Category: Foreign

  • Germany’s armed forces helicopter crashes, killing one

    A helicopter of the Bundeswehr, the unified armed forces of Germany, crashed in Lower Saxony, killing one person and seriously injuring another, the German armed forces confirmed on Monday.

    The accident happened on Monday afternoon in Aerzen District, according to local German police.

    Fire had broken out around the crash site which was close to a forest area, said a spokesperson from Aerzen’s local fire brigade.

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    The helicopter was part of the Buekeburg Military Aviation School, the spokesperson, who was not named, confirmed.

    The German training helicopter was in a low-flying exercise shortly before the crash.

    Only last week, two Eurofighters of the German Armed Forces collided during air combat exercises and crashed in Mecklenburg, Western Pomerania.

    Both pilots had managed to operate their ejection seats. A flying instructor had survived the accident, while the second pilot died in the accident.

    (Xinhua/NAN)

  • Ebola: Death toll in DR Congo rises to 1,540, says WHO

    The death toll in the latest outbreak of Ebola in the Democratic Republic of the Congo has risen to 1,540, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).

    In an update on Friday, the world health body said 2,284 people had been infected since the outbreak in the country’s Ituri and North Kivu provinces nearly 11 months ago.

    However, vital work of tracing people infected with the deadly virus is progressing, in spite of of evidence of “several” massacres in the affected area earlier this month, the organisation said.

    In spite of the insecurity, WHO insisted that frontline workers were doing all they could to tackle Ebola in North-east DRC.

    “We had 637 people who survived the disease, and I think this is important,” Dr Ibrahima Fall, WHO Assistant Director-General for Emergency Response, told newsmen in Geneva, according to a statement.

    He noted that around 90 people were currently receiving treatment for Ebola virus disease infection, while new cases had dropped from 106 two weeks ago, to 79 last week.

    At the same time, the UN human rights office, OHCHR, announced that a “robust” probe found that 117 people had been killed in “several massacres” involving multiple villages in gold-rich Ituri, between June 10 and June 13.

    “The investigative team confirmed that at least 94 people had been killed in Djugu territory and 23 in Mahagi territory, including a yet to be determined number of women and children.

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    “Some of the victims were beheaded. Homes and warehouses were burned down after being looted.

    “The ferocity and scorched-earth nature of the attacks suggests the assailants intended to prevent survivors from being able to return to their villages,” OHCHR spokesperson, Marta Hurtado, said.

    Hurtado was quoted as saying that most of the victims belonged to the Hema community, while the remaining ones were Alur people.

    She added that the attackers were reportedly from the Lendu community, echoing an earlier alert from the UN refugee agency, UNHCR.

    UNHCR had earlier reported that thousands of people displaced by violence had arrived in Uganda this month, with an average of 311 people crossing the border daily, double the number for May.

    Fall explained that major urban centres of Butembo and Katwa were now seeing only “sporadic” cases of infection, thanks to full access.

    He, however, cautioned that in Beni, a large town in North Kivu, Ebola had claimed nine lives since Monday.

    Contact tracing there and other preventative work was slowed earlier this week amid attacks by taxi drivers who were upset about the death of a colleague who sought help too late, according to him.

    Turning to remote areas, Fall confirmed that the “very volatile” security situation had complicated the WHO’s work to tackle “a new hotspot” in Mabalako and Mandima.

    “The outbreak started there last year and spread to other regions, so it’s important to break the vicious cycle, to contain very quickly the situation in Mabalako and Mandima, where we have more than 55 per cent of the cases coming from.”

    He said for the first time in the current outbreak, Ebola had also reached small forest-based villages such as Alima, where access is “more challenging”.

    Fall blamed the situation on the presence of armed groups from DRC and neighbouring Uganda.

    “You cannot just say, ‘I have access, I can go.’ You have to negotiate; you have to assess conscious that the risk is still important.

    “This is because as you know, with Ebola, you only need one case to start spreading or one high-risk contact not followed transfers the disease,’’ he said.

    Asked about the infection threat in Uganda, where three people with Ebola died earlier this month after arriving from DRC, the WHO official insisted “there has been no transmission” of the virus.(NAN)

  • Five die, 40 sustain injuries as bus hits truck in India

    No fewer than five people were killed and more than 40 others sustained injuries on Friday after a passenger bus rammed into a stationary truck in the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, Police said.

    The accident took place on Agra-Lucknow Expressway in Fatehabad of Agra district, about 297 kilometres west of Lucknow, the capital city of Uttar Pradesh.

    “This morning, five people including a child were killed and over 40 others injured after a double-decker bus plying on Agra-Lucknow Expressway rammed into a sand-laden truck,’’ a police official posted in Agra, told Xinhua.

    According to the Police, the bus was coming from Bihar and heading to Jaipur in Rajasthan when the accident occurred.

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    The police and Uttar Pradesh district administration officials rushed to the scene of the accident and the injured were rushed to the hospital.

    Meanwhile, Uttar Pradesh, Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath has expressed grief over the loss of lives in the accident.

    “Yogi Adityanath expressed deep condolences over the death of five persons in a road accident in Agra and directed the administration to provide all possible medical assistance to the injured,’’ a statement issued by Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister’s office said.

    Police have registered the case and ordered an investigation into the accident.

    On June 19, 44 people were killed and over 30 others injured after a bus carrying them fell into a 500-feet gorge in the northern Indian state of Himachal Pradesh.

  • IWS celebrates International Widows’ Day

    The International Women’s Society of Nigeria (IWS) has drawn the government’s attention to the plight of widows across the country.

    The organization held an event tagged: ‘Rejuvenate Widows Respect, on June 23 at its Skills Centre in Lekki, to educate the public on issues of concern, mobilise political will and resources to address global problems, and to celebrate and donate to the widows.

    President of IWS Nkoli Ogbolu lamented that no fewer than 15 million widows live in abject poverty in Nigeria, same also goes to millions of students who are out of school. This, she regretted, was why some of them went into prostitution.

    “This is a huge burden on the society, considering the attendant fall out of such a disposition, and the socio-economic problems and challenges they pose. It shows that this country is not doing something right, the Federal Government needs to address the basic needs of its people, which is food, shelter, lighter and water.

    “We all need to rally round to re-orientate widows of their rights, repair their broken spirits and bring relief through a reward system for hardworking widows,” she said.

    Chairman of the occasion Chief Abimbola Abimbola Ogunkelu, a former Minister of Health, called on the Federal Government to come up with statutes that will protect the right of widows.

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    “Widows are almost like outcasts, particularly in some cultural settings, and Nigeria must do all it can to come to the aid of widows. We ask for the girl-child right, women’s right. When women become widows, they don’t stop being women, so widow’s right must be upheld. And women’s right cannot be complete unless widow’s rights are upheld,” Ogunkelu said.

    Chairperson of the Widows Trust Fund, Mrs. Olabisi Alokolaro, who had been widowed for ‘7 years, emphasised that its committee is still fully committed in ensuring that the rights and respect of widows are upheld. “Widows must not be regarded as objects of rights but as subjects of rights,” she said.

    One of the beneficiaries, Mrs. Giwa Aminat, who lost her husband in 2009 but joined the society in 2014, praised the IWS for its support, saying its empowerment had touched many lives.

    “What happens to us as widows is uncontrollable; we don’t have control over death because it comes suddenly. This caused sadness, depression, but with the help of this organization, things are getting better. Since, I became a member; they have been assisting to me. I have been able to take care of myself and the children because they empowered me some months ago,” she said.

  • Myanmar shuts down internet in conflict areas

    A top United Nations (UN) official has warned of “serious implications for human rights” in parts of Myanmar after the government shut down mobile data networks.

    According to Telenor, a Norwegian telecoms firm which operates mobile internet services in Myanmar, all mobile phone operators were ordered to “temporarily stop mobile internet traffic in nine townships in Rakhine and Chin State” on June 20.

    “The directive, which makes references to the Myanmar’s Telecommunication Law, does not specify when the shutdown will end. Officials referenced disturbances of peace and use of internet services to coordinate illegal activities,” Telenor said in a statement.

    The Myanmar military, also known as the Tatmadaw, has been conducting major security operation and crackdown in the western province of Rakhine since August 2017, when alleged Rohingya militants attacked police posts.

    More than 720,000 Rohingya are estimated to have been forced to flee into Bangladesh as a result of the ensuing violence, which US lawmakers and international human rights bodies have said amounts to ethnic cleansing, and even genocide.

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    The unrest caused by the anti-Rohingya crackdown and exodus has been exacerbated by conflict between the Tatmadaw and the Arakan Army, a Buddhist insurgent group, which has been fighting with the government since last year. More than 35,000 civilians have been displaced by the conflict, according to the UN, with violence spilling into neighbouring Chin state.

    U Myo Swe, an official of the Ministry of Transport and Communications, said this month’s internet shutdown was “for the sake of security and the public interest”.

    “All of us know the situation in Rakhine. People are in trouble, and many people have been displaced. The internet is one of the contributors to this. So, it has been temporarily suspended. It will be resumed when stability is restored,” U Myo Swe said.

    But Yanghee Lee, the UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Myanmar, said the internet shutdown could have the precise opposite effect, however.

    She said in a statement: “As there is no media access and serious restrictions on humanitarian organisations in the conflict-affected area, the entire region is in a blackout. I fear for all civilians there, cut off and without the necessary means to communicate with people inside and outside the area.”

  • Ethiopia mourns top general killed in ‘coup attempt’

    ETHIOPIA has held a memorial for the army chief of staff, Gen. Seare Mekonnen, who was killed in an alleged coup attempt on Saturday.

    Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed was pictured weeping at the ceremony in Addis Ababa to honour the general.

    The assassination was reportedly part of a coup attempt in the Amhara region.

    Officials said the alleged attacker, the general’s bodyguard, is being treated for his injuries – contradicting an earlier claim that he was dead.

    The alleged ringleader behind the attempted coup, Brig. Gen. Asaminew Tsige, was killed on Monday as he tried to escape from his hideout in Asmara’s capital, Bahir Dar, the police said.

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    Yesterday’s memorial service held at a large venue in the Ethiopian capital, amid tight security. Mourners paid their respects before flag-draped coffins bearing the bodies of Gen. Seare and Gen. Gezai Abera, a colleague who was assassinated with him.

    Abiy was filmed wiping away his tears at the event, while soldiers eulogised the dead men.

    In a statement on Monday evening, Ethiopian federal police apologised for having earlier said the alleged assassin, Gen. Seare’s bodyguard, had killed himself.

    The latest statement from the police said the bodyguard, who has not been named, was being treated for gunshot wounds in hospital. It is not clear if the injuries were self-inflicted.

    The internet has been shut across Ethiopia, after a brief resumption in service that followed an unexplained blackout lasting more than a week.

  • Umahi dissociates self from 2023 presidency

    EBONYI State Governor David Umahi has dissociated himself from the purported inauguration of a campaign platform known as “Southeast for President 2023”.

    He described the purported inauguration as a distraction.

    Umahi, in a statement by his Chief Press secretary, Emmanuel Uzor, dissociated himself and his government from any form of political gathering with intent to promote him for President in 2023. He said he is more committed to delivering quality and purposeful leadership to the people.

    He added that promoters of his purported 2023 presidential ambition did not have his support, and so should not link him with any election that is four years ahead.

    The statement reads: “The governor was greatly embarrassed by the link to presidential ambition of 2023 being circulated in the news, and states that he will not be distracted by the various endorsements by groups and individuals who clamour for a President of Igbo extraction.

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    “Governor Umahi does not know the promoters of the platform, and could not have contracted them to do the job, but be believes that genuine and law abiding Nigerians reserve the right to go about their business as long as it doesn’t not impinge on laid down rules of the country.

    “2023 is still very far ahead. I am the Governor of Ebonyi State, and a second term governor for that matter, by the grace of God. I put all my energy and concentration to serve my people and deliver on my campaign promises. I am not looking at where I will be tomorrow. Allow God to determine my next political fate but don’t distract me with Presidential ambition of 2023 now in 2019, it’s ridiculous.

    “As a Nigerian and Igbo man, and in my capacity as the Chairman of Southeast Governors’ Forum, I am not against the idea or agitation for Nigeria President of Igbo extraction, but linking me to it at this time is mostly embarrassing, distracting and premature, and I beg to be left out of it.”

  • Australian children of ISIS fighters rescued from Syria

    EIGHT Australian children have been rescued from a refugee camp in Syria and they are in the care of the Australian government, Prime Minister Scott Morrison said on Monday.

    The children – aged between 2 and 18 – the children and grandchildren of ISIS fighters – crossed the Syrian border into an unnamed Middle Eastern country on Sunday.

    The rescue comes after the collapse of ISIS’s caliphate in Syria, leaving thousands of ISIS affiliates – many of whom are women and children – in make-shift camps.

    Morrison said the eight rescued are now in the care of Australian government officials.

    “The fact that parents put their children into harm’s way by taking them into a war zone is a despicable act. However, children should not be punished for the crimes of their parents,” the PM said in a statement.

    Morrison said the decision to repatriate the children – who will be taken to Australia – was not taken lightly, and the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) officials had supported the efforts.

    “As I have said repeatedly, my government would not allow any Australian to be put at risk. Australia’s national security and the safety of our people and personnel have always been our most important considerations in this matter,” Morrison added.

     

  • Ethiopia’s ‘coup ringleader killed’

    The suspected ringleader of Saturday’s failed coup attempt in Ethiopia’s Amhara region has been killed, the police said.

    Brig.-Gen. Asaminew Tsige was killed as he attempted to escape from his hideout in Amhara’s capital.

    Ethiopia’s army chief Gen. Seare Mekonnen was killed while trying to foil the coup, the government said.

    Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed has urged Ethiopians to unite against “evil” forces set on dividing the country. Flags are flying at half-mast after he declared a day of mourning to mark the deaths.

    Gen. Seare and Amhara governor Ambachew Mekonnen, who was also killed on Saturday, were seen as close allies of the prime minister.

    A heavy contingent of pro-government forces has been deployed in Amhara’s capital, Bahir Dar, and the federal capital, Addis Ababa.

    The internet has been shut across the country, days after services resumed following an unexplained blackout of more than a week.

  • U.S. expected to impose fresh sanctions on Iran

    The U.S. is expected to impose fresh sanctions on Iran on Monday, days after U.S. President Donald Trump stopped short of launching airstrikes on Iranian targets.

    This was in response to Iran’s downing of a U.S. drone worth 130 million dollars.

    Before departing for Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said late Sunday, “On Monday there will be a significant set of new sanctions.’’

    Pompeo told reporters that the U.S. was seeking “a global coalition’’ prepared to push back against what he called “the world’s largest state sponsor of terror.’’

    The U.S. would continue its efforts to deny Iran the resources to foment terror, to develop its nuclear weapons and missile programmes.

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    The U.S. withdrew last year from an international deal designed to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons.

    However, the U.S. has already re-imposed sanctions on Tehran in a “maximum pressure’’ campaign, demanding stricter oversight of its nuclear programme and changes to Iranian foreign policy, such as the Islamic Republic’s support for groups in Syria and Yemen.

    Iranian President Hassan Rowhani, has called the U.S. sanctions the “equivalent of economic terrorism’’ and said the U.S. withdrawal from the nuclear deal stood at “the root’’ of the current regional and international conflict.