Afshain Afzal

Afshain Afzal

SRINAGAR, 29 January 2020, TON: Indian Deputy Superintendent of Police, Davinder Singh was arrested along with two most wanted terrorist being dubbed as Hizbul Mujahideen militants from a car on the Jammu-Srinagar national highway in the first week of January 2020.

The investigation officer of Jammu and Kashmir Police who interrogated Davinder Singh disclosed on the condition of anonymity that Police officials are working for intelligence agencies in carrying out genocide of Kashmiris on the pretext of their links with outlawed organizations including Hizbul Mujahideen. He further disclosed that Indian Military Intelligence have issued communication equipment to undercover former Kashmiri Mujahideen, who surrendered sometime back but not shown as “Surrendered Mujahideen”.

Accordingly, the case was transferred to Indian National Investigation Agency (NIA). The initial findings about Indian security forces and Intelligence agencies fake and sel-engineered operations were personally shared by Director-General NIA, Yogesh Chander Modi to Jammu and Kashmir Lieutenant Governor Girish Chandra Murmu at the Raj Bhavan on 28th January 2020  (Part – I of the Inside Story). 

WUHAN, 29 January 2020, TON: There are 5,992 confirmed cases of a deadly new virus in People’s Rebublic of China from which 142 people have died as of January 29.

Chinese National Health Commission in a statement had confirmed 132 cases on 28 January and claimed that another 9,239 suspected cases of the respiratory illness are being monitored. 
Dozens of cases have been confirmed outside mainland China as well, including in Europe, Africa, North America, and Asia.

Symptoms of the new kind of “Corona-virus” include fever, cough, and shortness of breath. Health authorities have sealed off access to 17 cities in China's Hubei Province including Wuhan, where the pathogen is believed to have originated and was first reported in December last year.

Foreigners have begun to leave the virus-stricken province where thousands of people have are trapped. The World Health Organization has recognized the outbreak as a national emergency but stopped short of declaring it an international one. However, TON could not verify if actually so many deaths are taking place. 

29 January 2020, TON: A former deputy energy and coal minister in the administration of former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych was placed in pretrial detention for 45 days on suspicion of causing $40 million in damages to the state. Former deputy minister was allegedly involved in a scheme to sell liquefied gas at the expense of two state-owned oil and gas companies to private firms causing huge losses worth $40 million.

Bail was alternately set at $240,000, the High Anti-Corruption Court ruled on January 28 in Kyiv.

Should the former government official post bail, he is ordered to obey summons by law-enforcement agencies and the courts, not to change his residence, refrain from speaking with other suspects in the case, surrender his travel passport, and wear a monitoring bracelet.

The suspect has neither been identified by the Court not the officials have disclosed the name. However, Ukrainian media have identified him as Ihor Kiryushyn, who served as deputy energy and coal minister in 2009-2011. He was arrested in Georgia in March 2017. Kiryushyn was extradited from Georgia to Ukraine on 27 January 2018. Yanukovych, who is in self-imposed exile in Russia has denied the allegations and maintains he is the legitimate president of Ukraine.

RIYADH, 29 January 2020: Saudi Arabia’s Deputy Defense Minister Prince Khalid bin Salman met with America’s top military commander in the Middle East on Tuesday.

Prince Khalid and General Kenneth McKenzie, commander of US Central Command, discussed cooperation between the two countries “particularly in the defense field, and the importance of strengthening security and military cooperation,” Saudi Press Agency reported.

They also discussed the latest developments in the region and the “joint efforts made towards them to serves international peace and security.”

28 January 2020: By Shaban Abdur Rahman Alfa. This year is expected to be another busy election year for West Africa, much like in 2019 when three presidential polls were held across the region. Incumbents won re-election in Nigeria and Senegal whiles in Guinea-Bissau, the incumbent was kicked out.

The 2020 calendar sees three close neighbours holding elections i.e. Togo, Ghana and Ivory Coast. Guinea is the other country even though there is a referendum specifically on whether or not outgoing Alpha Conde can run for another term after a decade in charge.

Togo’s Faure Gnassingbe will be contesting for the first of two constitutionally mandated five-year terms. Previously, the law allowed a candidate to run for as long as he wanted. That changed with the amendments that followed protests in 2017 and 2018.

 

But given that they did not have retrospective effect, Faure’s 15 years in office (2005 – 2020) did not count. It leaves him with a possible ten years to finally quit the presidency. If he wins the February 2020 polls, he is eligible to contest again in 2025 for a final term.

There are ten candidates cleared by the election body to contest. The president is the frontrunner but will be given his strongest opposition by Jean-Pierre Fabre, who was the leader of the protests that forced reforms especially on term limits for the presidency.

Alassane Ouattara after winning re-election in 2015 in what was expected to be his final term, said more than once that he was not interested in remaining in office beyond 2020. A lot has since changed and the president seems like he wants more of the presidency. Polls are slated for October.

Before disputed local polls of 2019, the coalition under whose aegis he rose to power parted ways. The ruling party managed to win the polls. Early this year, Ouattara dropped the strongest hint of staying on under certain conditions.

A key one being if his peers are going to contest, in this case former presidents Laurent Gbagbo and Henri Konan Bedie (his former coalition partner). Meanwhile, another ally in ex Speaker of Parliament, Guillaume Soro, has been shut out of the country over his presidential ambitions.

Soro is the subject of a judicial probe but has been denied re-entry into the country after a trip to Europe. Ouattara has promised to oversee free and credible polls, what remains to be seen is if it will usher in a new leader or a new mandate for himself.

Guinea remains in a state of political heat as opposition vows to continually oppose plans by the president, Alpha Conde, to amend the constitution to allow him run for a third straight term in office.

Conde like Ouattara has yet to make a clear statement on whether or not he will contest only again like Ouattara disclosing that plans are afoot to amend the laws. Protests in the country since 2019 has claimed lives, people have been arrested and jailed for their roles in the clashes with security forces.

With Conde’s party having a majority in parliament, it is projected that lawmakers will pass the amendment following which a referendum is likely to be held on the issue. Guinea, thus, has a long electoral year ahead.

West Africa is looking at four votes same for the East, Horn Africa region where Ethiopia and Somalia as well as Tanzania and Burundi go to the polls. Except for Burundi where Pierre Nkurunziza is exiting, incumbents are busy with plans to seek re-election.

John Pombe Magufuli will be seeking a final five-year term in Tanzania, In Tanzania. Abiy Ahmed will be in the driving seat as the Prosperity Party seeks political prosperity and Mohamed Abdullahi Farmaajo will be hoping to secure a historic second term in Somalia.

Here at Africanews, our Africa elections page will be updated with major developments from the different electoral arenas with before, during and after coverage guaranteed.

Pakistan pledged its support to Sri Lanka yesterday to combat drug trafficking and human smuggling.

Visiting Pakistani Navy Commander Admiral Zafar Mahmood Abbasi conveyed Pakistan’s willingness to assist the Government’s efforts to battle drug trafficking and human smuggling when he met Defence Secretary Maj. Gen. (Retd.) Kamal Gunaratne at the Defence Ministry yesterday.

While pledging Pakistan’s support for countering terrorism, Admiral Abbasi said that both countries should enhance existing cooperation to improve information sharing and defence ties.

“Pakistan will help to repair the Sri Lanka Navy’s hovercraft and also to develop a library at the proposed National Defence College,” Admiral Abbasi said. Expressing gratitude over Pakistan’s continuous assistance to Sri Lanka, Maj. Gen. Gunaratne said that he was looking forward to working closely with Pakistan in the future to strengthen military relations between the two nations.

Admiral Mahmood arrived in Sri Lanka on Saturday (25), on an official visit made on the invitation of SLN Commander Vice Admiral Piyal De Silva.

Maj. Gen. Gunaratne and Admiral Abbasi exchanged mementos to mark the occasion.

SHILLONG, 28 January 2020, TON: The United Democratic Party (UDP) expressed its apprehension over the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) and dubbed it as a wake up call for all North Eastern states to act against illegal immigration from neighbouring countries and influx of non-indigenous people. UDP top leadership is convinced that New Delhi is bent upon bringing demographic changes in their states.

The UDP General Secretary, Jemino Mawthoh said his party opposed the CAA in principleand everyone should wait for the Supreme Court of India’s interpretation in this regard.
He said people of North East and Meghalaya as well as other states should work together to find a solution against illegal immigration from the neighbouring countries and influx of non-indigenous people. He cautioned leadership in New Delhi and said, ‘We have been fighting over the and influx and illegal immigration for the last four decades and now it is right time to come up with something which is concrete for the protection and safeguard of the indigenous people. 

ISLAMABAD, 28 January 2020, TON: Hundreds of protesters have gathered in Khyber Pakhtunkhawa province of Pakistan over detention of Pakistani human and civil rights activists, Manzoor Pashteen, Mohsin Dawar and Ali Wazir.

It is pertinent to mention here that cases against these activities were already filed in Islamabad High Court (IHC) and were repeatedly summoned regarding response from Pashtun Tahafuz  Movemnet (PTM) chief Manzoor Pashteen, MNAs Mohsin Dawar and Ali Wazir in a case pertaining to maligning state institutions.

Manzoor Pashteen, a Pakistani youth leader who  remained vocal over foreign military operations especially drone attacks, killing hundreds and thousands of innocent, men, women and children as well as operations by Pakistani security forces and extrajudicial detentions in the northwestern tribal districts. He along with his activists were detained in the city of Peshawar, while court rejected their bail application on 28 January and sent them on 14-day judicial remand.
Manzoor Pashteenm leader of the PTM is accused of sedition, hate speech, incitement against the state, and criminal conspiracy.

Protesters took out rallies in Peshawar, Nowshera, Mardan, Tribal districts as well as Islamabad and Karachi, demanding immediate release of Pashteen, d PTM members, were among those detained during the demonstration outside the National Press Club in the capital.
Afghan nationals in Kabul also protested in front of Pakistani Embassy in Kabul and demanded immediate release of PTM leaders.

Meanwhile, Afghan President Ashraf Ghani while criticizing detention said, “Pakistan must support and encourage peaceful civil movements for justice and must not use coercive force to supress these movements." Pakistan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs cautioned President Ashraf Ghani for his comments as a clear interference in Pakistan’s internal affairs.

CAIRO – 28 January 2020, TON: Sheikh Ahmed El-Tayyeb, the grand Imam of Al-Azhar, Egyptian top religious authority, on Monday while addressing “Al-Azhar International Conference on Renovation of Islamic Thought,” announced establishing a new religious center, as part of the national efforts to renovate religious discourse, in a way that suits developments.

The conference  was attended by representatives of religious institutions from dozens of Arab and Islamic countries, El-Tayyeb  urged the renewal of religious discourse, calling it a “pure Quranic law,” which prominent scholars saw as necessary to cope with political and social developments. The stance taken by Al Azher came after Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi’s demanded renovation of Islamic thought.


 

Afghanistan, 28 January 2020, TON: Militants attacked a police base in Puli Khumri, northern Afghanistan, killing 11, Mabobullah Ghafari, resident of Baghlan province said Tuesday.
The insurgents first overran a checkpoint near the base late Monday, and easily entered the compound using main gate. An Afghan police official claimed that some police personnel inside the base were accomplices of the militant who allowed the militant to easily enter from the gate. No group has yet claimed responsibility for the attack.

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