Author: Publisher

  • Sudan Apostate Mother on Death Row Unchained

    Sudan Apostate Mother on Death Row Unchained

    Sudanese jailers removed the chains from a Christian woman, sentenced to death for apostasy, after she gave birth in prison last month, one of her lawyers said Tuesday.

    The case of Meriam Yahia Ibrahim Ishag sparked an outcry from Western governments and rights groups after a judge sentenced her on May 15 to hang.

    Born to a Muslim father, she was convicted under Islamic sharia law that has been in force in Sudan since 1983 and outlaws conversions on pain of death.

    Twelve days after the verdict, Ishag gave birth to a daughter at the women’s prison in Khartoum’s twin city of Omdurman.

    “They removed the chains” after she delivered, one of her lawyers, Mohanad Mustafa, told reporters.

    “This is on order by the doctor.”

    Sudanese law requires anyone sentenced to death to be shackled but Mustafa said he did not think they would be put back on again.

    After the delivery, Ishag was moved to the prison clinic from a cell she shared with other women.

    “After she gave birth the conditions got better,” Mustafa said.

    “She has air conditioning. She has a good bed,” he said after he and Ishag’s Catholic husband, Daniel Wani, visited her.

    “She’s fine. Usually her husband brings the food, and he gives her money” to buy any other items she needs.

    The couple’s 20-month-old son is also incarcerated with Ishag and their daughter.

    Mustafa said that despite the relative improvement in Ishag’s conditions, “a prison is a prison.”

    Last week, European Union leaders called for revocation of the “inhumane verdict,” while US Secretary of State John Kerry urged Khartoum to repeal its laws banning Muslims from converting.

    British Prime Minister David Cameron said the way she has been treated “is barbaric and has no place in today’s world.”

    Mustafa and four other human rights lawyers handling her case for free have appealed the verdict.

    “We’re still waiting,” and there is no word on when the higher court’s decision may come, Mustafa said.

    ‘Never a Muslim’

    A church source was optimistic Ishag would be freed because of international pressure on Sudan.

    “I am hopeful that she will be released,” said the source, asking for anonymity.

    But Muslim extremist groups have been lobbying the Islamist government over Ishag’s case, prominent newspaper editor Khalid Tigani has said.

    Ishag, born in eastern Sudan’s Gedaref state on November 3, 1987, is the daughter of a Sudanese Muslim father and an Ethiopian Orthodox Christian mother, a statement obtained by media on Tuesday from the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Khartoum says.

    Her father abandoned the family when Ishag was five, and she was raised according to her mother’s faith, it says.

    “She has never been a Muslim in her life,” said the statement signed by Father Mussa Timothy Kacho, episcopal vicar for Khartoum.

    Ishag joined the Catholic church shortly before she married the Khartoum-born Wani in December 2011, the vicar said.

    Wani is a United States citizen, the US embassy confirmed to AFP on Tuesday.

    The case against Ishag dates from 2013 when “a group of men who claim to be Meriam’s relatives” filed an initial legal action, the vicar’s statement said.

    In fact, she had never seen those men before, the statement added, in comments confirmed by the lawyer Mustafa.

    Ishag and her husband own a barber shop, a mini-mart and an agricultural project in Gedaref, the vicar said.

    Mustafa did not know if there is a link between the businesses and the case against Ishag but he said: “Surely there is something behind this”.

    The Ishag case is the latest problem facing Sudan, an impoverished nation battling rebellions in its west and south, while more than six million people need humanitarian aid.

  • Umurabyo Editor Uwimana Nkusi Released From Prison

    Umurabyo Editor Uwimana Nkusi Released From Prison

    The Editor of Umurabyo newspaper Agnes Uwimana Nkusi was released on Wednesday after successfully completing four years in jail.

    “I am very happy to get out of jail and I will continue my career,” she told reporters as she left jail, adding she would continue to write critical articles of the government.

    She added, “I’m not afraid because of my four-year sentence…I have no regrets, I am determined to do my job until I die.”

    Her sentence of 17 years was cut to four in 2012, after the supreme court cleared her of genocide denial and promoting ethnic divisions.
    uuu898.jpg

  • Kenya Arrests Sunday Massacre Suspects

    Kenya Arrests Sunday Massacre Suspects

    Kenya Police have arrested two suspects in connection with Sunday’s attack and a subsequent raid on Monday in Mpeketoni in Lamu County, Kenya, that left more than 60 people dead.

    One suspect, Ahmed Abdallah, is alleged to be the owner of a vehicle said to have been used by the gunmen to perpetrate the attacks.

    Mr Abdallah is also claimed to be linked to Plot 270 land in Mpeketoni where some of the squatters living on it were killed and was Wednesday morning recording a statement with police.

    The second suspect, Salim Dyana, claimed to have been hired as a driver in one of the vehicles used in the attacks for Sh20,000 ($228), police said.

    The arrests came as Inspector-General of Police David Kimaiyo appointed a new District Administration Police commander Mr John Njenga Miiri, who has already taken charge of the situation.

    Mr Miiri’s appointment follows the suspension of top security officials in the area, who are blamed for being negligent regarding the attacks.

    Paramilitary forces

    On Tuesday, President Uhuru Kenyatta blamed the police for not acting on intelligence on the impending attacks and said that some officers would be charged in court for abdicating their responsibility.

    The situation in the town was calm Wednesday morning, with hundreds of paramilitary General Security Unit officers having been dispatched to the area.

    Some of the residents, terrified by the killings and seeking to flee the area, urged the government to provide transport for them to move to other areas.

    Another group whose vehicles were burnt during the raid by the gunmen asked police to sign abstract certificates to help them make insurance claims.

    They said the police were reluctant to sign the papers and were, therefore, seeking an audience with Inspector-General Kimaiyo.

    Mr Kimaiyo, the Cabinet Secretary for Interior Joseph Ole Lenku, Principal Secretary Mutea Iringo and other top security officials are in the town in the wake of the attacks.

    On Wednesday morning, the officials were held up in a closed-door meeting to deliberate on the security situation.

  • AU Lifts Suspension Against Egypt, Guinea Bissau

    AU Lifts Suspension Against Egypt, Guinea Bissau

    The African Union (AU) ended the suspension of Egypt and Guinea Bissau from the grouping on Tuesday after the two countries elected new leaders, a senior AU official said.

    Egypt held an election in May after it was suspended from all the activities of the African body when the military overthrew the elected president, Islamist Mohamed Mursi, in July last year. Guinea Bissau also held a vote in May after a military takeover.

    Suspension is the AU’s usual response to any interruption of constitutional rule by a member.

    “Today a decision has been taken to allow Egypt to regain its seat in all the activities of the African Union,” AU Commissioner for Peace and Security Smail Chergui told Reuters.

    Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, who removed Mursi when he was head of Egypt’s army, was sworn into office in June after a poll in which he won 96.91 percent of the vote.

    Guinea Bissau’s election winner was Jose Mario Vaz, a former finance minister and candidate for the dominant African Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde (PAIGC). The result was initially challenged by the loser who then conceded.

    “Now we have a president elected and recognised by even those who were opposed,” Chergui said.

    agencies

  • Maradona Criticises Poor Brazil

    Maradona Criticises Poor Brazil

    After watching Brazil play to a scoreless draw against Mexico, former Argentina superstar Diego Maradona criticised the Soccer World Cup hosts for their unconvincing performance through two matches at the 2014 finals.

    “If they want to be one of the favourites, then Brazil need to drastically improve themselves,” the 1986 world champion told the De Zurda (From left) show on Venezuelan TV channel Telesur Tuesday night.

    The 53-year-old said the Selecao are relying too much on Neymar. The Brazilian star did have some good chances against Mexico, but he was not as effective as he was versus Croatia.

    “I recognised that Mexico can play at the same level as Brazil because other than Neymar, Brazil do not know how to attack,” said Maradona, who believes there are are no other options up front.

    The Argentinean great also said the referees are looking after the Brazilians, saying Brazilian Thiago Silva should have seen the red card for his foul on Javier Hernandez.

    “That leaves one to wonder if Brazil want to get better that it would do so thanks to the referee more than their own doing,” added Maradona.

    diego.jpg
    reuters

  • ICC prosecutor Slams UN Council Over Inaction In Darfur

    ICC prosecutor Slams UN Council Over Inaction In Darfur

    The prosecutor of the International Criminal Court slammed the U.N. Security Council on Tuesday for failing to take action against Sudan’s government and to push for the arrest of President Omar Hassan al-Bashir and others on charges of war crimes in Darfur.

    “Close to ten years since the much lauded council’s referral of the situation in Darfur to the International Criminal Court, systematic and widespread crimes continue to be committed with total impunity in Darfur,” ICC prosecutor Fatou Bensouda said.

    “Time is long overdue for the government of Sudan’s consistent defiance of U.N. Security Council resolutions to be matched by this council’s decisive action,” Bensouda told the council – the 19th such briefing on the western Darfur region.

    Action by the 15-member Security Council is seen as unlikely as veto-wielding member China traditionally acts as Khartoum’s protector.

    China abstained on the council vote in 2005 that authorized the ICC to investigate Darfur, but has said it has “serious reservations” about the charges against Bashir.

    “China has not changed its position on the ICC in regard to Darfur,” China’s U.N. diplomat Cai Weiming told the council.

    British U.N. diplomat Paul McKell said it was a “poor reflection” on the Security Council that it had been unable to act. “We must do more to follow up on the referral to the ICC,” he told the council.

    The Hague-based court indicted Bashir in 2009 and has also charged Defense Minister Abdel Raheem Muhammad Hussein, former Interior Minister Ahmed Haroun and Janjaweed militia leader Ali Kushayb with war crimes in Darfur.

    “The reality is that the ICC’s judicial process cannot take place without arrests. Darfur suspects remain at large and no meaningful steps have been taken to apprehend them and bring them to justice,” Bensouda said.

    additional reporting reuters

  • Nigeria Blast Hits World Cup Viewers

    Nigeria Blast Hits World Cup Viewers

    nige.jpg

    At least 21 people have been killed in a bomb blast in northern Nigeria as they were watching a World Cup match, a hospital source has told media.

    Witnesses in Damaturu, in Yobe state, say a suicide bomber in a tricycle taxi detonated explosives as people watched Brazil’s match against Mexico on TV.

    At least 27 people are said to have been seriously injured.

    Public screenings of the World Cup in some parts of Nigeria have been banned because of threats by Boko Haram.

    Three states, including Yobe, are under a government-imposed state of emergency following years of attacks.

    No group has said it was behind the latest blast.

    The local police chief said it was not a viewing centre where Nigerians often watch football matches, as these have been banned in the state.

    Other sources say it was a viewing centre which was attacked.

    While the police say 13 people died, the hospital worker told media he had personally counted 21 bodies.

    Correspondents say Nigeria’s authorities often downplay the number of casualties.

    In another development, the authorities say a senior Boko Haram militant was among almost 500 northerners arrested as they travelled to Nigeria’s oil hub of Port Harcourt earlier this week.

    The authorities did not name the suspect. Relatives of those arrested say they had no links to Boko Haram and had gone to southern Nigeria for economic reasons.

    The Damaturu hospital worker said truckloads of injured people were being treated in overcrowded wards after the explosion on Tuesday evening.

    “The military and police trucks that brought them in have made four return trips so far ferrying them in,” the worker said.ndf-2.jpg

  • IMF in Warning Over Argentina Ruling at US Supreme Court

    IMF in Warning Over Argentina Ruling at US Supreme Court

    The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has warned that Argentina’s legal defeat in its fight against hedge fund investors may have wider implications.

    On Monday, a US Supreme Court ruling sided with bondholders demanding Argentina pay them $1.3bn.

    The IMF said it was concerned about “broader systemic implications”.

    Meanwhile the ratings agency S&P cut Argentina’s credit rating, warning the ruling made it more likely that the country would default.

    “The Argentine government has limited capacity to pay the plaintiff creditors while servicing its current debt”, S&P said.

    S&P reduced the credit rating by two notches from “CCC+” to “CCC-“.

    The move theoretically makes it more expensive for Argentina to borrow money. However, the country has been unable to raise funds on the international market since its 2001-02 debt default.

    Argentina’s Economy Minister, Axel Kicillof, said the government was “starting to take steps” to restructure the debt under Argentine law – as a way of avoiding complying with the US order.

    In a press conference Mr Kicillof said this would allow the country to honour its commitments with those creditors who had accepted the initial agreement.

    Argentina has agreed a restructuring with the bulk of investors holding its defaulted debt, but the so-called “hold-outs” have been fighting for 100% of the value.

    Mr Kicillof added that he would be sending lawyers to speak to the US judge behind the ruling, Thomas Griesa.

    On Monday President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner said her country would not bow to “extortion”, in a reference to the court’s ruling. She urged people to “remain tranquil” in the days ahead.

    arge.jpg

    Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner went on national television to say her country could not comply with the ruling

  • US Executes Inmate Since Botched Attempt

    US Executes Inmate Since Botched Attempt

    The US state of Georgia has carried out the first execution in the US since a botched lethal injection in Oklahoma in April.

    Marcus Wellons, who raped and killed a 15-year-old in 1989, died by injection of a single drug late on Tuesday.

    Shortly afterwards John Winfield was executed in Missouri for two killings.

    The men were among three set to die within 24 hours, after nine executions were stayed since one in Oklahoma went wrong seven weeks ago.

    A last-minute appeal by Wellons over the source of the drugs used to kill him failed at the Supreme Court.

    He was pronounced dead at 23:56 (03:56 GMT), more than an hour after the execution began, a Georgia corrections spokesperson said. No obvious complications were reported.

    Winfield was executed by lethal injection just after midnight on Wednesday (05:00 GMT) for killing two women in 1996.

    Officials in Oklahoma halted the execution of Clayton Lockett in April after he began making noises, and he died of a heart attack less than an hour later.

    Like Oklahoma, Georgia and Missouri refuse to say where they are obtaining drugs for lethal injections, or if they are tested.

    Lawyers for Wellons, as well as others on death row, have challenged such secrecy in court.

    John Ruthell Henry is scheduled to be executed at 18:00 local time on Wednesday in Florida.

    wirestory