Tag: InternationalNews

  • Sierra Leone’s War Leader Dies

    Sierra Leone’s War Leader Dies

    {{Sierra Leone’s ex-president and war-time leader Ahmad Tejan Kabbah has died at the age of 82 after a long illness.}}

    He died on Thursday afternoon at his home in the capital, Freetown, with his wife and close family members at his side, reports say.

    In a statement, Sierra Leone’s government said Mr Kabbah’s death was an “irreparable loss”.

    Mr Kabbah was praised for his leadership during and after Sierra’s Leone’s decade-long civil war.

    Tens of thousands died in the conflict, with many more maimed and raped.

    The rebel Revolutionary United Front’s trademark was to hack off the hands or feet of their victims.

    The conflict officially ended in 2002 after foreign forces intervened to help defeat the rebels.

    ‘Peace and stability’
    Mr Kabbah was first elected president in 1996, ending a decade of military rule. He was briefly ousted in a military coup the following year before being restored to power by a West African regional force.

    He won a landslide victory in the 2002 elections and was praised for maintaining peace and establishing democratic institutions, although he was also criticised for failing to tackle poverty.

    “If we are now enjoying peace and stability in Sierra Leone, there is no way President Kabbah could be dissociated from that,” government spokesman Abdulai Bayraytay said on Thursday.

    Born in 1932, Ahmad Tejan Kabbah began his career in public service in 1959, rising to become the youngest permanent secretary in the country in the late 1960s.

    He then spent 21 years working for the UN Development Programme, based in New York, Lesotho and Tanzania.

    In 2012 the UN-backed Sierra Leone war crimes court in The Hague convicted former Liberian leader Charles Taylor of aiding and abetting war crimes in the Sierra Leone civil war.

    He was the first former head of state convicted by an international court since the Nuremburg military tribunal of Nazis after World War II.

    BBC

  • US-Russia in Ukraine crisis talks

    US-Russia in Ukraine crisis talks

    {{US Secretary of State John Kerry is in London for key talks on Ukraine with his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov, as a disputed referendum in Crimea looms on Sunday.}}

    Mr Kerry is expected to warn Mr Lavrov that the referendum and Russia’s military intervention in Crimea could trigger concerted US and EU sanctions.

    He has warned of “very serious steps” if Russia annexes the region.

    Russia insisted at the UN on Thursday it did “not want war” with Ukraine.

    During an emergency meeting of the Security Council, Moscow’s ambassador to the UN Vitaly Churkin defended the right of Crimea, which is predominantly ethnic Russian, to decide whether or not to join the Russian Federation.

    Russia’s military intervention followed the fall of Ukraine’s pro-Moscow President Viktor Yanukovych on 22 February.

    Mr Kerry had talks with UK Prime Minister David Cameron before his meeting with the Russian foreign minister at the US ambassador’s residence in central London.

    Our correspondent says they will have very different accounts of events in Ukraine.

    Mr Kerry will try to persuade Russia that it risks paying a heavy price in political and economic damage from American and European measures which could be triggered by Sunday’s referendum.

    “If there is no sign of any capacity to be able to move forward and resolve this issue, there will be a very serious series of steps on Monday in Europe and here [in Washington] with respect to the options that are available to us,” Mr Kerry said before arriving in London on Friday.

    BBC

  • US Death Row Man Free After 25 Years

    US Death Row Man Free After 25 Years

    {Speaking following his release, Mr Ford said that he had been denied the right to see his son grow up}

    {{A man who spent more than 25 years on death row in the US state of Louisiana has walked free from prison after his murder conviction for the 1983 killing of a jeweller was overturned.}}

    Glenn Ford, 64, had been on death row since August 1988.

    He had been found guilty of killing 56-year-old Isadore Rozeman, a jeweller for whom Mr Ford occasionally worked.

    US media reports say that he is one of the longest-serving death row inmates in modern US history to be exonerated.

    Mr Ford had always denied killing Mr Rozeman.

    {{‘Very pleased’}}

    Asked by a reporter how he was feeling as he left the high security prison in Angola, Louisiana, Mr Ford said: “My mind is going in all kinds of directions but it feels good.”

    He said that he did harbour some resentment because he had been locked up for almost 30 years “for something I didn’t do” and had lost years of his life.

    “Thirty years, 30 years of my life if not all of it. I can’t go back and do anything that I should’ve been doing when I was 35, 38 and 40 – stuff like that. My son when I left was a baby, now they’re grown men with babies.”

    State District Judge Ramona Emanuel on Monday overturned Mr Ford’s conviction and sentence because of new information that supported his claim that he was not present or involved in Mr Rozeman’s death, Mr Ford’s lawyers said.

    He was convicted over the 1983 killing and sentenced to death.

    “We are very pleased to see Glenn Ford finally exonerated, and we are particularly grateful that the prosecution and the court moved ahead so decisively to set Mr Ford free,” a statement by the freed man’s lawyers said.

    They said that his trial had been “compromised by inexperienced counsel and by the unconstitutional suppression of evidence, including information from an informant”.

    They also drew attention to what they said was a suppressed police report related to the time of the crime and evidence involving the murder weapon.

    The family of the murder victim have also welcomed his release, US media has reported.

    The many flaws in the case against Mr Ford have been listed by the US press:

    No murder weapon was ever found and there were no eyewitnesses to the crime
    Mr Ford was initially implicated in the killing by a woman who later testified she had lied

    Mr Ford’s original court-appointed lawyers had never tried a murder case
    Mr Ford, a black man, was convicted by an all-white jury who recommended the death sentence

    There are 83 men and two women serving death sentences in Louisiana.

    State law entitles those who have served time but are later exonerated to receive compensation.

    It sets out payments of $25,000per year of wrongful incarceration up to a maximum of $250,000, plus up to $80,000 for loss of “life opportunities”.

    BBC

  • Russian Court Sanctions Arrest of Ukrainian Nationalist Leader

    Russian Court Sanctions Arrest of Ukrainian Nationalist Leader

    {{A Moscow city court has sanctioned the arrest of a Ukrainian nationalist leader whom Moscow has accused of publicly encouraging acts of terrorism, while a Communist lawmaker urged Russian security services to send agents to Ukraine to “eliminate” the man.}}

    The Basmanny court on Wednesday issued a warrant for the arrest of Dmytro Yarosh, leader of the Ukrainian paramilitary organization Right Sector, “in absentia,” RIA Novosti reported.

    The court’s ruling provides police with a simplified procedure for taking Yarosh into custody if he comes to Russia.

    Yarosh was already on Russia’s wanted list, along with fellow Right Sector leader Oleksandr Muzychko, for making “public appeals to commit acts of terrorism” on the group’s page on the popular VKontakte social network.

    Yarosh said that the message — which appealed to Chechen terrorist leader Doku Umarov — was posted by hackers who broke into Right Sector’s VKontakte account.

    A State Duma lawmaker and deputy chief of the Communist Party, Valery Rashkin, said that the international arrest warrants Russia had issued for Yarosh and Muzychko were insufficient.

    Moscow should begin “eliminating terrorists and [other] individuals who have committed major crimes against servicemen and civilians,” he said in comments published on the Communist Party’s website on Tuesday.

    Yarosh and Muzychko are leaders of the Right Sector nationalist paramilitary movement, which was a major force in street protest movement that toppled former-Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych.

    {themoscowtimes}

  • Mexico Arrests Vigilante Leader Who Helped to Battle Drug Cartel

    Mexico Arrests Vigilante Leader Who Helped to Battle Drug Cartel

    {{A leader of armed vigilantes who are helping federal security forces combat a violent drug gang in western Mexico has been arrested on suspicion of murder, which could test the fragile peace the government has built there.}}

    The attorney general’s office in the state of Michoacan said late on Tuesday it detained Hipolito Mora on suspicion that he and others in his group took part in the killing of two men whose charred remains were found on Saturday.

    The government said this week that tensions have been rising between some of the vigilante groups in the state.

    Local media said one of the dead men belonged to another vigilante group. A federal official declined to confirm this, saying the incident was still under investigation. Mora could not be reached for comment.

    Mora is one of the most prominent leaders of “self-defense groups” that have weakened the Knights Templar, a drug cartel which has had much of Michoacan in a firm grip over the past few years.

    The government formed an uneasy alliance with the vigilantes after they overran a number of Knights Templar strongholds in Michoacan at the start of 2014, and has since captured one of the cartel’s leaders and killed another.

    Locals believe the vigilantes may have been infiltrated by organized crime groups, however, raising doubts about how sustainable the alliance is.

    Michoacan has become a test case for President Enrique Pena Nieto’s ability to crush the gangs in Mexico. More than 85,000 people have died in cartel-related violence since Pena Nieto’s predecessor Felipe Calderon launched a crackdown seven years ago.

    reuters

  • Ukraine Appeals to West as Crimea Turns to Russia

    Ukraine Appeals to West as Crimea Turns to Russia

    {Armed men, believed to be Russian servicemen, stand guard outside a Ukrainian military unit in the village of Perevalnoye outside Simferopol.}

    {{Ukraine’s government appealed for Western help on Tuesday to stop Moscow annexing Crimea but the Black Sea peninsula, overrun by Russian troops, seemed fixed on a course that could formalize rule from Moscow within days.}}

    With their own troops in Crimea effectively prisoners in their bases, the new authorities in Kiev painted a sorry picture of the military bequeathed them by the pro-Moscow president overthrown two weeks ago.

    They announced the raising of a new National Guard to be drawn from volunteers among veterans.

    The prime minister, heading for talks at the White House and United Nations, told parliament in Kiev he wanted the United States and Britain, as guarantors of a 1994 treaty that saw Ukraine give up its Soviet nuclear weapons, to intervene both diplomatically and militarily to fend off Russian “aggression”.

    But despite NATO reconnaissance aircraft patrolling the Polish and Romanian borders and U.S. naval forces preparing for exercises in the Black Sea, Western powers have made clear that, as when ex-Soviet Georgia lost territory in fighting in 2008, they have no appetite for risking turning the worst East-West crisis since the Cold War into a military conflict with Moscow.

    Diplomacy seemed restricted to a war of words. The U.S. and Russian foreign ministers did speak by telephone.

    But the U.S. State Department said Moscow’s position offered no room for negotiation and the Russian Foreign Ministry issued a statement condemning U.S. financial aid to the “illegitimate regime” in Kiev, which it calls ultra-nationalists with “Nazi” links.

    That language echoed ousted Ukrainian president Viktor Yanukovich, who gave a news conference in Russia insisting that he was still the legitimate head of state.

    Toppled by protests sparked by his rejection of closer ties with the European Union in favor of a deal from Russian President Vladimir Putin, Yanukovich blamed his enemies for provoking Crimean secession.

    Parliament in Kiev, whose position is backed by Western governments, dismisses plans for a referendum on Sunday to unite the region with Russia as illegitimate and resolved on Tuesday to dissolve Crimea’s regional assembly if by Wednesday it had not scrapped the plebiscite. There seems no chance that it will.

    Moscow, which to widespread scorn denies its troops have any role in the takeover of the once Russian-ruled region, says people in Crimea, a small majority of whom are ethnic Russians, should have the right to secede.

    It has made much of anti-Russian sentiment among some Ukrainian nationalists – though many native Russian speakers in Ukraine are wary of Putin.

    {{Sanctions, Referendum}}

    U.S. lawmakers are preparing sanctions against Russia and European Union leaders could impose penalties, such as bans on visas for key officials, as early as Monday.

    The chairman of the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee said on Tuesday he would introduce a bill that would include $150 million in aid for Ukraine, sanctions and backing for a shift in funding for the International Monetary Fund.

    The bill echoes one passed by the U.S. House of Representatives last week in backing $1 billion in loan guarantees for Ukraine, but it would also authorize $50 million for democracy, governance and civil society assistance, as well as $100 million for enhanced security cooperation for Ukraine and other states in Central and Eastern Europe.

    However, by the time the West acts, Crimea could already have voted – in a referendum not recognized by Kiev or the West – to seek union with Russia. The ballot paper offers no option to retain the status quo of autonomy within Ukraine.

    Voters among the two million population must choose either direct union with Moscow or restoring an old constitution that made Crimea sovereign with ties to Ukraine.

    On Tuesday, the regional assembly passed a resolution that a sovereign Crimea would sever links to Kiev and join Russia anyway.

    The Russian parliament has already approved the accession in principle of Crimea, which was handed to Ukraine by Soviet rulers 60 years ago.

    Still, it is not clear whether or how soon Putin would formalize such a union as he engages in a complex confrontation with the West for geostrategic advantage.

    In disputes with Georgia, Russia has granted recognition to small breakaway states on its borders, a process critics view as annexation in all but name.

    It fiercely criticized Western recognition of the independence of Kosovo from its ally Serbia – a process which Crimea’s parliament nonetheless cited as a legal precedent for its own forthcoming declaration of independence.

    There seems little chance that Crimea’s new leaders, who emerged after Yanukovich’s overthrow as Russian-backed forces took control of the peninsula, will fail to get the result they want.

    A boycott by ethnic Tatars, 12 percent of the regional population and deeply wary after centuries of persecution by Moscow, will have little effect as there is no minimum turnout.

    In Sevastopol, the Crimean home port of Russia’s Black Sea Fleet, Valery Medvedev, the chairman of the city’s electoral commission, made no pretence at concealing his own preference:

    “We’re living through historic times. Sevastopol would love to fulfil its dream of joining Russia. I want to be part of Russia and I’m not embarrassed to say that,” he told reporters.

    There is little sign of campaigning by those opposed to the government line. Billboards in Sevastopol urge people to vote and offer a choice of two images of Crimea – one in the colors of the Russian flag, the other emblazoned with a swastika.

    {{Ukranian Troops}}

    It is unclear whether thousands of Ukrainian servicemen, many of whom are native Crimeans but are effectively trapped on their bases and ships by Russian troops and local militia allies, will take part in the referendum.

    One sailor, who declined to be named, said he would only vote if he got the order from his commander to do so, a position echoed by many other servicemen spoken to by Reuters. They all said they would vote for Crimea to remain part of Ukraine.

    Elena Prokhina, an ethnic Russian planning to vote for union with Moscow, said she feared the referendum could lead to conflict with others in Ukraine, notably nationalists in the Ukrainian-speaking west of the country of 46 million.

    “Knowing what I know about the fanaticism of the western Ukrainians, we will have to defend our rights after the referendum,” she said. “They won’t just let us leave.”

    Around Sevastopol, Ukrainian military facilities remained under virtual siege on Tuesday. At an air defense base outside Sevastopol, dozens of men who looked like Russian soldiers were camping outside the gate, while an armed Ukrainian serviceman could be seen pacing the base’s roof keeping a wary eye on them.

    In the port, two Ukrainian warships remained on alert but unable to set sail because of Russian vessels and a cable strung across the harbor by Russian forces. Relatives of the sailors come to the dockside every day to converse and provide food.

    A Ukrainian officer said there was a fragile understanding between the two fleets not to escalate the situation, but he said nerves were frayed: “The Russians have not troubled us until now,” he said. “But all it takes is one order and they will open fire. We won’t be able to hold out long”.

    {{Call for Help}}

    In parliament, the acting defense minister said that of some 41,000 infantry mobilized last week, Ukraine could field only about 6,000 combat-ready troops, compared with more than 200,000 Russians deployed on the country’s eastern borders. The prime minister said the air force was outnumbered 100 to one.

    Acting president Oleksander Turchinov warned against provoking Russia, saying that would play into Moscow’s hands, as he announced plans to mobilize a National Guard, though he gave little detail of its size or expected functions.

    Prime Minister Arseny Yatseniuk, who will visit the White House and United Nations Security Council this week, said the 1994 treaty under which Ukraine agreed to give up its Soviet nuclear weapons obliged Russia to remove troops from Crimea and also meant Western powers should defend Ukraine’s sovereignty.

    “What does the current military aggression of the Russian Federation on Ukrainian territory mean?” he said.

    “It means that a country which voluntarily gave up nuclear weapons, rejected nuclear status and received guarantees from the world’s leading countries is left defenseless and alone in the face of a nuclear state that is armed to the teeth.

    “I say this to our Western partners: if you do not provide guarantees, which were signed in the Budapest Memorandum, then explain how you will persuade Iran or North Korea to give up their status as nuclear states.”

    Parliament passed a resolution he had proposed calling on the United States and Britain, co-signatories with Russia of that treaty to “fulfil their obligations … and take all possible diplomatic, political, economic and military measures urgently to end the aggression and preserve the independence, sovereignty and existing borders of Ukraine”.

    But Western powers have been careful to note that Ukraine, not being a member of NATO, has no automatic claim on their help and Ukrainian officials gave no details on what they hoped for.

    The wording of the 1994 treaty indicates that help is only required if Ukraine is threatened by a nuclear attack.

    reuters

  • U.N. Refugee Chief Warns World Powers not to Forget Syria Conflict

    U.N. Refugee Chief Warns World Powers not to Forget Syria Conflict

    {{The head of the United Nation’s refugee agency said on Tuesday it must be ready in case Ukraine’s crisis causes refugees to flee Crimea, but his biggest worry is that “a total disaster” could occur if the international community diverts its attention away from Syria’s conflict.}}

    Antonio Guterres, the head of the U.N.’s High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR), said in an interview that little progress was being made in efforts by the United States and Russia, now at loggerheads over Ukraine, to bring Syria’s warring sides together after the collapse of talks in Geneva last month.

    “In the moment in which we need the most relevant countries in the world to be able to come together to narrow their differences and to try to find a way to move into peace for Syria, this tension around Ukraine will obviously not help,” Guterres told Reuters while visiting Washington to discuss Syria’s refugee crisis.

    “I hope that those that have the most important responsibility in world affairs will be able to understand that forgetting Syria will be a total disaster,” he said.

    Tensions between Washington and Moscow have risen over Russia’s bloodless seizure of Ukraine’s Crimea region, which has brought U.S.-Russian relations to one of their lowest points since the Cold War.

    The United States and European allies have threatened sanctions against Moscow, which has said people in Crimea, a small majority of whom are ethnic Russians, should have the right to secede by voting in a referendum to be held on Sunday.

    Guterres said his agency was preparing for the possibility of refugees from Crimea and had moved teams inside Ukraine to monitor the situation.

    “We are preparing ourselves for any movement of population that might occur,” said Guterres. “Until now it has not happened in a significant way, and we hope that it will be avoided,” he said.

    “Our hope is that things will not evolve in a way that will force large numbers of people to be displaced. We have enough problems of refugees and displaced people in the world, we can live without a new massive displacement,” he added.

    But Guterres said he was concerned that tensions between Russia and the West over Ukraine could worsen divides that have already played out in the U.N. Security Council over Syria. Throughout the civil war, Russia, backed by China, has shielded Syria on the U.N. Security Council by vetoing three resolutions condemning Syria’s government and threatening it with possible sanctions.

    “I don’t think there are reasons to be optimistic,” he said of the possibility of resolving the Syrian war.

    “We see the war going on and on and on, not only with tragic humanitarian consequences with suffering of Syrian people that is unimaginable, but also becoming a serious threat to global peace and security, not only to regional stability but also to global peace and security.”

    Repeating what political leaders have said that the conflict can only be resolved through political dialogue, Guterres also said that “discreet diplomacy” was needed among the main players – the U.S., Saudi Arabia, Russia and Iran – to narrow differences and avoid a prolonged deadlock in talks.

    “There was never any major international crisis that was solved without a lot of silent, discreet diplomacy behind the scenes to support the public diplomacy process,” he said. “That is lacking in the Syrian crisis.”

    With the Syrian conflict now heading toward a fourth year this week and more people fleeing the war, the UN has warned that Syrians are about to replace Afghans as the world’s largest refugee population.

    There are currently more than 2.5 million Syrian registered by the U.N. in neighboring countries such as Lebanon, Turkey, Jordan and Iraq, but Guterres said it is believed more than 3 million have fled the conflict.

    “It is absolutely essential that the international community mobilizes massively to support Lebanon, to support Jordan, to support all the other neighboring countries to make sure that they are able to cope with the challenge and to preserve the stability of the region,” he said.

    With the bulk of U.N. funding for refugees focused on Syria, Guterres said other U.N. operations in Central Africa Republic, South Sudan, Mali and Democratic Republic of Congo were underfunded.

    {agencies}

  • US Army Sex Crimes Case in Doubt

    US Army Sex Crimes Case in Doubt

    {{A US army judge has said the military may have improperly pushed for the sex crimes trial of a US army general.}}

    Judge Col James Pohl did not dismiss the case, but has offered Brig Gen Jeffrey Sinclair’s lawyers another opportunity for a plea deal.

    Gen Sinclair, 51, is accused of sexually assaulting and threatening a female captain with whom he was having an affair.

    He has admitted the affair but denied assaulting or threatening the woman.

    The US military has come under heavy pressure amid what the Pentagon has called an epidemic of rape and other sex crimes.

    On Monday, Col Pohl said he had found evidence, in newly-disclosed emails, of unlawful influence from senior military echelons in the decision to reject a plea deal before the trial.

    Gen Sinclair’s defence has argued the former deputy commander of the elite 82nd Airborne Division was the victim of overzealous prosecutors under political pressure.

    His lawyers now have until Tuesday morning to decide whether to submit a plea bargain proposal to a different set of military officials, or let the court martial proceed.

    “This is an unprecedented situation,” lawyer Richard Scheff said. “It’s a mess created by the government. It wasn’t created by us. We have so many options, we don’t even know what they all are.”

    Earlier, Gen Sinclair pleaded guilty to three lesser charges against him, including adultery, which is illegal in the military. He faces up to 15 years in prison on the guilty pleas.

    Military prosecutors had no comment after Monday’s hearing.

    Gen Sinclair’s accuser took the stand on Friday, alleging the Army general had threatened to kill her and her family if she ever told anyone of their three-year affair.

    Prosecutors have alleged he twice ended arguments about their relationship by forcing her to perform oral sex on him.

    The Pentagon has estimated that as many as 26,000 military members may have been sexually assaulted in 2012, based on an anonymous survey.

    On Monday, the US Senate approved a bill changing how the US military justice system deals with sexual assault, including prohibiting the use of the “good soldier defence” to raise doubts that a crime has been committed and giving accusers a greater say in whether their cases are tried in a civilian or military court.

    A more wide-reaching bill on the issue was rejected by the Senate last week.

  • Ousted Ukrainian President Announces Return

    Ousted Ukrainian President Announces Return

    {{Ousted Ukrainian president Viktor Yanukovych on Tuesday said that he remained Ukraine’s legitimate president and commander-in-chief, saying he believed he would be able to return to Kiev soon.}}

    “I remain not just the sole legitimate president of Ukraine but also commander-in-chief,” he said in his first public appearance in a week in the southern Russian city of Rostov-on-Don.

    “As soon as the circumstances allow — and I am sure there is not long to wait — I will without doubt return to Kiev.”

    AFP

  • Detained US Immigrants Refuse Food

    Detained US Immigrants Refuse Food

    {{About 150 people are on the fourth day of a hunger strike at an immigration detention centre in the US state of Washington, officials say.}}

    Supporters say the detainees are protesting over their treatment at the facility as well as calling for an end to deportations.

    The Northwest Detention Center in Tacoma holds about 1,300 people being investigated for possible deportation.

    At one point, activists say, 750 people refused to eat as part of the strike.

    US immigration officials have said any detainee who refuses food for 72 hours will be referred for medical evaluation and possible treatment.

    The facility is privately owned and operated by the GEO Group, a government contractor.

    Activists who back the striking immigrants say they are seeking better food and treatment.

    They are also calling for wages higher than $1 (£0.60) a day for work carried out at the detention centre.

    Supporters also say they have received reports that detainees are being intimidated for participating in the strike.

    Lawyer Sandy Restrepo says the wife of a detainee talked briefly with her husband on Sunday, who said he and others had been confined to one cell without toilet breaks and could not move around.

    US Immigration and Customs Enforcement spokesman Andrew Munoz told the Associated Press he could not immediately comment on those reports.

    A lockdown was announced on Sunday as a precaution in areas holding violent offenders, but it has since been lifted, immigration officials said.

    There are an estimated 11 million undocumented immigrants living in the US.