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‘UDP have been living on deception’: Seedy Njie reacts as Supreme Court throws out UDP’s petition

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National People’s Party deputy spokesman Seedy Njie has reacted that UDP has been living on deception and fooling its people following the party’s Supreme Court misery.

UDP has lost its legal challenge to the election result after the Supreme Court threw out its petition Tuesday morning. The court held the party failed to abide by the rules of filing a petition.

Seedy Njie told reporters at the high court after their victory: “We knew the will of the Gambian people must be sustained. For us as a party, we know the United Democratic Party over the years have been living on deception, have been living fooling and hoodwinking their people and also by hypnotizing them.

“You see people who have no value to their party, who have no value to the country, who have no agenda and program for this country. What they wanted was to destroy people and we are never distracted.

“We are committed to serving this country and we committed to delivering the services as social contract that we have with the Gambian people.”

Senegal’s new commuter train makes first journey

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Senegal on Monday launched a new 1.3 billion U.S. dollar commuter railway meant to ease traffic gridlock and modernize a crumbling public transport system.

President of Senegal Macky Sall on Monday launched the operating phase of the Regional Express Train, or TER, which will connect the city of Dakar to the new city of Diamniadio, around 40km to the east.

It’s expected to carry some 115,000 passengers daily, according to the Senegalese authorities.

A 45-minute ride on the train will cost commuters $3, although shorter trips will be much cheaper.

Speaking at the launch, President Sall said the goal of the train is to spread out the country’s economy.

Sall said Dakar currently holds “26 percent of the Senegalese population and nearly 70 percent of the country’s economic activity”, with only “0.3 percent of the national territory”.

The TER, the first new railway since independence from France in 1960, is one of the flagship projects of the Emerging Senegalese Plan.  Sall’s plans also include a new airport, roads, sports arenas and a sleek conference center. (CGTN Africa)

UDP loses: Supreme Court throws out party’s petition and orders the party to pay D100,000

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The Supreme Court has struck out United Democratic Party’s petition against the December 4 presidential election result.

Supreme Court top justices led by Justice Hassan B Jallow held Tuesday that UDP failed to comply with Rule 11 of the Elections Petition Rules.

That rule says when a petitioner files a petition, the petitioner is required to file a notice showing the proposed security, nature of the security and must attach the petition itself within five days of the filing of the petition.

The top court also ordered UDP to pay D100,000.

Officials of President Adama Barrow’s National People’s Party celebrated as they came out of court on Tuesday morning.

The UDP has refused to accept the December 4 election result, accusing President Adama Barrow of bribing voters. UDP also made the charge foreigners voted in the election.

Breaking News: Further heartbreak for UDP as Supreme Court throws out petition and asks party to pay D100,000

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The Supreme Court has struck out United Democratic Party’s petition against the December 4 presidential election result.

Supreme Court top justices led by Justice Hassan B Jallow held Tuesday that UDP failed to comply with Rule 11 of the Elections Petition Rules.

That rule says when a petitioner files a petition, the petitioner is required to file a notice showing the proposed security, nature of the security and must attach the petition itself within five days of the filing of the petition.

The top court also ordered UDP to pay D100,000.

Officials of President Adama Barrow’s National People’s Party celebrated as they came out of court on Tuesday morning.

The UDP has refused to accept the December 4 election result, accusing President Adama Barrow of bribing voters. UDP also made the charge foreigners voted in the election.

AdvocAid Condemns Death of 17-Month-Old Baby in Police Cell

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By: Christian Conteh

AdvocAid an organisation that works on providing holistic access to justice via free legal representation, education empowerment, detainee support and a moving forward programme has strongly condemned what it described as ‘the tragic loss of life of a baby who died in a police cell in Makeni, Northern Sierra Leone while being detained with her mother’. The mother is said to have been arrested on allegations of stealing a handbag.

“AdvocAid has over the period repeatedly called for pregnant women and women with young children not to be detained and instead to be supported through alternatives to incarceration such as community support, mediation or diversion,” a statement from the institution reads.

Adding that, “this is in line with the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child (Article 30), UN Standards for the Treatment of Female Prisoners and Non-Custodial Measures for Women Offenders (Rule 64), and Sierra Leone’s Bail Regulations 2018.”

This mother AdvocAid maintained was arrested for a minor, non-violent offence and should not have been detained, especially with a young baby. The institution calls for the police to ‘immediately and unconditionally release the mother and for the Ministry of Social Welfare to provide the required medical and psycho-social support.’

Whilst it will be investigating the matter further it calls on the Independent Police Complaints Board and the Human Rights Commission of Sierra Leone to also undertake an investigation.

“AdvocAid calls on the Government of Sierra Leone to urgently review all cases of pregnant women and women with young children detained in police stations and correctional facilities across the country.

“We urge the Government to facilitate early releases of this group of women as a COVID-19 prevention measure given the increasing infection rates, in line with our press statements of 25 March and 8 July 2020, and calls by the UN, WHO and African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights.”

The rights group further stressed the need for petty offences to be decriminalised.

AdvocAid works with girls and women caught up in Sierra Leone’s often unjust legal system. It is the only organisation in West Africa providing holistic access to justice via free legal representation, education empowerment, detainee support and  ensuring detainees leave as stronger women with brighter prospects.

Police issue statement to dismiss reports of driver beaten for killing boy

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Police have issued a statement contradicting a report by What’s On Gambia that a driver was seriously beaten by an angry mob after killing a boy.

Police in a statement on Monday clarified: “We can confirm an accident which occurred on Sunday 26th December 2021.

“The accident involves a Motorcycle with registration number KM 5583 C ridden by Makhary Thiam of Latri-Kunda German and motor vehicle with registration number KM 6724 D driven by Muhammed Darboe of the same address.

“Preliminary accident investigations revealed that the motorcycle was riding towards Manjai when the private car left its lane knocking the motorcycle carrying a passenger known as Modou Penn. The driver tried fleeing the accident scene leading to a hot pursuit and was intercepted at Pipeline where an angry mob attacked damaging the vehicle.

“Personnel of the PIU intervened and rescued the driver for further investigations.

“Makhary Thiam sustained minor injuries and was rushed to Serrekunda General Hospital where he was treated and discharged. Meanwhile, police probe continues and appropriate actions will follow.”

Rights Group Advocates for Implementation of TRRC Report Recommendations; Especially Those Around Sexual and Gender-Based Violence

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By Christian Conteh

The Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Women In Liberation and Leadership (WILL) has said that her organisation will keep advocating for the implementation of the Truth Reconciliation and Reparations Commission (TRRC) Report recommendations especially those that involve sexual and gender-based violence.

Fatou Baldeh MBE was speaking to The Fatu Network in an exclusive interview following the release of the TRRC Report to the public.

“As someone who has been working directly with victims this is quite encouraging because for us it shows government commitment, which we are very encouraged by,” she said.

Fatou further noted that often issues of sexual and gender-based violence as serious as they are, are not given the much-needed importance when compared to other crimes.

“Our fear was that more attention would be placed on crimes like murder and enforced disappearance than sexual gender-based violence. So that’s why we have been working tirelessly these few years to make sure that victims of sexual gender-based violence are heard from and their stories inform the decision-making process,” Fatou said.

Adding that her institution is very pleased that the names of victims who came forward were mentioned and criminal liability attached to certain individuals.

When asked about whether her organisation will be monitoring the implementation phase of the TRRC process she replied,

“absolutely, we shall be following the process through, this is another milestone, there are more things to be done. As an organisation we shall continue to popularise the TRRC Report and advocate for implementation of the recommendations around sexual and gender-based violence,” she noted.

WILL is a Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO) aiming to transform and protect the lives and rights of Gambian women and girls in The Gambia.

Nigeria: Cleric caught with fresh human head allegedly dies in custody

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A cleric and suspected ritualist, Alfa Tunde Olayiwola, who was arrested for being in possession of a fresh human head, has died in police custody.

Olayiwola, who also claimed to be a herbalist, was paraded along with other suspects by the state Commissioner of Police, Mr Oyeyemi Oyediran, last Thursday at the command headquarters, Akure.

According to the police commissioner, the deceased was arrested at the Oka area of Ondo town.

Oyediran said, “On December 23, 2021, around 9am, the police received information that a self-acclaimed cleric named Alfa Tunde Olayiwola, a suspected ritualist, was about to receive a consignment suspected to be a human head.  The police immediately swung into action and the cleric was apprehended at the Ajagbale area of Oka, Ondo town.

“A fresh human head was found in his custody.  He confessed that the head found in his possession was to be used to ensure he had a better life.”

The 55-year-old Olayiwola, who confessed to the crime, had said he bought the head from a man, whom he did not identify, for N60,000, adding that he wanted to use it for a money ritual.

PUNCH Metro learnt that the suspect died on Saturday, as the cause of his death had yet to be ascertained. (PUNCH)

PDOIS, All People’s Party and Alhaji Mamadi Kurang’s Youth of Change agree to support each other’s candidates in 2022 parliamentary election

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PDOIS, All People’s Party and Youth for Change have agreed to a new deal that will see the three parties work together in the 2022 national assembly elections.

Gambians will choose their representatives in April 2022 and PDOIS, APP and Youth for Change have already gotten the ball rolling on their campaign strategy.

PDOIS is plotting to retain its four seats in parliament, namely Serrekunda, Banjul North, Wulli East and Wulli West.

PDOIS, APP and Youth for Change worked together in the December 4 presidential election and an agreement was on Monday unveiled at a press conference by leaders of the three parties.

The agreement document seen by The Fatu Network says the three parties will support each other’s candidates in constituencies where they are selected to contest.

Elsewhere in the two-page deal, all candidates who are not selected would fully participate in the campaign of the successful candidate.

Falalo M Touray asks alkalolu who can’t work with president to resign as he gets coronated as New Chief of Kombo South

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By Dawda Baldeh

Falalo M Touray a one-time Permanent Secretary at the Ministry of Agriculture, Director General of Department of Agriculture, Director Agriculture Extension Services has been coronated as new traditional chief of Kombo South Constituency on Saturday 25 December, 2021. The traditional coronation ceremony was held at his residence in Gunjur.

Chief Falalo M Touray is among the highly educated traditional chiefs in The Gambia. He has Master Degree in Agricultural Science from University of Reading U.K.

Speaking at the event, Falalo M Touray expressed gratitude to the president for appointing him as the chief of Kombo South.

“As citizens, we must come together to do what is right. Any Alkalo who cannot work with the sitting president the best thing is for the person to resign,” he said.

Lamin Sanneh Governor of West Coast Region said chiefs should work amicably to guard the interest of the country.

“I am calling on the Alkalolu (Village Heads) to work with the chief.Let’s come together as Gambians and work towards developing our country,” he said.

Buba Sanyang, Permanent Secretary at the Ministry of Lands who said the role of the Chiefs is very crucial advised the Chiefs to be very careful in the way they rule their constituencies.

“The most important part is that they work with a team which are the district authorities. It is important for the chiefs to understand that the Chieftaincy rule is very crucial in the country. They need to caution their village heads to be conscious of the documents that they authenticate and bring to the chief for endorsement,” he said.

Momodou Sabally says Supreme Court will cancel December 4 election

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UDP commando Momodou Sabally has said it is his belief the Supreme Court will annul the December 4 election.

“What we yearn for is when the Supreme Court annuls the election, we will go back and have a new election and I believe this is what will happen and that’s also what is in the interest of this country,” Mr Sabally told UDP supporters in a new audio message.

UDP has yet to come to terms with its devastating defeat in the hands of President Adama Barrow in an election that is notorious for its bitter acrimony.

UDP rejected the election even before the final result was announced and has filed a petition at the Supreme Court complaining and alleging that President Barrow cheated his way to victory.

Army will not take action against General Saul Badjie for desertion

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The military will not take action against the returning runaway general Sulayman Badjie, unlike Generals Umpa Mendy and Ansumana Tamba who were arrested and tried for desertion.

General Badjie returned to the country over the weekend from Equatorial Guinea after years at the side of former President Yahya Jammeh.

He arrived back in the country along with other a dozen others most of them military officers.

Regarding the army taking action against the once powerful military leader, army spokesman Captain Malick Sanyang told The Fatu Network: “When you look at this one, their coming has been somewhat more protocol, such that they voluntarily requested to come back and they were obliged through the use of the necessary diplomatic channels.

“So having exhausted the diplomatic channels, you can see that they do not necessarily present, at face value, a particular kind of threat that would have advised you to react differently other than to extend humanitarian gesture bringing them back home.”

 

‘Backway’: Gambians reportedly die in boat disaster as 28 migrants wash ashore Libya’s coast

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Some Gambians are among scores who died in a migrant boat disaster over the weekend, according to reports.

AFP reported on Sunday Libya’s Red Crescent says the bodies of 28 Europe-bound migrants washed ashore in western Libya.

The bodies were found late Saturday in two separate locations in the coastal town of Khoms, the Red Crescent’s branch there said. Three other migrants were rescued. Search efforts continue for others.

The Red Crescent, a Muslim organization equivalent to the Red Cross, posted images purporting to show bodies floating in the Mediterranean Sea with its workers putting them in black burial bags.

The dead migrants likely drowned in recent shipwrecks off Libya. There has been a surge in crossings and attempted crossings from Libya as authorities accelerated their deadly crackdown on migrants in the capital of Tripoli.

Around 1,500 migrants have drowned in numerous boat mishaps and shipwrecks in the Central Mediterranean route this year, according to the U.N. migration agency.

Sierra Leone: WAEC Sabotages Free Access To Public Exams Results

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By Amara Thoronka

West African Examination Council (WAEC), the public exams conducting body in West Africa, has shown unwillingness to corporate with the Government of Sierra Leone led by President Julius Maada Bio in providing free electronic access to the 2021 West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) results.

On Christmas Day [Saturday 25th December 2021] Sierra Leone’s Minister of Basic and Senior Secondary Education, Dr. David Moinina Sengeh twitted:

“I did ask WAEC for the release of soft copies of the 2021 WASSCE results. They refused, claiming the data belongs to them and referred the matter to their Board which meets in January 2022. We have dispatched the hard copies to schools without analyses.”

Dr. Sengeh is a United States-based Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) trained expert with wide experience in information and communication technology, recognized globally.

It could be recalled that Dr. Sengeh and team, mid-2021, and for the first time in the history of Sierra Leone developed an electronic system that allowed for free, easy and quick access to results of this year’s National Primary School Examination (NPSE) – public exam for entrance to junior secondary school – and Basic Education Certificate Examination (BECE) – public exam for entrance to senior secondary school.

This year, 124,541 candidates took the NPSE and 131,822 sat to the BECE. All were given the opportunity by the Ministry to freely and quickly access their results at the comfort of their homes by sending a free text message to 468 and in a few seconds the results popped up.

Parents and pupils were profoundly appreciative and thanked President Bio and Dr. Sengeh for removing the financial burden of paying approximately One Hundred Thousand Leones ($10) to purchase a WAEC scratch card to access the result of just one pupil.

In a letter dated 22nd October 2021, addressed to Dr. Sengeh, WAEC expressed dismay over the Minister’s intention to extend the same free electronic access to candidates who took the 2021 WASSCE.

“At a meeting of the Sierra Leone Examinations Committee (SLEC) of WAEC held recently in Freetown it was reported that the Ministry of Basic and Senior Secondary Examination (MBSSE) had created an online result checker platform and displayed for free access by candidates for the 2021 NPSE and BECE, despite the existence of a functional WAEC Result Checker facility. The council has viewed this development as most inappropriate and deeply worrisome…” the letter noted.

“In view of the adverse implications, I wish to solicit your kind intervention, Honourable Minister, to immediately shut down the MBSSE result checker platform to prevent the danger it portends and facilitate necessary consultation between WAEC and MBSSE on the issue,” it urged.

The scratch card system to access results online was introduced in Sierra Leone in August 2008. It has been 13 years of generating huge money from poor parents. The price of scratch card increases every year. The usual modus operandi is that WAEC will upload on their portal results for the said public exams and inform candidates to access their results online by purchasing a WAEC scratch card.

The results will be on the portal for weeks before they are sent to the schools. This is reportedly to influence curious parents to buy WAEC scratch cards to know the performance of their children before the results are sent to the schools.

As Sierra Leoneans observe the issue between WAEC and the Ministry, many hold the view that the move of WAEC is a way to continue making huge money from the sale of scratch cards as usual, notwithstanding the high poverty rate in the country.

“Only Dialogue Can Heal a Divided World”- Pope Francis Admonishes World Leaders

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Pope Francis has urged world leaders to shun polarisation and try dialogue to heal a divided world. Pope Francis was speaking over the weekend whilst delivering his traditional Christmas message.

The Pope decried increasing polarisation in personal and international relationships, saying only dialogue can resolve conflicts ranging from family feuds to threats of war.

In his “Urbi et Orbi” (to the city and the world) message, he called on individuals and world leaders to talk to each other rather than dig in their heels, a distancing he said has been worsened by the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Our capacity for social relationships is sorely tried; there is a growing tendency to withdraw, to do it all by ourselves, to stop making an effort to encounter others and do things together,” he said from the central balcony of St. Peter’s Basilica on a wet and windy Christmas in Rome.

“On the international level too, there is the risk of avoiding dialogue, the risk that this complex crisis will lead to taking shortcuts rather than setting out on the longer paths of dialogue. Yet only those paths can lead to the resolution of conflicts and to lasting benefits for all,” he said.

Francis, who turned 85 last week, listed conflicts, tensions or crises in Syria, Yemen, Israel, The Palestinian Territories, Afghanistan, Myanmar, Ukraine, Sudan, South Sudan and elsewhere.

“We continue to witness a great number of conflicts, crises and disagreements,” he said, speaking from the same balcony where he first appeared to the world as pope after his election on March 13, 2013.

“These never seem to end; by now we hardly even notice them. We have become so used to them that immense tragedies are now being passed over in silence; we risk not hearing the cry of pain and distress of so many of our brothers and sisters,” he said, speaking to an unusually small crowd reduced by COVID-19 restrictions and the weather to only several hundred.

He asked God to “give serenity and unity to families”, praising those who strive to keep them and communities together in such divisive times.

“Let us ask him for the strength to be open to dialogue. On this festive day, let us implore him to stir up in the hearts of everyone a yearning for reconciliation and fraternity,” he said.

He used the word “dialogue” 11 times in a speech of little more than two pages as he spoke to people huddled under rain parkas and umbrellas.

Francis asked God to “prevent fresh outbreaks of a long-festering conflict” in Ukraine, which has accused Russia of massing tens of thousands of troops in preparation for a possible large-scale military offensive.

Russia denies planning any attack and accuses Ukraine and the United States of destabilising behaviour, saying it needs security guarantees for its own protection.

He asked people not to be indifferent to the plight of migrants, refugees, the displaced, political prisoners and women victims of violence and urged leaders to protect the environment for future generations.

In his Christmas Eve Mass on Friday night in St. Peter’s Basilica, Francis said that people who are indifferent to the poor offend God, and urged all to “look beyond all the lights and decorations” and remember the neediest.

VATICAN CITY (Reuters)

Tributes Paid to Anti-Apartheid Icon Desmond Tutu

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Nobel Peace Prize laureate Desmond Tutu, 90, has died in Cape Town, South African President Cyril Ramaphosa announced in a statement on Sunday.

Alongside late Nelson Mandela, Tutu was one of the most important voices against the old system of white minority rule known as apartheid. The Anglican cleric also headed the country’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission in the post-apartheid era and was seen by many as the conscience of the troubled nation.

Tutu “died peacefully at the Oasis Frail Care Center in Cape Town this morning,” said Ramphela Mamphele, the acting chairperson of the Archbishop Desmond Tutu IP Trust and coordinator of his office. The statement, issued on behalf of Tutu’s family, did not provide details on the cause of death.

Tutu Praised as ‘Patriot Without Equal’

“Desmond Tutu was a patriot without equal; a leader of principle and pragmatism,” Ramaphosa said in a statement.

The Nelson Mandela Foundation said, “His contributions to struggles against injustice, locally and globally, are matched only by the depth of his thinking about the making of liberatory futures for human societies. He was an extraordinary human being.”

Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama said, “He was a true humanitarian and a committed advocate of human rights.”

Pope Francis said in a statement issued by the Vatican that he was saddened to learn of the archbishop’s passing.

“Mindful of his service to the gospel through the promotion of racial equality and reconciliation in his native South Africa, his Holiness commends his soul to the loving mercy of Almighty God,” the statement read.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz also offered his condolences, saying that Tutu had “made a decisive contribution to ending apartheid in South Africa.”

“He was a lifelong advocate of the principles of humanity, freedom and equality, and worked to bring about balance and reconciliation among people.”

“Especially at Christmas time and in view of his death, these are values that we particularly celebrate and hold dear,” Scholz added.

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson tweeted Tutu “will be remembered for his spiritual leadership and irrepressible good humour.”

US President Joe Biden says he and his wife, First Lady Jill Biden, were “heartbroken” to hear about Tutu’s passing. “His legacy transcends borders and will echo throughout the ages,” the Bidens said.

“On behalf of the people of the United States, we send our deepest condolences to the people of South Africa who are mourning the loss of one of their most important founding fathers.”

Former US President Barack Obama said Tutu was “a moral compass for me and so many others.”

“A universal spirit, Archbishop Tutu was grounded in the struggle for liberation and justice in his own country, but also concerned with injustice everywhere,” Obama said on Twitter.

Queen Elizabeth II said the royal family was “deeply saddened” by news of Tutu’s passing and said the archbishop was a “man who tirelessly championed human rights in South Africa and across the world.

“I remember with fondness my meetings with him and his great warmth and humor,” the queen said in a statement.

Elections Like ‘Falling in Love’

Tutu won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1984 for his efforts in leading the non-violent struggle against apartheid.

While other leaders, like Mandela, were incarcerated, Tutu traveled and spoke widely, using his senior position in the Anglican Church and the esteem the Nobel Peace Prize brought to promote his anti-apartheid message worldwide and elevate the stories and lives of Black South Africans.

Following Mandela’s release from prison after 27 years, Tutu led him onto a balcony at Cape Town City Hall where Mandela delivered his first public speech.

Tutu likened voting in the country’s first democratic election in 1994 to “falling in love.” When Mandela was sworn in as the country’s first black president, Tutu was at his side.

The archbishop’s life was a testament to the hope and strength he placed on reconciliation in the divided nation, Ramaphosa said.

Dream of a ‘Rainbow Nation’

While Tutu preached against the tyranny of apartheid, he would go on to be just as critical of black political elites.

He even publicly criticized his ally Mandela over what the cleric describes as the “gravy train mentality” of Mandela’s party, the African National Congress. Later, Tutu would castigate Mandela for his open affair with Graca Machel, who Mandela would eventually marry.

In 2013, Tutu withdrew his support for Mandela’s party, describing South Africa as “the most unequal society in the world.”

In recent years, Tutu started to campaign in favor of the assisted dying movement.

“Dying people should have the right to choose how and when they leave Mother Earth,” he wrote in the Washington Post in 2016.

“I have prepared for my death and have made it clear that I do not wish to be kept alive at all costs.

Toward the end of his life, Tutu also spoke with regret that the dream of a true “rainbow nation” had yet to be realized.

Politician and fellow anti-apartheid activist Reverend Allan Boesak told DW that the archbishop acknowledged that his work was not yet complete.

“He knows that South Africa is still a society in which women are violently assaulted, we are still in many ways discriminating, despite our constitution, against LGBTQ persons. And so he would love for us, who are now living and taking up the baton and going forward with the struggle, to continue… because he knew the work is not done.”

Credit: DW

COVID-19: Around 8,000 Flights Cancelled Globally Over Christmas Weekend

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Around 8,000 flights were cancelled globally between Christmas Eve and Boxing Day as airlines experienced staff shortages due to COVID-19.

Approximately 3,000 of the cancelled flights were in or out of the United States, where the highly transmissible Omicron COVID variant is causing a surge in infections, according to flight-tracking website FlightAware.com

The website’s tally showed 14,269 flights were delayed on Boxing Day, 3,099 were called off and of those, 1,369 were in the US.

As of 2.30am on Monday, 1,176 flights had already been cancelled around the world, with 268 of them being to or from the States. A total of 678 had been delayed.

The Christmas period is typically a peak time for travel but this year it has coincided with the rapid spread of the Omicron variant, which has caused many airlines to cancel flights while pilots and cabin crew self-isolate.

A Delta spokesperson said on Sunday: “Winter weather in portions of the US and the Omicron variant continued to impact Delta’s holiday weekend flight schedule.”

They added the airline was working to “reroute and substitute aircraft and crews to get customers where they need to be as quickly and safely as possible”.

Infections have risen sharply in many parts of the US, with New York state’s health department warning it had recorded a “startling” four-fold increase in COVID-19 hospital admissions for children under 18 since the week beginning 5 December.

Several cruises have also been affected by COVID-19, according to multiple media reports.

Lawyer Malick F M’bai wins Leaders in Law 2021 Global Award

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Lawyer Malick F M’bai, co-managing partner of Fajara Chambers has been chosen as the winner of the Commercial Law Expert of 2021.

Mr M’bai was recognized as the commercial law expert of the year in The Gambia by the Leaders in Law Global Awards 2021.

Mr M’bai is a solicitor and barrister and Co-Managing Partner of the law firm of Fajara Chambers which was founded in 1995 by Senior Lawyer Ann Rivington, a UK qualified lawyer with over 40 years combined practice experience in the UK and The Gambia.

The Chambers are conveniently located at the Standard Chartered House, Kairaba Avenue, Kanifing Municipality, the heart of the commercial and financial district of The Gambia.

The practice has a wide client base of local and international corporate and private individual retained clients. This includes local and international manufacturers, international airlines, local and international NGO’s, international and locally owned hotels and tourist enterprises, financial institutions, diplomatic missions and international investors. The practice receives agency instructions from international law firms in Europe, USA, Africa as well as locally based clients.

The members of the Chambers have a combined practice experience of over 50 years of offering and delivering legal services and the practice has the capacity to undertake large and complex transactions handled with high professional and ethical standards and the delivery of high quality legal services. The Chambers is well known for its client orientated approach aimed at delivering professional legal services in an efficient, timely and cost effective manner.

Mr M’bai currently focuses on civil litigation, debt recovery, property and conveyance, private client care, banking, corporate and commercial transactions and documentation, tax, petroleum law, probate, estate administration and matrimonial causes.

 

Commuter railway to open on Monday in Dakar, Senegal despite protests

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By AFP

On Monday, December 27 after five years of work and at a cost of more than 1 billion U.S. dollars, Senegal’s capital city will finally welcome a new commuter railway line.

Politicians are lining up to extol the benefits of slashing journey times and decongesting Dakar once the gleaming TER regional express trains start to roll.

“I know that in Dakar, there has been controversy about the TER being behind schedule,” TER General Manager Frederic Bardenet explained. But this is not the case, we are almost breaking world records in terms of construction, in terms of completion of this project.”

The state-owned railway line is a key part of President Macky Sall’s plan to overhaul the nation’s infrastructure by 2035.

The new transport system is aimed at reducing journey times and also decongesting the city.

Traveling at up 160 kilometers per hour, the trains will ply the 36-kilometer route between Dakar and the new city of Diamniadio in about 20 minutes.

Tickets for the Dakar-Diamniadio stretch will cost 1,500 CFA francs (2.5 U.S dollars) in second class, and 2,500 francs (4.3 USD) in first.

The trains will carry 115,000 people per day, saving passengers hours otherwise spent in vehicular congestion.

SETER will use 15 four-car dual-mode trains with diesel and electric power, built by French company Alstom.

The TER stations will link up with express buses, which will operate on reserved lanes on a toll highway that has been operating for the last decade.

But thousands of residents claim they have not been properly compensated for homes and businesses that were demolished to make way for the project.

“We plan to block the start of the TER on the day of the inauguration to demand satisfaction for our grievances,” said Ibrahima Cisse, who leads a group of some 16,000 people who say they are owed money.

Many are also furious that the rehousing they were promised has not yet been completed.

Yatma Dieye of Apix told AFP that “98.8 percent of people affected by the project have been compensated.”

“Payments began in February 2017. Everything was transparent and done according to international standards,” he said.

The government says that almost everyone who is owed compensation has received it but accepts that some resettlements have not yet happened.

Mali denies deployment of Russian mercenaries

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By AFP

Mali’s government has denied any deployment of Russian mercenaries from the Wagner group following charges by a group of 15 Western powers involved in the fight against militants in the Sahel region.

The government “gives a formal denial to these baseless allegations” of “an alleged deployment of elements from a private security company in Mali,” it said in a statement released late Friday.

Mali’s government “demands that proof be brought to it by independent sources” and said “Russian trainers” were in Mali as part of strengthening the operational capacity of the national defense and security forces.

Bamako was “only involved in a state-to-state partnership with the Russian Federation, its historical partner”, said the statement signed by government spokesman Colonel Abdoulaye Maiga.

A group of 15 Western powers on Thursday expressed anger that Russian mercenaries working for the controversial Wagner group had started to deploy in Mali, accusing Moscow of providing material backing for the fighters.

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