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Acquitted Ugandan activist faints amid disorder at court

Ugandan academic and activist Stella Nyanzi, who was earlier acquitted of insulting the president, fainted after a scuffle ensued between her supporters and police officers.

Ms Nyanzi, who was ordered to be released immediately by a judge on Thursday, fainted after the trouble between her supporters and prison officials who tried to take her back into prison, according to Reuters news agency.

Officials attempted to wrestle Ms Nyanzi from her supporters but they managed to help her outside the court compound, put her in a car and drive off.

Security officers fired tear gas into the small crowd that formed, Reuters reports.

It quotes a supporter blaming the chaos on security officers:

“We were simply jubilating and we knew that this was court ground, we needed to move further… the police officers, they are the ones who brought in all this chaos,” Flavia Kalule is quoted as saying.

“It’s not surprising because that is how the mafia state operates,” she added.

Ms Nyanzi, who blew kisses and flashed the middle finger immediately after the judge’s verdict, had questioned the real reasons for her arrest before she fainted:

“Why was I in prison, because I wrote a poem? Because I expressed my deep disinterest and disgust of the NRM (National Resistance Movement) regime?” she asked.

She was convicted over a September 2018 Facebook post in which she referred to the president’s mother’s private parts.

Witness found dead in Kenya’s ‘$395m fake arms’ saga

A Kenyan policeman who was to be questioned over an alleged forged deal worth $395m (£306m) for military equipment that has made headlines in the country was on Thursday found dead in his house in the capital, Nairobi.

Sergeant John Kipyegon Kemei, who served in the office of the Deputy President William Ruto, was found with a gunshot wound to the head.

Local media report that he was at work on the day a former Kenyan cabinet minister visited the office accompanied by directors from an American firm to discuss an arms tender.

The former minister, Rashid Echesa, has since been charged with forgery. The US firm Eco Advanced Technologies alleges that Mr Echesa approached them with a fake deal to supply arms to the Kenyan military, and also allege that Mr Echesa swindled them out of $113,727 (£88,204) in consultation fees

Mr Echesa denies any wrongdoing and is out on bail.

The policeman who died was among those due to be questioned over the alleged fake deal. His workmates decided to visit his house after failing to contact him since Wednesday, according to local media. They found the body with a gunshot wound on the chin, according to police.

Deputy President William Ruto wrote a message of condolence on Twitter:\

Mr Ruto has been accused of allowing Mr Echesa to use his office for business meetings, but has denied any involvement in the scandal.

Sierra Leone’s first couple to tie the knot… again

Wedding bells will ring in Sierra Leone’s capital, Freetown, on Friday as President Julius Maada Bio waits for his lady love to walk down the aisle.

President Bio and First Lady Fatima Bio will be exchanging their vows again in a Catholic Church.

The couple were married in a civil ceremony in the UK seven years ago, before the former army general became president.

The first lady is Muslim but such mixed faith marriages are common in the country.

Reporter Umaru Fofana said that the president’s ex-wife claimed to have wedded him before a Catholic priest in the east of the country, but that the marriage register in the church does not have any such record.

Friday’s wedding has been a big topic of discussion on social media in the country.

Weather: Parts of UK could see a month’s rain in 24 hours amid floods

Deluged communities in parts of the UK are facing more heavy rain as they struggle to cope in the wake of Storm Dennis.

A month’s worth of rain in 24 hours could also hit north Wales and north-west England, forecasters said, falling on ground that is already saturated.

Nearly 120 flood warnings remain in place across the country.

And there is also travel disruption after floods blocked a major rail route between England and Scotland.

The Environment Agency said there was a “heightened flood risk” across the Midlands, with six severe warnings – meaning there is a danger to life – still in place near the Welsh border around the Rivers Lugg, Severn and Wye.

There are also three yellow severe weather warnings in place across parts of north-west England and Wales as clean-up operations continue following flooding in the wake of Storm Dennis.

Rain fell heavily overnight into Thursday, with Met Office forecasters warning it was likely to continue until about 15:00 GMT in parts of the UK.

The West Coast Main Line was closed between Carlisle and Lancaster on Thursday morning following severe wet weather, affecting Avanti West Coast, Northern and TransPennine Express services.

Hundreds of people have been evacuated from their homes due to floods, with the worst-affected areas including south Wales, Herefordshire, Worcestershire and Shropshire.

Meanwhile, Prime Minister Boris Johnson has faced criticism from opposition parties for not visiting flood-hit communities.

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said he was showing his “true colours by his absence”, adding that the prime minister was sending a “clear message” by not convening the government’s emergency committee, Cobra.

Plaid Cymru leader Adam Price also questioned why Mr Johnson had not convened Cobra.

Fire Brigades Union general secretary Matt Wrack said his union had been raising the issue of long-term planning to deal with extreme weather events for years, but had found the government’s response to be “lacklustre”.

On Wednesday, business minister Nadhim Zahawi told Sky News the prime minister was focused on getting “money out the door” to businesses and local authorities in affected communities.

“He wants to help people by getting funding to them,” Mr Zahawi said.

Environment Secretary George Eustice said the government was investing £2.6bn in flood defenses.

FROM BBC NEWS


Container slides off truck killing 19 in India freak accident

At least 19 people have been killed in a freak accident in southern India, after a container slipped off a truck and rammed into a passenger bus.

Police are investigating the incident, but officials say the container came off its hinges after one of the wheels of the truck had a puncture.

“There were about 48 people in the bus, and several are in a critical condition,” an official told BBC Hindi.

The incident occurred around 3:30am local time (21:50 GMT), police said.

The bus was on a highway when the container slipped off the truck, which was in the opposite lane. It then rolled onto the other side, colliding with the bus.

The Volvo bus, owned by the Kerala state transport corporation, was travelling from Bangalore city in the neighbouring state of Karnataka to Ernakulam in Kerala.

The district collector, Dr Vijay Karthikeyan, told BBC Hindi that the cause of the accident was still being investigated.

The driver of the truck is reportedly absconding.

BBC NEWS

Basic Education Ministry warns private schools

The Ministry of Basic and Secondary Education has warned private school heads to desist from “illegal operations,” saying it violates the Education Act and the regulations governing the operation of private schools.

In a media dispatch sent to The Point, the Basic Education Ministry highlighted some of these practices as: disregard for the national curriculum; not registering students for National Exams like the National Assessment Test (NAT); Gambia Basic Education Certificate Examination (GABECE) and the West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE).

Other practices include hiring teachers who do not have the required qualifications and also not putting in place a standard recording system.

According to the release, disciplinary measures will be taken against those who fail to comply with the Ministry.

The ministry nonetheless appreciates and encourages school proprietors who are complying and complementing its effort in providing quality education to every child in The Gambia.

SOURCE POINT NEWSPAPER

Hannah Baxter: Australian mother and children ‘senselessly murdered’

Australia is mourning the deaths of a woman and her three children who were “senselessly murdered” in a car fire, Prime Minister Scott Morrison has said.

Police are yet to confirm reports the father, ex-rugby player Rowan Baxter, set the car alight in Brisbane before stabbing himself to death.

However, they confirmed a history of family violence. Hannah Baxter, 31, and her children were killed on Wednesday.

The case has sparked national outcry over domestic violence.

“Australians all over the country are just shocked, saddened and devastated about what has happened in a suburban street,” Mr Morrison told reporters on Thursday.

“Hannah and her three children [were] so senselessly and maddeningly murdered in what has occurred in a terrible act of violence,” he said.

On Thursday, Queensland Police said the children and their mother had been killed, and there were no suspicious circumstances concerning Mr Baxter’s death.

“There’s a rising sense of anger in this day and age [that] the scourge of family and domestic violence still can lead to the death of five people,” said Det Insp. Mark Thompson.

What do we know?

Police were first called to the scene in the suburb of Camp Hill the city’s east in at 08:30 local time on Wednesday (21:30 GMT on Tuesday).

They found the couple’s three children – Laianah, 6, Aaliyah, 4, and Trey, 3 – dead inside the car, and their mother burning on the ground beside it. Hannah Baxter, 31, died later in hospital from extensive burns.

Witnesses told Australian media she had screamed “he’s poured petrol on me” and “save my children” when helpers rushed to the site.

They said Mr Baxter, 42, had attempted to stop helpers intervening, before grabbing a knife from the car and stabbing himself to death. Emergency responders were unable to revive him when they arrived at the scene.

Mrs Baxter had been driving the car at the time of the incident, police said.

What do we know about the victims?

Family services had previously supported Mrs Baxter with domestic violence issues, and a number of court orders had been granted, police said.

Hannah Baxter, also known as Hannah Clarke, had moved to her parents’ home in Camp Hill with the children last year after separating from her husband. The two had been working out custody arrangements.

“She loved them so fiercely and she was doing everything she could to protect them,” her friend Caitlin Langford told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.

An online fundraiser started by a relative for funeral costs said Mrs Baxter’s parents had “exhausted themselves to try and help Hannah escape this monster”.

“For all those who knew Hannah, or had even just met her once, [you] would know how much of a beautiful soul she was, her children were her life,” said Mrs Baxter’s sister-in-law Stacey Roberts.

Rowan Baxter formerly played for the New Zealand Warriors rugby league team in Auckland. In recent years, he had run a gym with his wife in Capalaba to the east of Brisbane.

The gym’s website describes Hannah Baxter as “an enthusiastic, passionate mother of three” and as a state trampolining champion who had won international medals.

What has the reaction been?

Tributes have poured in for the victims, with #HannahBaxter a top trend on Twitter in Australia. There has been widespread anger and despair, amid ongoing concern about violence against women.

On average, one woman per week is murdered in Australia by a current or former male partner, according to the Bureau of Statistics.

BBC NEWS

Ethiopian 18th Century crown returns home from Netherlands

An 18th Century Ethiopian crown has been returned home after being hidden in a Dutch flat for more than 20 years.

Ethiopian Sirak Asfaw, who fled to the Netherlands in the late 1970s, found the crown in 1998 in the suitcase of a visitor and realised it was stolen.

The management consultant protected it until he alerted a historian and Dutch police of his discovery last year.

On Thursday, Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed received the crown, thought to be one of just 20 in existence.

The crown has depictions of Jesus Christ, God and the Holy Spirit, as well as Jesus’ disciples, and was probably given to a church by the powerful warlord Welde Sellase hundreds of years ago.

In a tweet, Mr Abiy said he was grateful to Mr Sirak and the Dutch government for the return of the “precious crown”.

What’s the story of the crown?

Mr Sirak left his home country in 1978 to escape the political repression of the Communist government, or Derg, which had come to power in 1974. The regime unleashed a wave of violence known as the Red Terror, which killed hundreds of thousands and forced many to leave.

The former refugee used to host Ethiopians who had left the country in his Rotterdam flat throughout the 1980s and 1990s. “Friends, refugees, whoever,” he said. It was one of these visitors staying at his home in 1998 who was carrying the crown in his bag.

“Most people don’t really care about this cultural heritage. I’m loyal to Ethiopia,” he told the BBC in an interview last year.

Mr Sirak confronted the man and insisted the crown was not leaving unless it could be returned to its home.

After asking for help on internet forums – which yielded no useful answers – he decided the best course of action was to hold onto the crown until he knew it would be safe.

“You end up in such a suffocating situation, not knowing who to tell or what to do, or to hand over,” he said. “And of course afraid that the Dutch government might confiscate it.”

“I had fire alarms all over my house, eight or something like that. Really scared!”

‘I feel pity for the people who had to wear it’

But after the reforming Mr Abiy becoming prime minister in 2018, Mr Sirak felt the time was right to have a piece of Ethiopia’s history return to Addis Ababa.

He contacted Arthur Brand, known as the “Indiana Jones of the art world”, for help returning it home.

“I explained to him, look, either the crown will disappear or you [will], if you continue like this,” Mr Brand told the BBC.

“I said if the people who were involved at the time got knowledge of it, the risk was that they would come back and would take the crown from him.”

With the consent of the Dutch police, the art hunter placed the artefact in a secure facility. An expert confirmed it was genuine, and Mr Brand decided the best course of action was to announce it publicly.

“It’s an amazing piece. It’s very big, I feel pity for the people who had to wear it on their heads because when you wear this for a couple of hours your neck hurts,” he said.

Both men waited for the Ethiopian government to get in touch with the Dutch authorities to plan the return of the crown.

“I want this crown to be a symbol of unity and togetherness,” Mr Sirak said. “The crown will be celebrated by all of us Ethiopians, even Africans.”

FROM BBC NEWS

Film fans gear up for Nollywood-Bollywood crossover

The Nigerian star of upcoming movie Namaste Wahala has told fans that filming has wrapped ahead of its release on 24 April.

Ini Dima-Okojie plays opposite Indian actor Ruslaan Mumtaz in a “love story that cuts across the cultures of two countries”.

News of the upcoming film has delighted and amused fans:

“Nollywood featuring Bollywood? This is about to be the most dramatic, over-exaggerated movie ever made,” Twitter user Official Gracie said

.

“The name alone wants me to watch it. Namaste [means] peace. Wahala [means] trouble/problem. Gotta watch it with some Chicken Biryani and Jollof Rice for the culture(s),” said Jerome Antwin-Lewis

.

“A Nollybollywood romance called Namaste Wahala is exactly the type of film this world needs. I cannot wait to see it,” Ronke Lawal tweeted

OkayAfrica points out that this isn’t the first Nollywood-Bollywood crossover – that distinction belongs to the 2017 film J.U.D.E. , it says.

Nigeria and India boast two of the world’s biggest film industries – each year generating an estimated $800m (£620m)

and $2.6bn respectively

SOURCE: BBC AFRICA

Acid attack survivor: ‘There are more good people than bad’

An Ethiopian woman disfigured after her estranged husband attacked her with acid in 2017 says that despite her suffering she has reasons to be thankful.

“There are more good people in the world than there are bad people,” Atsede Nguse said on the phone from her new home in the US.

“I have been touched by the kindness and love people showed me after the incident,” the 29-year-old mother of one said.

The acid poured over her destroyed her face and burned through her body.

She could not get treatment in an Ethiopian hospital and did not have money to go elsewhere

When they learned what had happened, friends and well-wishers raised money to pay for treatment in Thailand.

But that money ran out before Ms Atsede was properly healed and she had to return home.

Then, for a second time, someone came to her assistance.

‘Touched my heart’

Menbere Aklilu, an Ethiopian women’s rights activist based in the US, read about what had happened to Ms Atsede on Facebook.

As a survivor of domestic violence herself, she said she wanted to help.

“When I read her story, I felt sorry like everyone else. But when I knew she was a mother, I thought: ‘What if my son was in her son’s place?’

“This really touched my heart.”

Acid Survivors Trust International, a UK-based non-governmental organisation, estimates that between 50 and 75 women are attacked with acid in Ethiopia every year.

This figure fits into a larger pattern of domestic violence.

A 2016 Ethiopian government study said that more than a third of adult women who were or had been in a relationship had been the victims of physical, sexual or emotional violence at the hands of their partner.

The attack on Ms Atsede can be seen in this context.

Neighbours’ warning

Her husband, whom she married in 2012, would beat her over minor disagreements.

“Our neighbours were worried, and said he may kill me some day. Despite it all, I continued to live with him for the sake of my child. I didn’t want him to grow up without a father, as I did.”

FROM BBC STORIES

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