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  • South Africa, Kenya Africa’s top users of cashless payments

    South Africa, Kenya Africa’s top users of cashless payments

    {{South Africa and Kenya are the countries that have most significantly adopted cashless payments systems in Africa, a new global survey says.}}

    Released Tuesday, The Cashless Journey report shows that 43 per cent of South Africans and 27 per cent of Kenyans had wholly adopted the cashless system for settling bills, buying goods and paying for various services at restaurants, among others, with the number rising sharply due to reliable mobile phone cash transactions.

    Egypt (seven per cent) came third in the survey.

    The report, which covered 33 countries across the world, observes that while other countries have been promoting use of credit cards and electronic fund transfers, Kenya’s case is unique following invention of Safaricom’s M-Pesa mobile phone-based money transfer system that has since been replicated by other providers.

    The Kenyan government has also embraced the technology services where billions of shillings in development funds are disbursed to beneficiaries via mobile phone money transfer. The same system is used to repay the loans advanced to various groups.

    “What seems to be overlooked in the policy dialogue is that cash takes time to access, is riskier to carry, and costs a country up to 1.5 per cent of its gross domestic product,” said Peer Stein, director of access to finance advisory services at the International Finance Corporation.

    “We cannot expect the journey from cash toward electronic payments to be completed overnight, yet driven by technological advances and public-private partnerships this trend has gathered significant momentum over the past few years.”

    The study focuses on value of all consumer payments —$63 trillion in total spend — including those that happen beyond retail point-of-sale in supermarkets, petrol stations and restaurants that accept card payments.

    The report observes that use of cashless services has tripled since 2011 when cash payments stood at $21 trillion, 34 per cent of total global consumer spend while cashless payments amounted to $42 trillion.

    Belgium leads the pack with an estimated 93 per cent of transactions being cashless, France (92 per cent), and Canada at 90 per cent followed by Sweden, Australia and the Netherland.

    NMG

  • British national arrested over Westgate mall attack

    British national arrested over Westgate mall attack

    {{A British national has been arrested in Nairobi over the bloody attack on Westgate shopping mall by armed Islamists, a spokeswoman for the Foreign Office said on Wednesday.}}

    “We can confirm the detention of a British national in Nairobi and we are making contact to offer standard consular assistance,” she told media, without saying if the suspect was a man or a woman.

    British newspapers have speculated that Samantha Lewthwaite, the widow of one of the men who bombed the London transport system in 2005, was among the attackers who besieged the Westgate mall in the Kenyan capital.

    Kenyan Foreign Minister Amina Mohamed told US television on Monday that a British woman was among the attackers, although this contradicted earlier statements from Kenyan officials who said they were all male.

    Lewthwaite, a 29-year-old Muslim convert known as the “White Widow”, has been on the run in East Africa for the last couple of years and is wanted by Kenyan police for alleged involvement in a separate terror plot.

    President Uhuru Kenyatta announced an end to the 80-hour bloodbath in Nairobi late Tuesday, with the loss of 61 civilians and six members of the security forces.

    He said five attackers were killed and 11 suspects detained.

    NMG

  • Gen. Bashir cancels powder keg UN trip

    Gen. Bashir cancels powder keg UN trip

    {{Sudan’s President Omar al-Bashir, who is wanted for war crimes and genocide, on Wednesday cancelled a planned trip to the UN General Assembly, the UN said.}}

    President Bashir’s application for a visa had embarrassed the US government and UN leadership.

    The UN gave no reason for the no-show however.

    “Protocol has now confirmed that Sudan has cancelled President Bashir’s appearance at the General Assembly,” a UN spokesman, Jerome Bernard, told media.

    Mr Bashir had been scheduled to speak to world leaders on Thursday. The spokesman said that Sudan’s Foreign Minister Ali Karti would now address the assembly on Friday.

    Under international accords, the United States would not have been able to refuse President Bashir a visa. But it could have detained him on arrival.

    US authorities had refused to say whether they had accorded a visa or warned Bashir.

    The International Criminal Court had urged US authorities to arrest Bashir who is wanted by the The Hague court on 10 counts of war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide in the Darfur conflict.

    The ICC issued arrest warrants for the Sudanese leader in March 2009 and July 2010. He has travelled to several African countries however since then.

    The United States is not party to the ICC’s Rome Statute. But the court in 2010 asked all UN Security Council members that are not Rome Statute members, including the United States, to arrest Mr Bashir.

    wirestory

  • UN’s Minusma peacekeepers ‘raped woman in Mali’

    UN’s Minusma peacekeepers ‘raped woman in Mali’

    {{At least four UN peacekeepers have been involved in the rape of a woman in Mali, according to the UN.}}

    The soldiers have been identified as being among 1,500 Chadian troops serving with Minusma.

    The UN says it wants Chad to investigate the incident and take disciplinary action against the men.

    Minusma took over security duties in July after the withdrawal of French forces, which led an operation to oust Islamist militants from the north.

    The assault is believed to have happened last Thursday in the northern city of Gao.

    Medical help
    Gao was among the areas seized by militants following a coup in March 2012.

    The woman is thought to have come forward seeking medical help from the UN immediately after the attack. This triggered the UN force to launch an investigation.

    The BBC’s Alex Duval Smith in Bamako says it is not known exactly how many Chadians were involved, but the victim identified four soldiers as having assaulted her.

    At the time, 165 Chadian soldiers were stationed in Gao, our correspondent adds. They had defied the orders of their superiors and left their base in Tessalit after a dispute over pay and conditions.

    A Minusma spokesman in Bamako said it was for the Chadian authorities to decide on what disciplinary action they should take against the men.

    He said the victim would be offered medical, psychological and legal support but not financial compensation.

    The Chadians are part of a force of 6,000 African troops serving under the 12,000-strong Minusma peacekeeping force.

    French and West African troops drove militant Islamists out of northern Mali in February.

  • Charles Taylor Appeal Verdict Due in The Hague

    Charles Taylor Appeal Verdict Due in The Hague

    A UN-backed special court in The Hague is due to rule on an appeal by former Liberian President Charles Taylor.

    Last May, the court sentenced him to 50 years in prison for aiding and abetting rebels in neighbouring Sierra Leone during the 1991-2002 civil war.

    He became the first former head of state convicted by an international war crimes court since World War II.

    His lawyers want him acquitted arguing that legal and factual errors were made during the trial.

    However, the prosecution has sought to increase his sentence to 80 years.

    Media says the court’s decision will be closely watched because the guilty verdict was hailed as a landmark, proving that even people at the highest level of power can be held to account.

    Charles Taylor, 65, was found guilty of aiding and abetting war crimes in Sierra Leone, including terrorism, rape, murder and the use of child soldiers.

    He was also found guilty of planning some of the attacks carried out by rebel groups in neighbouring Sierra Leone during the vicious civil war.

    The former Liberian leader was arrested in 2006 and maintained his innocence throughout the trial.

    If his appeal fails, Charles Taylor will serve his sentence in a foreign jail. The UK has offered to accept him at a British prison – alternative destinations include Sweden or Rwanda.

    Our correspondent says it would take about a week to organise his transfer from The Hague.

    {wirestory}

  • NSA Spied on Martin Luther King, Documents Reveal

    NSA Spied on Martin Luther King, Documents Reveal

    {{The US National Security Agency spied on civil rights leader Martin Luther King and boxer Muhammad Ali during the height of the Vietnam War protests, declassified documents reveal}}.

    The documents show the NSA also tracked journalists from the New York Times and the Washington Post and two senators.

    Some NSA officials later described the programme as “disreputable if not outright illegal”, the documents show.

    The operation, dubbed “Minaret”, was originally exposed in the 1970s.

    However, the names of those on the phone-tapping “watch list” had been kept secret until now.

    The secret papers were published after a government panel ruled in favour of researchers at George Washington University.

    The university’s National Security Archive – a research institute that seeks to check government secrecy – described the names on the NSA’s watch-list as “eye-popping”.

    The agency eavesdropped on civil rights leaders Martin Luther King and Whitney Young as well as boxing champion Muhammad Ali, New York Times journalist Tom Wicker and Washington Post columnist Art Buchwald.

    Protest fears
    The NSA also monitored the overseas phone calls of two prominent US senators – Democrat Frank Church and Republican Howard Baker.

    Many of those targeted were considered to be critics of US involvement in the Vietnam War.

    In 1967 the strength of the anti-war campaign led President Lyndon Johnson to ask US intelligence agencies to find out if some protests were being stoked by foreign governments.

    The NSA worked with other spy agencies to draw up the “watch lists” of anti-war critics, tapping their phone calls.

    The programme continued after Richard Nixon entered the White House in 1969. US Attorney General Elliot Richardson shut down the NSA programme in 1973, just as the Nixon administration was engulfed in the Watergate scandal.

    The latest revelations come as the NSA is embroiled in fresh controversy over its surveillance programmes.

    US intelligence leaker Edward Snowden recently exposed far-reaching electronic surveillance of phone records and internet traffic by the agency.

    Researchers Matthew Aid and William Burr, who published the documents on Wednesday, said the spying abuses during the Vietnam War era far surpassed any excesses of the current programme.

    “As shocking as the recent revelations about the NSA’s domestic eavesdropping have been, there has been no evidence so far of today’s signal intelligence corps taking a step like this, to monitor the White House’s political enemies,” they wrote.

    BBC

  • China court jails general’s son Li Tianyi for rape

    China court jails general’s son Li Tianyi for rape

    {{A court in China has convicted the son of a high-profile army general and sentenced him to 10 years in jail for rape, state media say.}}

    The court said Li Tianyi, 17, and four others raped the woman at a Beijing hotel in February after having drinks.

    He had denied any sexual relations with the woman, whom he alleged was working as a prostitute, previous reports say.

    Li Tianyi is the son of army Gen Li Shuangjiang, known for his renditions of patriotic songs on television.

    Li Tianyi’s mother Meng Ge is also a well-known singer in China’s People’s Liberation Army.

    The case was heard at the Haidian Court in north-west Beijing. The other defendants also received jail terms ranging from three to 12 years.

    This was not the first time that Li Tianyi, also known as Li Guanfeng, was involved in an incident that sparked public outcry. In 2011, he was sentenced to detention for a year over a road rage incident.

    He was behind the wheel of a BMW car with no licence plates in Beijing when he confronted a middle-aged couple in another vehicle blocking his way.

    He assaulted the couple and shouted at shocked bystanders, telling them not to “dare to call the police”.

    His father apologised to the couple over the incident.

    The case of Li Tianyi inflamed public anger at the children of the political elite, who are often seen as spoilt and above the law, correspondents say.

  • Clashes Erupt as Thousands March Against Fascism

    Clashes Erupt as Thousands March Against Fascism

    {{Greek police clashed with protesters in Athens late Wednesday at the end of a huge march sparked by the murder of an anti-fascist musician, allegedly at the hands of a self-confessed neo-Nazi.}}

    Protesters were seen hurling petrol bombs at anti-riot police, who responded with tear gas a few hundred metres (yards) from the headquarters of the neo-Nazi party Golden Dawn.

    Some also attacked shops including a bank after police parked trucks in the road to block the protesters’ access to the party offices.

    Around 10,000 left-wing activists staged a peaceful protest earlier Wednesday in Athens against the fatal September 18 stabbing of 34-year-old musician Pavlos Fyssas by unemployed truck driver George Roupakias.

    Roupakias, a Golden Dawn member, admitted stabbing Fyssas but said he was acting in self-defence.

    The killing sparked a wave of sometimes violent protests and prompted an unprecedented crackdown on Golden Dawn after months of inaction by the authorities.

    In recent months, Golden Dawn has been accused of instigating beatings of migrants and political opponents, and several of its lawmakers have been implicated in assaults, but police failed to pursue most of the cases.

    This changed after Fyssas’ murder, with the government this week suspending several senior police officers for failing to investigate suspected illegal activity by Golden Dawn.

    Police raids on Golden Dawn offices in search of hidden weapons were also ordered this week, amid reports that the party organised military-style training activities for its members.

    In the wake of Fyssas’ murder, government officials and police unionists have confirmed long-running fears that Golden Dawn has broad support among Greek police.

    “Over the last three years there are many incidents in which fellow officers tolerated violence by Golden Dawn members,” Christos Fotopoulos, head of the Greek association of police staff, told Skai radio.

    Two police generals quit their posts on Monday and several other officers on the island of Evia were suspended after failing to investigate a Golden Dawn office near a local police station where weapons were allegedly kept.

    On Tuesday, a police officer assigned to a Golden Dawn lawmaker prosecuted for anti-migrant aggression was arrested in the central town of Agrinio.

    Golden Dawn has vehemently denied links to the singer’s killer — despite pictures emerging of Roupakias participating in party activities — and says it is the victim of a smear campaign.

    “I cannot possibly be Al Capone, ordering paid criminals to every corner of Greece,” party leader Nikos Michaloliakos told his party website TV this week, dismissing the allegations as “laughable.”

    “We have dozens of offices operating legally around the country,” he said, as the party on Wednesday threatened to sue all its main political rivals.

    A few days prior to Fyssas’ murder, members of the Communist party had been assaulted by alleged Golden Dawn supporters whilst putting up posters.

    agencies

  • Boys at Turkish High School Don Skirts in Protest at Ban

    Boys at Turkish High School Don Skirts in Protest at Ban

    A small group of male high school students wore skirts in protest at a ban on girls wearing skirts yesterday at a high school in the southern province of Antalya.

    Several male students, members of “Dev-Lis” (Revolutionary High Schoolers), turned out for the protest against a ban placed on girls wearing skirts late yesterday, after the Gazi Anatolian High School in Antalya prohibited its female students from wearing skirts as part of the school uniform.

    wirestory

  • Iran Wants Nuclear Deal Within Months, says Rohani

    Iran Wants Nuclear Deal Within Months, says Rohani

    {{Foreign ministers from the five permanent members of the UN Security Council and Germany (P5 + 1) are set to sit down with their Iranian counterpart on Thursday for what could be the start of earnest talks about Tehran’s controversial nuclear programme, in the wake of Iran’s President Hassan Rohani stating that he wanted to reach a deal within three to six months.}}

    “The only way forward is for a timeline to be inserted into the negotiations that is short. The shorter it is, the more beneficial it is to everyone,” Rohani said in an interview with the Washington Post newspaper published on Wednesday.

    The comments come a day after he told the UN General Assembly that Iran presented no threat to world peace and was ready to engage with the United States.

    Rohani told the newspaper on the sidelines of the UN gathering in New York that, “If it’s three months that would be Iran’s choice, if it’s six months that’s still good. It’s a question of months not years.”

    There was a real optimism at the UN over the possibility of a breakthrough in the stalled nuclear negotiations, according to FRANCE 24’s correspondent at the UN in New York Emmanuel Saint-Martin.

    “It is a cautious optimism,” Saint-Martin noted. “One Western diplomat told me today that while we have seen a lot of gestures and a lot of good signals have been sent, so far there is nothing concrete. So people are very eager for this meeting.”

    Rohani, described as a moderate cleric, won the presidential election in June on a platform of more openness with the West and progress on the nuclear issue.

    US President Barack Obama and French President François Hollande welcomed Rohani’s encouraging address in New York this week, but demanded more than rhetoric.