Author: Andy Ogbarmey-Tettey

  • Richmond Lamptey banned 30 months for involvement in AshGold-Inter Allies match manipulation, social media reacts

    Richmond Lamptey, an Asante Kotoko midfielder, has been banned 30 months from the Ghana Premier League for his involvement in match fixing with Inter Allies against AshantiGold SC last season.

    The 25-year-old was charged on two counts for breaching Article 34(6)(d) of the GFA Premier league regulations,2019 and Article 26(1) & (2) of the GFA Code of Ethics, 2019.

    The Ghana Football Association (GFA) made this known in a press statement announcing the sanctions slapped on Ashanti Gold and its President, Dr Kwaku Frimpong, and a few others. The sanctions will take effect from the 2022/2023 Ghana Premier League season.

    Since the news broke, football fanatics have taken to Twitter to share their disappointment in Lamptey being banned. Kotoko fans are unhappy such a “good player” will be unable to contribute his quota to the development of the team.

    Others are calling on the club to terminate its contract with Richmond Lamptey.

    Meanwhile, a section of Twitter users has applauded the GFA for the thorough investigation it carried out.

    Source: The Independent Ghana

     



  • See the full list of sanctions against AshantiGold for involvement in match-fixing

    The Ghana Football Association (GFA) earlier indicated that AshantiGold SC have been demoted from the Ghana Premier League to the Division Two League.

    This is after the club was found guilty of match manipulation in their 2020/21 Ghana Premier League Matchday 34 game against Inter Allies FC.

    Several sanctions have been meted out to AshantiGold and this will take effect from the 2022/2023 Ghana Premier League season.

    Among the sanctions is a ¢100,000 fine against the club and its President, Dr Kwaku Frimpong, respectively.

    Here is the full list of sanctions:

    • At the end of the 2021/22 Ghana Premier League season, Ashantigold SC shall be demoted to the Division Two League in accordance with Article 6(3)(h) of the GFA Disciplinary Code 2019.
    • That a fine of ¢100,000 is imposed on Ashantigold SC in accordance with Article 6(1)(c) and Article 6(4) of the GFA Disciplinary Code 2019.
    • The President of Ashantigold SC, Dr Kwaku Frimpong, is banned from taking part in any football-related activity for 120 months in accordance with Article 34.5(d)(i) of the Ghana Premier League Regulations 2019.
    • That a fine of ¢100,000 is imposed on Dr Kwaku Frimpong in accordance with Article 34.5(d)(ii) of the Ghana Premier League Regulations 2019.
    • The CEO of Ashantigold SC, Emmanuel Frimpong, is banned from taking part in any football-related activity for 96 months in accordance with Article 34.5(d)(i) of the Ghana Premier League Regulations 2019.
    • That a fine of ¢50,000 is imposed on the Chief Executive Officer of Ashantigold SC Emmanuel Frimpong in accordance with Article 34.5(d)(ii) of the Ghana Premier League Regulations 2019.
    • The Head Coach of Ashantigold SC, Thomas Duah, is banned from taking part in any football-related activity for 24 months in accordance with Article 34.5(d)(i) of the Ghana Premier League Regulations 2019.
    • The Team Manager of Ashantigold SC, Aidoo Gee Ahmed, is banned from taking part in any football-related activity for 24 months in accordance with Article 34.5(d)(i) of the Ghana Premier League Regulations 2019.
    • The underlisted players of Ashantigold SC are hereby banned for 24 months each in accordance with 34.5(d)(i) of the Ghana Premier League Regulations 2019.

    Player Name Jersey Number

    Stephen Owusu Banahene 4

    Dacosta Ampem 7

    Frank Akoto 15

    Agyemang Isaac Opoku 19

    Amos Kofi Nkrumah 24

    Eric Esso 25

    Moses Kwame 29

    Solomon Afriyie 35

    • That Samed Mohammed, Player number 32 of Ashantigold SC, is hereby banned for 30 months in accordance with Article 34.5(d)(i) of the Ghana Premier League Regulations 2019.
    • That Seth Osei, Player number 33 of Ashantigold SC, is hereby banned for 30 months in accordance with Article 34.5(d)(i) of the Ghana Premier League Regulations 2019.
    • That the underlisted players and official of Ashantigold SC who were invited but failed to appear before the Committee are hereby banned for 48 months each in accordance with Article 34.5(d)(i) of the Ghana Premier League Regulations:
    1. Emmanuel Owusu Player
    2. Mohammed Bailou Player
    3. Amos Addai Player
    4. Paul De Vries Asare Player
    5. Nana Kwasi Darling Sporting Director

    The GFA’s decision shall be communicated to FIFA to be given international application in accordance with the GFA Disciplinary Code and FIFA Disciplinary Code, since a number of players are now playing in outside clubs.

    Source: The Independent Ghana

  • Religious leaders urged to improve security at places of worship over threat of terrorist attacks

    The Ministry of National Security has urged leaders of religious institutions in the country to enhance security in their various places of worship.

    In a press statement dated May 12, the Ministry said its attention has been drawn to the growing threat of terrorism and drive of terrorist groups towards West African states.

    The terrorist groups have been targeting public gatherings in the sub-region, therefore the need to beef up security at places of worship, the Ministry added.

    The various religious institutions are being encouraged to “install CCTV cameras at designated places of worship, and engage the services of approved security guards, among others.”

    Meanwhile, as part of its mandate to safeguard peace and security, the National Security is working with the “relevant State Security and Intelligence Agencies” to put in place measures to prevent terrorist attacks in the country.

    On Wednesday, May 11, eight soldiers were killed and 13 wounded in an attack in northern Togo.

    According to reports, the attack by heavily armed gunmen took place before dawn at an army post in the Kpendjal prefecture near the border with Burkina Faso, the government said in a statement sourced by Reuters.

    It is said that this marks potentially the first deadly raid on its territory by Islamist militants, Africanews reports.

    In Nigeria, citizens have been at the mercy of terrorist groups such as Boko Haram.

    According to media reports, Boko Haram has raided villages and killed over 50 people and left dozens wounded.

  • Saudi Aramco: Oil giant sees profits jump as prices surge

    Saudi Aramco has posted its highest profits since its 2019 listing as oil and gas prices surge around the world.

    The state-owned energy giant saw an 82% jump in profits, with net income topping $39.5bn (£32.2bn) in the first quarter.

    In a press release, the firm said it had been boosted by higher prices, as well as an increase in production.

    The invasion of Ukraine has seen oil and gas prices skyrocket.

    Russia is one of the world’s biggest exporters but Western nations have pledged to cut their dependence on the country for energy.

    Oil prices were already rising before the Ukraine war as economies started to recover from the Covid pandemic and demand outstripped supply.

    Other energy firms including Shell, BP and TotalEnergies have also reported soaring profits as a result, although many are incurring costs exiting operations in Russia.

    Energy security ‘vital’

    Aramco’s president and chief executive, Amin Nasser, said on Sunday that the company was “focused on helping meet the world’s demand for energy that is reliable, affordable and increasingly sustainable”.

    “Energy security is vital and we are investing for the long-term,” he added.

    In March, the oil and gas producer pledged to ramp up investment and boost output significantly over the next five to eight years.

    Prime Minister Boris Johnson visited the world’s biggest oil exporter that month to try to persuade it to release more oil into world markets in the short-term.

    Saudi Arabia is the largest producer in the oil cartel Opec (Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries) and by raising production it could help to reduce energy prices.

    But the country has been condemned for a range of human rights abuses: its involvement in the conflict in neighbouring Yemen, the murder in 2018 of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, for jailing dissidents and for widespread use of capital punishment.

    Aramco itself also faces security challenges because of the conflict in Yemen, with Huthi rebels targeting some of its sites and temporarily knocking out a big portion of the kingdom’s crude production.

    Its latest set of results come days after Aramco reclaimed the top spot as the world’s most valuable company from Apple for the first time in almost two years.

    Aramco also announced on Sunday it would issue 20 billion bonus shares to shareholders – one share for every 10 shares already owned.

    Source: BBC

  • Russian operator to suspend electricity supply to Finland

    Russian energy supplier RAO Nordic says it will suspend deliveries of electricity to Finland from Saturday, citing problems with payments.

    The company said it had not been paid for previous deliveries.

    The Finnish grid operator said Russia provided only a small percentage of the country’s electricity and that it could be replaced from alternative sources.

    On Thursday, Russia threatened to take “retaliatory steps” after Finland said it planned to join Nato.

    Finland shares a 1,300-km (810-mile) border with Russia, and has previously stayed out of Nato to avoid antagonising its eastern neighbour. However, since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine there has been a surge in public support for Nato membership.

    On Sunday Finland is expected to formally announce its plan to join.

    The decision by Rao Nordic has not been explicitly tied to Finland’s decision.

    The Russian state-owned firm said: “This situation is exceptional and happened for the first time in over twenty years of our trading history”.

    Neither Rao Nordic nor the grid operator in Finland, Fingrid, explained what was behind the payment difficulties.

    Last month Russia cut supplies of gas to Bulgaria and Poland after they refused to comply with a demand to pay in roubles, a change they said would contravene western sanctions.

    This week Russia’s Gazprom announced it would stop supplying gas via the Polish part of the Yamal-Europe pipeline.

    Fingrid said it did not expect electricity shortages as a result of the shut off, as only around 10% of Finland’s electricity is supplied from Russia.

    “The lack of electricity import from Russia will be compensated by importing more electricity from Sweden and by generating more electricity in Finland,” said Reima Päivinen, senior vice president of power system operations at Fingrid.

    Demand is also decreasing as the weather gets warmer, while a significant amount of extra wind power generation is expected to come on stream. A new nuclear power station, expected to open this summer, would more than make up for the lost supplies from Russia, Fingrid added.

    Source: BBC

  • Ukraine war: Global wheat prices jump after India export ban

    The price of wheat has jumped on international markets after India banned the export of the staple cereal.

    The benchmark wheat index rose as much as 5.9% in Chicago, the highest it has been in two months.

    The export ban comes after a heatwave hit India’s wheat crops, taking domestic prices to a record high.

    The cost of everything from bread and cakes to noodles and pasta has risen in recent months as wheat prices soared on world commodity markets.

    India’s government said it would still allow exports backed by letters of credit that have already been issued, and to countries that request supplies “to meet their food security needs”.

    Government officials also said the ban was not permanent and could be revised.

    However, the decision has been criticised by agriculture ministers from the Group of Seven (G7) nations meeting in Germany.

    “If everyone starts to impose export restrictions or to close markets, that would worsen the crisis,” German food and agriculture minister Cem Ozdemir said.

    The G7 is an organisation of the world’s seven largest so-called “advanced” economies, which dominate global trade and the international financial system. They are Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the UK and the United States.

    Although India is the world’s second-biggest wheat producer, it has not previously been a major exporter as most of its crop is sold on domestic markets.

    But Ukraine’s wheat exports plunged after the Russian invasion. And with droughts and floods threatening crops in other major producers, commodity traders were expecting supplies from India to make up for part of the shortfall.

    Before the ban, India had aimed to ship a record 10 million tonnes of wheat this year.

    Source: BBC

  • North Korea: More than a million Covid cases feared

    North Korea’s leader Kim Jong-un has lambasted health officials and ordered the army to help distribute medicine, as a wave of Covid cases sweeps through the country.

    More than a million people have now been sickened by what Pyongyang is calling a “fever”, state media said.

    Some 50 people have died, but it’s unclear how many of those suspected cases tested positive for Covid.

    North Korea has only limited testing capacity, so few cases are confirmed.

    North Koreans are likely to be especially vulnerable to the virus due to lack of vaccinations and a poor healthcare system. A nationwide lockdown is in place in the reclusive country.

    State media said Mr Kim led an emergency politburo meeting at the weekend where he accused officials of bungling the distribution of the national medicine reserves.

    He ordered that the “powerful forces” of the army’s medical corps step in to “immediately stabilise the supply of medicines in Pyongyang City”.

    The country announced its first confirmed Covid cases last week – although experts believe the virus has likely been circulating for some time.

    Mr Kim has imposed “maximum emergency” virus controls, including lockdowns and gathering restrictions in workplaces.

    The international community offered to supply North Korea with millions of AstraZeneca and Chinese-made jabs last year, but Pyongyang claimed it had controlled Covid by sealing its borders early in January 2020.

    North Korea shares land borders with South Korea and China, which have both battled outbreaks. China is now struggling to contain an Omicron wave with lockdowns in its biggest cities.

    South Korea has offered to send unlimited aid to the North if requested, including vaccine doses, health workers, and medical equipment.

    On Saturday Mr Kim called the rapidly spreading Covid-19 outbreak a “great disaster”.

    “The spread of the malignant epidemic is [the greatest] turmoil to fall on our country since the founding,” the official KCNA news agency quoted him as saying.

    As well as the direct health impact, fears have been raised for food production in North Korea. It suffered a brutal famine during the 1990s, and today the World Food Programme estimates that 11 million of the country’s 25 million people are undernourished.

    If agricultural workers are unable to tend the fields, analysts say, the implications are extremely serious.

    Source: BBC

  • Shanghai lockdown: China unemployment rate near pandemic peak

    China’s jobless rate rose to 6.1% in April, the highest level since the 6.2% peak seen in the early part of the Covid-19 pandemic in February 2020.

    It comes as widening lockdowns led to a sharp slowdown in activity for the world’s second largest economy.

    Official figures also show retailers and manufacturers were hit hard.

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

    Chinese Premier Li Keqiang recently described the country’s employment situation “complicated and grim” following the worst outbreaks of the virus since 2020.

    Still, the government aims to keep the jobless rate below 5.5% for this year as a whole.

    The rise in unemployment came as lockdowns had an impact across the Chinese economy.

    Retail sales saw the biggest contraction since March 2020 as they shrank by 11.1% in April from a year earlier, according to China’s National Bureau of Statistics.

    That was much worse than March’s 3.5% drop and missed the economists’ expectations of a 6.1% fall.

    At the same time industrial production fell by 2.9% from a year earlier, as measures to stop the spread of the coronavirus had a major impact on supply chains.

    That was the largest decline since February 2020 and marked a reversal of the 5% gain in March.

    However, Shanghai on Monday set out plans for the return of more normal life from the start of next month and the end of a lockdown that has lasted more than six weeks and contributed to the sharp slowdown of China’s economy.

    In the clearest timetable yet, Deputy Mayor Zong Ming said the reopening of the financial, manufacturing and trading hub would be carried out in stages, with movement curbs largely to remain in place until 21 May to prevent an increase of infections, before a gradual easing.

    Source: BBC

  • Buffalo shooting: Gunman deliberately sought black victims – Mayor

    The man suspected of shooting dead 10 people at a supermarket in Buffalo, New York, deliberately sought a site with a high black population, authorities say.

    The suspect, Payton Gendron, 18, drove more than 320km (200 miles) to carry out the attack, police say.

    The attack is being investigated as an act of racially motivated violent extremism.

    Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown said the suspect arrived intending to take “as many black lives as possible”.

    A 180-page document seemingly authored by Mr Gendron has emerged, in which he describes himself as a fascist and a white supremacist.

    Questions are being asked about how he was able to carry out the attack when concerns had already been raised. “I want to know what people knew and when they knew it,” New York Governor Kathy Hochul told ABC News.

    Joseph Gramaglia, Buffalo’s chief of police, told reporters on Sunday Mr Gendron had made “generalised threats” while still at high school. He spent a day and a half in hospital undergoing a mental health evaluation, but was then released.

    He does not appear to have remained under watch by authorities.

    FBI Special Agent Steven Belongia told the New York Times neither state police nor the FBI had any intelligence on Mr Gendron. Meanwhile, the gun store owner who sold him a semi-automatic weapon told several US outlets that no alert came up when his name was run through a government background check system.

    Meanwhile New York’s Attorney General Letitia James said her office would focus on extremist material online.

    “This event was committed by a sick, demented individual who was fuelled [by a] daily diet of hate,” she said.

    The shooting has stunned the local community. One of those attending a vigil on Sunday told Reuters: “It just hurts, why somebody would do that.”

    Of the 13 people shot, police said 11 were black. Among those reported killed were a man buying cupcakes for his son’s birthday and a woman who had gone shopping after visiting her husband at a nursing home.

    Source: BBC

  • Ukraine: The children’s camp that became an execution ground

    Since Russian forces were pushed back from Kyiv at the end of March, the bodies of more than 1,000 civilians have been discovered in the Bucha region – many hastily buried in shallow graves.

    The BBC’s Sarah Rainsford has been investigating what happened at a children’s summer camp – now being treated as a crime scene.

    *This report contains material some readers will find disturbing*

    It is easy to miss the killing spot at first in the gloom. But in a cold, damp basement on the edge of the woods that made Bucha a popular get-away spot before the war, five Ukrainian men were forced to their knees and shot in the head.

    To the right of the entrance, there are stones coated in blood that has turned dark red. Lying among that is a blue woollen hat with an exit hole in one side and its rim soaked in blood. In the wall, I counted at least a dozen bullet holes.

    Forensics team marker in Bucha basement
    Image caption, A marker left by a forensics team in the basement

    A couple of steps away are the remains of a Russian military ration pack – an open can of rice porridge with beef and an empty packet of crackers. A name daubed in graffiti on a wall is a reminder that the scene is a children’s camp. But when Russian troops moved into Bucha, just outside the capital, in early March, Camp Radiant became an execution ground.

    The story of the summer camp killings is chilling but so is this detail: more than 1,000 civilians were killed in the Bucha region during a month under Russian occupation, but most did not die from shrapnel or shelling. More than 650 were shot dead by Russian soldiers.

    Now Ukraine is searching for their killers.

    Volodymyr Boichenko lived in Hostemel, just up the road from Bucha and near the airfield where the first Russian forces landed to try to overthrow Ukraine’s government. When his sister Aliona Mykytiuk decided to flee before the fighting reached her, she pleaded with Volodymyr to join her. He was a civilian, not a soldier, but he wanted to stay and help. So he spent the days searching Hostemel for food and water to bring to neighbours, including children, who were trapped in their cellars by the constant shelling and Russian airstrikes.

    A chatty 34-year-old, who had travelled the world in the merchant navy, Volodymyr phoned his family from Hostemel most days to reassure them he was safe. Aliona would wait nervously for his brief calls: she knew he had to move to higher ground to get a connection and if the shelling was heavy it was impossible to leave the bomb shelter. As supplies ran low, she urged her brother to try to escape but by then the roads were blocked.

    Volodymyr drinking from a coconutIMAGE SOURCE, BOICHENKO FAMILY
    Image caption, Volodymyr Boichenko had travelled the world

    The last time Aliona heard from him was on 8 March. Volodymyr wasn’t the demonstrative type, but that day he told his sister not to worry about him. “He said ‘I really love you,’ and that was so painful to hear,” Aliona sobs, rubbing her eyes hard but unable to stop the tears. “There was fear in his voice.”

    Four days later, Volodymyr was spotted by neighbours close to Promenystyi, as it’s known here, or Camp Radiant. Then he disappeared.

    In March, the fighting around Kyiv was intense and the small town of Bucha was at the epicentre. The withdrawal of Russian troops in early April revealed scenes that shocked the world: the bodies of residents slumped in the streets where they’d been shot.

    Moscow tells anyone who will listen that the killings were staged, an idea that is as twisted as it is patently false. Determined to hold those responsible to account, Ukrainian investigators are busy collecting the hard evidence on territory now back under their control.

    “We don’t know what Putin’s plans are, so we are working as quickly as possible in case he drops a bomb and destroys all the proof,” says Kyiv regional police chief, Andrii Niebytov.

    That evidence includes a field full of civilian cars pierced with multiple bullet holes, now piled up on the edge of Bucha. They are vehicles that were shot at when families tried to flee. One still has a length of white cloth at the window, hung to show the soldiers that its occupants were no threat. Step too close, and you catch the sickly smell of death.

    Car with white ribbon and bullet holes
    Image caption, A white flag did not prevent this car from being attacked

    When the bodies beneath Camp Radiant were discovered on 4 April, Volodymyr Boichenko was among them. Aliona had spent weeks frantically calling hospitals and morgues. That day she was sent a photograph to identify. She knew it was her brother before it had even downloaded.

    “I hate them with every cell of my being,” Aliona cries, about Volodymyr’s killers. “I know that’s wrong to say about people, but they are not human. There was not one patch on those men’s bodies that was not beaten.”

    Ilona and Alona, Volodymyr's sister
    Image caption, Volodymyr’s sister Aliona, with her cousin Ilona

    The five men had been found crouching on their knees, heads down and hands bound behind their backs.

    “We know they had been tortured,” the police chief told the BBC. “The Russian army has crossed the line of how war is conducted. They were not fighting the military in Ukraine, they were kidnapping and torturing the civilian population.”

    Neither the Prosecutor’s Office nor the SBU security service will disclose details of ongoing investigations, but some Russian military were so careless at covering their tracks that there are likely to be considerable clues to work with. Ukrainian territorial defence units have even discovered lists of soldiers at some abandoned positions. One appears to be part of a rota for litter duty, another includes passport details and mobile phone numbers.

    Kyiv regional police chief, Andrii Niebytov
    Image caption, Kyiv regional police chief, Andrii Niebytov, is working fast to gather evidence

    With such a vast volume of work – more than 11,000 potential war crimes cases registered so far – Ukraine’s security services have called on more digitally savvy civilians for help.

    “I feel some call of duty,” said Dmytro Replianchuk, a journalist at slidstvo.info who worked to expose corruption within Ukraine’s law enforcement bodies before the war. Now he’s joined forces with prosecutors, scouring the internet for extra data to help catch suspected war criminals.

    “I understand it will be so hard and a lot of cases won’t be solved. But in these weeks, it’s important to find as much information as possible,” Dmytro explained.

    We found one potential clue among the litter at Camp Radiant – the wrapping from a parcel sent by a woman named Ksyukha to a Russian soldier whose own name and military unit are clearly marked. Unit 6720 is based in Rubtsovsk, in the Altai region of Siberia. It has been linked to Bucha before when soldiers from the town were caught on CCTV sending giant packages to relatives full of goods that they had looted from Ukrainian homes.

    A parcel addressed to a Russian soldier - the address has been blurred
    Image caption, A parcel addressed to a Russian soldier – the name has been blurred

    We can’t be sure yet whether soldiers from Rubtsovsk were based at the children’s camp, or were there when the men were killed. The police first need to establish a more precise time of death.

    “We are working on it, but it’s not a quick thing,” Mr Niebytov explains. “But that camp was a headquarters so there would have been a commander. The soldiers could not have executed anyone without the commander’s knowledge. So we will first find the organisers and then look for the implementers.”

    Across the road from Camp Radiant, behind a church spattered with shrapnel damage, a corner of Bucha is slowly showing renewed signs of life. Young boys run around the yard, while a man fixes sheets of wood to windows shattered when the town was being shelled, constantly. And a little shop has just reopened to serve others now trickling back to begin their own repairs.

    family in Bucha cemetery - a fresh grave is being dug
    Image caption, Fresh graves are still being dug in Bucha

    As neighbours cross paths, they discuss the days when Russian tanks rolled into their town, the soldiers who would shoot wildly and those who roamed the streets drunk, breaking into homes and stealing from them. And they remember the local man who escaped to their block of flats from the summer camp opposite, and who they had sheltered despite the risk.

    Viktor Sytnytskyi didn’t know Camp Radiant before, but all the details he gives match up. He’s now in western Ukraine and told me his story over the phone, calling from his car so he wouldn’t upset his mother.

    It was early March when Viktor was grabbed by Russian soldiers on the street. They tied his hands and pulled his hat down over his eyes, then dragged him to a cellar that he’s sure was on the grounds of the children’s camp.

    Mosaic of children dancing around a camp fire
    Image caption, Camp Radiant is decorated with mosaics of happy children playing – now it’s a crime scene

    There, the Russians poured water over his legs so he would freeze, and they held a gun to his head.

    “They kept saying, ‘Where’s the fascists? Where’s the troops? Where’s Zelensky? One of them mentioned Putin so I said something rude and he hit me,” Viktor recalls.

    He remembers being angry at his captors as well as terrified. He had worked in Moscow in the past with men from Siberia and was horrified that Russians could now treat him with such brutality. Even more so, when one of the soldiers revealed that he, too, was from Siberia.

    Viktor told him he was sad things had come to this.

    “The sad thing is that our grandfathers fought together against the Nazis and now you’re the fascists,” was the Russian’s angry reply.

    “He told me: ‘You have until the morning to remember what you’ve seen, and if not, you’ll be shot.’”

    That night, Viktor got lucky. There was heavy shelling and when he realised his captors were no longer guarding him, he ran for his life.

    “I calculated that I had more chance of surviving under shelling than if I stayed in that cellar. They’d already put the gun to my head. What would it cost them to pull the trigger?”

    From a common grave beneath the children’s camp, Volodymyr Boichenko has now been given a proper burial beneath the cherry blossom in the old cemetery of Bucha.

    After his funeral, Aliona says she finally saw her brother’s face in her dreams again, as if he were comforting her.

    Vladimir Boychenko grave

    But she still has many questions. The cross on Volodymyr’s grave is marked only with his birthday, not the date of his death, because the family have no idea when he was shot.

    They may never know, unless the Russian commander who took over Camp Radiant can be found.

    Like everyone in Bucha, though, they do know that civilians are not only caught up in this war. They are being targeted – by Russian soldiers who either don’t know the rules of war, or don’t care.

    Photographs by Sarah Rainsford unless otherwise marked

    Additional reporting: Daria Sipigina, Mariana Matveichuk and Tony Brown

    Source: BBC

  • Full lunar eclipse creates rare super blood Moon

    Stargazers have been treated overnight to a stunning and unusual sight – a super blood Moon.

    Shortly after 03:30 GMT on Monday, Earth’s orbit meant that for several minutes our planet was positioned directly between the Sun and the Moon.

    In that time the Moon fell completely into Earth’s shadow – temporarily turning it a dusky shade of dark red.

    Its hue was created by sunlight being projected through Earth’s atmosphere onto the Moon’s shadowed surface.

    The lunar eclipse coincided with a separate event – a super Moon. This is when the Moon is at its closest point to Earth in its orbit and so appears larger than usual.

    Image shows blood moonIMAGE SOURCE, EPA
    Image caption,

    The super blood Moon sets over hilltops in the Republic of North Macedonia

    Those watching out for the resulting super blood Moon got the best view from 03:29 GMT, the moment the full lunar eclipse started and the event became visible in the Western hemisphere.

    For almost one and a half hours afterwards, the only sunlight reaching the Moon had passed through the Earth’s atmosphere turning it red.

    Image shows super moon above Temple of PoseidonIMAGE SOURCE, REUTERS
    Image caption,

    In Greece, spectators gathered at the Temple of Poseidon near Athens to watch the Moon before the full eclipse

    In Europe, the phenomenon was only visible for some of that time because of the Moon beginning to set. But in the Americas areas under clear skies were treated to the full spectacle.

    “You’ll actually be seeing every sunrise and every sunset occurring around the Earth at once. All of that light will be projected on to the Moon,” explained Dr Gregory Brown, astronomer at the Royal Observatory in Greenwich, London, ahead of the event.

    “If you were an astronaut standing on the Moon, looking back towards Earth, you’d see a red ring running around the outside of our planet,” he told the BBC.

    BBC diagram
    Source: BBC
  • Mass shooting at Buffalo supermarket was a racist hate crime, police say

    The 18-year-old suspected of opening fire at a Buffalo supermarketSaturday told authorities he was targeting the Black community, according to an official familiar with the investigation.

    The alleged gunman made disturbing statements describing his motive and state of mind following his arrest, the official said. The statements were clear and filled with hate toward the Black community. Investigators also uncovered other information from search warrants and other methods indicating the alleged shooter was “studying” previous hate attacks and shootings, the official said.

    The revelation comes a day after a gunman killed 10 people and wounded three others at the Tops Friendly Markets store in a predominantly Black neighborhood in Buffalo. Eleven of the people who were shot were Black, officials said. The victims range in age from 20 to 86, police said.

    Buffalo police identified all 13 victims Sunday. Among them were a former police officer who tried to stop the shooter, the octogenarian mother of the city’s former fire commissioner and a long-term substitute teacher.

    Two people remain hospitalized in stable condition, a spokesman for Erie County Medical Center said Saturday night.

    The suspect was identified as Payton S. Gendron, a rifle-toting 18-year-old from Conklin, New York, who allegedly wrote a White supremacist manifesto online, traveled about 200 miles to the store and livestreamed the attack, authorities said.

    Buffalo Police Commissioner Joseph Gramaglia said Sunday the attack was a racist hate crime and will be prosecuted as such.
    “The evidence that we have uncovered so far makes no mistake that this is an absolute racist hate crime. It will be prosecuted as a hate crime,” he said. “This is someone who has hate in their heart, soul and mind.”

    People gather outside a supermarket in Buffalo, New York, where 10 people were killed on Saturday.

    People gather outside a supermarket in Buffalo, New York, where 10 people were killed on Saturday.
    Investigators believe the suspect acted on his own in the shooting, Gramaglia said. The suspect was in Buffalo a day before the shooting and did some reconnaissance at the Tops Friendly Markets store, the commissioner said.
    Gendron, the suspect, surrendered to police and was taken into custody. He was charged with first-degree murder, prosecutors said, and pleaded not guilty in court Saturday night, Buffalo City Court Chief Judge Craig Hannah told CNN.
    Erie County Sheriff John Garcia said Gendron is currently under suicide watch.
    On Sunday, New York Gov. Kathy Hochul announced $2.8 million in federal and state funding for the victims and their families, according to a statemnt from her office.
    “The past 24 hours have been traumatizing for New Yorkers, and my administration will spare no effort to ensure the victims of this act of terrorism by a white supremacist are receiving all the resources and support they need,” Hochul said in the statement.
    “The entire world is watching how we will come together as New Yorkers to overcome this unthinkable tragedy. Buffalo, my hometown, is the City of Good Neighbors and New York State will be good neighbors for them.”
    New York State’s Office of Victim Services will be in Buffalo throughout the week to help administer funding and assist victims and families in obtaining financial assistance from the state, according to the statement.
    In addition, Hochul announced a partnership with rideshare services Uber and Lyft to provide transport to and from local grocery stores for affected community members.
    The grocery store company, Tops Markets, is also providing free transportation to members of the Buffalo community affected by the shooting “to ensure our neighbors are able to meet their grocery and pharmacy needs,” according to an update on Twitter from the grocery chain.
    “While the Tops location at Jefferson Avenue will remain closed until further notice, we are steadfast in our commitment to serving every corner of our community as we have for the past 60 years,” the statement reads. “Knowing the importance of this location and serving families on the east side of the city, we have taken immediate steps to ensure our neighbors are able to meet their grocery and pharmacy needs by providing free bus shuttle service starting today.”
    Saturday’s attack bears similarities to a number of mass shootings in recent years that were motivated by hate and intended to be seen online, including the shootings at two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand, in 2019.
    The Buffalo attack was the deadliest US mass shooting of the year. There have been at least 198 mass shootings so far in 2022, per the Gun Violence Archive, which — like CNN — defines a mass shooting as four or more people shot, not including the shooter.
    The owner of a firearms shop in New York told The New York Times that the suspect recently bought a Bushmaster assault weapon. A background check on the suspect at the time showed nothing, Donald told the Times.
    “I knew nothing about it until I got the call from them. I couldn’t believe it,” said Robert Donald, whose shop is in Endicott, about 200 miles from Buffalo.
    “I just can’t believe it. I don’t understand why an 18-year-old would even do this,” he added. “I know I didn’t do anything wrong, but I feel terrible about it.”

    Suspect targeted predominantly Black area

    Shooting suspect charged with murder in court appearance

    Investigators are reviewing a 180-page purported manifesto posted online in connection with the shooting. The author of the document, who claims to be Payton Gendron, confesses to the attack and describes himself as a fascist, a White supremacist and an anti-Semite.
    “We are obviously going through that with a fine-toothed comb and reviewing that for all evidence that may lead us to besides the manifesto itself,” Erie County District Attorney John Flynn told CNN’s Victor Blackwell.
    The manifesto’s author says he bought ammo for some time but didn’t get serious about planning the attack until January.
    The author writes about his perceptions of the dwindling size of the White population and claims White people are being replaced by non-Whites in a “White genocide.” This “replacement theory,” once a fringe idea, has recently become a talking point for Fox News’ host Tucker Carlson as well as other prominent conservatives.
    “We continue to investigate this case as a hate crime, a federal hate crime and as a crime perpetrated by a racially motivated, violent extremist,” said Stephen Belongia, special agent in charge of the FBI’s Buffalo field office.
    In the manifesto, the author says the supermarket in Buffalo is in a ZIP code that “has the highest black percentage that is close enough to where I live.”
    New York Gov. Kathy Hochul told CNN investigators believe the suspect targeted the busiest place in that area at the busiest time.
    “This was targeted by ZIP code,” Hochul said. “This was the highest concentration of African Americans within hours.”
    The ZIP code that includes the store, 14208, is 78% Black, according to the US Census Bureau’s 2020 American Community Survey. That is the highest percentage of Black population of any ZIP code in upstate New York.
    Hochul said an AR-15 used in the shooting was purchased legally in a gun store in New York state but was modified with a high-capacity magazine, which is not legal in the state.
    The suspected gunman had previously been on the radar of police, officials said.
    As a student at Susquehanna Valley Central High School, he made a “generalized threat” in June 2021, Gramaglia said. The student was brought in for a mental health evaluation and was released after a day and a half, according to Gramaglia.
    The threat was not racially motivated, he added. A spokesman for the New York State Police confirmed to CNN it investigated and responded to a report that a 17-year-old student had made “a threatening statement” in June 2021 at the same high school. The student was taken into custody and transported to a hospital in June 2021 for a mental health evaluation.
    State police were unable to confirm how long the individual was in the hospital or the findings of the evaluation. They also refused to name the 17-year-old.
    Earlier Sunday, Hochul said on ABC’s “This Week” the suspect had previously been under surveillance with medical authorities related to “something he wrote in high school.”
    In his hometown, the suspect worked at the local Conklin Reliable Market for about four months and left about three months ago, according to the store’s owner. The owner described him as very quiet, while a neighbor similarly said “you wouldn’t get more than a word or two” from him.

    How the shooting unfolded

    At around 2:30 p.m., the suspect drove to Tops Friendly Markets near the areas of Masten Park and Kingsley. Wearing tactical gear and armed with an assault weapon, the suspect allegedly shot and killed three people in the parking lot and wounded a fourth, according to a statement from Erie County District Attorney John J. Flynn.
    The suspect then entered the store and exchanged gunfire with an armed security guard who was a retired member of the Buffalo Police Department, the district attorney said. The guard was identified as Aaron Salter, Brown said.
    Because the suspect wore heavy tactical gear, however, the guard’s bullets did not have any effect, Buffalo Police Commissioner Joseph Gramaglia said Saturday.
    “He was very heavily armed,” the police commissioner said. “He had tactical gear, he had a tactical helmet on, he had a camera that he was livestreaming what he was doing.”
    Inside the store, nine people were shot before the suspect was apprehended by police, according to the district attorney’s statement.
    In a statement sent to CNN, livestreaming service Twitch confirmed the shooting was streamed and said the user “has been indefinitely suspended from our service, and we are taking all appropriate action, including monitoring for any accounts rebroadcasting this content.”
    CNN obtained a portion of the livestream which showed the suspect arriving at the supermarket in his vehicle. CNN is not airing the video.
    People hug near the scene of the mass shooting at the Tops Friendly Markets store Saturday.

    Grady Lewis said he was outside the supermarket when he heard seven or eight gunshots and saw a White man dressed in tactical gear spraying gunfire at the entry of the store. Law enforcement arrived within two minutes after the shooting began, Lewis told CNN affiliate WKBW. He “heard at least 20 or so shots” before the suspect exited the store.
    “He came out, he put the gun to his head, to his chin. Then he dropped it and took off his bulletproof vest, then got on his hands and knees and put his hands behind his back,” Lewis said, describing the moments the suspect was arrested by police. “I thought they were going to shoot him but they didn’t shoot him.”
    “I still don’t even believe it happened … that a person would go into a supermarket full of people,” he said. “It was horrible, it was really horrible.”
    The Tops Friendly Markets store released a statement Sunday saying it was heartbroken over the violence. “Tops has been committed to this community and to the city of Buffalo for decades and this tragedy will not change that commitment,” the company said.
    Source: CNN
  • Mali withdraws from the regional anti-jihadist force G5 Sahel

    Mali’s junta announced Sunday that it will quit a West African anti-jihadist force after it was blocked from assuming the presidency of the regional group.

    The country’s departure from the G5 Sahel security force deepens its isolation after its neighbours hit it with sanctions in January over perceived foot-dragging in restoring civilian rule.

    Mali’s diplomatic relations with western allies, including former colonial power France, have also deteriorated, especially over its recent rapprochement with Russia.

    Earlier this month, UN chief Antonio Guterres said political instability and human rights violations in Mali and Burkina Faso were undermining the Sahel’s anti-jihadist operations, and called for returning power to civilians as soon as possible.

    But Mali’s junta claims it is a victim of politicking.

    “The government of Mali is deciding to withdraw from all the organs and bodies of the G5 Sahel, including the joint force” fighting the jihadists, Bamako announced in a statement.

    “The opposition of some G5 Sahel member states to Mali’s presidency is linked to manoeuvres by a state outside the region aiming desperately to isolate Mali,” it added, without naming that country.

    The G5 Sahel, which also includes Mauritania, Chad, Burkina and Niger, launched in 2014, with an anti-jihadist force added in 2017.

    The group’s heads of states were supposed to assemble in Bamako in February to see Mali assume the G5 presidency, but nearly four months later, this meeting “has still not taken place”, the junta said.

    Mali is struggling under sanctions imposed by other West African countries over the military’s decision to retain power following multiple coups.

    The junta has opted for a two-year transition, while the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) is pushing for 16 months maximum.

    The military initially seized control in August 2020 as the country’s decade-long jihadist insurgency inflicted a spiralling death toll and forced hundreds of thousands to flee their homes.

    A second de facto coup occurred in May 2021, when Assimi Goita pushed out an interim civilian government and took over the presidency.

    The violence gripping Mali since 2012 has involved attacks by jihadists linked to Al-Qaeda and the so-called Islamic State group, but also an assortment of self-declared militias and bandits.

    In a May 11 report to the Security Council, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said Mali’s vague transition timeline was hampering the G5 anti-jihadist force’s ability to function.

    “Among other issues uncertainty over the transition timelines in Mali and the 23 January coup d’etat in Burkina Faso significantly slowed down the Joint Force’s operational tempo,” said the UN chief’s report, obtained by AFP.

    Source: Africa news

  • Somalia’s new president elected by 327 people

    Somalia’s former leader Hassan Sheikh Mohamud has been elected president after a final vote that was only open to the country’s MPs.

    He defeated the current president, Mohamed Abudallahi Farmajo, who has been in office since 2017.

    The ballot was limited to Somalia’s 328 MPs due to security concerns over holding a wider election, and one of them did not cast a vote.

    Mr Mohamud received 214 votes, defeating Mr Farmajo who won 110 votes.

    Three MPs are reported to have spoiled their ballots.

    The unusual circumstances highlight Somalia’s security issues as well as the lack of democratic accountability.

    The result marks a comeback for Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, who served as Somalia’s president between 2012 and 2017 before he was defeated by Mr Farmajo.

    The elections – which were hotly contested and went to a third round – were delayed for almost 15 months due to infighting and security issues.

    Mr Mohamud was sworn in shortly after the final results were announced, prompting supporters in the capital to cheer and fire guns into the air. He will serve for the next four years.

    In the vote on Sunday, hundreds of parliamentarians cast their ballots at a fortified aircraft hangar in the capital Mogadishu.

    Explosions could be heard nearby as voting was taking place, but police said no casualties were reported.

    As the incoming president, Mr Mohamud will have to deal with the impact of an ongoing drought in which the UN says 3.5 million Somalis are at risk of severe famine.

    But the big task he faces is to wrest control of much of Somalia from al-Shabab. The al-Qaeda-linked Islamist militant group continues to dominate large parts of the country and carries out frequent attacks in Mogadishu and elsewhere.

    The country is also being affected by food and fuel inflation sparked by the war in Ukraine

    The government is backed in its fight against al-Shabab by the African Union, in the shape of some 18,000 troops and the United Nations.

    The instability is one of the reasons why Somalia has been unable to hold direct elections. Somalia has not had a one-person-one-vote democratic election since 1969.

    That vote was followed by a coup, dictatorship and conflict involving clan militias and Islamist extremists.

    This is only the third time that the indirect election for president has been able to take place in Somalia itself. Previous ones were held in neighbouring Kenya and Djibouti.

    MPs waiting to voteIMAGE SOURCE, BBC/ MOHAMUD ABDISAMAD
    Image caption,

    Voting took place in an airport hangar on Sunday

    This vote was supposed to have happened last year when Mr Farmajo’s four-year term ended. But political differences and instability delayed the poll and the president remained in power.

    The MPs who chose the new president were themselves elected by delegates nominated by the country’s powerful clans.

    They gathered in a large airport hangar in the well-guarded Halane Camp. This is the main military base of the AU’s mission in Somalia (Atmis), as well as the home of diplomatic missions and aid agencies.

    The voting, done by secret ballot, was delayed for hours due to lengthy security checks.

    Past elections were marred by allegations of vote-buying with candidates reportedly offering money in exchange for support.

    The only female candidate, former Foreign Minister Fawzia Yusuf Adam, was eliminated in the first round of voting.

    What has al-Shabab said?

    In previous elections, al-Shabab threatened and even kidnapped clan elders after condemning them for participating in what it saw as an un-Islamic poll.

    This time around, its response to the elections has been more muted, with fears that its members or sympathisers may have secretly sought parliamentary seats in a bid to undermine the system from within.

    The fear was publicly expressed by neighbouring Djibouti’s President Omar Guelleh in 2020, when he was quoted as saying: “I fear we will end up with a parliament indirectly controlled by al-Shabab because they’ll have bought the support of some of the MPs.”

    Some analysts felt Mr Guelleh was exaggerating the possibility of al-Shabab gaining a foothold in parliament, but there is no doubt that it is a major political force in Somalia.

    Source: BBC

     

  • Ukraine preparing for Russian push in Donbas, Zelensky says

    Ukraine is preparing for a new Russian push in the eastern Donbas region, President Volodymyr Zelensky says.

    Since failing to take Kyiv at the beginning of the invasion in late February, control of Donbas has become one of Moscow’s main objectives.

    “We are preparing for new attempts by Russia to attack in Donbas, to somehow intensify its movement in the south of Ukraine,” President Zelensky said in his nightly address.

    “The occupiers still do not want to admit that they are in a dead-end and their so-called ‘special operation’ has already gone bankrupt,” he added.

    He once again called on the West to impose an oil embargo on Russia.

    “We are also working to strengthen sanctions on Russia. Partners need to make decisions that limit Russia’s ties to the world every week,” he said.

    “The occupiers must feel the rising cost of war for them, feel it constantly.”

    Source: BBC

  • Elon Musk puts Twitter deal on hold over fake account details

    Elon Musk has said his $44bn (£35bn) deal to buy Twitter is on hold after he queried the number of fake or spam accounts on the social media platform.

    He said he was waiting for information “supporting [the] calculation that spam/fake accounts do indeed represent less than 5% of users”.

    Mr Musk added later that he was “still committed to [the] acquisition”.

    However, analysts speculated he could be seeking to renegotiate the price or even walk away from the takeover.

    Mr Musk’s tweets sent Twitter’s share price plunging 10% in morning trade in New York.

    Even before his comments, the company’s stock had been selling for less than the $54.20 per share Mr Musk has offered, a sign that the markets were not convinced he would complete the buyout.

    Dan Ives, a tech analyst at investment firm Wedbush Securities, said Mr Musk’s comments would “send this Twitter circus show into a Friday the 13th horror show”.

    “Many will view this as Musk using this Twitter filing/spam accounts as a way to get out of this deal in a vastly changing market,” he wrote in a note.

    “The nature of Musk creating so much uncertainty in a tweet (and not a filing) is very troubling to us… and now sends this whole deal into a circus show with many questions and no concrete answers as to the path of this deal going forward.”

    Mr Musk has been vocal about “defeating the spam bots”, identifying it as a key goal following his planned takeover of the company.

    Twitter has long faced accusations of not doing enough to address automated, fake accounts posting content.

    In a filing more than two weeks ago, Twitter estimated that fake accounts accounted for fewer than 5% of its daily active users during the first three months of this year. It cautioned that the figures were based on estimates and could be higher.

    Those claims were not different from what the firm had shared in previous disclosures.

    The number of spam bots on the service is a key statistic, as a higher than expected figure could hurt the ability to grow advertising revenue or paid-for subscriptions, said Susannah Streeter, analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown.

    But she said it was not clear how genuine Mr Musk’s concerns were.

    “There will also be questions raised over whether fake accounts are the real reason behind this delaying tactic, given that promoting free speech rather than focusing on wealth creation appeared to be his primary motivation for the takeover,” she said.

    “The $44bn price tag is huge, and it may be a strategy to row back on the amount he is prepared to pay to acquire the platform.”

    Weeks of market turmoil in the US have wiped billions off the value of many companies – including once favoured tech firms.

    Tesla, the electric car company where Mr Musk serves as chief executive, has also seen its shares plunge – a hit to Mr Musk, whose status as the world’s richest person is bound up in his stake in the company and who had planned to rely on his shares to help finance the Twitter purchase.

    Last month, he raised $8.5bn by selling shares. He also planned to use the shares to secure $6.5bn in loans.

    After Mr Musk tweeted that the deal was temporarily on hold, Tesla’s share price gained more than 5%.

    Source: BBC

     

  • Ukraine begins first war crimes trial of Russian soldier

    Ukraine has started its first war crimes trial since the beginning of Russia’s invasion, with a 21-year-old soldier appearing in the dock accused of killing an unarmed civilian.

    Vadim Shishimarin appeared at a preliminary hearing in Kyiv. He faces life in prison if convicted.

    Ukraine says it has identified thousands of potential war crimes committed by Russia.

    Russia has denied targeting civilians and made no comment on the trial.

    Prosecutors say Mr Shishimarin was driving in a stolen vehicle with other soldiers in the north-eastern Sumy region when they encountered a 62-year-old cyclist using a phone.

    He was ordered to shoot the civilian to stop them from telling Ukrainian defenders about their location, according to the prosecutors.

    It is not clear how he was captured or what the nature of the evidence against him is.

    Mr Shishimarin spoke to confirm basic details such as his name. He is yet to enter a plea, and the trial will reconvene next week.

    Hundreds of bodies have been found in regions previously occupied by Russia.

    Some of Ukraine’s allies, such as the UK and US, have joined the country in accusing Russia of carrying out genocide.

    After the hearing, state prosecutor Andriy Synyuk told Reuters: “This is the first case today. But soon there will be a lot of these cases.”

    Source: BBC

  • I decided to leave Enyimba FC because of betting – Ex-Ghana goalkeeper Fatau Dauda

    Former Ghana goalkeeper Fatau Dauda has disclosed why he decided to leave Nigerian giants Enyimba FC few years ago.

    According to 37-year-old, most the players of Enyimba FC were involved in betting, hence he opted to leave to the club.

    He is currently without a club after leaving Ghana Premier League side Legon Cities.

    “There’s one particular reason why I decided to leave Enyimba FC. It’s all because of betting. It can completely destroy football. You know Nigeria is a big country. Sometimes, we can be on the road for two days travelling for an away game. We will go and lose a game but when we come on the bus, you will see some players happy,” Dauda told Angel TV.

    “You will see some players pressing their phones and checking scorelines of other league games. I later got to find out from one of our guys that some of the players in the team were betting on our matches. They were fixing the games and it was shocking.”

    He added, “It was the reason I decided to leave. I can’t be part of this and it was a waste of time playing in games when some people have already planned the outcome.”

    Dauda was in the Black Stars squad for the 2008 Africa Cup of Nations, and was the first choice keeper for the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations edition of the tournament.

    Source: Football Ghana

  • I am eager to play for Asante Kotoko but I need to regain full fitness – Asamoah Gyan

    Former Black Stars striker, Asamoah Gyan has insisted Asante Kotoko remains the only club he will like to play before he retires.

    The 36-year-old before his move to Legon Cities before the start of the 2020/21 Ghana Premier League season was linked to the Porcupine Warriors but the move could not materialize.

    The former Al Ain and Sunderland ace is now clubless after parting ways with the Royals after the expiration of his one-year contract.

    Speaking to Graphic Sports, the former Liberty Professionals forward insisted he has plans of playing for the club but must first regain fitness before the move could be materialized.

    “I support Kotoko, It’s in my plans to join Kotoko but as I always say I have to be fit,” Gyan said.

    “You cannot have the talent and not be ready. Talent-wise, I am sure everybody will agree with me but the most important thing is to get back in shape and make sure there is no injury then I can decide,” he added.

    Gyan remains the country’s all-time leading goal scorer with 51 goals for the senior national team, the Black Stars.

    Source: Football Ghana

  • Bayern join race for Pogba

    The latest transfer gossip on Manchester United is that Bayern Munich have joined the race for the soon-to-be free agent Paul Pogba, with Juventus, Paris St-Germain, Real Madrid and Manchester City already in the hunt for the 29-year-old France midfielder’s signature.

    The Mail says that United are monitoring Barcelona and Netherlands midfielder Frenkie de Jong’s situation at the Nou Camp but Barca have put a £70m price tag on the 25-year-old, who favours a move to a side in the Champions League.

    And 90 Min reports that West Ham retain an interesting in signing United and England forward Jesse Lingard, 29, who spent a season on loan with the Hammers and is out of contract this summer.

    They’re just some of the stories in today’s gossip column.

    Source: BBC

  • Women’s FA Cup final: Everything you need to know as Chelsea play Manchester City at Wembley

    Will it be Chelsea or Manchester City who are crowned Women’s FA Cup winners when the two sides face each other at Wembley Stadium on Sunday?

    Holders and three-time winners Chelsea are going for the double, having lifted the Women’s Super League title last Sunday.

    Manchester City are also aiming for their fourth FA Cup triumph and second piece of silverware this year after their thrilling 3-1 Continental League Cup final victory over Chelsea in March.

    The past five finals have been won by Chelsea or City, but it will be the first time the teams have met in the showpiece event, which will be shown live on BBC One.

    For the first time, the men’s and women’s finals will be played across the same weekend, with Thomas Tuchel’s Chelsea taking on Liverpool the day before

    New crowd record?

    The current record for a Women’s FA Cup final stands at 45,423, which was set when Chelsea beat Arsenal at Wembley in 2018.

    A record attendance looks on the cards, with the FA announcing on 11 May that more than 50,000 tickets had already been sold.

    The FA had been optimistic of breaking that record in December for the final delayed from the previous season, but after issuing more than 45,000 tickets for the match the attendance on the day at Wembley was 40,942.

    Double-double for dominant Chelsea?

    Chelsea are aiming to lift the trophy for a second consecutive season, after they beat Arsenal in the final for last year’s competition.

    Victory five months ago handed the Blues their first domestic treble, joining the WSL title and League Cup they had won in 2020-21 to wrap up a dominant campaign.

    Should Emma Hayes’s side triumph this season, they will have won five of the past six domestic trophies on offer.

    In this league campaign they beat City 1-0 at home in February and 4-0 away last November, although that latter match took place when Gareth Taylor’s team was plagued with injuries.

    Chelsea have been sensational in the WSL this campaign, winning 18 of their 22 fixtures, including their past nine in the top flight.

    In-form City aiming for number four

    Since losing 1-0 to Chelsea in February, City have won 13 straight games in all competitions – a run that includes March’s League Cup final win over Sunday’s opponents.

    In the league they claimed the final Champions League spot, finishing third, above Manchester United, despite a torrid start to the season.

    Last November, after a 4-0 defeat by Chelsea, City sat in ninth place, a distant 12 points off the top.

    It has been a remarkable turnaround and now the the three-time-FA-Cup-winners can move one clear of opponents Chelsea in the record books if they secure a fourth title.

    The North West outfit have won three of the past five FA Cups and have never lost an FA Cup final.

    Unstoppable in attack and immoveable in defence

    Chelsea’s route to Wembley saw them edge past Aston Villa and thrash Birmingham City and Leicester City, before a feisty last-four encounter with Arsenal was settled thanks to goals by Guro Reiten and Ji So-yun.

    Despite facing WSL opposition at every stage of this year’s tournament, they have conceded only one goal and scored 17 across their four ties.

    Gareth Taylor’s City team have also been dominant in the cup this season. They beat third-tier Nottingham Forest 8-0, embarrassed rivals Manchester United 4-1 and defeated Everton 4-0 in their first three rounds.

    The 4-1 semi-final win over West Ham United was emotional for City, with forward Chloe Kelly scoring her first goal since returning from a serious knee injury.

    City last lifted the FA Cup in November 2020 thanks to late extra-time goals from Georgia Stanway and Janine Beckie against Everton in a behind-closed-doors tie.

    Source: BBC

  • Sudanese protests against military rule persist

    Sudanese demonstrators are back on the streets to protest against the military in power and ask for the implementation of a civil government.

    Large crowds could be seen around the presidential palace in Khartoum responding to calls from several dissident groups on May 12. This is the most important turnout since the holy month of Ramadan.

    “All we are asking now is for the military council to step down and hand the state over to a civilian government in order to save the state, because Sudan is now collapsing, there is no justice, there is no freedom, and there is no peace.“, says Abd El-malik Ibrahim a protester in Khartoum.

    Activists have often condemned the use of live ammunition and tear gas by the security forces during clashes with protesters. According to Sudanese lawyers, over 80 political protesters are still in jail, many of whom are tortured.

    Source: Africa News
  • Rwandan genocide fugitive Protais Mpiranya confirmed dead

    The death has been confirmed of the last major Rwandan fugitive indicted by a war crimes court for his role in the 1994 genocide.

    Protais Mpiranya was head of the presidential guard and was accused of ordering the murder of the then-Prime Minister, Agathe Uwilingiyimana.

    His officers also murdered the 10 Belgian UN peacekeepers guarding her.

    Investigators tracked him down to Zimbabwe, where a recently exhumed grave confirmed he had died in 2006.

    They found that Mpiranya had used various aliases whilst on the run to evade capture for over 12 years.

    In the immediate aftermath of the genocide – in which about 800,000 ethnic Tutsis and moderate Hutus were killed by ethnic Hutu extremists in 100 days – he moved to Cameroon

    Others accused of taking part in the genocide had fled over the border to the Democratic Republic of Congo, forming a rebel group known as the FDLR.

    Mpiranya joined them in 1998, commanding a brigade that fought alongside Zimbabwe’s army, which had become embroiled in a conflict in DR Congo involving several nations often dubbed “Africa’s world war”.

    French troops driving past Hutu militiamen
    Image caption, French forces in Rwanda were accused of not doing enough to stop the killing

    He adopted the name Alain Hirwa and became known as “Commander Alain” – and was well respected by senior Zimbabwean officers, the investigation found.

    It was his Zimbabwean allies who organised refuge for him in Zimbabwe’s capital, Harare, after his indictment was made public in 2002 by the international tribunal set up to bring to justice those responsible for the genocide.

    He was charged with eight counts, including genocide, murder and rape, for “having instructed, supervised, encouraged, and assisted the crimes” carried out by the presidential guard.

    The “challenging and intensive” investigation to track him down was conducted by a UN body that handles outstanding war crimes cases for Rwanda and Yugoslavia.

    “For the victims of his crimes, Mpiranya was a feared and notorious fugitive, leader of the presidential guard during the genocide and later a top commander in the FDLR,” said the prosecutor of the International Residual Mechanism for Criminal Tribunals (IRMCT), Serge Brammertz.

    “Confirming his death provides the solace of knowing that he cannot cause further harm.”

    According to the IRMCT, during his four years in Zimbabwe, Mpiranya ran a business with his sister-in-law and was still connected with FLDR associates – and had a Ugandan passport under the name James Kakule.

    His wife and daughters went to live in the UK, but visited him in Harare.

    When he fell seriously ill in 2006, aged 50, with tuberculosis he was using the name Ndume Sambao – and this was the name on his gravestone when he was buried in a cemetery outside Harare.

    “Since October 2006, Mpiranya’s family and associates have gone to great lengths to conceal his death and place of burial,” the IRMCT said.

    “They have repeatedly provided false statements to investigators, and coached those who knew of Mpiranya’s presence and death in Harare to lie if questioned. His tombstone was purposefully designed to thwart its discovery.”

    How did the Rwandan genocide unfold?

    On 6 April 1994, a plane carrying then-President Juvenal Habyarimana – a Hutu – was shot down, killing all on board.

    Hutu extremists blamed the Tutsi rebel group, the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF), which denied the accusation.

    In a well-organised campaign of slaughter, militias were given hit lists of Tutsi victims. Many were killed with machetes in acts of appalling brutality. Little was done internationally to stop the killings.

    Eventually the RPF, backed by Uganda, marched on the capital Kigali. Some two million Hutus fled, mainly to DR Congo.

    Dozens of Hutus were convicted of roles in the killings by the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, based in Tanzania, and hundreds of thousands more faced trial in community courts in Rwanda.

    Source: BBC

  • Spain plans menstrual leave in new law for those with severe pain

    Spain is planning to introduce medical leave for women who suffer from severe period pain, media reports suggest.

    A draft bill says women could have three days of leave a month – extended to five in some circumstances.

    But politicians warned that the draft – leaked to Spanish media outlets – was still being worked on.

    If passed, it would be the first such legal entitlement in Europe. Only a handful of countries around the world have such legislation in place.

    The Spanish legislation is part of a much wider reproductive health reform which will include changes to the country’s abortion laws.

    Media outlets who have seen portions of the law report that it is due to be presented to cabinet early next week

    Three-day sick leave for painful periods will be allowed with a doctor’s note, the draft says, potentially extending to five on a temporary basis for particularly intense or incapacitating pain.

    But it is not expected to apply to those who suffer mild discomfort.

    It is part of a wider approach of treating menstruation as a health condition, El País reports, which also includes the abolishing of VAT on some hygiene products – the so-called “tampon tax” – and free hygiene products being made available at public centres such as schools and prisons.

    The draft also includes extended paid maternity leave before childbirth and changes to abortion laws outlined earlier this year by Equality Minister Irene Montero.

    That includes removing the requirement of aged 16 and 17 to have an abortion without the permission of their parents or guardians, which was introduced in 2015 by another government. It also eliminates a current three-day cooling-off period, and a requirement for abortion services to be provided in the public healthcare system.

    But doctors in traditionally Roman Catholic Spain will still be able to sign up to a register of conscientious objectors, El País reports.

    The proposed law will also include tighter rules around surrogacy, which is banned in Spain.

    Source: BBC

     

     

  • Mahama condemns killing of Al Jazeera reporter, demands justice for Ahmed Suale

    Former President John Dramani Mahama has denounced the assassination of Al Jazeera journalist Shireen Abu Akleh, who was killed while covering an Israeli operation in the occupied West Bank city of Jenin.

    In a Facebook message, the former President expressed his condolences to the reporter’s family and urged for an independent investigation into his death.

    He praised Shireen Abu Akleh, describing her as an expert in her profession.

    “The killing of ace Al Jazeera journalist Shireen Abu Akleh is a most condemnable act. For a journalist who has for many years covered and brought us reports of events in Israel and the Middle East region, we all mourn her loss. It is our prayer that whoever pulled the trigger and any associates will be brought to justice through an Independent and transparent process,” he said.

    The 51-year-old Palestinian-American journalist died, while her producer survived a bullet wound. They were “presumably” shot by Palestinian gunmen during an exchange of fire, according to Israel’s prime minister.

    While commiserating with Al Jazeera on their loss, John Mahama took the opportunity to highlight the country’s rising number of journalist attacks.
    He urged President Akufo-Addo and the Ghana Police Service to speed up the investigation into the killing of Ahmed Hussein Suale, the head undercover investigator of Tiger Eye PI.

    He stated that the perpetrators of such a heinous crime should be held accountable.

    “Having said that, we also note that the murderers of Ghanaian journalist, Ahmed Suale, are still walking free. We call on the Akufo-Addo administration and the Police Service to take this investigation seriously and bring the murderers to justice”.

    On January 16, 2019, Ahmed Suale was assassinated in Madina, Accra. His death came as a result of his final inquiry (Number 12), which revealed corruption within the Ghana Football Association. The murder case has not been concluded three years after his death.

    Source: backend.theindependentghana.com

  • Brendon McCullum: England appoint former New Zealand captain as new men’s Test coach

    England have appointed former New Zealand captain Brendon McCullum as men’s Test coach on a four-year deal.

    McCullum, 40, will be in place for England’s first Test against world champions New Zealand at Lord’s on 2 June.

    He succeeds Chris Silverwood, who left his position in February following the heavy Ashes defeat in Australia.

    McCullum said he is aiming to “move the team forward into a more successful era” alongside new captain Ben Stokes.

    He added: “In taking this role on, I am acutely aware of the significant challenges the team faces at present, and I strongly believe in my ability to help the team emerge as a stronger force once we’ve confronted them head-on.”

    England are winless in nine Tests and have only one won of their past 17 matches.

    McCullum’s appointment continues England’s post-Ashes overhaul, with Rob Key having taken over as managing director last month, replacing Andrew Strauss, who had stepped in on an interim basis following the sacking of Ashley Giles in February.

    Root stood down as captain following March’s 1-0 series defeat in the West Indies and was replaced by Stokes.

    The England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) selection panel of Key, strategic adviser Strauss, chief executive Tom Harrison and performance director Mo Bobat said McCullum was the “outstanding candidate” for the role.

    “I’ve enjoyed several robust conversations with Rob Key about the direction of travel for the team and have found his enthusiasm contagious,” added McCullum.

    “I’m no stranger to bringing about change within a team environment, and I can’t wait to get started.

    “Ben Stokes is the perfect character to inspire change around him, and I look forward to working closely with him to build a successful unit around us.”

    McCullum, who retired from playing in 2019, has never coached in first-class cricket, but played 101 Tests for New Zealand from 2004 to 2016.

    He is currently head coach of Indian Premier League franchise Kolkata Knight Riders and previously coached Trinbago Knight Riders to the 2020 Caribbean Premier League title.

    Kolkata are likely to go out of the IPL next Wednesday after their two remaining group games and McCullum is set to arrive in the UK later this month.

    The squad for the first Test against New Zealand is set to be chosen next week.

    In looking for Silverwood’s successor, Key split the England head coach position into Test and white-ball roles.

    McCullum, a close friend of England limited-overs captain Eoin Morgan, was initially approached over the white-ball post but has secured the Test job ahead of former South Africa and India coach Gary Kirsten, who was thought to be favourite for the position.

    “It has been a real privilege to get to know Brendon and understand his views and vision for the game,” said Key.

    “He has a recent history of changing cricket culture and environments for the better, and I believe he is the person to do that for England’s red-ball cricket.

    “I believe in Brendon and Ben Stokes – a formidable coach and captain partnership. Time for us all to buckle up and get ready for the ride.”

    After three Tests against New Zealand, England face India in the rescheduled fifth Test in July before three Tests against South Africa in August and September.

    McCullum captained New Zealand in 31 Tests, 62 one-day internationals and 28 Twenty20 internationals, leading them to the 2015 50-over World Cup final, where they were beaten by Australia.

    His spell as Black Caps Test captain started a resurgence that eventually saw them win the World Test Championship last year under his successor Kane Williamson.

    The wicketkeeper-batter scored 6,453 runs at an average of 38.64, with 12 hundreds – including the fastest Test century of all time, off just 54 balls against Australia in 2016.

    England are not as close to naming the new white-ball coach, with candidates likely to be spoken to again next week before the first engagement of the summer, a three-match one-day series in the Netherlands, begins on 17 June.

    Source: BBC

  • De Bruyne scores four to send Man City clear

    Kevin de Bruyne’s stunning four-goal haul helped Manchester City thump Wolves and restored their three-point lead at the top of the Premier League.

    Pep Guardiola’s side now need only four points from their final two fixtures to ensure they will finish above Liverpool and win their fourth title in five seasons.

    De Bruyne has played a central role in all of those previous triumphs but this was an individual display that must rank among the finest of his stellar collection in a City shirt.

    The Belgian started the move that led to his side’s opener, and finished it too, running on to Bernardo Silva’s pass to slot home.

    Wolves did not take long to respond, with a rapid counter-attack ending when Pedro Neto found Leander Dendoncker in space on the edge of the box to fire past Ederson.

    This was De Bruyne’s stage, however, and he quickly put his side back in front. Again, he played a part in the build-up too, and was in the right place to smash in the rebound after Jose Sa beat Raheem Sterling to his pass.

    His third goal – again with his so-called weaker left foot – was the pick of the bunch, and saw him drive towards the edge of the area and curl into the bottom corner.

    De Bruyne’s hat-trick was his first for City and at 24 minutes was the third-quickest in Premier League history.

    He celebrated in style by copying the meditation celebration of his soon-to-be team-mate Erling Haaland, who City reached an agreement to sign this week, but he was not finished yet.

    City came out for the second half looking for more goals to improve their goal difference, which was already three better than Liverpool’s before kick-off.

    Raheem Sterling thought he had extended their lead when he ran clear and beat Sa but an offside flag cut short his celebrations.

    It was left to De Bruyne to make it 4-1, typically making no mistake when a Phil Foden cross was deflected into his path and finding the bottom corner with his first right-footed effort of the night.

    More chances followed, with Foden hitting the post and Sterling missing an easy chance but eventually someone else did get in on the act, with Sterling tapping into an empty net after Sa denied Joao Cancelo.

    This was still the De Bruyne show, however. City are not over the line yet, and their next test is an awkward trip to West Ham on Sunday, but on this evidence they will take some stopping.

    Source: BBC

  • United States passes one million Covid-19 deaths

    The US has passed more than one million Covid-related deaths, says the White House.

    President Joe Biden said the country was marking “a tragic milestone” and each death was “an irreplaceable loss”.

    It’s the highest official total in the world – although the World Health Organization believes the true death toll may be much higher elsewhere.

    The US has also recorded more than 80 million Covid cases, out of a 330 million population.

    The first confirmed case was reported on 20 January 2020, when a man flew home to Seattle from Wuhan in China.

    The 35-year-old survived, after 10 days of pneumonia, coughs, fever, nausea and vomiting. But deaths began to be reported just a few weeks later.

    In the two years since, death rates have ebbed and flowed as waves of the virus swept across the country – reaching highs of more than 4,000 a day in early 2021.

    Public health experts give several reasons for the high US death toll – including high rates of obesity and hypertension, overworked hospital systems, some vaccine hesitancy and a large older population.

    Each US state may have a slightly different way to define a Covid death, and such deaths are often not solely because of the virus.

    “One million Covid deaths, one million empty chairs around the family dinner table, each irreplaceable losses,” said President Biden in a televised statement on Thursday morning.

    “Our heart goes out to all those who are struggling, asking themselves, how do we go on without him, how do we go on without her?”

    The president ordered the White House flags to be lowered to half mast to mark the milestone.

    Source: BBC

  • Ukraine conflict: Russian soldiers seen shooting dead unarmed civilians

    When Leonid Pliats and his boss were shot in the back by Russian soldiers, the killing was captured on CCTV cameras in clear and terrible detail. The footage, which was obtained by the BBC, is now being investigated by Ukrainian prosecutors as a suspected war crime.

    It was the height of the fighting around Kyiv and the main roads into the capital were a battlefield, including around the bicycle shop where Leonid worked as a security guard.

    But this was no firefight: the video clearly shows heavily armed Russian soldiers shooting the two unarmed Ukrainians and then looting the business.

    We have pieced together the full sequence of events, matching what was recorded on multiple CCTV cameras around the site with the testimony of people Leonid phoned that day, as well as the Ukrainian volunteer fighters who tried to rescue him.

    The Russians arrive in a stolen van daubed with the V sign used by Russian forces and the words Tank Spetsnaz in black paint. They wear Russian military uniform and approach with their guns up, fingers on the triggers.

    Leonid walks towards the soldiers with his hands up to show he’s unarmed and no threat.

    Russian soldiers shortly before they destroy a camera
    Image caption, The Russian soldiers had not realised they were being filmed

    The Russians initially talk to him and his boss through the fence. There is no audio on the footage but the men seem calm, they even smoke. Then the Ukrainians turn away and the soldiers start to leave.

    Suddenly they turn back, crouch then shoot the two men multiple times in their backs.

    One is killed outright but somehow Leonid manages to stagger to his feet. He even ties his belt around his thigh to slow the blood, then stumbles to his cabin where he begins to call for help.

    Vasyl Podlevskyi spoke to his friend twice that day, as he sat bleeding heavily.

    Leonid told him the soldiers claimed they don’t kill civilians, then they shot him.

    “I said can you at least bandage yourself up? And he told me, Vasya, I barely crawled here. Everything hurts so much. I feel really bad,” Vasyl remembers the call.

    “So I told him to hang in there and started phoning the territorial defence.”

    The men he called used to sell air conditioning before the war.

    Abandoned Ukrainian tanks
    Image caption, There has been fierce fighting on the outskirts of Ukraine’s capital

    Now volunteer fighters, Sasha and Kostya show me video on their mobile phones of Russian tanks rolling past their positions. Their job was to send real-time information on Russian movements to Ukraine’s military positions up the road.

    When Leonid Pliats was injured they were tasked with crossing the dangerous E40 highway to try to save him. Even today, the road is littered with the burned-out carcasses of Russian tanks, a reminder of the intensity of the fighting.

    As the security guard lay bleeding, Russian troops were still on site.

    On the CCTV you see them shooting their way into rooms, stealing bicycles and even a scooter and lolling around in the director’s office, drinking his whisky, and rifling through his cupboards.

    Outnumbered and only lightly armed, Sasha and Kostya were forced to wait although they realised that Leonid was dying.

    “We talked to him on the phone, we tried to calm him. We told him, it’s ok. Everything will be ok. You’ll survive,” Sasha tells me they did their best to comfort him.

    “We said we were on our way. Maybe that helped him. Maybe. But unfortunately, by the time we made it, he was dead.”

    Even as they collected the two men’s bodies, the volunteer fighters had to take cover as a Russian tank rolled past.

    There is ample evidence against the men responsible for these killings. We have studied the video in minute detail and the Russian soldier who we believe was one of the killers is clearly visible, his face uncovered.

    Leonid and his cat
    Image caption, Leonid was 65 when he died

    It is a long time before his friends realise they are being filmed and smash one of the security cameras.

    We showed the footage to the chief of police for Kyiv region and he told us the bodies of 37 civilians, all of them shot dead, were found along the road to Ukraine’s capital after Russian forces were pushed back.

    The Prosecutor’s office confirms that it is now investigating the killing of Leonid and his colleague as a possible war crime: one of more than 10,000 cases they have registered.

    “My Dad was not a military man at all. He was a pensioner. They killed a 65-year-old. What for?” Leonid’s daughter, Yulia Androshchuk, wants to know.

    She is abroad and hasn’t even been able to bury her father yet because of the war.

    “I’m not so much furious as full of grief – and fear. These damn Russians are so out of control, I’m afraid of what they might do next,” she told me.

    Yulia hopes those responsible will stand trial someday, somehow. For now, she wants people to know exactly what happened to her father and for the brutality to stop.

    Source: BBC

  • Top DR Congo police officer found guilty of killing activist

    A military court in the Democratic Republic of Congo has sentenced to death a high-ranking police officer for his role in the murder of top human rights activists Floribert Chebeya and his driver.

    Christian Ngoy Kenga Kenga was pronounced guilty of murder, desertion and the misappropriation of weapons and ammunition, the court said on Wednesday.

    Jacques Migabo, another police officer, was sentenced to 12 years, while Paul Mwilambwe who had been a key witness in the trial was acquitted, UN-sponsored Radio Okapi says.

    In 2011, four policeman were sentenced to death for the murder – but it was thought that there were other more high-ranking officials behind the killing.

    DR Congo has not carried out the death penalty for many years.

    Chebeya led the Congolese charity The Voice of the Voiceless, and was a critic of the government. He had received regular threats to his life during his career of more than 20 years.

    His body was found tied up in the back of his car on a roadside in the capital, Kinshasa, in June 2010. The discovery came on the day that he had gone to police general headquarters to meet the then head of national police, Gen John Numbi.

    His driver Fidèle Bazana went missing on the same day and later the authorities pronounced him dead.

    Source: BBC

  • East Legon Marwako closed down over food poisoning allegations

    The Food and Drugs Authority (FDA) has closed down Marwako Restaurant’s East Legon branch, after some customers reported food poisoning over the weekend.

    Multiple Twitter users, including one Edward Elohim, reported of the same symptoms after visiting the eatery over the weekend.

    Edward Elohim says that he is one of 70 patients being treated at Nyaho Clinic following a meal at Marwako.

    Following these, FDA together with “relevant agencies” have decided to examine the allegations.

    The Authority has therefore assured all affected persons and the general public, of their intent to extensively scrutinize the matter and take the needed actions to avoid future occurrence.

    Meanwhile, Marwako’s management has failed to respond to the situation, which has many Ghanaians concerned.

    Source: theindependentghana

  • We won’t increase tariffs more than 10% – ECG

    The Electricity Company of Ghana (EGG) has indicated that it will not adjust tariffs beyond 10% in the future should the Public Utilities Regulatory Commission (PURC) approve its pending proposal.

    The company is requesting a 148% increment in tariffs, which the PURC is yet to either approve or disapprove.

    At a stakeholder engagement on the proposals on Wednesday, May 11, Sylvia Noshie, General Manager for Regulatory Management at ECG, stated that the company is looking forward to having the PURC approve its proposal; something that will go a long way to help enhance efficiency and effectiveness.

    She added that some technical and commercial losses also accounted for the increased proposal.

    Sylvia Noshie further explained that increased tariffs were, “partly as a result of an accumulated adjustment for the past four years.”

    She noted that Ghanaians will pay more than the 148% next year if the PURC disapproves of the current proposal.

    “If PURC approved the 148%, there will be an average yearly increment of 7%,” Sylvia Noshie said as part of ECG’s projections.

    Source: Ghanaweb

  • GFA comfortable with Otto Addo handling two coaching roles with Ghana & Dortmund

    The Ghana Football Association (GFA) has disclosed that they are ‘okay’ with Otto Addo handling two coaching roles with the Black Stars and Borussia Dortmund.

    GFA believes the dual roles will not get in the way of adequately preparing the Black Stars for the upcoming 2023  Africa Cup of Nations qualifiers and the 2022 FIFA World Cup in Qatar.

    Otto Addo confirmed last week that Dortmund have given him the permission to coach Ghana during the World Cup in Qatar at the end of the year as well as handle Ghana’s AFCON qualifiers which would commence with a home match against Madagascar on June 1.

    The Association is closing in on appointing the 46-year-old as permanent Ghana coach as well as other members of the Black Stars technical team.

    The Otto Addo-led team qualified the Black Stars to the global showpiece following a 1-1 draw against Nigeria in the final play-offs of the World Cup at the Moshood Abiola National Stadium in Abuja in March.

    The Technical team was made up of Aston Villa U-19 coach George Boateng and Mas-ud Didi Dramani of Nordsjaelland with Chris Hughton serving as Technical Advisor.

    Otto Addo became first Ghanaian to have represented Ghana at the World Cup and also qualified the team to the Mundial as a coach.

    Ghana have been placed in Group H together with Portugal, Uruguay and South Korea for the World Cup which is scheduled for November 21 to December 18 in Qatar.

    Source: Football Ghana

  • Brighton defender Tariq Lamptey inches close to nationality switch to Ghana

    Brighton and Hove Albion defender, Tariq Lamptey has agreed to play for the senior national team, the Black Stars ahead of the 2022 World Cup in Qatar.

    The former Chelsea graduate has been on the radar of the country for years since his Premier League breakthrough.

    The move to get Tariq to switch allegiance from the Three Lions to play for the Black Stars proved difficult because the player was weighing his options with England.

    Speaking in an interview, London-based Ghanaian coach Freddie has said on Kumasi-based Pure FM stated that an agreement has been reached and the Brighton and Hove Albion defender will now play for Ghana.

    “Tariq Lamptey’s switch is done. He is available now for Ghana and it now depends on the coach if he will invite him for the upcoming games or not,” he said.

    “To be honest I shouldn’t be saying this but the switch is done,” Coach Freddie added.

    Lamptey has so far made 29 appearances in all competition in the ongoing season.

    Source: FootballGhana

  • Rob Edwards: Watford appoint former Forest Green boss as manager from 2022-23

    Relegated Watford have appointed former Forest Green Rovers boss, Rob Edwards, as their new manager from the end of the current season.

    The confirmation follows Edwards’ departure from Rovers, the club he has just led to the League Two title.

    Forest Green had earlier said negotiations between Watford and Edwards took place “behind our backs”.

    Current Watford boss Roy Hodgson is due to leave the Hornets at the end of the current campaign.

    Forest Green’s owner Dale Vince told BBC Sport: “It takes a bit of the shine off winning promotion. If there’s any karma in football they’ll languish in the Championship and we’ll meet them there in a few years’ time.”

    “[Edwards] said he’d been advised by Watford and his agent to keep it a secret from Forest Green which I think is pretty poor from them. It’s poor from Rob and he knows it.

    “I thought I knew him better as a person.”

    Watford were relegated from the Premier League after defeat by Hodgson’s former team Crystal Palace on Saturday.

    In a statement, Watford said: “Rob had a contractual provision allowing him to leave Forest Green Rovers at any time to discuss employment opportunities at other clubs and the Hornets are delighted to confirm our discussions concluded today.”

    Edwards, 39, will become Watford’s eighth permanent manager since the start of 2018.

    The former Wales international took over at Rovers last summer, having previously coached England’s youth teams, and led the Gloucestershire club, who entered the Football League in 2017, to a first promotion from League Two.

    Edwards has previously managed Wolves on an interim basis and Telford United full-time.

    He left Telford to work as a coach in the England Under-20s setup, eventually being named head coach of the country’s Under-16s side from 2020 before his move to Forest Green.

    Source: BBC

  • Liverpool win at Villa to keep title hopes alive

    Liverpool maintained the pressure on Premier League leaders Manchester City as they survived an early scare to come from behind and win at Aston Villa.

    Jurgen Klopp’s side suffered a shock after only three minutes when Douglas Luiz bundled home after Liverpool keeper Alisson failed to hold his header.

    Liverpool were on terms within three minutes when Joel Matip scored following a goalmouth scramble and the sides then exchanged chances before Sadio Mane put the visitors ahead with a superb angled header from Luis Diaz’s cross in the 65th minute.

    The win means Liverpool now lie second only on goal difference before City’s visit to Wolves on Wednesday.

    Former Liverpool striker Danny Ings wasted opportunities to equalise and inflict a blow to his old club’s hopes of winning a historic quadruple – although the Reds did suffer an injury setback when influential midfielder Fabinho went off in the first half with a hamstring problem that must make him doubtful for Saturday’s FA Cup final against Chelsea.

    Liverpool pass stern Villa test

    Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp made five changes from the side that drew with Spurs at Anfield on Saturday, resting tired legs and freshening things up with Saturday’s Wembley showpiece in mind.

    It was a ploy that worked in the end, although Liverpool were set back on their heels when they were punished for a slow start as Villa went ahead.

    Liverpool showed their character and the threat they carry to reply instantly and, while this was not a particularly assured performance, the only thing that matters at this stage is the final result, and this was a case of job done.

    The injury to Fabinho will be a serious worry to Klopp with FA Cup and Champions League finals on the horizon but he will hope the Brazilian’s swift removal in the first half will limit the damage.

    Once again January signing Diaz was a key figure, a danger all night and the provider of the cross that brought Mane’s decisive header. The Colombian’s signing has proved to be a masterstroke.

    Now the scenery switches to Molineux on Wednesday, where leaders City face Wolves, who still have European aspirations of their own.

    Pep Guardiola’s side still have that advantage on goal difference but Liverpool’s win at least ensures they stay right on Manchester City’s shoulders as the season reaches its climax.

    Gerrard with work to do

    Aston Villa will finish the season in a comfortable mid-table position but so much of this term has been about manager Steven Gerrard discovering what he has at his disposal then laying the groundwork for next season.

    He has talent in the shape of Emiliano Buendia but big decisions remain about whether he will strengthen in defence – where captain Tyrone Mings still looks suspect – and on the possibility of a permanent deal for his former Liverpool colleague Philippe Coutinho.

    The Brazilian, on loan from Barcelona, only showed his ability in flashes here and it was clear the Villa fans felt more of a surge of hope when he was replaced by Buendia.

    Gerrard certainly has something to work with but a lot needs to be done and he is a driven personality who will not want to cruise along in mid-table.

    Villa, and Ings in particular, had plenty of opportunities to take advantage of some uncharacteristic uncertainty in the visitors’ defence, with keeper Alisson fortunate to get away with one or two moments of poor judgement – although he then made a crucial save from the striker when he broke clear with a chance to equalise.

    The end of the season will be the end of Gerrard’s fact-finding mission and the serious reconstruction will begin at Villa Park.

    Source: BBC

  • Germany to increase military presence in Mali as part of UN mission

    Germany is ready to increase its military contingent in Mali as part of the UN mission Minusma, a government spokeswoman announced Wednesday.

    “The current number of 1,100 soldiers has been increased by 300” to an authorized ceiling of 1,400, in particular to compensate for the departure of French forces, Christiane Hoffmann said at a regular press briefing.

    She was speaking at the end of a meeting of the Council of Ministers which endorsed the extension of the mandate until May 31, 2023.

    The German deputies must still give their green light to this decision.

    Until April, the German army was involved in two missions in Mali: 328 soldiers are participating in the European Union Training Mission in Mali (EUTM), and about 1,100 in the United Nations Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in Mali (UNMISMA).

    But the European Union stopped training the army and the national guard in April. The training mission will resume elsewhere in the Sahel, however, “with an emphasis on Niger,” the spokeswoman said.

    The future of UNMISMA itself also does not appear to be fully guaranteed after the withdrawal of French forces, Hoffmann acknowledged.

    Several countries have undertaken to review their participation in the Minusma. The West has denounced the presence of mercenaries from the Russian group Wagner, who came to Mali at the call of the junta.

    In Mali, where violence by jihadist groups and militias has killed thousands since 2012, the military took power in two coups in August 2020 and May 2021.

    Source: AfricaNews

  • Gunmen kill seven Nigerian soldiers in ambush on army

    At least seven soldiers have been killed and two others missing in Nigeria in an ambush by gunmen while on patrol in the eastern state of Taraba, two military sources said on Wednesday.

    The attack occurred on Tuesday night when troops from the 93 Battalion came under heavy fire in the village of Tati in the Takum local government area of Taraba. A brigadier general and his aide were missing after the attack, the sources said as reported by Reuters.

    “Right now a search and rescue operation is ongoing,” said an army source from the 93 battalions who spoke to the media on condition of anonymity.

    Taraba suffered two separate bombings last month that were claimed by Islamic State militants and killed at least three people and injured more than 30.

    Nigeria has for over a decade contended with an Islamist insurgency that has targeted communities and security forces in northern parts of the country.

    Source: AfricaNews

  • IS video said to show Nigerian Christian executions

    The Islamic State group has published a video which it says shows the execution of 20 Christian civilians in north-eastern Nigeria’s Borno state.

    Speaking in the Hausa language, one of the masked militants who was brandishing a knife said it was to avenge the killing of the group’s leaders in the Middle East earlier this year.

    The BBC has not been able to verify the contents of the video or where the footage was shot.

    It was published on an IS-linked news outlet and shows three groups of captives in civilian clothes.

    The authorities have not yet commented on the video.

    The IS militants, which operate in the Lake Chad region under the name Islamic State West Africa Province (Iswap), along with another Islamist militant group, Boko Haram, have recently suffered huge losses as a result of attacks by a multi-national military force.

    Such military campaigns in the past have usually been followed by propaganda videos from the extremist groups.

    Source: BBC

  • Al Jazeera reporter killed during Israeli raid in West Bank

    A Palestinian-American journalist has been shot dead while reporting for Al Jazeera on a raid by Israeli forces in the occupied West Bank city of Jenin.

    The Qatar-based network said Sherine Abu Aqla, 51, was shot “deliberately” and “in cold blood” by Israeli troops. Her producer was also shot and wounded.

    Israel’s prime minister said it was “likely” they were shot by Palestinian gunmen during an exchange of fire.

    It comes amid a surge in violence between Israel and the Palestinians.

    The Palestinian president said he held the Israeli government fully responsible for what he described as a “crime of execution”.

    Sherine Abu Aqla (Al Jazeera handout)
    Sherine Abu Aqla was known to millions for her coverage of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Image source, Al Jazeera

    The Israeli military said its soldiers and security forces conducted a raid on the Jenin refugee camp early on Wednesday to apprehend “terrorist suspects”.

    “During the activity, tens of Palestinian gunmen fired at and hurled explosive devices toward the soldiers. The soldiers responded with fire toward the gunmen and hits were identified.”

    The Palestinian health ministry said Sherine Abu Aqla was hit in the head by a live bullet as she covered the raid. She was taken to hospital in a critical condition and later pronounced dead.

    Another Palestinian journalist, Al Jazeera producer Ali Samoudi, was shot in the back and was in a stable condition in hospital, the health ministry added.

    “We were going to film the Israeli army operation and suddenly they shot us without asking us to leave or stop filming,” Al Jazeera cited Mr Samoudi as saying.

    “The first bullet hit me and the second bullet hit Sherine. There was no Palestinian military resistance at all at the scene,” he added.

    Source: BBC