Author: Chris Kodo

  • Climate change brings fires, floods and moths to Siberia

    Best known as a vast, cold tundra, Russia’s sprawling Siberia region is being transformed by climate change that has brought with it warmer temperatures, forest fires and growing swarms of hungry moth larvae.

    Spanning millions of square kilometres east of the Urals to the Pacific Ocean, the area has been particularly hard hit this year by extreme weather, which scientists say is the result of global warming.

    Photographs of wildflower fields in local media last month were a rare sight so early in the year in the normally chilly region — and ice cream sales were up 30 per cent.

    “This winter was the hottest in Siberia since records began 130 years ago,” said Marina Makarova, the chief meteorologist at Russia’s Rosgidromet weather service.

    “Average temperatures were up to six degrees centigrade higher than the seasonal norms.”

    Then spring came and with it much warmer temperatures. Makarova says April saw some days reach 30 C or higher.

    The warmer temperatures didn’t just bring wildflowers and boosted ice cream sales.

    Rainfall was up by a third in eastern Siberia, sparking devastating floods that forced thousands to be evacuated, particularly in the town of Tulun and the surrounding area.

    – ‘Huge moths’ –

    Swarms of the Siberian silk moth, whose larvae eat away at conifer trees in the region’s forests, have grown rapidly amid the rising temperatures.

    The moths are usually inactive during winter and eat in spring, summer and autumn periods which are now lengthening.

    “In all my long career as a specialist, I’ve never seen moths so huge and growing so quickly,” said Vladimir Soldatov, a moth expert, who warns of “tragic consequences” for forests.

    The larvae, which are taking over larger areas of forest, strip trees of their needles and make them more susceptible to forest fires.

    The moth “has moved 150 kilometres north compared to its usual territory and that’s because of global warming,” Soldatov told AFP.

    In the Krasnoyarsk region of eastern Siberia, more than 120,000 trees have had to be treated to kill the larvae, according to the regional forest protection centre.

    Another insect pest, the bark beetle that bores into tree trunks, has also recently colonised the region. It has flourished since 2003 as the climate became milder.

    With the snow melting earlier in the year in northern Siberia, exposed dry vegetation and soil means fires can spread easily, said Alexei Yaroshenko, who heads the forest section at Greenpeace Russia.

    From January to mid-May, fires devastated 4.8 million hectares in Siberia, among them 1.1 million hectares of the high-latitude boreal forest, according to a Greenpeace report published Tuesday.

    This year’s fires follow on from exceptionally severe blazes last summer.

    – Forest fires ‘doubled’ –

    Climate change has led the number of forest fires to “double in 10 years,” said Vyacheslav Kharuk, the head of the forest monitoring laboratory at the Forest Institute in the city of Krasnoyarsk.

    The fires risk cutting the capacity of far-northern boreal forests to retain carbon dioxide and methane, which will lead to higher emissions of greenhouse gases that contribute to climate change.

    According to research by Kharuk’s laboratory, between 2000 and 2009, around three million hectares of forest caught fire every year. Between 2010 and 2019, the average was six million hectares.

    In years to come “the area of the fires will increase to double or four times the size,” he predicted.

    The news is not all bad: the changing nature of Siberia’s landscape will attract new species of birds and animals, Kharuk added.

    “Our steppes are getting greener. Our lakes are warming up. Siberia is becoming a more appealing region for animals and for us, too.”

    But, he says, the number of extreme weather events means he is already starting to “miss our winters with temperatures of minus 40 degrees centigrade”.

    Source: france24.com

  • Motherhood looks beautiful on Moesha; Fall in love with this picture of Moesha bonding with her baby

    Socialite and claimed actress Moesha Boduong has given her Instagram family something to feed on and they are doing good at it.

    Moesha has a baby or so it seems.

    In a picture sighted, Moesha is seen cradling a beautiful baby girl with a smile as huge as 6th March 1957.

    It is not hard to notice that motherhood looks beautiful on Moesha but we know this baby could not be hers.

    Moesha made her way to visit Tracey Boakye and decided to take some beautiful shots with her baby girl.

    Moesha should consider having a mini her sometime soon…

    Source: GhanaCelebrities.Com

  • Saudi Arabia’s oil-export revenues plunged US$11 billion in the first quarter as crude prices tanked

    Saudi Arabia’s oil exports dropped by $11 billion in the first three months of 2020, the kingdom’s statistics agency said this week.

    Saudi Arabia’s revenue from oil exports tanked 21.9% or about $11 billion in the first quarter of 2020, according to official data released by the country’s statistics agency.

    The General Authority for Statistics said the sharp decline fueled a 20.7% year-on-year drop in the kingdom’s total revenue from merchandise exports to $53 billion. The drop in exports reflected depressed oil prices last quarter, as the coronavirus pandemic hammered demand for fuel.

    Saudi Arabia and Russia also waged an oil-price war for several weeks that only ended in April after OPEC and its allies agreed to cut crude production by 10% . Lower prices contributed to oil exports making up 75.8% of Saudi Arabia’s total exports last quarter, down from 77% a year earlier.

    The global downturn didn’t just weigh on Saudi Arabia’s oil exports. Its revenue from non-oil exports, such as plastics and chemicals, fell by 16.5% in the first three months of the year.

    Saudi Arabia’s main trading partner was China last quarter, as the world’s second-largest economy bought about $9 billion worth of its exports. Japan and India were its next two biggest buyers, buying $5.3 billion and $5.2 billion of its exports respectively.

    Source: markets.businessinsider.com

  • Why I apply the ninety day rule – Freelove of TV3’s Date Rush

    Due to the fear of the extreme pain caused by ‘broken- heart’, most ladies in particular have adopted several measures to prevent or cushion themselves against it. Some ladies have adopted measures such as the ninety-day rule; where a man who is interested in that particular lady must demonstrate beyond all reasonable doubts that he is not just in for physical intimacy but really loves her.

    Well, Portia Yayra Freelove is not an exception. Popularly known as Freelove, she was a recent contestant on TV3’s Date Rush program, where her advances were soundly rejected by one Ignatius. The native of Volta Region confirmed in an interview with Zionfelix that she only wanted to date Ignatius not to be in a relationship with him.

    On her ninety day rule, she said that she puts men through that rule, of course without the men’s knowledge, because she wants test the men’s resolve (whether the men love her or just want to be physically intimate with her). When asked whether she has been successful since she adopted the rule, she answered that she dated two men after they had successfully passed the 90 day rule but it all ended in tears.

    She however said she will not give up but continue with her 90 day rule knowing very well that one day she’ll be successful.

    Well, a man will stay with you when he wants to, with or without the 90 day rule. After all, 90days is just 3 months and a man can pretend for more than 3 months. There are several examples of couples who dated for years and kept themselves pure until marriage, only to find out after marriage that their husbands had children with other women.

    What is your opinion on the ninety day rule? Do you think it works? Any experience? Feel free to share your thoughts in the comment section.

    Source: OhemaaGladie

  • Juliet Ibrahim and Bob Valentino rekindle their relationship as they catch up on a video chat

    Screen goddess, Juliet Ibrahim has finally rekindled the friendly relationship between her and American singer Bob Valentino.

    Some years back, the American singer visited Ghana and during his visit the two got along so well that many speculated they were in a relationship or probably had a sexual affair during the visit.

    However Juliet Ibrahim debunked that rumor and since then much was not seen from the two as their friendly relationship toned down.

    But it seems the two have brought back the light in their relationship as they have linked up once again in a video chat.

    Juliet Ibrahim posted a video where the two were having a live chat, talking about their lives as well as general happenings around the world.

    The actress posted the video with the caption, “Had a very great conversation with @bobbyvshow the other day as we spoke about our lives, current happenings around the world”

    Watch video below;

    Source: ghbase.com

  • Cardi B still feeling the African vibe as she breaks her waist with African music Watch video

    American singer, Cardi B seem to be still feeling the African vibe after visiting Africa months ago for shows and socialization.

    Late last year, Cardi B visited Ghana and Nigeria specifically for performances and connected with the African vibe.

    Despite her short stay, the American singer seem to have taken much of Africa with her, going back to her country.

    Cardi B was seen in a recent video breaking her waist and dancing like an African to an African music.

    With the singers dance moves one would think that she has lived much of her life in Africa rather than States where she lives.

    Watch video below;

    Source: ghbase.com

  • One in five Iranians may have had the coronavirus – Health official

    Nearly one in five Iranians may have been infected with the novel coronavirus since the country’s outbreak started in February, a health official said Tuesday.

    “About 15 million Iranians may have experienced being infected with this virus since the outbreak began,” said Ehsan Mostafavi, a member of the task force set up to combat COVID-19.

    This meant the virus was “much less lethal than we or the world had anticipated”, the semi-official ISNA news agency quoted him as saying.

    The figure represents 18.75 per cent of the more than 80 million population of Iran, which on Tuesday announced another 74 deaths from the coronavirus.

    Mostafavi said it was derived from serology tests to identify antibodies in patients who have recovered from the illness.

    These differ from polymerising chain reaction (PCR) tests, which detect the presence of an antigen.

    Iran says it has carried out more than one million PCR tests to “confirm” infections and report them so far.

    Health ministry spokeswoman Sima Sadat Lari said 74 new coronavirus fatalities in the past 12 hours had raised the overall death toll to 8,425.

    Cases of infection rose by 2,095 over the same period to total 175,927, she added.

    Lari replaced Kianoush Jahanpour as the health ministry’s spokesperson on Tuesday, according to a ministry statement.

    Health Minister Saeed Namaki called on her to “avoid politicisation” of issues and to coordinate with him “before making any remarks on social media or to the press,” it added.

    Jahanpour had come under fire in March after saying China’s reporting of its COVID-19 figures was a “bitter joke”.

    He was slammed on Twitter by the Chinese ambassador to Tehran, Chang Hua, and later retreated by praising Beijing for its support of Tehran during the pandemic.

    Iran-China relations are usually warm as Beijing is one of Tehran’s top trade partners, especially in oil.

    Source: france24.com

  • Joe Biden: I think George Floyd will change the world

    Democratic US presidential candidate Joe Biden has said the late George Floyd will “change the world.”

    Following a private meeting with Mr Floyd’s family in Houston, Texas, to offer his sympathies, Mr Biden told CBS news his death was “one of the great inflection points in American history”.

    The killing of African American George Floyd at the hands of a white officer has fuelled global protests.

    A private funeral service will be held in Houston later on Tuesday.

    Mr Biden has sharply criticised President Donald Trump, who is standing for re-election as the Republican candidate on 3 November, accusing him at the weekend of making “despicable” remarks about Mr Floyd.

    The Democratic politician was himself recently accused of taking black American votes for granted when he said African Americans “ain’t black” if they even considered voting for Mr Trump.

    What did Biden say about Floyd’s family? “They’re an incredible family, his little daughter was there, the one who said ‘daddy’s going to change the world’, and I think her daddy is going to change the world,” Mr Biden told CBS anchor Norah O’Donnell.

    “I think what happened here is one of the great inflection points in American history, for real, in terms of civil liberties, civil rights and just treating people with dignity.”

    Floyd family spokesman Benjamin Crump, who tweeted a photo of the meeting said Mr Floyd’s relatives welcomed Mr Biden’s comments.

    “That compassion meant the world to this grieving family,” he added.

    Aides to the former vice-president said he would also record a video message for Tuesday’s service.

    Mourners in Houston, Texas, where Mr Floyd lived before moving to Minneapolis, formed long lines to view his body, publicly on display for six hours at The Fountain of Praise church.

    Memorial services have already been held in Minneapolis and North Carolina, where Mr Floyd was born.

    What is the latest on the George Floyd case?

    Derek Chauvin, the Minneapolis ex-policeman accused of killing Mr Floyd, made his first court appearance on Monday, where his bail was set at $1.25m (£1m).

    Mr Chauvin – who kept his knee on Mr Floyd’s neck for nearly nine minutes – faces charges of second-degree murder and manslaughter. Three other arresting officers are charged with aiding and abetting murder.

    Prosecutors cited the “severity of the charges” and public outrage as the reason for upping his bail from $1m.

    Meanwhile, US Democrats in Congress have proposed sweeping legislation to reform American police. The bill would make it easier to prosecute police for misconduct, ban chokeholds and address racism.

    It is unclear whether Republicans, who control the US Senate, will support it.

    Anti-racism protests started by Mr Floyd’s death are now entering their third week in the US. Huge rallies have been held in several cities, including Washington DC, New York, Chicago, Los Angeles and San Francisco.

    With the rallying cries “Black Lives matter” and “No Justice, No Peace”, the demonstrations are among the largest US protests against racism since the 1960s. Saturday’s gatherings included a protest in the Texas town of Vidor, once infamous as a stronghold of the Ku Klux Klan white supremacist group.

    Protesters in European cities including London and Rome also gathered to show their support for Black Lives Matter over the weekend, while anti-racism protests in Australia were attended by tens of thousands.

    In the city of Bristol in the UK, protesters tore down a statue of Edward Colston, a prominent 17th Century slave trader.

    His next court appearance is set for 29 June.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Holiday firm reverses coronavirus refund policy

    The UK’s Competitions and Markets Authority (CMA), which oversees consumer protection laws, has chalked up a significant win for travellers whose holiday bookings have been cancelled due to the coronavirus pandemic.

    The CMA stepped in following complaints about the company Vacation Rentals – which operates Hoseasons holiday parks and the short lets website Cottages.com. Customers said that the firm had failed to offer full refunds after bookings were cancelled.

    The company has now voluntarily changed its policy, but the CMA says it is continuing to investigate the actions of other holiday companies through its COVID-19 Taskforce.

    If you’d like to know more about your consumer rights during the pandemic, click here.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Indian man dies after five hospitals refuse treatment

    After being turned away from five hospitals in India’s capital, Delhi, a COVID-19 positive man traveled 800km (497 miles) via train to Bhopal city for treatment over the weekend.

    But he died hours after being admitted to a hospital in Bhopal on Sunday, reports the Times of India newspaper.

    Authorities are trying to trace passengers who were on the train with the man. Officials are also concerned about how the man, who reportedly had a high fever, was able to board the train in Delhi – as authorities are meant to screen all passengers for temperature.

    His 18-year-old son said his mother had a “severe asthmatic attack” on Sunday when she found out that her husband had died.

    “I sent tweets and e-mails to the Delhi chief minister and health minister and even to the prime minister’s office but in the end, we lost,” his son said.

    Other residents in the city have complained about being turned away from hospitals. And the Delhi government’s smartphone app to track available hospital beds has added to the confusion.

    The app showed vacancies at several city hospitals – which then told news channel NDTV they actually did not have any space for new

    Source: bbc.com

  • Infections rise rapidly in India’s capital

    Delhi added around 1,000 new infections on Monday, taking the total in the Indian capital to nearly 30,000.

    Its highest daily spike – more than 1,500 – was recorded earlier this month, but its upward trajectory has experts worried as the city eases out of lockdown this week. Delhi has also reported more than 800 deaths.

    A five-member expert committee of top doctors told reporters that Delhi could be looking at 100,000 COVID-19 cases by the end of June if current trends continue. Reports suggesting that patients are already being turned away from hospitals in the city have only added to concerns about how hospitals will cope.

    The western city of Mumbai, India’s financial capital, is still the worst-hit in the country with more than 50,000 cases. After a strict lockdown was imposed in the early stages of the pandemic, the virus is now on the rise in India as restrictions ease. There are more than 250,000 total cases and 7,466 deaths.

    Source: bbc.com

  • BNI arrests prophet for threatening EC Boss, making accusations against Akufo-Addo

    The General Overseer of Hezekiah Prayer Ministries, Kwabena Owusu Agyei is in the custody of the Bureau of National Investigations (BNI).

    He was picked up during a live interview with Accra-based Hot FM on Tuesday morning.

    The arrest follows his alleged threats on the life of the Chairperson of the Electoral Commission (EC), Jean Mensa.

    The self-acclaimed prophet is also being interrogated for allegations he made against the President regarding the death of Abuakwa North MP J.B. Danquah-Adu.

    Meanwhile, lawyer for the suspect, Victor Adawudu says he is yet to see his client.

    The pastor reportedly warned Jean Mensa to stop the compilation of the new register or risk being killed.

    His threat has sparked calls by groups and individuals for his arrest.

    A group called Okyeman Youth For Development in the Eastern Region called on the National Security to sanction the pastor for threatening the EC boss.

    Source: citinewsroom

  • £2.5m musicians’ fund runs out of cash

    A £2.5m ($3.17m) fund set up to help musicians in the UK during the coronavirus crisis is set to run out of cash after just five days.

    More than 3,500 people have applied for financial assistance since Friday, says the charity Help Musicians UK.

    But with the fund reaching capacity, and live music a distant prospect, other applicants may be left stranded.

    “It’s a bigger, longer crisis than any of us could have thought possible,” said the charity’s chief executive, Jack Ainscough.

    Touring and gigging musicians have been particularly affected by the lockdown, as months of work simply vanished in mid-March.

    Many of them (up to 25%) are not covered by the government’s scheme to support freelancers, and have no other source of income.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Part of China’s great wall not built for war – Study

    The northern segment of the Great Wall of China was built not to block invading armies but rather to monitor civilian movement, an Israeli archaeologist said Tuesday.

    When researchers fully mapped the Great Wall’s 740-kilometre (460-mile), Northern Line, for the first time, their findings challenged previous assumptions.

    “Prior to our research, most people thought the wall’s purpose was to stop Genghis Khan’s army,” said Gideon Shelach-Lavi from Jerusalem’s Hebrew University, who led the two-year study.

    But the Northern Line, lying mostly in Mongolia, winds through valleys, is relatively low in height and close to paths, pointing to non-military functions.

    “Our conclusion is that it was more about monitoring or blocking the movement of people and livestock, maybe to tax them,” Shelach-Lavi said.

    He suggested people may have been seeking warmer southern pastures during a medieval cold spell.

    Construction of the Great Wall, which is split into sections that in total stretch for thousands of kilometres, first began in the third century BC and continued for centuries.

    The Northern Line, also known as “Genghis Khan’s Wall” in reference to the legendary Mongolian conqueror, was built between the 11th and 13th centuries with pounded earth and dotted with 72 structures in small clusters.

    Shelach-Lavi and his team of Israeli, Mongolian and American researchers used drones, high-resolution satellite images and traditional archaeological tools to map out the wall and find artefacts that helped pin down dates.

    According to Shelach-Lavi, whose findings from the ongoing study were published in the journal Antiquity, the Northern Line has been largely overlooked by contemporary scientists.

    Source: france24.com

  • For Italy’s Muslims, lack of burial space deepens grief in pandemic

    Italy’s Muslim community, like others, suffered many deaths as the coronavirus pandemic hit the Mediterranean country hard.

    Compounding the pain for the religious minority has been the grim reality of a lack of space to bury their dead.

    Imams and Muslim community leaders are now calling for more Islamic cemeteries, or additional space in the country’s existing graveyards, as the faithful increasingly want to be buried in Italy, their home.

    “We have experienced the pain (of the pandemic), but it has sometimes been deepened when some families could not find a place to bury their dead because there were no Muslim sections in the town cemeteries,” Abdullah Tchina, imam of the Milan Sesto mosque, told AFP.

    More than 34,000 people have died from the virus in Italy, mostly in the industrial north, and for months global air travel has been at a near-standstill.

    As a result, Muslims who died of COVID-19 or other causes could not be repatriated to their countries of origin, as was the practice previously.

    That led to a spike in requests for burials – and the realisation that Italy lacks the space.

    Italy’s Muslims number around 2.6 million, or 4.3 per cent of the population. Living mainly in the country’s north, 56 per cent hold foreign citizenship, many from countries in North Africa or South Asia.

    No official statistics are available on the number of Muslims, whether Italians or foreign nationals, who lost their lives during the outbreak.

    A rectangle of pebbles

    In the cemetery of Bruzzano, on the outskirts of Milan, 50-something Mustapha Moulay gazes at a greyish earthen tomb in the Muslim section of an overwhelmingly Roman Catholic cemetery.

    “It was God’s will,” he said of the death on April 7 of his 55-year-old wife from COVID-19.

    She contracted the virus in a Milan hospital where she had been admitted a month earlier for a minor leg operation, said Moulay, who was born in Morocco and has lived in Italy for 32 years.

    The grave has no tombstone and is simply marked out with a rectangle of pebbles. The freshest graves are strikingly destitute.

    The graves of those who died pre-coronavirus look more permanent — with cement borders and sometimes a marble slab engraved with the crescent moon.

    Many other Italian Muslims, however, were forced to travel long distances to bury their dead, or leave bodies for days in morgues, or even keep them at home while seeking a space.

    ‘A dignified burial’

    Under Islamic tradition, the dead must be buried as quickly as possible, preferably within 24 hours.

    One of the most extreme cases was that of Hira Ibrahim, a Macedonian woman in Pisogne, near the northern city of Brescia, whose mother died from coronavirus.

    Ibrahim had to keep her mother’s body at home for more than 10 days for lack of a Muslim cemetery in her community, according to the newspaper La Repubblica.

    Countless Muslim families faced similar tragic predicaments during the crisis, the paper said.

    Tchina, the imam, said the problem persists even after the biggest waves of deaths have subsided.

    The body of a Muslim who died in Milan last week was transported some 50 kilometres (30 miles) away for burial, he said.

    Tchina thanked mayors “who opened their (Catholic) cemeteries during this crisis to ensure a dignified burial” for the Muslim dead.

    The president of Milan’s Islamic Centre, Gueddouda Boubakeur, said that some families in Brescia and Bergamo – two of the areas hardest hit by the coronavirus – had to wait “a very long time”.

    Thanks to the combined efforts of municipalities and central government authorities, solutions were ultimately found most of the time, he said.

    “We didn’t consider the distance. We went to the first town that accepted the bodies. Our concern was above all to find space,” Boubakeur said.

    A handful of cemeteries

    The Union of Islamic Communities of Italy lists just 76 Islamic cemeteries in the country, which counts nearly 8,000 municipalities.

    The oldest was built in 1856, in the northeastern city of Trieste, while Rome’s date back only to 1974.

    Under Italian law, cemeteries “may provide for special and separate sections” for non-Catholics, but they are not required.

    Boubakeur acknowledged the government’s cooperation but urged more “political will” to create additional Muslim burial spaces.

    “After this pandemic, 150 municipalities responded positively to our requests” to provide a Muslim section in their cemeteries, Boubakeur said – just a fraction of the nearly 8,000 municipalities.

    Going forward, the need for Muslim burial plots will only increase as immigrants and their offspring prefer to be interred in Italy.

    “We used to have a kitty to pay for sending back bodies to their country of origin, but no longer,” Boubakeur said.

    “Some old people still want to be buried in their country of origin. But many have children, grandchildren in Italy and now prefer to be buried here.”

    Younger Muslims “want to be buried in Italy because they’re Italian”, Boubakeur said.

    Source: france24.com

  • See what this young talented boy did with photos of Cardi b, Nicki Minaj, Rihanna and Wizkid.

    Nigerians are really talented when it comes to photoshop or photo editing, this young man is awesome and his photo editing skills are great, he literally edited himself with some celebrity

    Since many of us don’t have the privilege to meet with one on one with our celebrities or our top famous people, God used the producers of photo editing apps to answer our prayers.

    Since we can’t meet them in reality, I see no crime in editing ourselves with them just for the fun involved.so check out this editting and tell how you fell about them

    Here is a popular American celebrity, Rihanna, this boy editted himself together with her, but to be fair this picture is looking so real.

    This is really funing, this boy edited, himself with wizkid sewing his cloth, lol, if you chech well you will see Teni also

    This is Cardi b, he just editted, this picture that look,so real, as if he was with her.

    Must this be Nicki minaja, yes he so edited this picture, that it look so real.

    Last on my list, this boy must be a generous I editing, how on earth did he do this, edditing himself with cardi b

    So which one is your favorite. Please Like share and follow me for more updates.

    Source: Letgossip

  • Elmina: 18-year-old remanded over alleged kidnapping of two children

    The Elmina Magistrate Court has remanded Daniel Wallace, an 18-year-old high school student, into police custody over claims he kidnapped two children.

    Reports indicate that the suspect allegedly kidnapped the six-year-old kids on May 6, 2020, at Ametoe a suburb of Komenda.

    The suspect is said to have demanded a GHS6,000 ransom.

    The Public Relations Officer of the Central Regional Police Command, DSP Irene Oppong said “On June 6, 2020, the Komenda Police station received a complaint from one Paa Ekow Eduam that his child and a friend both six years were playing within the area and later went to visit their grandfather but have not heard from them again. Later a strange number called him demanding for a ransom of GHS 6,000 before releasing the children.”

    “On that same day, the Komenda District Police with support from the Regional Police Command and community members managed to rescue the children,” DSP Irene Oppong said.

    She indicated further that, “Investigations have begun in the case and the suspect will reappear in court again on June 25, 2020”.

     

    Source: citinewsroom 

  • Highlife singer Kuami Eugene hangs out with his mother in new video 

    The video as sighted by YEN.com.gh has Kuami Eugene and his mother hanging out and having fun.

    In the video Kuami could be seen sitting behind the wheels of a car while his mother sat in the back.

    With a camera in the singer’s hand, his mother could be seen posing as he sat behind her son.

    After seeing his mother posing, Kuami Eugene put her mother on the spot asking ‘mom, what are you doing?’

    Watch the video below:

     

    View this post on Instagram

     

    My Favorite Woman👸🏽 #Mama♥️

    A post shared by KUAMI EUGENE (@kuamieugene) on

    Source: yen.com.gh

  • Youngster Samuel Alabi happy to join Israeli side FC Ashdod on permanent deal

    Ghanaian youngster Samuel Alabi is happy after his impressive loan performance earned him a permanent stay at Israeli side FC Ashdod.

    Alabi has penned down a four-year contract with the Yud-Alef Stadium outfit, ending his association with the Ghanaian club Dreams FC.

    “I am very happy with this new contract, it has been a good first season for me but I believe I can do more as time goes on,” Alabi told Graphic Sports Online.

    “This permanent contract is actually a dream come through. I will keep doing my best.”

    On settling at the club after joining them from the GPL, he added, “It has been a little bit difficult because of the new environment, new teammates, different coaches, and different languages and in all is like you starting a new life.”

    “So, I just told myself that this is the opportunity I have waited for long and I must make things happen. Truly I have not disappointed.”

    The 20-year has made 17 appearances for Ashdod in the Israeli Premier League this season, scored one goal and provided an assist thus far.

    Source: Ghana Soccernet

  • I left Hearts of Oak because of Anas expose – Patrick Razak

    Former Accra Hearts of Oak SC winger and 2017 WAFU winner, Patrick Razak has disclosed that his exit from the rainbow boys back in 2018 to Horoya AC was motivated by the Anas number 12 exposè.

    The Anas exposè which was premiered on June 6, 2018, at the Accra International Conference Centre resulted in the ban of all football activities in the country.

    However, Razak claims that he took the decision to leave the local scene to play abroad because of the difficulties the exposè placed on Ghana football.

    In an interview with Bryt FM, Razak said, “I left Hearts for Horoya AC in 2018 and at the time there were no football activities in the country so I decided to move”

    “Even after the premiering of the video, there were ups and downs with regards to the commencement of our league. There was no hope of football return during that time of normalization”

    “Low and behold Horoya AC showed interest to sign for two seasons and so, if I look at that two seasons and Ghana football didn’t know when to start, I decided to move on” he concluded.

    Source: footballghana.com

  • NSS boss not responsible for stalling development in Yagaba/Kubori – NPP

    The North East Regional Secretary of the New Patriotic Party (NPP) Sulley Sambian has refuted claims that the Chief Executive Officer of the National Service Secretariat, Yussif Mustapha, is behind the delay of payment to Tass-kalia Construction Ltd to complete a two-year road contract on the Yagaba/Kubori/Mankarigu road.

    The road work which covers a distance of 36km from Yagaba to Kubore, and then to Wiase was to ease the discomfort that came with the bad road in the area.

    According to Sulley Sambian, Yusif Mustapha is at the forefront of fighting for the development of his people and not sabotaging the project as stated by the opposition.

    He instead accused the Member of Parliament for Yagaba Kubore Constituency, Abdul-Rauf Tanko Ibrahim, who he claimed failed to go back to the site after receiving GH¢8 million from the coffers of the Road Fund.

    Sambian, alleging that the activities of Tass-kalia Construction Ltd, is controlled by the MP, also revealed that failure by the MP to return to the construction site agitated the youth in the constituency making them embark on a series of demonstrations.

    This, he added, led to him [Tanko Ibrahim] being summoned at the Kubore Chief’s palace. While being interrogated on the matter, Sambian indicated that the MP denied receiving the said amount insisting that he received a part payment of about GH¢3 million and not GH¢8 million as reported.

    However, following the delay, government terminated the contract with the MP and re-awarded it to another firm called Mawums Company Ltd, the NPP Secretary disclosed.

    Sulley Sambian, in a release said “the new contractor went to site only to be confronted by thugs operating at the instance of Honorable Tanko. The Honourable MP has since resumed operations on the site under the pretext of executing a project that has been terminated, forcing the new contractor to move out of site for fear of his life.”

    The NPP Secretary is, therefore, appealing to the security agencies to pay keen attention to the unhealthy development in Yagaba to prevent a breach of the peace.

    Below is his full statement

    TERMINATION OF TASSKALIA CONTRACT AND MATTERS ARISING BACKGROUND: In August 2016, the government of Ghana awarded a contract to TASSKALIA Ltd, a company whose mind is directed by the Member of Parliament for Yagaba Kubore Constituency. The contract had a life span of two years and covered a distance of 36 kms from Yagaba to Kubore, and then to Wiase.

    Following the inability of the company to promptly execute the project, the Government of Ghana through the Ghana Highways Authority reviewed the project to cover a distance of 12 Kilometers from Yagaba to Kubore

    During the period, Honourable Tanko presented two certificates for payment totalling about 11 Million cedis. The Government of Ghana through the Road Fund honoured payment to the tune of about 8 Million Cedis.

    Upon receipt of the payment, Honourable Tanko failed to go back to site, prompting the youth of the Constituency to embark on series of demonstrations. The matter eventually got to the Kubore Chief’s palace where Honorable Tanko admitted to a part payment of about 3 Million Cedis, a figure the NPP disputes.

    The NDC in the North East Region, realising that their MP would court bad publicity for himself quickly released a pathetically lame statement accusing the NPP parliamentary candidate for Yagaba Kubore, Honourable Mustapha Ussif, of sabotaging the efforts of Honourable Tanko, and masterminding a grand scheme to have his contract terminated.

    The Regional Secretariat of the NPP promptly issued a rejoinder daring Honorable Tanko to deny payment of the amount of about 8 Million to him by the Road Fund. Whilst the challenge was yet to be taken by Honorable Tanko, the Government of Ghana terminated the contract and re-awarded same to Mawums Company Ltd. Two days ago, the North-East Regional Minister, handed over site of Tanko’s abandoned and terminated project to Mawums Company Ltd. Yesterday, the new contractor went to site only to be confronted by thugs operating at the instance of Honorable Tanko. The Honourable MP has since resumed operations on the site under the pretext of executing a project that has been terminated, forcing the new contractor to move out of site for fear of his life.

    As an honorable member of parliament, the conduct of Tanko is extremely unparliamentary. He has a duty to inculcate a culture of civility in the people he he seeks to lead. He has a duty to lead by example.

    Do we really have to remind Honourable Tanko that the courts exist to give vent to civil rights and to enforce contractual obligations? If he feels his contract was wrongfully terminated, his recourse is the court, not this Rambo style. He must equally be reminded that, one man cannot be recipository of violence. The earlier he understood this for all of us to live harmoniously, the better!.

    As a Region, we remember ingloriously, the physical attack Honourable Tanko meted out to a colleague member of parliament few years ago. It was bad enough; a replication of this conduct in his constituency cannot be the price the people have to pay for the undeserved honour of making him their member of parliament. At least if it is not a blessing, it must not be such a glaringly bad fortune. Macho theatrics as a means of ventilating rights is no longer even practised by lesser animals! Posterity will definitely not look kindly at us if we plunge our region into avoidable chaos and conflict. If the regional NPP had not timeously intervened, violent clash would have erupted in Yagaba.

    We are aware of Tanko’s schemes to cause confusion in Yagaba. We are equally aware of the late hour meeting he held with some youth of the NDC in other Constituencies from the region last night. A meeting which started from 10 pm till 2 a.m. this morning!

    Honorable Tanko appears to be giving little thought to danger. It is called foolhardiness.

    We appeal to the security agencies to pay keen attention to the unhealthy development in Yagaba to prevent a breach of the peace.

    Thank you

    Sulley Sambian

    North-East Regional Secretary To all media platforms

     

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • I’m sorry – Winful Cobbinah to Thomas Abbey

    Former Hearts of Oak midfielder and 2017 WAFU winner, Winful Cobbinah has finally apologized to Thomas Abbey after launching a scathing attack on his former teammate.

    Abbey recently revealed the Phobians lost the 2017 MTN FA Cup due to an unpaid three months salary plus seven months bonuses.

    The porcupine warriors thrashed the Phobians 3-1 courtesy Saddick Adams’s first half hat-trick that propelled them to a ninth FA Cup triumph at the Tamale Sports Stadium.

    Responding to Abbey’s comment, Cobbinah bashed him and said he is frustrated because Hearts of Oak rejected his return to the club few months ago.

    But in an interview with Don Summer of Angel FM in Kumasi, Winful Cobbinah apologized to his former teammate for his comment but has insisted they were not owed before they played the final against Kotoko.

    “Going into that game, Hearts were not owing us. We took the game easy but Kotoko were hungry for success and that is why they scored us”

    “I would like to apologize to Thomas Abbey for my comment. I didn’t grant any interview with the media about his comment but it was just an idea sharing on the players platform which someone leaked it”

    “If he has heard and taken it personal, i will plead with him to forgive me because i don’t have any problem with him ” he added

    Source: footballghana.com

  • Stop hiding and fight back for your properties – Afia Schwarzenegger tells Ohemaa Mercy

    Controversial media personality Afia Schwarzenegger has advised Ohemaa Mercy to stop hiding from the public after the alleged collapse of her marriage and fight back for all her properties from her estranged husband.

    Mr. Isaac Twum-Ampofo, husband of the popular musician, is alleged to have seized all properties owned by Ohemaa Mercy with claims that he is the contractual manager of the songstress.

    According to Afia Schwarzenegger, Mr. Twum has not only claimed lordship over her house, but he has also hijacked all her verified social media pages with the excuse that he created the pages for her in the capacity as a manager.

    “Ohemaa Mercy, stop hiding…the man is threatening to say he will announce to the whole world that you have cheated on him. Come back for your properties. Come back for your sweat. Why, Why, your wife works hard to bring money home and as for you keep sleeping with backup artistes, maid, P.A…What is in your penis?” she said in Twi dialect in a video released on her Youtube page.

    She reiterated that Mr. Twum has rushed to register his wife’s flagship program ‘Tehilla Experience’ in his name.

    “He has gone a step further to register Tehilla Experience…Also if you don’t hear from Ohemaa Mercy on social media, it’s because her husband claims he opened the accounts for her. The man has also claimed ownership of the house,” she added.

    Afia Schwarzenegger dared Mr. Twum to bring out any documents that indicate he indeed had a contractual management agreement with Ohemaa Mercy.

    “A guy who sleeps with you shouldn’t do business with you. As for you Ohemaa Mercy, I don’t know why you are hiding, the man says he manages you. What contract does he have with you? Which contract? If I’m working and my husband supports me, does it mean the business is for my husband? Bra Twum, what you are doing is not good…You have claimed lordship over the house…”

    It is alleged that award-winning gospel musician Ohemaa Mercy’s marriage has collapsed for almost a year now. It is alleged that the ‘Edin Jesus’ hitmaker packed her belongings from her matrimonial home two days after her annual Tehilla Experience Concert in August 2019.

    “Ohemaa Mercy left her marital home in August two days after her Tehilla Concert. If only the information is correct then coming August will be exactly one year she left her home. The man has claimed lordship over the house. The children were also not allowed to see her, until recently,” Afia Schwarzenegger claimed.

    According to Afia Schwarzenegger, the husband of Ohemaa Mercy, Mr. Isaac Twum-Ampofo, is alleged to have cheated on his wife with some of her backup singers.

    GhanaWeb cannot independently confirm the veracity of the allegations.

    Watch the video below:

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • 2017 MTN FA Cup final: We underrated Kotoko – Winful Cobbinah

    Former Accra Hearts of Oak SC midfielder, Winful Cobbinah has revealed that players of the club underrated rivals Asante Kotoko during their MTN FA cup final in 2017.

    The porcupine warriors thrashed the Phobians 3-1 courtesy Saddick Adams’s first-half hat-trick that propelled them to a ninth FA Cup triumph at the Ali Mahama Sports Stadium in Tamale.

    Thomas Abbey, a former captain of the rainbow boys attributed their defeat to an unpaid three months salary plus seven months bonuses.

    But Cobbinah who played with him at the final said the latter is frustrated when responding to Thomas Abbey.

    However, in an interview with Don Summer of Angel FM in Kumasi, Winful Cobbinah apologized to his former teammate for his comment but has insisted they were not owed before they played the final against Kotoko.

    “Going into that game, Hearts were not owing us. We took the game easy but Kotoko was hungry for success and that is why they scored us” he said.

    Source: footballghana.com

  • Show desire on the pitch – Patrick Razak tells Hearts of Oak players

    Former Accra Hearts of Oak SC winger, Patrick Razak has encouraged players plying their trade for the Phobians to show desire and commitment whenever they swear the rainbow jersey.

    Razak, a member of the squad that played in the 2017 MTN FA Cup final against sworn rivals Asante Kotoko which they subsequently lost 3-1 in an interview with Bryt FM said he does not see the current squad showing desire on the pitch for Hearts of Oak.

    “Since I came to Ghana I have been monitoring the players and it seems some of them do not show any sign of commitment. They play normal football but Hearts of Oak is a big club and they should know that”

    “Hearts is an exceptional team and if you are a player and you get the opportunity to play for them you have to give your all”

    “Talking about this years Classico, I think Hearts should have finish Kotoko in the first half of the desire was there” he added

    Source: footballghana.com

  • Coronavirus may cost Africa US$4.8 billion in crop exports

    The coronavirus pandemic could cost Africa as much as $4.8 billion in lost agricultural exports and affect the livelihoods of 10 million farmers, McKinsey & Co. said.

    Disruptions ranging from canceled flights to the closure of chocolate factories in Europe have limited exports of crops ranging from nuts to roses, according to the consultancy firm. Livelihoods will be affected through “job loss or price reductions,” McKinsey said.

    Agriculture is key for African economies, accounting for 23% of gross domestic product and jobs for 60% of economically active people in the sub-Saharan region. Agricultural exports from the continent are worth between $35 billion and $40 billion annually.

    McKinsey forecasts the following losses:

    Between $500 million and $2 billion in exports of fruit, vegetables and nuts from countries such as South Africa.

    A fall in demand for chocolate and the resultant decline in prices could reduce cocoa exports by as much as $2 billion.

    About $200 million in exports of coffee, a crop that supports 6.6 million jobs mainly in East Africa.

    Between $400 million and $600 million in revenue from flower exports may be lost.

    The outbreak in Africa, which has about 190,000 confirmed infections and over 5,000 deaths, could also disrupt preparations for the next planting season and hamper efforts to curb an invasion of crop-eating locusts in East Africa.

    Still, bumper harvests from the current season in some countries could cushion the blow.

    Source: Bloomberg

  • Truncate the League or consider me out – Abdul Salam Yakubu tells GFA

    The President of New Edubiase United, Abdul Salam Yakubu has ruled out any move to participate in the Division One League if fixtures are congested by the Ghana Football Association (GFA) should the league resumes after July 31.

    The current season has been suspended due to the Coronavirus pandemic and with the government set to review the ban on July 31, talks are going on between the GFA and clubs on whether to continue or truncate the season.

    According to him, any move by the GFA to continue the season by playing consistently during mid-week and weekends will be rejected by him.

    Speaking in an interview, Abdul Salam Yakubu said, “There is no league that I am going to take part that is played consistently on Wednesdays and Sundays. There is no sponsorship and we are punishing the players. We the club administrators have to leave our jobs and be following the team around, he told Happy FM.

    “There is no proper structured league in the world that plays consistently on those days. The proper leagues are played on weekends so the fans come also come in their numbers to watch”.

    Abdul Salam joins a list of club administrators who have called for the season to be truncated amid the Coronavirus pandemic.

    “For now we have to cancel the league, so the clubs can begin to prepare ahead of the new season”.

    The GFA is currently engaging its stakeholders on the future of the 2019/20 football season and says it will announce a decision on June 30.

    Source: Ghana Soccernet

  • Defunct fund managers: GH¢2 billion worth of claims not credible – SEC reveals

    Director General of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has revealed that GH¢2 billion worth of claims filed by customers of defunct fund management companies were not credible.

    According to Rev. Daniel Ogbarmey Tetteh, the liquidation process for defunct management companies has also started with two liquidation orders filed so far before payment can be made to customers.

    “So far, the validation of claims has shown that claims worth about GH¢2 billion aren’t credible. The original value of GH¢12.5 billion has now shrunk to GH¢10 billion and that is because of the validation process. This shows how important validation is” Daniel Ogbarmey Tetteh said on the Citi Breakfast Show on Tuesday 9 June 2020.

    He added; “The liquidation process has started although because of the processes involved, we can’t state exactly when it will end. But hopefully, we don’t have to wait for liquidation to end before payment starts”

    Rev. Obamey Tetteh indicated the position of government is to get a full sense of the validated amount before the payment of the claims to customers can commence.

    The Director General also revealed officers working on the validation of claims have completed around 50 percent per their last report to the SEC.

    Customers of collapsed fund management companies, were in March 2020 assured by the SEC of their locked funds, after a successful validation of their claims.

    This follows the revocation of licenses of some 53 fund management companies last year for various regulatory breaches.

    Members of the Coalition of Aggrieved Customers of the defunct 53 Fund Management Companies, called on government to commence payment of their locked-up funds before March 24, 2020.

    The group earlier said they believed government has deliberately been silent on the payment of their funds following the financial sector clean-up by the Bank of Ghana (BoG)

    Source: www.ghanaweb.com

  • New Zealand lifts all Coronavirus restrictions, declaring the nation virus-free

    New Zealand has lifted almost all of its coronavirus restrictions after reporting no active cases in the country.

    At midnight local time (12:00 GMT), all of New Zealand moved to level one, the lowest of a four-tier alert system.

    Under new rules, social distancing is not required and there are no limits on public gatherings, but borders remain closed to foreigners.

    New Zealand has reported no new Covid-19 cases for more than two weeks.

    Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern told reporters she did “a little dance” when she was told the country no longer had any active virus cases.

    “While we’re in a safer, stronger position, there’s still no easy path back to pre-Covid life, but the determination and focus we have had on our health response will now be vested in our economic rebuild,” Ms Ardern said.

    “While the job is not done, there is no denying this is a milestone. So can I finish with a very simple, ‘Thank you, New Zealand’.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • George Floyd murder suspect to appear in court in Minnesota

    The man accused of murdering African American George Floyd, whose death sparked global protests, is to appear in court for the first time.

    Derek Chauvin, a white policeman, knelt on Mr Floyd’s neck for almost nine minutes while he was being arrested in Minneapolis on 25 May.

    Mr Chauvin, who has since been sacked, will face a judge in Minnesota remotely on murder and manslaughter charges.

    Three other officers were also fired and charged with aiding and abetting.

    Mourners in Houston, Texas, where Mr Floyd lived before moving to Minneapolis, have been viewing his body, publicly on display for six hours at The Fountain of Praise church.

    On Tuesday, a private funeral service will be held in Houston. Memorial services have already been held in Minneapolis and North Carolina, where Mr Floyd was born.

    It is believed a family member escorted Mr Floyd’s body on a flight to Texas late on Saturday.

    Democratic US presidential candidate Joe Biden is expected to visit Mr Floyd’s relatives in Houston to offer his sympathies. Aides to the former vice-president said he would also record a video message for Tuesday’s service.

    What are the accusations against Chauvin?

    He faces three separate charges: unintentional second-degree murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter, for which the maximum penalties are prison terms of 40, 25 and 10 years respectively.

    Further charges could be brought but it appears unlikely he will be accused of first-degree murder as prosecutors would have to prove premeditation, intent and motive, the Associated Press reports.

    By bringing multiple charges, prosecutors give jurors a choice and increase the chances of a conviction.

    Minneapolis city council has voted to ban chokeholds and neck restraints by police officers, and Democrats in Congress are expected to present sweeping legislation on police reform.

    In France, which saw Black Lives Matter protests over the weekend, Interior Minister Christophe Castaner announced that police would no longer be allowed to use chokeholds to arrest people.

    It is part of a policy of zero tolerance of racism within the French police. France’s police watchdog has revealed that there were 1,500 complaints against officers last year, half of them for alleged assaults.

    How are people in Houston mourning Floyd?

    Anti-racism protests started by Mr Floyd’s death are now entering their third week in the US. Huge rallies have been held in several cities, including Washington DC, New York, Chicago, Los Angeles and San Francisco.

    With the rallying cries “Black Lives matter” and “No Justice, No Peace”, the demonstrations are among the largest US protests against racism since the 1960s. Saturday’s gatherings included a protest in the Texas town of Vidor, once infamous as a stronghold of the Ku Klux Klan white supremacist group.

    Episodes of looting and violence have, however, been reported among the peaceful rallies, and President Donald Trump threatened to call up troops to quash the protests.

    Security measures were lifted across the US on Sunday as unrest started to ease. New York ended its nearly week-long curfew, and Mr Trump said he was ordering the National Guard to start withdrawing from Washington DC.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Fella Makafui warns fans who have been sending her naughty photos

    Ghanaian actress and entrepreneur, Fella Makafui has exposed fans who have been sending her their nudes.

    Fella Makafui now Mrs. Frimpong angrily took to social media to warn some fans who have been sending their nude photos through her DM.

    She took to her Snapchat to express her frustration with respect to guys who have to disturb her with their nudes.

    In her post, she threatened to post and tag the entire family of anyone who decides not to put a stop to the sending of nudes.

    come to my dm with business ideas so we all make money..not sending me ur D**ks.. I will post it and tag your entire family!! please lets all respect ourselves here oo!!! warning you for the last time !!!

    She wrote.

    See post below:

  • Hollyoaks launches investigation after Rachel Adedeji racism claims

    Hollyoaks has launched an investigation after Rachel Adedeji alleged she witnessed racism on the soap.

    The actress said a senior producer referred to black cast members using a racial slur and claimed black actresses were told to change their hair.

    A statement posted on the show’s Instagram page said: “Hollyoaks has zero tolerance on racism.

    “We are taking Rachel Adedeji’s comments extremely seriously and are investigating.”

    On Saturday, Adedeji tweeted several claims about her experiences on the Channel 4 soap, which is produced by Lime Pictures.

    The actress said she was told “You’re all the same” by a make-up artist, and said black actresses on the show were “forced to drastically change their hair” after being told viewers wouldn’t be able to tell them apart.

    Adedeji, has appeared in more than 200 episodes of the show, but said in her four years on the soap she had only worked with one black director.

    “Working at Hollyoaks is mostly positive, but the experiences I have encountered are a constant reminder of how difficult it is being a black woman in the industry,” Adedeji said. “I am no longer standing for it.”

    Her comments follow the Black Lives Matter protests, which were sparked by the death of George Floyd in police custody.

    Former Hollyoaks star Amanda Clapham supported Adedeji on Twitter, saying she witnessed “micro-aggressions” towards BAME staff on the show.

    Clapham alleged one male black cast member was “disproportionately told off” for talking and messing around during filming, when a whole group of actors had been involved.

    Andrea Ali, who plays Celeste Faroe, supported Adedeji but praised the soap’s efforts on representation.

    “I am beyond blessed to be a part of a team as diverse and as inclusive as Hollyoaks,” Ali said.

    “Celeste Faroe is a powerhouse and that representation of black women is not only one that I am proud of, but one that matters.”

    Last week, Hollyoaks announced it would address the Black Lives Matter movement by recording a series of special podcasts about racism.

    At the time, actress Kéllé Bryan said: “We’ve been busy behind the scenes having lots of highly important conversations and we’ll be kick-starting with a podcast all about racism – how we tackle it, how we face it and, most importantly, how we overcome it.”

    But in her statement, Adedeji said: “Putting out a podcast and asking your black cast members to teach you how to tackle these issues is the bare minimum. Do better.”

    On Monday’s Loose Women, Bryan addressed the backlash she’d received from the podcast announcement, but said there was no bad blood between herself and Adedeji.

    “Myself and Rachel have spoken and we have shared our feelings… I’m supporting her and she’s reached out to me also. We’ll just work through this, hopefully, internally.

    “She meant no harm in her post in terms of me personally.”

    In a statement to the ITV daytime show, Hollyoaks said: “Lime Pictures has a zero tolerance approach to racism, in line with our commitment to do the right thing, we will review the matters that have been reported.”

    The BBC has contacted Lime Pictures for further comment.

    Hollyoaks is set to resume production in Liverpool this week, with the cast expected back on set in July.

    Adedeji first shot to fame as an X Factor finalist in 2009, finishing in ninth place. She joined Hollyoaks in 2016.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Energy Ministry invites proposals into review of renewable energy act

    The Ministry of Energy has started inviting members of the general public to make input by way of contributions as the country seeks to review the Renewable Energy Act, 2011 (Act 832).

    The review of the Act, the Ministry said, has become necessary due to the current development in the renewable energy sub-sector.

    A statement signed by John-Peter Amewu, the sector Minister, added that the aim of the amendment and review is to address the challenges in the industry.

    The deadline for the submission of comments or proposals is Friday, June 12, 2020, 17:00hrs GMT.

    Source: goldstreetbusiness.com

  • Maritime Authority uproots tree stumps in River Oti

    Mr Thomas Alonzi, Director for the Ghana Maritime Authority (GMA) has said travelling on River Oti was now safe after the Authority started uprooting tree stumps in the River to prevent accidents.

    Tree stumps are said to have caused several boat accidents on the Lake, with some being fatal.

    The exercise is being done at Njari, Kudorkope, Tumpunja, Wolubu, and Ble Yi korpe communities in the Krachi East Municipality.

    Mr Alonzi who inspected the ongoing exercise said the aim was to provide safe passage for boats on the Lake.

    He said the Authority was determined to ensure that accidents on the Lake was reduced to the barest minimum and urged boat owners and operators to cooperate with the Authority to achieve its objective.

    Mr Alonzi expressed satisfaction at the extent of work done and hopeful the contractors, Kete Krachi Timber Recovery (KKTR) Limited would be on schedule.

    Mr Patrick Jilima Chartey, Municipal Chief Executive (MCE) for Krachi East was grateful to the Authority for the exercise and expressed the hope that accidents on the River would be a thing of the past.

    Mr Checki Akwasi, a leading boat operator in the area said people who travelled from Accra to Kete Krachi, Chinderi, Banda, Buya and both Nanumba North and South mostly relied on boats or ferry to cross the River.

    Some passengers said they were happy that efforts were being made to ensure their safety and commended the Authority for the exercise.

    Source: goldstreetbusiness.com

  • US Democrats introduce sweeping legislation to reform police

    US Democrats in Congress have proposed sweeping legislation to reform American police, following weeks of protests against police brutality and racism.

    The bill would make it easier to prosecute police for misconduct, ban chokeholds, and addresses racism.

    Its comes as Minneapolis lawmakers vowed to disband the city’s police force.

    The death of George Floyd at the hands of a white officer there sparked national pressure for change.

    However, it was unclear whether Republicans, who control the US Senate, will support the proposed Justice in Policing Act of 2020.

    Mr Floyd’s brother is expected to testify to the House of Representatives later this week in a hearing on police reform.

    What does the bill say?

    The Justice in Policing Act of 2020 was introduced on Monday by top Democratic lawmakers House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, black senators Kamala Harris and Cory Booker and members of the Congressional Black Caucus.

    As she unveiled the bill, Mrs Pelosi read the names of black men and women who have died at the hands of police in recent years.

    The bill forces federal police to use body and dashboard cameras, ban chokeholds, eliminate unannounced police raids known as “no-knock warrants”, make it easier to hold police liable for civil rights violations and calls for federal funds to be withheld from local police forces who do not make similar reforms.

    “The martyrdom of George Floyd gave the American experience a moment of national anguish, as we grieve for the black Americans killed by police brutality,” Mrs Pelosi said.

    “Today, this movement of national anguish is being transformed into a movement of national action”.

    The bill makes lynching a federal crime, limits the sale of military weapons to the police and gives the Department of Justice the authority to investigate state and local police for evidence of department-wide bias or misconduct.

    It would also create a “national police misconduct registry” – a database of complaints against police.

    Some Republican leaders have said they would consider the possibility of writing their own bill, with a hearing scheduled in the Senate Judiciary committee next week.

    However, members of President Trump’s party have been largely reticent on signalling support for legislation.

    In a break with his party, Republican Senator Mitt Romney on Sunday tweeted pictures of himself marching towards the White House with Christian protesters, with the caption “Black Lives Matter.”

    What chance does the bill have?

    The reform package, crafted by Democratic leaders in Congress, can be viewed as the “official” position of the party – at least for now. It is, in part, an effort to head off more drastic measures that some on the left, under the slogan “defund the police”, are pushing.

    If the Democrats can keep their liberal ranks in line, they should be able to get the reforms passed in the House of Representatives, where they have a majority. The outlook is less certain in the Republican-controlled Senate – particularly if Donald Trump sees political advantage in trying to paint Democratic proposals as a threat to “law and order”.

    While there is sure to be plenty of heated rhetoric from national politicians during a presidential election season, the real change may end up coming from local officials who are more directly accountable to the voters in municipalities that have seen the largest protests.

    The call to disband the police in Minneapolis, while largely symbolic at this point, could indicate that sweeping changes are very real possibility – with or without federal guidance.

    This could be the beginning of series of local experiments in policing reform that take very different forms in different parts of the US.

    Source: bbc.com

  • New Zealand lifts all Covid restrictions, declaring the nation virus-free

    New Zealand has lifted almost all of its coronavirus restrictions after reporting no active cases in the country.

    At midnight local time (12:00 GMT), all of New Zealand moved to level one, the lowest of a four-tier alert system.

    Under new rules, social distancing is not required and there are no limits on public gatherings, but borders remain closed to foreigners.

    New Zealand has reported no new Covid-19 cases for more than two weeks.

    Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern told reporters she did “a little dance” when she was told the country no longer had any active virus cases.

    “While we’re in a safer, stronger position, there’s still no easy path back to pre-Covid life, but the determination and focus we have had on our health response will now be vested in our economic rebuild,” Ms Ardern said.

    “While the job is not done, there is no denying this is a milestone. So can I finish with a very simple, ‘Thank you, New Zealand’.”

    ‘A sustained effort’

    New Zealand first went into lockdown on 25 March, setting up a new four-stage alert system and going in at level four, where most businesses were shut, schools closed and people told to stay at home.

    After more than five weeks, it moved to level three in April, allowing takeaway food shops and some non-essential businesses to re-open.

    As the number of community cases continued to decline, the country moved into level two in mid-May.

    The move to level one comes ahead of time – the government had originally planned to make the move on 22 June, but it was brought forward after no new cases were reported for 17 days.

    Under the new rules, all schools and workplaces can open. Weddings, funerals and public transport can resume without any restrictions. Social distancing is no longer required but will be encouraged.

    The country’s borders remain closed to foreign travellers, and rules remain in place requiring New Zealanders arriving from abroad to go through a 14-day period of isolation or quarantine.

    Ms Ardern warned that the country would “certainly see cases again”, adding that “elimination is not a point in time, it is a sustained effort”.

    New Zealand has recorded 1,154 confirmed cases and 22 deaths from Covid-19 since the virus arrived in late February, but has been widely praised for its handling of the crisis.

    For many, the latest announcement is a cause for celebration – but not without caution. Auckland-based lorry driver Patrick Weston told the BBC: “Everyone is so happy we’re finally through this, but we’re still nervous.

    “I think the main thing people are worried about is the economy – so many people out of work, so many people looking for work at the same time.

    “[On Tuesday] all restrictions are lifted and we can carry on as normal. Sporting events, music events can all take place with no restriction of numbers. We’re still being encouraged to social distance of course, so we hope people will be sensible.

    “We’re happy, but nervous about the future.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • Petition to replace Colston statue with Paul Stephenson reaches 20,000

    A petition to replace the Edward Colston statue with one honouring civil rights campaigner Paul Stephenson has now passed 20,000 signatures.

    Dr Stephenson organised the Bristol bus boycott in the 1960s, which saw campaigners overturn a ban on ethnic minorities working on Bristol’s buses, and which influenced the creation of the Race Relations Act.

    The petition states it is “time Bristol moves forward with its history in the slave trade, acknowledging the evil committed and how it can educate its citizens about black history”.

    Source: bbc.com

  • UNIPASS: Government won’t impose any porous system – Carlos Ahenkorah assures freight forwarders

    Deputy Minister for Trade and Industry, Carlos Kingsley Ahenkorah has said he is not in the right position to dictate to his Minister on what to do as some stakeholders of the newly introduced UNIPASS system have tagged him as not being considerate because he is a freight Forwarder.

    “I can’t talk against the Universal Pass (UNIPASS) system when the authorities in charge have accepted it,” he said.

    According to him, he was appointed to back the good works of the sector Minister he works under and defend the decisions of the government.

    The Tema West Member of Parliament (MP) as a panelist on UTV’s ‘Adekye Nsroma’ newspaper discussion show urged stakeholders of the UNIPASS system to exercise patience because government will not in any way impose a porous system on them.

    “I cannot let out some quotes of sincerity concerning this contract but the best system is which this government has offered Ghanaians. Stakeholders should exercise patience for the best,” he added.

    Carlos Ahenkorah assured that the stress that stakeholders of the UNIPASS system are going through now is for a short period as they will be used to the system soon.

    He said the government is working hard to sort out demurrage issues with members as promised.

    Source: Peace FM

  • WHO head urges world not to let up on Coronavirus battle

    The World Health Organization (WHO) urged countries on Monday to press on with efforts to contain the novel coronavirus, noting the pandemic was worsening globally and had not peaked in central America.

    “More than six months into the pandemic this is not the time for any country to take its foot off the pedal,” WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told an online briefing.

    His top emergency expert, Dr Mike Ryan, said cases of infection in central American countries were still on the rise.

    “I think this is a time of great concern,” he said, calling for strong government leadership and international support for the region.

    Maria van Kerkhove, a WHO epidemiologist, told the briefing a “comprehensive approach” was essential in South America.

    Ryan said the need now was to focus on preventing second peaks of COVID-19, the respiratory disease caused by the coronavirus that has infected more than 7 million people and killed more than 400,000.

    “This is far from over”, Van Kerkhove said.

    Source: reuters.com

  • Actors in Ghana are jokers Mikki Osei Berko

    Veteran actor, Mikki Osei Berko known popularly as Dada Boat says actors and actresses in Ghana are jokers.

    According to him, they are only interested in the talent and the glamour but do not care about the business aspect of their job.

    He said most of these actors and actresses just look lavish to get the people to talk about them but go home to cry because they are not earning a dime from being actors and actresses.

    “Outside gentility home cry. Ask any actor or actress that within the last five years who amongst them have been paid GHC 20,000 for a role in a movie. They are all jokers who fall for only the glamour and forget about the business of the show.”

    The actor who gained grounds for his role in the Taxi-Driver series noted that there is no movie industry hence the failure of the actors and actresses because their activities are not regulated.

    He expressed shock at the fact that some Associations supposed to be related to the movie industry have their cases in court when there are no movies to be shot.

     

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    Source: MyNewsGh.com

  • Insider deals pop up in the latest audit report

    The Auditor General report on the Performance Audit Report on Capital Projects funded through District Development Facilities in 30 Districts Assemblies Contractors is suspecting that district officials give insider information during the bidding process.

    The report which, scoped three projects each from 30 Assemblies constructed between 2008 and 2019, noted that in awarding the contracts, the contract sums in many instances turn out to be the same or ridiculously close to the budgeted figures.

    It said the situation was widespread and showed that projections were skewed towards predetermined figures.

    The report, for example, said the Construction of four-storey Community Centre at Obeweku Chokor, Accra Metropolitan Assembly budgeted GH¢ 4,722,305.00 and the contract was awarded at GH¢4,722,304.95.

    Similarly, it said the construction of one No. 4 Unit Police quarters at Japekrom, in the Jaman South Municipal, the contract was awarded at GH¢195,097.45, GH¢97.45 higher than the budgeted cost of GH¢195,000.00.

    In other instances, the report said the budgeted costs of the projects were less than the contract sums because the total budget ceiling that the Assembly planned with was insufficient to cover the entire cost of all the projects the Assembly was undertaking.

    “For example, the budgeted amount of GHC149,548.30 that was captured in the 2016 budget for the 6-unit Classroom Block at Sokoban was GHC170,363.08 lower than the contract sum,” it said.

    “For the Fencing and Landscaping at Oti Clinic, the budgeted amount of GHC125,000.00 that was captured in the 2016 budget was below the eventual contract sum by GHC274,638.91”.

    The report said District Works Engineers needed to improve the Accuracy of Estimates to support the Budgeting process.

    It said the subsection (1) of section 92 of the Local Government Act 1993, Act 462, and required Assemblies to submit to the regional coordinating Council a detailed budget, step 13.1 of the NDPC guidelines for preparing Medium-Term Development Plan (MTDP) (20142017) specifies that DAs should link the Composite Budget with the Annual Action Plan (AAP).

    It said the budget should be considered as allocating financial resources for the implementation of the District Medium-Term Development Plan by Departments of the Assemblies through the Composite Budgeting for the achievement of the objective of the plan.

    The report said without the preparation and approval of the budget, the Assembly would not be able to access funds for the execution of projects in the AAP.

    It said the guidelines required the DAs to employ the Medium- Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF) process in costing the activities, since it links the expenditure to District goals, objectives, and output as outlined in the District plan.

    “We noted that at the time of budgeting, Budget Offices allocated monies to various activities in anticipation of budgetary releases from Central government. In this regard, Budget officers assign figures to capital projects without drawings from which cost estimates are calculated,” it said.

    It said the budgeting process for capital projects was, not informed by any technical data but based on assumptions and that District Works Department (DWEs), multiply previous contract sums of similar works by a scale factor and provide them to Budget Officers as estimates for new works.

    “We observed that a percentage is added discretionarily to contract sum of previous works as the basis for budgetary allocation to new projects,” it said.

    Source: GNA

  • Man jailed for 5G phone mast arson attack

    A man in the UK who thought 5G technology was linked to Coronavirus has been jailed for an arson attack on a phone mast.

    Michael Whitty, 47, set fire to the mast’s equipment box in Kirkby, north-west England, after reading erroneous internet claims about the virus, Liverpool Crown Court heard.

    Theories claiming that 5G technology helps to transmit coronavirus have been widely condemned by the scientific community.

    Attacks on 5G masts pre-date the coronavirus pandemic. But there are concerns that a surge in the amount of vandalism has been caused by conspiracy theories which falsely claim the deployment of 5G networks has caused, or helped accelerate, the spread of COVID-19.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Drake and Ariana Grande’s record label drops the term ‘urban’

    Republic Records, one of the most powerful record labels in the US, will stop using the word “urban” to describe music of black origin.

    The company, which is home to Drake and Ariana Grande, says it will no longer use the term to describe “departments, employee titles and music genres”.

    “We encourage the rest of the music industry to follow suit,” it added.

    The term is often considered to be a generalization that marginalizes music by black artists.

    “‘Urban’ is a lazy, inaccurate generalization of several culturally rich art forms,” radio presenter DJ Semtex told the magazine Music Business UK in 2018.

    “I despise the word,” he added. “I know artists that do hip-hop, grime, or rap. I don’t know anyone that does urban music.

    “The connotation of the word doesn’t hold a positive weight,” agreed Sam Taylor, a senior vice president at Kobalt Music, in an interview with Billboard in 2018.

    “It’s downgrading R&B, soul and hip-hop’s incredible impact on music.”

    The term dates back to the mid-1970s, when black New York radio DJ Frankie Crocker coined the phrase “urban contemporary” as a label for the eclectic mix of songs that he played – which covered everything from James Brown to Doris Day.

    At the time, the label didn’t carry negative connotations but, after being shortened to “urban” it started being used as a catch-all for music created by black musicians – effectively lumping them into one category, regardless of genre.

    Republic Records reflected the growing discomfort around the term in a statement announcing it would remove the word from its company vocabulary.

    “‘Urban’ is rooted in the historical evolution of terms that sought to define black music,” it said.

    “As with a lot of our history, the original connotation of the term urban was not deemed negative. However, over time the meaning and connotations of ‘urban’ have shifted and it developed into a generalisation of black people in many sectors of the music industry, including employees and music by black artists.

    “While this change will not and does not affect any of our staff structurally, it will remove the use of this antiquated term.

    “We encourage the rest of the music industry to consider following suit as it is important to shape the future of what we want it to look like, as to not adhere to the outdated structures of the past.”

    ‘Important step forward’

    The label, whose roster also includes The Weeknd, Nicki Minaj, Post Malone and Taylor Swift, also announced the formation of an “action committee” to address social justice issues.

    Management company Milk & Honey, whose songwriters have contributed to hits by Drake & Rick Ross, The Chainsmokers, Dua Lipa and Selena Gomez also declared it would “formally eliminate the term ‘urban’ at our company”.

    In a statement posted to social media, it said: “We will no longer be using the term as we believe it’s an important step forward, and an outdated word, which has no place in 2020 onwards.”

    The move comes in the wake of widespread protests in the US and UK over the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis two weeks ago,

    A white police officer was filmed kneeling on Mr Floyd’s neck for almost nine minutes, while the 46-year-old repeated several times, “I can’t breathe”. He was later pronounced dead in hospital.

    His death prompted hundreds of thousands to take to the streets demanding racial justice.

    The music industry responded by pausing work for a day last week, with Universal Music – Republic Records’ parent company – establishing a “task force to accelerate our efforts in areas such as inclusion and social justice”.

    However, others have said the industry needs widespread systemic change, rather than “window dressing”.

    “Why is it that black music generates millions and millions of dollars a year and yet none of the companies have a meaningful number of employees of colour, let alone in the executive suite?” asked senior music industry lawyer Ronald E. Sweeney in an open letter published on Sunday.

    Sweeney, who has represented the likes of James Brown, P Diddy and Public Enemy, drew up a 12-point plan to address what he called “the elephant in the room”, including equal pay and the creation of a three-year programme to train people from minority backgrounds for executive roles.

    “[This] is what meaningful and real change looks like,” he wrote. “So, let’s see what you do.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • Oil giant BP to cut 10,000 jobs

    The boss of UK-based oil giant BP has told staff it plans to cut 10,000 jobs from its global workforce after being hit hard by the coronavirus pandemic.

    In an email to staff, BP chief executive Bernard Looney said most of the jobs would go by the end of the year and the majority of people affected would be in office-based jobs.

    “We are protecting the front line of the company and, as always, prioritising safe and reliable operations,” he added.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: UK daily deaths drop to pre-lockdown level

    The UK has recorded its lowest daily rise in the number of Coronavirus deaths since before lockdown on 23 March, the latest government figures show.

    A further 55 people died after testing positive with the virus as of 17:00 BST on Sunday, taking the total to 40,597.

    This included no new deaths announced in both Scotland and Northern Ireland for the second consecutive day.

    However, there tend to be fewer deaths reported on Mondays, due to a reporting lag over the weekend.

    The number of new UK cases on Monday – 1,205 – is also the lowest number since the start of lockdown.

    On the day lockdown began, 23 March, there was a rise of 74 deaths.

    The UK is only the second country – after the US – to pass the milestone of 40,000 deaths.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: Rural schools will have challenges Addae Mensah

    Emeritus Professor Ivan Addae Mensah, who is also a former Vice Chancellor of the University of Ghana, has noted that schools in rural areas in the country will have a daunting task protecting their students from coronavirus.

    This he said is due to the lack of enough financial and other resources to ensure that the materials needed to use in protecting the children are provided.

    Speaking in an exclusive interview with Alfred Ocansey on the Sunrise morning show on 3 92.7FM Tuesday, June 9, Emeritus Prof Addae Mensah said: “Certainly methods of teaching are likely to change, class sizes will need to be minimized.

    “That will mean having more teachers in the classroom, more facilities in the classrooms.

    “Government should be prepared to put in the necessary financial and other resources to make sure that these facilities are provided for the educational institutions.”

    But he indicated: “When it comes to the rural areas you will really have serious challenges especially with children in the basic schools. You can have social distancing or physical distancing in the classrooms but what do you do when they go out during recreation? How can you prevent them from interacting with each other and from chasing each other on the football field?”

    President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo on Sunday, May 31 announced the reopening of schools for final year students at all levels of education from Monday, June 15, 2020.

    He said after an engagement with the various teacher unions, government decided to allow final-year students to go back to school to prepare for their final examinations.

    President Akufo-Addo said all other levels of education will remain closed to students.

    Final year university students will resume classes on Monday, June 15 while Form 3 Senior High School students as well as Form 2 SHS students on Gold Track will reopen the following week.

     

    Source: 3 News

  • Coronavirus: Schools need more facilities Former Vice Chancellor alerts government

    Emeritus Professor Ivan Addae Mensah, a former Vice-Chancellor of the University of Ghana, has proposed to school authorities to reduce the sizes of their classes when schools reopen, as part of the efforts to limit the spread of the coronavirus pandemic.

    President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo on Sunday, May 31 announced the reopening of schools for final year students at all levels of education from Monday, June 15.

    He said after an engagement with the various teacher unions, government has decided to allow final-year students to go back to school to prepare for their final examinations.

    In his 10th televised address to the nation on measures taken by government to ease restrictions, President Akufo-Addo said all other levels of education will remain closed to students.

    Final year university students will resume classes on Monday, June 15 while Form 3 Senior High School students, as well as Form 2 SHS students on Gold Track, will reopen on June 22, 2020.

    Junior high school students will reopen on June 29.

    Speaking in an exclusive interview with Alfred Ocansey on Sunrise on 3 92.7FM Tuesday, June 9, Emeritus Prof Addae Mensah said: “Certainly methods of teaching are likely to change, class sizes will need to be minimized.

    “That will mean having more teachers in the classroom, more facilities in the classrooms.

    “Government should be prepared to put in the necessary financial and other resources to make sure that these facilities are provided for the educational institutions.”

    He added: “When it comes to the rural areas you will really have serious challenges especially with children in the basic schools. You can have social distancing or physical distancing in the classrooms but what do you do when they go out during recreation?

    “How can you prevent them from interacting with each other and from chasing each other on the football field?” he quizzed.

     

    Source: 3 News

  • Prince Andrew ‘offered to help Jeffrey Epstein prosecutors’

    The Duke of York offered to help US officials on “at least three occasions” in the inquiry into sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, his lawyers say.

    US authorities have previously accused Prince Andrew of not cooperating with the investigation.

    But the duke’s representatives suggested the US Department of Justice was seeking publicity rather than accepting the offer of help.

    The duke has been heavily criticised for his friendship with Epstein.

    He has previously said he did not witness any suspicious behaviour during visits to Epstein’s homes.

    Prince Andrew’s legal team has hit back at allegations from the US prosecutor in charge of the investigation into Epstein that the duke had provided “zero co-operation” to the Department of Justice (DoJ).

    In a statement, the legal team said: “The Duke of York has on at least three occasions this year offered his assistance as a witness to the DoJ.

    “Unfortunately, the DoJ has reacted to the first two offers by breaching their own confidentiality rules and claiming that the duke has offered zero cooperation. In doing so, they are perhaps seeking publicity rather than accepting the assistance proffered.”

    Prince Andrew stepped away from royal duties last year following a widely-criticised BBC interview about his relationship with Epstein, who took his own life in a US jail cell in August, aged 66, while awaiting trial on sex trafficking and conspiracy charges.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Prince Andrew’s lawyers deny lack of cooperation in Epstein case

    Britain’s Prince Andrew on Monday hit back at claims he had failed to cooperate with US authorities investigating the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

    US lawyers have claimed that Queen Elizabeth II’s second son refused to help in the case, which centres around lurid sex trafficking claims against the multi-millionaire financier.

    The 60-year-old senior royal publicly defended his friendship with Epstein in a BBC television interview last year, prompting outrage from his victims, and leading him to quit frontline royal duties.

    But Andrew’s lawyers, Blackfords, said in a statement that claims he had stonewalled investigators were untrue and accused the US Department of Justice (DoJ) of chasing headlines.

    “The Duke of York has on at least three occasions this year offered his assistance as a witness to the DoJ,” the statement said.

    “Unfortunately, the DoJ has reacted to the first two offers by breaching their own confidentiality rules and claiming that the Duke has offered zero co-operation.

    “In doing so, they are perhaps seeking publicity rather than accepting the assistance proffered.”

    Andrew, a former Royal Navy helicopter pilot who as a younger man had a reputation as a playboy prince, is accused of having sexual relations with one woman when she was 17 – an allegation he has vehemently denied.

    The woman, Virginia Giuffre, alleges she was trafficked under-age to have sex with friends of Epstein, who was 66 when he killed himself in a New York jail in August last year.

    The hedge fund manager, who befriended countless celebrities over the years, including US President Donald Trump, was awaiting trial on sex-trafficking charges.

    ‘Disappointing’

    Andrew’s lawyers said they had upheld their commitment to confidentiality but said they were forced to go public “in view of misleading media briefings” from the United States.

    US investigators had been looking into Epstein’s affairs for more than 16 years but only requested the prince’s help on January 2 this year, they said.

    “Importantly, the DoJ advised us that the Duke is not and has never been a ‘target’ of their criminal investigations into Epstein and that they sought his confidential, voluntary cooperation.

    “In the course of these discussions, we asked the DoJ to confirm that our co-operation and any interview arrangements would remain confidential, in accordance with the ordinary rules that apply to voluntary co-operation with the DoJ,” the statement said.

    “We were given an unequivocal assurance that our discussions and the interview process would remain confidential.”

    The lawyers pointed to two claims from New York attorney Geoffrey Berman on January 27 and March 9 that the duke was refusing to cooperate, leading to “misleading” media reports.

    “These statements were inaccurate, and they should not have been made,” Andrew’s lawyers added, accusing the DoJ of treating their client “by a lower standard” than anyone else.

    The Sun newspaper on Monday reported that the DoJ had submitted a mutual legal assistance request to Britain’s interior ministry to force the prince to give a statement.

    His lawyers said that would be “disappointing” given his willingness to do provide a written statement voluntarily.

    Source: france24.com

  • US police officer charged in Floyd death to appear in court

    The white police officer whose fatal arrest of George Floyd sparked mass protests for racial justice across the United States and beyond was to make his first court appearance Monday in Minneapolis, where the city council has moved to disband the police department.

    Thousands of mourners were expected to attend a memorial for the 46-year-old African American at the Fountain of Praise Church in Houston, the Texas town where he grew up and is to be buried on Tuesday next to his mother.

    Among those paying their respects will be Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden and his wife, Jill, who were also to meet privately with Floyd’s family.

    In Minnesota, Derek Chauvin, 44, a 19-year veteran of the Minneapolis police force, was to appear in court to face second-degree murder, third-degree murder and manslaughter charges for his role in Floyd’s May 25 death.

    Chauvin, who is seen in harrowing video footage kneeling on Floyd’s neck for nearly nine minutes while he gasps “I can’t breathe,” could face decades behind bars if convicted.

    Three other Minneapolis police officers appeared in court last week to face a charge of aiding and abetting Floyd’s murder for their roles in his arrest for allegedly passing a counterfeit $20 bill.

    Chauvin’s appearance in Hennepin County District Court is scheduled for 12:45 pm Central Time (1745 GMT) and is to be held remotely by video link from a prison in Stillwater, Minnesota.

    Floyd’s death, the latest of an African-American man at the hands of police, has unleashed protests for racial justice and against police brutality in cities across the United States and around the world.

    The Minneapolis city council pledged on Sunday to dismantle and rebuild the police department.

    “We committed to dismantling policing as we know it in the city of Minneapolis and to rebuild with our community a new model of public safety that actually keeps our community safe,” council president Lisa Bender said.

    ‘Massive structural reform’

    Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey is against getting rid of the department, however, and the head of the city’s powerful police union, Bob Kroll, appeared on stage last year with President Donald Trump.

    Frey told AFP he supported “massive structural reform to revise this structurally racist system” but not “abolishing the entire police department.”

    Other US cities have already begun to embrace reforms – starting with bans on the use of tear gas and rubber bullets.

    In Washington, Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer and two dozen other lawmakers kneeled in silence at the US Capitol for the eight minutes and 46 seconds that Chauvin spent with his knee on Floyd’s neck.

    The tribute to Floyd and other black Americans “who have unjustly lost their lives” was held in Emancipation Hall – named in honour of the slaves who helped erect the Capitol building.

    Democrats went on to unveil a wide-ranging police reform bill, one of the chief demands of demonstrators who have taken to the streets for the past two weeks in the most sweeping US protests for racial justice since the 1968 assassination of Martin Luther King Jr.

    “What we have to do as a nation is hold police accountable,” said Florida Representative Val Demings, a former police officer who has been mentioned as a possible running mate for Biden.

    It is unclear what support the proposed reforms might find in the Republican-controlled Senate – or whether Trump would sign such legislation into law.

    Trump has adopted a tough approach to putting down the protests and his administration has proposed no specific policy changes in response to the widespread outrage over Floyd’s death.

    “LAW & ORDER, NOT DEFUND AND ABOLISH THE POLICE. The Radical Left Democrats have gone crazy!” he tweeted on Monday.

    The president was scheduled to host a roundtable with law enforcement at the White House on Monday.

    A new CNN poll published on Monday of registered voters had Biden with a 14-point lead over Trump – 55 per cent to 41 per cent – his biggest margin yet in the White House race.

    Source: france24.com