Category: Foreign

  • Depp severed finger during three-day row with ex-wife, UK court told

    Depp severed finger during three-day row with ex-wife, UK court told

    Agency Reporter

    Hollywood star Johnny Depp wrote on a wall with blood from his severed finger tip during a long and violent confrontation with his ex-wife Amber Heard five years ago, London’s High Court heard on Thursday at his libel case against a British tabloid.

    Depp told the court he suffered “some species of nervous breakdown” during a row with actress Heard, but denied he had violently attacked her and accused her of cutting his finger by throwing a bottle at him.

    The revelations came on the third day of Depp’s appearance in the witness stand as he sues the publisher of Britain’s Sun tabloid, News Group Newspapers, over an article in which it labelled the actor a “wife beater”.

    The court heard that Depp was in Australia in March 2015 to film “Pirates of the Caribbean” a month after the couple married.

    Heard had flown to join him from London, where she had been making a movie with co-star Billy Bob Thornton.

    The Sun’s lawyer Sasha Wass said Heard suffered a three-day ordeal at Depp’s hands in the rented house where the actor was staying after she became angry at him because he had been drinking to excess and taking drugs.

    Consumed with jealousy about Heard and Thornton, Depp attacked her, constantly swigging from a bottle, Wass said.

    He slapped Heard across the face, pushed her against the fridge and smashed her head against it, and she barricaded herself in her bedroom to escape him, the court was told.

    Wass said at one stage Depp spat in her face, grabbed her by the throat and told her it would be easy to crush her neck.

    “Fabricated and vicious,” Depp replied, rejecting all the accusations which he says form part of a hoax by his ex-wife.

    He agreed the couple had a violent row on the final day that began because he wanted Heard to sign a post-nuptial agreement, and he had not been drinking until that point.

    Depp described the Australian incident as the end of the marriage, after which it was only going to get worse.

    READ ALSO: Genevieve Nnaji signs film deal with foreign agency

    Depp said Heard threw two vodka bottles at him, the second of which “severed my finger and crushed my bones”.

    “That is when I began what I feel was perhaps some species of a nervous breakdown,” he told the court. “I couldn’t live, didn’t want to live.”

    He said he began to write messages on the wall in blood using his severed finger, before then using paint. One message on a mirror said: “Starring Billy Bob, Easy Amber”.

    He agreed he might have ripped a telephone off the wall and smashed it and told Heard that she had ruined his life.

    Wass told the court the house was a scene of “carnage” with paint everywhere and windows and the television smashed. It caused $75,000 of damage, according to Depp’s assistant.

    Earlier, Depp denied attacking Heard while undergoing detox to ease himself off prescription drugs on his private island in the Bahamas in August 2014.

    Depp told the court it was the “lowest point of my life”, when he was in a great deal of pain, suffering uncontrollable spasms and sobbing like a child on the floor.

    He accused Heard of withholding medication that would ease the process, calling it “one of the cruellest things that she has ever done”, the court was told.

    However, Wass said Heard, 34, was following instructions from Depp’s medical team and pointed out she had contacted a nurse who was staying on the island to say he was screaming and had pushed her.

    “I did not push Miss Heard or attack her in any way,” Depp said. “I was not in a condition to do so in any case.”

    Depp has told the court that the abuse allegations were a hoax, and Heard appeared to have been building a dossier as an insurance policy.

    The trial is due to last three weeks.

    (Reuters/NAN)

  • ‘Glee’ actress Naya Rivera missing at California lake, authorities say

    ‘Glee’ actress Naya Rivera missing at California lake, authorities say

    Agency Reporter

    Actress Naya Rivera, who played Santana Lopez in the hit TV musical show “Glee,” was missing feared drowned on Wednesday at Lake Piru, California, authorities said.

    Ventura County Sheriff’s office said late on Wednesday it had identified the missing person as Naya Rivera and a search and rescue operation would continue in the morning.

    Rivera, 33, had rented a boat in the early afternoon along with her four-year-old son, CBS Los Angeles reported, citing the sheriff’s department.

    READ ALSO: Why missing person cases are on the rise – NEMA

    Her child was found alone in the boat about three hours later by an another boater, but was said to be unharmed, the report said.

    The child told investigators that he and his mother were swimming, but his mother never got back into the boat, it added.

    (Reuters/NAN)

  • Police ignored George Floyd’s ‘I can’t breathe’ plea: transcript

    Police ignored George Floyd’s ‘I can’t breathe’ plea: transcript

    Agency Reporter

    The former U.S. police officer charged in the death of George Floyd told him to stop shouting and save his breath as he knelt on his neck and Floyd gasped for air, according to a newly released transcript of police body camera footage.

    The death of Floyd, a Black man, in police custody on May 25 led to anti-racism protests and demonstrations against police brutality across the U.S. and around the world with protesters calling for racial equality and police reforms.

    “Tell my kids I love them. I’m dead,” Floyd said during the nearly nine minutes that the officer knelt on him as he went lifeless.

    Floyd pleaded for help as he was pinned to the ground, according to the transcript made public on Wednesday as part of a motion filed in the Minneapolis state court.

    “I’m through, through. I’m claustrophobic. My stomach hurts. My neck hurts. Everything hurts. I need some water or something, please. Please? I can’t breathe officer,” he said.

    “You’re going to kill me, man,” Floyd said.

    READ ALSO: George Floyd: Nigeria’s inexcusable silence

    Derek Chauvin, the officer who knelt on Floyd, replied: “Then stop talking, stop yelling, it takes a heck of a lot of oxygen to talk.”

    Chauvin, who is white, was arrested on May 29, four days after Floyd’s death. He has pleaded not guilty to charges of second-degree murder and manslaughter.

    Three other former Minneapolis police officers, who are white, Black and Asian American, have been charged with aiding and abetting in the case.

    At one point, one of those officers, Thomas Lane, suggested that Chauvin roll Floyd on his side, according to the transcript.

    “No, he’s staying put where we got him,” Chauvin responded.

    All four of the officers have been fired from the Minneapolis police department. None of them entered a plea during a brief hearing on June 29.

    The transcript was made public as part of an effort by Lane’s lawyer to have charges that he aided and abetted Floyd’s murder thrown out by a judge, according to U.S. media.

    (Reuters/NAN)

  • ‘Africans can fast-track SDGs despite pandemic’

    ‘Africans can fast-track SDGs despite pandemic’

    By Bola Olajuwon, Assistant Editor

     

    Africa may have lost some momentum on its quest to achieve the sustainable development goals by 2030 due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, but the continent can fast-track and get back on track, said Executive Secretary of the Economic Commission for Africa (ECA), Ms. Vera Songwe, said on Tuesday.

    Ms. Songwe spoke during  a virtual conversation with Zeinab Badawi during the CDC’s Annual Review 2019 in which she provided a macro-economic perspective on the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on Africa.

    She said there was a lot that can be done through partnerships and collaboration to ensure Africa regains lost ground in the aftermath of COVID-19.

    Badawi is a Sudanese-British television and radio journalist.

    “What Africa has shown in this crisis, even as we talk about the debt conversation, is the fact that we have matured. We are not talking about debt cancellation.

    We are talking about a bridge to get over the crisis for many of our countries

    “We could have lost some momentum on 2030, but if we all come back together quickly, we may not have lost that much and we can use that as an opportunity to fast-track a few things,” she said.

    She shared with the audience, among them representatives from across the United Kingdom government, parliamentarians, policy makers, academics, NGO leaders and impact investors as well as representatives from multilateral and bilateral organisations the initiatives being undertaken by the ECA and its partners to help Africa contain effects of the health crisis.

    This includes the debt standstill call for all African nations, the Africa Communication and Information Platform for Health and Economic Action (ACIP), the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) pharma initiative, and others.

    Read Also: FCMB: how to grow businesses during pandemic

     

    ACIP is a mobile based tool for two-way information and communication between citizens and governments. It furnishes national and regional COVID task forces with user-generated survey data and actionable health and economic insights that will enable authorities to better analyze pandemic-related problems and implement appropriate responses.

    For his part, CDC Chief Executive Officer, Nick O’Donohoe, said aside from the obvious health crisis that Africa is going through, there was huge economic damage caused by coronavirus.

    He said the role of the development finance institutions like the CDC in such circumstances is to step forward to fill the gap of commercial money being withdrawn.

    Yasemin Lamy, Deputy Chief Investment Officer at the CDC, said since the COVID-19 outbreak, CDC has focused on preserving jobs in countries they have invested in; adopted systematic injection of liquidity; and is focusing on rebuilding for impact.

    Songwe said Africa has a more powerful tool in AfCFTA to accelerate regional and economic integration and prepare for uncertain times.

    She said this in a virtual panel discussion to mark the inaugural Africa Integration Day that was set aside by the African Union to mark the implementation of the AfCFTA.

    Integration, said Ms. Songwe, is key for Africa’s growth and attainment of Agenda 2030 for sustainable development and Africa’s development aspirations as found in Agenda 2063.

  • Ivory Coast PM dies  after cabinet meeting

    Ivory Coast PM dies after cabinet meeting

     

    IVORY Coast’s Prime Minister Amadou Gon Coulibaly has died after falling ill at a ministerial meeting.

    The 61-year-old had been chosen as the ruling party’s candidate for October’s presidential election, after Alassane Ouattara said he would not seek a third term in office.

    Gon Coulibaly had only just returned from France where he had received two-months’ heart treatment.

    President Ouattara said the country was in mourning.

    He said Gon Coulibaly had become unwell during a weekly cabinet meeting and was taken to hospital where he later died.

    His death creates huge uncertainty over the election.

    Gon Coulibaly had received a heart transplant in 2012 and had travelled to Paris on May 2 for the insertion of a stent.

    He returned last Thursday, saying: “I am back to take my place by the side of the president, to continue the task of developing and building our country.”

    Gon Coulibaly was among the favourites to win the presidential election.

    Read Also: Africa’s COVID-19 death toll surpasses Ebola fatality, says WHO

     

    An article in Le Monde on Monday quoted one foreign observer as saying: “If Gon Coulibaly were unfit, Ouattara would have no choice but to run as a candidate because there is no plan B.

    “This matter has so far remained taboo because the president has clearly shown his willingness to leave and indicated who his choice was to succeed him.”

    Ouattara’s decision in March not to run stunned the country.

    At the time, the BBC wrote from the main city, Abidjan, that there was praise from politicians as Ouattara broke the normal mould for the region of trying to remain in power.

    Even then, it was clear that Gon Coulibaly would be backed as the successor candidate.

    Ouattara’s supporters said he has brought economic growth, stability and a renewed standing for Ivory Coast on the international stage.

    But opposition politicians – and many Ivorians – say that the president has not done enough to bring the nation together, and heal the wounds of the bitter conflict that divided Ivory Coast and then brought him to power.

  • Africa’s COVID-19 death toll  surpasses Ebola fatality, says WHO

    Africa’s COVID-19 death toll surpasses Ebola fatality, says WHO

    By Omolola Afolabi

     

    The number of people, who died of COVID-19 in Africa in less than five months have surpassed the West Africa’s 11,308 Ebola deaths of between 2014 and 2016.

    The World Health Organisation’s Regional Office for Africa in Brazzaville, Congo, yesterday confirmed that COVID-19 cases in Africa had surpassed 500,000, even as a total of 11,959 persons died of the virus within five months.

    The WHO noted that the number of COVID-19-related deaths have overtaken the 11,308 lives lost in the world’s worst Ebola outbreak in West Africa between 2014 and 2016.

    “Cases have more than doubled in 22 countries in the region over the past month. Nearly two-thirds of countries are experiencing community transmission,” the update stated.

    The body also stated that five countries comprising Algeria, Egypt, Ghana, Nigeria and South Africa account for about 42 per cent of Africa’s COVID-19 cases, even as South Africa alone accounts for 29 per cent of the continent’s total cases.

    “However, the accelerating growth trend is not uniform across the continent, with some countries recording a steady rise in cases, indicating a protracted pandemic.

    “Eritrea, Gambia, Mali, Seychelles and Togo are witnessing long doubling times and low growth rates.

    “Seychelles had not experienced a case in nearly two months, but in the past week had dozens of new imported cases, linked to crew members of an international fishing vessel,” WHO added.

    It stressed there were also some signs of progress as 10 countries have experienced a downward trend over the past month, noting that although Egypt accounts for 15 per cent of cumulative cases, it has seen a decline in the past week.

    WHO Director for Africa Dr. Matshidiso Moeti said: “With more than a third of countries in Africa doubling their cases over the past month, the threat of COVID-19 overwhelming fragile health systems on the continent is escalating.

    “So far, the continent has avoided disaster and if countries continue to strengthen key public health measures such as testing, tracing contacts and isolating cases, we can slow down the spread of the virus to a manageable level,” she said.

    According to WHO, 88 percent of COVID-19 infections are among people aged 60 and below, likely due to Africa’s relatively young population.

    However, it added that the likelihood of dying from COVID-19 rises with increasing age and the existence of co-morbidities, with the risk of death among patients aged 60 years and above being 10 times higher, compared with those below 60.

    “Communities across the continent have a crucial role to play in controlling the pandemic, especially as countries begin easing lockdowns and opening up their borders,” said the WHO Director for the Eastern Mediterranean, Dr. Ahmed Al-Mandhari.

  • Kanye West breaks ranks with Trump, vows to win presidential race

    Kanye West breaks ranks with Trump, vows to win presidential race

    Agency Reporter

    Rapper Kanye West signalled he no longer supports U.S. President Donald Trump and said he had entered the presidential race to win it, in an interview published on Wednesday.

    West, previously a vocal supporter of Trump, announced on Saturday that he would run for president in 2020.

    “I am taking the red hat off, with this interview.

    “Like anything I’ve ever done in my life, I’m doing this to win,’’ West told Forbes, referring to Trump’s trademark red “Make America Great Again” baseball cap.

    He told the magazine he would run under a new banner, the Birthday Party.

    West and his reality TV star wife, Kim Kardashian West, have visited Trump in the White House.

    READ ALSO: Popular rapper, Kanye West, declares for America Presidency

    He, however, denied that his aim was to split the Black vote and hurt the chances of Trump’s Democratic opponent, Joe Biden.

    “It was a form of racism and white supremacy to suggest all Black people should support the Democrats’’ he said.

    The rapper told Forbes he had been ill with COVID-19 in February and would be suspicious of any vaccines developed to prevent the infection, repeating false theories that link vaccines with child developmental disorders.

    “So, when they say the way we’re going to fix COVID-19 is with a vaccine, I’m extremely cautious, as that’s the mark of the beast.

    “They want to put chips inside of us, they want to do all kinds of things, to make it where we can’t cross the gates of heaven,’’ Kanye added.

    (Reuters/NAN)

  • UN at 75th: Countries advised on human rights, COVID-19

    UN at 75th: Countries advised on human rights, COVID-19

    By Bola Olajuwon, Assistant Editor

     

    RETIRED ambassadors, business leader, university don, information manager and other stakeholders have shared their thoughts on the current state of the world and their future expectations as United Nations (UN) celebrates its 75th anniversary.

    The stakeholders noted that the issue of the lockdown due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has thrown up hazardous issues in Nigeria and other parts of the world involving women and the underprivileged.

    They spoke at a virtual event organised by the United Nations Association of Nigeria (UNAN) in collaboration with Nigeria Youth SDGs with the support of the United Nations Information Centre (UNIC), Lagos.

    The topic was:  “UN@75: Ideas that changed the World – Human Rights at the Centre of Multilateral Diplomacy”.

    They urged the governments to ensure the implementation of the various policies formulated towards tackling sexual abuses, child rights, economic rights among others.

    According to them, some of the burning issues include insecurity, governance, human rights violations, gender violence, rape, police brutalities and extra-judicial killings among others still posing serious challenges that the UN must address on a continuous basis.

    Nigeria and other member states, they said, must promote international peace and security, peaceful, coexistence, understanding and cooperation based on the UN Charter.

    Key personalities who spoke at the webinar were: President of Retired Career Ambassadors of Nigeria (ARCAN), Lagos Chapter and First National Vice-President of ARCAN Ambassador Olusegun Akinsanya; Director- General of Nigerian Association of Chambers of Commerce, Industry, Mines and Agriculture (NACCIMA) Ambassador Ayo Olukanni; Lecturer, International Relations, Covenant University, Ota Dr. Rosemary Popoola and National Information Officer of United Nations Information Centre (UNIC), Lagos Dr. Oluseyi Soremekun.

    The event was moderated by Joshua Alade of Nigeria Youth SDGs.

    Secretary General of UNAN, Ganiyu Owolabi, thanked participants for attending the webinar.

     

     

  • Brazil’s president tests positive for Coronavirus

    Brazil’s president tests positive for Coronavirus

     

    Brazil President Jair Bolsonaro has revealed that he tested positive for the coronavirus.

    Speaking to reporters yesterday, he said he was tested after experiencing fatigue, muscle pain and a fever.

    Bolsonaro said he was feeling better yesterday, which he credited to after taken hydroxychloroquine, an anti-malaria pill.

    “I’m fine; I’m very well,” Bolsonaro said, standing a few feet away from reporters.

    Bolsonaro has come under criticism for his handling of the pandemic, even as Brazil’s caseload and death toll ballooned in recent months.

    Read Also: Nigeria Governors who tested positive for COVID-19

     

    Contact tracing and tests will be carried out for the people Bolsonaro has met recently.

    His previous three tests for the virus came back negative.

    The Executive Director of the World Health Organisation, Dr. Mike Ryan, wished Bolsonaro “a speedy and full recovery from this disease”, adding: “I think the message to us all is: we are vulnerable to this virus.”

    Brazil’s 1.6 million diagnosed cases and more than 65,000 deaths make it the second hardest-hit country, trailing only the United States.

  • IHRC approves FCT Chief Judge’s nomination for ICC

    IHRC approves FCT Chief Judge’s nomination for ICC

     

    The International Human Right Commission (IHRC) has endorsed Justice Ishaq Bello, Chief Judge of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) to represent Nigeria in the International Criminal Court (ICC).

    The endorsement was announced by the Secretary-General, IHRC, Prof. Rafal Wasik, when he led his team to visit the chief judge in his office yesterday in Abuja.

    Wasik, who was represented by the Country Representative, Amb. Friday Sani, said Bello’s nomination by President Muhammadu Buhari to represent Nigeria at ICC was a good decision.

    “Considering the role you played during the lockdown in the country to fight the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic in which you put your life and lives of other judges on the line.

    “Also, by setting up mobile courts to uphold the right of Nigerians and this has since attracted the world headquarters.

    Read Also: UK sanctions Russians, Saudis, others for human rights violations

     

    “Be rest assured that I shall mobilise our diplomatic ties with countries in the world in support of your election into the international court.

    “Therefore, I have concluded to pronounce an endorsement of your nomination on behalf of IHRC,’’he said.

    Wasik, however, urged the Justice to assign a particular judge to deal with the rising cases of rape and maltreatment of children that has become rampart in the country.

    Bello, in his response appreciated IHRC and Buhari for finding him worthy to be nominated to serve as a judge at ICC.

    The judge, who assured IHRC of a robust partnership that would bring about the defense and protection of human rights in the country, assured the visitors that all prayers presented before him would be granted.