Clashes in Mozambique after opposition leader calls for protest

Update Clashes in Mozambique after opposition leader calls for protest
Several thousand people took to the streets on Thursday morning, with some dispersed by riot police using tear gas. Above, protesters carry a protester injured by a rubber bullet on Nov. 7, 2024. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 07 November 2024
Follow

Clashes in Mozambique after opposition leader calls for protest

Clashes in Mozambique after opposition leader calls for protest
  • The southern African nation has been rocked by violence since an October 9 vote
  • Main opposition candidate Venancio Mondlane says results were false and that he won

MAPUTO: Police in Mozambique fired tear gas to disperse protesters in the capital Maputo Thursday after the main opposition leader called for a demonstration against election results.

The southern African nation has been rocked by violence since an October 9 vote, won by the Frelimo party which has been in power for almost 50 years.

Opposition leader Venancio Mondlane, who said the results were false and that he won, called for a mass protest on Thursday, saying in an interview that it was a “crucial moment” for the country.

“I feel that there is a revolutionary atmosphere... that shows that we are on the verge of a unique historical and political transition in the country,” said Mondlane, speaking from an undisclosed location.

The 50-year-old former radio presenter said he could not disclose his whereabouts other than to say he was not in Africa.

The Mozambique Bar Association warned there were “conditions for a bloodbath” on Thursday as a heavy security presence was seen deployed across the capital.

Several thousand people took to the streets on Thursday morning, with some dispersed by riot police using tear gas, according to AFP reporters at the scene.

The city of more than one million people was a ghost town, with shops, banks, schools and universities closed.

“Our first objective... is certainly the restoration of electoral truth,” Mondlane said on Zoom late on Wednesday.

“We want the popular will expressed at the polls on October 9 to be restored.”

He said he was “waging a struggle” with “national” and “historical purpose.”

“People have realized that it wasn’t possible to bring profound change in Mozambique without taking risks,” he said, and that “now they have to free themselves.”

Using social media, Mondlane has rallied supporters out onto the streets on several occasions for demonstrations that have turned violent in police crackdowns.

At least 18 people have been killed in the post-electoral violence, according to Human Rights Watch (HRW), while a local NGO the Center for Democracy and Human Rights (CDD) said the death toll was 24.

A police officer was also killed in a protest at the weekend, Defense Minister Cristovao Chume told reporters Tuesday, warning the army could intervene “to protect the interests of the state.”

“There is an intention to change the democratically established power,” said Chume.

President Filipe Nyusi is expected to step down early next year at the end of his two-term limit and hand over to Frelimo’s Daniel Chapo, who won the presidential election with 71 percent of the vote, according to the electoral commission.

Mondlane, who has lodged a case at the Constitutional Council to request a ballot recount, said that he was “open to a government of national unity.”

The authorities have restricted access to Internet across the country, in an apparent effort to “suppress peaceful protests and public criticism of the government,” according to HRW.

The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk has warned against “unnecessary or disproportionate force,” saying police should “ensure that they manage protests in line with Mozambique’s international human rights obligations.”

The Southern African Development Community has called for an extraordinary summit between November 16 and 20 in part to discuss developments in Mozambique.

Mondlane left the country last month following the unrest.

He initially said he would be at Thursday’s march but on Wednesday said he wouldn’t return after all due to safety concerns.

“I wanted so much to be in Maputo with my people. But unfortunately, I received more than 5,000 messages... Ninety-nine percent of those messages discouraged me from going to Maputo,” he said.

“Unfortunately, I won’t be able to be there.”


Hundreds flee Santorini as quakes disrupt life

Hundreds flee Santorini as quakes disrupt life
Updated 37 sec ago
Follow

Hundreds flee Santorini as quakes disrupt life

Hundreds flee Santorini as quakes disrupt life

SANTORINI: Hundreds of people packed a port in Santorini in the early morning hours of Tuesday to board a ferry and reach safety in Athens as a series of quakes kept shaking the famous Greek tourist island.
Hundreds of quakes have been registered every few minutes in the sea between the volcanic islands of Santorini and Amorgos in the Aegean Sea since Friday, prompting authorities to shut schools in Santorini and the small nearby islands of Ios, Amorgos and Anafi until Friday.
A tremor with a magnitude of 4.7 was recorded by the European Mediterranean Seismological Center (EMSC) at 0653GMT on the island most of whose popular white and blue villages cling to steep cliffs over the sea.
“Everything is closed. No one works now. The whole island has emptied,” said Dori, a 18-year-old local resident who declined to give his last name, before boarding the ferry to Athens.
“We will go to Athens until we see how things develop here.”
More people were expected to fly out on an additional flight on Tuesday.
With seismologists estimating that the intense seismic activity could take days or weeks to abate, people were advised to stay out of coastal areas due to the risk of landslides and avoid indoor gatherings.
Some hotels started emptying their pools as they were told that the water load made buildings more vulnerable.
Greece is one of the most earthquake-prone countries in Europe as it sits at the boundary of the African and Eurasian tectonic plates whose constant interaction prompts frequent quakes.
Santorini took its current shape following one of the largest volcanic eruptions in history, around 1600 BC. The last eruption in the area occurred in 1950.


Japan PM to meet Trump on Feb 6-8 US trip: govt spokesman

Japan PM to meet Trump on Feb 6-8 US trip: govt spokesman
Updated 18 min 1 sec ago
Follow

Japan PM to meet Trump on Feb 6-8 US trip: govt spokesman

Japan PM to meet Trump on Feb 6-8 US trip: govt spokesman

TOKYO: Japan’s Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba will meet President Donald Trump on a visit to the United States this week, top government spokesman Yoshimasa Hayashi said on Tuesday.
“If circumstances permit, he will visit the United States from February 6-8 and hold (his) first face-to-face Japan-US summit meeting with President Trump in Washington DC,” Hayashi said.


Prisoners killed in Tajikistan riot were members of Daesh

Prisoners killed in Tajikistan riot were members of Daesh
Updated 04 February 2025
Follow

Prisoners killed in Tajikistan riot were members of Daesh

Prisoners killed in Tajikistan riot were members of Daesh

DUSHANBE: The five prisoners killed in a riot in an escape attempt from a facility in Tajikistan on Tuesday were members of Daesh, a source in Tajik law enforcement said.
Nine prisoners armed with homemade knives attacked guards on Tuesday, according to the justice ministry, which said the prisoners had tried to kill the guards and escape from the penal colony 20 km (12 miles) east of Dushanbe.
At least five prisoners were killed and three prison employees were injured, security agency sources told Reuters.


Frenchman on death row in Indonesia to return home

Frenchman on death row in Indonesia to return home
Updated 04 February 2025
Follow

Frenchman on death row in Indonesia to return home

Frenchman on death row in Indonesia to return home
  • Atlaoui was arrested in 2005 at a factory in a Jakarta suburb where tens of kilos of drugs were discovered

JAKARTA: A Frenchman on death row in Indonesia since 2007 for drug offences will be returned to his home country on Tuesday, where he hopes to be granted his freedom.
Indonesia, which has some of the world's toughest drug laws, has in recent weeks released half a dozen high-profile detainees, including a Filipina mother on death row and the last five members of the so-called "Bali Nine" drug ring.
Serge Atlaoui, 61, will be driven from Salemba prison in Jakarta to the city's main airport in a convoy before being handed over to French police officers and boarding a commercial flight to Paris, due to arrive Wednesday morning.
Upon arrival, "he will be taken to Bobigny (a suburb of Paris), presented to prosecutors and most likely detained while awaiting a decision on the adaptation (of his sentence)", his lawyer Richard Sedillot told AFP.
Then "in the coming weeks or months" the lawyer will request that a French court "adapt his sentence to grant his freedom".
"Serge is happy and calm", added Sedillot, "but he is going to need a little bit of time to reorganise himself".
France requested his return officially on November 4 and it was made possible after an agreement between the French Justice Minister Gerald Darmanin and his Indonesian counterpart Yusril Ihza Mahendra on January 24.
In the agreement, Jakarta said they had decided "not to execute the prisoner" and authorised his return on "humanitarian grounds" because "he is ill".
Atlaoui has been receiving weekly medical treatment at a nearby hospital.
Jakarta also left it to the French government to grant Atlaoui -- the only Frenchman on death row in Indonesia -- "clemency, amnesty or a reduced sentence".

Atlaoui was arrested in 2005 at a factory in a Jakarta suburb where tens of kilos of drugs were discovered and accused of being a "chemist" by the authorities.
A welder from Metz in northeastern France, the father of four has always denied being a drug trafficker, saying that he was installing machinery in what he thought was an acrylic factory.
"I thought there was something suspicious (about the factory)," Atlaoui told AFP in 2015.
Initially sentenced to life in prison, his sentence was reviewed by the supreme court and changed to death on appeal.
He was due to be executed alongside eight others in 2015, but was granted a reprieve after Paris applied more pressure and the Indonesian authorities allowed an outstanding appeal to proceed.
There are currently at least 530 inmates on death row in Indonesia, according to the human rights organisation Kontas, referencing official figures.
Among them 90 foreigners, including at least one woman, according to the Ministry of Immigration and Correction.
The Indonesian government recently signalled it will resume executions, on hiatus since 2016.
In December, Filipina inmate Mary Jane Veloso, who was arrested in 2010 and also sentenced to death for drug trafficking, was returned to her home country after an agreement was reached between both countries.


China hits back with tariffs on US goods after Trump imposes new levies

China hits back with tariffs on US goods after Trump imposes new levies
Updated 04 February 2025
Follow

China hits back with tariffs on US goods after Trump imposes new levies

China hits back with tariffs on US goods after Trump imposes new levies
  • Beijing slaps 15% levy on US LNG, coal; 10% on crude, farm equipment
  • Donald Trump initiated two-year trade war with China in his first term

WASHINGTON/BEIJING: China on Tuesday slapped tariffs on US imports in a rapid response to new US duties on Chinese goods, renewing a trade war between the world’s top two economies as President Donald Trump sought to punish China for not halting the flow of illicit drugs.

Trump’s additional 10 percent tariff across all Chinese imports into the US came into effect at 12:01 a.m. ET on Tuesday (0501 GMT).

Within minutes, China’s Finance Ministry said it would impose levies of 15 percent for US coal and LNG and 10 percent for crude oil, farm equipment and some autos. The new tariffs on US exports will start on Feb. 10, the ministry said.

Separately, China’s Commerce Ministry and its Customs Administration said the country is imposing export controls on tungsten, tellurium, ruthenium, molybdenum and ruthenium-related items to “safeguard national security interests.”

Trump on Monday suspended his threat of 25 percent tariffs on Mexico and Canada at the last minute, agreeing to a 30-day pause in return for concessions on border and crime enforcement with the two neighboring countries.

But there was no such reprieve for China, and a White House spokesperson said Trump would not be speaking with Chinese President Xi Jinping until later in the week.

During his first term in 2018, Trump initiated a brutal two-year trade war with China over its massive US trade surplus, with tit-for-tat tariffs on hundreds of billions of dollars’ worth of goods upending global supply chains and damaging the world economy.

To end that trade war, China agreed in 2020 to spend an extra $200 billion a year on US goods but the plan was derailed by the COVID pandemic and its annual trade deficit had widened to $361 billion, according to Chinese customs data released last month.

“The trade war is in the early stages so the likelihood of further tariffs is high,” Oxford Economics said in a note as it downgraded its China economic growth forecast.

Trump warned he might increase tariffs on China further unless Beijing stemmed the flow of fentanyl, a deadly opioid, into the United States.

“China hopefully is going to stop sending us fentanyl, and if they’re not, the tariffs are going to go substantially higher,” he said on Monday.

China has called fentanyl America’s problem and said it would challenge the tariffs at the World Trade Organization and take other countermeasures, but also left the door open for talks.

Neighborly deals

There was relief in Ottawa and Mexico City, as well as global financial markets, after the deals to avert the hefty tariffs on Canada and Mexico.

Both Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum said they had agreed to bolster border enforcement efforts in response to Trump’s demand to crack down on immigration and drug smuggling. That would pause 25 percent tariffs due to take effect on Tuesday for 30 days.

Canada agreed to deploy new technology and personnel along its border with the United States and launch cooperative efforts to fight organized crime, fentanyl smuggling and money laundering.

Mexico agreed to reinforce its northern border with 10,000 National Guard members to stem the flow of illegal migration and drugs.

The United States also made a commitment to prevent trafficking of high-powered weapons to Mexico, Sheinbaum said.

“As President, it is my responsibility to ensure the safety of ALL Americans, and I am doing just that. I am very pleased with this initial outcome,” Trump said on social media.

After speaking by phone with both leaders, Trump said he would try to negotiate economic agreements over the coming month with the two largest US trading partners, whose economies have become tightly intertwined with the United States since a landmark free-trade deal was struck in the 1990s.