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Uganda To Take 2,000 Afghan Refugees At U.S. Request

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Uganda said on Tuesday it had agreed to a request from the United States to take in temporarily 2,000 refugees from Afghanistan fleeing after the Taliban takeover.

The east African nation has long experience receiving people escaping conflict and currently hosts about 1.4 million refugees, most from South Sudan.

Uganda’s junior minister for relief, disaster preparedness and refugees, Esther Anyakun Davinia, told Newsmen that the request was made yesterday by the U.S. government to President Yoweri Museveni and he has given them an OK to bring 2,000 Afghan refugees to Uganda.

She said they are going to be here temporarily for three months before the U.S. government resettles them elsewhere. It was unclear when they would start arriving.

Albania and Kosovo have also accepted a U.S. request to temporarily take in Afghan refugees.

Hundreds Of Firefighters Tackle Wildfire In Southern France

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French firefighters are battling to contain a large wildfire in the southern region of Var that has forced the evacuation of thousands of people, including tourists in campsites.

The Élysée Palace said in a statement thatPresident Emmanuel Macron would visit the area Tuesday afternoon. Around 750 firefighters and water-droppping aircraft were battling the blaze in difficult conditions, with high temperatures and strong winds.

A fire service spokeswoman, Delphine Vienco, said, Thousands of people have been evacuated as a precautionary measure, but there are no victims adding that the blaze was still very fierce.

Southern France is the latest area around the Mediterranean basin to be hit by wildfires this summer, a seasonal phenomenon, which climate scientists warn will become increasingly common because of man-made global warming.

Large fires have already ravaged parts of Greece, Turkey, Spain, Portugal, Algeria and Morocco.

The blaze broke out Monday at a motorway stop about 100 kilometres  northeast of the port city of Toulon. By Tuesday morning, it had already covered more than 3,500 hectares of forest and scrubland, according to the fire department. 

The Var prefecture confirmed that several campsites were evacuated and asked people to avoid congesting the roads around the Gulf of Saint-Tropez so that the emergency services can access the area.

Hot and arid southeast France, which regularly experiences summer wildfires, had been relatively spared so far this year.

According to the Prometheus database on forest fires in the Mediterranean region, the total area burned in France in the four regions hit was 2,336 hectares for 2021, against 7,698 for the whole of 2020.

Sudan Leaders Visit Border Area Amid Tensions With Ethiopia

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Sudanese leaders on Monday visited a disputed area along the country’s eastern border with Ethiopia, amid growing tensions between the two East African nations.

Head of the ruling Sovereign Council.Gen, Abdel Fattah Burhan, and Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok inaugurated developments projects in the fertile al-Fashaqa area which Sudanese troops reclaimed in recent months from Ethiopian forces and militias.

Speaking in the eastern village of Wad Kouli, Hamdok said Sudan has sought good ties with Ethiopia but that it’s also able to protect and defend its territories.

The decades-long border dispute centers on large swaths of agricultural land Sudan says are within its borders, according an agreement that demarcated the borders between the two nations in the early 1900s.

The two nations have held rounds of talks, most recently in Khartoum in December, to settle the dispute, but haven’t made progress.

The dispute has escalated in recent months after Sudan deployed troops to al-Fashaqa, driving out Ethiopian farmers and militias in the area. At least 84 Sudanese troops were killed in clashes with Ethiopia forces and militias since November, according to Burhan.

Sudan says it reclaimed most of its territory and called on Ethiopia to withdraw troops from at least two points it says are inside Sudan. At least 84 Sudanese troops were killed in clashes with Ethiopia forces and militias.

Monday’s visit was the latest sign of Sudan’s defiance against Ethiopia’s repeated calls for Sudanese troops to return to their positions before the war in Ethiopia’s region of Tigray.

Ethiopian officials accuse Sudan of taking advantage of the conflict which erupted in November after a falling out between Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed and the Tigray ruling party that had dominated Ethiopia’s government for nearly three decades.

Big Story: Time-Line Of Afghanistan Under Taliban And The War Against Terrorism

Taliban Repressive Laws

The Taliban’s crushing of press freedom comes as the extremist group Reimposed many of the repressive laws and retrograde policies that defined its extremist 1996-2001 rule.

When it controlled Afghanistan, the Taliban forced women to cover themselves from head to toe, banned them from working outside the home, severely limited girls’ education, and required women to be accompanied by a male relative if they left their homes.

Meanwhile, men were banned from trimming or shaving their beards. They were also forced to pray five times a day. Listening to music and watching television was also outlawed.

Many of those policies have returned in areas now under Taliban control, say residents. That is despite repeated claims by the Taliban that it has changed and that it would not bring back its notorious, restrictive strictures. These repressive laws violated human rights of the Afghan people and got international community’s attention.

No doubt western influence in the region became a major challenge hence the push back leading to series of terror activities from these insurgent groups.

October 15, 1999: An Al-Qaeda and Taliban

The United Nations Security Council adopted Resolution 1267, creating the so-called al-Qaeda and Taliban Sanctions Committee, which links the two groups as terrorist entities and imposes sanctions on their funding, travel, and arms shipments. The UN move follows a period of ascendancy for al-Qaeda and its leader, Osama bin Laden, who guided the terror group from Afghanistan and Peshawar, Pakistan, in the late 1980s, to Sudan in 1991, and back to Afghanistan in the mid-1990s. The Taliban, which rose from the ashes of Afghanistan’s post-Soviet civil war, provides al-Qaeda sanctuary for operations.

September 11, 2001, Terrorists Strike the United States

Al-Qaeda operatives hijack four commercial airliners, crashing them into the World Trade Center in New York and the Pentagon in Washington, DC. A fourth plane crashes in a field in Shanksville, Pennsylvania. Close to three thousand people die in the attacks. Although Afghanistan is the base for al-Qaeda, none of the nineteen hijackers are Afghan nationals.

September 18, 2001: A War Footing

U.S President George W. Bush signs into law a joint resolution authorizing the use of force against those responsible for attacking the United States on 9/11. This joint resolution will later be cited by the Bush administration as legal rationale for its decision to take sweeping measures to combat terrorism, from invading Afghanistan,

October 7, 2001,  The U.S. military, with British support, begins a bombing campaign against Taliban forces, officially launching Operation Enduring Freedom. Canada, Australia, Germany, and France pledge future support. The war’s early phase [PDF] mainly involves U.S. air strikes on al-Qaeda and Taliban forces that are assisted by a partnership of about one thousand U.S. special forces.

December 5, 2001: An Interim Government

After the fall of Kabul in November 2001, the United Nations invites major Afghan factions, most prominently the Northern Alliance and a group led by the former king (but not the Taliban), to a conference in Bonn, Germany. On December 5, 2001, the factions sign the Bonn Agreement, endorsed by UN Security Council Resolution 1383.

December 9, 2001: The Taliban Collapses

The end of the Taliban regime is generally tied to this date, when the Taliban surrendered

August 8, 2003: An International Mission

The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) assumes control of international security forces (ISAF) in Afghanistan, expanding NATO/ISAF’s role across the country. It is NATO’s first operational commitment outside of Europe. Originally tasked with securing Kabul and its surrounding areas, NATO expands in September 2005, July 2006, and October 2006. The number of ISAF troops grows accordingly, from an initial five thousand to around sixty-five thousand troops from forty-two countries, including all twenty-eight NATO member states.

In Nov 2020: Permanent And Comprehensive Peace

A total of 66 nations and 32 international organizations attended the conference voicing “strong support” for a “permanent and comprehensive peace in Afghanistan.

The conference was held amid a complex situation in Afghanistan, 19 years after an international coalition led by the United States toppled the Taliban government that supported Al-Qaeda.

Taliban militants and the Afghan government got involved in peace talks in Qatar, and the administration of Then U.S. President Donald Trump announced that another 2,000 U.S. troops will exit Afghanistan by January 15 — less than a week before Joe Biden was set to take over as president — leaving just 2,500 behind.

Some $600 million out of the total was pledged by the United States for humanitarian aid to civilians in 2021, half of it conditional on the peace talks with the Taliban.

August 2021: Taliban Complete Recapture

Following the recent capture of Kabul by the Taliban militants, Prime Minister Boris Johnson intends to hold a virtual meeting of Group of Seven leaders at the earliest opportunity to discuss the situation in Afghanistan.

Western governments are discussing how to handle the situation in Kabul where thousands of civilians desperate to flee Afghanistan have descended on the airport after the Taliban seized the capital. The United Nations Security Council had an emergency meeting on Monday, where they called for the establishment of a new Afghan government.

More than 60 countries issued a joint statement saying Afghans and international citizens who want to leave Afghanistan must be allowed to depart and added airports and border crossings must remain open, the US State Department said late Sunday.

The US government and more than 60 other countries including Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Republic of Korea, Qatar and the United Kingdom said in a joint statement that “those in positions of power and authority across Afghanistan bear responsibility – and accountability – for the protection of human life and property, and for the immediate restoration of security and civil order.

President Buhari, Service Chiefs To Meet Thursday

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President Muhammadu Buhari will on Thursday confer with security chiefs at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

Mr Femi Adesina, the President’s Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, confirmed this in a statement in Abuja on Tuesday.

The President returned to Abuja last Friday after 18 days in London, during which he attended an education summit and did health checks.

Adesina noted, the security forces have in the past few weeks taken the battle more robustly to insurgents, bandits, and all other criminals troubling the country, and they are now surrendering in droves.

“The President will be informed on developments at the Thursday meeting, while plans to bring a decisive end to the challenges will be formulated”. Adesina added

This is coming as the Nigerian Army says at least 1,000 Boko Haram/Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) members have laid down their arms and surrendered to Nigerian troops.

Army spokesperson, Onyema Nwachukwu, stated this on Tuesday in a statement in Abuja.

Nwachukwu also said all the surrendered terrorists would be received, processed and passed on to the relevant agencies of government for further assessment in line with extant provisions.

Expert Advocates for Ban of Medical Tourism for Govt. Officials

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A Consultant Surgeon at the University of Ilorin Teaching Hospital, Professor Kunle Olawepo, has advocated the need for the National Assembly to ban medical tourism for top government officials.

This he said would enable political office holders, starting from the President to have first hand information and knowledge about the deplorable conditions of the country’s health sector.

Professor Olawepo, who is the President, Nigerian Orthopaedic Association, stated this while reacting to the strike embarked upon by resident doctors that the state of healthcare delivery in the country is deplorable because Government is abandoning its responsibilities in the sector.

According to him, the President just returned from the United Kingdom on Medical check-up, saying that he has never heard where the Prime Minister of UK or President of United States going abroad or other country for check up.

When asked of the factors responsible for incessant strikes in the health sector, the medical expert attributed them to a long harrowing process of complaints, lamentations and frustration occasioned by excessive workload on Doctors, unfriendly working environment, non-availability of optimal appropriate work tools and inadequate remuneration.

He said “If top Government functionaries attend public health facilities in the Country, then they will see 1st hand the true state of affairs and can therefore agree to an overhaul”

“Inconsistent Government policies and audacious draconian circulars together with lack of Commitment to honour agreement freely entered into by Government are factors responsible for what has turned out to be incessant Strikes by Resident and other groups of Doctors“, Olawepo further stated .

The Consultant Surgeon and a former Chairman of the Nigeria Medical Association in Kwara State, therefore stressed the need for government to go back to the original drawing board where Doctor-patient ratio is respected, with adequate budgeting for health sector and adherence to W.H.O recommendations or African charter agreement.

Professor Olawepo noted that though strike is not right for Doctors or any other health worker, but government should not wait until they embark on strike before attending to their demands, pointing out that issues must be resolved from the foundation.

He said” Health is an essential service just like Military and Police; therefore the federal government must wake up to responsibility and treat the cause and not the effect. Once the foundation is right, every other thing naturally falls in place! Even the Military and Police and even in the so called developed Countries go on strike. Criminalizing strikes will not put an end to it. Do the right thing and everything falls in line“.

Malaria: Oyo State Governor begins Distribution of 5million Treated Nets

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Governor Seyi Makinde of Oyo State, on Monday, begins the distribution of 5million insecticide-treated bed nets across the state. The distribution of the insecticide-treated nets is to be carried out at 2,500 designated points across the 33 local government areas of the state, to residents with pre-given net cards.

Speaking at the flag-off ceremony, which held at the International Conference Centre, University of Ibadan (UI), Ibadan, Governor Makinde expressed optimism that the treated nets would help to reduce mortality rate, especially among pregnant women and children under five years in the state.

Represented by his Deputy Chief of Staff, Mr. Abdul-Mojeed Mogbonjubola, Governor Makinde said the figure to be distributed would go a long way in helping the state achieve the target of one net for two persons.

He assured the commitment of his administration to reducing the burden of malaria in the state, as well as ensuring universal health coverage in a cost-effective way.

Makinde also restated the commitment of his government to providing affordable, accessible, and qualitative healthcare in the state, adding that he has put in place different health intervention programmes which are free, accessible and affordable, to the grassroots.

He affirmed that his administration would continue to reach out to development partners and well-meaning organisations, with a view to improving the health status of the people.

Also present at the ceremony was the Special Adviser to Governor Makinde on Health, Dr. Funmi Salami, who assured residents of the state a hitch-free distribution, noting that the state had done a house-to-house sharing of the net cards.

Also speaking was the representative of USAID, Celeste Carr who lauded the efforts of the Oyo State Government in the area of health, saying the best way to eliminate mosquitoes is to put a barrier on them from dusk to dawn.

In his remarks, representative of the Federal Ministry of Health, Mr. Mike Nwamdikwu, said the Oyo state government through this initiative, is joining the efforts of the federal government in continuously reducing the prevalence of under-five children and pregnant women mortality due to malaria.

OAU Launches New Transcript Application Process

Months after an outcry over the relative failure of the “cumbersome” transcript application process at the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile Ife, the University has launched a ‘new’ process for its alumni.

Over a 100 of students of the school had reportedly expressed displeasure through a social media platform what they termed as frustrating the process of getting their academic transcripts, years after graduation.

The institution’s alumni said they missed international academic admissions and scholarships due to the frustrating processes put in place by the school before they could get their academic transcripts.

Apart from missing out from such global opportunities due to the failure of the school and etx.ng, an online consultant it engaged for the process, to send the transcripts before the specified deadlines, many ex-students said they were also not refunded monies they paid for the service.

The University, in a statement on Friday, reproduced below, says it has begun a new process to address the hurdles faced.

Press statement

This is to inform all students and alumni of Obafemi Awolowo University as well as the general public that the approved channel for making transcript applications is at tps.oauife.edu.ng.

Transactions with any individual, agent, or company through payment of cash or any other means outside of the approved channel are prohibited.

Prospective applicants are strongly encouraged to make their applications by themselves to forestall avoidable delays for which the University will not be liable.

For further enquiries, kindly contact transcript@oauife.edu.ng.

Signed

Director, Academic Affairs

Domestic Abuse Law: 60 Northern Ireland Schools To Receive Incidents Alerts

Some schools in Northern Ireland are to be alerted by police if pupils have been affected by domestic violence.

The move is part of a scheme called Operation Encompass which is being piloted in 60 schools in County Down.

Before each school day, the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI), will alert schools if any pupils have been affected by an incident of violence in the home in the previous 24 hours.

The scheme has been in operation in police forces in England and Wales for a number of years.

It will eventually be rolled out across all schools in Northern Ireland.

The scheme is a partnership between the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI), the Safeguarding Board Northern Ireland (SBNI), the Education Authority (EA) and schools.

It has come into effect due to new domestic abuse laws being introduced in Northern Ireland.

Incidents of domestic abuse and violence in Northern Ireland have spiraled in recent years.

Operation Encompass aims to help get children affected by domestic violence immediate emotional support in school.

Abducted School Students, Teachers Will Be Rescued, Zamfara Governor Vows

The Governor of Zamfara State, Bello Matawalle, has expressed dismay over the abduction of 15 students and staff of the state’s College of Agriculture and Animal Sciences in Bakura Local Government Area of the state.

The governor in a statement issued by his spokesperson, Yusuf Idris, said the state was determined to rescue the students unhurt.

He said the government has been strengthening its capacity to provide security to schools across the state since the abduction of Jangebe school girls.

The statement reads in part “The governor directed security operatives in the state to intensify efforts and rescue the abductees, promising to do everything humanly possible to rescue them unhurt,”

“Governor Matawalle who is seriously saddened with the resurgence of school abduction in the state by recalcitrant bandits is, however, thankful to God for the prompt response of the security agencies to the school to reinforce the already stationed security at the school.

“The timely response of the security agents led to the successful rescue of three out of the four abducted staffs of the institution. The governor also lauded the immediate action embarked on by the security of search and rescue strategies in order to ensure the safe rescue of the abducted students and staff currently in captivity…”

Governor Matawalle has appealed to the citizens of the state to remain calm as government is taking all the necessary steps to restore normalcy in the area and charged inhabitants to cooperate with the security agencies deployed to the area by providing them with useful information leading to the rescue of the victims.

He further called on citizens to intensify prayers for an end of all criminal activities in the state and the nation at large.

The Governor extended his condolences to families of those killed by the bandits including a police man and two civilian security guards during the attack, while reassuring parents of the abducted students that his government will intensify efforts to rescue them.