Category: Foreign

  • Ireland, Spain call for EU review of Israel’s human rights conduct in Gaza

    Ireland, Spain call for EU review of Israel’s human rights conduct in Gaza

    The prime ministers of Spain and Ireland have asked the European Commission to urgently review whether Israel is complying with its human rights obligations in Gaza as international pressure grows for Israel to hold off on an assault of the densely packed southern border city of Rafah.

    The two leaders said yesterday that attacking Rafah poses “a grave and imminent threat that the international community must urgently confront”.

    “We also recall the horror of October 7, and call for the release of all hostages and an immediate ceasefire that can facilitate access for urgently needed humanitarian supplies,” the prime ministers said in a joint letter published on the Spanish government’s website.

    At least 1,139 Israelis were killed and about 240 people were taken captive in a raid by Hamas fighters on southern Israel on October 7, prompting Israel to unleash its most brutal offensive yet on the besieged territory.

     At least 28,576 Palestinians have since been killed in Israeli attacks, the Ministry of Health in Gaza said yesterday, mostly women and children.

    Spain and Ireland have been particularly outspoken on the topic of Israel’s assault on Gaza in comparison with other European Union states.

    But a Spanish government source told the Reuters news agency that it was confident that European countries are unifying around a firmer position and for the European Commission to take more concrete action over Israel’s actions in Gaza.

    The source pointed to a tweet on Tuesday by Alexander De Croo, the prime minister of Belgium, which said any Rafah operation could generate an “unmitigated humanitarian catastrophe”. Belgium at present holds the presidency of the European Council.

     German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock also said before talks scheduled with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that an offensive on Rafah would jeopardise the humanitarian situation there.

     While only Spain and Ireland signed the letter, the source said it expected further backing for a review when ministers meet for the Council of Europe in March.

     Their intervention follows South Africa’s referral of Israel to the International Court of Justice over allegations it is committing genocide.

     The European Commission confirmed receipt of the letter and said it would “look into it”, spokeswoman Arianna Podesta told reporters.

    “We do urge all sides when it comes to Israel to respect international law, and we note that there must be respect, there must be accountability for violations of international law,” the spokesperson said.

    Read Also: Gaza Strip at my doorstep

    Two weeks ago, Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar said he was in talks with other EU heads of government to review the EU-Israel Association Agreement on the basis that Israel may be breaching the agreement’s human rights clause.

    The 23-year-old agreement sets out a framework for free trade in goods, services and capital based on “respect for human rights and democratic principles”.

    Varadkar said several EU states were also talking about a possible joint recognition of a Palestinian state.

    More than 1.4 million displaced Palestinians are currently trapped in Rafah as Israeli troops prepare for a full-scale ground operation that has triggered international alarm over the potential for mass casualties. Most of those in Rafah fled there after the Israeli army designated it a “safe zone”.

    With an influx of desperate people and a lack of clean water, food, medicine and other basic supplies, disease is also flourishing.

    Israeli tanks have already shelled parts of Rafah over the past few days, causing waves of panic. Dozens of Palestinians were killed in overnight attacks on Monday, and on Tuesday, two journalists, including an Al Jazeera Arabic correspondent, were seriously wounded.

    Thousands have started to flee the area to Deir el-Balah in central Gaza as much of the enclave has been turned into ruins.

  • Foreign ministers seek quality education in Africa

    Foreign ministers seek quality education in Africa

    THE 44th Ordinary Session of the Executive Council of the African Union (AU) began yesterday  at the AU headquarters in Addis Ababa, the Ethiopian capital.

    The session began with a call for increased efforts to ensure continental stability and quality education in Africa.

     The two-day meeting, comprising foreign ministers from AU member states, is being held under the AU’s theme of the year for 2024: “Educate an African fit for the 21st Century: Building resilient education systems for increased access to inclusive, lifelong, quality, and relevant learning in Africa.”

    Addressing the executive council meeting, the Chairperson of the AU Commission Moussa Faki Mahamat underscored the need to exert concerted efforts towards ensuring continental peace and security.

     He added that socio-economic development and sustainable financing of the AU will also strengthening the global multilateral system.

    Recalling the positive achievements and gaps marked in the first-decade implementation of the AU’s 50-year continental development blueprint, Agenda 2063.

    Faki underscored the need to exert collective efforts towards realising the major aspirations of the AU as the pan-African bloc embarked on the second decade of its continental blueprint.

     “The resurgence of military coups, pre- and post-electoral violence, and humanitarian crises linked to war and the effects of climate change are all very serious sources of concern for us.

     “They seriously threaten to obliterate the signs of the emergence of Africa, of which we are proud,“ Faki told the African foreign ministers.

     Ethiopian Minister of Foreign Affairs Taye Atske Selassie said the AU theme of the year “resonates deeply with the expectation of people across our continent for progress and development.”

     He stressed the urgent need to build a resilient education system in Africa towards availing increased access to education and promoting quality inclusive education.

     Selassie further underscored the importance of AU’s participation in G20 as well as Ethiopia’s recent membership into the BRICS mechanism to advance Africa’s position on the global stage.

    Read Also: African Games: Flying Eagles, Falconets to resume camp in Abuja 

    Claver Gatete, Executive Secretary of the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) noted the crucial impetus to enhance investment in education, promote Africa’s global competitiveness in education.

    He said that creating a competitive education system with emphasis on digital transformation and innovation, as well as boosting science, technology, engineering, arts, and mathematics in Africa in line with the job market.

    “Education is a basic human right and a key enabler for achieving our collective socioeconomic objectives. When we fail to provide accessible and inclusive education, we deny people this right,” he said.

    Dhoihir Dhoulkamal, minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation of Comoros and the chairperson of the AU Executive Council for 2023, called for strengthening continental socioeconomic integration, and togetherness against terrorism and extremism.

    Noting that the current global uncertainties and their impact on Africa, Dhoulkamal called for promoting Africa’s unity in responding to global uncertainties and towards creating continental resilience against the adverse effects of climate change.

    The AU Executive Council meeting will be followed by the 37th Ordinary Session of the AU Assembly of the Heads of State and Government, which is slated to be held from Feb. 17 to 18.

  • Trump not immune from election subversion charges, Us Court rules

    Trump not immune from election subversion charges, Us Court rules

    A federal appeals court ruled on Tuesday that Donald Trump does not have immunity from charges that he plotted to overturn his 2020 election defeat, bringing the former U.S. president a step closer to an unprecedented criminal trial.

    A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit rejected Trump’s claim that he cannot be prosecuted because the allegations relate to his official responsibilities as president.

    “We cannot accept that the office of the Presidency places its former occupants above the law for all time thereafter,” the unanimous panel wrote.

    The court concluded that any “executive immunity” that may have shielded Trump from criminal charges while he served as president “no longer protects him against this prosecution.”

    The ruling, which Trump is almost certain to appeal, rebuffs his attempt to avoid a trial on charges that he undermined American democracy and the transfer of power, even as he consolidates his position as the frontrunner for the Republican presidential nomination.

    Read Also: Trump hints at potential running mate

    The case will remain paused until at least Feb. 12 to give Trump time to appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.

    Trump’s lawyers argued that former presidents were entitled to sweeping legal protections and could not be criminally prosecuted for official actions unless first impeached by the House of Representatives and removed from office by the Senate.

    Trump was impeached twice by the House, but each time Senate Republicans cast sufficient votes to acquit him of the charges.

    REUTERS

  • British vessel attacked on Red Sea

    British vessel attacked on Red Sea

    A British-cargo vessel was attacked  on the Red Sea on Tuesday, the UK Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) said.

    The attack on the ship happened west of Hodeida in Yemen just after midnight.

    No group has claimed responsibility for the attack but the Associated Press reports that suspicions are on Iranian-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen.

    The UKMTO said the ship’s master was “aware of a small craft on his Port side” before a projectile was fired at the ship.

    No crew  member was injured in the attack.

    Read Also: JUST IN: Sanwo-Olu witnesses arrival of LNG-powered vessel at Lekki seaport

    The vessel sustained small damages on its bridge windows, but the vessel was deemed safe to continue its journey.

    Earlier on Monday, Defence Secretary Grant Shapps said the UK would, if necessary, not hesitate to respond again, in self-defence, to Houthis in Yemen.

    He was updating MPs after the UK and the U.S. took part in joint airstrikes against Houthi rebel sites on Saturday.

    Mr Shapps said the attacks were in line with international law and in self-defence, adding that they had targeted three military facilities following “very careful analysis.”

    (dpa/NAN) 

  • UN appoints independent review of UNRWA amid Israel’s allegations

    UN appoints independent review of UNRWA amid Israel’s allegations

    The United Nations has appointed an “independent Review Group” to examine internal policies at the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA), amid allegations some of the agency’s workers participated in the Oct. 7 Hamas terrorist attack in Israel.

    Secretary-General António Guterres and UNRWA Commissioner-General Philippe Lazzarini said yesterday the group will review whether the agency is remaining neutral in foreign conflicts and is responding appropriately to allegations that this neutrality has been breached.

    The inquiry comes as several countries around the world, including the United States, have suspended payments to UNRWA over Israeli allegations that 12 of its staffers assisted Hamas fighters during the attack on Israeli border communities or held Israelis hostage following the attack.

    Catherine Colonna, the former minister of foreign affairs of France, will lead the inquiry, the officials said. She will work with the Raoul Wallenberg Institute in Sweden, the Chr. Michelsen Institute in Norway, and the Danish Institute for Human Rights.

    The Review Group will begin work on Feb. 14 and is expected to submit its initial findings in a report to the secretary-general at the end of March.

    It will submit a final report, which will be made public, by late April 2024, the UN said.

    According to the UN, the Review Group is tasked with satisfying four objectives. These include identifying “the mechanisms and procedures that the Agency currently has in place to ensure neutrality and to respond to allegations or information indicating that the principle may have been breached.”

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    The group will also “ascertain how those mechanisms and procedures have, or have not, been implemented in practice and whether every practicable effort has been made to apply them to their full potential, taking into account the particular operational, political and security environment in which the Agency works.”

    It will also “assess the adequacy of those mechanisms and procedures and whether they are fit for purpose… taking into account the particular operational, political and security context in which the Agency works,” and to “make recommendations for the improvement and strengthening, if necessary, of the mechanisms and procedures that are currently in place or for the creation of new and alternative mechanisms and procedures that would be better fit for purpose.”

    UNRWA, which contributes to the largest humanitarian relief effort in the Middle East, has said it is delivering life-saving assistance to roughly 2.3 million Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.

    U.S. State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said the U.S. supports “the work that UNRWA does,” and called it “critical” for the survival of the civilians who have been impacted by Israel’s war with Hamas in Gaza.

  • Senegal police clampdown on protesters

    Senegal police clampdown on protesters

    • Opposition reject halt to election

    Protesters in Senegal were arrested and tear gassed by the police as they took to the streets to oppose the decision by President Macky Sall to postpone the country’s February 25 elections.

    This came ahead of a scheduled debate of federal lawmakers yesterday to formalise the postponement of the poll.

    Demonstrators rallied in the capital of Dakar after leading opposition figures and candidates in the presidential election blasted the decision.

    Opposition leaders had called on citizens to defend democracy amid a push for dialogue by leaders of the Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas).

    Those arrested in the capital included former prime minister Aminata Toure and Anta Babacar Ngom, one of the presidential candidates.

    The government cut off the signal of the private Walf television channel as it broadcast the protest live.

    The global Committee to Protect Journalists condemned the signal cut off in a post on the X social media platform, urging Senegalese authorities to ensure that “journalists can work without hindrance.”

    Read Also: Senegal postpones national election indefinitely

    Senegal has been embroiled in political tensions as a result of deadly clashes involving opposition supporters and the disqualification of two opposition leaders ahead of the now-cancelled presidential ballot.

    Several opposition figures rejected President Sall’s decision to postpone the presidential election citing a dispute between the judiciary and parliament over the final list of candidates and those disqualified.

    At least two of the 20 candidates said they would proceed with their campaign scheduled to kick off on Sunday.

    President Sall said that he was stopping the vote because of a dispute between the judiciary and federal lawmakers over the disqualification process and the reported dual nationality of some qualified candidates.

    But opposition leaders claim the Senegalese leader lacks the power to delay the vote.

    They argue that only the country’s Constitutional Council, Senegal’’s highest election authority, has the power to reschedule the election.

  • Gaza hospital officials missing after being summoned by Israeli forces

    Gaza hospital officials missing after being summoned by Israeli forces

    Two officials at Al Amal Hospital in southern Gaza are missing after being “summoned” by the Israeli military yesterday, the Palestine Red Crescent Society said.

    The summons came as hundreds of displaced people who sought shelter at the society’s hospital and the adjacent headquarters in Khan Younis began leaving after a two-week siege by Israeli forces, the PRCS said in a post on X.

    The PRCS said Dr Haidar Al Qudra, general manager of the hospital, and its administrative director, Maher Atallah, had been taken to an unknown location.

    “This follows the ICRC [International Committee of the Red Cross] informing PRCS of occupation approval for a safe passage, enabling displaced individuals to leave Al Amal Hospital and PRCS headquarters towards Mawasi in Khan Younis,” it said.

    Thousands of civilians have been fleeing to the coastal town of Al Mawasi, near Khan Younis, and to the city of Rafah, further south, after weeks of intense Israeli bombardment and ground fighting against Palestinian militants in the city.

    People trapped at the Al Amal Hospital had begun burying victims of Israeli attacks in the hospital grounds because they were unable to leave the compound.

    The death toll in Gaza from nearly four months of Israel’s offensive has reached 27,478 people, with 66,835 injured, the enclave’s health ministry said on Monday. About another 8,000 are missing.

    Israel launched strikes and a ground offensive in Gaza after Hamas militants attacked Israeli communities on October 7, killing about 1,200 people and abducting 240.

    Read Also: When the war in Gaza stops, the political war in Israel will begin

    Overnight, at least 128 people were killed in Gaza in Israeli attacks.

    Israel’s military bombarded Deir Al Balah in central Gaza, Khan Younis and areas leading to Rafah.

    Some 1.9 million out of Gaza’s 2.2 million population are now crammed into the Rafah area, the Gaza Health Ministry and the Palestinian state news agency Wafa reported.

    An Israeli air strike on a home in Al Hakar neighbourhood of Deir Al Balah killed 14 people, reported the agency.

    In Gaza city, Israeli soldiers set fire to homes in the Burj Al Sousi area, it added.

    Israeli media reported last week that Israeli soldiers were under direct orders to raze homes they occupied.

    The Israeli offensive has created a humanitarian crisis as displaced people struggle with food shortages and winter cold.

    Many are reliant on food handouts from charity kitchens, queuing in wet, cold weather.

  • Namibia inaugurates Mbumba as new president

    Namibia inaugurates Mbumba as new president

    Following the death of President Hage Geingob, Namibia on Sunday, February 4, swore in former Vice President Nangolo Mbumba as the new president of the country.

    The 82-year-old president promised to enhance the superb framework that his predecessor had laid.

    He said: “I take on this heavy mantle, cognisant of the weight of this responsibility, to serve all the People of the Republic of Namibia with utmost dedication and commitment, in the service of all citizens of the Namibian House.”

    Mbumba also said that Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah, a former deputy prime minister, would be taking over as vice president.

    Read Also: Tinubu, other leaders mourn Namibian President

    “I am not going to be around for the elections so don’t panic,” he said at his swearing-in ceremony.

    He commended his predecessor for maintaining the peace and stability that the nation enjoys.

    He added: “This is owing to the visionary leadership and foresight of President Geingob, who was the chief architect of the Namibian Constitution and the champion of our Governance Architecture, based on stable Processes, Systems and institutions that are guiding us today.”

    Late President Geingob passed away on Sunday while undergoing cancer treatment in Namibia.

  • Senegal postpones national election indefinitely

    Senegal postpones national election indefinitely

    Senegalese President Macky Sall, yesterday, announced the indefinite postponement of the presidential election scheduled for February 25, just hours before official campaigning was due to start.

    In an address to the nation, Sall said he signed a decree abolishing a previous measure that set the date as lawmakers investigate two Constitutional Council judges whose integrity in the election process has been questioned.

    A minister in the Senegal government said he was resigning his post Saturday, hours after Sall announced the indefinite postponement of the February 25 presidential election.

    Read Also; Tinubu’s quest for living wage for Nigerian workers: 37 to the rescue

    Abdou Latif Coulibaly said in a statement he was quitting because he wanted to have “full and complete freedom” to defend his political convictions.

    The US State Department yesterday urged Senegal to “swiftly” set a date for a new election, after Sall announced the indefinite postponement of a presidential poll scheduled for February 25.

    “We urge all participants in Senegal’s electoral process to engage peacefully in the important effort to swiftly set a new date and the conditions for a timely, free and fair election,” the department’s Bureau of African Affairs posted on X.

    “We acknowledge allegations of irregularities, but we are deeply concerned about the disruption to the Presidential electoral calendar.”

  • Senegal’s President Sall postpones presidential election

    Senegal’s President Sall postpones presidential election

    President Macky Sall on Saturday postponed Senegal’s planned Feb. 25 presidential election, announcing in a televised address to the nation that he had cancelled the relevant electoral law due to electoral disputes he warned could fuel unrest.

    With little more than three weeks to go before the vote, the unprecedented step of delaying the poll, to an unspecified date, pitches Senegal into uncharted constitutional waters that some opposition and civil society groups warn could destabilise the country.

    Sall’s decision follows the constitutional council’s January decision to exclude some prominent contenders from the electoral list, which has fuelled discontent about the election process.

    “These troubled conditions could seriously undermine the credibility of the ballot by sowing the seeds of pre- and post-electoral disputes,” Sall said in his address.

    He did not set a new date for the vote, but said there would be a national dialogue to ensure the election would be free, fair and transparent.

    Read Also: Tinubu congratulates Dangote for getting Senegal’s highest honour

    He said the postponement would not affect his decision not to run for a third term – an issue that has helped fuel recurrent and sometimes deadly protests in what is normally one of West Africa’s most stable democracies.

    The capital Dakar appeared calm after Sall’s announcement with no immediate sign of people taking to the streets in protest.

    REUTERS