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Friday 21 April 2023

In Chad, freed rebel prisoners call for leader’s release

 In March, Chad’s interim president Mahamat Idriss Deby had pardoned 380 jailed members of a rebel group accused of killing his father in 2021.



With the midday sun high over Chad’s capital N’Djamena, Alhadj Barh embraced his wife for the first time in more than two years. It marked a new start for a man who, until earlier that day, had been in jail for fighting in a rebel army accused of killing the president.

In an apparent peace gesture, Chad’s interim president Mahamat Idriss Deby in March pardoned 380 jailed members of the Front for Change and Concord in Chad (FACT), a rebel group accused of killing his father – longtime ruler Idriss Deby – in 2021.

Barh was among a group of pardoned detainees to be released near the capital in early April.

Seated at home beside his wife and four daughters, Barh said he was eager to help facilitate peace if the government pursued an inclusive approach.

“We are not bullies,” he said. “If the situation changes, I will actively contribute to national reconciliation.”

The military government led by the younger Deby has launched peace talks with various rebel groups who had long challenged his father’s regime, but FACT has not taken part, insisting the transitional authorities first free its members.

While hundreds have been pardoned, most of the group’s senior leadership, including leader Mahamat Mahadi Ali, remain in custody.

Another newly released detainee, former maths teacher and FACT member Ouckonga Guelmine Kemnda, said calls for unity would ring hollow without their release.

“The government says it is open to dialogue and yet the person with whom it must dialogue is condemned,” the 46-year-old said, sitting among his extended family.

“When we want to talk to someone, we have to stay open,” he added.

The transitional authorities have not commented on the detainees’ statements or the outlook for the continuing peace negotiations. The government is set to stay in office at least through elections slated for October 2024.

In August 2022, government representatives signed an agreement began engaging of negotiations in what was called a “pre-dialogue” with hundreds of rebels and civil society society, with the Qatari government as mediator.

SOURCE: NEWS AGENCIES

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Tunisian authorities close opposition Ennahdha party HQ

 Move comes a day after party leader Ghannouchi was arrested in an ongoing crackdown on Tunisia’s opposition.



Tunisian authorities have closed the headquarters of the opposition Ennahda party, a day after leader Rached Ghannouchi was arrested, party officials have said.


Ahmed Gaaloul, an adviser for Ghannouchi, told Al Jazeera that police were conducting a search of the building on Tuesday, and that it would be closed for a minimum of three days.

“A police unit showed up at the party’s main headquarters (in Tunis) and ordered everyone there to leave before closing it,” Riadh Chaibi, a senior party official, told AFP.

“The police also closed the other offices of the party elsewhere in the country and prohibited any meeting in these premises,” Chaibi added.

Ghannouchi, Ennahda’s longtime leader, was arrested at his home in the capital, Tunis, late on Monday, the latest in a string of opposition figures held.

Ennahdha, a self-styled “Muslim Democrat” party, was the largest in Tunisia’s parliament before President Kais Saied dissolved the chamber in July 2021.

Since early February, authorities in the North African country have arrested more than 20 political opponents and personalities.

They have included politicians, former ministers, businessmen, trade unionists and the owner of Tunisia’s most popular radio station, Mosaique FM.

Saied claims those detained were “terrorists” involved in a “conspiracy against state security”.

Ennahdha vice-president Mondher Lounissi told a news conference late on Monday that Ghannouchi had been taken to a police barracks for questioning and that his lawyers had not been allowed to attend.

His arrest came after he warned that Tunisia faced a civil war if any of the country’s political forces – including political Islamists and leftists – were excluded.

A source at the interior ministry quoted by Tunisian media confirmed that Ghannouchi arrest was linked to these statements.

Ghannouchi was the speaker of Tunisia’s parliament before Saied dissolved it and went on to seize wide-reaching powers through a series of moves opponents have dubbed a “coup”.

Opponents of Saied accuse him of reinstating autocratic rule in Tunisia, which was the only democracy to emerge from the Arab Spring uprisings in the Middle East region more than a decade ago.

After his dramatic power grab, he has ruled by decree, and last year rammed through a constitution that gave his office unlimited powers and neutered parliament.

Human rights groups have criticised the arrests, which targeted leading figures of the National Salvation Front (NSF), the main opposition coalition, which includes Ennahdha.

“The arrest of the leader of the most important political party in the country, and who has always shown his commitment to peaceful political action, marks a new phase in the crisis,” NSF head Ahmed Nejib Chebbi said late on Monday.

“This is blind revenge against opponents,” he added.

Ghannouchi appeared in court at the end of February on terror-related charges after being accused of calling police officers “tyrants”.

Ghannouchi was exiled for more than two decades under late dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali but returned following the country’s 2011 uprising to become a dominant figure in Tunisian politics.

SOURCE: AFP, AL JAZEERA

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Huge Boost: Donald Trump Raises More Than $34 million For His 2024 Presidential Campaign

 Donald Trump has raised more than $34 million for his 2024 White House run since the start of the year and saw a spike in donations after his indictment on March 30th.



The former U.S. president raised $15.4 million of that money in the two weeks after charges were filed against him, his campaign told CNN, arguing it showed how much his supporters have rallied around Trump.

Trump also saw a huge increase in his poll numbers after Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg arraigned him on more than 30 charges related to a hush money payment to former porn star Stormy Daniels. Trump pled not guilty.

Trump claims to be the victim of a weaponized federal government and claims the charges are the work of Democrats who don’t want to see him win another term in the White House.

But the former president also has been rallying his supporters with the news of the indictment, sending out fundraising appeal after fundraising appeal including a dramatic one entitled ‘the last email before I go to jail’ on the morning of his indictment in New York.

His campaign previously said on March 31 that it had raised $4 million in the 24 hours since his indictment was first announced.  He then received 312,564 donations in the two weeks after charges were filed with the average donation totaling roughly $49.

Trump has been raising money for his 2024 presidential bid through both his campaign and his political action committee, Save America PAC.

In comparison, Nikki Haley, one of few other announced candidates in the GOP presidential race, announced she raised more than $11 million between her Feb. 15 campaign launch and the end of the first quarter. Haley has $7.8 million on hand. But her actual filings with the Federal Election Commission told a different story.

They show that her campaign appears to have double-counted money it moved among various committees, which means it dramatically overstated its haul.

The filings, which cover the first three months of 2023, show that her three committees together brought in about $8.3 million.

Source:  Peacefmonline

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G7 ministers pledge to intensify Russia sanctions, slam China

 Top diplomats also urge warring sides in Sudan to end hostilities and demand the Taliban reverse the ban on women working for the UN.



The foreign ministers of G7 have pledged to intensify sanctions against Russia over its war in Ukraine and criticised China for its actions in the Taiwan Strait and disputed South China Sea, urging Beijing “to act as a responsible member of the international community”.

The comments, issued on Tuesday, marked the conclusion of a three-day meeting in the Japanese resort town of Karuizawa.

The G7 communique also criticised North Korea over its nuclear and ballistic missile programme, expressed concern over the violence in Sudan and Myanmar and called on the Taliban to reverse its ban on women working for non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and the United Nations.

The document was prepared as a template for global leaders to use at a G7 summit that will be held in Hiroshima, Japan next month, and also included language about Iran, nuclear proliferation and other “grave threats”.

Two crises stood out: Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and China’s increasing assertiveness against, and military manoeuvres around, Taiwan, the self-governing democracy that Beijing claims as its own.

But it was Russia’s invasion of Ukraine that was the focus of the summit.

The group, which comprises the United States, Japan, Germany, the United Kingdom, France, Italy and Canada, said, “There can be no impunity for war crimes and other atrocities such as Russia’s attacks against civilians and critical civilian infrastructure.”

“We remain committed to intensifying sanctions against Russia, coordinating and fully enforcing them,” the ministers said, and would support “for as long as it takes” Ukraine as it defends itself.

Russia’s current offensive is largely stalled and Ukraine is preparing a counteroffensive, but there is widespread global worry about Russian President Vladimir Putin’s repeated threats to use tactical nuclear weapons.

“Russia’s irresponsible nuclear rhetoric and its threat to deploy nuclear weapons in Belarus are unacceptable,” the ministers said.

They added that any use of chemical, biological or nuclear weapons in Ukraine “would be met with severe consequences”.

Putin had said last month that Russia would station shorter-range, so-called tactical nuclear weapons on its neighbour’s territory, a move that marked the first time Moscow had said it would place nuclear weapons on the territory of another country since the end of the Cold War three decades ago, and appeared to raise the stakes, at least symbolically.

On China, the G7 ministers reiterated their call for China to act as a responsible member of the international community, agreeing that peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait was “an indispensable element in the security and prosperity in the international community”.

The ministers reiterated that there was “no legal basis” for China’s expansive maritime claims in the South China Sea, and opposed Beijing’s militarisation activities in the region.

Meanwhile, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin condemned the statements, saying the G7 foreign ministers had “rudely interfered in China’s internal affairs, maliciously slandered and smeared China”.

“The statements were filled with arrogance, prejudice, and sinister intentions to suppress China,” he said during a press conference in Beijing, adding that China made a “strong demarche to the host Japan”.

On North Korea, the statement demanded Pyongyang “refrain” from further nuclear tests and ballistic missiles, warning of a “swift, united, and robust international response” should such actions continue.

The warning comes days after North Korea said it had successfully tested a solid-fuel intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM), hailing it as a breakthrough for the country’s nuclear counterattack capabilities.

That launch was the latest in a string of banned weapons tests conducted by North Korea, which has already fired several of its most powerful ICBMs this year.

“We strongly condemn North Korea’s unprecedented number of unlawful ballistic missile launches, including the April 13 launch of what North Korea claimed as a solid-fuel intercontinental ballistic missile,” the G7 ministers said.

“Each of these launches violated multiple United Nations Security Council resolutions,” they added.

On Sudan, the ministers urged General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, who heads the military, and his rival, Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, who commands the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), to “end hostilities immediately” and return to negotiations.

The fighting, which erupted on Saturday over a disagreement on integrating the RSF into Sudan’s military, has killed nearly 200 people and forced the closure of the country’s international airport.

The G7 ministers warned that the fighting “threatens the security and safety of Sudanese civilians and undermines efforts to restore Sudan’s democratic transition”.

They urged a return to negotiations and called on all sides to “take active steps to reduce tensions and ensure the safety of all civilians, including diplomatic and humanitarian personnel”.

The ministers also condemned the ongoing violence in Myanmar, where the military staged a coup two years ago and is engaged in nationwide battles with civilian militias opposed to its rule, expressing deep concern over the deteriorating security and humanitarian situation in the Southeast Asian country.

They also slammed the Taliban’s “systematic abuses of human rights of women and girls”, denouncing the group’s bans on female higher education and work.

“We call for the immediate reversal of unacceptable decisions restricting human rights and fundamental freedoms, including the latest bans prohibiting Afghan women from working for NGOs and the UN,” they said.

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA AND NEWS AGENCIES

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US arrests two for running secret Chinese ‘police station’ in NYC

 US officials accuse two men of engaging in ‘transnational repression’ of Chinese diaspora in US at the behest of China.



Authorities in the United States have arrested two men on allegations they operated a “secret police station” in New York City on behalf of China.


China foreign ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin on Tuesday disputed the US claims. China maintains a policy of non-interference in other countries and these alleged police stations do not exist, he said.

The US Department of Justice announced the charges at a news conference on Monday, saying Liu Jianwang, 61, and Chen Jinping, 59, opened the covert police outpost in Manhattan’s Chinatown in early 2022.

Breon Peace, the US Attorney for the Eastern District of New York, said the men had engaged in “transnational repression targeting members of the Chinese diaspora community in New York City and elsewhere in the United States” at the behest of Beijing.

Both were charged with conspiring to act as an agent of China’s government without informing US authorities, as well as obstruction of justice.

The second charge relates to the men admitting that they deleted correspondences with an official from China’s Ministry of Public Security once they discovered they were being investigated, authorities said.

The secret police station “at the very least” provided Chinese citizens with basic Chinese government services, Peace said, adding that this in itself would run afoul of US law without prior approval.

However, he said the station “had a more sinister use”.

“On at least one occasion, an official with the Chinese national police directed one of the defendants, a US citizen who worked at the secret police station, to help locate a pro-democracy activist of Chinese descent living in California,” Peace said.

“In other words, the Chinese national police appear to have been using the station to track a US resident on US soil.”

Authorities said the police station closed in the fall of last year after the men learned they were being investigated.

If convicted, the accused both face up to five years in prison for conspiring to act as agents of the Chinese government and up to 20 years for the obstruction charge. They were set to appear in court in Brooklyn later on Monday.

Spanish human rights organisation Safeguard Defenders has said China has dozens of such covert police stations across the globe, including in the United Kingdom and the US.

In a report last September, the group said the stations were used to “harass, threaten, intimidate and force targets to return to China for persecution”.

In October, the Dutch foreign ministry said it was investigating reports the Chinese government had set up illegal police stations in the Netherlands to intimidate dissidents. Beijing called those reports “absolutely false”.

China has previously described the foreign outposts as service stations for Chinese people who are abroad and need help with bureaucratic tasks, such as renewing their Chinese drivers’ licences.

Last month, the Chinese government accused Canada of smearing its reputation after Canadian federal police announced that they were launching an investigation into alleged Chinese police stations in the country.

“China has been … strictly abiding by international law and respecting all countries’ judicial sovereignty,” Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said at the time.

Back in the US, Monday’s charges were among a raft of actions announced by the US Department of Justice against accused Chinese agents.

The measures come as relations between Washington and Beijing have grown increasingly fraught over security in the Pacific, alleged spying activities, and Taiwan, among other issues.

US federal authorities on Monday also announced two criminal complaints against 44 people, including 40 officers in China’s national police.

The accused “allegedly perpetrated transnational repression” by targeting US residents “whose political views and actions are disfavored by the [Chinese] government, such as advocating for democracy in [China]”, the US said.

In two separate schemes, the individuals “created and used fake social media accounts to harass and intimidate” Chinese dissidents residing abroad.

One group of officers allegedly worked for the “912 Special Project Working Group”, an elite task force charged with targeting Chinese dissidents around the world, authorities said.

That was largely done through creating thousands of fake online personas to target dissidents with propaganda and threats. Other officers targeted dissidents in online video conferences.

Department of Justice official David Newman said the alleged schemes amounted to a “multi-front campaign to extend the reach and impacts of its authoritarian system into the United States and elsewhere around the world”.

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA AND NEWS AGENCIES

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UK, US envoys voice concerns on Sudan violence

 UK Foreign Secretary James Cleverly has once again met US counterpart Antony Blinken to discuss the situation in Sudan, with both raising concerns about the assault on the European Union ambassador to Sudan and the attack on a US Embassy convoy in Sudan’s capital Khartoum.



“Indiscriminate military operations have resulted in significant civilian deaths and injuries, and are recklessly endangering the Sudanese people and diplomats,” Mr Blinken said in a statement.

He reiterated his earlier call for a 24-hour ceasefire to “allow Sudanese to safely reunite with their families and to obtain desperately needed relief supplies”.

The two envoys met and made similar ceasefire calls on Monday.

Mr Blinken is due to have another telephone meeting with Sudan’s de facto leader Gen Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and Rapid Support Forces commander Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo later on Tuesday, about the possibility of a ceasefire to allow residents access to medical care and food supplies.

Source: BBC

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Sudan Crisis: The Two Generals At The Heart Of The Conflict

 A soundtrack of explosions, a skyline dominated by bitter, black smoke, a daily existence of fear and uncertainty as bullets, rockets and rumours fly.



Life in Sudan’s capital, Khartoum, and in many other parts of the country, has taken a sudden, very dramatic turn for the worse.


At the heart of it are two generals: Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, the leader of the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF), and Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, better known as Hemedti, the head of the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF).
The two worked together, and carried out a coup together – now their battle for supremacy is tearing Sudan apart.

The relationship between the two goes back a long way.
Both played key roles in the counter-insurgency against Darfuri rebels, in the civil war in Sudan’s western region that began in 2003.
Gen Burhan rose to control the Sudanese army in Darfur.
Hemedti was the commander of one of the many Arab militias, collectively known as the Janjaweed, which the government employed to brutally put down the largely non-Arab Darfuri rebel groups.

Majak D’Agoot was the deputy director of the National Intelligence and Security Services at the time – before becoming deputy defence minister in South Sudan when it seceded in 2011.
He met Gen Burhan and Hemedti in Darfur, and said they worked well together. But he told the BBC he saw little sign that either would rise to the top of the state.

Hemedti was simply a militia leader “playing a counter-insurgency role, helping the military”, while Gen Burhan was a career soldier, though “with all the ambitions of the Sudanese officer corps, anything was possible”.
The military has been running Sudan for most of its post-independence history.
The government’s tactics in Darfur, once described by Sudan expert Alex de Waal as “counter-insurgency on the cheap”, used regular troops, ethnic militias and air power to fight off the rebels – with little to no regard for civilian casualties.

Darfur has been described as the first genocide of the 21st Century, with the Janjaweed accused of ethnic cleansing and using mass rape as a weapon of war.
Hemedti eventually became the commander of what could be described as an offshoot of the Janjaweed, his RSF.
Hemedti’s power grew massively once he began supplying troops to fight for the Saudi-led coalition in Yemen.
Sudan’s then-military ruler, Omar al-Bashir, came to rely on Hemedti and the RSF as a counterweight to the regular armed forces, in the hope that it would be too difficult for any single armed group to depose him.
In the end – after months of popular protests – the generals clubbed together to overthrow Bashir, in April 2019.

Later that year, they signed an agreement with the protesters to form a civilian-led government overseen by the Sovereign Council, a joint civilian-military body, with Gen Burhan at its head, and Hemedti as his deputy.
It lasted two years – until October 2021 – when the military struck, taking power for themselves, with Gen Burhan again at the head of the state and Hemedti again his deputy.
Siddig Tower Kafi was a civilian member of the Sovereign Council, and so regularly met the two generals.

He said he saw no sign of any disagreements until after the 2021 coup.
Then “Gen Burhan started to restore the Islamists and the former regime members to their old positions”, he told the BBC.
“It was becoming clear that the plan of Gen Burhan was to restore the old regime of Omar al-Bashir to power.”
Mr Siddig says that this is when Hemedti began to have doubts, as he felt Bashir’s cronies had never fully trusted him.
Sudanese politics has always been dominated by an elite largely drawn from the ethnic groups based around Khartoum and the River Nile.

Hemedti comes from Darfur, and the Sudanese elite often talk about him and his soldiers in pejorative terms, as “country bumpkins” unfit to rule the state.
Over the last two or three years, he has tried to position himself as a national figure, and even as a representative of the marginalised peripheries – trying to forge alliances with rebel groups in Darfur and South Kordofan that he had previously been tasked with destroying.

He has also spoken regularly of a need for democracy despite his forces having brutally put down civilian protests in the past.
Tensions between the army and the RSF grew as a deadline for forming a civilian government approached, focused on the thorny issue of how the RSF should be re-integrated into the regular armed forces.

Source: BBC

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International Day of Clean Energy 2024 | 26 January 2024

 Every dollar of investment in renewables creates three times more jobs than in the fossil fuel industry.  Greetings friends. I am Sofonie D...