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Saturday 28 November 2020

Ethical Awareness to youths in Africa


Focusing on moral development and personal growth, that which gives life a sense of purpose which is a significant part of our very life and an efflorescence which has substantially help us to mold and form our very essence and a better world. 

Organizing moral conduct lecture camps, providing equal opportunities to youngster to explore deep moral lectures -Visiting any community school, college, university, cultural, religious institutions and deliver a short motivational lecture on moral conduct.

Stage 6: Sustained Scale

Focusing on personal growth and moral development, that which gives life a sense of purpose, which is a significant part of our very life and an efflorescence which has substantially help us to mold a future generation and form a better world.

Problem

In presenting the details of any conflict, moral challenges and bad behavior it is important programmes standard of objective are heeded.


Solution

The concept of the moral imagination, embrace, repentance. Providing the future generation with ethical solution.

Target Beneficiaries

Identifying and accompanying youths and inspired individuals to explore how one’s own worldwide and experiences shape perceptions of moral conduct, ethics and social development dynamics. This is about accompanying and equipping people internally and externally.

Mission and Vision

Explore morality – moral development -personal growth. 

Competitive Advantage

Despite the fact that an academic approach or attempt cannot solve all problems, it can still provide valuable knowledge and skills, moral education should therefore form part of schools, religious, cultural and sectoral curricular. it is in the realm of ethics, research and moral conductor engaged themselves who have been motivated by strong moral concerns. Moral as a scholarly endeavour seek to encourage social growth.

Suspected Iranian nuclear mastermind Fakhrizadeh assassinated near Tehran

 An Iranian scientist long suspected by the West of masterminding a secret nuclear bomb program was killed in an ambush near Tehran on Friday that could provoke confrontation between Iran and its foes in the last weeks of Donald Trump’s presidency.

Suspected Iranian nuclear mastermind Fakhrizadeh assassinated near Tehran

The military adviser to Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei blamed Israel for the assassination of Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, and vowed to retaliate for his killing.

“In the last days of the political life of their… ally (Trump), the Zionists seek to intensify pressure on Iran and create a full-blown war,” Hossein Dehgan tweeted.

"We will strike as thunder at the killers of this oppressed martyr and will make them regret their action."

Fakhrizadeh died of injuries in hospital after armed assassins fired on his car, Iranian state media reported. There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office declined to comment on the killing. In the United States, the Pentagon declined to comment and the State Department and White House did not immediately respond to requests for comment. President-elect Joe Biden’s team also declined to comment.


Fakhrizadeh has been described by Western and Israeli intelligence services for years as the leader of a covert atomic bomb program halted in 2003, which Israel and the United States accuse Tehran of trying to restore in secret. Iran has long denied seeking to weaponise nuclear energy.

“Unfortunately, the medical team did not succeed in reviving (Fakhrizadeh), and a few minutes ago, this manager and scientist achieved the high status of martyrdom after years of effort and struggle,” Iran's armed forces said in a statement carried by state media .

The semi-official news agency Tasnim said “terrorists blew up another car” before firing on a vehicle carrying Fakhrizadeh and his bodyguards in an ambush outside the capital.

Regardless of who was responsible for the attack, it is certain to escalate tension between Iran and the United States in the final weeks of Trump’s U.S. presidency.


Trump, who lost his re-election bid on Nov. 3 and leaves office on Jan. 20, has repeatedly accused Iran of secretly seeking nuclear weapons. Trump pulled the United States out of a deal under which sanctions on Iran were lifted in return for curbs on its nuclear program. Biden has said he would restore it.


A U.S. official confirmed earlier this month that Trump had asked military aides for a plan for a possible strike on Iran. Trump decided against it at that time because of the risk it could provoke an uncontrollable wider Middle East conflict.


Last January, the U.S. drone strike in Iraq killed Qassem Soleimani, Iran’s most powerful military commander. Iran retaliated for that attack by firing missiles at a U.S. base in Iraq, the closest the two foes have come to war in decades.


Fakhrizadeh is thought to have headed what the U.N. nuclear watchdog and U.S. intelligence services believe was a coordinated nuclear weapons program in Iran, shelved in 2003.


He was the only Iranian scientist named in the International Atomic Energy Agency’s 2015 “final assessment” of open questions about Iran’s nuclear program. The IAEA’s report said he oversaw activities “in support of a possible military dimension to (Iran’s) nuclear program”.


He was a central figure in a presentation by Israeli Prime Minister Benajmin Netanyahu in 2018 accusing Iran of continuing to seek nuclear weapons.


“Remember that name, Fakhrizadeh,” Netanyahu said at the time.


During the final months of Trump’s presidency, Israel has been making peace with Gulf Arab states that share its hostility towards Iran.


Earlier this week, Netanyahu traveled to Saudi Arabia and met its crown prince, an Israeli official said, in what would be the first publicly confirmed visit by an Israeli leader. Israeli media said they were joined by U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.


On Friday before the news of the attack on Fakhrizadeh emerged, an Israeli official said Israel was discussing with Gulf Arab states how to tackle Iran.

“The story is not Trump, nor even Israel. The story is Iran - the growing dread that a new U.S. administration will go back to the nuclear deal which threatens the very existence of the Gulf countries, ”Tzachi Hanegbi, who sits in Netanyahu’s security cabinet, told Tel Aviv radio station 102 FM.


“We will know how to handle the issue of the Iranian threat, even if through our own means.”

AL AHLY OF ANGOLAN GERALDO WIN CHAMPIONS LEAGUE

 Al-Ahly of Angola's Geraldo won the African Champions League on Friday, thanks to a 2-1 victory over Zamalek, bringing the number of titles in this competition to nine.

Angola Calles up Geraldo for National Team Camp

The historical final of the 56th edition, the first between two clubs from the same country (Egypt) was decided with goals from Amr Al Sulaya, in the fifth minute, and Mohamed Magdy Kafsha, in the 86`.

Zamalek's goal was scored by Shikabala in the 31st minute, in a match, played behind closed doors, in which Geraldo, former 1º de Agosto player took the field in the second half, when the two sides were drawn to one goal.

Al Ahly had already won the tournament on eight occasions, in 1982, 1987, 2001, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2012 and 2013, the first four of the 21st century, under the command of the Portuguese coach Manuel José.


Activists, Black celebrities call on UK to halt deportation plane

 The UK government is under increasing pressure to halt a planned deportation flight to Jamaica with up to 50 people, a move which would separate 31 children from their fathers.

Activists, Black celebrities call on UK to halt deportation plane

As campaigners and activists appeal to the Home Office to stop the plane scheduled to leave on December 2, 82 Black British public figures, including model Naomi Campbell, historian David Olusoga, actresses Thandie Newton and Naomie Harris, and writer Bernardine Evaristo, are urging airlines which have previously allowed such charter flights to refuse any assistance.

The issue has also trended regularly on Twitter since the flight was announced earlier this week, under the hashtag #stoptheplane.

The Kingston-bound flight will be second deportation operation to Jamaica this year.

According to the Home Office, the flight will deport “convicted murderers and rapists”

Under the UK law, a foreign national who has been convicted of an offence and received a custodial sentence of 12 months or more can be eligible for deportation.

But Jacqueline Mckenzie, human rights lawyer and director for the Center for Migration Advice and Research, said the 12-month limit unjustly targeted people responsible for less serious crimes, such as a young man she represented who was deported to Jamaica in February 2019, after serving 14 months in prison for driving offences.

"The majority of people on the list are on the list for drug offences," she told Al Jazeera.

“If you have been in the UK as a child, you shouldn’t be deported irrespective of what your offence is.

“Whether you’ve got the right documentation or not, you’re culturally British, you’re part of this society. You’ve offended here, you are punished here, and your punishment is going to prison. People should not be punished twice. ”

Meanwhile, there were growing concerns over the impact of separating families.

According to the civil liberties and migrant rights group Movement for Justice, eight of the men due to be deported have 31 children among them, aged from three to 18.

Although the Home Office has said none of the deportees is eligible for the Windrush Scheme, Zita Holbourne, co-founder of the anti-racist Black Activists Against Rising Cuts organization, said many detainees had a direct link to the Windrush generation through their parents or grandparents.

“It’s like an extension of the Windrush scandal. You’re now punishing their children and their grandchildren, ”she said.

The Windrush Scheme allows Commonwealth citizens settled in the UK before January 1, 1973, who do not have documentation to prove it, to obtain evidence confirming their British citizenship free of charge.

The last chartered flight to leave for Jamaica in February this year drew concerns from lawyers after it emerged mobile phone outages had prevented deportees from accessing legal advice.

In that case, a last-minute court ruling granted a reprieve to 25 people, while 17 others were still removed.

Holbourne claimed that the detainees at Colnbrook detention center in Middlesex, who are scheduled to be on the December 2 flight, are experiencing similar challenges.

“The computer room is locked as a COVID-19 measure. But the computer room is where you email, print, prepare your case, find a lawyer and liaise with your lawyer, ”she said.

“That’s actually barring access to justice. And families aren't allowed to visit the detention centers, which means they can’t say goodbye, which adds to that trauma and distress. ”

As the UK grapples with a second wave of the coronavirus disease, the Home Office says it is taking “sensible, precautionary measures in relation to COVID-19 and immigration detention” to protect staff and detainees.

But Mckenzie and Holbourne raised concerns over the implementation of social distancing measures in detention centers, en route to the airport, and on the flight itself.

“When you get to the plane, you are shackled from the waist down and you are cuffed to two guards on either side,” said Holbourne. “[The Home Office] is saying they’re aiming for up to 50 [deportees]. Up to 50 [people] with two guards added is 150, which is a full plane, so that won’t be socially distanced. ”

The announcement follows a report from the Equalities and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) earlier this week, criticizing the Home Office for breaking equalities legislation with its hostile environmental policies.

EHRC said the Windrush scandal, which saw the wrongful deportation of British citizens invited to the UK between 1948 and 1971 from Caribbean countries, was a “shameful stain on British history”, adding “negative equality impacts… were repeatedly ignored, dismissed, or their severity disregarded ”.

More than 6,400 “foreign national offenders” have been removed since January 2019, according to the government.

Since April, enforced returns and deportations have seen more than 30 charter flights to countries including Albania, France, Germany, Ghana, Lithuania, Nigeria, Poland and Spain.

Responding to criticism of the planned deportation, the Home Office said: “We make no apology for seeking to remove dangerous foreign criminals to keep the public safe.”



COVID-19: ANGOLA REPORTS 88 NEW INFECTIONS, 80 RECOVERIES

 Angolan health authorities announced Friday the record of 88 new infections, 80 patients recovered and one death, in the last 24 hours.

According to the Secretary of State for Public Health, Franco Mufinda, who was speaking at the country usual Covid-19 update session, 53 new cases were diagnosed in Lunda Norte, 15 in Luanda, eight in Huambo, five in Cuando Cubango, three in Cabinda, two in Uíge, one in Moxico and the same number in Malanje.

The list of new patients, whose ages range from 14 to 66, is made up of 75 men and 13 women.

It was reported that 80 patients were recovered, 46 from Huila, 23 from Luanda, eight from Benguela, two from Namibe and one from Cuanza Sul, aged between two and 71 years.

In relation to the death, Mr. Mufinda said that the patient was a 61-year old Angolan, resident in Luanda.

Angola has a record of 15,008 cases, with 342 deaths, 7,697 recovered and 6,969 active people.

Of the active cases, six are in critical condition with invasive mechanical ventilation, 13 severe, 176 moderate, 176 with mild symptoms and 6,598 asymptomatic.

The health authorities have followed up 371 patients admitted to treatment centers in the country.


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