Author: Publisher

  • Dar-es-salaam: Plane Skids off Runway, 3 Injured

    Dar-es-salaam: Plane Skids off Runway, 3 Injured

    {{Three passengers were slightly injured during evacuation following a mishap involving a Kenya Airways plane in Tanzania.}}

    The KQ482 Embraer 190 aircraft with was travelling from Nairobi to Dar-es-salaam, Tanzania with 49 passengers and six crew.

    In a statement sent to newsrooms, Kenya Airways Managing Director Titus Naikuni said all passengers and crew were evacuated.

    “The aircraft reportedly had a runway excursion in heavy rain. All passengers and crew were evacuated and we can confirm that three passengers suffered minor injuries during the evacuation and have been transferred to hospital for further observation.”

    He said a probe into the incident was underway.

    “Kenya Airways wishes to confirm that we are cooperating fully with government investigative agencies in Tanzania and Kenya on this matter.”

    {capitalfm}

  • Kenyan Woman Jailed in US Over Marriage Fraud

    Kenyan Woman Jailed in US Over Marriage Fraud

    {{A US federal court has sentenced a Kenyan woman to one year in prison and a three year probation for her role in an inter-state fake marriage scheme.}}

    Margaret Kimani of Worcester, Massachusetts, appeared before U S District Judge John Woodcock in Bangor, Maine, for the sentencing on Tuesday.

    She had been found guilty of what the judge described as “one of the most sophisticated marriage frauds in the country” in December last year.

    Ms Kimani, 30, was one of 28 defendants convicted in the state of Maine for being part of a scam which saw American citizens getting paid to marry immigrants so they could easily obtain permanent residency status, popularly known as a green card.

    “The key idea was to achieve citizenship more easily,” said Maine’s US Attorney Thomas E. Delahanty II at a press conference after the sentencing.

    Court documents seen by Africa Review indicate that the defendant entered the United States on a visitor’s visa which expired in 2003.

    “She married an American man on Dec 30, 2003, nearly two years after her visitor’s visa expired in order to gain US citizenship more easily,” a prosecutor’s affidavit filed with the court states.

    However, the judge heard, when the man backed out of the scheme, she filed a petition under the Violence Against Women Act, alleging abuse by her spouse.

    “Kimani had been awarded lawful permanent residency in March 2010 based on the false information that her husband sexually, physically and emotionally abused her,” the prosecutor told the jury.

    Court documents show that she was indicted by a federal grand jury in August 2012 and was arrested 13 months later when she returned from a visit to Kenya. She has been held without bail since her arrest on Sept. 5, 2013, at JFK International Airport in New York City.

    A jury found her guilty of one count of conspiracy to defraud the US government in December 2013.

    On Tuesday, tough talking US government officials sent a warning to would-be perpetrators.

    {{Deportation}}

    “America’s legal immigration system is not for sale and we will move aggressively against those who willfully compromise the integrity of that system simply to enrich themselves,” said Bruce Foucart, special agent in charge for US Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Homeland Security Investigations in Boston, whose office headed the investigation that led to the prosecutions.

    And during a press conference outside the courthouse Tuesday, the prosecutor warned that the US government would be ruthless on scammers.

    “ If you commit marriage fraud, there isn’t going to be a honeymoon,” said US Attorney Delahanty.

    The sentencing of Margaret Kimani brings to a close a joint investigation which identified over 40 sham marriages between US citizens and nationals from Kenya, Uganda, Zambia and Cameroon.

    The court heard that the scheme was hatched by a man named James Mbugua, 53, and his friend Rashid Kakande, 41.

    “ Immigrants seeking an American spouse would pay Mr Kakande or Mr Mbugua between $1,000 and $1,500.

    Spouses who provided false information, such as joint bank accounts, rent receipts and utility bills to show that the couple was living together, and attended interviews with immigration officials received further payments,” said Mr Delahanty.

    Assistant US Attorney Gail Malone, who prosecuted all of the cases, said at the press conference that Kakande and Mbugua targeted the state of Maine “because there is no waiting period for marriage in the state as is the case in many other states.”

    In addition to prison time, Judge Woodcock sentenced Margaret Kimani to three years of supervised release.

    Ms Kimani, who is a Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN) and has a daughter who is a US citizen, is expected to be deported upon completion of her jail term.

    NMG

  • CAR: Foreign Peacekeepers Injured in Ambush

    CAR: Foreign Peacekeepers Injured in Ambush

    {{Gunmen ambushed peacekeeping troops in the crisis-torn Central African Republic, injuring two, residents and a spokesman for the French army force in the country said Friday.}}

    A hospital employee said that French troops and Congolese soldiers from African Union peacekeeping force MISCA were “ambushed” outside the hospital in the central mining town of Bria while making their way back to their airport base on Thursday night.

    Gunfire broke out for around half an hour outside the hospital in the town centre, according to the employee, who asked not to be named.

    International peacekeeping troops are in the area in a bid to stop months of violence between the country’s Christian majority and Muslim minority.

    The crisis began when a mostly Muslim rebel group called Seleka seized power a year ago and some of its members went rogue, attacking the civilian population and sparking revenge attacks by Christian vigilante groups.

    Both sides have been accused of brutal violence against civilians, and about a quarter of the country’s 4.6 million people have fled their homes.

    Sebastien Isern, a communications officer for the French force in the capital Bangui, confirmed Thursday’s incident.

    NMG

  • Oscar Pistorius Accused of Invention

    Oscar Pistorius Accused of Invention

    {{Oscar Pistorius faced another day of relentless cross-examination Friday as the prosecution challenged his account of the killing of his girlfriend, Reeva Steenkamp.}}

    Prosecutor Gerrie Nel has accused the athlete of hiding the truth about the death of Steenkamp, whom he shot last year through a closed toilet door in his home in Pretoria, South Africa.

    His questions Friday again sought to undermine Pistorius’ reliability and credibility — and to portray the athlete as someone who was inventing his version of events.

    As Nel turned once again to the early hours of Valentine’s Day last year, he challenged Pistorius over his actions in the moments leading up to Steenkamp’s death.

    Pistorius denied being “ready to shoot” as he made his way to the bathroom where he says he heard what he thought was an intruder.

    But he agreed that he had taken off the safety catch so he could fire if needed.

    “I didn’t want to take anybody’s life. I screamed for the intruders to get out of my home,” he said.

    “You wanted to shoot,” Nel contended. Pistorius replied that there is a “massive difference” between being ready for something and wanting to do it.

    Asked by the prosecutor why he approached the danger rather than seeking to move out of harm’s way, the athlete said it was his in his nature to respond that way.

    “I wanted to put myself between the perceived danger and Reeva,” he said. “I wish I did all these other things put to me.”

    Nel also argued it was “not possible” that Steenkamp would not have responded when Pistorius screamed to her about what he thought was an intruder in the house, as he has said happened.

    Steenkamp was only 3 meters from Pistorius at the time behind the toilet door, the prosecutor said.

    “She would’ve been terrified, but I don’t think that would’ve led her to call out,” Pistorius said, arguing that Steenkamp would’ve assumed the danger was getting closer.

    “She wasn’t scared of anything except you. She wasn’t scared of an intruder. She was scared of you,” Nel replied.

    The prosecutor also pressed Pistorius over whether he heard a woman screaming during the shots he fired, as some witnesses have said they heard.

    Pistorius said Steenkamp did not scream and denied knowing that she was behind the door when he fired through it.

    The judge granted Nel’s request for the court to be adjourned until Monday.

    {{Pistorius: I was fixated on the threat}}

    As Nel went through the events leading up to the point of the shooting, Pistorius said that after getting up to close a balcony door and move fans inside, he heard the noise of the bathroom window sliding open and slamming into the frame.

    Nel repeatedly asked him why he hadn’t at that point asked Steenkamp — who was awake — whether she too had heard the noise.

    Pistorius replied that he didn’t because he was sure about what he had heard. He said he whispered to Steenkamp to get down and call police.

    Nel asked whether he had waited for a response, as he said would have been reasonable, pointing out that his ex-girlfriend Samantha Taylor had testified he had done that on a previous occasion when he’d heard a noise.

    “I never waited for a response. … My whole body was fixated on the threat,” Pistorius answered.

    Nel’s questions then focused on the position of certain items in the bedroom, including a duvet, the fans and a pair of jeans, all of which Pistorius says were moved by police.

    The court was shown blown-up photographs of the items as Nel sought to argue that they do not support Pistorius’ version of events.

    At one point, the judge reprimanded Nel — known in South African legal circles for his bulldog-like approach in court — for calling Pistorius a liar and told him to mind his language.

    More than once, Nel suggested that Pistorius had difficulty remembering what happened because he had made things up.

    Pistorius became emotional as the cross-examination continued, prompting Nel to ask him why.

    “This is the night I lost the person that I cared about. I don’t know why people don’t understand that,” Pistorius responded.

    As he broke down in tears, the judge ordered a short break to allow him time to gather himself.

    Nel has previously accused Pistorius of becoming emotional when the questions get difficult.

    No one disputes that Pistorius killed Steenkamp. But the prosecution is trying to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that he did so knowingly and intentionally.

    {{Pistorius quizzed about mistakes}}

    During cross-examination earlier Friday, Pistorius made mistakes in answering questions about repair work and his alarm system.

    He attributed the mistakes to fatigue, prompting Nel to ask whether he was too tired to continue in the stand.

    Pistorius, becoming emotional, replied, “I don’t need time. I am tired; that’s not going to change.”

    “With respect, Mr. Pistorius, I’m not convinced. … I think you’re trying to cover up for lies,” Nel said.

    After Judge Thokozile Masipa pressed Pistorius on the question, the athlete said he wasn’t making mistakes because he was tired — prompting Nel to ask why, in that case, he was making mistakes.

    A little later, Nel made a mistake while questioning Pistorius, who pointed it out. The prosecutor said Pistorius wasn’t too tired to highlight the mistakes the prosecutor himself was making in his questioning.

    {{Pistorius’ message exchanges with Steenkamp}}

    A day earlier, the athlete denied that he acted selfishly toward Steenkamp as Nel sought to portray him as an arrogant hothead who is reckless with guns.

    In a bid to paint their relationship as rocky, he ripped apart message exchanges between the couple Thursday.

    Nel highlighted an incident in which Steenkamp complained in a message that Pistorius asked her to stop chewing gum. He also read a message in which she defended herself against Pistorius’ accusations that she flirted at a party.

    The prosecution challenged almost every aspect of the athlete’s credibility, including accusing him of lying that he killed his girlfriend by mistake last year.

    Nel also sought to paint him as selfish and demanded to know why the athlete did not respond to his girlfriend’s declaration of love.

    But Pistorius said he preferred to talk to his girlfriend over the phone rather than messaging. He acknowledged he never got a chance to tell her that he loved her.

    “Because it was all about Mr. Pistorius,” Nel said.

    {{Different accounts}}

    The runner has admitted to the killing but said he mistook Steenkamp for an intruder in the bathroom when he fired through the toilet door and killed her.

    The prosecution alleges that Pistorius killed his girlfriend after they argued. Several witnesses have testified to hearing a man’s shouts coming from the house, although they have also spoken of the terrified screams of a woman leading up to and during a volley of shots.

    The trial has gripped South Africa, where Pistorius is considered a symbol of triumph over physical adversity. His disabled lower legs were amputated when he was a baby, but he went on to achieve global fame as the “Blade Runner,” winning numerous Paralympic gold medals on the steel blades fitted to his prostheses.

    Only those in the courtroom can see Pistorius because he has chosen not to testify on camera. His testimony can be heard on an audio feed.

    The trial is scheduled to continue until the middle of May.

    Masipa will decide the verdict in collaboration with two experts called assessors. South Africa does not have jury trials.

    {agencies}

  • Nigeria Athletics Appoints Maurice Greene as Relay Coach

    Nigeria Athletics Appoints Maurice Greene as Relay Coach

    {{Athletics Federation of Nigeria (AFN) yesterday announced the appointment of former Olympics and world champion, Maurice Greene, as the relay coordinator of Team Nigeria track and field athletes.}}

    In a statement signed by the federation’s Secretary General, Olumide Bamiduro, Greene’s contract with AFN begins at the Mt. Sac Relay in California later this month, and it terminates after the Glasgow 2014 Commonwealth Games and the Africa Athletics Championships in Marrakesh, Morocco in August 2014.

    In his acceptance letter to the AFN, Greene said he is excited at the prospect of working for Team Nigeria and that it is his own way of giving back to Africa.

    Born 39 years ago in Kansas City, Kansas, United States of America, Greene is a retired American track and field sprinter who specialised in the 100 metres and 200 metres. He is a former 100m world record holder with a time of 9.79 seconds.

    During the height of his career (1997–2004), he won four Olympic medals and was a five-time world champion. These include three gold medals at the 1999 World Championships, a feat which had previously only been done by Carl Lewis and Michael Johnson and has since been equaled by three others.

    Following his track career, he has become an ambassador for the IAAF and a TV personality, appearing on Identity, Blind Date, and Dancing with the Stars.

    Most recently he volunteered as a track coach at University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA) for the 2012-2013 session.

    {myjoyonline}

  • World Bank Boss Suggests Solutions to Ghana’s Economic Trouble

    World Bank Boss Suggests Solutions to Ghana’s Economic Trouble

    {{The World Bank President, Jim Yong Kim says Ghana is going through some economic challenges because it is not doing enough to check its rising debts and the weakening economic fundamentals.}}

    Managers of Ghana’s economy have attributed the problems facing the economy to declining commodity prices and the US tapering program which has contributed to the Ghana cedis’ decline by about 18 percent for the quarter of this year.

    Some government officials had told local media if it had not been for these external challenges, the economy would not have been experiencing these problems now.

    But in a response to a question posed by reporters at the on-going IMF/Spring meetings in Washington D.C, Mr. Kim says examples from other developing countries on the contrary show that their currencies appreciated during this tapering exercise.

    He therefore added that Ghana has been badly affected by these external factors because it has not managed its internal affairs that well.

    “The outlook for emerging economies, the message is really get back to the fundamentals, tackle the basics; if the fundamentals are in good shape then the market would recognise that and punish Ghana less.”

    {myjoyonline}

  • Dentist Wants to Clone John Lennon

    Dentist Wants to Clone John Lennon

    {{A dentist wants to make a clone of John Lennon.

    Michael Zuk purchased a tooth belonging to the late star – who was a member of legendary rock band The Beatles – at an auction for $33 000 and is hoping to extract enough DNA to be able create a clone. }}

    Speaking on Channel 4’s Dead Famous DNA, he explained: ”If there is enough DNA to sequence it, it could be basically genetic real estate.

    ”My aim is to own John Lennon’s DNA.”

    Dr Zuk revealed that once cloning technology is advanced enough to replicate a human, he plans to use the molar to clone the deceased singer and will then raise him as his own child.

    He said: ”He could be looked at as my son… He would still be his exact duplicate but you know, hopefully keep him away from drugs and cigarettes, that kind of thing.

    ”But you know, guitar lessons wouldn’t hurt anyone right?’

    {wirestory}

  • Thieves Shoot Woman Over Plastic Container

    Thieves Shoot Woman Over Plastic Container

    {{ A 63-year-old woman was shot and killed on Friday evening in Lenasia, south west of Johannesburg, after robbers mistook a plastic bag, carrying a plastic container, as carrying money instead, Gauteng police said.}}

    “Around 19:00 on Friday evening, the 63-year-old woman was dropped off from work by her brother,” Warrant Officer Kay Makhubela said.

    “The brother had a shop in Lenasia.”

    While the brother was dropping his sister off, a red car stopped behind them, with three men believed to be in the car.

    “As she got out the car, one of the men got out and shot and killed her. [He] took the plastic bag she was carrying and [they] drove off and left her,” Makhubela said.

    The woman died on the scene shortly afterwards.

    Makhubela said the motive appeared to be robbery.

    “The men knew they were coming from the shop and believed that the plastic bag had money in it,” he said.

    “There was no money in the plastic bag. It was an empty plastic container.”

    No arrests have been made.

    Police were investigating.

    – SAPA

  • Pope Asks Forgiveness for Child Abuse by Priests

    Pope Asks Forgiveness for Child Abuse by Priests

    {{Pope Francis made his first public plea for forgiveness on Friday for the “evil” committed by priests who molested children, using some of his strongest words yet on the Roman Catholic Church’s sexual abuse crisis.}}

    Yet the Argentine-born pontiff said the Church had to take an even stronger stand against the scandal that has haunted it for over two decades.

    “I feel compelled… to personally ask for forgiveness for the damage that they have done by having sexually abused children,” he told members of members of the International Catholic Child Bureau, an NGO committed to protecting the rights of the child.

    Francis said the number of guilty priests was “quite a few in number” but “obviously not compared to the number of all the priests”.

    {{“Personal, moral damage”}}

    “The Church is aware of this … personal, moral damage carried out by men of the Church, and we will not take one step backward with regards to how we will deal with this problem, and to the sanctions that must be imposed,” he continued.

    “On the contrary, we have to be even stronger. Because you cannot interfere with children,” Francis said.

    Victims’ groups have criticised Francis in recent months for not taking a bold enough stand on the issue. He was also criticized for failing to meet with victims of sexual abuse in Italy and in a July trip to Brazil.

    The Vatican announced in December the creation of a new dedicated group to help the Church fight the abuse crisis but only named its members in late March.

    The group of clerics and lay people includes Marie Collins, a survivor of abuse in Ireland in the 1960s, who has campaigned for the protection of children and for justice for children who were molested.

    {france24}

  • UK Military Provokes Argentina

    UK Military Provokes Argentina

    {{Britain has been accused of provoking Argentina with plans to hold military exercises in the Falkland Islands.}}

    Argentina said next week’s drills would include missile launches and were part of a “pattern” of “hostile acts”.

    The British ambassador in Buenos Aires has been summoned by Argentina’s deputy foreign minister, who will protest over the “new show of military force”.

    Argentine President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner has called the islands “Nato’s military base” in the region.

    Argentina claims the islands, which are known to it as Las Malvinas.

    It said the UK planned to conduct the exercises on “occupied Argentine territory” between 14 and 27 April.

    A spokesman for the Argentine embassy in London added: “This action is a new example of UK’s disregard for United Nations resolutions, which call on both parties to resume negotiations over sovereignty and refrain from introducing unilateral modifications in the situation as long as the dispute persists.”

    Islanders voted by 1,513 to three to remain a British overseas territory in a referendum last year.

    UK Prime Minister David Cameron said at the time that the result “could not have sent a clearer message”.

    {wirestory}