Yoon Suk-yeol agreed to hold bigger military drills and deploy more U.S. strategic assets if necessary to deter North Korea’s intensifying weapons tests.

    Mr Biden had said the United States was “prepared for anything North Korea does.”

    Source: BBC

  • Texas shooting: 19 children among dead in primary school attack

    Nineteen young children and two adults have died in a shooting at a primary school in south Texas.

    The gunman opened fire at Robb Elementary School – which teaches children aged seven to 10 – in the city of Uvalde before he was killed by law enforcement, officials said.

    The 18-year-old suspect had a handgun, an AR-15 semi-automatic rifle and high-capacity magazines, investigators say.

    The teenager is suspected of shooting his grandmother before the rampage.

    Local media report he may have been a high school student in the area.

    Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District Chief of Police Pete Arredondo said the shooting began at 11:32 local time on Tuesday, and that investigators believe the attacker “did act alone during this heinous crime”.

    Texas Governor Greg Abbott said the shooter, whom he named as Salvador Ramos, abandoned a vehicle before entering the school to “horrifically, incomprehensibly” open fire.

    One of the adults killed was a teacher, who has been named in US media as Eva Mireles. Her page on the school district’s website said she has a daughter in college and loved running and hiking.

    Nearly 500 pupils are enrolled in the predominantly Hispanic school around 85 miles (135km) west of the city of San Antonio.

    The Associated Press news agency reports that a US Border Patrol official who was nearby when the shooting began rushed into the school and shot and killed the gunman, who was behind a barricade.

    Border Patrol is a federal agency that guards US ports of entry. Uvalde, which is fewer than 80 miles from the border with Mexico, is home to a Border Patrol station.

    Two border agents were reportedly shot in an exchange with the gunman. One agent was shot in the head, officials say, adding that both were now in a stable condition in hospital.

    According to CBS News, the attacker was wearing body armour as he carried out the attack. Another 18-year-old who is suspected of attacking a grocery store in Buffalo, New York, on 14 May was also wearing body armour and carrying a semi-automatic rifle – both of which are commercially available in the US.

    The Uvalde Memorial Hospital posted on Facebook earlier that 13 children had been taken to hospital “via ambulances or buses”.

    A 66-year-old woman and a 10-year-old girl were in a critical condition at a hospital in San Antonio, University Health hospital officials said.

    Source: BBC

     

  • Saul ‘Canelo’ Alvarez to face Gennady Golovkin in trilogy fight

    Saul ‘Canelo’ Alvarez will face Gennady Golovkin in a trilogy fight in September rather than meet Dmitry Bivol in a rematch.

    Mexican Alvarez, 31, will return to super-middleweight, where he is undisputed champion, after a shock defeat by Bivol at light-heavyweight.

    Alvarez had the option of a rematch with Russian Bivol, but will honour his agreement with Kazakhstan’s Golovkin.

    “This is the biggest fight in boxing,” said promoter Eddie Hearn.

    The fight will take place on 17 September but no venue has yet been announced.

    “These are two men that bitterly dislike each other and want to end this incredible series with a blistering KO,” Hearn added.

    “I truly believe this will be the most thrilling fight between these two great champions and it will be fireworks from the first bell to the last man standing.”

    Alvarez beat Golovkin in their rematch in 2018 after a controversial draw in 2017, both of which were at middleweight.

    Golovkin, who turned 40 in April, has won four successive fights since losing to Alvarez, reclaiming the IBF and WBA (Super) middleweight titles along the way.

    Before his defeat by Bivol on 7 May – only the second loss of his career – Alvarez had agreed to face Golovkin on 17 September.

    “Unfortunately, we lost, but that doesn’t mean I’m not going to try again. The important thing here is perseverance and we’re going to do it again,” said Alvarez.

    “I think those are the two biggest fights in boxing, the fight with Golovkin and the rematch with Bivol.”

    Source: BBC

  • Chelsea: Todd Boehly consortium takeover deal gets UK government approval

    The UK government has approved the £4.25bn takeover of Chelsea by a consortium led by LA Dodgers co-owner Todd Boehly.

    The London club was put up for sale in March before owner Roman Abramovich was sanctioned over his links to Russian president Vladimir Putin.

    On Tuesday, the Premier League said the consortium had passed its owners’ and directors’ test.

    Chelsea have been operating under a special government licence which expires on 31 May.

    “Late last night the UK government reached a position where we could issue a licence that permits the sale of Chelsea,” a government spokesperson said in a statement on Wednesday.

    The government does not want Abramovich to receive any of the proceeds from the sale, which will instead go into a frozen bank account to be donated to charity.

    The statement added: “Following the sanctioning of Roman Abramovich, the government has worked hard to ensure Chelsea has been able to continue to play football. But we have always been clear that the long-term future of the club could only be secured under a new owner.

    “Following extensive work, we are now satisfied that the full proceeds of the sale will not benefit Roman Abramovich or any other sanctioned individual. We will now begin the process of ensuring the proceeds of the sale are used for humanitarian causes in Ukraine, supporting victims of the war.

    “The steps today will secure the future of this important cultural asset and protect fans and the wider football community. We have been in discussions with relevant international partners for necessary licences required and we thank them for all their cooperation.”

    Earlier this month the deal had seemed close to collapse over concerns proceeds would not reach good causes as promised by Abramovich.

    Abramovich denied that he had asked for his £1.5bn loan to Chelsea be repaid when the club was sold.

    Several parties expressed an interest but Chelsea agreed to sell to the Boehly-led consortium earlier in May.

    The consortium is led by Boehly, but Clearlake Capital – a Californian private equity firm – would own a majority of the shares in Chelsea. Other investors include US billionaire Mark Walter, also a co-owner of the LA Dodgers, and Swiss billionaire Hansjorg Wyss.

    Chelsea’s sale – the key moments

    24 February: Russia invades Ukraine

    26 February: Roman Abramovich gives “stewardship and care” of club to charitable foundation

    2 March: The Chelsea owner says he plans to sell the club

    10 March: The UK government sanctions Abramovich

    5 May: Abramovich denies he has requested a £1.5bn loan he made to Chelsea is repaid

    7 May: Todd Boehly agrees a £4.25bn deal for the club

    16 May: Government insider says the deal is close to collapse

    24 May: Premier League approves takeover

    25 May: Government approves takeover

    Source: BBC

  • Sir Johns Will: Ownership of lands at Achimota Forest, Sakumono Ramsar Site declared void – Lands Ministry

    The Ministry of Lands and Natural Resources has directed the Lands and Forestry Commissions to declare as void the ownership of lands at the Achimota Forest and Sakumono Ramsar Site allegedly owned by the late Kwadwo Owusu Afriyie.

    The directive comes after the ministry commenced investigations into the alleged ownership of lands by the recent former Chief Executive Officer of the Forestry Commission popularly known as Sir John.

    On Monday, the Fourth Estate reported that some portions of land at the Achimota Forest and Sakumono Ramsar Site had been willed to relatives of the late Sir John.

     Portions of the purported Will of Sir John read: “I give my land also situate at the Achimota Forest in the name of Fasoh Limited and measuring 0.987acres to my nephews Michael Owusu, Yaw Boadu and Kwabena Amoateng forever.”

     “I give my land situate at the Achimota Forest in the name of Jakaypro Limited and measuring 5.541 acres to the following persons forever.

    Yaw Amoateng Afriyie                           -One (1) acre

    — Eva Akua Afriyie                                   One (1) acre

    Ivy Akua Afriyie                                     One (1) acre

    Elizabeth Asare Boateng (aka Mother)     One (1) acre

    Michael Owusu                                         1.541 acres

     But preliminary investigations conducted by the Lands Ministry indicate that there is no record of ownership of both lands in question at the Lands and Forestry Commissions.

     In a press statement dated May 24, the Ministry also revealed that the Will is a subject matter of litigation in the court.

     The Lands Minister, Samuel Abu Jinapor, has therefore urged the Commissions to take the appropriate actions.

     Meanwhile, Mr Jinapor has assured that beneficiaries listed in the Will of the late Kwadwo Owusu Afriyie, will not obtain the Achimota Forest and Ramsar site lands.

     “For the avoidance of doubt, the bequeathing of the aforesaid lands, if established, will not pass any interest/title to the named beneficiaries in the alleged Will.”

    “Government will act on any improper acquisition of any Public Lands, regardless of how it was procured, whether now or in the past, and the Achimota Forest Lands will not be an exception,” the statement added.

     According to the minister, the Achimota Forest lands in question will remain “public lands” in spite of falling within the de-gazetted lands pursuant to E.I 144.



  • Ukraine war: Melitopol residents resist Russian occupation

    Russian forces met fierce resistance from residents when they arrived in the southern Ukrainian city of Melitopol in February.

    Locals tried to block armoured vehicles as the convoy of soldiers rolled in to occupy the city, and people flooded the streets waving Ukrainian flags.

    When the Russians started cracking down on the protesters, the resistance movement was forced to evolve and new groups emerged.

    Melitopol, according to the US-based Institute for the Study of War, is an area where partisan warfare has been active since at least the middle of March.

    Ukraine’s Military Intelligence Directorate has reported that from 20 March to 12 April “partisans eliminated 70 Russian soldiers during their night patrol”.

    These groups are continuing to carry out attacks.

    Last Wednesday a Russian armoured train was reportedly derailed. Days earlier, two Russian soldiers were found dead in the street. Last month a bridge near Melitopol – used to deliver supplies to the Russian army – was blown up.

    A destroyed bridge near Melitopol, which Russian forces used to transport suppliesIMAGE SOURCE, UKRAINIAN SPECIAL OPERATION FORCE
    Image caption, The destroyed bridge near Melitopol that Russian forces used to transport supplies

    Ivan Fedorov, the mayor of Melitopol, says these attacks were organised by partisan groups. “It’s the job of our partisans, our secret services and our soldiers. They do this job together,” he tells the BBC.

    Mr Fedorov himself was abducted by Russian forces and later released as part of a prisoner exchange.

    The Russians are desperately trying to crush all resistance. They are searching houses and detaining people, residents say, often at random.

    On 29 April, armed men in military uniform with white armbands – the marking used by Russian soldiers – abducted Boris Kleshev, the head of a local fire brigade in Melitopol.

    For two weeks his relatives heard nothing about his whereabouts. A few days ago, a pro-Russian Telegram channel posted a video showing Mr Kleshev and other Ukrainian men admitting that they were sharing information on Russian movements with the Ukrainian military.

    Mr Kleshev was speaking with a low voice, clearly under duress. But even if it looked like a forced confession, those who made the video were unlikely to have cared – their aim is to break the resistance spreading through Melitopol.

    These resistance groups, however, are only a small part of the movement.

    “Ninety per cent of Melitopol residents are now partisans and they resist in their own way,” says Svitlana Zalizetska, a local journalist.

    “Some people just stare at the Russian soldiers with hatred. Others sing patriotic songs at night. Some people hang posters in the street with Ukrainian flags,” she says, adding that some also pass on information about Russian military movements.

    People protest the abduction of Melitopol mayor Ivan Federov outside the regional administration building, after he was reportedly taken away by Russian forces, during their ongoing invasionIMAGE SOURCE, REUTERS
    Image caption, Crowds gathered outside the regional administration building in Melitopol when the city’s mayor was reportedly abducted

    At the start of the invasion in February, Melitopol residents organised mass protests against the Russian army’s presence. People regularly took to the streets with Ukrainian flags, chanting: “Melitopol is Ukraine.”

    “Russian forces were truly shocked to see that the local population was not happy to see them. Those soldiers really believed that they were liberators,” says Iryna (not her real name), who lives in Melitopol.

    A few weeks after the invasion, police from Rosgvardia – Russia’s national guard – arrived to crack down on the protests. They started dispersing crowds and detaining activists.

    But Russian troops appear to understand that defeating the resistance here requires more than just stopping the rallies.

    Unlike other regions occupied by Russian forces, the military in Melitopol have been trying to win people’s hearts and minds. “We have the brand of ‘polite people’”, Iryna jokes, referring to the term used to describe Russian soldiers when Moscow annexed Crimea in 2014.

    “These are ordinary guys who look like us and try to be nice,” she explains. “They help elderly women and show that they care about people. But they can’t realise that it was them who created all these troubles and that our people didn’t beg for help before.”

    In order to create a perception of normality, the Russian forces try to silence anyone who openly opposes them.

    The mayor of the Ukrainian city of Melitopol, Ivan FedorovIMAGE SOURCE, EPA

    Image caption, Mayor of Melitopol Ivan Fedorov was detained by Russian forces in March

    Svitlana Zalizetska, who used to run a popular news website, was pressured to co-operate with the new authorities appointed by the Russian military. She refused. When the mayor, Mr Fedorov, was abducted, Svitlana realised she could be next. She later escaped into territory controlled by Ukrainian forces.

    Then, Russian officers started threatening her family. “First they wanted to destroy the website. They failed,” she says. “Then they tried to capture me. They failed again. Then they detained my father and took him hostage to make me come back, and gain control over the website.”

    Only when she publicly acknowledged that she no longer owned the website and stopped writing for it, they released her father.

    The Russian army is mobilising resources to change the pro-Ukrainian views of the population in Melitopol. They desperately want to get schools, shops and businesses to reopen with the aim of presenting Russian rule as a positive step.

    And the longer the occupation lasts, the harder it is for people to resist. Some residents, with no funds left to feed their families, are returning to work – even if it implies supporting the new Russian regime.

    “If they are physically killing Ukrainians in Mariupol, here they’re trying to break our souls,” says Iryna. “But they will fail.”

    Source: BBC

  • England squad: Jarrod Bowen & James Justin called up for Nations League games

    England manager Gareth Southgate has called up uncapped West Ham forward Jarrod Bowen for the Nations League games with Hungary, Germany and Italy.

    Bowen has scored 18 goals and provided 13 assists for the Hammers this season.

    The 25-year-old was in contention for the previous England squad in March but was ruled out by a fractured foot bone.

    Leicester City right-back James Justin is named for the first time and Fikayo Tomori is recalled for June’s matches after helping AC Milan win Serie A.

    Leeds United midfielder Kalvin Phillips and Newcastle United defender Kieran Trippier also return after injury.

    Liverpool captain Jordan Henderson is not named among the midfielders after a heavy workload in a season that will only end on Saturday in the Champions League final, with Southgate saying “I don’t need to know any more about him”.

    The England boss suggested that was also his reason for leaving out Tottenham Hotspur defender Eric Dier, saying the 28-year-old was “definitely in our thinking”.

    There is also no place for Henderson’s Liverpool team-mate Joe Gomez, so Trent Alexander-Arnold is the only representative of a Reds squad looking to complete a treble of cups this season when they face Real Madrid in Paris.

    As Southgate indicated would be the case, Manchester City’s Kyle Walker returns to the squad despite not having played in the Premier League since mid-April because of an ankle problem.

    Southgate said he has selected 11 defenders in his squad because of doubts over the fitness of some.

    “It is a bit of a minefield, in terms of players who have missed football and are coming back from injuries,” he said. “Luke Shaw and Ben Chilwell haven’t played at all. Marc Guehi is a doubt.

    “Fikayo has had a very good season with AC Milan and I talked in March about wanting to have a look at some of the young centre-backs coming through and some of these guys are slightly ahead of Tyrone [Mings], who has always played well for us.

    “At the same time we have to make opportunities for good young players to have a look at them.”

    England’s Nations League fixtures
    Date Opponent Venue
    Saturday, 4 June Hungary Puskas Arena, Budapest
    Tuesday, 7 June Germany Allianz Arena, Munich
    Saturday, 11 June Italy Molineux, Wolverhampton
    Tuesday, 14 June Hungary Molineux, Wolverhampton

    Another Italy-based player, Tammy Abraham, is included after a stellar season under Jose Mourinho at Roma, for whom he has scored 27 goals.

    The former Chelsea striker is preferred to Everton’s Dominic Calvert-Lewin in a group of forwards that also includes Manchester City title-winning trio Phil Foden, Jack Grealish and Raheem Sterling.

    Southgate has resisted a plea from Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta not to include 20-year-old forward Bukayo Saka, who has played a part in every league game for the Gunners in 2021-22.

    “I think Mikel Arteta knows we look after players well,” said the England boss. “We’ve given all the players a week off this week, which not everyone has done, but we feel that has worked well for us.

    “We’ve had a good discussion around Bukayo Saka and all the players from Arsenal. All the players are carrying niggles after a long season, but they all want to be here.”

    Jadon Sancho, who did not feature for Manchester United in the last month of the season because of tonsillitis, also misses out, as does his club-mate Marcus Rashford, who has struggled for form throughout this campaign.

    Another notable absentee is Leicester’s James Maddison, who won the Foxes player of the season award after 17 goals and 11 assists in all competitions. The 25-year-old’s last cap was almost three years ago.

    “He has finished the season very well,” added Southgate. “He is obviously scoring goals but we just feel we are very happy with the players that have been with us.

    “He is competing with Mason Mount and Phil Foden and these types of players in the role where he is at his best. It’s one of the positions where there is a lot of strength in depth and you may have to leave players out who may be equally as deserving.”

    Other players omitted from the previous squad include defenders Tyrick Mitchell and Kyle Walker-Peters as well as forwards Emile Smith Rowe and Ollie Watkins.

    West Ham forward Bowen began his career with Hereford before moving to Hull, where he excelled in the Championship before making the move to West Ham in January 2020.

    Southgate says he “thoroughly deserves” his first senior call-up following “constantly strong performances”.

    “We were certainly thinking about involving him in March before he got injured,” said the England boss.

    “He’s a goal threat and his direct journey is an interesting reminder that you don’t have to be at an elite academy – experience is a great route to go.

    “He works incredibly hard for the team, which we want all our players to do.”

    He was equally complimentary about Leicester defender Justin, who has made 19 appearances in all competitions since recovering from an anterior cruciate injury sustained in February 2021.

    “He is a player we’ve followed for a long time and he obviously had a very serious injury,” added Southgate. “We feel he’s now played the number of matches needed.

    “He’s comfortable at right or left back – he’s very comfortable with the ball and a super athlete. He’s a very good person from the feedback I’ve had and we’re really looking forward to working closely with him.”

    England squad in full

    Goalkeepers: Jordan Pickford (Everton), Nick Pope (Burnley), Aaron Ramsdale (Arsenal)

    Defenders: Trent Alexander-Arnold (Liverpool), Conor Coady (Wolves), Marc Guehi (Crystal Palace), Reece James (Chelsea), James Justin (Leicester), Harry Maguire (Man Utd), John Stones (Man City), Fikayo Tomori (AC Milan), Kieran Trippier (Newcastle), Kyle Walker (Man City), Ben White (Arsenal)

    Midfielders: Jude Bellingham (Borussia Dortmund), Conor Gallagher (Crystal Palace, on loan from Chelsea), Mason Mount (Chelsea), Kalvin Phillips (Leeds), Declan Rice (West Ham), James Ward-Prowse (Southampton)

    Forwards: Tammy Abraham (Roma), Jarrod Bowen (West Ham), Phil Foden (Man City), Jack Grealish (Man City), Harry Kane (Tottenham), Bukayo Saka (Arsenal), Raheem Sterling (Man City)

    Source: BBC

  • Jesse Lingard: West Ham enquire about Manchester United player

    West Ham United have enquired about Manchester United’s Jesse Lingard, who becomes a free agent next month.

    Hammers boss David Moyes has a long-standing interest in the England attacking midfielder, 29, after a successful loan spell last season.

    Moyes has twice tried to sign Lingard on a permanent basis since then.

    Lingard says he feels let down over his treatment during the past 12 months and has resolved to leave Old Trafford despite new boss Erik ten Hag arriving.

    There was significant interest from clubs in Lingard during the past two transfer windows.

    However, Manchester United refused to let Lingard join a rival for a European place and both former manager Ole Gunnar Solskjaer and his temporary replacement Ralf Rangnick told him he would get an opportunity to press his first-team claims.

    Lingard started only two Premier League games last season and was upset interim manager Rangnick did not introduce him from the bench in the 3-0 win against Brentford, which would have been a farewell appearance at Old Trafford for a player who joined the club when he was seven.

    He did not make an appearance in the club’s final four games of the season.

    Lingard’s brother posted a message on social media complaining that after “20 years of blood, sweat and tears, four domestic trophies and three cup final goals” there was “not even a farewell” for the England player.

    While there are other clubs interested, Moyes hopes his association with West Ham – Lingard recently posted in appreciation of former team-mate Mark Noble, who is retiring – will give them an advantage.

    Lingard scored nine goals and registered five assists in 16 appearances for the Hammers while on loan and was named Premier League Player of the Month for April 2021.

    Moyes has vowed to strengthen his squad after a disappointing end to the season, which included a Europa League semi-final defeat against Eintracht Frankfurt and a run of five points from their last seven Premier League games, which cost them a second successive top-six finish.

    West Ham will instead go into the Europa Conference League play-offs in August, but coach Stuart Pearce will not be part of Moyes’ backroom staff for those after he announced on Monday he was leaving the club.

    Source: BBC

  • #AccraFloods: Vehicles carried away, several roads destroyed after downpour

    In Ghana, there is concern whenever dark clouds gather because no matter the quantum of rain, several lives are affected as their surroundings get flooded.

    A 10-hour rainfall that commenced at the wee hours of Tuesday, May 24, has left several parts of the country flooded with some public infrastructure destroyed.

    Over the weekend, several houses and shops were filled with water after an 8-hour downpour. Motorists found it difficult to move as parts of the road was flooded. Floodwaters wash away vehicles into a drain at Nima.

    Beyeeman Junction, Graphic Road, Osu, were among the flooded areas in Accra.

    Today has been no exception but for several roads that have been destroyed. Quite a number of roads in Accra have been damaged after the rains came down.

    Ghanaians have flooded Twitter with images and videos of the bad roads. These roads are in locations such as Adabraka, Kaneshie, Pamprom in Abossey Okai, among others.

    Also, parts of the Accra-Tema Beach Road have caved in.

    Also, persons heading to Gomoa, CapeCoast, Mankessim, Takoradi and Nzema have been entreated to desist from embarking the journey due to the bad nature of the road.

    Source: The Independent Ghana

  • An account of how the Owoo Family became part owners of Achimota Forest land

    The Owoo Family has recently made headlines in Ghana after it emerged they were original owners of the Achimota Forest land and have now been given portions of the land back, with the quantity of the land given to them becoming a matter of contention.

    After the state (the then Gold Coast) acquired the land from the Owoo Family between 1921 and 1927 and gave the family compensation of some £4000, the family in 2006 began requesting for portions of the land back.

    The family said it wanted portions of the land back because the land was not being used for its intended purpose – a forest reserve.

    The New Patriotic Party under president John Agyekum Kufuor after several deliberations come to a conclusion that the Owoo Family deserves portions of the Achimota land that was not used as the forest reserve. It decided to give the family 90 acres.

    Then came the National Democratic Party government under former President John Dramani Mahama which become the second administration to give portions of the land back to the family.

    After negotiations with the family, the government decided to increase the portions of the land given to the family by the Kufuor government to some 196.5 acres.

    The New Patriotic Party government led by President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, after some negotiations with the family, also decided to give the Owoo Family portions of the de-gazetted Achimota Forest land (part of the land that is not part of the reserve) to the family.

    In addition to the 196.5 acres, the Akufo-Addo government decided to give the family additional 165 acres of the land, bringing the total acres of land given back to the family to 361.50 acres.

    The Lands Ministry in a statement has brought out details of how the Owoo family acquired portions of the Achimota Forest Land.

    Source: Ghanaweb