Category: Foreign

  • Thieves steal TV sets at South Africa police chief’s home

    By Our Reporter

     

    Thieves have stolen two television sets from a home of South Africa’s police chief Gen Khehla Sitole, a police spokesman has said.

    “Actually it was not a break-in. However, two television sets were stolen,” Brigadier Vish Naudi was quoted by South Africa’s privately owned IOL news site as saying.

    “The national commissioner’s house is currently under construction and, therefore, we are exploring certain possibilities. We believe that this was purely opportunistic.”

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    Gen Sitole was apparently in the parliamentary capital, Cape Town, when the thieves struck at his home in eastern Mpumalanga province, IOL reported.

    The police boss has become a victim of crime at a time when he is under intense pressure to bring down high crime levels in South Africa.

     

     

     

     

  • Ex-military officer tackles Ghana over alleged ‘coup’ plot

    By Our Reporter

     

    A former Colonel in the Ghana Armed Forces is doubting the capability of three men arrested by state security apparatus for plotting to topple the presidency.

    Festus Aboagye, who is also a security analyst, noted that considering the alleged evidence gathered during the arrest of the said persons, the government rather acted prematurely in concluding that they could be plotting to subvert the presidency.

    A joint security operation on Friday, according to the government, led to the retrieval of several arms, explosive devices and ammunition from locations in Accra and Kpone Bawaleshie in Dodowa.

    According to the Information Minister Kojo Oppong Nkrumah, personnel drawn from Defence Intelligence, CID and Bureau of National Investigations (BNI) conducted a successful operation, which led to the arrest of three persons – Dr. Frederick Yao Mac-Palm and his two accomplices – Ezor Kafui (a local weapon manufacturer) and Bright Allan Debrah Ofosu (aka BB or ADC).

    He added that the joint operation was to neutralise an elaborate plot targeted at the Presidency, and with the ultimate aim of destabilising the country.

    Col. Aboagye reacting to the development in an interview on Newsnight with Evan Mensah Monday, said he finds it very difficult understanding what government meant in its statement.

    “I cannot put words in the mouth of government but the agencies involved are expected to be professional enough to explain exactly what this group was about but if it fell short of calling it an attempted coup to overthrow government we cannot purport otherwise that the aim, as indicated in the statement, was to undermine the presidency…I do not exactly understand what targeting the presidency means,” he said.

    Breaking the issue down into three areas, the security analyst noted that, the government statement failed to state clearly whether there was some mobilisation of some youth to violently overthrow government, the acquisition of foreign and manufacture of weapons “giving the quantities that are mentioned in the statement, I am not too sure the number of targets that those welding these pieces of ammunition were going to target.”

    The former Col. wondered whether “these weapons and ammunition will be sufficient for anybody attempting to overthrow the state to actually overthrow the state”.

     

  • Life and time of ex-French President Chirac

    By Our Reporter

     

    Jacques Chirac was a two-term French president, who was the first leader to acknowledge France’s role in the Holocaust and who defiantly opposed the United States (U.S.) invasion of Iraq in 2003.

    He was born in Paris on November 29, 1932 and the only child of a well-to-do businessman. A lively youth, he was expelled from school for shooting paper wads at a teacher. He sold the Communist daily “L’Humanite” on the streets for a brief time.

    Chirac travelled to the United States as a young man, and as president he fondly remembered hitchhiking across the country. He worked as a fork-lift operator in St. Louis and a soda jerk at a Howard Johnson’s restaurant while attending summer school at Harvard University.

    Chirac served in Algeria during the independence war, which France lost, and enrolled at France’s Ecole Nationale d’Administration, the elite training ground for the French political class.

    In 1956, Chirac married Bernadette Chodron de Courcel, herself involved in politics in the central farming region of Correze. They had two daughters, Laurence and Claude, who became his presidential spokeswoman.

    A dominant figure in French politics for four decades, Chirac was long the standard-bearer of France’s conservative right, and mayor of Paris for nearly two decades. As president from 1995-2007, he was a consummate global diplomat, but failed to reform the French economy or defuse tensions between police and minority youths that exploded into riots across France in 2005.

    Yet Chirac showed courage and statesmanship during his presidency.

    In what may have been his finest hour, France’s last leader with memories of World War II crushed the myth of his nation’s innocence in the persecution of Jews and their deportation during the Holocaust when he acknowledged the actions of the French nation at the time.

    “Yes, the criminal folly of the occupiers was seconded by the French, by the French state,” he said on July 16, 1995. “France, the land of the Enlightenment and human rights … delivered those it protects to their executioners,” he added.

    With words less grand, the man who embraced European unity — once calling it an “art” — raged at the French ahead of their “no” vote in a 2005 referendum on the European constitution meant to fortify the EU.

    “If you want to shoot yourself in the foot, do it, but after don’t complain,” he said. “It’s stupid, I’m telling you.” He was politically humiliated by the defeat.

    At home, a host of scandals dogged Chirac, including allegations of the misuse of funds and of kickbacks during his time as Paris mayor.

    He was formally charged in 2007 after he left office as president, losing immunity from prosecution. In 2011, he was found guilty of misuse of public money, breach of trust and illegal conflict of interest and given a two-year suspended jail sentence. He did not attend the trial. His lawyers said he was suffering severe memory lapses, possibly related to a stroke.

    Chirac ultimately became one of the French’s favorite political figures, often praised for his down-to-earth human touch rather than his political achievements.

    In his 40 years in public life, Chirac was derided by critics as opportunistic and impulsive. But as president, he embodied the fierce independence so treasured in France. He championed the United Nations and multi-polarism as a counterweight to U.S. global dominance, and defended agricultural subsidies over protests by the European Union.

    In 1995, one of his first decisions as president was to launch a series of nuclear tests in French Polynesia — prompting criticism from Australia, New Zealand, Japan and the U.S. France stopped its tests the next year when it signed the international treaty banning all nuclear explosions.

    In 2002, Chirac presciently made a dramatic call for action against climate change.

    “Our house is burning down and we’re blind to it. Nature, mutilated and overexploited, can no longer regenerate and we refuse to admit it,” he said at the Johannesburg World Summit, adding the 21st century must not become “the century of humanity’s crime against life itself.”

    Chirac was also remembered for another trait valued by the French: style.

    Tall, dapper and charming, Chirac was a well-bred bon vivant who openly enjoyed the trappings of power: luxury trips abroad and life in a government-owned palace. His slicked-back hair and ski-slope nose were favorites of political cartoonists.

    Yet he retained a common touch that worked wonders on the campaign trail, exuding warmth when kissing babies and enthusiasm when farmers — a key constituency — displayed their tractors. His preferences were for western movies and beer — and “tete de veau,” calf’s head.

    Chirac’s outspoken opposition to the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003 rocked relations with France’s top ally and weakened the Atlantic alliance. Angry Americans poured Bordeaux wine into the gutter and restaurants renamed French fries “freedom fries” in retaliation.

    The United States invaded anyway, yet Chirac gained international support from other war critics.

    Troubles over Iraq aside, Chirac was often seen as the consummate diplomat. He cultivated ties with leaders across the Middle East and Africa and was the first head of state to meet with U.S. President George W. Bush after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

    But, all these became history yesterday as condolences poured in from French citizens, including political rivals, and international leaders following his death.

  • UN Sec-Gen appoints Dangote, Adesina, 25 others to fight global malnutrition

    Our Reporter

     

    UNITED Nations Secretary-General António Guterres has appointed Africa’s richest man Aliko Dangote, African Development Bank President Akinwumi Adesina and 25 other persons to champion the fight against global malnutrition.

    A statement issued by Scaling Up Nutrition SUN Movement, an initiative of the UN Gen Sec, Dangote and others have pledged to make sure nutrition remains at the top of the agenda.

    They have also pledged to provide inspiration and direction for the SUN Movement and its mission in eradicating malnutrition.

    The movement said one in three people suffer from malnutrition globally and 149 million girls and boys are stunted, hence the job of the global leaders to support country-led efforts to scale up nutrition and to deliver for girls, boys and their families to ensure a world free from malnutrition by 2030.

    The statement reads: “Members of the Lead Group are appointed until July 2021 and include several Vice Presidents of SUN member countries and other leaders from the array of partners engaged in the SUN Movement – civil society, youth coalitions,  international and United Nations organisations, donor agencies, businesses and foundations.

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    “At the annual meeting of the Lead Group, to be held on 24 September, the group will take a decision on the continuation of the SUN Movement into its third phases (2021-2025) and make commitments to achieve its objectives – looking toward the 2020 Tokyo Nutrition for Growth Summit and the future of the movement.”

    Guterres launched the movement in 2010.

  • Iraq protests death toll hits 319

    By Our Reporter

     

    NO fewer than 319 people have been killed in Iraq since the start of anti-government protests in October, according to the Iraqi Parliamentary Human Rights Committee.

    Four protesters were killed in Baghdad on Saturday after Iraqi Security Forces pushed back hundreds of protesters and burnt several tents that were being used for an overnight sit-in, according to Iraqi activists.

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    Teargas and live ammunition was used by Iraqi security forces in the al Khalani commercial area, about 1 kilometer from Tahrir square — Iraq’s ground zero for demonstrations.

    According to the Independent High Commission for Human Rights of Iraq nearly 15,000 have also been injured.

  • Bolivia to hold general election after audit

    By Our Reporter

     

    Bolivia will hold new general elections after an international audit found last month’s election results could not be validated due to “serious irregularities,” President Evo Morales said yesterday.

    Morales did not cite the report published by the Organisation of American States (OAS), but announced the current members of Bolivia’s electoral council would be replaced. Morales, the country’s longtime socialist leader, did not name a date for the new elections.

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    The OAS recommended that new elections be held under the umbrella of “new electoral authorities in order to offer a reliable process.”

  • Thousands greet Japan’s imperial couple during Tokyo parade

    By Our Reporter

     

    Japan’s newly crowned emperor and empress were yesterday cheered by tens of thousands of spectators during an imperial parade through the heart of Tokyo.

    Emperor Naruhito and Empress Masako waved to the crowds from the back of their open-top Toyota Century limousine during the 30-minute parade.

    The imperial couple’s car was part of a 400-meter long motorcade consisting of 46 vehicles, which carried a number of dignitaries including Crown Prince Akishino, Crown Princess Kiko and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.

    The parade was originally due to take place on October 22, the same day as the official enthronement ceremony which was attended by dignitaries and royalty from around 190 countries.

    The event nevertheless had to be postponed as Japan grappled with the aftermath of Typhoon Hagibis, which left nearly 90 people dead.

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    The Japanese government estimated that 119,000 people attended the parade yesterday which stretched 2.6 miles, according to the public broadcaster NHK. Spectators stood rows deep and waved Japanese flags as they watched the parade progress along the streets of the capital.

    “To witness this historical moment with my own eyes and to see the smile of the emperor and empress. I wanted to be in the front,” Hiyori Okazaki, a spectator, told Reuters.

    Toshiko Ito, who visited the capital with her husband, added: “Emotion welled up and I was so happy that I was about to cry.”

    Emperor Naruhito wore a tailcoat during the parade. Empress Masako donned a white dress and tiara, which glistened in the sunlight.

    The parade was one of the final official events marking Emperor Naruhito’s accession to throne, which officially took place in May after his father, Emperor Akihito, abdicated following three decades at the helm. He became the first Japanese monarch to abdicate in two centuries.

    Emperor Naruhito’s official enthronement ceremony took place in October, in a centuries-old ceremony at the Imperial Palace in Tokyo.

    In an elaborate series of rituals known as “Sokui no Rei,” purple curtains were pulled back to reveal Naruhito and his wife sitting on two ornately decorated thrones.

  • Conservatives, Labour dirty dossiers released in the UK election campaign

    Our Reporter

     

    IF the first week of the United Kingdom’s (UK) snap election campaign has been anything to go by, it’s the easiest way to guarantee your personal history being raided and your worst secrets splashed across the pages of national newspapers.

    Just this week, the Cable News Network (CNN) reported that both the governing Conservatives and main opposition Labour party have suffered embarrassing revelations about candidates – some of whom have since been forced to stand down.

    For Labour, the problem has been anti-Semitism. The party has been dogged by questionable comments by members, and a criticism they’ve done little to combat record high anti-Semitic incidents in the UK.

    Kate Ramsden, a Labour candidate standing for election in Scotland, was forced to end her campaign on Thursday after the Jewish Chronicle newspaper uncovered a blog post from 2014 in which she compared Israel to an “abused child who becomes an abusive adult.” She later apologised for the post.

    “I can see why many Jewish people have been hurt by my words. That was never my intention and I apologise unreservedly,” she said.

    This came just days after Zarah Sultana, another Labour candidate, had to apologise for tweets sent in 2015 when she was a student, saying that she would celebrate the death of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, former U.S. President George W. Bush and former British Prime Minister Tony Blair. She also apologised for a Facebook post in which she backed the Palestinian right to “violent resistance”.

    “I do not support violence and I should not have articulated my anger in the manner I did, for which I apologise,” she said in a statement, according to the BBC.

    Unlike Ramsden, she did not stand down.

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    The Conservatives, meanwhile, have been firefighting equally uncomfortable revelations about candidates and activists, failing to take rape allegations seriously enough and, in one case, collapsing a rape trial.

    Conservative Nick Conrad learned how quickly a party is willing to ditch a candidate once the media storm hits – Prime Minister Boris Johnson himself condemned Conrad’s comments from 2014.

    Conrad, then a radio host, engaged listeners in a discussion on men and women.

    “Women also have to understand that when a man’s given certain signals he’ll wish to act upon them and if you don’t wish to give out the wrong signals it’s best, probably, to keep your knickers on and not get into bed with him.”

    Conrad apologised at the time for the comments. But that didn’t stop Johnson from criticiSing the candidate, and once that happens, it’s usually game over for any hopeful.

    He dropped out of the race this week.

    This came shortly after Johnson’s Welsh Secretary, Alun Cairns, was forced to resign over claims he knew that his former aide had allegedly sabotaged a rape trial. Cairns had said he did not know his aide was accused by a judge of sabotage until last week. However, BBC Wales obtained an email from over a year ago in which Cairns is clearly talking about the case. He maintains that he did nothing wrong and will comply with any investigation. He also stressed that he had nothing to do with the trial itself.

    The aide, Ross England, was suspended by the Conservative Party pending an investigation and denies wrongdoing. CNN has tried to contact England for comment.

    It should not come as a great surprise that these sorts of stories are now appearing so frequently in such a short span of time. They tend to hit the front pages as soon as an election campaign kicks off.

    Some may call it dirty politics. Some simply call it opposition research.

    With hundreds of national races, there are targets for each campaign team to take aim at.

    “Opposition research has always focused on the weakest link in your opponents. This is usually individual candidates and what they have previously said or done,” said John McTernan, a former senior aide to former PM Tony Blair and former Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard.

    “It used to be painstaking. I used to have keep clippings in folders and hide them away for a rainy day. With social media, there is a database of someone’s pre-political life that is easily raided,” McTernan said.

     

     

  • American couple named world’s oldest husband and wife

    By Our Reporter

    The Guinness World Records has named John Henderson (106) and his wife, Charlotte (105) both of Texas, USA, the oldest living couple in the world.

    They marriage will turn 80 on December 15.

    They met in class at The University of Texas in 1934. Charlotte was studying to become a teacher, while John was a guard for the football team.

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    They married in 1939 during the Great Depression and spent just $7 on the hotel room for their honeymoon.

    In fact, John is also the oldest living former UT football player, according to the CNN.

    For the past 84 years, he’s held a tradition of attending at least one Longhorn football game each year.

    Both are still very healthy, and John exercises every day. Ten years ago, the two moved into the Longhorn Village, a senior living community associated with a University of Texas alumni group. Hook ‘Em!

    So what’s the secret to a long life and happy marriage after all?

    Live life in moderation and be cordial to your spouse, John said.

  • British MPs begin process to pick Speaker

    By Our Reporter

     

    MEMBERS of British Parliament have made their pitches to succeed John Bercow as Speaker of the House of Commons in the first election for the powerful post in more than a decade.

    The Speaker keeps order in Commons debates and calls MPs to speak.

    Seven candidates are in the race, including Labour’s Harriet Harman and deputy Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle.

    That list was whittled down to five after the first vote – rounds will continue until one candidate obtains more than half of the votes.

    Labour MP Meg Hillier and Conservative Sir Edward Leigh were knocked out in the first round of the contest after receiving 10 and 11 votes respectively.

    Sir Lindsay Hoyle received the most votes in round one (211), followed by Dame Eleanor Laing (113), Chris Bryant (98), Harriet Harman (72) and Dame Rosie Winterton (46).

    Bercow stood down last week after an eventful and frequently controversial decade in the Speaker’s chair. His resignation as MP for Buckingham was officially confirmed yesterday.

    The first to speak was Labour’s Dame Rosie Winterton. She said the Speaker’s job was “not to dominate proceedings or speak for Parliament”, and promised to “douse the flames not pour petrol on them”.

    Another Labour MP Chris Bryant said he believed in “a Speaker who will stand by the rules, who is completely impartial and who knows Erskine May (the parliamentary rule book) back to front”, adding: “I’ve got it lying by my bedside.”

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    He also pledged to end clapping in the chamber and “sort out the wi-fi” – pledges that were themselves met with clapping from those listening.

    Conservative Sir Edward Leigh said a Speaker should “submerge their character in the job” and be “a quiet voice”.

    He also said the preservation of parliamentary buildings should be done “in the interests of our paymaster – the taxpayers”. “We cannot waste billions of pounds,” he said.

    Current deputy Speaker Eleanor Laing expressed sadness at the number of MPs deciding not to run again at the December election and vowed to stand up for all members, if selected for the job.

    She said Parliament needed to “escape from the hierarchical structures that allow bullying to take root”.

    Also addressing the subject of bullying, Labour’s Meg Hillier said MPs needed to protect staff in the House, warning bullying “will become the next expenses scandal”.

    Bercow was criticised for not doing more to tackle allegations of bullying and harassment in the Commons, and was himself accused of mistreating several members of staff, which he denied.

    Another current deputy Speaker, Sir Lindsay Hoyle, said he had introduced security measures for MPs “so we can feel safe”.

    “I will not let you down,” he promised MPs.