French National Front Has Third Leader in One Week

France’s far-right National Front, the party of presidential candidate Marine Le Pen, has replaced its leader for the second time in three days.

Jean-Francois Jalkh, who was named interim president of the party on Tuesday after Le Pen stepped down, was forced to vacate the office in response to allegations he praised a Holocaust denier. He also expressed doubts about the reality of Nazi gas chambers, which killed millions of Jews during World War II.

Jalkh is being replaced by Steeve Briois. Each has served as one of the party’s five vice presidents.

Another party vice president, Louis Aliot — Marine Le Pen’s partner — told reporters that Briois would take over the interim leadership and “there’ll be no more talk about it.”

It is a blow to the campaign of Le Pen, who had a better-than-expected showing in French elections on Sunday and faces a runoff with centrist rival Emmanuel Macron on May 7.

Le Pen raised controversy earlier in the campaign by saying France was not responsible for the roundup and demise of thousands of Parisian Jews during World War II.

Ironically, she expelled her father, party founder Jean-Marie Le Pen, from the party in 2015 because he referred to the Holocaust as a “detail of history.”

Macron is expected to win the May 7 runoff, but experts say an unexpected voter turnout could rock the results to one side or the other.

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Somali Lawmaker Narrowly Escapes Roadside Blast

A member of Somalia’s parliament escaped unharmed Friday after a roadside explosion targeted his vehicle in Mogadishu, officials said.

Abdifatah Omar Halane, a spokesman for Mogadishu’s mayor, told VOA that the explosion targeted Mohamud Abukate, a member of the lower house of the parliament. Two soldiers who were riding with him and a civilian bystander were wounded in the explosion, he said.

Security officials said the MP was on his way to the residence of another MP in the Taleh area of Hodan district in Mogadishu.

Somali intelligence officials said this week that they had received information al-Shabab terrorists might be planning to attack high-profile targets, including installations and senior government officials.

Al-Shabab has been carrying out a series of attacks against both government and civilian buildings in Mogadishu and other parts of the country.

Meanwhile, Amnesty International is urging Somali authorities in Puntland to halt plans to execute two boys sentenced to death by a military tribunal in February for their alleged role in the assassination of senior regional officials.

Amnesty said the boys, Muhamed Yasin Abdi, 17, and Daud Saied Sahal, 15, could be put to death “at any moment.” The group said five other boys between the ages of 14 and 17 had been executed by Puntland earlier this month.

“These five boys were executed following a fundamentally flawed process during which they were tortured to confess, denied access to a lawyer and additional protections accorded to juveniles, and tried in a military tribunal,” said Michelle Kagari, Amnesty International’s deputy regional director for East Africa, the Horn and the Great Lakes.

Kagan added that the “lives of the remaining two boys must be spared.”

Amnesty said the death penalty is “cruel” and urged Puntland to halt the executions and retry the boys in a juvenile civilian court without turning to capital punishment.

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MSF Evacuates International Staff in South Sudan’s Upper Nile

Doctors Without Borders said it has evacuated international staff from two towns in South Sudan because of intense fighting between the army and rebel groups.

The medical aid group, known by its French acronym MSF, said Thursday it removed foreign staff from the towns of Aburoc and Kodok, in the former Upper Nile state.

MSF’s country head of mission, Marcus Bachman, told VOA’s South Sudan in Focus that domestic staff will maintain essential medical services in the area as long they remain safe.

Renewed fighting broke out between opposition forces and the South Sudan Army in and around Kodok on Tuesday. Bachman said his team is treating gunshot victims as well as vulnerable women and children suffering from diarrheal waterborne diseases, pneumonia, and respiratory infections.

 

 

 

Bachman said some 25,000 new South Sudanese families arrived at a displaced persons’ camp in Aburoc this week, seeking shelter from the latest fighting.

“The population we are serving is fleeing … out of fear of being targeted in the conflict,” he said. “This is what the population is telling us, the fear of being targeted. They also share with us accounts where either family members or neighbors have been targeted in the conflict.”

MSF said Aburoc can only be reached by air because of unpaved or poorly maintained roads. In February, aid agencies stepped up air drops of relief items to the area, but fighting has interrupted some of those deliveries.

Colonel Santo Domic, deputy spokesman for the government’s Sudan People’s Liberation Army (SPLA), said the army launched attacks on rebel bases around Kodok this week and accused the rebels of denying residents access to the Nile River.

He said the army “liberated” Kodok and the town of Galacel on Wednesday.

Brigadier General William Gathjiath, spokesman for the rebel SPLA-In-Opposition, said government forces captured one of their bases, but denied Kodok and Galacel are now under government control.

“They have not even flushed our forces out of the town,” he said. “So if they are claiming that they have already captured the town, that’s not true.”

The head of the United Nations mission in South Sudan (UNMISS), David Shearer, said the conflict in South Sudan can only be resolved through peaceful means.

He also said the decision by leaders from the East Africa region and South Africa to keep out rebel leader Riek Machar out of South Sudan could bring stability to South Sudan.

“The feeling very much within the region is that his role, in terms of bringing him back, wouldn’t necessarily be positive at this stage,” said Shearer. “So that’s the decision of regional governments and South Africa.”

At the same time, he said President Salva Kiir’s national dialogue should include rebels loyal to Machar.

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Pakistani Doctor Who Helped Locate Bin Laden Marks 6 Years in Jail

He’s known in the U.S. Congress as “Dr. Hero” for his alleged role in finding al-Qaida mastermind Osama bin Laden. But in his native Pakistan, Dr. Shakil Afridi has been cast as a traitor, locked away for nearly six years in a slippery, tangled case that has strained bilateral relations.

It’s a tale that has played out as part spy novel, with Afridi involved in a CIA-linked plan to find bin Laden with a fake vaccination operation, and part political controversy  in increasingly conservative Pakistan, where the physician is jailed in a tribal area that operates under an antiquated colonial legal system.

Despite U.S. pressure for Afridi to be released, it’s unclear how much effort the national government is putting into the case, which is seen as a litmus test of Pakistan’s fight against militancy but could lead to a public backlash if Afridi were freed.

“We believe Dr. Afridi has been unjustly imprisoned and have clearly communicated our position to Pakistan on Dr. Afridi’s case, both in public and in private,” a State Department said in a statement to VOA this week. “We continue to raise this issue at the highest levels during discussions with Pakistan’s leadership. Pakistan has assured us that Dr. Afridi is being treated humanely and is in good health.”

Representing Afridi is not just fraught with frustration, current counsel Qaram Nadeem has not seen his client in 34 months, it’s also dangerous. Nadeem’s predecessor, Samiullah Afridi, gave up the case and moved to Dubai after threats from al-Qaida affiliates. He was gunned down in March 2015 after returning, with Taliban splinter groups Jundullah and Jamaatul Ahrar claiming responsibility.

“The tribal tribunal has adjourned his case for 30 times so far, as the state prosecutor abstains from appearing before the court,” Nadeem told VOA. The last hearing, scheduled for April 12, was called off with the prosecutor a no-show once again.

“Due to (the) high sensitivity of the case, we are proceeding with care and not over-pushing for hearing,” he said, expressing his frustration while demonstrating understandable prudence.

The hunt for bin Laden

The widely circulated story is that Afridi ran a fake hepatitis vaccination in Abbottabad — where the CIA had gotten intelligence that bin Laden was hiding out – to get DNA samples to confirm his presence. The use of a fake campaign sparked criticism from aid groups who said it would cast suspicion on legitimate projects and put aid workers at risk.

A raid by an elite SEAL team killed the terror leader and four others on May 2, 2011. Bin Laden was buried at sea almost immediately.

Days later, Afridi was arrested at the Torkham border crossing, apparently trying to flee into Afghanistan. He was convicted in May 2012 of treason for allegedly providing financial support to a local militant group in tribal regions adjacent to Afghanistan. His appeal is pending at a tribal court, with rules that date back to 1901 and are different from Pakistan’s regular set of laws.

Afridi was tried in a tribal court headed by a bureaucrat. The court sentenced him for 33 years, and only a tribal tribunal has the power to hear the appeal. Nadeem is not allowed to see Afridi despite a higher court order allowing them to meet.

The United States has withheld $33 million in aid for Pakistan — $1 million for each year of his sentence – but Islamabad has resisted all pressure so far.

President Donald Trump’s election victory last November raised hopes among Afridi’s family and friends that things might change. Trump was critical of Pakistan’s treatment of the doctor during his campaign, telling Fox News that he would get Afridi released in “two minutes.”

Pakistan bristled at the claim. Interior Minister Choudhry Nisar Ali Khan said nobody had the right to dictate to the country about how to handle Afridi’s case.

For their part, Afridi’s family has avoided talking about the case since his arrest. His brother, Jamil Afridi, told VOA through his counsel that the entire family is frustrated with the legal proceedings.

“We the family want both the U.S. and Pakistan to find a diplomatic solution for his release as his children are suffering,” Jamil Afridi said. “We don’t want to comment on the tribunal proceedings and don’t want to create problems for Pakistan.”

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Downpours Ruin Spring Harvest in Beleaguered Southwest Haiti

Flooding in southwest Haiti has wiped out as much as 80 percent of the spring harvest in a beleaguered region that is nearly completely dependent on farming, officials said Friday.

About five days of rain saturated swaths of the Caribbean region and triggered flooding across southwest Haiti, drowning crops and causing at least four deaths in the area that was overwhelmed by Hurricane Matthew last year.

Enzo Di Taranto, the head of Haiti’s U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, said the destructive downpours that finally tapered off on Monday “certainly came at a very bad time.”

The rugged region’s farmers were given seeds after Matthew hit in October so they could start reaping corn and beans now. But the rains that tapered off Monday have ruined the harvest or left gravel and other debris scattered on cultivated fields where planting was set to take place.

“Nature isn’t giving the people any slack,” said Hervil Cherubin, country director for Heifer International, an international nonprofit working with farmers in Haiti.

Following Matthew’s destruction, Haitian and international agricultural officials said it could be a decade or more before the southwestern peninsula recovers economically. In the Grand-Anse department, nearly all crops and half the livestock were destroyed by Matthew, according to the World Food Program.

When the hurricane hit, the southwest area was just starting to recover from a drought that had decreased crop production by half.

Cherubin said Haiti needed to learn from countries such as Bangladesh that face heavy rains and flooding each year but mitigate the risks with watershed management, reforestation and other strategies.

“We can’t do emergency work every day,” he said.

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Russia Cracks Down on Opposition Ahead of Planned Protest

A Russian opposition movement founded by exiled Kremlin critic and oligarch Mikhail Khodorkovsky says it plans to go ahead with protests against President Vladimir Putin in 32 cities this weekend, despite the fact that authorities have banned the movement and declared it illegal, and police have raided its Moscow offices.

The Open Russia movement’s spokeswoman, Maria Galitskaya, said the action will be held as planned.

“We insist we do not breach the law since we do not conduct either a meeting, or a demonstration or a picket,” she said.  “We are carrying letters to the president’s reception (office), since someone does not hear us when we do that individually.”

The protests planned for Saturday afternoon will involve submitting letters of complaint to President Vladimir Putin about the situation in Russia.  

“It is difficult to forecast what will be going on at the action,” said Galitskaya.  “We hope we shall submit the letters and quietly leave. We do not plan any law violations from our side.”

“Open Russia” closed?

Russian authorities have not simply warned Open Russia not to conduct any activities, but have blacklisted the group.  

The Russian prosecutor general’s office Wednesday declared Open Russia and two other groups founded by Khodorkovsky to be “undesirable” organizations.  The three organizations are the U.K.-registered Open Russia, the U.S.-based Institute of Modern Russia, and the social movement Open Russia.  

The “undesirable” designation bans them from operating inside Russia, with any violation punishable by fines and jail time.  

Galitskaya spoke to VOA on Friday, just a day after police raided the group’s Moscow office.

“One started breaking open the doors of the rooms and desk drawers, though there was nothing illegitimate in the office,” she said.  “It is difficult to talk about the real reasons of the search but we connect that with tomorrow’s action and think that this is an effort at intimidation.”

The ban is the latest in a longstanding crackdown on civil society, said Amnesty International Russia Director Sergei Nikitin.

“These aren’t the first organizations banned in Russia as ‘undesirable’, but it’s the first time the authorities ban a civil society group that was founded by Russians and operates only in Russia,” he said. “Since its creation, Open Russia has done a lot to support victims of human rights violations in Russia and denounce Russia’s deplorable human rights record, and now itself has fallen victim to the system.”

Khodorkovsky was Russia’s wealthiest man and close to the Kremlin before his outspoken criticism of corruption raised tensions between him and President Putin.  He was sentenced to a decade in prison on fraud charges that were widely seen as politically motivated and the state stripped his Yukos oil company assets over alleged tax evasion and embezzlement.  

Khodorkovsky was pardoned and released from prison in December 2013 and left Russia. In exile, he became even more critical of President Putin and supportive of Kremlin opponents through Open Russia.

A Moscow court on Friday rejected Open Russia’s complaint against city authorities, who had offered an alternative location for its protest, citing public renovation work.  

The prosecutor’s office said the lack of agreement meant any protest would be unauthorized and anyone taking part could be arrested.  

Electioneering?  

Russian authorities have been tightening controls as the country heads toward 2018 presidential elections.  

The crackdown shows they plan to continue repressing political opposition to the Kremlin, says Andrei Kolesnikov, the Carnegie Moscow Center’s head of domestic politics and institutions.  

“The authorities have got two lines of behavior in regard to the opposition – propaganda efforts and repressions,” he said.  “And they provide this line step by step, expressing their readiness to continue this line.”

Russia enacted the law against undesirable organizations two years ago and has used it to ban seven international groups, including The National Endowment for Democracy, the Open Society Foundation, and the International Republican Institute.

Russia has also tightened laws and regulations to discourage public protests in an effort to prevent displays of opposition to the Kremlin from getting out of control or attracting too much attention.

Opposition leader attacked, again

Also Thursday, Russian opposition leader and anti-corruption campaigner Alexei Navalny was attacked for a second time this year with a green antiseptic liquid known as zelyonka, which was thrown in his face outside his Moscow office.  He was treated in hospital for damage to one eye.   

In mid-March, Navalny was attacked with the green chemical in a Siberian city by a man who pretended to want to shake his hand.  

Russian authorities are trying to shame and scare Navalny, says Kolesnikov.  

“They all try to do something with him – to detain him, etc.,” he said. “I think he is in great danger.”

Navalny’s Anti-Corruption Foundation organized Russia’s largest unauthorized mass protests in years on March 26.  The demonstrations against alleged self-enrichment by Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev were broken up by riot police, who arrested hundreds of protesters, many of them minors.   

Navalny, who in 2012 led the biggest anti-Kremlin protests since Putin came to power, plans to run for president in 2018.  Russia’s politicized courts seem intent on stopping him.  In February, he was convicted, on flimsy evidence, of embezzlement. That conviction will disqualify him from running for office if not overturned.   

Throwing the green-staining, noxious zelyonka at critics is an increasingly common tactic of Kremlin supporters.  

This week, unknown assailants threw the antiseptic on investigative journalist Galina Sidorova in the city of Yoshkar-Ola.  A day earlier, Russian blogger Ilya Varlamov was attacked with zelyonka, eggs and flour at Stavropol airport.  

In late February, Putin critic and former prime minister Mikhail Kasyanov was spattered with green paint at a memorial march for slain opposition leader Boris Nemtsov.  Nemtsov was shot in the back and killed two years ago on a bridge just meters from the Kremlin and Red Square.  

On Friday, the Russian opposition political party Yabloko (Apple) said one of its campaigners, Natalia Fedorova, was “almost blinded” after a chemical substance was thrown in her eyes by unknown attackers.  She was also hospitalized.  

 

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Number of US Visas to Citizens of Trump Travel Ban Nations Drops

The United States issued about 40 percent fewer temporary visas in March to citizens of seven countries covered by President Donald Trump’s temporary travel bans than it did in an average month last year, according to a Reuters analysis of preliminary government data released on Thursday.

At the same time, the data showed that the total of U.S. non-immigrant visas issued to people from all countries was up by nearly 5 percent in March compared to the 2016 monthly average.

Citizens of the seven Muslim-majority nations under the bans – Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen – received about 3,200 non-immigrant visas in March 2017, compared to about 5,700 on average per month during the 2016 fiscal year and more than 6,000 on average per month in 2015 and 2014.

Trump’s travel bans were later blocked by the courts.

The State Department released the data to comply with a directive from Trump asking it to publish monthly breakdowns of the number of visas issued around the world.

The department did not release data on the total number of all types of visa applications, so it is unclear whether the lower number of temporary visas for citizens of the seven countries is because of a higher rate of rejections or other

factors, such as fewer applicants or slower processing times.

A State Department official noted that “visa demand is cyclical, not uniform throughout the year, and affected by various factors at the local and international level. Visa issuance numbers tend to increase during peak travel seasons, such as during the summer and the winter holidays.”

The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

March is neither a busy nor slow time for temporary visa issuances to people from the seven countries, several immigration lawyers said. Therefore, the significant drops are notable, they said.

The data is preliminary and numbers could be subject to minor revision, the State Department said.

Previously, such data was only available in aggregate by fiscal year, and the department declined to break out March visa data from previous years.

Nevertheless, some immigration attorneys said the numbers released on Thursday provide a glimpse into how Trump’s policies are affecting visa decisions.

“Either there are many fewer people applying because they believe they will be denied, or a much higher rate of denials is already happening even though the executive orders have been blocked,” said William Stock, president of the American Immigration Lawyers Association.

Executive Orders

Trump, who has said the travel bans were intended to make Americans safer from attacks by terrorists, signed an executive order on Jan. 27 barring people from the seven countries from entering the United States for 90 days.

The order was blocked by federal courts and the Trump administration replaced it with a revised, narrower travel ban effective March 16 which dropped Iraq from the list. Courts have also halted parts of the second order.

The number of non-immigrant visas issued to Iranians dropped to 1,572 in March from 2,450 per month on average in 2016 according to the data. Iraqis received 684 such visas in March, compared to nearly twice that number per month on average in 2016, the data showed.

Iranians also received fewer immigrant visas, which are granted to family members of U.S. citizens or those with jobs in the United States, than the average in previous years – 393 received immigrant visas in March, compared to 644 on average per month in 2016 and nearly 600 on average per month in 2015 and 2014.

Although visitor visas were down across the board for the seven targeted countries, two of them saw the number of immigrant visas issued tick up slightly. Forty-one Libyans received immigrant visas in March, compared to 32 per month on average in 2016. Somalians received 171 visas in March compared to 150 on average in 2016.

Immigration lawyers said that although the travel bans have been halted by courts for now, the administration’s vow to put stricter controls on immigration is likely to have changed how U.S. consulates evaluate visa applicants.

Stephen Pattison, a former State Department consular official now working as an immigration attorney, said consulates “are going to probably err more on the side of denying some people that they’d be on the fence about.”

Anecdotally, several U.S.-based lawyers with Iranian clients say their visa applications are taking longer to process and are being rejected more often since Trump took office on Jan. 20.

They cite shortages of interview appointments for Iranians, interviews cancelled at the last minute and longer “administrative processing” periods than they are accustomed to.

“If you can’t get an interview, you can’t get a visa,” said Babak Yousefzadeh, a San Francisco-based attorney and member of the board of directors of the Iranian American Bar Association.

Some Iranians have decided that for now, it is not worth it to risk the expense and time of making U.S. visa applications, said Kiyanoush Razaghi, a Maryland-based immigration attorney.

In addition to paying a standard $160 visa application fee, Iranians must typically travel to Turkey, Armenia or the United Arab Emirates for their interviews, since there is no U.S. diplomatic presence in Iran.

“That’s a fundamental change that I am seeing, at least in the community and among the clients that I have,” Razaghi said.

“They have a general feeling that now is not a good time to apply for a visa.”

 

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Los Angeles Looks Back on 1992 Riots

Saturday, April 29 will mark the anniversary of the outbreak of riots in Los Angeles, sparked by the acquittal of white police officers accused of beating a black motorist, Rodney King.  Mike O’Sullivan spoke to police and community members about the state of race relations, 25 years later.

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Trump Delivers National Rifle Association Keynote Address Amid Protests

As U.S. President Donald Trump delivered the keynote address Friday at the National Rifle Association’s annual convention in downtown Atlanta, scores of gun control advocates are planning to demonstrate across town against the nation’s most powerful gun lobby group.

Trump, who supported tougher gun restrictions before he entered the political arena, became the first president to address the NRA’s annual convention since Ronald Reagan in 1983.

WATCH: President’s speech in Atlanta

Gun control advocates face a reinvigorated NRA, which spent more than $30 million to help Trump win the presidency.

After Trump’s surprising victory last November, NRA chief executive Wayne LaPierre said it was time to “defeat the forces that have aligned against our freedom once and for all.”

Support for gun rights

President Trump has already taken action in support of gun rights proponents. He signed a bill that reversed a rule implemented by President Barack Obama that would have required the federal government to provide information about mentally ill people undergoing background checks for gun purchases.

Still, the NRA has a busy legislative agenda. It is pushing for a federal “concealed-carry reciprocity” law that would validate nationwide any state’s concealed-carry permits. The gun lobby group also aims to eliminate gun-free zones at schools and relax state requirements for background checks.

Gun control advocates maintain validating state permits throughout the U.S. would effectively turn the weakest state standards into national law.

Gun control proponents admit achieving legislative gains on a national level are unlikely. But they cite victories in the states where laws have been enacted requiring universal background checks and tighter access to guns for domestic abusers.

Atlanta protests

Two of the groups planning to demonstrate in Atlanta are Everytown for Gun Safety and Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense of America, which was formed after the 2012 shooting deaths of 20 children and six adults at an elementary school in the northeastern town of Newtown, Connecticut.

Moms Demand Action co-founder Shannon Watts said in a statement to VOA that a top priority for gun control groups is defeating the concealed-carry reciprocity initiative.

“That’s why Moms Demand Action volunteers and gun violence survivors are in Atlanta this weekend, and it’s why we’ll continue to show up in D.C. (the District of Columbia) and in statehouses and boardrooms across the country until our nation’s lawmakers put the safety of our families and communities above the profits of the gun lobby,” Watts said.

 

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Court Grants Trump Request to Hold Climate Regulations Case

A U.S. appeals court on Friday granted a Trump administration request to put on hold a legal challenge by industry and a group of states to former President Barack Obama’s regulations aimed at curbing greenhouse emissions mainly from coal-fired power plants, rules that the Republican president is moving to undo.

A 10-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit granted the request to put the litigation involving the regulations known as the Clean Power Plan in abeyance for at least 60 days while the administration plans its next steps.

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Congo’s Ethnic Violence Displaces More Than 1M People

The United Nations has issued a flash appeal of $64.5 million to provide emergency assistance over the next six months to hundreds of thousands of people uprooted by ethnic violence in the Democratic Republic of Congo’s southern Kasai, Lomami and Sankuru provinces.

The United Nations reports that more than 1 million people have been forcibly displaced since violence erupted in August, when government soldiers killed a local tribal leader in Kasai province. Over the past eight months, the violence between militia and government forces has intensified and expanded to Lomami and Sankuru provinces.

Spokesman for the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, Jens Laerke, said children are at extreme risk and in need protection. He said  many women have been raped and need medical care and psychological counseling.

“The violence behind the displacement has already led to civilian deaths in the hundreds and human rights violations, including the discovery of mass graves, and severely disrupted people’s livelihoods and education of thousands of children,” he said. “It has also exacerbated the risks of malnutrition and epidemics in a region already known for high malnutrition rates and a weak health system.”

Laerke said the flash appeal is on top of the regular $750-million humanitarian response plan for the DRC. He told VOA the additional money is urgently required to deal with the humanitarian needs, which he described as astronomical.

“To have 1 million displaced is really a lot of people,” he said, “We know that affects every aspect of life, including the ability for families to access food and to obtain the nutrition for the children that they need. So, it is indeed a very acute concern.”

Laerke said the crisis is worsening pre-existing tensions between communities and ethnic groups, and it also has driven tens of thousands of people to seek refuge in neighboring Angola.

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11 Dead of Mystery Illness in Liberia as Ebola Is Ruled Out

United Nations officials say at least 11 people have died from a mysterious illness in Liberia, and tests have been negative for the Ebola virus.

The World Health Organization said Friday that authorities are looking into whether the people were sickened by something they ate or were exposed to a chemical or bacteria.

Five others remain hospitalized in Sinoe County, about 250 miles (400 kilometers) outside the capital, after complaining of abdominal pains. Two are critically ill.

The cases over the past week have evoked painful memories in Liberia, where more than 4,800 people died during the Ebola epidemic.

Those who fell sick this week all had attended a relative’s funeral. That was how many Ebola victims contracted the disease when they came in contact with victims’ corpses.

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Pakistani Parliamentarians to Meet Afghan Counterparts in Kabul

A 15-member Pakistan parliamentary delegation will travel to Afghanistan on Saturday on a two-day official visit.

Speaker Ayaz Sadiq of the National Assembly, the lower house of parliament, will lead the delegation that will meet with their Afghan counterparts and the Afghan leadership, an official announcement said Friday.

“In the meetings, the matters related to enhance the cooperation between the two parliaments, besides resumption of dialogue to address the common issues between the two sides would be discussed,” Speaker Sadiq’s office said.

The visit is expected to help Pakistan and Afghan governments to resolve issues straining bilateral relations through negotiation, according to the announcement.

This is the first time such a broadly represented Pakistani parliamentary delegation is officially visiting Kabul.

The initiative stems from a recent understanding between Islamabad and Kabul to enhance contacts at political and military levels to try to ease tensions and find ways to an improved relations, officials said.

Two federal ministers, Abdul Qatar Baluch and Mir Hasil Bazijo are part of the delegation which consists of representatives of all parliamentary parties, including PPP and MQM.

Other members, include Raja Muhammad Zafar-UlHaq, leader of the house in Senate, Akram Khan Durrani, Mehmood Khan Achkzai, Sardar Awais Ahmed Khan Leghari, Syed Naveed Qamar, Shafqat Mehmood, Farooq Sattar, Haji Ghulam Ahmed Khan Bilour, Aftab Khan Sherpao, Sahibzada Tariqullah, G.G. Jamal and Mushahid Hussain Syed.

A high-level Pakistan military delegation visited Kabul on Thursday where it held talks with the acting Afghan defense ministry and military leadership on bilateral issues.

Allegations that security institutions in both countries covertly support and fund terrorist attacks against each other have lately deteriorated bilateral ties.

 

 

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Thai Military Steps Up Security in Restive Muslim Border Provinces

Thailand’s military in the southern border provinces is on high alert on the 13th anniversary of a wave of insurgent attacks that included the deaths of 32 insurgents inside a mosque.

The increased security comes as the Thai government is pressing on with informal peace talks with several militant groups amid a spike in violence in recent months.

The 2004 bloodshed came just three months after a resurgent militancy started in the largely Muslim southern border provinces of Pattani, Narathiwat, Songkhla and Yala.

Since then, 6,500 lives have been lost as efforts to end the insurgency against the Thai state has ebbed and flowed with local communities bearing the brunt of the violence.

The April 2004 pre-dawn attack by dozens of insurgents was met by military force that left 107 insurgents dead.

Thirty two militants fled to the sanctuary of the 16th century Krue Se Mosque, in Pattani before being surrounded by the Thai military and later killed by soldiers storming the mosque.

Media images later showed the blood spattered walls of the inner rooms.

Security increased

Panitan Wattanayagorn, an analyst and advisor to Thai Deputy Prime Minister Prawit Wongsuwan, said security had been stepped up to coincide with the anniversary of the 2004 attacks.

“Moving into the important anniversaries – some of the local events, the security forces are instructed to step up their measures to make sure that peace and stability are secured in the area,” Panitan told VOA.

But late Thursday, Thai media reported five army rangers had been ambushed and killed during a patrol in the Narathiwat’s Chanee district, raising fears of an escalation in violence.

The years of violence have reaped a grim toll. Insurgent attacks and reprisals by the military have caused a constant spiral in the bloodshed.

Militant attacks have focused on symbols of the Thai state, officials and school teachers. More than 150 teachers have died in the violence. But the toll has included Muslims, the beheading of Buddhists, and arson attacks on schools.

Thailand is largely Buddhist but with a majority of Muslims in the Southern provinces. Analysts say tens of thousands of Buddhists from the region have been forced to migrate to Northern provinces to escape the violence.

The Thai military government launched peace talks in 2015 with the negotiations centered on an umbrella organization, MARA Pattani, representing several insurgent groups, with the Malaysian government supporting the peace process. The latest milestones in the talks are an agreement on “safe zones” in largely urban areas.

Mixed opinions on talks

Panitan said the informal talks are making progress, with the government open to meeting with all insurgent groups.

“The peace talks are on schedule in the South and now moving into a more difficult period, after getting technical measures and building up trust, they are now able to sit down and work out the new mapping of the more secure areas,” Panitan told VOA.

But other analysts say the talks with the military representatives are failing to show significant gains.

Outside the negotiations are militants under the National Revolutionary Front (BRN) and the main instigators of the increasing attacks in recent months.

The BRN rejected the current negotiations saying it is standing by a demand of negotiating directly with the government in Bangkok. It has also called for an impartial mediator and international observers to the negotiations.

Thai Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha has rejected the BRN’s calls for direct talks with the government.

Matthew Wheeler, an analyst with the International Crisis Group (ICG), in emailed comments, said a recent spate of attacks across the region appeared “to be a statement of opposition” to the proposed framework agreement on safety zones.

“The militants continue to demonstrate that they have the capabilities to launch attacks across the region despite of the security measures by the Thai state,” Wheeler said.

Panitan said meetings are scheduled with representatives of the OIC in the coming days.

In early April, the Organization of Islamic Conference (OIC) at a summit in Turkey, lent its support to the Thai efforts in pressing on with dialogue with the MARA – Pattani.

But it also called for Muslim communities in the South to include “all stakeholders and to work for the common good to ensure a peace process can be effectively realized in the South,” the OIC said in an official statement.

Pakorn Preeyakorn, president of the Islamic Center of Thailand, also called for a greater role of Thai civilian and academics in the negotiation process.

“You need to put some people who are very keen in dealing with this kind of conflicts. Sometimes when you use those from the army, for example, they are not very keen in dealing with the peace talks,” Pakorn told VOA.

“So in this sense, we need to have some more people who know the real situation,” he said.

ICG’s Wheeler said the long term solution to the conflict requires dialogue and negotiation. “Crisis Group has long argued for greater political decentralization as a path out of the conflict,” he said.

But analysts say the Thai military opposes any calls by the insurgents for local autonomy, a major obstacle to ending to the violence.

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Tillerson Urges UN Security Council to Take Action Before N. Korea Does

U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said Friday that Washington would not rule out a military response to future North Korean aggression and that it would seek to increase the rogue nation’s financial and international isolation.

 

“As we have said before, all options for responding to future provocation must remain on the table,” Tillerson told a high-level meeting of the U.N. Security Council on the North Korean nuclear issue.

 

“Diplomatic and financial levers of power will be backed up by a willingness to counteract North Korean aggression with military action if necessary,” he warned. “We much prefer a negotiated solution to this problem, but we are committed to defending ourselves and our allies against North Korean aggression.”

 

WATCH: Tillerson on North Korean nuclear threat

Tillerson said this new campaign of intensified pressure would be swiftly implemented and “painful to North Korean interests,” but he insisted that regime change is not a part of it.

 

He added that talks would not happen before North Korea takes concrete steps to dismantle its illegal weapons programs.

Tillerson laid out what Washington wants the international community to do to stop North Korea’s pursuit of nuclear weapons, calling for increased diplomatic and economic pressure on Pyongyang to get it to change course, including new targeted sanctions.

 

“We must bring maximum economic pressure by severing trade relationships that indirectly fund the DPRK’s nuclear and missile program,” he said. “I call on the international community to suspend the flow of North Korean guest workers and to impose bans on North Korean imports, and especially coal.”

WATCH: Tillerson on consequences of failing to act

 

He singled out China, urging it to exert its powerful economic leverage over North Korea.

 

He also asked states to downgrade their diplomatic relations with Pyongyang and to fully implement existing U.N. Security Council resolutions regarding North Korea.

 

“Those nations which have not fully enforced these resolutions fully discredit this body,” Tillerson said.

 

“For years, North Korea has been dictating the terms of its dangerous course of action; it is time for us to retake control of the situation,” Tillerson added.

 

The United States called for Friday’s meeting as part of its presidency this month of the Security Council. It was Tillerson’s first time at the world body and the Security Council chamber was packed, as nations are eager to have a clear indication from the Trump administration on where it is headed on the dangerous North Korea issue.

China remains firm

 

Several foreign ministers attended Friday’s high-level session, including China’s Wang Yi. He deflected President Donald Trump’s recent calls on Beijing to solve the North Korean problem.

 

“China is not a focal point of the problem on the peninsula and the key to solving the nuclear issue on the peninsula does not lie on the Chinese side,” Wang told the council.

“China has, over the years, made unremitting efforts and played a unique role in promoting a negotiated solution,” he added.

 

China’s position remained consistent, with the minister calling for North Korea to stop its nuclear and ballistic missile activities and return to its international commitments. He also called on other parties to work constructively for the denuclearization of the Korean peninsula.

 

“We must stay committed to the path of dialogue and negotiations,” Wang said. “The use of force does not solve differences and will only lead to bigger disasters,” he cautioned.

 

 

Anxious neighbors

 

“We must act now, we are racing against time,” said South Korean foreign minister Yun Byung-se, whose country is on the frontline of the crisis. “Extraordinary circumstances require extraordinary responses,” he urged.

 

He called for tougher new international sanctions, saying they are necessary. “Our goal is not to bring North Korea to knees, but to bring it back to the negotiation table for genuine denuclearization.”

 

Japan’s foreign minister Fumio Kishida urged the international community to send a message to Pyongyang that provocation comes at a high price. “No bright future awaits North Korea without denuclearization.

 

Russia, which shares a short border with North Korea, also expressed concern about the growing tensions.

 

“The combative rhetoric coupled with reckless muscle-flexing has led to this situation where the whole world sits seriously now wondering whether there’s going to be a war or not,” Deputy Foreign Minister Genady Gatilov told the council.

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