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  • Kremlin says US mediation role in Russia-Ukraine negotiations on hold
  • Football: Bayern Munich eye €50m move for Yann Bisseck
  • Southern Cameroons Crisis: Suspected Ambazonia fighters kill two students in Bambui
  • Biya is already in Hell as Yaoundé unravels
  • Child Benefit: Biya regime audit families after 55% jump in declared children

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Russia: Putin signs law allowing him to hold office for two more terms

5, April 2021

Russia: Putin signs law allowing him to hold office for two more terms 0

Russian President Vladimir Putin has signed a law that would allow him to stay in office for two more terms until the year 2036.

The legislation, officially approved by Putin on Monday, came after changes to the country’s constitution last year that allowed the 68-year-old Russian leader to run for two more six-year terms once his tenure ends in 2024.

The changes, which were overwhelmingly backed in a public vote last summer, permit Putin to potentially hold office until the age of 83.

The reforms also include an amendment that grants former Russian presidents automatic immunity from criminal prosecution.

Putin, already the longest-serving leader in modern Russian history since Soviet leader Josef Stalin, and his supporters said at the time that the reforms were needed to ensure national stability.

The legislation was passed in both the lower and upper houses of Russian parliament last month.

Putin has ruled the country as a president or prime minister for more than 20 years.

Source: Presstv

Southern Cameroons Crisis: Priest Recounts Rough Ordeal with Military

5, April 2021

Southern Cameroons Crisis: Priest Recounts Rough Ordeal with Military 0

Fr. Ngenge Godlove Bong-aba who grew up in the Archdiocese of Bamenda in Cameroon’s Northwest region recalls several instances he has been harassed by the country’s security forces on allegations that he was connected to militants in the Central African nation.

In an interview with ACI Africa Wednesday, March 31, the former Parish Priest of St. Therese of the Child Jesus Esu Parish of Bamenda Archdiocese says that members of the Clergy whose only concern is to uphold the dignity of human life in the country are sometimes accused of siding with those who oppose the government.

“My challenges reflect those of the Catholic Church as a whole in the Anglophone regions of Cameroon,” Fr. Godlove told ACI Africa.

He added, “In my quest to uphold the truth, condemn injustice and defend the God-given dignity of the human being, I am sometimes misunderstood, suspected and misrepresented as supporting one or the other camp by the regime as well as the actors advocating for the breakaway state of Ambazonia!”

Ambazonia is a self-proclaimed independent state by separatists in Cameroon’s English-speaking North West and South West regions.

Efforts to create the state are at the heart of the ongoing conflict that has led to the death of over 3,000 people and displacement of over 679,000 others. The conflict that started with a strike of a section of teachers and lawyers in the two regions has also left more than 600,000 children unable to go to school.

Fr. Godlove recalls a particular incident in 2020 when he was summoned by a group of military men that were setting up camp at a village near his Parish.

“I was introduced to the highest in command in the entire Division (a Colonel), who told me to my face that he did not trust Priests, Bishops and the Catholic Church as far as the crisis was concerned!” the Priest told ACI Africa.

He went on to narrate, “He (the Colonel) kept us there for over an hour, obtaining information from a Fulani motorbike rider concerning a boy who was riding my Parish motorbike, whom he suspected to be an armed separatist.”

The 33-year-old Priest who recently went to work on a project in South Africa says that were it not for the word of the Fulani, the military would have taken the young man into custody “and probably shot him and disposed of his body.”

In a separate incident, Fr. Godlove was denied access to an Outstation of his Parish by an armed separatist.

Recalling the event, he says, “I was with the same boy and they searched us thoroughly and emptied all my stuff on the ground; also claiming that I had shown the military the way to go and attack their colleagues.”

In this particular altercation, the Cameroonian Priest was ordered to leave immediately and warned never to minister at the outstation again.

Fr. Godlove is currently working with the Denis Hurley Peace Institute (DHPI) that has been closely monitoring the situation in the conflict hit part of Cameroon for about two years now.

He shares with ACI Africa that the work of the institute of the Southern African Catholic Bishops Conference (SACBC) is to “meticulously record and report human rights violations in the country.”

The institute is also working to rouse the international community into action to work in bringing about an end to the conflict.

Fr. Godlove says that clashes between the Cameroonian military and armed separatists still occur from time to time.

“Except for a few schools that run in urban areas under strict military protection, schools remain closed down for all these years,” he says, and adds, “Teachers and students are targeted by separatist fighters in order to ensure effective school boycott.”

In the two English-speaking regions, there are “routine ghost town days” every Monday and total lockdown days to frustrate government activities.

Kidnapping for ransom by separatist fighters makes life unbearable for people in the conflict areas, he says.

“Esu where I worked is one of the hardest-hit areas in the conflict,” the Catholic Priest shares, adding that the local population suffers from the state military who accuse them of collaborating with armed separatists.

On the other hand, separatist fighters deal harshly with anyone suspected of interacting with the military, calling them “blacklegs”.

Blacklegs is a term used by the exiled advocates for separation (activists) and armed separatists to refer to those whom they think want to compromise the struggle for independence (traitors) by collaborating with the state military or other administrators of the regime.

Additionally, teachers, especially government-employed, are abducted, tortured, killed and extorted, Fr. Godlove told ACI Africa, adding that witch hunting and settlement of scores is rampant among the people.

Schools remain shut down in most of the rural areas and very few run in urban areas with heavy military presence, a situation that the Priest says psychologically impacts the learners negatively.

Movement between towns and villages in the conflict areas is very expensive, difficult and dangerous with many checkpoints mounted by both the state military and the separatist fighters, who extort money from passengers and drivers, he says.

“As a result, transport fare has quadrupled as bike riders and drivers risk having their cars, buses and bikes burnt down,” the Priest told ACI Africa during the March 31 interview.

He expressed concern that the number of internally and externally displaced person has kept on rising as a result of kidnapping for ransom in cities and killings by the Fulani gunmen who also loot in some of the rural areas and burn down villages.

Source: aciafrica.org

Palestinian leader Abbas headed to Germany for ‘medical tests’

5, April 2021

Palestinian leader Abbas headed to Germany for ‘medical tests’ 0

Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas left for Germany on Monday for “routine medical tests” and to meet Chancellor Angela Merkel, a source within his office told AFP.

Less than two months before the first Palestinian polls in 15 years, the 86-year-old Abbas left the presidential compound in Ramallah in the occupied West Bank via helicopter for Jordan, said the source.

He was to fly to Germany before returning on Thursday, the source added, requesting anonymity pending an official announcement.

Palestinian legislative elections are scheduled for May 22, with a presidential vote set for July 31.

Abbas, who was elected president of the Palestinian Authority in the last vote in 2005 following the death of Yasser Arafat, has not yet declared whether he intends to run again.

His secular Fatah movement, which controls the West Bank, has submitted a list of candidates for the legislative polls.

Abbas, a heavy smoker, was hospitalised with pneumonia in 2018, fuelling speculation about a possible Palestinian succession plan.

His latest visit comes with Abbas and Fatah facing mounting political pressures.

In the legislative polls, Fatah is facing challenges from dissident factions including the Freedom list, led by a nephew of the late Arafat, Nasser al-Kidwa.

Freedom has been endorsed by Marwan Barghouti, a popular leader whom supporters have described as the Palestinian Mandela.

Barghouti is serving multiple life sentences in Israel for allegedly organising deadly attacks during the second Palestinian intifada (uprising) from 2000-2005.

Abbas’s former Gaza security chief, Mohammed Dahlan, who is currently in exile in Abu Dhabi, is also backing a list of challengers.

Former Palestinian prime minister Salam Fayyad, an ex-World Bank official with a track record of fighting corruption, is supporting his own group.

The Palestinian election followed an agreement on vote procedures between Fatah and Hamas Islamists who control the Israeli-blockaded Gaza strip.

Source: AFP

Jordan: Palace turmoil, wave of arrests over plot to ‘destabilise’ kingdom

5, April 2021

Jordan: Palace turmoil, wave of arrests over plot to ‘destabilise’ kingdom 0

Jordan’s Prince Hamzah, accused of a “wicked” plot against his elder half-brother King Abdullah II, has struck a defiant tone, insisting he will not obey orders restricting his movement.

The government has accused Hamzah of involvement in a seditious conspiracy to “destabilise the kingdom’s security”, placed him under house arrest and detained at least 16 more people.

But 41-year-old Hamzah, who says he has been ordered to stay inside his Amman palace, vowed he would defy orders limiting his movement and communications, in an audio recording posted on Twitter late Sunday.

“I don’t want to make moves and escalate now, but of course I’m not going to obey when they say you can’t go out, you can’t tweet, you can’t communicate with people, you’re only allowed to see your family,” he said.

Hamzah, a former crown prince who was stripped off that title by Abdullah in 2004, has emerged as a vocal critic of the monarchy, accusing Jordan’s leadership of corruption, nepotism and authoritarian rule.

In a video he sent to the BBC on Saturday he bemoaned “incompetence that has been prevalent in our governing structure for the last 15 to 20 years and has been getting worse”.

He charged that “no-one is able to speak or express opinion on anything without being bullied, arrested, harassed and threatened”.

‘Wicked slander’

Hamzah denied being involved in any “nefarious” plot, but said he had been placed under house arrest, with his phone and internet cut, by Jordan’s military chief, General Youssef Huneiti.

In the recording released Sunday, Hamzah said that: “When the head of the joint chiefs of staff comes and tells you this … I think it’s kind of unacceptable”.

He added that when Huneiti visited his home, “I recorded what he said and sent it to my friends abroad and to my family, in case anything happens”.

King Abdullah, 59, named Hamzah crown prince in 1999, in line with their father’s dying wish, but stripped him of that title five years later and named his own son Prince Hussein, now 26, heir to the throne.

Hamzah’s mother, American-born Queen Noor, defended her son and the others on Sunday, tweeting that she was “praying that truth and justice will prevail for all the innocent victims of this wicked slander.”

Linchpin of stability

Jordan’s palace turmoil has laid bare divisions in what is usually considered a bulwark of stability in the Middle East.

Washington, major Gulf powers, Egypt and the Arab League were all quick to pledge their support for Abdullah and all his steps to ensure stability.

Jordan has only 10 million people but outsized strategic importance in a turbulent region. It borders Israel and the occupied West Bank, Syria, Iraq and Saudi Arabia and is the formal custodian of Jerusalem’s Al Aqsa Mosque.

It hosts US troops and is home to millions of exiled Palestinians and more than half a million Syrian refugees.

The Washington Post had first reported Saturday that the former crown prince was “placed under restriction” as part of a probe into an alleged plot to unseat the king.

Jordan’s government waited until Sunday afternoon to outline its case, delivered by the foreign minister and deputy premier Ayman Safadi.

“This sedition was nipped in the bud,” Safadi said, charging that the plotters had linked up with foreign parties “to carry out wicked plans aimed at destabilising” the kingdom.

Among those arrested were a former finance minister, Bassem Awadallah, who was chief of the royal court in 2007-08, and Sherif Hassan bin Zaid, a junior member of the royal family.

Safadi declined to identify the alleged foreign parties or say what the charges were, but said authorities acted because the alleged conspirators were “talking about timing”.

He also charged that an individual “with links to foreign intelligence services” had offered to spirit Hamzah’s wife out of the country by plane.

An Israeli who said he is a close friend of Hamzah, Roy Shaposhnik, said in a statement he had indeed “extended an invitation for the prince’s wife and children to stay at his home in Europe”.

He said he had made “this benign, humanitarian” offer after the prince had described a “dynamic situation in Amman” and voiced “concerns about the safety of his family”.

Shaposhnik stressed that he had “never served in any capacity with any intelligence branch in Israel or any other country for that matter” and that he had “no knowledge of, or any involvement with, events that are allegedly transpiring in Jordan”.

(AFP)

Covid-19 hits another minister close to Biya

5, April 2021

Covid-19 hits another minister close to Biya 0

Coronavirus has moved closer to the heart of government in La Republique du Cameroun, where an acolyte of President Paul Biya, Alim Garga Hayatou Secretary of State to the Minister of Public Health responsible for the fight against Epidemics and Pandemics has died.

The 75 year-old traditional ruler of the city of Garoua has been a cabinet minister since 1996. He is the second Cameroon government minister to die from Covid-19 after Gargoum Adoum of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

A Cameroon Intelligence Report source in Yaoundé says the very powerful Lamido of Garoua reportedly contracted the virus from a contaminated document.

His Majesty Alim Hayatou was the top official aide to President Biya and one of the most powerful men in La Republique du Cameroun. Like most members of the Biya ruling crime syndicate, he had underlying health conditions, including diabetes.

Covid-19 is currently killing hundreds in the two Cameroons and experts said the Biya regime was badly prepared for an outbreak with major hospitals having no ventilators at all.

By Rita Akana in Yaounde

Pope Francis sends condolences for death of Cardinal Christian Tumi

4, April 2021

Pope Francis sends condolences for death of Cardinal Christian Tumi 0

Pope Francis expresses his condolences for the death of Cardinal Christian Tumi, and praises the Cameroonian Archbishop’s defense of democracy and promotion of human rights.

Cardinal Christian Tumi passed away on Good Friday, 2 April, in a clinic in the Cameroonian city of Douala.

Pope Francis sent a telegram on Easter Sunday to express his condolences for the Cardinal’s death.

The Pope’s message was addressed to Archbishop Samuel Kleda, the Archbishop of Douala and Cardinal Tumi’s successor.

“On learning with sorrow of the death of our brother Cardinal Christian Tumi, I wish to express my condolences and my union in prayer with the College of Cardinals, the family and friends of the deceased, as well as with all those who mourn him,” wrote the Pope.

Unforgettable mark of service

He added that Cardinal Tumi “left an unforgettable mark on the Church and on the social and political life” of Cameroon.

Cardinal Tumi served from 1979 as the Bishop of Yagoua, then as the Archbishop of Garoua, and finally as the Archbishop of Douala until his retirement in 2009.

He was the African nation’s first Cardinal—created by Pope St. John Paul II in 1988.

Defender of democracy, servant to Popes

Pope Francis said the late Cardinal always committed himself “courageously to the defense of democracy and the promotion of human rights.”

He also praised Cardinal Tumi’s desire to promote peace and reconciliation “in his old age.”

“He was a faithful collaborator of the Popes, assuming various offices in the Roman Curia,” wrote Pope Francis. “May the Lord welcome His servant into His peace and joy!”

Source: Vatican News

Cardinal Tumi: The nation mourns a Cleric

4, April 2021

Cardinal Tumi: The nation mourns a Cleric 0

The Catholic Church in Cameroon is mourning the passing away of Cardinal Tumi.

His death was announced during Saturday morning Prayers by the Archbishop of Douala, Samuel Kleda. The prelate died Friday night breaking Saturday April 3, 2021 in Douala from an illness in a clinic in the economic capital.

Report shows he had recently appeared quite weak during a traditional ceremony.

The Douala cathedral was swamped by the congregation to confirm the news. Emotions have been pouring since the announcement of the death.

“This man had the ability to get the best out of people, he was an extreme diplomat and psychological person. He proved it time and again and in the contributions he made in the crises that are currently raging in the two Anglophone regions, he proved it “Expressed Cedric Ndzi, a Christian

The cardinal played an active role in the Major National Dialogue organised in 2019 to resolve the socio-political crisis in the North West and South West regions.

“The memories that I have of the Cardinal in particular is the fact that he was very active in promoting peace in this country.” according to _Kondjoua Jaccque Daniel, a Catholic Church adherent.

“Even when you don’t listen to people, when you step back a bit on the day they leave, you understand the message they wanted to convey. His underlying message was about peace. He always wanted peace and it was very important to him that peace is restored in NOSO.

The death of the prelate has been described by many as a great loss to the nation given his constant quest for justice and truth.

“I can tell you that he is really a holy man. I have known him and talked with him a lot, we used to visit each other regularly because we know each other very well, he is a very endearing man and very much in love with peace for his country,” says Paul Ngatsi, a friend of the cardinal.

His forthright approach to pursuing long-term solutions to the conflict contributed to his abduction and subsequent release by separatist fighters in the North West region.

Source: Africa News

Cardinal Tumi: Heartbroken President Sisiku Ayuk Tabe sends condolences to the Roman Catholic Community

4, April 2021

Cardinal Tumi: Heartbroken President Sisiku Ayuk Tabe sends condolences to the Roman Catholic Community 0

To the Catholic Community

It is with deep sorrow that we learned of the passing into Eternity of Christian Cardinal Tumi, a great icon of the Catholic Church and a Man of Peace. Our sincere and deepest condolences to all the Christian faithfuls, the world over! We have lost, in the Cardinal, a great leader and reconciler. To our brothers of the Holy Order of Priesthood, our brothers and sisters of Kikaikelaki and Bui, we are indeed saddened and in shock by the sudden passing into glory of Shufai wo Kintam. His passing means so much to all of us, especially in the contemporary times of the trials and tribulations of his people.

It is emblematic and very significant that he is transitioning into Eternity, while the Christian Church is commemorating the greatest moments of our salvation through the passion, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ our Saviour.

We have noted with even greater sadness the unfortunate professional misbehaviour, medically unethical, moral bankruptcy and decadence displayed immediately post his demise, evident of a failed system. We condemn the overt disrespect of the remains of such a great man. One can only imagine what those people do to the rest of humanity. We urge people to follow the precepts of the church at this sad time. Please pray for the peaceful repose of our Spiritual father, who dedicated his entire life to educate and elevate our people as Christians and Children of God. May the Soul of our dear Father Christian Cardinal Tumi, Shufai wo Kintam rest in perfect peace. Amen.

Jordan arrests former senior royal aides for ‘security reasons’

4, April 2021

Jordan arrests former senior royal aides for ‘security reasons’ 0

The half-brother of Jordan’s King Abdullah II was asked to “stop some movements and activities that are being used to target Jordan’s security and stability,” the country’s top general said Saturday amid the arrest of former senior officials close to the ruling monarchy.

The details remained murky, but any internal unrest would raise alarms among the US and other Western nations, which have long viewed Jordan’s ruling monarchy as a key military ally and a bastion of stability in a volatile region.

Gen. Yousef Huneiti, the army chief of staff, denied reports that Prince Hamzah – the king’s half-brother who was also a former crown prince – had been arrested. He said an investigation is still ongoing and its results will be made public “in a transparent and clear form.”

“No one is above the law and Jordan’s security and stability are above all,” he told the official Petra news agency.

Petra had earlier reported that two senior officials who formerly worked for the palace “and others” had been arrested for “security reasons,” without providing further details.

The Petra report said Sharif Hassan bin Zaid, the former royal envoy to Saudi Arabia, and Bassem Ibrahim Awadallah, the former head of the royal court, were detained. Awadallah also previously served as planning minister and finance minister.

The agency did not provide further details or name the others who were arrested.

“We are closely following the reports and in touch with Jordanian officials,” State Department spokesman Ned Price said. “King Abdullah is a key partner of the United States, and he has our full support.”

Abdullah has ruled Jordan since the 1999 death of of his father, King Hussein, who ruled the country for close to a half-century. The king has cultivated close relations with US and other Western leaders over the years, and Jordan was a key ally in the war against the Islamic State group. The country borders Israel, the occupied West Bank, Syria, Iraq and Saudi Arabia.

Jordan’s economy has been battered by the coronavirus pandemic. The country, with a population of around 10 million, also hosts more than 600,000 Syrian refugees.

Jordan made peace with Israel in 1994, but relations have been tense in recent years, largely due to differences linked to Israel’s conflict with the Palestinians. Jordan is home to more than 2 million Palestinian refugees, most of whom have Jordanian citizenship.

Abdullah stripped his half-brother Hamzah of his title as crown prince in 2004, saying he had decided to “free” him “from the constraints of the position of crown prince in order to give you the freedom to work and undertake any mission or responsibility I entrust you with.”

The current crown prince is Abdullah’s oldest son, Hussein, aged 26.

Abdullah had chosen Hamzah as his crown prince hours after their father died of cancer in February 1999. The designation was out of respect for Hussein, who is known to have favored Hamzah the most among his 11 children from four marriages.

Abdullah and Hamzah have not displayed any open rivalry over the years.

Source: AP

Football: Liverpool back into Champions League contention

3, April 2021

Football: Liverpool back into Champions League contention 0

Liverpool clicked back into form to thrash Arsenal 3-0 at the Emirates on Saturday and rekindle their chances of a top-four finish in the Premier League.

Diogo Jota came off the bench to score twice either side of Mohamed Salah’s 26th goal of the season as Jurgen Klopp’s men closed to within two points of fourth-placed Chelsea.

The manner of the victory will be just as pleasing as the scoreline for Klopp as Liverpool looked far more like their old selves ahead of a trip to Real Madrid in the first leg of their Champions League quarter-final tie on Tuesday.

Chelsea’s shock 5-2 defeat at home to West Brom earlier on Saturday opened the door for both sides to close in on their target of a top-four finish.

However, it was only Liverpool who showed any ambition as Arsenal were thoroughly outplayed.

The visitors pressed the Gunners high and quickly recovered possession, but lacked the killer edge up front to turn their dominance into goals until Jota was introduced on the hour mark.

Roberto Firmino flashed a shot just wide from outside the box before James Milner also failed to hit the target with the best chance of the first period.

Arsenal got to half-time without any damage done on the scoreboard, but suffered a major injury blow as Kieran Tierney limped off just before the break.

Tierney’s outstanding form for club and country has seen calls for Liverpool’s Andy Robertson to be dropped by Scotland to allow the former Celtic left-back to play in his favoured role.

With success for Arsenal this season now dependent on winning the Europa League, Tierney would be a big miss for Thursday’s quarter-final, first leg against Slavia Prague.

Like Robertson, Trent Alexander-Arnold has failed to hit the heights of his stunning season as Liverpool romped to the title last year.

On Friday, Klopp expressed his shock that Alexander-Arnold had been dropped from the England squad by Gareth Southgate and the right-back showed his international manager what he is missing by creating the opener on 64 minutes.

Jota had only been on the field three minutes when he met Alexander-Arnold’s cross with a powerful header at the back post.

Four minutes later, Salah wrapped up the three points as the Egyptian outmuscled Gabriel Magalhaes before coolly slotting underneath the advancing Bernd Leno.

The loss of centre-backs Virgil van Dijk, Joe Gomez and Joel Matip to injury has been attributed as the principal reason for Liverpool’s slide down the Premier League table this season.

However, Jota’s absence for three months due to a knee injury between December and March also played a major part.

The Portuguese pounced again at the back post for his sixth goal in four games for club and country to round off a miserable night for the Gunners eight minutes from the end.

Arsenal remain in ninth, nine points adrift of the top four.

Source: AFP

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