Tag: Foreign News

  • North Korea elects new ceremonial president

    North Korea has elected a new ceremonial president, a month after the election of its official parliament, state media said on Friday.

    North Korean leader Kim Jong Un’s deputy, Choe Ryong Hae, was elected on Thursday as chairman of the State Affairs Commission of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, as North Korea is officially known.

    According to a report Friday by the news agency KCNA, Choe replaces Kim Yong Nam, 91, who was long considered the diplomatic face of North Korea, but whose retirement was expected due to his advanced age.

    Read Also: As Korean Embassy intervenes in LADOL’s shooting incident

    South Korean media have described Choe as a political heavyweight and the number two man in North Korea behind Kim.

    KCNA called his selection a “great political event of crucial historical significance.’’

    The 687 lawmakers in the nominal parliament are elected for a period of five years, while turnout at the polls in March was over 90 per cent.

    The parliament is officially North Korea’s highest organ of state but it only meets once or twice a year to rubber-stamp decisions made by the country’s leaders.

  • Breaking: Army arrests Sudanese President, Omar Al-Bashir

    The Sudanese military has removed President Omar al-Bashir from power and set up a transitional military council to rule the country for two years, Sudan’s Minister of Defense, Awad Mohamed Ahmed Ibn Auf, said in a televised statement on Thursday.

    Details shortly…

  • Britain’s May heading to Brussels in hope of Brexit extension

    British Prime Minister Theresa May will on Wednesday head to Brussels for an emergency meeting of the European Council at which other EU leaders are expected to extend the Brexit deadline.

    May has requested to delay Britain’s EU departure from Friday till June 30, while European Council President Donald Tusk has proposed a flexible one-year extension.

    Report says all EU leaders need to agree to a delay.

    London needs time to broker parliamentary approval on a Brexit divorce deal negotiated with Brussels.

    Britain’s EU departure has already been postponed from March 29.

    Read Also: Brexit: PM Theresa May survives vote of no-confidence

    “As a condition for any delay – either the shorter option sought by May or Tusk’s one-year `flextension’ – Britain will likely have to take part in EU elections in late May,’’ EU diplomats have said.

    On Tuesday, lawmakers backed May’s plan to request an extension until June 30, voting by 420 to 110 in favour of a government motion.

    The prime minister was forced to table the motion after parliament approved a cross-party bill the previous day that legally obliged her to avoid a no-deal Brexit and request a delay.

    Britain’s parliament has rejected May’s withdrawal agreement three times but also failed to come up with a majority position on any other option.

    Her government held more talks on Tuesday with the opposition Labour Party in a bid to break the impasse in parliament.

    Labour lawmaker, Rebecca Long Bailey, told newsmen that the talks were “really constructive” and would continue on Wednesday.

    Labour’s key demand is that Britain remains in a long-term customs union with the EU.

  • US unveils new restrictions on foreign aid for abortions

    The U.S. will further clamp down on the use of foreign aid for non-governmental organisations that support abortions or work with groups that help women access the medical service, an official said.

    The U.S. Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo, on Tuesday said this as he announced new limitations on the use of federal government funds in Washington.

    “We can continue to meet our critical global health goals… while refusing to subsidize the killing of unborn babies,” Pompeo said.

    He said the new measures would include “strict prohibition on back door schemes” meant to help funnel money to organisations working on women’s health and that support abortions.

    Pompeo is a Christian conservative and has been facing lobbying by right-wing groups on the abortion issue in Latin America.

    U.S. President Donald Trump, upon taking office, reversed regulations that were in place during the Obama administration to reimpose the so-called Mexico City Policy, which prohibits organisations receiving U.S. money from even using non-U.S. funding for abortions.

    Critics call the policy the “global gag rule’’ as it not only limits what organisations can do with their own money, but also places restrictions on the types of conversations health care providers can have with patients.

    Human Rights Watch, a lobby group, warned already in 2018 that Trump was applying the rule not only to the tens of millions of dollars the U.S. gives to family planning programmes but to the more than 8 billion dollars the U.S. donates to global health issues.

    Trump has further been criticised at the UN for supporting conservative, non-democratic states, who oppose using the international organisation for gay rights and key women’s health issues.

    US unveils new restrictions on foreign aid for abortions

    The U.S. will further clamp down on the use of foreign aid for non-governmental organisations that support abortions or work with groups that help women access the medical service, an official said.

    The U.S. Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo, on Tuesday said this as he announced new limitations on the use of federal government funds in Washington.

    “We can continue to meet our critical global health goals… while refusing to subsidize the killing of unborn babies,” Pompeo said.

    He said the new measures would include “strict prohibition on back door schemes” meant to help funnel money to organisations working on women’s health and that support abortions.

    Pompeo is a Christian conservative and has been facing lobbying by right-wing groups on the abortion issue in Latin America.

    U.S. President Donald Trump, upon taking office, reversed regulations that were in place during the Obama administration to reimpose the so-called Mexico City Policy, which prohibits organisations receiving U.S. money from even using non-U.S. funding for abortions.

    Critics call the policy the “global gag rule’’ as it not only limits what organisations can do with their own money, but also places restrictions on the types of conversations health care providers can have with patients.

    Human Rights Watch, a lobby group, warned already in 2018 that Trump was applying the rule not only to the tens of millions of dollars the U.S. gives to family planning programmes but to the more than 8 billion dollars the U.S. donates to global health issues.

    Trump has further been criticised at the UN for supporting conservative, non-democratic states, who oppose using the international organisation for gay rights and key women’s health issues.

  • AU urges Congo to delay final election result

    The African Union (AU) has called on authorities in the Congo to delay releasing the final results of the recent elections following reports of vote rigging, an AU statement said on Friday.

    “The bloc met on Thursday in Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa and concluded there were serious doubts on the conformity of the provisional results, as proclaimed by the National Independent Electoral Commission.

    “Accordingly, the heads of state and government called for the suspension of the proclamation of the final results of the elections,’’ it said.

    Several international media outlets reported on Tuesday that leaked voting data showed that runner-up Martin Fayulu had definitely won at the polls on Dec. 30.

    Britain’s Financial Times (FT), as well as France’s RFI and TV5 Monde, said they were leaked full voting data, which had not yet been released.

    Analysis showed the man announced the winner by the electoral commission recently, Felix Tshisekedi, actually lost.

    Fayulu has cried foul, and appealed to the country’s highest court to order a recount, a matter it is now deliberating.

    Read Also: Congo under mounting foreign pressure for vote recount

    Fayulu has suggested Tshisekedi and President Joseph Kabila did a back-room deal after early results showed Kabila’s chosen successor, Emmanuel Ramazani Shadary, finished third.

    Western powers have not congratulated Tshisekedi, and France has expressed concern over the official results, which saw Tshisekedi win 38.57 per cent of the vote to Fayulu’s 34.8 per cent.

    On Thursday, the AU said it would “urgently dispatch’’ a high-level delegation including its chairperson, Rwandan President Paul Kagame, with the view to reach “a consensus on a way out of the post-electoral crisis in the country.’’

  • Bogota bomb blast: death toll rises to 21

    The death toll from a car bomb blast outside a police academy has increased to 21, Colombian police said on Friday.

    “The blast at the General Santander Police Academy in southern Bogota left 68 people wounded, 58 of whom had been discharged from the hospital,’’ Agence France-Presse reported, citing a statement from the Colombian police.

    Officials quickly identified the perpetrator as Jose Aldemar Rojas, saying that in the attack, he drove into the academy aboard his 1993 gray Nissan Patrol car that was loaded with 80 kg of pentolite, a composite high explosive.

    Pentolite is a composite high explosive used for military and civilian purposes, it can penetrate as much as 5 inches (127 mm) of armour plate.

    Read Also: Many ‘killed’ in Mogadishu bomb blast

    According to the statement, Rojas died in the bombing.

    “Colombia is saddened but will not bow down to violence.

    “This demented terrorist act will not go unpunished’’ Colombian President Ivan Duque, who canceled a Security Council meeting he was scheduled to attend in Quibdo, Choco, in order to return to Bogota.

    Prosecutor General Nestor Humberto Martinez said officials are investigating who ordered the bombing.

  • Ethiopia’s parliament approves first female president

    Ethiopia’s parliament has approved senior diplomat Sahle-Work Zewde as the country’s first female president, proceedings on state television showed, cementing another shift in the country’s political system from Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed.

    Zewde is at present UN under-Secretary-General and special representative of its Secretary General to the African Union.

    She replaces Mulatu Wirtu, who tendered his resignation to parliament earlier on Wednesday.

    The president’s post is a ceremonial one in Ethiopia. The prime minister, who is the head of state, holds executive power.

    “In a historic move, the two Houses has elected Amb. Shalework Zewde as the next President of Ethiopia.

    “She is the first female head of state in modern Ethiopia,” Fitsum Arega, Abiy’s chief of staff, said on Twitter.

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    “In a patriarchal society such as ours, the appointment of a female head of state not only sets the standard for the future but also normalizes women as decision-makers in public life.”

    Recently, when the prime minister reshuffled his cabinet, he appointed 10 female ministers, making Ethiopia the third country in Africa, after Rwanda and Seychelles, to achieve gender parity in their cabinets.

    “When there is no peace in the country, mothers will be frustrated. Therefore, we need to work on peace for the sake of our mothers,” Zewde told parliament after her approval.

    Wirtu, who had held the office for five years, departed one year ahead of his term ending, saying he wanted to be part of change and reforms.

    Zewde became the fourth president since the ruling EPRDF coalition came to power.

    Since his appointment in April, Abiy has presided over a raft of reforms that have turned the region’s politics on its head, including the pardoning of dissidents long outlawed by the government.

    Earlier, the Ethiopian parliament’s two houses in a joint extraordinary session on Thursday approved the resignation request by Ethiopia’s President Mulatu Teshome.

    Teshome, who has been the East African country’s head of state since October 2013, on Wednesday submitted his letter of resignation as the Ethiopian parliament’s two houses are scheduled to consider his resignation.