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Archive for June 4th, 2008

Barack Obama expected to get the nomination to become the first African/American to become Democratic Presidential candidate

Posted by African Press International on June 4, 2008

Publisher: Korir, africanpress@getmail.no

Obama and family may become the first family of the US if the American people decide on him and not the Republican Mcain.

Barack Obama has managed to get enough delegates to become the nominee to represent the democratic party as their presidential candidate today after getting enough delegates.

This is history in the making for the American people if it stands. Senator Hillary Clinton may become his running mate if she concedes , but she may decide to continue the fight until the convention…

 

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Norway: Contractor turns himself in

Posted by African Press International on June 4, 2008

Publisher: Korir, africanpress@getmail.no source.aftenposteneng

Harald Langemyhr, a building contractor from Tønsberg who’s charged with defrauding the City of Oslo and violating labour laws, reported to police during the night and said his first priority is to get three employees out of jail.

Harald Langemyhr is now undergoing questioning by the police.

PHOTO: SVEIN ERIK FURULUND

 

The three employees were arrested last week when police and labour authorities raided Langemyhr’s offices. Langemyhr himself was said to be out of the country at the time, and a warrant was issued for his arrest.

His lawyer Petar Sekulic said Langemyhr is prepared to answer the police’s questions, in the hopes of freeing his workers.

“He’s putting a priority on his workers, ahead of himself,” Sekulic told financial news service E24.

Langemyhr was due to undergo questioning on Tuesday. He continues to deny charges he overbilled or tried to overbill Oslo city officials to the tune of NOK 28 million, in connection with work his firm was doing on a nursing home project in Oslo’s Økern district.

The job site was raided earlier this year, and Langemyhr was also charged with exploiting Polish workers on the job.

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Six embassies under threat

Posted by African Press International on June 4, 2008

Publisher: Korir, africanpress@getmail.no source.aftenposteneng

Norway’s embassy in Pakistan remained closed on Tuesday, following Monday’s terrorist attack on the nearby Danish Embassy. Foreign Ministry officials believe the threat of attack on five other Norwegian embassies is also high, and security measures are being further increased.

The bombing of the Danish Embassy in Islamabad on Monday left eight persons dead and dozens injured.

PHOTO: ANJUM NAVEEN/AP

 

Newspaper Aftenposten reported Tuesday that an internal list at the Foreign Ministry identifies six Norwegian embassies where the threat of terrorist attack is viewed as especially high. They include the embassy in Islamabad plus the embassies in Afghanistan, Sudan, Sri Lanka, Algeria and the Palestinian region at Al-Ram.

The ministry also has standing warnings against unnecessary travel to the areas, and urges Norwegians in the targeted countries to be especially cautious.

Norway’s embassies in Cairo, Beirut, Damascus, Harare and Teheran also mount serious security challenges, Aftenposten reported. The embassy in Damascus, for example, was plundered in 2006 and set on fire by a mob protesting drawings of the prophet Mohammed in Danish publications and a Norwegian magazine.

A ministry spokeswoman refused to confirm the list, nor would she comment on the security measures at the embassies believed to be on it.

Foreign Minister Jonas Gahr Støre, however, confirmed that Norway’s embassy in Pakistan has long been considered especially vulnerable. He denied, however, that it has receceived any concrete threats like the Danish Embassy had.

Norway’s ambassador to Pakistan, Aud Marit Wiig, said her staff planned meetings with Pakistani authorities to discuss new security measures around the building in Islamabad. Repairs were due to begin after the fatal bombing of the nearby Danish Embassy blew out most of the windows at the Norwegian mission as well.

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Embassies hit by staff unrest

Posted by African Press International on June 4, 2008

Publisher: Korir, africanpress@getmail.no source.aftenposteneng

Locally employed staff at Norway’s foreign embassies are protesting low pay, long workdays, lack of overtime pay and few benefits. The situation is viewed as especially serious at embassies in North America and Europe.

One of Norway’s foreign missions, in London.

PHOTO: NINA RANGØY

Staff members are describing the situation at embassies as a looming uproar. Newspaper Aftenposten reported Monday that a lack of benefits and pay raises prompted locally employed embassy workers all over the world to send a joint protest letter to Norway’s Foreign Ministry in Oslo.

One such worker, a Norwegian citizen hired at an embassy in western Europe, said he’s actually had a 25 percent reduction in his pay over the past 12 years.

“We’re tired of how the ministry has neglected this large group of workers for years,” says another worker at one of Norway’s embassies in west Africa. “The ministry uses either Norwegian or local regulations according to what suits its own interests best.”

Most of the embassy staff hired in the cities where the embassy is located are not represented by any labour organization. An informal network of local employees at as many as 40 foreign missions, however, has been established in an effort to press through the workers’ demands.

Earlier this year, a representative for the network also sent a letter to the government minister for labour issues in Norway, Bjarne Håkon Hanssen, pleading for his help.

Foreign missions aren’t always subject to Norwegian laws governing work hours, which has resulted in cases where chauffeurs are required to work more than 20 hours in a row, where local staff work 250 hours of overtime and only get paid for 15, and where workers have received just five or six vacation days in the course of a year.

Foreign Ministry officials have conceded that they need to improve terms in many workers’ contracts, and all locally hired workers have been promised more systematic evaluation of salary levels.

They claim, though, that much of the unhappiness among embassy staff is rooted in “misunderstandings” over the “important differences” between ministry staff dispatched to the overseas postings and those hired locally.

A newly established forum comprised of 15 locally hired embassy employees is aimed at giving the local staff a voice within the ministry in Oslo. It’s already been criticized, however, because ministry officials and not local employees are choosing who will make up the forum.

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Cheating on your spouse? Beware someone is watching

Posted by African Press International on June 4, 2008

Publisher: Korir, africanpress@getmail.no source.standard.ke

By Isaac Ongiri

Two weeks ago the CEO of a blue-chip Nairobi-based company told his wife that he was flying to Mombasa on company business.

Instead of heading for the airport, the man drove to Kitengela where he rendezvoused with his girlfriend. They spent the rest of the day and the night drinking and canoodling.

His suspicious wife contacted a private eye firm to track down and expose the man. It did not take them long to compile a dossier on the philanderer.

Few private eyes goes about their business with the professionalism and tenacity of SpyLink International, a firm started by a former policeman. A growing number of women and men disgusted by their partners’ cheating ways are now using such firms to track them down.

Some of the latest gadgets that are used by private eye operatives

Jealous and suspicious spouses have been flocking to the private investigator’s offices in Nairobi seeking assistance to catch their cheating partners.

Assisted by the latest ICT technology, the SpyLink International sleuths will collect the necessary evidence and present it to their clients.

They use psychologists to help them trace the cheats to their romantic hideouts without arousing suspicion.

“We know where the cheats hung out and we use our psychologists to pin them down and we follow them all the way,” says John Muriungi, a top SpyLink manager.

Prominent personalities in the country are among the people whose wives have sought the help of the private sleuths to unearth their dirty liaisons with women.

“Here we help people who come to us,” says Muriungi. “They may not be having any evidence, but we use our expertise to obtain the evidence necessary to pin down a cheating partner.”

At the moment two Cabinet ministers, 36 Members of Parliament (some of them women), three permanent secretaries and eight prominent CEOs are being tracked down.

Their jealous partners have sought the aid of the sleuths to pin them down and expose their dirty ways.

A number of former policemen have been recruited to boost SpyLink’s activities.

The company is quickly acquiring a reputation as a ‘hanging noose’ for cheating spouses — and their partners now have a way of proving their suspicions either right or wrong.

Using a car and a motorbike to track down their quarry, the SpyLink sleuths rely on cell phones to report progress to headquarters.

From the car, the man or woman is photographed and every move filmed.

Kitengela, Mlolongo, Hurlingam and Westland areas are named by the trackers as the most popular hideouts for cheating executives.

An assignment, Muriungi reveals, is charged depending on the nature of the job. It costs about Sh10,000 for a ‘minor’ assignment within Nairobi’s central business district and up to Sh2 million for a job involving foreign trips.

Last year SpyLink signed up a client from Italy who wanted his wife spied on. The woman has been paying frequent visits to the country and the husband suspected that she was up to some hanky-panky at the Coast. SpyLink charged Sh2 million for the job.

” Our business is not about framing anyone, and not everybody being investigated is a cheat,” Muriungi says. “Some may just be merely suspicious and jealous. We deliver the truth to our clients.”

The firm is also undertaking pre-wedding espionage for partners waiting to get married. Muriungi says a good number of women and men who are suspicious about those they intend to wed have requested for their services.

“Every week we get about five clients who want us to spy on their intended spouses,” he says.

“Knowing whether your partner is cheating or not can be huge task, and getting the evidence good to pin him or her down could be a nightmare. That is what we do for our clients,” says Muriungi.

An assignment might take months, and starts from the target’s home. He or she is then tracked in different cars and motorbikes all the way to the work place and all movements studied.

Case one

SpyLink sleuths use micro cameras to record hard-to-get information while miniature microphones are placed in various places to get the audio evidence.

Grace* was shocked to be shown a video recording of her husband making love to an Arab woman in Zanzibar.

The man had claimed to be on a business trip to Tanzania, but her suspicious wife set spies on him.

She paid them Sh300,000 and they tracked down her husband and boarded the same plane with him to Zanzibar. They brought back shocking evidence and, according to Grace, her husband collapsed when she showed him what he had been doing in Zanzibar.

A man we found at the SpyLink offices was anxious to have his wife, whom he accused of sleeping with her boss, investigated.

“She comes home and behaves in a manner that indicates she has been seeing someone else,” he complained. “I have come here to get the whole truth because she claims to be tired every night,” says Geofrey*

The firm has four cars and five motorbikes to deploy when a mission arises.

The tracking team often changes cars to ensure that the subject does not get a hint of what is happening.

The firm sometimes uses its own staff mainly women, to trap the people being investigated but according to Mr Muriungi, not with the aim of framing the subject.

According to Muriungi, most of their clients already know their husbands or wives are cheating and are only looking for confirmation.

Wednesdays, Fridays and weekends are the days the company’s spying team is busiest. The snoops told Crazy Monday that it is usually more difficult to track down a cheating woman than a man.

“We don’t take long to catch up with cheating, men, but it takes more time and greater evidence in the case of women,” he says.

The spies sometimes collaborate with employees of various lodgings and hotels and pay them to put cameras and earphones in the rooms used by the lovers.

“We can pay up to Sh 50,000 to a lodging attendant or air hostess to make sure they place our equipment at strategic places to capture the details what we want.

Aware that their assignment may end up breaking up a marriage, SpyLink International and other firms conducts counselling for their clients to prepare them for what might transpire.

“We have helped a number of couples live together even after knowing the truth about their partners. Our aim is not to break up marriages,” Muriungi told Crazy Monday. With such spying organizations at work, the grass won’t look so green on the other side.

* Names have been changed to

conceal the identity of respondents

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Kibaki succession positioning is on as politicians target 2012 elections in Kenya

Posted by African Press International on June 4, 2008

Publisher: Korir, africanpress@getmail.no source.standard.ke

A Standard story

Kibaki allies in new power plot

By Joseph Murimi and James Ratemo

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UNAIDS Executive Director Peter Piot defies critics and prints US$1 million UNAIDS “history” book

Posted by African Press International on June 4, 2008

UNAIDS..watch               Media Information Note            June 4, 2008
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AIDS activists to protest UNAIDS’ “wasted funding” at the XVII International AIDS Conference (AIDS 2008) in México City in August

 

Geneva, June 5, 2008 – The first copies of a US$ 1 million UNAIDS ‘history’ book are rolling off the presses this week after UNAIDS Executive Director Peter Piot revived the printing of the 300-page glossy tome that he previously cancelled six months ago.

 

The book is called “UNAIDS: the first 10 years” and editorial preparation and production have been ongoing for several years. Run under a confidential code word – the “Chronicles” – the entire project has been a closely-guarded secret within Piot’s office. However, the secret was leaked 6 months ago and, in the wake of harsh condemnation from AIDS activists and other critics including his own former senior advisor, Piot cancelled the intended December 2007 printing.

 

A senior spokesman at a leading AIDS NGO in sub-Saharan Africa, where two-thirds of all people with HIV or AIDS live, called the publishing exercise “shameful” and denounced Piot for wasting these funds. “I thought he had listened to our December call for printing to be cancelled. Clearly he has not; we consider the publishing of this book is nothing less than scandalous since this money is so desperately needed to save lives.”

 

The book focuses on the first decade of the UN agency’s work and the total cost of editorial preparation, design, printing and distribution exceed US$ 1 million.

 

Approximate Budget: History book: “UNAIDS: the first 10 years”

 

Specifications:      Full colour

                                300 pages printed on special paper

                                Print run: 10-15,000 copies

                                Weight per book (over 2 kilos)

 

Task

US$

 

Writing (over several years)

400,000

 

Full time administrative/research staff position (1 year contract)

100,000

 

Layout (at least 4 different versions)

100,000

 

Special paper

75,000

 

Printing

200,000

 

*Distribution

 

* Many of the books will be individually posted since the target distribution group is different than regular UNAIDS publications which benefit from less expensive bulk packaging and discounted postal rates.

175,000

Economy mailing costs

Europe $US 15 per copy

Rest of the world $US 20 per copy

TOTAL:

+ US$ 1 million

 

 

 

Some of the most serious criticism on this issue came from Siddarth Dube, Piot’s former senior advisor who quit UNAIDS in disillusionment about 18 months ago. In a December 2007 article in the UK’s Guardian newspaper1 Dube stated it was particularly inexcusable that a UN agency “has spent well in excess of half a million dollars on a book chronicling its work.”2

 

He called on the UNAIDS mid-December 2007 governing board meeting to take up this issue. “These government and NGO representatives should seriously discuss what institutionalized flaws are being spotlighted when a young UN body, charged with tackling a continuing global emergency and staffed by many committed people, wastes public funds on an appalling scale,” Dube wrote.

 

His article echoed the views of AIDS activists and sources at leading AIDS NGOs who have been clamouring for the book to be cancelled. They argue that it is totally irresponsible for the head of a UN agency to have spent this kind of money on a book while 6000 people a day are dying of AIDS.

 

In his article, Dube stressed that publication of the UNAIDS book was a clear indication of …” mismanagement within its top ranks and, even worse, a systemic lack of accountability to the populations that have been worst hit by the HIV-Aids pandemic…”.

 

However, UNAIDS lack of accountability does not stop with this one publication. In fact, since 2006 Piot has wasted almost US$ 3 million on his agency’s publishing ventures. He overspent the budget for the UNAIDS 2006 Global Report on AIDS by US$ 1 million because─at a late stage of preparation─he decided he wanted country profiles in the report. This doubled the size of the book from about 240 pages to 500, resulting in astronomical printing and distribution costs. Each report weighed over 2 kilograms and, if sent individually outside Europe, each copy cost US$ 30 to mail! Then, in the spring of 2007 Piot had UNAIDS publish a coffee table “art” book called “Art for AIDS” at a cost of close to US$ 400,000.

 

A top source at a leading AIDS NGO is calling for an official UN investigation into Piot’s financial management of UNAIDS. “This kind of waste proves that there is a clear lack of oversight of Piot’s activities by both UNAIDS Co-sponsors and its governing board,” said the source. “In my experience working with UNAIDS these past years, I have seen that waste and mismanagement do not stop with publications. It is time that someone in the UN started asking very serious questions about the policies and finances at this agency,” he concluded.

 

1. “Bringing UNAIDS to book”, The Guardian, UK, December 17, 2007

http://commentisfree.guardian.co.uk/siddharth_dube/2007/12/bringing_unaids_to_book.html

 

2. At the time he wrote the article, Dube was not aware of the full extent of the costs of the history book.

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Publisher: Korir, africanpress@getmail.no African Press International – api

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Loyalty of the Provincial administrators in Kenya is to the President

Posted by African Press International on June 4, 2008

Publisher: Korir, africanpress@getmail.no source.nation.ke

A Kenya Daily Nation story

Saitoti tells PCs to take charge

Story by FRED MUKINDA

Provincial and District Commissioners have been directed to take charge of all development projects in their areas.

Internal Security minister George Saitoti, while meeting the administrators, told them to demand accountability and transparency in utilisation of public funds.

He cited the Constituency Development Fund, Local Authority Transfer Fund, Local Authority Service Delivery Programme Fund, Women and Youth Development Fund as well as free primary and secondary education programmes.

Jurisdiction

The mandate was in line with a circular issued by the Office of the President describing PCs and DCs as “principal executive officers of Government” he said.

The minister also directed them to be in charge of security and resettlement of victims of post-poll violence in their areas of jurisdiction.

“Over 178,000 internally displaced people have returned to their homes. You must maintain proper registers and ensure that only genuine IDPs access this support,” he said.

Three weeks into the resettlement programme, 40,000 victims of the violence were still living in camps in Nakuru and Eldoret.

On Madaraka Day, President Kibaki said the resettlement programme should continue until all those displaced had returned to their homes. Tuesday’s meeting took place at the Kenya Institute of Administration at Lower Kabete. It brought together administrators from all districts in the country.

Prof Saitoti also directed them to take charge of “airstrips and security roads” in their areas as management of these facilities had been placed under the ministry.

Recruited

The minister also announced that more District Officers would be recruited and deployed to the newly formed administrative areas. “I’ve asked the PS to ensure proper criteria and rationalisation so that new administrative units are justified in tandem with available resource portfolio,” he said.

The PS Francis Kimemia said provincial administration officials should be loyal to the Government of the day.

“They are indeed personal representatives to the President. They must therefore uphold the rule of law at all times and democratic principles enshrined in the constitution,” said Mr Kimemia.

He added that 9,357 chiefs had been trained in administration while another 2,000 were laid off.

Prof Saitoti also directed the administrators to order closure of bars that sold alcohol to youngsters as well as those that operated beyond the stipulated hours.

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CAF disqualify Chad national team

Posted by African Press International on June 4, 2008

Publisher: Korir, africanpress@getmail.no

<Story by CHISHALA MUSONDA

CHAD has been disqualified from competing in the 2010 Africa Cup qualifiers after failing to fulfill the 2010 World Cup and Africa Cup opening Group 10 fixture against Sudan in Khartoum at the weekend.

The Confederation of African Football (CAF) disqualified Chad today after an emergency committee studied circumstances leading to the un-played match at the weekend.

Other nations in Group 10 are Mali and Congo-Brazzaville. Mali leads the group after the first group match following their 4-2 win over Congo.

CAF stated on the http://www.cafonline.com: “CAF emergency committee decided to disqualify the Chad national team from the preliminaries of the African Nations Cup – Angola 2010.

“Only the matches played between the other three teams will be taken into account for the qualification of the second round of the preliminaries of the African Cup of Nations.

“The decision is final and takes effect as of today,” the statement on the CAF website continued.

Chad had expressed their fear to the world football body, FIFA, of traveling to Sudan for the 2010 World Cup and Africa Cup qualifier following the existing tension between two nations and the breached diplomatic relations.

But FIFA guaranteed the Chad Football Association of safety while in Sudan after receiving the assurance from the host nation’s Football Federation.

The Africa football governing body, CAF, emergency committee argued that despite the FA in Sudan stating of the Chadian delegation safety, also assured of according the visitors the spirit of fair-play, the Chad authorities decided not to travel for the encounter.

“Nevertheless, the Chadian authorise refused to move their team to Khartoum and FIFA thus cancelled the match this in order to avoid unnecessary expenses.”

The CAF website went on to say that in view of what precedes and taking into account the provisions of article 15 para 1 (a) of the regulations of the African Cup of Nations mentioned hereunder:

“If for any reason whatsoever, a team withdraws from the Competition or does not report for a match except in cases of force majeure accepted by the Organising Committee, or if it refuses to play or leaves the ground before the regular end of the match without the authorization of the referee, it shall be considered loser and shall be eliminated for good from the Competition.  The same shall apply for the teams which were declared disqualified by decision of CAF.”

The Africa zone 2010 World Cup and Africa Cup qualifiers enter day two this weekend.

ends…

 

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African Press International – api

 

 

 

 

 

 

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MP humiliated during burial ceremony

Posted by African Press International on June 4, 2008

Publisher: Korir, africanpress@getmail.no

Story by Jeff Otieno, Kisumu – Kenya

Alego Usonga MP Edwin Yinda was recently ejected from his seat during the burial of the son of the public  service minister Dalmas Otieno in Rongo. 

The beleagured legislator who was clad in his customery casual attire was ejected from his chair by a lady  usher who could not link his position with the kind of dressing style he had for the occasion.

”Excuse me gentleman,you are sitted in a wrong place,this area is reserved for MPs,ministers and their assistants only,who are you?”the usher gloated. 

It took the quick intervention of one of the ushers who unsuccesfully contested the Rongo parliamentary seat in the last general elections to bring sanity.

Yinda who looked shocked and bittter thundered to the lady that he was a parliamentarian and therefore he had the moral authority to sit where he was.

The legislator who is of late being accused by his constituents and admirers to be practicing an ivory tower kind of politics is currently working a tight political rope.

He is among a clique of ODM brigades who are agitating for the formation of the grand opposition in parliament a stance which has sparked fury from the prime minister Raila Odinga together with the party’s fanatics who view him as a betrayor and a sell-out.

Recently in one of the airports in Kenya,he was overheard thundering that he paid dearly for his election and therefore he owes nobody an apology.

ENDS.

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African Press International – api

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South Africans given 6 months in Zimbabwe jail

Posted by African Press International on June 4, 2008

Publisher: Korir, africanpress@getmail.no source.apa

South African media workers arrested for broadcasting illegally from Zimbabwe were slapped with six months sentences on Tuesday, APA has learnt.

Magistrate John Masimba refused pleas for financial penalties from lawyers for the South African trio of Bernet Hasani Sono, Resemate Boy Chauke and Simon Maodi (also known as Simon Musimani) and sentenced them to jail terms.

The men had pleaded guilty to contravening Section 33 (1) of the Postal and Telecommunications Act, Chapter 12.03.

Sono and Maodi were given a further six weeks in jail for breaking Zimbabwe’s immigration laws after entering the country without proper travel documents.

They are expected to appeal the sentence.

The South Africans were arrested at a roadblock in south-western Zimbabwe last week after they were found with broadcasting equipment.

The equipment allegedly had logos belonging to Sky News but the British television network has denied any links to the arrested South African media workers.

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Posted by African Press International on June 4, 2008

Publisher: Korir, africanpress@getmail.no

Story by Thomas Ahianou

Despite its official abolition in the early 1848, the slave trade has not easily and entirely pulled out its roots from some of the African Countries.
Like in “WOOD HOME” and “GATOVOUDO” which means in the Togolese local Ewe dialect “the Well of the chained peoples” in the southern memorial Portuguese city of Agbodrafo in Togo, the slave trade has clandestinely continued its way for several years.
A tour to the City of Agbodrafo then called by the first Portuguese slave traders “Porto Segouro” which means “ Secured Port” when the Golf of Guinea was in the grip of this mercantile activities seems like a discovery of inviolate  lands of a painful memory.

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African Press International – api

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Bhatti acquitted of terrorism, convicted on other charges

Posted by African Press International on June 4, 2008

Publisher: Korir, africanpress@getmail.no source.aftenposteneng

AftenpostensStory

Norway’s first terrorism trial ended Tuesday with the acquittal of Arfan Qadeer Bhatti, who was charged with firing shots at a Jewish synagogue in Oslo and planning embassy attacks. Bhatti’s alleged accomplices were also acquitted, but Bhatti was convicted for other shootings and for attempted murder.  

Terror defendant Arfan Bhatti with his defense attorney, John Christian Elden, in court on Tuesday.

PHOTO: SARA JOHANNESSEN/SCANPIX

Bhatti, who has a long criminal record, was thus ordered held in preventive custody for up to eight years, and possibly longer under the relatively harsh Norwegian sentence known as forvaring. It can result in indefinite custody.

Bhatti and his accomplices were charged in both the September 2006 shots fired at the synagogue in Oslo and with planning terrorist attacks against the Israeli and American embassies in Oslo. Bhatti was further charged with firing shots at the suburban Bærum home of one of the leaders of a failed pyramid scheme, and threatening his family because the man owned Bhatti money. Those charges resulted in convictions, also for attempted murder.

Police believed they had a strong case against Bhatti, not least after they were allowed to play in court audio tapes of Bhatti’s phone conversations that investigators had recorded secretly. The tapes were incriminating, revealing strong language used by Bhatti against Israel and the US and his desire to hurt them.

His defense attorney had dismissed Bhatti’s remarks as overly emotional talk, and argued that Bhatti never intended to follow through on the threats he made.

The judge in an Oslo city court largely bought that argument, claiming that the demand for strong and clear evidence of terrorist activity wasn’t met. Judge Kim Heger also noted Norway’s anti-terror law demands strong evidence that the alleged terrorist act was carried out willfully and intentionally.

The judge ruled that it couldn’t be proved that either Bhatti or accomplice Andreas Bog Kristiansen entered into a binding and intentional agreement to carry out terrorist acts on the Israeli and American embassies. Heger said he could see no hard evidence for that, nor could he see that the shots fired at the synagogue amounted to a terrorist act.

Vandalism, not terrorism
Rather, he said, the court viewed the synagogue shooting as an act of serious vandalism. He conceded that the taped recordings of Bhatti’s verbal threats contained frightening thoughts and ideas, but ruled that they needed to be understood in their proper context.

Bhatti has been held in police custody since being arrested shortly after the synagogue shooting. He denied having anything to do with either the synagogue or Bærum shootings. Bhatti admitted on the opening day of his trial earlier this year, however, that he “might” have sent some mobile phone text messages that “could” have been interpreted as “frightening.”

But he claimed no knowledge of or involvement in the shootings, and suggested the Bærum shooting stemmed from a conflict involving stolen property.

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Posted by African Press International on June 4, 2008

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Kenya: Imposing Raila’s ODM man in Ainamoi, the Kalenjin area, will not bear fruit

Posted by African Press International on June 4, 2008

Publisher: Korir, africanpress@getmail.no source.nation.ke

Leaders claim ODM candidate imposed

Story by SOLLO KIRAGU and COSMAS BUTUNYI

Discontent among Ainamoi leaders may cost ODM the seat in the June 11 by-election, with claims of interference from “outsiders”.

The leaders are opposed to campaigns for candidate Benjamin Langat from politicians not from the constituency in Kericho District.

ODM won the seat in last year’s General Election but it fell vacant a month later following the murder of MP David Kimutai Too.

Rebellion is building up, with accusation that Mr Langat is being imposed on the Ainamoi people by outsiders.

Contestants

The leaders say that some outsiders, among them Cabinet ministers, are plotting to impose a leader on the constituents.

Led by former deputy Chief of General Staff John Koech, they accused the politicians, whom they declined to name, of interfering with campaigns.

ODM is fronting Mr Langat, a younger brother of Mr Too against four others.

However, the UDM through its candidate, Dr Paul Chepkwony, a former senior lecturer at Moi University, appears to be giving the ODM aspirant difficult time.

The other candidates include Nairobi-based businessman Paul Chirchir of Kanu, Mr Parveen Sigey of United Democrats Party of Integrity (UDPI) and Mr John Kibet Keino on Agano party ticket.

Last week, the battle for the seat took a dramatic twist when retired Lieutenant General Koech threw his weight behind the UDM candidate.

Similarly, former MPs Kipng’eno Ng’eny and Noah arap Too and other aspirants who lost in the ODM primaries have declared their support for the UDM candidate.

Seek votes

A number of Kipsigis legislators led by Belgut MP Charles Keter are supporting the ODM candidate and have vowed to campaign for him ahead of the by-election to boost their numbers in Parliament.

Separately, campaigns for the Emuhaya seat have intensified, with Kaddu leader Cyrus Jirongo pitching tent in the constituency to drum up support for the party’s candidate, Mr Julius Sikalo Ochiel.

Mr Jirongo announced that Kaddu would hold elections next year in preparation for the 2012 General Election. Mr Ochiel called on voters to elect him on the strength of his development record.

Speaking separately, ODM nominee Wilbur Ottichilo said that the seat was crucial to his party as it would be a test of its popularity after the polls.

Narc-Kenya candidate Norah Olembo is also set to kick off the home stretch of her campaigns this week, after spending last week making preparations in Nairobi.

A major showdown looms in Emuhaya next weekend when two teams are expected to spearhead campaigns.

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African Press International – api

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