India Court Quashes Early Release of Men in Muslim Woman’s Gang-Rape – Lawyer

NEW DELHI — India’s top court on Monday quashed the early release of 11 Hindu men who had been jailed for life for gang-raping a pregnant Muslim woman and murdering her relatives during Hindu-Muslim riots in Gujarat state in 2002, a lawyer in the case said.

The court directed the men to surrender to prison authorities within two weeks, the lawyer added.

The victim, Bilkis Bano, was three months pregnant when she was gang-raped and seven of her relatives, including her three-year old daughter, murdered during the riots that swept through the state, killing more than 1,000 people, most of them Muslims.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi was Gujarat’s chief minister at the time and his Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party still rules the state.

The men, convicted in early 2008, were ordered freed by the Gujarat government in August 2022 after the prison they were being held in recommended their release considering the time they had served and their good behavior.

Their release drew condemnation from the victim’s husband, lawyers, and politicians. Local media reported that several petitions were filed in the Supreme Court challenging the remission, including one by the victim herself.

In its verdict on Monday, the court held that Gujarat did not have the authority to reduce the sentence since the trial had been moved to Mumbai, making neighboring Maharashtra state responsible for the decision.

“The court has said that the law is clear, the appropriate government is the government where the accused are tried and sentenced,” advocate Vrinda Grover, among the lawyers appearing for the petitioners, told reporters outside the court.

The bench of two judges also held that a 2022 order of the top court, which directed the Gujarat government to consider remission, was obtained fraudulently and by suppressing material facts, local media reported.

“Gujarat government usurped the powers of Maharashtra government…which in our opinion is a nullity,” the court said, according to news website Live Law.

The Gujarat government will be able to comment on the verdict only after going through the detailed order, a senior state official said, speaking on condition of anonymity as they are not authorized to speak to the media.

There was no immediate reaction to the verdict from the 11 men.

your ad here

Former Gambian Interior Minister on Trial in Switzerland Over Alleged Crimes Against Humanity

BELLINZONA, Switzerland — A former interior minister of Gambia was going on trial Monday in Switzerland on charges including crimes against humanity for his alleged role in years of repression by the west African country’s security forces against opponents of its longtime dictator.

Advocacy groups hailed the trial of Ousman Sonko, Gambia’s interior minister from 2006 to 2016 under then-President Yahya Jammeh, as an opportunity to reach a conviction under “universal jurisdiction,” which allows the prosecution of serious crimes committed abroad.

Sonko was taken Monday in a police van to Switzerland’s federal criminal court in southern Bellinzona.

He applied for asylum in Switzerland in November 2016 and was arrested two months later. The Swiss attorney general’s office said the indictment against Sonko, filed in April, covers alleged crimes during 16 years under Jammeh, whose rule was marked by arbitrary detention, sexual abuse and extrajudicial killings.

“The trial of Ousman Sonko is another major step in the search for justice for victims of brutal crimes and their families committed under Jammeh’s rule,” said Sirra Ndow, coordinator of the Jammeh2Justice campaign.

Swiss prosecutors say Sonko is accused of having supported, participated in and failed to stop attacks against regime opponents in the country, which juts through neighboring Senegal. The alleged crimes include killings, acts of torture, acts of rape and numerous unlawful detentions, Swiss authorities say.

Philip Grant, executive director at TRIAL International, which filed a case in Switzerland against Sonko before his arrest, said he was “the highest-level former official to be tried under the principle of universal jurisdiction in Europe.”

The trial is set to run through Jan. 30.

In November, a German court convicted a Gambian man, Bai Lowe, of murder and crimes against humanity for involvement in the killing of government critics in Gambia. 

The man was a driver for a military unit deployed against opponents of Jammeh.

Sonko, who joined the Gambian military in 1988, was appointed commander of the State Guard in 2003, a position in which he was responsible for Jammeh’s security, Swiss prosecutors said. He was made inspector general of the Gambian police in 2005.

Sonko was removed as interior minister in September 2016, a few months before the end of Jammeh’s government, and left Gambia for Europe to seek asylum.

Jammeh seized control in a 1994 coup. He lost Gambia’s 2016 presidential election but refused to concede defeat to Adama Barrow, and ultimately fled amid threats of a regional military intervention to force him from power.

 

your ad here

Deadly Bomb Hits Pakistan Polio Protection Police Team Near Afghan Border

ISLAMABAD — Authorities in northwestern Pakistan said Monday that at least six police officers were killed and nearly two dozen injured when a roadside bomb struck their truck in a remote region bordering Afghanistan.

The officers were traveling to Bajaur, a militancy-hit border district, to escort anti-polio workers on the first day of a weeklong national immunization drive. Witnesses reported that the powerful blast destroyed the police vehicle.

Rescue workers expected the death toll to increase, saying several officers among the injured were rushed to local hospitals in “critical condition.” The attack prompted local authorities to suspend the polio immunization campaign in the area.

The anti-state Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan, or TTP, claimed responsibility for the deadly bombing. The group, commonly known as the Pakistani Taliban, actively targets security forces in areas near and on the Afghan border.

Polio Drive

Health officials said that during the immunization campaign launched Monday, anti-polio teams would go door to door across Pakistan’s 159 districts to administer vaccine drops to more than 44 million children under 5.

Pakistan and Afghanistan are the last two countries in which the highly infectious polio virus still paralyzes children. However, the cases in both countries significantly declined in 2023, with six reported in each.

With a population of about 241 million, Pakistan came close to eradicating polio in 2021, when it reported only one case of paralysis from the virus. However, the country saw a spike in 2022, with 20 confirmed cases of infection.

The World Health Organization said last month that political instability, insecurity in some districts, and vaccination boycotts continue to hinder anti-polio efforts, particularly in the Pakistani province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, where Bajaur is located.

The province had four of the six polio cases the country reported in 2023.

The WHO has cautioned that polio vaccination programs in Pakistan and Afghanistan, which also reported six cases last year, continue to miss many children, posing a significant risk to gains made against the crippling disease.  

 

your ad here

Maldives Suspends 3 Officials for Insulting Indian PM

Maldives — The Maldives government has suspended three deputy ministers for disparaging India’s prime minister, an official said Sunday, during a dip in ties with its powerful neighbor.

Malsha Shareef, Mariyam Shiuna and Abdulla Mahzoom Majid all worked for the archipelago’s Ministry of Youth Empowerment, Information and Arts and were disciplined for their comments on social media, the senior government official told Reuters.

The three had variously labeled Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi a “clown,” “terrorist” and “puppet of Israel” on social media platform X, in response to a video of him visiting the Indian islands of Lakshadweep to promote local tourism.

Some viewed his visit as trying to draw tourists away from the globally popular Maldives, whose 1,192 islands in the Indian Ocean are dotted with luxury resorts.

The Indian High Commission in the Maldives had “strongly raised and expressed concerns” over the comments, a source familiar with the matter told Reuters.

The controversy comes ahead of a visit by President Mohamed Muizzu to China on Jan. 8-12. Muizzu won election last year with a pledge to end the Maldives’ “India first” policy in a region where New Delhi and Beijing compete for influence.

Muizzu also pledged to remove a small contingent of 75 Indian military personnel from the nation of just over half a million people.

Tourism campaign

Some prominent Indians, including actor Akshay Kumar and cricketer Hardik Pandya, expressed dismay at the comments by the now suspended Maldivian officials.

Neither of the three were immediately available for comment.

In a campaign to promote local tourism, other Indians, from former cricketer Sachin Tendulkar to actor Salman Khan, have urged people to visit their own islands rather than go abroad.

#ExploreIndianIslands is the second largest trending hashtag in India on X, and some Indians are sharing screenshots of canceled bookings of Maldivian holidays.

Maldives’ Foreign Ministry said the government was aware of “derogatory remarks” against foreign leaders and would not tolerate them.

“India has always been a good friend to Maldives and we must not allow such callous remarks to negatively impact the age-old friendship between our two countries,” added former Maldives President Ibrahim Solih on X.

your ad here

Internet Disrupted in Pakistan as Khan’s Party Launches Virtual Election Campaign

Islamabad — Authorities in Pakistan disrupted internet connectivity and blocked access to social media platforms nationwide late Sunday as the party of imprisoned former Prime Minister Imran Khan virtually launched its manifesto and fundraising campaign ahead of elections next month.

The national and global telethon was organized to bypass a local media ban and government crackdown on physical gatherings of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, or PTI. According to public polls, the party is rated as the largest national political force, with Khan being the most popular politician.

NetBlocks, an independent global internet monitor promoting digital rights, cybersecurity, and governance, and PTI officials confirmed the disruption in the run-up to and during the online campaign activity.

“Confirmed: Live metrics show a nation-scale disruption to social media platforms across #Pakistan, including X/Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and YouTube; the incident comes as persecuted former PM Imran Khan’s party, PTI, launches its election fundraising telethon,” NetBlocks said on X, formerly known as Twitter.

“The incident is consistent with previous social media filtering events which have all been imposed during opposition party rallies or speeches by opposition leader Imran Khan,” the U.K.-based watchdog noted.

Election authorities have rejected Khan and most senior PTI leaders as candidates for the February 8 parliamentary vote. The opposition party has persistently accused the Pakistani military of blocking its participation in the vote.

The independent non-profit Human Rights Council of Pakistan condemned the suspension of internet services as a breach of international law and fundamental rights. It said on X that all political parties have the right to carry out their activities.

“In the context of elections, all political parties should get the basic right of freedom of expression. It is the responsibility of the government of Pakistan to uphold the fundamental rights,” the council emphasized.

The PTI denounced the caretaker government of Prime Minister Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar, which is constitutionally a neutral entity with a mandate to organize the elections freely and transparently.

“Once again, PTI has a virtual event, and once again, the internet is shut off,” Syed Zulfiqar Bukhari, a party spokesperson, said. “What has happened and is happening in Pakistan in the name of democracy is a slap in the face of transparency,” he added.

An opposition-led parliamentary no-confidence motion removed cricket star-turned-Prime Minister Khan from office in April 2022.

The deposed Pakistani leader rejected the move as illegal, alleging the military orchestrated it at the behest of the United States to topple his government to punish him for pushing an independent foreign policy and refusing to provide military bases to the U.S. military.

Washington and Islamabad deny the accusations.

Khan reiterated his allegations in an article he wrote from prison last Thursday in The Economist.

“I will just say, as we have said before, the former prime minister’s accusations are baseless, and I think I’ll leave it at that,” Mathew Miller, the U.S. State Department spokesperson, said last week when asked for his reaction to Khan’s claims.

The Pakistani government and the military justify their crackdown on the PTI, saying its workers vandalized army properties and installations during anti-government protests last May.

Khan rejects the allegations, saying the violence was planned by the military to pave the way for arresting, torturing, and forcing his party leaders to quit PTI or politics altogether.

The 71-year-old incarcerated politician is being tried on several allegations, ranging from corruption and murder to leaking state secrets while in office. Last August, he was convicted on controversial graft charges and sentenced to three years.

A higher court suspended the sentence, but he remains in prison. Khan rejects any wrongdoing and says the military is behind nearly 200 legal challenges against him to block him from returning to power, charges officials deny.

The independent Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, or HRCP, has backed Khan’s assertions, noting, “There is little evidence to show that the upcoming elections will be free, fair or credible.” It denounced the crackdown on the PTI as a “systemic dismemberment” of the party.

Last month, Pakistan also temporarily slowed down internet services and blocked access to social media platforms to disrupt a rare massive PTI virtual election rally, drawing widespread denunciation.

The military has staged three coups against elected governments and ruled Pakistan for more than three decades since it gained independence. Generals influence decision-making when the military is not in power, say politicians, including former prime ministers.

Some information for this story came from Agence France-Presse.

your ad here

Japan FM Says Tokyo ‘Determined’ to Support Ukraine

Kyiv, Ukraine — Japanese Foreign Minister Yoko Kamikawa paid a surprise visit Sunday to Kyiv where she said Tokyo was “determined” to keep supporting Ukraine, as the second anniversary of Moscow’s invasion nears.  

Kamikawa, the first high-level foreign official to visit Kyiv this year, announced new deliveries of defense equipment and discussed Tokyo’s plans to host a February conference to promote Ukraine’s economic reconstruction.   

“Japan is determined to support Ukraine so that peace can return to Ukraine,” Kamikawa told a press conference with her Ukrainian counterpart, Dmytro Kuleba, held in a bomb shelter as an air raid siren rang out.

“I can feel how tense the situation in Ukraine is now.”  

Her visit came during escalating attacks by both sides in the conflict.  

“I once again strongly condemn Russia’s missile and drone attacks, particularly on New Year’s Day,” said Kamikawa.  

She said Tokyo would “allocate” $37 million to provide Ukraine with a drone detection system. It will also supply five generators to help Ukraine “survive” another winter.

Kamikawa visited the Kyiv suburb of Bucha, where Russian forces are blamed for a 2022 massacre of civilians, saying she was “shocked” by what she saw. She also went to Irpin, a past scene of heavy fighting.  

‘Comprehensive support’

Her unannounced visit is part of a two-week tour starting Friday that was planned to take in Poland, Finland, Sweden, the Netherlands, the United States, Canada, Germany and Turkey.

Kuleba said Kyiv was thankful for Japan’s decision last year to provide Ukraine with F-16s jets, but said the country also needed air defense systems.   

“Every day, Ukrainian cities are destroyed by Russian missiles and drones. They cannot capture us, so they are trying to destroy us,” he said.  

Kuleba said the two also discussed “threats from North Korea,” and he expressed “solidarity” after the recent earthquake in Japan.  

Kamikawa later met with President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who thanked Tokyo for its security, economic and humanitarian “assistance” to Kyiv.  

“Japan is our very important and strong partner,” Zelenskyy said on social media.  

Ukraine’s Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal also hailed a “meaningful meeting” with Kamikawa, thanking Japan for its “comprehensive support,” including humanitarian and financial assistance.

In a Telegram message, he applauded Japan for its “decision to allocate $1 billion for humanitarian projects and reconstruction, with a readiness to increase this amount to $4.5 billion through the mechanisms of international institutions.”

He said the meeting also covered the Ukrainian president’s conditions for peace, the implementation of reforms, and joint cooperation on infrastructure projects.

Shmyhal said Kyiv and Tokyo are also strengthening trade relations.

“We have already held meetings with two business delegations from Japan and are interested in locating production facilities of leading Japanese companies in Ukraine,” he added.

your ad here

Portugal’s Socialists Pledge to Raise Minimum Wage, Boost Competitiveness

LISBON — The new leader of Portugal’s ruling Socialist Party (PS) Pedro Nuno Santos pledged Sunday to increase the minimum wage and boost economic competitiveness through more incentives to select sectors, if he wins an election in March. 

Socialist Prime Minister Antonio Costa, in office since 2015, resigned on Nov. 7 over an investigation into alleged illegalities in his government’s handling of lithium, hydrogen and data center projects. 

President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa has called a snap election for March 10. 

Most opinion polls put the PS neck and neck with the center-right Social Democratic Party, but many analysts fear a post-election quagmire and a potential strengthening of the role of the far-right, anti-establishment party Chega. 

At a center-left party congress, Santos said that “only a more sophisticated, diversified economy will be able to produce with greater added value, pay better wages and generate revenue to finance an advanced social state.” 

In June, Portugal was placed 39 out of 64 countries in the IMD-Institute for Management Development’s competitiveness world ranking, which put Denmark, Ireland and Switzerland as the three most competitive economies. 

“We don’t want a country in the average of the European Union, but at the top. We will only be able to transform the economy with more selective incentives… with more money for fewer sectors… during a decade,” Santos said. 

The key sectors will be identified by companies and universities, he said. 

The Bank of Portugal last month lowered its 2024 economic growth forecast to 1.2% from 1.5% it had set in October, in a slowdown from last year’s 2.1% expansion. 

Santos also promised to increase the minimum wage to at least 1,000 euros ($1,094.10) a month in 2028, compared to the current 820 euros ($897.57). 

The 46-year-old former infrastructure minister replaced Costa as secretary-general of the PS after winning a party election in mid-December. 

He praised Costa for balancing the public accounts over the past eight years, but acknowledged there was a shortage of doctors and teachers and a problem with access to housing.  

your ad here

UN Decries IS-claimed Deadly Attack on Afghan Religious Minority

Islamabad — The United Nations has urged Afghanistan’s ruling Taliban to bring to justice the perpetrators of an overnight deadly minibus bombing in Kabul that targeted members of the minority Hazara-Shiite community.

Saturday’s attack in the western Dasht-e-Barchi neighborhood of the Afghan capital killed at least five passengers and wounded more than a dozen others, a Taliban police statement said. An earlier statement put the death toll at two.

A regional Islamic State affiliate, known as Islamic State-Khorasan, or IS-K, claimed responsibility, saying it detonated an explosive device on the bus carrying Shiite Muslims, whom the Sunni-based militant outfit condemns as disbelievers.

“At least 25 members of Kabul’s Hazara community killed and wounded in last night’s explosion in Dasht-e Barchi,” the U.N. Assistance Mission in Afghanistan said Sunday on X, formerly known as Twitter.

“UNAMA calls for an end to targeted attacks on civilians, greater protection for # Afghanistan’s Hazara community and accountability for perpetrators,” the agency wrote.

Dasht-e-Barchi is a predominantly Shi’ite neighborhood and has experienced persistent militant bomb attacks targeting mosques, schools, and hospitals. IS-K has claimed credit for almost all recent attacks against the Hazara community in the city and elsewhere in Afghanistan, killing hundreds of civilians.

The militant group has also targeted prominent Afghan religious personalities linked to the Taliban since they regained control of the country more than two years ago.

Taliban officials claim their counterterrorism operations led to a 90% decrease in nationwide IS-K attacks in the past year, saying the group is not able to threaten Afghanistan or beyond.

However, the United States says IS-K “remains a viable terrorist threat” to the conflict-torn South Asian nation and the region.

“ISIS-K does remain a viable terrorist threat. Certainly, they are largely based out of Afghanistan. That’s where they headquarter themselves,” John Kirby, the U.S. National Security Council spokesperson, told reporters on Thursday, using a different acronym for the group.

Kirby was responding to questions about IS-K’s strength and its ability to threaten global security after the group claimed credit for twin suicide bombings that killed nearly 100 people in predominantly Shi’ite Iran last Wednesday.

Iranian authorities said after the deadly attack in the southeastern city of Kerman that they were shutting “porous stretches” of the country’s long borders with Afghanistan and Pakistan as part of a “comprehensive plan” to increase national security.

Iran’s media reported that the plan stemmed from concerns that “illegal immigrants” and “terrorists” from the two neighboring countries had slipped into Iranian territory, posing a security threat.

Islamabad and Kabul have both condemned the bomb attack in Iran, but they have not yet responded to Tehran’s terror allegations.

your ad here

Erdogan Names Ex-Minister as His Party’s Istanbul Mayor Candidate 

ISTANBUL — Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Sunday named former environment minister Murat Kurum as the ruling AK Party’s candidate in Istanbul’s mayoral election in March, bidding to win back control of Turkey’s largest city.

Kurum will stand against incumbent Ekrem Imamoglu from the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP), whose election as mayor in 2019 ended 25 years of rule in Istanbul by the AKP and its Islamist predecessors.

Last May, Erdogan won re-election as president while his AKP and its nationalist allies took a majority in parliamentary elections, illustrating the challenge faced by the opposition in the nationwide municipal elections on March 31.

“Working shoulder to shoulder, we will definitely bring Istanbul out of the interregnum of the last five years,” Erdogan said at a ceremony to announce the candidacy of Kurum and other AKP candidates in the elections.

Kurum, 47, was environment and urbanization minister from July 2018 until last June, leaving the post after the elections. He was then elected as a member of parliament for Istanbul, Turkey’s commercial hub and a city of 16 million, or some 20% of the population.

Kurum was one of the most prominent figures in the government’s response to the devastating earthquakes that shook southern Turkey last February, killing more than 50,000 people.

He studied engineering at university and worked in Turkey’s mass housing administration before his time as a minister.

Erdogan announced his party’s candidates for more than two dozen of the country’s municipalities on Sunday and was expected to announce its candidates for the others, including the capital Ankara, later this month.

your ad here

India’s First Solar Observatory Reaches Destination 

New Delhi — India has achieved another milestone in space exploration by successfully placing a spacecraft in an orbit from which it will study the sun for five years.

India joined a select group of nations already studying the sun four months after it became the first country to land an unmanned spacecraft on the moon’s southern polar region, cementing its reputation as a nation that is emerging on the frontlines of space exploration.

The Indian Space Research Organization said that the space observatory, Aditya L-1, reached the position from which it can monitor the sun’s outer layer and send data back to Earth on Saturday. The spacecraft, which was launched September 2, took four months to reach its destination.

“The orbit of Aditya-L1 spacecraft is a periodic Halo orbit which is located roughly 1.5 million km [kilometers] from earth,” according to an ISRO statement.

Aditya-L1 is named after the Hindu god of the sun, called Aditya in Sanskrit. “L1” refers to Lagrange point 1, the location in space between the sun and Earth, where the satellite has been parked.

“This demonstrates India’s capability to travel over a million kilometers away from the Earth’s orbit. It is a capability that very few countries have and India is the first in Asia to do so,” according to Chaitanya Giri, associate professor of environmental sciences at Flame University in Pune. “The ability to maintain deep space communication with a spacecraft that has traveled so far and sustain a mission for a long period is also significant.”

The Indian mission is scheduled to study the sun for five years. The “Lagrange 1” point, where the spacecraft has been positioned provides an uninterrupted view of the sun, even during eclipses.

The major focus of the mission is to gain a better understanding of space weather, variations in the environment in space between the Earth and the sun, which is crucial for protecting satellites and other spacecraft, according to space scientists.

“It is vital to understand space weather at a time when there are thousands of satellites in space,” Ajay Lele, space scientist and former senior fellow at the Manohar Parrikar Institute of Defense Studies and Analyses in New Delhi, said.

“Space weather is about disturbances that happen on the sun such as solar winds, solar flares and coronal mass ejections. These three components need to be studied,” he said.

Aditya-L1 is expected to be able to give warnings about space storms that can have an impact on Earth, occasionally affecting the operation of satellites and radio communications.

The spacecraft is equipped with seven scientific instruments to study solar wind particles and magnetic fields.

Solar observatory missions have been launched so far by the U.S. space agency NASA, the European space agency, Japan and China.

India’s space program, which began in the 1960s, has gained prominence under Prime Minister Narendra Modi — it is seen as part of his efforts to promote India’s global stature.

“India creates yet another landmark. It is a testament to the relentless dedication of our scientists in realizing among the most complex and intricate space missions,” Modi said in a post on X, formerly known as Twitter, on Saturday.

Other major missions planned by the Indian space agency include a manned mission to space that is due to be launched this year and an interplanetary mission to Mars.

Besides scientific space explorations such as these, India is also looking to enhance its military capabilities in space, according to experts. The first signal that it is giving a military profile to its space program came in 2019 when it conducted an anti-satellite weapon test to demonstrate that it could shoot down satellites in space — a capability that only the United States, China and Russia have.

India has plans to develop 50 new satellites based on artificial intelligence technology in the next five years to beef up the country’s border surveillance and enhance its “geo-intelligence” capabilities, Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) chairman S. Somanath said last month.

Enhancing surveillance capabilities from space from a military perspective is key for India, according to experts. Its concerns center both on its Himalayan borders with China, where disputed borders between the two have sparked military tensions, and on the Indian Ocean region, where China has been increasing its influence.

your ad here

Italian Foreign Minister Calls For Formation of EU Army

Rome — The European Union should form its own combined army that could play a role in peacekeeping and preventing conflict, Italian Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani said.

In an interview with Italian newspaper La Stampa, Tajani said that closer European cooperation on defense was a priority for the Forza Italia party that he leads.

“If we want to be peacekeepers in the world, we need a European military. And this is a fundamental precondition to be able to have an effective European foreign policy,” he said in an interview published on Sunday.

“In a world with powerful players like the United States, China, India, Russia – with crises from the Middle East to the Indo-Pacific – Italian, German, French or Slovenian citizens can only be protected by something that already exists, namely the European Union,” he added. 

European defense cooperation has risen up the political agenda since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine almost two years ago.

However, efforts have been more focused on NATO expansion, with EU nation Finland joining the alliance last year and Sweden also on track to become a member.

Tajani also said the 27-nation EU should streamline its leadership and have a single presidency, rather than the current structure of a European Council president and a European Commission president.

The foreign minister became leader of Forza Italia following the death of Silvio Berlusconi last year.

European Parliament elections in June will be the first gauge of the party’s popularity after the loss of its charismatic former leader. 

your ad here

UN Sounds Alarm at Rising Hate Speech in DRC

Geneva — The United Nations’ top human rights official voiced alarm on Sunday about rising ethnic tension and calls to violence in the Democratic Republic of Congo following  disputed elections.

Massive delays and bureaucratic chaos marred the December 20 ballots to choose the president, lawmakers for national and provincial assemblies, and local councilors.

So far the election commission has only announced the result of the presidential vote -– a landslide victory for incumbent Felix Tshisekedi that the opposition has rejected as a sham.

“I am very concerned about the rise in ethnic-based hate speech and incitement to violence in the Democratic Republic of the Congo,” (DRC) said U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk.

He said the post-election calls for violence were particularly concerning in the eastern provinces of North and South Kivu -– which have been plagued for decades by armed groups and ethnic killings -– as well as the regions of Kasai and Katanga.

Tshisekedi hails from Kasai and Moise Katumba, one of his main rivals, from Katanga.

“Hateful, dehumanizing and inciteful rhetoric is abhorrent and can only deepen tension and violence in the DRC itself, as well as putting regional security at risk,” Turk said.

He urged the authorities “to thoroughly and transparently investigate all reports of hate speech and incitement to violence and to hold those responsible to account.”

Election-related tensions are common in the DRC, which has a history of authoritarian rule and violent government overthrow.

Some 250 different ethnic groups live in the vast country. It sits on considerable  mineral wealth but little trickles down the population of around 100 million. 

your ad here

Bangladesh Counts Votes after Election Without Opposition

Dhaka — Bangladesh election officials began counting votes Sunday after polls guaranteed to give a fifth term in office to Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina closed, following a boycott led by an opposition party she branded a “terrorist organization.”

Hasina has presided over breakneck economic growth in a country once beset by grinding poverty, but her government has been accused of rampant human rights abuses and a ruthless opposition crackdown.

Her party faced almost no effective rivals in the seats it contested, but it avoided fielding candidates in a few constituencies, an apparent effort to avoid the legislature being branded a one-party institution.

“Vote counting has begun,” election commission spokesman Shariful Alam told AFP.

The opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), whose ranks have been decimated by mass arrests, has called a general strike and urged the public not to participate in what it called a “sham” election.

But Hasina, 76, called for citizens to cast their ballots and show their faith in the democratic process.

“The BNP is a terrorist organization,” she told reporters after casting her vote.

“I am trying my best to ensure that democracy should continue in this country,” she added.

Results are expected as early as Monday morning.

‘Farce’ election

Initial signs suggested that turnout was low, despite widespread reports of carrot-and-stick inducements aimed at bolstering the poll’s legitimacy.

At noon, according to Election Commission Secretary Jahangir Alam, turnout stood at 18.5 percent.

Many said they had not voted because the outcome was assured.

“When one party is participating and another is not, why would I go to vote?” said  Mohammad Saidur, 31, who pulls a rickshaw.

“We all know who’s going to win,” said Farhana Manik, 27, a student. 

Charity worker Shahriar Ahmed, 32, called the election a “farce” and did not vote.

“I would rather stay home and watch movies,” Ahmed said.

BNP head Tarique Rahman, speaking from Britain where he lives in exile, said he worried about ballot stuffing.

“I fear that the election commission may increase voter turnout by using fake votes,” he told AFP.

Some voters said earlier they had been threatened with the confiscation of government benefit cards needed to access welfare payments if they refused to cast ballots for the ruling Awami League. 

“They said since the government feeds us, we have to vote for them,” Lal Mia, 64, told AFP in the central district of Faridpur.

The BNP and other parties staged months of protests last year, demanding Hasina step down ahead of the vote.

Around 25,000 opposition cadres including the BNP’s entire local leadership were arrested in the ensuing crackdown, the party says. The government puts the figure at 11,000.

Small and scattered protests continued in the days ahead of the election — a shadow of the hundreds of thousands seen at rallies last year.

On Sunday, police in the port city of Chittagong said they had fired shotguns to break up a rally of up to 60 opposition members who had blocked a road using burning tires, adding that no one was injured. 

The election commission said nearly 700,000 police officers and reservists had been deployed to keep order during the vote along with nearly 100,000 members of the armed forces.

Politics in the world’s eighth-most populous country was long dominated by the rivalry between Hasina, the daughter of the country’s founding leader, and two-time premier Khaleda Zia, wife of a former military ruler.

Hasina has been the decisive victor since returning to power in a 2009 landslide, with two subsequent polls accompanied by widespread irregularities and accusations of rigging.

Zia, 78, was convicted of graft in 2018 and is now in ailing health at a hospital in Dhaka, with her son Tarique Rahman helming the BNP in her stead from London.

Rahman told AFP that his party, along with dozens of others, had refused to participate in a “sham election.”

‘Dangerous combination’

Hasina has accused the BNP of arson and sabotage during last year’s protest campaign, which was mostly peaceful but saw several people killed in police confrontations.

The government’s security forces have long been dogged by allegations of extrajudicial killings and enforced disappearances — charges it rejects.

The United States, the biggest export market for the South Asian nation of 170 million, has imposed sanctions on an elite police unit and its top commanders.

Economic headwinds have left many dissatisfied with Hasina’s government, after sharp spikes in food costs and months of chronic blackouts in 2022.

Wage stagnation in the garment sector, which accounts for around 85 percent of the country’s $55 billion in annual exports, sparked industrial unrest late last year that saw some factories torched and hundreds more shuttered.

Pierre Prakash of the International Crisis Group said before the vote that Hasina’s government was clearly “less popular than it was a few years ago, yet Bangladeshis have little real outlet at the ballot box.”

“That is a potentially dangerous combination.”

your ad here

Afghan Earthquake Survivors Struggle to Rebuild Lives

ZINDA JAN, Afghanistan — A 6.3 magnitude quake on October 7 killed and injured thousands of people in Afghanistan’s west. Three months on, survivors are struggling to rebuild their lives.

Some families are living in canvas-colored tents in Zinda Jan district, the quake’s epicenter in the province of Herat, where every home was flattened.

People endure the winter conditions with the help of donations and their Islamic faith, but they’re anxious about what lies ahead.

Habib Rahman, 43, was watching TV at his father-in-law’s home when the quake struck. The horror still rings in his ears. He can’t get it out of his head.

However many details he gave about that day would never be enough, he told The Associated Press.

Every squat mud building in Zinda Jan collapsed within minutes. Fear, shouting, panic and shock swept through villages. People used their hands to pull the living and the dead from under the rubble.

“If we look at this soil and dust, we will go beyond crazy,” Habib said. “The children are psychologically affected. Sometimes I play with them to distract them from being anxious and [help them] forget about the earthquake. But they don’t forget.”

The winds and storms continuously knock down and tear the tents of Zinda Jan, the people’s only refuge from the bitter cold. “Give us your heart [warmth], find shelter for us,” he implored. “The weather is cold. It is very cold.”

Children still don’t have access to a mosque or school, he said. He wonders what will happen to them, their future. He wants life to return to how it was before the quake, when villagers had their own means and resources.

Before the quake, 55-year-old Mula Dad Mohammadi had a house with six rooms, a kitchen, and space for crops, livestock and timber. Now, he shelters underneath tarpaulin and sheets with his wife and children. He is grateful for the relief efforts but wants measures for longer-term recovery.

“Our farming and agriculture have been destroyed,” he said. “Our property and lives have been destroyed. What they gave us was for a temporary period — two sacks of rice and two sacks of wheat. Let us do our own farming.”

The global response to the disaster was slow, with much of the international community wary of dealing directly with the Taliban-controlled government.

The world was also focused on the surprise attack by the militant Palestinian group Hamas on Israel on October 7 that triggered the ongoing war, only hours before the quake hit Herat.

The Taliban, NGOs, the U.N., the country’s private sector and the Afghan public rallied around quake-hit communities to help with cash assistance, food, clothing, medicine, and reconstruction.

Pale blue domes resembling beehives — built in Zinda Jan with donations from the Afghan diaspora, including artists and singers — could now be seen dotting the skyline.

They’re sturdier than the houses normally seen in much of Afghanistan and are intended to be more earthquake-resistant.

It’s the first time that this type of housing, known as super adobe, has been seen in the country. Project manager Shakib Shahabi, from a local nongovernmental organization, called the Agency for Humanitarian and Development Assistance for Afghanistan, said 37 homes have been built in 32 days.

“We have lessons learned from the implementation of this project and we’re willing to share our experiences with interested organizations,” he said.

Nisar Ahmad Ilias, a spokesperson for the Herat governor, said 3,000 houses are being worked on in Zinda Jan. Some are 90% finished and others are 20% completed. Survivors still need help because of the scale of the disaster. He urged Afghans — and the rest of the world — to step up their response.

“Natural disasters happen in other countries as well,” said Ilias. “The international community, which has helped in those places, has not done it here. It is necessary for them to take more steps and stand with Afghans.”

your ad here

Police Investigate UK Post Office after IT Problem Leads to Wrongful Theft Accusations

LONDON — U.K. police have opened a fraud investigation into Britain’s Post Office over a miscarriage of justice that saw hundreds of postmasters wrongfully accused of stealing money when a faulty computer system was to blame.

The Metropolitan Police force said late Friday that it is investigating “potential fraud offences arising out of these prosecutions,” relating to money the Post Office received “as a result of prosecutions or civil actions” against accused postal workers.

Police also are investigating potential offenses of perjury and perverting the course of justice over investigations and prosecutions carried out by the Post Office.

Between 1999 and 2015, more than 700 post office branch managers were accused of theft or fraud because computers wrongly showed that money was missing. Many were financially ruined after being forced to pay large sums to the company, and some were convicted and sent to prison. Several killed themselves.

The real culprit was a defective computer accounting system called Horizon, supplied by the Japanese technology firm Fujitsu, that was installed in local Post Office branches in 1999.

The Post Office maintained for years that data from Horizon was reliable and accused branch managers of dishonesty when the system showed money was missing.

After years of campaigning by victims and their lawyers, the Court of Appeal quashed 39 of the convictions in 2021. A judge said the Post Office “knew there were serious issues about the reliability” of Horizon and had committed “egregious” failures of investigation and disclosure.

A total of 93 of the postal workers have now had their convictions overturned, according to the Post Office. But many others have yet to be exonerated, and only 30 have agreed to “full and final” compensation payments. A public inquiry into the scandal has been underway since 2022.

So far, no one from the publicly owned Post Office or other companies involved has been arrested or faced criminal charges.

Lee Castleton, a former branch manager who went bankrupt after being pursued by the Post Office for missing funds, said his family was ostracized in their hometown of Bridlington in northern England. He said his daughter was bullied because people thought “her father was a thief, and he’d take money from old people.”

He said victims wanted those responsible to be named.

“It’s about accountability,” Castleton told Times Radio on Saturday. “Let’s see who made those decisions and made this happen.”

The long-simmering scandal stirred new outrage with the broadcast this week of a TV docudrama, Mr. Bates vs the Post Office. It charted a two-decade battle by branch manager Alan Bates, played by Toby Jones, to expose the truth and clear the wronged postal workers.

Post Office Chief Executive Nick Read, appointed after the scandal, welcomed the TV series and said he hoped it would “raise further awareness and encourage anyone affected who has not yet come forward to seek the redress and compensation they deserve.”

A lawyer for some of the postal workers said 50 new potential victims had approached lawyers since the show aired on the ITV network.

“The drama has elevated public awareness to a whole new level,” attorney Neil Hudgell said. “The British public and their overwhelming sympathy for the plight of these poor people has given some the strength to finally come forward. Those numbers increase by the day, but there are so many more out there.”

your ad here