Home Blog Page 2549

Oregon Police Face Off With Far-Left Protesters

0

Oregon police and National Guard troops in camouflage trucks pursued far-left protesters around the US city of Portland as a riot was declared late Wednesday, making at least 10 arrests.

The northwestern city that has seen continuous protests since summer had been placed on high alert by Governor Kate Brown, who extended an election-night emergency order amid fears of violent clashes over the contested US polls.

A heavy law enforcement presence flooded the streets after a handful of demonstrators broke off from hundreds-strong anti-Trump protests to shatter storefront windows, and a man believed to have thrown a Molotov cocktail was arrested.

The Multnomah County Sheriff’s Office cited “widespread violence” in the city’s downtown area, including glass bottles thrown at police who advanced on demonstrators.

An AFP journalist at the scene witnessed two arrests during a skirmish on a street corner that left protester Michael Ream with a bloodied face.

“It’s the same thing it always is — just horrible conduct of the police force and the terrible legacy that they carry every day,” the 38-year-old PhD student told AFP as police handcuffed him.

Asked whether this week’s contested election had brought him to the streets, he replied: “More or less. I mean, I haven’t been out (protesting) in a while.”

Portland has seen months of clashes between police and demonstrators, angered at the repeated killings of Black Americans by law enforcement officers across the country.

The protesters involved in Wednesday’s clashes had earlier attended a 300-strong peaceful rally in a downtown park hosted by a coalition of anti-capitalist groups featuring lectures, music and slogans including “The Vote is Over. The Fight Goes On.”

Rally organizer Evan Burchfield told AFP the city had been using the police as a “tool of political repression” for years and that “nothing is actually going to change” if Joe Biden is elected.

Another group of protesters who had gathered by Portland’s river Wednesday vowed to “protect the results” of Tuesday’s close-run election and held banners proclaiming “Count Every Vote.”

“We want Trump out of office, that’s the main focus,” one rally leader told the crowd, to loud cheers.

Several of the demonstrators were openly carrying firearms, including rifles, and one anti-racism and anti-imperialism banner showed an image of an assault rifle, with the slogan “We Don’t Want Biden. We Want Revenge.”

Ethiopia Nears War in Tigray As Abiy Sends in Troops

0

As Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed sends troops into the Tigray region, the country could be on the brink of a civil war.

Fighting and gunshots have been reported in Tigray after Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed ordered a military offensive in the region in northern Ethiopia.

Military operations in the region have commenced, Abiy’s spokeswoman Billene Seyoum told the Reuters news agency on Wednesday.

Internet access monitor NetBlocks said internet and mobile lines in the region have been shut down. DW’s correspondent in the regional capital Mekele couldn’t be reached by telephone or text throughout the day.

The airspace over Tigray is also closed.

“We have confirmation that there is troop movement on the border to Tigray, there is an active ongoing armed confrontation,” said Ethiopia observer Kjetil Tronvoll, Research Director of Peace and Conflict Studies at Norway’s Bjorknes University College.

Nigerian Opposition Party Slams Govt for ‘Reckless Borrowing’

0

The main opposition, the Peoples Democratic Party has chided President Muhammadu Buhari for his plan to take a U.S.$1.2 billion loan, this time from Brazil. There has been huge public outcry over loans made by the government from countries like China and other foreign entities. The government said it is seeking approval from the National Assembly for the loan to address issues in the agriculture value chain. Recently, Zainab Ahmed, the minister of finance, said that the public debt stock is projected to rise to over U.S.$98 billion by December 31, 2020. In August, 2020, Nigeria’s economy witnessed its biggest decline in 10 years. 

African Development Bank, Africa Investment Forum Founding Partners, Announce Postponement of the Africa Investment Forum to 2021

0

The Board of Directors of the African Development Bank Group and the Africa Investment Forum (AIF) founding partners have approved the postponement of the 2020 Africa Investment Forum to 2021, due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

The annual three-day investment marketplace was initially scheduled for November 2020 in Johannesburg, South Africa.

The decision follows a careful evaluation of the impact and evolution of the COVID-19 global pandemic, the attendant risk of a possible second wave, and its associated effects on global travel, investments, as well as social distancing rules.

The Forum will continue to curate new deals, track investments and advance the financial closure of transactions and existing deals through its innovative digital platforms.

At the 2019 Africa Investment Forum, 57 deals valued at $67.7 billion were tabled for discussions. Fifty-two deals worth $40.1 billion secured investment interest.

In July this year, the AIF Founding partners pledged to strengthen strategic partnership engagement and commitments for Africa Investment Forum Market Days 2021, to help “reboot investments in Africa.” They underscored the need to boost local manufacturing while leveraging the continent’s vast resources to unlock investment.

The Africa Investment Forum relies on four pillars to achieve its objectives: connecting, engaging, closing, and tracking investments.

The Africa Investment Forum founding partners are the African Development Bank, African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank); Africa Finance Corporation; Africa50, the Islamic Development Bank, the Development Bank of Southern Africa and the Trade and Development Bank.

Contact:

Amba Mpoke-Bigg, Communication and External Relations Department, African Development Bank; email: a.mpoke-bigg@afdb.org

Read the original article on African Development Bank.

Mexico demands explanation from French designer Isabel Marant over indigenous designs

Mexico’s culture ministry on Wednesday questioned French fashion designer Isabel Marant’s use of patterns from indigenous Mexican communities, marking the government’s latest complaint over high-fashion brands appropriating local styles.

According to the ministry, Marant’s latest collection, including a long cape with stripes and starburst designs in gray and brown hues, includes elements from the Purepecha people of Mexico’s Michoacan state.

Marant’s company, Isabel Marant, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The brand’s website says it is committed to ethical and responsible behavior.

In 2015, the company was similarly accused of incorporating designs from Mexico’s southern state of Oaxaca.

Last year, Mexico called out Venezuela-born designer Carolina Herrera and French fashion house Louis Vuitton for using traditional patterns in their designs, without regard for the people who first brought them to life.

After the Kumba massacre: Schools in Cameroon’s Anglophone crisis

0

Until recently, activists in the diaspora and separatists had insisted that schools remain closed and used violence to ensure it.

At a primary school in Cameroon. Credit: GPE/Stephan Bachenheimer.

On 24 October, armed men attacked a school in Kumba in the Southwest region of Cameroon. They killed seven students and injured others several more.

In the aftermath of the assault, the Cameroonian government was quick to blame separatist fighters who have been locked in war for independence since 2017. The secessionist groups rejected the claim. They said the attack was conducted by agents of the Cameroonian military in an attempt to tarnish the separatists’ reputation.

Regardless of who was responsible for it, the Kumba attack underscored the fact that educational institutions have been a target throughout the crisis that has engulfed the two Anglophone regions of Cameroon. Since its start, teachers and students have played a key role, whether as players or pawns. Many schools had only just re-opened following years of enforced closures, and Kumba is just the latest school in the Anglophone regions to have been attacked in the last few years.

Calling for a school boycott

Schools and teachers have been central to the Anglophone crisis since protests against the regions’ decades of marginalisation began in 2016. That October, teachers’ and lawyers’ trade unions organised demonstrations demanding an end to Francophone domination in their institutions. By the end of November, students had joined in, leaving schools empty.

As the Cameroonian government brutally suppressed these demonstrations, the Anglophone Civil Society Consortium, which was spearheading the movement at the time, called for civil disobedience in the form boycotting businesses and schools.

The day after this action commenced, the protest leaders were arrested. Soon after, several teachers’ trade unions and members of the consortium called for schools to resume but the consortium leaders refused to change their stance. Activists in the diaspora also spread disinformation by saying UNESCO would not recognise any educational certificates issued in Cameroon that year. The boycott largely held.

The few schools that re-opened faced reprisals. The first attack on a school occurred in February 2017 near Kumba. In May, a government primary school in Bamenda that was preparing to host exams was burnt down. It is not clear who carried out these attacks as separatist fighters had not yet mobilised, but it is likely they were motivated by activists in the diaspora who had begun to advocate for a violent approach.

The boycott was further solidified in the summer of 2017 when members of the diaspora formed the “Interim Government” of Ambazonia. The new group, which advocated for the creation of an independent state, said it would not permit the resumption of schooling until independence was granted.

Matters turn more violent

When conflict then broke out in January 2018, separatist fighters added the threat of violence and attacked schools that defied the boycott. In April 2018, high school staff member Thomas Nkongho was killed by secessionist fighters. Days later, primary school teacher Sophie Maloba was executed. Some other teachers were kidnapped. This use of violence was encouraged by activists in the diaspora. US-based activists such as Eric Tataw and Tapang Ivo Tanku, for instance, issued threats of violence that were later carried out or openly celebrated the executions of students.

These attacks continued at the start of the academic year in 2018. That August, Ayeah Ngam Emmanuel, a teachers trade unionist calling for school resumption, was abducted. Then, on the first day of the term, fighters attacked the Presbyterian School in Bafut, kidnapping teachers and students. By the end of 2018, at least 43 schools had been attacked or burned.

This pattern has continued up to now, with the vast majority of children in the two Anglophone regions unable to attend school.

The official reason separatists have given for opposing the resumption of schooling is that it is not safe for students due to the conflict. It is widely assumed that the real reason for the policy, however, is so that they can use it as leverage in negotiations with the Cameroonian government. When a delegation of female leaders travelled to the US to discuss reopening schools with separatist leaders, for instance, they were told that the issue could only be addressed as part of official negotiations.

A change in policy?

At the beginning of the academic year in 2020, segments of the divided separatist movement began to change their stance. The Interim Government of Sisiku AyukTabe, who remains in prison in Yaoundé, announced that parents may send their children to school if they determine it to be safe. Fighters on the ground announced their support for limited forms of schooling. Activists who had vociferously opposed school resumption in the past including Eric Tataw and Mark Bareta changed their positions. And some other separatist groups such as the Ambazonbia Governing Council (AGOVC) stated that while it did not support government schools resuming, it supported “community schools”.

Others retained their previous stance such as the Interim Government of Samuel Sako, which said that school resumption would not be allowed unless accompanied by international negotiations to end the conflict.

Following these changes, many students began attending school for the first time in years and felt secure doing so. However, this all changed with the killing of students in Kumba. While it is too early to know the full impact that attack will have on the resumption of schooling, it is clear that many children will continue not to receive an education as long as the conflict continues.

Vigilantes take over security in delta as policemen remain absent

0

The Chairman of Ughelli North Local Government Area of Delta State, Adode Tete, has deployed vigilantes to beef up security in all communities within the LGA.

This is coming on the heels of the gradual rise in crimes as operatives of the Nigeria Police have refused to return to their duty posts in spite of the directive of the Inspector-General, Mr Muhammed Adamu.

Police operatives, it will be recalled, emptied from the streets in the wake of extrajudicial killings by hoodlums who hijacked the peaceful #EndSARS protest across the country.

See Also: We’re committed to ending all forms of estimated billing –Buhari

No fewer than three policemen were killed and police stations burnt in some parts of the state, a development that has sent police operatives underground for fear of being hacked down.

The presence of operatives of vigilance groups was more noticeable across communities in Ughelli axis of the state where they have strategically manned towns and clans of the area.

Checks on Wednesday showed some of the vigilance groups’ operatives mounting surveillance at some locations in the ever-busy East-West road axis of Otovwodo junction, the Ughelli Market as well as Ekiugo community, and other parts of the LGA.

It was gathered that the decision to deploy the community outfits came following a security meeting the local government areas in Ughelli held with the traditional rulers and President-Generals of the various kingdoms in the locality.

The President-Generals of the seven kingdoms in Ughelli North Local Government Area, it was gathered, had, in collaboration with the council, already provided patrol vehicles and other necessary logistics for the effective operations of members of the local vigilante groups.

See Also: DSS sacks 140 teachers over request for better salary

The local government, it was further gathered, had also resolved to grant the vigilance groups’ operatives periodic seminars and training on the job.

The measures, as gathered, came into effect after a hurried meeting on Monday by the security committee of the local government area to prevent criminals from taking undue advantage of the noticeable drought of policemen at their duty posts and to avert jungle justice.

When contacted, Chairman of Ughelli North, Mr Adede Tete, confirmed the deployment of operatives of local vigilance groups and other efforts being made to protect his people and domain.

“These are just some of the pro-active measures being taken by the local government to guard against insecurity in the area,” he quipped.

According to him, he had had security meetings with the Ughelli Area Commander of the Nigeria Police who had assured him that “his officers and men are actually working, operating in plain clothes, in view of the fact that tension is still high for now.”

He further quoted the Area Commander as assuring that the police were on ground to give a timely response to any distress call from members of the public.

Mr Tete, however, remarked that the Nigeria Police, at this time, need morale-boosting from both the government and members of the public.

We’re committed to ending all forms of estimated billing –Buhari

0

President Muhammadu Buhari has restated the Federal Government is committed to ending estimated billing in all forms in Nigeria.

He said his regime would ensure that Nigerians pay only for the electricity they consume.

Buhari said this in a series of tweets he posted on his Twitter handle, @MBuhari, on Wednesday.

He added that the government was making money available for the distribution of one million free meters in the first instance while the target is to meet the 6.5 million deficit of meters nationwide.

Buhari wrote, “Under the first phase of the Presidential Mass Metering Initiative, we are making funding immediately available for DisCos to roll out 1,000,000 meters in the first phase, at no cost to consumers. Deployment has already started in parts of Kano, Kaduna, Lagos and Abuja.

“Future phases of this metering initiative will help us fully meet the 6.5 million deficit of meters nationwide and will impact an estimated 30 million consumers. All meters under this programme will be sourced from local manufacturers and in-country stock, to create jobs.

“We are committed to ending estimated billing in all forms in Nigeria, and ensuring that Nigerians pay only for the electricity they consume.”

DSS sacks 140 teachers over request for better salary

0

The Department of State Services, DSS, has reportedly sacked 140 teachers and other staff members of its Community Staff Schools, Asokoro, Abuja for demanding better conditions of service and regularisation of their appointment.

The service also shut down the institution and directed the 1,800 pupils in the nursery/primary and secondary classes to stay at home for two weeks.

It has been gathered that all the pupils had been sent away pending the engagement of new teachers by the authorities.

Findings indicate that the primary school commenced pupil enrolment in 1992/93, while the secondary classes took off in 1998.

See Also: FG, ASUU’s meeting hits deadlock over adoption of UTAS

Trouble began when the teachers demanded the regularisation of their appointment and an increase in their salaries and other emoluments following increase in the school tuition.

In response, the authorities issued a letter of disengagement to the workers, including the principal and other administrative officials.

Before the face-off, the fee for the nursery and primary classes was increased from N25,000 to N35,000 for children and wards of the rank and file, while children of senior DSS officers were required to pay N45,000 up from N35,000 per term.

For children of civilians, the tuition was increased from N45,000 to N60,000.

See Also: INEC earmarks N1 billion for the resumption of voter registration in 2021

The tuition for secondary school classes was increased from 35,000 to 45,000 for children and wards of the rank and file, while officers’ children were asked to pay N60,000 up from 40,000. Students who did not fall in either of the categories will pay N90,000 from N70,000. Other sundry charges were also said to have been increased.

However, in the letter of disengagement dated November 2, 2020, signed by the Executive Secretary, CSSA, M. Onyilo, the DSS hinged its decision to sack the school staff on poor financial situation brought about by the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on the nation’s economy.

The letter titled, ‘Disengagement from the service of Community Staff Schools, Asokoro,’ reads partly, “Due to the effect of COVID-19 on the Nigerian economy vis-a-vis the crippling financial situation of the school, I am directed to convey the Director-General, State Services/Proprietor’s approval to disengage you from the services of the school with effect from 3rd November 2020.”

2021 AFCON QUALIFIER: Nigeria to play S’Leone without fans

0

THE Ministry  of Youth  and Sports Development in alliance with Presidential Task Force (PTF) on COVID-19  have ruled out  the possibility of  fans  watching  the eagerly awaited Africa  Cup of Nations (AFCON) qualifier against  the Leone Stars of Sierra Leone  at the Samuel Ogbemudia Stadium in Benin on  November 13.

In a clearly worded advisory  to both the  Edo  State Government  and the  Nigerian  Football Federation (NFF), the authorities  said  they won’t condone breaching the COVID-19 protocol, adding ‘the no gathering, no audience for football  and contact sports’  is still in full  force.

In a  letter to the Deputy Governor  of  Edo State Comrade Philip  Shaibu, the Ministry noted inter alia : “The Ministry  wishes to bring to your  urgent attention  that in compliance with the  condition of no gathering  agreed upon by the Ministry and the Presidential Task Force (PTF) on COVID-19 before the Federal Government opened up football and contacts sports, the match between Nigeria and Sierra Leone will not have any audience and no gathering save for players, match officials and government officials from both countries.