Right group urges Africa nations to reject US deportee deals

Right group urges Africa nations to reject US deportee deals
US expulsions of detainees to African countries under "opaque deals", some involving millions of dollars in financial assistance, violated global rights law and must be rejected, a rights watchdog said Tuesday. (AFP/File)
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Updated 13 sec ago

Right group urges Africa nations to reject US deportee deals

Right group urges Africa nations to reject US deportee deals
  • Lawyers and civil society groups in Eswatini have gone to court to challenge the legality of the detentions
  • HRW urged African governments to refuse to accept US deportees and to terminate deals already in effect

JOHANNESBURG: US expulsions of detainees to African countries under “opaque deals,” some involving millions of dollars in financial assistance, violated global rights law and must be rejected, a rights watchdog said Tuesday.
Eswatini, Ghana, Rwanda and South Sudan have in recent months accepted US deportees as part of a scheme by President Donald Trump’s administration to expel undocumented migrants.
Human Rights Watch said a deal between the United States and the small African kingdom of Eswatini, which has not been made public, involved $5.1 million to build its border and migration management capacity.
In return, Eswatini agreed to accept up to 160 deportees, HRW said in a statement.
The kingdom in July accepted five nationals from Cuba, Jamaica, Laos, Vietnam and Yemen who had been convicted of crimes in the United States.
It jailed them at its maximum security Matsapha Correctional Center, which is notorious for holding political prisoners and for overcrowding.
A 62-year-old Jamaican national, who had reportedly completed a sentence for murder in the United States, was sent to Jamaica at the weekend, a government spokesman said.
Lawyers and civil society groups in Eswatini have gone to court to challenge the legality of the detentions and demand the government make public the terms of its deal with Washington.
HRW said it had also seen the deal with Rwanda, which had reportedly agreed to accept up to 250 deportees in exchange for roughly $7.5 million in US financial support.
“The opaque deals that facilitate these transfers, at least some of which include US financial assistance, are part of a US policy approach that violates international human rights law and is designed to instrumentalize human suffering as a deterrent to migration,” HRW said.
It urged African governments to refuse to accept US deportees and to terminate deals already in effect.
“These agreements make African governments partners in the Trump administration’s horrifying violations of immigrants’ human rights,” said advocacy director Allan Ngari.
The countries involved should “disclose their terms, allow access to independent monitors, refrain from detaining any deportees absent a clear legal basis,” it said.
And they should ensure that none are returned to their home country if there is evidence that they could be harmed, HRW said.


French unions call more protests to put pressure on new prime minister

French unions call more protests to put pressure on new prime minister
Updated 4 sec ago

French unions call more protests to put pressure on new prime minister

French unions call more protests to put pressure on new prime minister
  • Union leaders who met with Lecornu on Wednesday said they were not satisfied by his response
  • “The prime minister did not provide any clear answers to the workers’ demands,” said Leon

PARIS: French unions will hold another day of strike and protests on October 2 to put pressure on new Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu over their demands to scrap his predecessor’s austerity fiscal program, union leaders said.
Union leaders who met with Lecornu on Wednesday said they were not satisfied by his response to their last day of protest, attended by hundreds of thousands of people on September 18.
“The prime minister did not provide any clear answers to the workers’ demands, so for the unions, it’s a missed opportunity. It doesn’t add up,” said Marylize Leon, the head of CFDT, France’s largest union.
Just over two weeks after President Emmanuel Macron appointed Lecornu as his fifth prime minister in less than two years, the 39-year-old loyalist has yet to pull together a government or a draft budget for 2026. He has to deal with a divided parliament and pressure to fix France’s finances.
“There was a big turnout on September 18, and we need to step it up again on October 2,” said Sophie Binet, of the CGT union, describing Wednesday’s meeting as a missed opportunity where Lecornu made no clear commitment.
Lecornu has been little seen or heard in public since his appointment and has instead held a series of talks with party leaders and unionists to try and gather some support.
The prime minister and Macron are under pressure on one side from protesters and left-wing parties opposed to budget cuts and, on the other, from investors concerned about the deficit. None of parliament’s three main groups has a majority.
France’s budget deficit last year was close to double the EU’s 3 percent ceiling. Lecornu will face a battle to gather parliamentary support for a budget for 2026.
Lecornu’s predecessor, Francois Bayrou, was ousted by parliament on September 8 over his plan for a 44 billion euro budget squeeze. Lecornu has not yet said what he will do with Bayrou’s plans.


Ukraine front lines are locked in stalemate, Russian senator says

Ukraine front lines are locked in stalemate, Russian senator says
Updated 18 min 46 sec ago

Ukraine front lines are locked in stalemate, Russian senator says

Ukraine front lines are locked in stalemate, Russian senator says
  • “(The map of the front lines) is moving with enormous difficulty, at a colossal price,” Rogozin said
  • Russia’s slow advance is tactical, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said

MOSCOW: The front lines in Ukraine have reached an impasse, as parity in equipment, training and morale between Russian and Ukrainian forces stalls momentum on both sides, nationalist Russian senator Dmitry Rogozin said in an interview.
“(The map of the front lines) is moving with enormous difficulty, at a colossal price, which our military is paying in order for it to move,” Rogozin, who has fought in Ukraine, told the Bloknot media outlet in an interview published on Russian social media site VKontakte on September 19.
“Nevertheless we are moving, our pressure is definitely there. Victory will be ours, the question is just at what price. And the price will be very big.”
Russia’s slow advance is tactical, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said on Wednesday, a day after US President Donald Trump said Russia has been fighting “aimlessly” in Ukraine.
In a striking rhetorical shift in Ukraine’s favor, Trump said that a “real military power” would have won the war in less than a week, describing Russia as a “paper tiger.” Trump, who has sometimes echoed Russia’s views on the conflict, said he believed Ukraine could retake all the land occupied by Russia.
In his comments, Rogozin said it was very difficult to advance in Ukraine as assault groups consist of three-to-four middle-aged men, who are weighed down by armor and weaponry and surrounded by mines and with drones buzzing overhead.
“It’s impossible to get up from a chair, let alone go somewhere to attack,” he said, adding that any military equipment brought within 20 kilometers of the line of contact, on either side, would get burned.
“There are only bare fields, no forest belts, a hare appears and I can see it,” he said, referring to drone footage he had seen around Stepnohirsk, in Zaporizhzhia region, at his command post.
“How is it possible to move and get through? And all equipment will be blown up because the roads are mined by us and by them.”


3 people shot at immigration facility in Dallas and the shooter is dead, official says

3 people shot at immigration facility in Dallas and the shooter is dead, official says
Updated 23 min 40 sec ago

3 people shot at immigration facility in Dallas and the shooter is dead, official says

3 people shot at immigration facility in Dallas and the shooter is dead, official says
  • Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said details were still emerging but the agency was confirming there were “multiple injuries and fatalities”
  • Dozens of emergency vehicles were seen along a highway near the facility

DALLAS, USA: Three people have been shot at an Immigration and US Customs Enforcement facility in Dallas, and the shooter is dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, the agency’s director said.
Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons confirmed the shooting during an interview on CNN on Wednesday.
“It could be employees, it could be civilians that were visiting the facility, it could be detainees,” Lyons said of those who were shot. “At this point, we’re still working through that.”
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said details were still emerging but the agency was confirming there were “multiple injuries and fatalities” at the field office. Noem said the motive remained unclear but noted there has been an uptick of targeting of ICE agents.
Dozens of emergency vehicles were seen along a highway near the facility. Traffic cameras near the scene show six lanes of a normally busy freeway completely empty, with cars and semi-trailers ground to a halt on an interstate exit.
ICE and Homeland Security didn’t immediately provide additional details.
The Dallas Fire-Rescue Department was dispatched at 6:41 a.m. after a call reporting a shooting at or near the immigration office, department spokesperson Jason L. Evans said in an email. Evans said he didn’t have any confirmed details he could share, calling it an active and ongoing incident.
A July 4 attack at a Texas immigration detention center injured a police officer, who was shot in the neck. Attackers dressed in black military-style clothing opened fire outside the Prairieland Detention Center in Alvarado, southwest of Dallas, federal prosecutors said. At least 11 people have been charged in connection with the attack.
A man with an assault rifle fired dozens of rounds at federal agents as they were leaving a US Border Patrol facility in McAllen on July 7. The man, identified as Ryan Louis Mosqueda, injured a police officer who responded to the scene before authorities shot and killed him. Police later found other weaponry, ammunition and backpacks inside his car.


Russia blamed for GPS attack on Spanish defense minister’s plane

Russia blamed for GPS attack on Spanish defense minister’s plane
Updated 39 min 30 sec ago

Russia blamed for GPS attack on Spanish defense minister’s plane

Russia blamed for GPS attack on Spanish defense minister’s plane
  • “There was an attempt to scramble the GPS signal” of the plane transporting Margarita Robles to Lithuania, the defense ministry source said
  • Sakaliene called the incident “another illustration that Russia is a neighbor that does not follow any rules “

MADRID: A plane carrying Spain’s defense minister suffered an attack on its GPS navigation while flying near Russia’s exclave of Kaliningrad on Wednesday, a ministry source said, the latest such incident blamed on Moscow.
“There was an attempt to scramble the GPS signal” of the plane transporting Margarita Robles to Lithuania, the defense ministry source said, adding that the flight had an encrypted navigation system and was not “affected.”
“It seems to be normal on this trip, including for commercial flights” that pass close to the small territory wedged between EU and NATO members Poland and Lithuania, the source said.
Robles appeared to blame Russia during a news conference with her Lithuanian counterpart Dovile Sakaliene at Lithuania’s Siauliai air base.
“We all have the right to fly and travel across all European territory without, as we experienced this morning, interference by everyone knows who,” Robles said.
Sakaliene called the incident “another illustration that Russia is a neighbor that does not follow any rules and does not care about the damage it may cause.”
Earlier this month, the European Commission said Russia was suspected of jamming the GPS of EU chief Ursula von der Leyen’s plane as it prepared to land in Bulgaria.
But Bulgaria’s prime minister said there was “nothing unusual” about the GPS jamming, saying it was “one of the consequences” of Russia’s three-year-old war in Ukraine and ruling out an investigation.
Sweden’s Transport Agency has reported that interference incidents with global navigation satellite systems in Swedish airspace spiked from 55 to 733 between 2023 and August 18, 2025, blaming Russia.
The incidents have spread in scope, occurring over Swedish land and sea as well as international waters, the agency said.
In early June, Sweden and five other Baltic Sea countries — Estonia, Finland, Latvia, Lithuania and Poland — raised the issue with the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), of which Russia is a member state.
The ICAO Council “expressed grave concern over the situation” and demanded that Russia end the interference, but incidents in the Baltic Sea region have increased, the agency said.


WHO confirms 11 new Ebola cases in Congo

WHO confirms 11 new Ebola cases in Congo
Updated 24 September 2025

WHO confirms 11 new Ebola cases in Congo

WHO confirms 11 new Ebola cases in Congo
  • “The outbreak shows a decreasing trend of cases in the recent week ,” WHO said

KASAI, Congo: Eleven new confirmed cases of Ebola were reported in Democratic Republic of Congo since the World Health Organization’s last update on September 15, showing a decreasing trend of cases in the recent week, the UN health agency said on Wednesday.
As of September 21, a total of 57 cases, including 10 probable cases and 35 deaths were reported in Congo’s Kasai Province, the WHO added. The total deaths included 10 probable deaths.
“The outbreak shows a decreasing trend of cases in the recent week, nevertheless the attention remains high,” the agency said.