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Friday, 3 February 2023

Ex-policeman gets death penalty for Kenya lawyer’s murder

 A Kenyan court has sentenced to death a former Kenyan policeman for the killing of a prominent human rights lawyer and two other people more than six years ago.



Two other ex-policemen and a civilian were sentenced to between 15 and 39 years in prison for the murder of lawyer Willie Kimani, his client and a taxi driver in June 2016.

The four were last year each found guilty of three counts including murder.

All the four can appeal their conviction and sentencing within 14 days.

In her judgement, Justice Jessie Lessit said evidence produced during the trial had shown that the murders were premeditated and the victims brutally tortured and killed.

The bodies of Willie Kimani, Josephat Mwendwa and Joseph Muiruri were found after they had been dumped in a river on the outskirts of the capital, Nairobi.

Mr Kimani was defending motorbike taxi driver Josephat Mwenda who had accused policeman Fredrick Leliman – one of the three officers found guilty – of shooting him for no reason at a traffic stop in 2015.

Mr Kimani, Mr Mwenda and their taxi driver Joseph Muiruri were last seen on 23 June 2016 at a police station.

Their mutilated bodies were recovered two weeks later in a river almost 100km (62 miles) from the city.

Source: BBC

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Nigeria elections: UK agency disowns letter on Tinubu

 The UK’s National Crime Agency (NCA) has disowned two letters making the rounds among social media users in Nigeria on the alleged activities of presidential candidate Bola Tinubu.



The agency said the two letters were forgeries.

The first letter surfaced on Twitter in late January and is a purported reply to an enquiry to the agency on the alleged activities of Mr Tinubu.

It was viewed hundreds of thousands of times by Twitter users in the country.

The NCA told the BBC that it had denied the letter when it was drawn to their attention.

The second letter appeared to “challenge” the first letter.

It suggested that the NCA was threatening to take legal action against a rival presidential campaign team, which it claimed, forged the first letter.

The NCA has confirmed to the BBC that the second letter did not come from them.

The NCA is a law enforcement agency in the UK that focuses on local and international cybercrime, human trafficking, drug trafficking, organised crime, economic crime and weapons trafficking.

A recent investigation by the BBC disinformation unit found that political parties and campaigns in Nigeria were using social media influencers to spread disinformation to discredit their political rivals.

Nigerians will go to the polls on 25 February to elect a new president.

Source:BBC

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US tracking suspected Chinese surveillance balloon

 The US is tracking a suspected Chinese surveillance balloon that has been spotted flying over sensitive sites in recent days. Defence officials said they were confident the “high-altitude surveillance balloon” belonged to China. It was most recently seen above the western state of Montana.



The military decided against shooting it down in case debris falls. China warned against speculation and “hype” until the facts are verified.

Canada said on Friday that it was monitoring “a potential second incident” involving a surveillance balloon, but did not say which country could be behind it. It said in the statement that it is working closely with the US to “safeguard Canada’s sensitive information from foreign intelligence threats”.

The object flew over Alaska’s Aleutian Islands and through Canada before appearing over the city of Billings in Montana on Wednesday, officials said.

A senior defence official speaking on condition of anonymity said the government prepared fighter jets, including F-22s, in case the White House ordered the object to be shot down.

Top military leaders, including Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin and General Mark Milley, chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, met on Wednesday to assess the threat. Mr Austin was travelling in the Philippines at the time.

Montana, a sparsely populated state, is home to one of only three nuclear missile silo fields in the country, at Malmstrom Air Force Base, and officials said the apparent spy craft was flying over sensitive sites to collect information.

But they advised against taking “kinetic action” against the balloon because of the danger falling debris might pose to people on the ground.

The defence official, however, said there was no “significantly enhanced threat” of US intelligence being compromised because American officials “know exactly where this balloon is and exactly where it’s passing over”.

He added that there was also no threat to civilian aviation as the balloon was “significantly” above the altitude used by commercial airlines.

The official said the balloon is unlikely to give much more information than what China can already collect using satellites.

The US had raised the matter with Chinese officials in their embassy in Washington DC and in Beijing, the official added.

China’s foreign ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said Beijing is currently attempting to verify the reports of the surveillance balloon, adding that “until the facts are clear, making conjectures and hyping up the issue will not help to properly resolve it.”

During Thursday’s briefing at the Pentagon, officials declined to disclose the aircraft’s current location. They also refused to provide more details of the object, including its size.

“There have been reports of pilots seeing this thing even though it’s pretty high up in the sky,” the unnamed defence official said. “So you know, it’s sizable.”

They added that such surveillance balloons had been tracked in the past several years, but this one was “appearing to hang out for a longer period of time this time around”.

It confused social media users in Montana, with some posting images of a pale round object high in the sky. Others reported seeing US military planes in the area, apparently monitoring the object.

Billings office worker Chase Doak told the Associated Press news agency that he noticed the “big white circle in the sky” and went home to get a better camera.

“I thought maybe it was a legitimate UFO,” he said. “So I wanted to make sure I documented it and took as many photos as I could.”

Chinese state media has not reported on the incident, but it is being widely discussed on Chinese social media, with many amused at the reported use of balloons for surveillance.

“We have so many satellites, why would we need to use a balloon,” wrote one user on Weibo.

Senator Marco Rubio, the top Republican on the Senate Intelligence Committee, slammed China’s alleged balloon.

“The level of espionage aimed at our country by Beijing has grown dramatically more intense & brazen over the last 5 years,” he tweeted.

Montana Governor Greg Gianforte, a Republican, said in a statement that he had been briefed on the “deeply troubling” situation.

Speaking at an unrelated event in Washington DC on Thursday, CIA Director William Burns made no mention of the balloon, but called China the “biggest geopolitical challenge” currently facing the US.

The alleged spy craft is likely to increase tensions ahead of US Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s visit to China next week. It will be the first visit to the country by a Biden administration cabinet secretary.

The top US diplomat will be in Beijing to hold talks on a wide range of issues, including security, Taiwan and Covid-19.

He will also meet Chinese President Xi Jinping, the the Financial Times reported on Thursday.

Balloons are one of oldest forms of surveillance technology. Compared to other air surveillance devices, they can be operated cheaply without personnel, while remaining airborne for long periods of time.

Source: BBC

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Fight over Israel’s judiciary as Palestinians look on

Protests continue against PM Netanyahu’s moves to weaken the Supreme Court, as violence escalates in occupied West Bank.



Jerusalem –Every Saturday evening for the past month, thousands of Israelis have taken part in anti-government protests across the country.


Their handmade signs reveal the focus of the demonstrations: “Democracy for everyone” read one, in Hebrew and English. Others spelled out the participants’ support for the Israeli Supreme Court, with its independence under threat from the far-right government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

And yet, despite the growing movement against Netanyahu’s government, there had been talk of postponing the most recent protest, held last Saturday.

Violence in the occupied West Bank and east Jerusalem has reached fever pitch, with an Israeli raid on Jenin killing nine Palestinians last Thursday, and a Palestinian gunman killing seven Israelis in an East Jerusalem settlement on Friday, followed by further killings of Palestinians by Israelis, and attacks on Israelis carried out by Palestinians.

The Israeli government has attempted to create a rally-around-the-flag effect in the wake of the violence, and push through legislation that has been labelled as “collective punishment” targeting Palestinians.

What the return to the forefront of the Palestinian occupation will have on the protests remains to be seen.

Some demonstrators, including Palestinians, have taken the opportunity the protests have presented to call for an end to the occupation, and denounced government policy towards Palestinians.

But ultimately, the focus of most of the protesters has been on the debate over the Israeli judiciary, Netanyahu’s own legal troubles, and the growth of right-wing religious movements within government.

That has frustrated many Palestinians, who, while agreeing with the need to push back against Netanyahu, refuse to whitewash Israel’s political system.

“Note that very few [Palestinian] Arabs participate in the protests, because the protests are only about Jewish democracy not substantive democracy,” Ahmad Tibi, a Palestinian member of the Israeli parliament, and the head of the Ta’al Party, told Al Jazeera. “The demonstrators demand not to harm the courts, not to harm the legal advisers, not to harm the committee to appoint judges. But they don’t call for equality between Jews and Arabs. There is no such call by the protesters. Or to end the occupation or against the Jewish Nation State Law or against racism.”

“Nevertheless, I repeat that we oppose the judicial revolution of the Netanyahu government.” The focus of the protests has primarily been on the government’s plans to overhaul the judiciary.

The highly controversial plan unveiled in January by justice minister Yariv Levin includes a bill that will radically limit the Supreme Court’s power to overturn any Knesset (parliament) legislation and government decisions, an “override clause” enabling a simple majority of one vote to relegislate, a bill to change the selection process for judges by effectively giving it to the government, and a bill preventing the court from using a test of “reasonableness” to gauge Knesset legislation and government decisions.

Levin has also proposed that legal advisers in government ministries be personally appointed by government ministers.

The changes are necessary, according to Levin, because the Supreme Court was harming democracy, as it was “interfering” in government decision-making and parliament legislation, which harms the government’s ability to govern.

“We go to the ballot box and vote but time after time, people we didn’t elect make the decisions for us,” Levin said.

The proposals have been opposed by liberal and left-wing Israelis, as well as some within the religious camp.

At one recent protest, Tom Arad stood among a group of religious Jewish men wearing kippahs on their heads and women wearing long skirts.

“I went to demonstrate because I care about democracy and I care about human rights,” Arad said. “I’m afraid that a radical current will take over the country like in Hungary and Poland. I’m very afraid of religious coercion in the country and harm to the citizens’ freedoms.”

According to international and constitutional law expert Professor Amichai Cohen, the government’s proposals will turn Israel into an autocracy, with power in the hands of a few.

“In Israel, there are very few people who hold the power,” said Cohen. “They are the heads of the coalition parties, [normally] between five to eight people. In this government, they are seven people. Once they agree, there is no other political power that can stop them.

“We don’t have two [legislative] houses, we have no president with veto power, our local governments are very weak compared to other democracies, we are not part of a supranational organisation,” Cohen added. “The only limitation of political power in Israel is judicial review … [This issue] goes to the heart of the Israeli democracy. Absent the authority of the court to invalidate legislation there will remain no limit on the power of this small group of people.”

The Israeli opposition, which lost November’s elections, the fifth held in less than four years, says the main reasons for the legal overhaul were the personal interests of two of the government’s members, led by Netanyahu.

He is on trial for corruption, a charge he denies, but that could disappear if the government has more control over the judiciary.

Meanwhile, one of Netanyahu’s coalition partners, Shas party leader Aryeh Deri, hopes to get his jobs back as interior minister and health minister, after he was removed from them last month at the behest of the Supreme Court over a suspended prison sentence.

The characterisation of the Supreme Court as a challenge to Israel’s right has been pushed back against by pro-Palestinian advocates, who point to the many instances where the court has failed to rule in favour of the human rights of Palestinians.

For example, the court allowed the Israeli military to fire lethal weapons at Palestinian demonstrators in Gaza during the Great March of Return in 2018 and 2019, and has also ruled in favour of the displacement of Palestinian communities in the occupied West Bank.

“The judicial system in Israel, including the Supreme Court, has not usually given aid to Palestinians on both sides of the Green Line … on cardinal issues,” said Tibi. “For example, the Supreme Court legalised the occupation, expulsions, targeted killings, settlements, the eviction of the people of Khan al-Ahmar. And it legalised the Jewish Nation State Law, [and] the (community) Admissions Committees.”

“So there isn’t a lot of empathy or a fateful connection between the Palestinian minority in Israel and the Supreme Court and the judicial system.”

But, as Tibi and others argue, the possibility that the Supreme Court is neutered puts Palestinians in Israel and the occupied territories in greater danger, with nothing stopping the government from passing laws that could harm human and civil rights.

“We oppose the [judicial] reforms because, in the end, it is possible that the Supreme Court will be the last resort for minorities and weak groups on certain issues,” Tibi said. “It doesn’t always help, but it’s the last resort.”

If the judicial revolution is passed, Netanyahu’s opposition says, there will be no stopping the government from passing laws that harm human and civil rights.

And with a government composed of ultra-Orthodox Jews and ultra-nationalist pro-settlement Jews, this would allow for religious coercion and harm to minorities, such as Palestinian citizens of Israel and the LGBTQ community. It could also allow the government to approve the annexation of the West Bank.

“Weakening the power of the court in and of itself is not the point,” said Cohen. “The point is the implication of centralised political power having no limits. The ultra-Orthodox will promote their agenda. The extreme right wing will promote its agenda.”

Indeed, there are already plans for a bill aimed at disqualifying Arab parties and a bill to ban bringing certain foods into hospitals during the Passover holiday and to stop public transport from operating in Tel Aviv on the Sabbath.

If the demonstrations do not have an effect on Netanyahu, many hope the economic threats will.

The chief of the Bank of Israel has reportedly warned Netanyahu that any overhaul to the judiciary will hurt the economy, scaring away investors and harming Israel’s credit rating.

Meanwhile, some investors have already announced that they are moving their money out of Israel.

While this has left Israeli politics in an uncertain position, Cohen believes that the battle over the judiciary has had a positive effect.

“The opposition in Israel after the [November] election was in turmoil,” said Cohen. “They had no ideology. ‘Just not Bibi’ is not an ideology,” said Cohen, in reference to Netanyahu’s nickname and the slogan that united right-wing and left-wing parties in previous elections.

Cohen also argues that the opposition to Netanyahu’s government, and the protest movement that it has engendered, has pushed more Jewish Israelis to rethink their position towards Palestinians, despite the previous centrist government’s regular raids in the West Bank, in which more than 170 Palestinians died, as well as a brief assault on Gaza in August that killed at least 49 Palestinians

“If you look at Israel in terms of your position in regards to the Palestinian issue then it’s clear the right wing has a political majority,” Cohen said. “But … once you describe these dangers [of right-wing policy], people say, ‘We don’t want the most extreme parties to promote their agendas. And if your identity is liberal democratic and if you don’t want to live in a dissonance between your position in regards to the general democracy and [towards] the Palestinians then [the latter] will also move. Political identities are dynamic. It makes people rethink their positions.”

However, Palestinian political analyst and vice president for advancement of Birzeit University, Ghassan Khatib, argues Netanyahu’s ability to play on hatred for Palestinians to increase his popularity reveals the reality of Israel’s domestic politics.

“The internal tension between the different Israeli political groups and parties and the fierce political competition and confrontation within Israel is reflecting itself in attempts to show tough Israeli positions vis-a-vis Palestinians as a way of increasing his popularity inside Israel,” Khatib said.

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA

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Angolan president receives message from Kenyan counterpart

 Luanda - Angolan Head of State João Lourenço received Thursday a message from his Kenyan counterpart, William Ruto, as part of strengthening cooperation ties between the two countries and regional integration.



The letter was delivered by the Kenyan Minister of Industry and Commerce, Moses Kuria, who was received by President João Lourenço in Luanda.

Speaking to the press at the end of the meeting, Moses Kuria, said that the audience addressed issues linked to bilateral cooperation in the fields of trade, processing of mineral resources and agriculture.

In the political and diplomatic aspect, the Kenyan official said that issues related to the current situation in the eastern region of Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) were analysed.

Moses Kuria said that the Kenyan Government is committed to the process focused on political stability in the DRC.

"We are involved in this process and we think that Angola has to continue in the peace negotiations. For that reason, we came to learn of your country's experience on the subject", he expressed.

Angola and Kenya Cooperation

Angola and Kenya have a common interest in the areas of trade, investment, oil and gas, minerals, higher education, science, technology and innovation, fisheries, aquaculture, blue economy and others.

In the bilateral framework, they have a memorandum of understanding for cooperation in matters of gender and women's empowerment and another in matters of administration and justice.

Angolans and Kenyans have maintained friendly relations since 1961, a period prior to Angola's independence, proclaimed on November 11, 1975.

The two countries’ ties reached their highest point in 2012, with the signing of four legal instruments.

This is the General Agreement on Economic, Scientific, Technical and Cultural Cooperation, as well as the Memorandum of Understanding on Political Consultations.

The list is completed by the Agreement on the Creation of the Bilateral Commission and the Agreement for the Operation of Air Services, in the field of transport.

Angola has potential to increase GDP by over 3%

 Luanda - Angola has the potential to increase its Gross Domestic Product (GDP) by over 3%, said Thursday in Luanda the Board Chairman of Standard Bank, Luís Teles.



He added that in order to achieve that, it was necessary to speed up investments in infrastructure and improve the execution capacity of planned projects, to ensure that the percentage of GDP rises.

 

In this way, the manager who was speaking at the “Infrastructure Forum in Angola”, said that the private sector should be more involved because the State does not have the debt and budgetary capacity to carry out all of the necessary projects for the country.

 

Luís Teles said that it is very important to attract multinational companies, with a lot of experience, aiming to bring the best practices of world leaders, in order to add value to the local dynamic.

 

Angolan GDP in 2022

 

In June 2022, the Fitch Solutions consultancy revised its projection for growth of the Angolan economy slightly downwards, from 3.8 to 3.5%, which was above government projections, which estimated growth of gross domestic product (GDP) of 2.7% of the whole year.

 

Angola´s gross domestic product in 2022 rose at the fastest pace since 2004 as China buys 60.2% of Angola´s exports.

Angola suspends exist of raw wood to attract investors

 Luanda - Angolan government wants to give priority to the creation of the local industries to ensure the exploration and treatment of raw wood.



In order to achieve this goal it announced plans to suspend the exit of logs, blocks and semi-blocks of wood for a three-year period.

During this period (three years), operators in the sector will be only authorized to export wood transformed into doors, windows and other finished products, said the minister of Agriculture, António Assis.

 

The decision was approved Thursday at the First Ordinary Session of the Cabinet Council, chaired by the President of the Republic, João Lourenço.

 

The move is intended to protect the environment, guarantee reforestation, stimulate the growth and expansion in the country.

Speaking to the press, at the end of the meeting, António Assis

said similarly to what happens to other regions of the world, the country should make a rational use of the forests in order to create a strong, dynamic, competitive and processing industry that generate jobs for young people and income for families.

 

António Assis said the operators may cut trees, but they should be Internally processed, such as making different furniture to export them abroad in the
finished product.

Angola and US discuss defence agreements

 Luanda – The minister of State and Head of the President's Military Office, Francisco Furtado, on Thursday in Luanda granted an audience to the United States (US) Ambassador to Angola, Tulinabo Mushingi, where they analysed the agreements made on defence fields between the two states.



According to a press release that ANGOP had access to this Thursday, the meeting is framed in the implementation of the Memorandum of Understanding on defence and security between the Republic of Angola and the United States.

  

The document says that Tulinabo Mushingi has reported that senior officials from the US department of defence and security are planning to visit Angola this month.

It states that the visit by senior US officials is aimed to assess and evaluate the action underway, as well as implementing another plan for the modernisation of the Angolan Armed Forces and other bodies.

Angola is one of the African countries with which the United States has a strategic partnership. South Africa and Nigeria are other countries on the same path.

Government to spend 51.5 billion kwanzas on isolation allowance

 Luanda - The Cabinet Council on Thursday, in Luanda, approved a set of cash and social incentives that will cover 55,000 civil servants and administrative staff, in 104 municipalities which represent areas of difficult access, a measure that will cost roughly 51.5 billion kwanzas yearly.



These are financial incentives to help with accommodation, isolation and rent allowances, approved in the First Ordinary Session of the Cabinet Council of 2023, chaired by the Head of State, João Lourenço, whose measure will be applied as soon as the document is published in the State Gazette.

 

The measure, foreseen in the 2023 State General Budget (OGE), provides for 30% isolation allowance on the basic salary of the public servants and administrative staff, 30% for renting, but for those that are not residents in the areas where they work.

 

The accommodation assistance allowance will be 50% of the base salary subsidy, which will be done with a single payment of the amount, that is, at the time the employee is placed in these areas of hard access, or rather in municipalities classified in category C and D.

In addition to these allowances, the instrument includes social incentives related to the mobility preference of the spouse, in relation to the partner who is in the hard to reach zone, among other benefits relating to the couple.

 

“It was necessary to find subsidies that could correspond to employees and administrative agents who work in remote areas or areas of difficult access”, said the minister of Public Administration, Employment and Social Security (MAPTSS), Teresa Dias.

 

To ensure compliance with the law, the minister Teresa Dias promises inspection and monitoring actions, a work that will involve the State’s General Inspection Administration (IGAE), which will act at the level of municipalities for investigations, enquiries and other measures that are considered necessary.

 

According to the minister, the characteristics of the municipalities may be maintained, improved or changed, depending on the evaluation of the impact of this measure that the Ministry of Finance and the Ministry of Territorial Administration will undertake.

 

These are areas of difficult access, localities where public services are scarce in banking services, transport, telecommunications and other difficulties.

 

Angola has 400,000 civil servants, 75% of whom are connected to the State´s Local Administration bodies.

Apelo por Escolas Seguras e Sustentáveis no Âmbito Climático || Call for Safe and Climate-Friendly Schools in Angola

Assunto: Apelo por Escolas Seguras e Sustentáveis no Âmbito Climático Excelentíssima Senhora Vice-Presidente da República de Angola,  Espera...