Category: Foreign

  • Nurse Lucy Letby found guilty of murdering seven babies on neonatal unit

    Nurse Lucy Letby found guilty of murdering seven babies on neonatal unit

    The 33-year-old has been convicted of murdering babies while working at the Countess of Chester Hospital between June 2015 and June 2016.

    A nurse has been found guilty of murdering seven babies and attempting to murder six other infants while working on a hospital’s neonatal unit between June 2015 and June 2016.

    Lucy Letby – who was in her mid-20s and working at the Countess of Chester Hospital at the time of the murders – is now the UK’s most prolific child killer of modern times.

    She was found guilty by a series of partial verdicts, delivered several days apart, with the judge issuing reporting restrictions until the end of the trial.

    Among the guilty verdicts, Letby was convicted of seven counts of attempted murder, including two involving the same infant.

    Letby cried during some of the verdicts, while families of her victims sobbed and comforted each other as the jury read out its findings. One member of the jury also cried and held her head in her hands.

    She was also found not guilty of two charges of attempted murder. The jury was unable to reach verdicts on six further counts of attempted murder.

    Letby’s mother, Susan, broke down sobbing as her daughter was led away from the dock after the first set of verdicts, whispering “you can’t be serious, this can’t be right,” into her husband’s arms.

    Neither Letby nor her parents were in court as the trial came to a close today.

    During a later set of verdicts, Letby refused to come up from the cells, and was found guilty of more murders in her absence.

    The government has now ordered an independent inquiry into the killings.

    All of the children have been granted anonymity, although their names were read out in the courtroom during the nine-month trial.

    Two of her victims, known as Child L and M, were twin brothers.

    They had been born prematurely and were just days old when Letby tried to kill them within hours of each other, in April 2016.

    Speaking publicly for the very first time, the boys’ parents described the killer nurse as acting “very cool and calm” after trying to murder Child M with an injection of excessive air.

    “At that time, her body language and her behaviour totally changed,” the twins’ mother said.

    “She was very annoyed with us. She thought that ‘I couldn’t kill your baby’.”

    ‘I had to listen to her lie and lie and lie’

    The boys’ father said he broke down as he watched doctors trying to resuscitate Child M on the ward, “pumping his heart like a rag doll”.

    “We were first-time parents, we didn’t know what was going on,” he said. Neither parent suspected Lucy Letby at the time.

    Both Child M and Child L, who Letby tried to poison with insulin, survived the assaults.

    But Child M has been left with brain damage which his parents say means he may “deviate from his peers” as he grows older.

    The boys’ parents, who joined other families in the court, said it was “horrendous” to witness Letby repeatedly deny hurting their children during weeks of cross-examination.

    “I had to listen to her lie and lie and lie,” their mother said, “and I say now enough: don’t tell lies.”

    “Whatever sentence she gets, it’s not going to be enough.”

    Read Also: A Nurse’s Tale

    ‘Devious’ and ‘cold-blooded’

    Described as “devious” and “cold-blooded”, Letby “completely perverted her learning” and “weaponised whatever was at her disposal,” the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) said.

    The jury heard the nurse would misuse medical equipment and medicines to cause babies to unexpectedly collapse across day and night shifts on the hospital’s neonatal ward.

    Her victims included both boys and girls, many of whom were born prematurely.

    Two of her last victims were boys, known as Children O and P, who were two of three triplet siblings. Both died within the first week of their lives, and Child O was found with severe liver damage.

    Pascale Jones, of the CPS, said Letby “betrayed the trust that people had in the NHS” as well as the “faith that families had”.

    “Behind that angelic smile was a much darker side to her personality,” she added.

    Police investigating more attacks

    Letby stood trial accused of murdering seven babies and trying to murder 10 others at the Countess of Chester Hospital.

    The nurse, from Hereford, denied all the charges.

    But the court heard that colleagues had suspicions about Letby well over a year before hospital bosses contacted the police.

    A nursing assistant who worked at the hospital told Sky News that when “alarms would go off during the night” there would be a “phrase that people would use”.

    Lynsey Artell said that colleagues would ask, “I wonder if Lucy’s working tonight?”.

    Ms Artell also fears that Letby attacked her son, Asa, who was cared for on the hospital’s neonatal ward after being born two months premature.

    She is calling for the police to reinvestigate her claims and that of other parents.

    Following today’s verdicts, Cheshire Police confirmed they are now investigating whether Letby could have attacked other children in her care, prior to June 2015.

    This includes several more years she worked at the Countess of Chester Hospital, as well as time Letby spent on training placements at Liverpool Women’s Hospital.

    Dr Nigel Scawn, medical director of the Countess of Chester, said: “We are extremely sorry that these crimes were committed at our hospital and our thoughts continue to be with all the families and loved ones of the babies who came to harm or died. We cannot begin to understand what they have been through.

    “Since Lucy Letby worked at our hospital, we have made significant changes to our services and I want to provide reassurance to every patient that may access our services that they can have confidence in the care that they will receive.”

    DCI Nicola Evans, the deputy senior investigating officer on the case, told Sky News that it remains “really hard to even accept that, in that setting, somebody would be harming babies”.

    “That is totally unnatural for anybody to think that,” she added.

    No motive ever established

    Cheshire Police conducted a two-year investigation into the babies’ deaths before Letby was charged in November 2020.

    Officers say they examined more than half a million medical and digital records and have been supporting the victims’ families, many of whom have attended court proceedings in person.

    DCI Evans said: “I don’t think there’s anybody who has worked on this investigation who will come out of the other side the same person they were.

    “It has been heartbreaking.”

    During the trial, Letby claimed that she was being wrongly accused to cover hospital failings.

    No motive has ever been established, which DCI Evans said “must be really hard for families to accept”.

    “I don’t know whether we will ever be able to answer that question, and only Lucy Letby can answer that,” the officer added.

    Letby’s murder trial is believed to be one of the longest in British legal history – it began on October 10, 2022, 315 days or more than 10 months ago. In total, it sat for some 167 days. However the trial over the murder of Lynette White sat for longer – a total of 197 days – in 1990.

    Additional reporting by Megan Harwood-Baynes, news reporter inside Manchester Crown Court

  • Boat disaster: I’ll attempt Spain trip too, says  deceased’s brother

    Boat disaster: I’ll attempt Spain trip too, says  deceased’s brother

    The brother of a man who died after a boat carrying dozens of migrants was found off Cape Verde has told the BBC they were trying to reach Spain.

     According to Mamour Ba, he too would still attempt the trip himself as it was impossible to make a living in Senegal.

     More than 60 people are feared to have died on the boat, which was at sea for over a month. Most were from Senegal.

     “Everyone is shocked. He was one of the pillars of our family,” Mamour Ba said about his brother Cheikhouna.

     Ba, 27, is a student from the small fishing town of Fass Boye, halfway along the coast between the capital, Dakar, and the historical town of St Louis.

     Three of his brothers and one of his cousins were on the wooden pirogue style boat that set off for Europe on July 10 from Fass Boye with 101 people on board.

     “They wanted to get to Spain. They said they wanted to leave and I couldn’t tell them not to because they’d already made their minds up.”

    Read Also: India invites Tinubu for September G20 summit

     He thought they had all died, until he got a call from Cape Verde on Wednesday after their rescue.

     They were among 38 people, including children, who were saved, with footage showing them being helped ashore, some on stretchers, on the island of Sal. More than 60 other people are feared to be lost at sea.

     The archipelago sits around 600km (372 miles) off the coast of West Africa and on the migration route to the Canary Islands, a Spanish territory seen by many as a route to the EU.

     Ba said he still does not know the details of his relatives’ five-week journey as they were too disorientated: “They didn’t have the strength to explain what happened, they just said: ‘We’re alive’. They sounded very weak.”

     But as the conversation continued, he found out that not all of them had survived.

     “One of my brothers, Ibrahima, used one of the doctor’s phones to call me from Cape Verde.

     “He told us our other brother Cheikhouna was lost at sea. I was shocked. We were very close, he was a real fighter. He was married with two kids.

     “The day he left he held my hands and said, ‘Brother I have to go.’

     “He was my brother, he was my friend.”

     After news of the tragedy spread in Fass Boye, where most of those on board the boat hailed from, anger erupted on Wednesday.

     Some set fire to the house of the mayor, angered with the authorities about the lack of opportunities for young people.

  • Sweden raises terror threat level to high

    Sweden raises terror threat level to high

    Sweden has raised its terror threat level from elevated to high, citing a “deteriorating situation” of threatened attacks and a determination that the threat will persist for a long time.

    “The threat picture against Sweden has gradually changed and the threat of attacks from actors within violent Islamism has increased during the year,” said Swedish Security Police Chief Charlotte von Essen in a statement.

    “Sweden has gone from being regarded as a legitimate target for terrorist attacks to being regarded as a priority target.”

    High is the fourth threat level on a five-point scale, marking the first time it had reached that level since 2016.

    The Swedish government said the new terror threat level is based on a strategic assessment of terrorist actors’ “intention and ability to commit terrorist attacks against Sweden.”

    It added the terror threat level increase “does not depend on any single event, but must be seen in a strategic and long-term perspective.”

    Read Also: India invites Tinubu for September G20 summit

    “The development of events with threats directed at Sweden over a longer period of time is serious and affects Sweden’s security,” it said.

    However, the adjustment comes amid increased tension surrounding demonstrations including burning or other desecration of the Koran.

    Both Sweden and Denmark said in July they were exploring legal options to intervene in protests to deter Koran burnings during protests even as they continue to uphold freedom of expression.

    Earlier this summer Iraq expelled the Swedish ambassador amid tensions over Koran burnings during protests. Iraq Prime Minister Mohammed Shia’ Al Sudani accused Sweden of “repeated permission for burning the Qur’an, insulting Islam and burning Iraqi flag.”

    The EU condemned Qur’an burnings in July as Swedish Defense Minister Carl-Oskar Bohlin asserted that a disinformation campaign was perpetuating “false claims that the Swedish state is behind the desecration of copies of Holy Scriptures.”

  • India invites Nigeria, Egypt, others to G20 summit

    India invites Nigeria, Egypt, others to G20 summit

    India has invited Nigeria, Bangladesh, Egypt, Mauritius, the Netherlands, Oman, Singapore, Spain and the United Arab Emirates to the Group of 20 (G20) summit of major economies.

     Indian Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar said Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky was not invited.

     The summit is due to take place on September 9 and 10 in India’s capital New Delhi under the motto “One Earth, One Family, One Future.”

     The G20 includes Russia, which invaded Ukraine in February 2022 and is still at war.

     At 2022 G20 summit on the Indonesian island of Bali, Ukraine was top of the agenda.

    Read Also: India invites Tinubu for September G20 summit

     Zelensky made an appearance via video-call and presented his 10-point peace plan there for the first time.

     Jaishankar said that India had not invited Ukraine, which is not a member because the G20 was about growth and development, not global security issues.

     Accoding to him, global security issues is a matter for the UN Security Council.

     The summit, however, is expected to address issues such as energy security, fertilisers and food supply, which are all linked to the Ukraine war.

     Ukraine still hopes to be invited in some capacity.

  • ‘Handling Niger’s coup imbroglio shows Tinubu’s boldness’

    ‘Handling Niger’s coup imbroglio shows Tinubu’s boldness’

    Former Vice Chancellor, Al–Hikmah University, Ilorin Prof. Razaq Abubakre, said President Tinubu’s handling of the coup in Niger Republic is a display of boldness and diplomacy.

    Abubakre, who spoke with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja, said contrary to opinion of some observers, Tinubu is not a stooge of any superpower in the circumstances presently playing out.

    “Misreading the President’s strategy, the wailers misrepresented the democratic and constitutional requirement of the President.

    Read Also: All you need to know about NNPCL’s $3billion emergency loan

    “The requirement is to seek the consent of the National Assembly before embarking on the declaration of either a state of emergency on a state in the federation or war with another sovereign nation.

    “It is a lazy, nonchalant and clueless head of state that will depend on taking this step as soon as the ECOWAS resolution on the war option is taken,” he said.

    Abubakre said this does not mean that the President wants war willy-nilly.

    Rationalising the assemblage of military contingents from the ECOWAS countries on the Nigerian border with Niger Republic, he said a popular cliché is that attack is the best defence.

    According to Abubakre, the presence of military contributions from ECOWAS countries does not mean that war will necessarily break out the following day.

    “Still, it is a proactive mind that will take such a decision for a double advantage.

    “One is to shield member countries of ECOWAS from being vulnerable to the possible onslaught from the coupists and their allies from outside Africa.

    “The second advantage is, sending jitters to the coupists that ECOWAS is not a bulldog that can bark but cannot bite,” he explained.

    The Professor of Arabic highlighted the political economy that is of central importance to President Tinubu’s military and peaceful strategies.

    Abubakre said that, in this case, this would be his duly weighing what is advantageous to his country in the unfolding events at his immediate neighbourhood, which may have a dire consequence on his economic recovery plan for Nigeria.

  • Niger PM in Chad as U.S., Russia urge diplomatic option

    Niger PM in Chad as U.S., Russia urge diplomatic option

    Niger’s military-appointed prime minister made an unannounced visit to neighbouring Chad on Tuesday as West African states set talks for mulling possible military intervention to reverse his country’s coup and the United States and Russia urged a diplomatic solution to the crisis.

    Ali Mahaman Lamine Zeine, a civilian appointed by the military rulers, who ousted Nigerien President Mohamed Bazoum on July 26, arrived in Chad for a “working visit,” the Chadian government said on Facebook.

    Read Also: All you need to know about NNPCL’s $3billion emergency loan

     In a statement issued after meeting Chadian President Mahamat Idriss Deby Itno, Zeine said he had brought a message of “good neighbourliness and good fraternity” from the head of Niger’s regime.

    “We are in a process of transition, we discussed the ins and outs and reiterated our availability to remain open and talk with all parties, but insist on our country’s independence,” he said.

    Deby, a key player in the unstable Sahel had flown to the Nigerien capital Niamey four days after the coup.

    Photos later showed him pictured next to the detained Bazoum and, separately, with one of the regime’s leaders, General Salifou Mody.

    Zeine’s unannounced visit came hours after sources in the region said military chiefs from the regional bloc ECOWAS would meet in Ghana on Thursday and Friday to discuss possible intervention in Niger.

  • ECOWAS condemns killings of Niger soldiers by armed groups

    ECOWAS condemns killings of Niger soldiers by armed groups

    The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) Commission has expressed concerns over the reported killings of Nigerien soldiers by armed groups.

    The military junta yesterday reported that 17 of its soldiers were killed by an armed group near the Burkina Faso border.

    Reacting to the situation, the regional body condemned the attack and called for restoration of democratic rule.

    Read Also: All you need to know about NNPCL’s $3billion emergency loan

    The ECOWAS Commission, in a statement, insisted that reinstatement of democratically elected President Mohamed Bazoum, who was overthrown in a coup d’etat led by General Abdourahamane Tchiani, is the quickest option to return to peace and development.

    The statement read: “ECOWAS has learnt with sadness various attacks by armed groups in the Republic of Niger that have led to the death of several Nigerien soldiers.

    “ECOWAS condemns these attacks and conveys its deepest condolences to the people of Niger and the families of the soldiers who have lost their lives.

    “ECOWAS calls on the CNSP-military leadership in Niger to restore constitutional order in order to focus on the security of the country that had become increasingly fragile since the attempted coup d’etat against the democratically elected President, H.E. Mohamed Bazoum.”

  • President Bazoum to face high treason charge, says Niger military junta

    President Bazoum to face high treason charge, says Niger military junta

    Niger military junta on Monday announced plans to prosecute deposed President Mohamed Bazoum for high treason and undermining national security. 

    Bazoum has been held in the basement of his palace since the military staged a palace coup about three weeks ago.

    Bazoum was in “good spirits” despite being held in “difficult” conditions, his doctor said after a visit.

    Saturday’s visit was approved amid growing international demands for Bazoum’s release.

    But the junta said in a statement on State TV that it had gathered evidence to prosecute “the deposed President as well as his local and foreign accomplices for high treason and undermining the internal and external security of Niger”. It did not give further details.

    Bazoum, 63, is being held captive with his wife and son and there were growing concerns about their health.

    Read Also: Guterres worries about Bazoum’s condition

    The head of the presidential guards unit, Gen Abdourahmane Tchiani, declared himself Niger’s new ruler on 26 July after overthrowing him.

    The Economic Community of the West African States (ECOWAS) has threatened military action to reverse the coup but it has so far failed to follow through on its threat.

    The coup leaders have warned they will defend themselves against any intervention.

    ECOWAS has also imposed sanctions on the junta, including cutting electricity to Niger. This has caused blackouts in the capital Niamey, and other major cities.

    Only on  Saturday, a high-powered delegation of Muslim clerics from neighbouring Nigeria met junta leaders in Niamey in a bid to mediate an end to the crisis.

    UN human rights chief Volker Turk described the conditions of the detention as inhumane, degrading and in violation of international human rights law.

  • Revisit diaspora voting, says NYCN governor

    Revisit diaspora voting, says NYCN governor

    The Governor of the National Youth Council of Nigeria (NYCN), Europe Chapter, Collins Idahosa, has called for a revisit of diaspora voting during general elections in Nigeria.

     Idahosa, who was appointed by NYCN President, Sukubo Sukubo, made this call during a Zoom meeting with the members of the council in Europe.

     The Swedish-based said participation of Nigerians abroad in voting at home should be seriously considered.

    Read Also: The Future of Online Sports Betting in Nigeria

     This, he said, would nurture Nigerian democracy.

     “We should lend our voices to the current agitation for diaspora voting and how it should be coordinated to encourage more participation in deciding our leaders and elected offices from our local government level to the presidency,” he said.

    He promised to use his position to give Nigerian youths abroad a sense of belonging.

     “We will inform them that part of our purpose is to protect and give voice to the plight of the youths abroad and liaise with those youths in Nigeria. The current pains and sufferings endured by our youths and elderly must be brought to the attention of the policy makers and respective arms of the government,” he added.

     The council, he said, should leverage on its vast network to suggest to the powers that be the aspirations for a brighter future and practical way of achieving it.

    “We should be able to recommend members to the state and federal government to have appointments to be able to represent the interest of the youths and people in diaspora,” he stated.

     After the meeting, Idahosa announced the appointment of some coordinators to enhance effective and efficient service delivery

     They include Mrs Aghanti Tarela and Oludare Olusola Olowora for the United Kingdom; Prince Noble Otadaferua – Netherland; Dr Ayo Anifowose – Germany DENG; Micheal Otumun – Czech Republic; Oyediran Oyedayo – Poland; Victor Chibuike Osuji – Turkey; Ebhodaghe Joe – Belgium; Osas Otabor – Luxembourg; Morgan Omorogbe – Italy and Mercy Osaigbovo – Scotland.

    Idahosa said Olaoluwa Oyedola, who anchored the zoom meeting will serve as the Organisation Secretary.

    He enjoined them to coordinate youth activities and report to the office of the Governor

  • Niger coup: Wagner taking advantage of instability, says Blinken

    Niger coup: Wagner taking advantage of instability, says Blinken

    Russia’s Wagner mercenary group is “taking advantage” of instability in Niger, United States Secretary of State Antony Blinken has told the BBC.

    The country has been ruled by a junta following the ousting of President Mohamed Bazoum nearly two weeks ago.

    There have been suggestions the coup leaders have asked for help from Wagner, which is known to be present in neighbouring Mali.

    Read Also: The Future of Online Sports Betting in Nigeria

    Blinken said he did not think Russia or Wagner instigated Niger’s coup.

    However, the U.S. was worried about the group “possibly manifesting itself” in parts of the Sahel region, he told the BBC’s Focus on Africa programme

    “I think what happened, and what continues to happen in Niger was not instigated by Russia or by Wagner, but… they tried to take advantage of it.

    “Every single place that this Wagner group has gone, death, destruction and exploitation have followed,” said Blinken.

    He added that there was a “repeat of what’s happened in other countries, where they brought nothing but bad things in their wake”.

    Both the U.S. and France operate military bases in Niger as part of operations to disrupt jihadist groups operating in the wider region. Niger became the main base for French troops after they were told to leave Mali following a coup there.

    Wagner is believed to have thousands of fighters in countries, including the Central African Republic (CAR) and Mali, where it has lucrative business interests but also bolsters Russia’s diplomatic and economic relations.

    The group’s fighters have been accused of widespread human rights abuses in several African countries.

    Despite this, there has been speculation Niger’s army has asked Wagner for assistance as the country faces the possibility of military intervention.

    On Monday, U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Victoria Nuland held what she described as “difficult and frank” talks with the coup leaders, whom she said understood the risks of working with the mercenaries.

    Bazoum, who is currently being detained, has also spoken of his concerns about Wagner’s influence in Africa.

    “With an open invitation from the coup plotters and their regional allies, the entire central Sahel region could fall to Russian influence via the Wagner Group, whose brutal terrorism has been on full display in Ukraine,” he wrote in an opinion piece for the Washington Post published last week.

    It is currently unclear if Wagner fighters have entered the country but the prominent Wagner-affiliated Telegram channel Grey Zone said on Monday that some 1,500 of its fighters had recently been sent to Africa.

    It did not specify where on the continent they had allegedly been deployed.

    Wagner’s leader Yevgeny Prigozhin urged the junta to “give us a call” in a voice message uploaded to Telegram yesterday.

    “We are always on the side of the good, on the side of justice, and on the side of those who fight for their sovereignty and for the rights of their people,” he said.

    Niger is a former French colony and the coup has led to a wave of anti-France and pro-Russian sentiment in the country – similar to that experienced by neighbours Mali and Burkina Faso, which have both pivoted towards Moscow since their own coups.

    The two countries, which are both suspended from West African regional bloc ECOWAS, sent a delegation to Niamey to reassure the coup leaders they will come to their defence against the other West African nations and their Western allies if needed.

    “I would like to remind you that Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger have been dealing for over 10 years with the negative… consequences of Nato’s hazardous adventure in Libya,” Mali government spokesperson Abdoulaye Maiga said during the visit.

    “One thing is certain, (Mali’s) President Goita and Burkina Faso’s President Traoré have clearly said no, no and no. We will not accept military intervention in Niger. They are coming for our survival.”

    Meanwhile Niger’s junta has refused to receive a delegation of representatives from West African regional bloc ECOWAS, the African Union and UN, which was due to arrive in the capital Niamey on Tuesday.