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Violence in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo has left more than a dozen people dead in three days, military and local sources said.
Sunday's statement included two soldiers, who were among those killed since Friday.
Over 120 militias roam the country's volatile east and there are frequent attacks on civilians.
A military leader in North Kivu province said on Sunday: "We have just lost a brave soldier killed in an attack on our position in the northern outskirts of the city of Butembo by Mai-Mai militiamen".
The leader, who did not wish to be named, said two members of the militia were killed.
On Sunday in northeastern Ituri province "six gold miners were killed and decapitated by rebels from the CODECO group", Prince Kaleta, civil society president in Lodjo, Ituri said.
Deadliest militias
CODECO, the Cooperative for the Development of the Congo, is a political-religious sect that claims to represent the interests of the Lendu ethnic group.
It is considered one of the deadliest militias, blamed for ethnic massacres in Ituri.
Three civilians were "killed in an attack by the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF)" in North Kivu on Saturday night, said Flavien Kakule, head of a locality in the Bashu chiefdom, Beni territory.
Daesh terror group claims the ADF as its regional affiliate.
During protests against the United Nations in southern North Kivu on Friday and Saturday, "there was a death among the demonstrators, who carried bladed weapons and threw stones at a base of the Blue Helmets" in Kiwanja, Jason Ntawiha, mayor of the Rutshuru commune, said.
A soldier who "had just killed a civilian in Kimoka" was "killed and lynched by the angry population", Saturday, commander of the Congolese Army regiment in Sake Colonel Philemon Kakule said.
Source: AFP
It took only four hours to completely inundate the small village of farmer Altaf Hussain near historical Ranipur town of Pakistan's southern Sindh province, where swirling floodwaters washed away dozens of houses, animals, and crops last week.
Like hundreds of thousands of other displaced Pakistanis, Hussain from village Dur Mohammad Langrija Goth is currently lodged at a government school-turned-shelter camp in the port city of Karachi, but the ordeal he faced is settled in his mind.
Massive floods described by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif as "unprecedented in the last 30 years" have killed at least 1,061 people and affected more than 33 million across the country.
"It was midnight when the floodwaters struck our village. I was already awake, expecting something untoward as it had continuously been raining for the last 30 hours,” Hussain, a father of four, told Anadolu Agency.
The nearby Thari Mirwah canal and various streams burst their banks due to incessant rains, inundating the entire Ranipur town, located some 420 kilometres from Karachi, forcing the panicked residents to leave their homes for safety.
"It took me a few seconds to realize what was going on due to the loud screams and shouting (from adjacent houses). I woke up (my) kids and others and made them rush to the roof," Hussain recalled.
"It was a horrific scene that we could hardly see through the torches and mobile phone light from the rooftop as a deluge was heading towards our village," he went on to say.
Initially, Hussain said, he thought he and the family could survive on the rooftop but within hours he had to review his plans as floodwaters submerged streets, fields, and houses to alarming levels.
A timely operation by the army troops rescued the marooned villagers, including 20 members of Hussain's family.
Hours later, the raging floodwaters either washed away or badly damaged all the 500 houses of his ill-fated village.
“Nothing is left. All the houses and crops are destroyed,” Hussain added, trying to fight back his tears.
Hussain's family spent two shelter-less nights with no food along the main road where an army boat dropped them. A cargo truck eventually shifted them to this shelter camp.
'Only an hour to leave'
Mohammad Hussain Manganhar, a resident of Mehrabpur town, located roughly 380 kilometres from Karachi, had a similar account to share.
“The administration gave us only an hour to leave the village as floodwaters had already hit the adjacent towns and villages,” said Manganhar, whose family boarded a tractor-trolley along with whatever luggage they could carry in a hurry.
Speaking to Anadolu Agency at a shelter camp at Sachal Goth, a suburban locality in Karachi's eastern district, he said the flooding caused by massive rains and the bursting of the banks of a stream washed away hundreds of houses and animals in their village.
“There was a hue and cry. Everyone was trying to board the tractor trollies, donkey, and bull carts, while many started to walk towards the main road,” he recalled.
Fears of further inundation, including the road where the panicked family took refuge, prompted Manganhar to move to the shelter camp in Karachi.
"The entire Sindh is under water. Karachi is the only safe area," he said.
"Here, at least we get meals twice a day," he added.
Uncertain future
Unprecedented floods caused by record-breaking rains have inundated half of the country and killed over 1,000 people since mid-June.
Constant rains and raging floods have already destroyed a large chunk of infrastructure and agricultural lands across the country, including tens of thousands of houses, roads, and bridges, and washed away nearly a million animals.
The large-scale destruction has rendered the future of hundreds of thousands of people like Hussain and Manganhar bleak.
Experts fear a widespread migration within Pakistan due to the destruction of agricultural lands and businesses by the latest floods.
More than two million people had been displaced by massive floods that inundated one-fifth of the country in 2010, triggering mass migration to cities from rural Pakistan.
Of that figure, almost 70 percent did not go back to their hometowns and permanently settled in big cities to make a living because of the destruction of their homes and farmlands.
Source: AA
The Prime Minister of the Government of National Unity, Abdel Hamid Dbeibah, has given instructions to take all necessary measures to arrest all participants in the recent clashes in Tripoli, without exception, whether they were militants or civilians.
This came in a letter Dbeibah addressed to the Minister of Interior, the Military Prosecutor and the relevant security services, asking them to provide him with periodic reports in this regard, according to the Hakometna platform.
He also ordered the arrest of anyone suspected to be implicated in providing any form of support with these outlaw gangs.
Libya observer
Kuwait will hold a parliamentary election on September 29, state news agency KUNA has reported.
Sunday's announcement comes after the Gulf state's crown prince moved to dissolve parliament in a bid to resolve a political standoff between the government and the elected legislature.
Crown Prince Sheikh Meshal al Ahmad al Sabah, who has taken on most of the ruling emir's duties, issued a decree calling on voters to elect a new 50-seat assembly on September 29, KUNA said.
New districts will be added to the electoral circumscriptions, the decree showed.
Sheikh Meshal dissolved parliament earlier this month saying domestic politics were being "torn by disagreement and personal interests" to the detriment of the US-allied country and OPEC oil producer.
Lawmakers' protest
He made the move following a protest held by more than a dozen MPs inside parliament pressing the crown prince to appoint a new government.
The standoff with the cabinet has delayed the approval of a state budget for the fiscal year 2022/2023 and other economic reforms.
The budget, which has to be voted on before November, had set spending at 23.65 billion dinars ($77.2 billion) compared with 23.48 billion for the 2021/2022 budget.
Political stability in Kuwait has traditionally depended on cooperation between the government and parliament, the Gulf region's most lively legislature.
Kuwait bans political parties but has given its legislature more influence than in other Gulf monarchies.
Stalemates between Kuwait's government and parliament have often led to cabinet reshuffles and dissolutions of the legislature over the decades, hampering investment and reforms.
The last time parliament was dissolved was in 2016.
Source: Reuters
French police have opened an investigation into claims by World Cup winner Paul Pogba that he is the victim of a multi-million euro blackmail plot by gangsters involving his brother.
Pogba's allegations came after his brother Mathias Pogba published a bizarre video online –– in four languages (French, Italian, English and Spanish) –– promising "great revelations" about the Juventus star.
The police investigation was confirmed by a source close to the case to AFP news agency
A statement signed by the Juventus player's lawyers, his mother Yeo Moriba and current agent Rafaela Pimenta said that the videos published on Saturday night "are unfortunately no surprise".
"They are in addition to threats and extortion attempts by an organised gang against Paul Pogba," read the statement.
"The competent bodies in Italy and France were informed a month ago and there will be no further comments in relation to the ongoing investigation."
Mathias 'explosive revelation'
Mathias, 32, promised "great revelations about (his) brother Paul Pogba and his agent Rafaela Pimenta", who took over as head of the company of former agent Mino Raiola who died in April.
He said the "whole world, as well as my brother's fans, and even more so the French team and Juventus, my brother's team-mates and his sponsors deserve to know certain things".
Also a professional footballer, Mathias said people needed to know what he knew in order to judge whether his brother "deserves his place in the French team and the honour of playing in the World Cup. If he deserves to be a starter at Juventus."
"All this is likely to be explosive," he concluded without adding any substance to his "revelations".
Millions demanded from Paul
According to two sources close to the Pogba family contacted by AFP, large sums of money are being demanded from Pogba if he wants to avoid the dissemination of the allegedly compromising videos.
France Info reported that Paul Pogba told investigators he had been threatened by "childhood friends and two hooded men armed with assault rifles".
They are demanding $12.9 million from him for "services provided".
A source close to the matter confirmed the France Info reports to AFP.
Kylian Mbappe's name also came up in the affair.
Pogba explained to investigators that his blackmailers wanted to discredit him by claiming he asked a marabout (holy man) to cast a spell on the Paris Saint-Germain and France star, which Pogba denies.
Late Sunday, Mathias reacted to the day's developments.
"Paul, you really wanted to shut me up and lie and send me to prison," wrote Mathias.
"You left me in the hole, while running away and you want to play the innocent. When all is said people will see that there is no bigger coward, bigger traitor and bigger hypocrite than you on this earth."
Pogba, who won the World Cup with France in 2018, returned to Juventus on a free transfer this summer after six years at Manchester United and is currently sidelined with a knee injury.
The 29-year-old is expected to return to action next month.
Source: AFP
Anti-immigrant Sweden Democrats party has said it wants to spend $2.3 billion on strengthening the justice system and withdraw grants for immigrants who do not adopt the country’s culture.
The party’s leader, Jimmie Akesson, called it “a classic assimilation policy" and said he envisions the construction of special "Sweden centres" in marginalised areas.
“There you can let the Swedish way of being and Swedish heritage become very accessible in a part of the country where it is currently very inaccessible,” he said.
Akesson was speaking to the media while visiting the party’s stronghold of Ange municipality.
Once barred from politics due to their neo-Nazi ties, the Sweden Democrats are currently Sweden’s third-largest party.
They have surged in opinion polls ahead of elections due next month.
Growing support for anti-immigration policies
The party has the second-largest share of voter support ahead of the September 11 vote, trailing the ruling Social Democrats, which have dominated Swedish post-war politics.
The Sweden Democrats polled between 20 and 23 percent in three different surveys published this week, overtaking the conservative Moderate party in the close race.
Candidates have been vying for support among voters who say that crime is a top concern, followed by immigration and segregation issues.
Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson's Social Democrats enjoyed a lead with around 30 percent of voter support, according to the polls.
Her party, long defenders of the country's cherished welfare state, has in recent years curbed immigration and campaigned on tackling gang-related crime.
The conservative Moderate party, traditionally the second most popular party, came in third with between 16 and 18 percent of voter support.
Moderates leader Ulf Kristersson is challenging Andersson for the post of prime minister.
Sweden has struggled to contain deadly shootings and bombings that have soared in recent years, many linked to gang rivalries or organised criminals battling over the drug market.
The far-right Sweden Democrats have been shunned since entering parliament in 2010 but with violence and crime dominating voters' concerns, the right-wing bloc, made up of the Moderates, Christian Democrats and Liberals, is now ready to cooperate with the Sweden Democrats to wrest power from the Social Democrats.
The Social Democrats are meanwhile relying on support from the Left, Centre and Green parties, with the two blocs neck-and-neck in the polls.
Akesson for PM?
In an interview with Swedish Radio, Akesson refused to say whether he would request to be prime minister if his party ends up at the top of the polls.
“I don’t think I should have to sit and draw any red lines about what the government should look like at the moment. We’ll have to decide that after the elections. If I had my way, I’d be in a majority government, but I don’t get to do that on my own,” he said.
In this year’s election campaigning, all Swedish political parties pledged tougher stances on immigration, crime and integration, which are the core issues for the Sweden Democrats.
Source: AA
India has demolished two residential high-rise buildings outside New Delhi, in a dramatic spectacle carried live on television channels after days of excited media build-up.
The destruction on Sunday of the 100-metre-high "Twin Towers" in Noida, home to a concrete forest of similar structures, was also a rare example of residential building demolition in the country.
The 32 floors of "Apex" and the 29 of "Ceyane", containing between them nearly 1,000 apartments that were never inhabited in nine years of legal disputes, were brought down in seconds, creating an immense cloud of dust and debris.
The controlled implosions using 3,700 kilograms of explosives were India's biggest demolition to date, local media reported.
Thousands of people, as well as stray dogs, had to be evacuated before the blast, including from neighbouring high-rises, one of which was reportedly just nine metres away.
There were no immediate reports of injuries or damage to nearby buildings but a local official told reporters that the operation had gone "largely as planned".
Buildings breached safety regulations
The legal dispute over the towers went all the way to India's Supreme Court, which ruled last year that the buildings breached safety regulations.
The outskirts of major cities like Mumbai, Delhi, Hyderabad and Bangalore have become traps for middle-class buyers who invest in projects that are never completed or get drawn into similar legal sagas.
In Delhi's suburbs of Noida and Greater Noida, where the towers were demolished on Sunday, it is estimated that more than 100 residential towers have been abandoned by builders, making these areas look like ghost cities.
Uday Bhan Singh Teotia, one of a group of residents whose case against private developer Supertech led to the demolition order, said before the event that it would be a vindication of his legal battle.
"The two new towers that they constructed were blocking everything — our air and sunlight," Teotia, who lives close to the structures, said.
Demolitions of residential buildings are rare in India, with builders often escaping with penalties or abandoning projects midway if they fall foul of the law.
Source: AFP
The death toll from monsoon flooding in Pakistan since June has reached 1,033.
Figures released by the country's National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) on Sunday said 119 people had died in the previous 24 hours as heavy rains continued to lash parts of the country.
The annual monsoon is essential for irrigating crops and replenishing lakes and dams across the Indian subcontinent, but each year it also brings a wave of destruction.
Officials say this year's monsoon flooding has affected more than 33 million people – one in seven Pakistanis – destroying or badly damaging nearly a million homes.
The NDMA said more than two million acres of cultivated crops have been wiped out, 3,451 kilometres (2,150 miles) of roads destroyed, and 149 bridges washed away.
International help sought
Tens of thousands of people fled their homes in northern Pakistan after a fast-rising river destroyed a major bridge, as deadly floods cause devastation across the country.
Powerful flash floods in the northern province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa caused the Kabul River to swell, sweeping away a large bridge overnight, cutting off some districts from road access.
Downstream, fears of flooding around the river banks prompted around 180,000 people in the district of Charsadda to flee their homes, according to disaster officials, with some spending the night on highways with their livestock.
Historic monsoon rains and flooding in Pakistan have affected more than 30 million people over the last few weeks, the country's climate change minister said, calling the situation a "climate-induced humanitarian disaster of epic proportions".
The military has joined the country's national and provincial authorities in responding to the floods and Pakistan's army chief on Saturday visited the southern province of Balochistan, which has been hit heavily by the rains.
"The people of Pakistan are our priority and we won't spare any effort to assist them in this difficult time," said army chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa.
Pakistani leaders have appealed to the international community for help and plan to launch an international appeal fund. The foreign affairs ministry said Turkey had sent a team to help with rescue efforts.
"The magnitude of the calamity is bigger than estimated," said Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, in a tweet, after visiting flooded areas.
Afghanistan floods
In neighbouring Afghanistan, the Taliban administration also appealed for help after flooding in central and eastern provinces.
The death toll from floods this month in Afghanistan had risen to 192, disaster authorities said.
"We ask the humanitarian organisations, the international community and other related organisations and foundations to help us," Sharafudden Muslim, the deputy director of Afghanistan's disaster ministry, said at a press conference, adding more than a million families required assistance.
Source: AFP
More than a million tons of grain have been safely shipped from Ukrainian ports since the beginning of August under a historic deal, the Turkish National Defense Ministry said on Saturday.
In July, Türkiye, the UN, Russia, and Ukraine signed a deal in Istanbul to reopen three Ukrainian ports for the export of Ukraine grain, which had been stuck for months due to the Russia-Ukraine war, now in its seventh month.
As part of the grain export deal brokered by Türkiye and the UN, the shipments in Ukrainian ports continue as planned, the ministry said in a statement.
With three more ships leaving Ukrainian ports earlier today, a total of 103 ships have departed for grain shipments since Aug. 1, it added.
A Joint Coordination Center with officials from the three countries and the UN is overseeing the shipments in Istanbul./AA
Over 25,000 migrants have crossed the English Channel this year, the UK government figures showed on Sunday.
On Saturday, 19 more small boats reached Britain’s shores carrying 915 people on board, according to the Home Office citing Defense Ministry data.
It takes the total number of people who have crossed the Channel to 25,146 so far this year.
The total numbers of crossings in 2022 could double those in 2021.
Earlier this year, the British government announced its controversial Rwanda plan to deport Channel migrants to the Central African country where their asylum claims would be processed.
The plan is on hold while a judicial review takes place, but the UK government has said it remains committed to the policy and is continuing preparations to enact the policy.
Both Conservative Party leadership candidates vying to become Britain’s next prime minister, former Chancellor Rishi Sunak and current Foreign Secretary Liz Truss, have backed the Rwanda plan.
AA