Kenya’s president apologizes for arrogant officials and promises to act against police brutality

Kenya’s president apologizes for arrogant officials and promises to act against police brutality
Kenya's President William Ruto speaks during a press conference in Nairobi on July 4, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 06 July 2024
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Kenya’s president apologizes for arrogant officials and promises to act against police brutality

Kenya’s president apologizes for arrogant officials and promises to act against police brutality
  • Kenya experienced two weeks of unrest, leading to the death of 39 activists who stormed Parliament to protest a finance bill
  • President Ruto has told Parliament to withdraw the bill and he promised to have those guilty of police brutality prosecuted

NAIROBI: Kenya’s President William Ruto on Friday apologized for the “arrogance and show of opulence” by legislators and ministers from the ruling party and promised action against “rogue” police officers who shot at unarmed civilians during deadly protests and the storming of parliament over plans to hike taxes.
Ruto, referring to what he called arrogant statements made by officials, said public speaking was “difficult” and some people make “mistakes” for which he takes responsibility and promised change in the conduct of officials.
Kenya experienced two weeks of unrest during which Parliament was stormed by protesters during a finance bill vote. The president was hosted Friday on the social media platform X by popular social media influencer Osama Otero, who said he was abducted on the night of the protests and beaten by police.
Ruto said he regretted the abduction and that he would take action, adding that “that is not right.” “You don’t deserve the kind of treatment you went through,” he said.
The president said the police are independent and not controlled by the executive branch of government but promised to ensure that those responsible would be prosecuted. “I am ultimately responsible because I am president, and that is why I said it was regrettable,” Ruto said.




Kenyans march on July 5, 2024, in Machakos county to bury Rex Masai, 29, who was shot by the police during an anti-finance bill protest last month. According to the official human rights agency (KNHCR), 39 people have died since the first demonstration on June 18. (AFP)

During the storming of Parliament during a finance bill vote — which would have resulted in a tax increase if approved — legislators fled through an underground tunnel. Police responded by opening fire and several protesters were shot dead.
Ruto later said he would not sign the finance bill and communicated to Parliament that the proposed legislation should be withdrawn, but protests continued with calls for him to resign over poor governance.
Kenya has been plagued by corruption, with the latest case involving the sale and distribution of thousands of fake fertilizer bags worth millions of shillings by the agriculture ministry.
The president on Friday was accused of not showing empathy and not mentioning the names of those who died during the protests. He responded by saying “people are born differently.” But he added that he was scheduled to speak with the mother of a boy who was shot and killed during protests.
Ruto was accused of not acknowledging the correct number of those who died in the protests. He put the number at 25 while the Kenya National Commission for Human Rights said 39 people were killed.
An hour before the online engagement, Ruto in a televised address announced specific austerity measures that included the dissolution of “47 state corporations with overlapping and duplicative functions” to save on operation and maintenance costs.
He also “suspended” the appointment of 50 chief administrative secretaries that were challenged in court on the basis of the positions being unconstitutional.
The president also announced that the offices of the first lady and the spouses of the deputy president and prime Cabinet secretary would not be funded using public money.
The young people who spoke during Otero’s Friday engagement on X emphasized the need for the president to sack incompetent government ministers in a reorganization that he stated was “coming soon.”


Modi tells Putin that death of innocent children is very painful

Modi tells Putin that death of innocent children is very painful
Updated 33 sec ago
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Modi tells Putin that death of innocent children is very painful

Modi tells Putin that death of innocent children is very painful
  • Ukraine says it has recovered fragments of a Russian Kh-101 cruise missile at the hospital
  • The Indian leader made the televised remarks at a meeting with Putin in the Kremlin
MOSCOW: Indian Prime Minister Narenda Modi told Russian President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday that the death of innocent children was very painful, a day after a lethal strike on a children’s hospital in Kyiv.
The Indian leader made the televised remarks at a meeting with Putin in the Kremlin.
Ukraine says it has recovered fragments of a Russian Kh-101 cruise missile at the hospital, which was hit on Monday during a wave of Russian attacks that killed at least 41 Ukrainians across the country.
Russia said, without providing evidence, that it was a Ukrainian anti-missile system that struck the hospital.
Modi told Putin that the death of innocent children in war, conflict or a terrorist attack was “very painful.” He also said that a solution to the war in Ukraine “cannot be found on the battlefield ... we have to find peace through talks.”
Putin, speaking before Modi, said their two countries enjoyed a special strategic partnership and thanked him for his efforts to find a peaceful solution to the war.
He welcomed Modi in the Kremlin for talks on deepening the bilateral relationship, a day after the United States said it had raised concerns with India about its ties with Moscow.
“Our relations have the character of a particularly privileged strategic partnership,” Putin said.
“I thank you for the attention you are paying to the most acute problems including trying to find ways to resolve the Ukrainian crisis, above all by peaceful means, of course.”
India has become an increasingly important partner for sanctions-hit Russia as it shifts its trade away from the West and seeks to demonstrate that Western attempts to isolate it have failed.
India has refrained from criticizing Russia over the war and has increased its purchases of cheap Russian oil to record levels, while urging Ukraine and Russia to resolve their conflict through dialogue and diplomacy.

Paris prosecutor opens probe into Le Pen’s 2022 campaign financing

Paris prosecutor opens probe into Le Pen’s 2022 campaign financing
Updated 6 min 26 sec ago
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Paris prosecutor opens probe into Le Pen’s 2022 campaign financing

Paris prosecutor opens probe into Le Pen’s 2022 campaign financing
  • Investigation follows a 2023 report by the National Commission on Campaign Accounts and Political Financing
  • Marine Le Pen and her party have previously denied wrongdoing in connection with campaign financing

PARIS: The Paris prosecutor’s office said on Tuesday it had launched a preliminary probe into suspicions of illegal financing of far right National Rally (RN) leader Marine Le Pen’s campaign for the 2022 presidential race, which she lost to Emmanuel Macron.
The investigation, which was opened on July 2, follows a 2023 report by the National Commission on Campaign Accounts and Political Financing (CNCCFP), which scrutinizes candidates’ election expenses and funding, the prosecutor’s office said. It will look into allegations of embezzlement, forgery, fraud, and that a candidate on an electoral campaign accepted a loan.
Le Pen and her party have previously denied wrongdoing in connection with campaign financing. The National Rally could not be immediately reached for comment.


Taiwan soldier charged with leaking military secrets to China

Taiwan soldier charged with leaking military secrets to China
Updated 38 min 18 sec ago
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Taiwan soldier charged with leaking military secrets to China

Taiwan soldier charged with leaking military secrets to China
  • Beijing claims Taiwan as its territory and has ramped up pressure on the island in recent years
  • The sergeant ‘collected intelligence for mainland China’ via messaging apps in 2022

TAIPEI: A Taiwanese sergeant has been indicted for allegedly photographing and leaking confidential defense information to China, prosecutors said Tuesday.
Beijing claims self-ruled Taiwan as its territory and has ramped up military and political pressures on the island in recent years.
The sergeant, surnamed Chen, worked at a navy training center and was recruited by an unspecified number of people who “collected intelligence for mainland China” via messaging apps in 2022, said Taiwan High Prosecutors’ Office.
“Between April 2022 and February 2023, he photographed secret national defense information in (the counties of) Pingtung, Yilan and other places with his mobile phone,” the office said in a statement.
“(He) sent the information four times via Line and Telegram... for a total illegal gain of NT$170,000 ($5,230).”
The office said Chen was charged with violating the Criminal Code of the Armed Forces and the Anti-corruption Act.
When asked to comment on the indictment, defense ministry spokesman Sun Li-fang said the military had worked with national security units on the case.
“In recent years, the CCP’s (Chinese Communist Party’s) infiltration has indeed posed a very serious threat to the military. The threat is no less than... threats posed by missiles or aircraft and ships,” he told reporters.
China maintains a near-daily presence of warships, drones and fighter jets around Taiwan, and earlier this year had launched war games following the May 20 inauguration of Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te.
Beijing regards him as a “dangerous separatist” due to his defense of Taiwan’s sovereignty.
In pre-recorded footage for a military television program that aired Tuesday, Lai warned soldiers at an air force base in central Taichung city to be vigilant.
“China’s infiltration and spying will not stop,” he said, dressed in military fatigues.
“You must always be vigilant, pay attention to your own information security, and do not fall into traps.”
The sergeant’s indictment was the latest in a recent string of spying cases.
In April, a father and son duo were jailed for eight years for collecting confidential military information and trying to develop a spying “organization” for Beijing.


Greece records hottest June in over six decades: researchers

Greece records hottest June in over six decades: researchers
Updated 09 July 2024
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Greece records hottest June in over six decades: researchers

Greece records hottest June in over six decades: researchers

ATHENS: Greece recorded in 2024 its hottest June since 1960, the director of the Athens national observatory told AFP on Tuesday.
“The month of June 2024 was characterised by long periods of elevated temperatures over several days, largely surpassing normal seasonal temperatures throughout the country,” Kostas Lagouvardos said.


China hits back at NATO’s ‘smears and attacks’ ahead of summit

China hits back at NATO’s ‘smears and attacks’ ahead of summit
Updated 09 July 2024
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China hits back at NATO’s ‘smears and attacks’ ahead of summit

China hits back at NATO’s ‘smears and attacks’ ahead of summit
  • China’s foreign ministry takes aim at the defense group, which was founded in 1949 to provide collective security against the Soviet Union

BEIJING: China lashed out at NATO’s “smears and attacks” on Tuesday after the defense alliance’s chief accused it of supporting Russia’s war in Ukraine on the eve of a summit in Washington.
US President Joe Biden is hosting leaders of the 32-nation transatlantic alliance for three days from Tuesday, as well as the leaders of Australia, Japan, New Zealand and South Korea.
NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg told a news conference ahead of the 75th anniversary summit that their inclusion “demonstrates that our security is not regional, our security is global.”
“And that’s clearly demonstrated in the war in Ukraine where Iran, North Korea, China are supporting and enabling Russia’s illegal war of aggression against Ukraine,” Stoltenberg said on Monday, according to a NATO transcript.
China’s foreign ministry took aim at the defense group, which was founded in 1949 to provide collective security against the Soviet Union.
“NATO’s so-called security is at the expense of other countries’ security and its actions have brought extremely high security risks to the world and the region,” foreign ministry spokesman Lin Jian told a regular news conference in Beijing.
“China is firmly opposed to NATO’s smears and attacks on China, to its willingness to shift the blame onto others, as well as NATO’s use of China as an excuse to move eastward into the Asia-Pacific and stir up regional tensions,” he said.
NATO’s leaders are gathering in Washington in the shadow of setbacks in Ukraine and electoral headwinds on both sides of the Atlantic.
Biden is fighting for his political life after a disastrous debate against his Republican presidential rival, NATO skeptic Donald Trump.
The star of the summit is set to be Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, who is looking for firm signs of support even though NATO will not be extending his country an invitation to join the bloc.