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  • Afrikaners Demand Economic Freedom

    Afrikaners Demand Economic Freedom

    {{Afrikaners, including some farmers, also believe in economic freedom, according to a white Economic Freedom Fighters communications and media strategist, Beeld reported on Wednesday.}}

    “Some of them also believe in economic freedom,” Kim Heller was quoted as saying.

    {“I believe any South African who has an interest in democracy will be interested in the economic freedom that the EFF seeks.”}

    According to the report, Heller had been voting for the African National Congress since 1994 but had now joined the EFF.

    “I thought the EFF offers a real alternative. I support the party fully.”

    Support for the EFF was growing among white people, she said.

    Heller is on the EFF’s national and Gauteng lists.

    In February, EFF leader Julius Malema called on white people to join the party to get their hands on land.

    “White people must join the struggle for land. Only two percent of whites own land. If they want land, they must join EFF,” he said at the time.

    He said the EFF was not an anti-white party but a vanguard for the working class.

    “That includes the white workers,” he said.

    However, in October Malema said the land belonged to the landless and white South Africans were still refusing to hand over the land they inherited “through theft”.

    “Till today they [whites] are not ashamed of killing our people. They want us to kneel before them,” he said at the time.

    “We are not going to do that. We are not going to beg for the land. Bring back the land.”

    News24

  • Mali President Names Negotiator for Tuareg Talks

    Mali President Names Negotiator for Tuareg Talks

    {{Mali’s president has chosen a former prime minister to negotiate with separatist rebels.}}

    President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita named Modibo Keita in a statement.

    Tuareg rebels, who want an independent homeland in Mali’s north, greeted the announcement coolly, saying they were waiting for concrete actions.

    They launched a rebellion in 2012 and took control of much of the region. But al-Qaeda-linked extremists later moved in, and a French-led intervention last year wrested back control of the area.

    There were hopes that a newly elected government would negotiate a political solution, but talks between the government and the separatists have stalled. The opposition says the impasse is contributing to insecurity in the north.

    Last week a UN soldier was hurt when a mine exploded at an airstrip in the country’s north.

    – AP

  • M23 Rebels Stuck in Uganda

    M23 Rebels Stuck in Uganda

    {{The civilian head of Congo’s vanquished M23 rebel movement says hundreds of rebels are stuck in Uganda as they await confirmation of amnesty from Congo’s government.}}

    Rene Abandi said on Thursday that he expects Congo to “widen” the list of those under consideration for amnesty, one of the sticking points between both sides before they signed a peace deal late last year.

    More than 600 M23 rebels – including their UN-sanctioned commander, Sultani Makenga — fled to Uganda last year after facing military pressure from Congolese and UN forces.

    Congo’s president earlier this year declared amnesty for about 50 former rebels and insurgents, including at least 15 former M23 rebels.

    Congo’s government insists rebel leaders like Makenga can’t get amnesty for alleged crimes committed during fighting in eastern Congo.

    – AP

  • Armenia Accuses Turkey of Genocide Denial

    Armenia Accuses Turkey of Genocide Denial

    {{Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian on Thursday accused Turkey of an “utter denial” in failing to recognise World War I mass killings of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire as a genocide, after Ankara for the first time offered condolences for the tragedy.}}

    “The Armenian Genocide… is alive as far as the successor of the Ottoman Turkey continues its policy of utter denial,” Sarkisian said in a statement marking the 99th anniversary of the massacres.

    “The denial of a crime constitutes the direct continuation of that very crime,” he added. “Only recognition and condemnation can prevent the repetition of such crimes in the future.”

    He said the looming 100th anniversary offered “Turkey a good chance to repent and to set aside the historical stigma if they make efforts to set free their state’s future from this heavy burden.”

    In an unprecedented move by a Turkish leader, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Wednesday offered condolences over the massacres, calling them “our shared pain”.

    He also stressed that the events of 1915 “should not prevent Turks and Armenians from establishing compassion and mutually humane attitudes towards one another”.

    Using both diplomatic levers and its influential diaspora abroad, Armenia has long sought to win the massacre’s international recognition as a genocide.

    Armenians say up to 1.5 million people were killed during World War I as the Ottoman Empire was falling apart, a claim supported by several other countries.

    Turkey argues 300 000 to 500 000 Armenians and at least as many Turks died in civil strife when Armenians rose up against their Ottoman rulers siding with invading Russian troops.

    Over 20 countries have so far recognised the massacres as genocide.

    – AFP

  • Norway Torn on Dalai Visit as China Threatens

    Norway Torn on Dalai Visit as China Threatens

    {{A planned visit by the Dalai Lama has Oslo torn between its will to warm up frozen ties with China and warnings from the public not to compromise its stance on human rights.}}

    Rather than rolling out the red carpet, the Norwegian authorities seem more inclined to make the Tibetan spiritual leader enter through the back door when he arrives on 7 May for the 25th anniversary of his Nobel Peace Prize.

    “We must be aware that, if the Norwegian authorities receive the Dalai Lama, it will be more complicated to normalise our relations,” Foreign Minister Boerge Brende said in parliament this week.

    The attribution of the Nobel Peace Prize to Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo in 2010 revived the long-forgotten anger that Beijing expressed when the Tibetan leader received it, bringing bilateral relations to a new low and prompting Chinese leaders to freeze high-level contacts with their Norwegian counterparts.

    Oslo’s attempts to normalise relations with the world’s second largest economy have since proven fruitless, as China wants to set an example to deter other countries.

    {{On Wednesday, China issued a new warning.}}

    “We are firmly opposed to other countries providing a platform for the Dalai Lama’s activities that aim at dividing China, and we oppose foreign leaders meeting him,” foreign ministry spokesperson Qin Gang said.

    In order to prevent any escalation, the president of the Norwegian parliament Olemic Thommessen – second only to the king in Norway’s protocol – said he would not meet the Tibetan leader, who was received by Barack Obama last month in the White House.

    “Our possibilities to promote these values that are so dear to us don’t benefit from maintaining such a hopeless situation as the one we find ourselves in now,” Thommessen told public broadcaster NRK on Tuesday.

    Brende said that no decision had been made regarding a possible meeting between a member of the government and the Dalai Lama, with the ministry stressing that the visit is “private”.

    {{‘Empty words’}}

    The fact that Brende and Thommessen are former leaders of the parliamentary committee for Tibet, the latter as recently as last year, added to the controversy.

    As Norway prepares to celebrate the bicentennial of its constitution on 17 May, several commentators accused its leaders of betraying Norwegian values and letting China dictate their policy.

    “The contrast is huge with all the beautiful words the president of the Parliament and others use in this jubilee year,” said Harald Stanghelle, editor-in-chief of Aftenposten, the most respected Norwegian daily, who criticised the authorities’ “cowardice”.

    “Words like democracy and independence, freedom of speech and human rights. The announced visit of the Tibetan [leader] proves that these are but empty words.”

    According to a survey published by the Verdens Gang tabloid, 60% of Norwegians think that the government should meet the Dalai Lama and 50% said it would be “cowardly” not to do it out of consideration for Beijing.

    Only 20% Thommessen’s stand.

    “I don’t feel guilty of being cowardly or pathetic,” Thommessen said.

    “It is just about assuming one’s responsibilities to … actually improve the chances to work for the values, especially human rights, that we hold dear.”

    The current chairperson of the parliamentary committee for Tibet, Ketil Kjenseth, lamented the authorities’ efforts to soothe Beijing.

    “In Tibet, the situation in terms of human rights hasn’t changed an inch, but our economic dependence on China got in the way,” he told media, adding that he was determined to receive the Dalai Lama in parliament.

    Despite the freeze in diplomatic relations, bilateral trade climbed to a record high last year.

    Highlighting the importance of symbols in diplomatic protocol, Kjenseth has not been authorised to hold the meeting in the room he initially suggested.

    Among the solutions suggested by the presidency was a room in the basement.

    It has also been suggested that the Dalai Lama not use the main entrance to the building, an idea that has brewed up a storm among critics.

    – AFP

  • France: Environment Minister Orders Staff to “Dress Appropriately”

    France: Environment Minister Orders Staff to “Dress Appropriately”

    {{Ségolène Royal {above}, French President François Hollande’s former partner and the mother of his four children, has denied claims she ordered female staff at the Environment Ministry to “dress appropriately” and avoid revealing tops.}}

    The report, published by French weekly Le Point on Thursday, claimed Royal, who joined Hollande’s Socialist government following a cabinet reshuffle earlier this month, had also banned smoking in the ministry’s courtyard and gardens in her presence.

    Denying the “ridiculous rumours” on her Twitter account, Royal said the only instruction she had given colleagues was to be sparing in their use of public funds.

    This is not the first such report to emerge in the French press.

    Last week, L’Express, another French weekly, said the new environment minister had also banned the “bise”, France’s traditional cheek kiss, urging staff to greet her with a more formal handshake instead.

    A formal presidential runner-up, Royal, 60, has made a remarkable comeback after a string of political setbacks, including a humiliating defeat in parliamentary elections in 2012.

    She has been criticized in the past for her allegedly dictatorial behavior and is often described by French media as the “Iron Lady”.

    {france24}

  • Roberto Martinez tips Moyes for Quick Return to Management

    Roberto Martinez tips Moyes for Quick Return to Management

    {{Everton manager Roberto Martinez has backed predecessor David Moyes to make a swift return to management.}}

    Moyes, who led Everton to fourth in the Premier League during 11 years at the club, left to join Manchester United last summer but was sacked on Tuesday.

    “I am sure he will be ready to get into another job and I am sure he won’t have a lack of offers,” Martinez said.

    “He will always be well thought of and we will always be thankful of the job he did at our football club.”

    Moyes won the League Managers’ Association Manager of the Year three times at Everton, where he won 218 of his 518 matches in charge.

    But as Sir Alex Ferguson’s successor he was dismissed only 10 months into a six-year contract, having achieved 27 wins from 51 matches and suffered seven home defeats, leaving United in seventh place and likely to miss out on European qualification for the first time since the ban on English clubs was lifted in 1990.

    Moyes’s final match in charge of United proved to be a 2-0 defeat against his former team at Goodison Park last weekend.

    “We know David Moyes will look forward to the next footballing chapter and next experience,” said former Swansea and Wigan boss Martinez, who has taken Everton to fifth in his first season.

    “We all know he is a very successful man and has a real strong winning mentality and he will get ready to bounce back straight away.

    “It is very difficult to get that experience, the amount of years he has been working at the highest level, and the know-how he has is a real strength.

    “We all know he is going to be very successful in the future. It has been a difficult experience, but any experience is a good experience in this game unfortunately.”

    BBC

  • Ukraine Forces Kill Up to Five Rebels

    Ukraine Forces Kill Up to Five Rebels

    {{ Ukrainian forces killed up to five pro-Moscow separatists in the east of the country, the Interior Ministry said on Thursday, as Russian President Vladimir Putin warned of “consequences” if Kiev used the army against its own people.}}

    Interior Ministry forces backed by the army removed three checkpoints manned by armed groups in the separatist-controlled town of Slaviansk, the ministry said in a statement.

    “During the armed clash up to five terrorists were eliminated,” it said, adding that one person had been wounded on the side of government forces.

    Under an international accord signed in Geneva last week, illegal armed groups, including the rebels occupying about a dozen public buildings in the largely Russian-speaking east, are supposed to disarm and go home.

    However, the Kremlin, which has deployed tens of thousands of troops on Ukraine’s border, maintains it has the right to protect Russian-speakers if they come under threat, a reason it gave for annexing the Crimean peninsula from Ukraine last month.

    In St Petersburg, Putin said that if the authorities in Kiev had used the army in eastern Ukraine, this would be a very serious crime against its own people.

    “It is just a punitive operation and it will of course incur consequences for the people making these decisions, including (an effect) on our interstate relations,” Putin said in a televised meeting with regional media.

    The Geneva agreement, signed by Russia, the United States, Ukraine and the European Union, is already in trouble as Kiev launches its offensive to regain control of the east.

    East and West have put the onus on each other to ensure the accord is implemented on the ground. U.S. President Barack Obama said earlier he was poised to impose new sanctions on Moscow if it did not act fast to end the armed stand-off.

    reuters

  • US Medics Killed in Kabul Attack

    US Medics Killed in Kabul Attack

    {{Three Americans have been shot dead by a policeman at a hospital in the Afghan capital, Kabul, US officials say.}}

    A spokesman for Afghanistan’s interior ministry described those killed as “medical staff”.

    The hospital, which specialises in children’s and maternal health, is run by Cure, a small US Christian charity. Two others were reported wounded.

    The attacker, who reportedly shot himself, is in police custody. His motive remains unclear, officials say.

    Afghanistan suffered a spate of deadly attacks in the run-up to presidential elections on 5 April.

    The US embassy in Kabul tweeted that it was “with great sadness we confirm that three Americans were killed in the attack on Cure Hospital”. No other information would be released for the moment, it added.

  • U.N. Security Council Members Mulling South Sudan Sanctions

    U.N. Security Council Members Mulling South Sudan Sanctions

    {{ U.N. Security Council members are considering sanctions on South Sudan’s warring parties, envoys said on Wednesday, after U.N. peacekeeping chief Herve Ladsous demanded “serious consequences” be imposed to force an end to the violence.}}

    Ladsous and U.N. Assistant Secretary-General for human rights Ivan Simonovic briefed the 15-member council on a recent escalation in attacks on civilians, including an ethnic massacre in the oil town of Bentiu and the killing of dozens of people who had sought refuge inside a U.N. peacekeeping base in Bor.

    “Unless there are serious consequences for the parties to cease the violence and engage in meaningful talks … the toll on innocent civilians will continue to rise,” Ladsous told reporters after the closed-door council meeting.

    “The United Nations is doing everything it can to protect the civilians that are fleeing the violence, the war, but let us never forget that the primary responsibility for protection of civilians is with the government,” he said.

    Nigerian U.N. Ambassador Joy Ogwu, president of the council for April, said there was a lot of support among council members for pursuing sanctions on South Sudan.

    “I think we are ready to go down the road of sanctions,” French U.N. Ambassador Gerard Araud told reporters.

    U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, Samantha Power, posted on Twitter after the briefing: “For the sake of the people of South Sudan, international community must sanction political spoilers and those who target civilians.”

    The United States and the European Union have already threatened South Sudan with sanctions.

    President Barack Obama earlier this month authorized possible targeted sanctions against those committing human rights abuses in South Sudan or undermining democracy and obstructing the peace process.

    reuters