Connect with us

World

Papua New Guinea police accused of killing woman at polls

Published

on

Papua New Guinea police accused of killing woman at polls

Papua New Guinea police shot a younger mom useless at a polling station within the capital, Port Moresby, within the newest violence to mar nationwide elections, in line with a information report on Friday.

Murder detectives had been investigating the deadly capturing, which occurred on Monday, a police assertion stated.

Annaisha Max, 22, was holding her one-year-old son when she was shot, the Australian Broadcasting Company reported, citing witnesses.

“They (police) got here with pressure, extreme pressure. It was unprovoked,” Emmanuel Kiangu, a neighborhood chief who was on the scene, advised the ABC.

Police gave no warning they’d open hearth, in line with Max’s buddy, Anna Koip.

Advertisement

“They didn’t even say a phrase. They switched their weapons to auto and fired into the gang, the place a whole lot of us had been ready to vote,” Koip stated by a translator.

Since voting started on July 4, fights between rival teams have damaged out over allegations of vote fixing.

Prime Minister James Marape has apologised to 1000’s of people that have been turned away from polling stations due to issues with the electoral roll.

The gang on Monday reportedly grew to become agitated after ready hours for voting to start. A gaggle gathered round police vehicles asking the place the poll packing containers had been. Police referred to as for reinforcements earlier than the capturing began, the ABC stated.

Police Metropolitan Superintendent Gideon Ikumu stated in a press release on Tuesday that police reinforcements had been despatched to “restore order when a rowdy and quarrelsome crowd threatened to hurt election officers and disrupted polling”.

Advertisement

“Rocks had been hurled at police and gunshots had been fired to disperse the unruly crowd,” Ikumu added.

Ikumu stated he had personally assured indignant residents after Max’s demise {that a} police investigation would “set up how the sufferer was killed and who was accountable for her demise”.

“Murder detectives are actually amassing proof together with video footage and statements from potential witnesses,” Ikumu stated.

Max died in an citizens the place polling had been delayed thrice.

Elections marred by violence and fraud

Peter Aitsi, a Papua New Guinea consultant for Transparency Worldwide, a world motion to finish corruption, stated the election risked failing.

Advertisement

“Sadly, it hasn’t been a profitable and peaceable and secure election,” Aitsi stated. “However I encourage all of our stakeholders on the market, significantly the candidates and their supporters, to assist the method, try to conclude the elections the very best we will.”

Polling lasts weeks and the composition of the brand new authorities — with greater than 50 events contesting 118 seats — won’t be recognized till parliament subsequent sits in August.

The highest contenders to steer the brand new authorities are Marape and his predecessor, Peter O’Neill, who resigned in 2019.

Since Papua New Guinea’s independence from Australia in 1975, elections within the nation of 9 million have been marred by violence, fraud and bribery.

On the outset of voting, police urged residents to not promote their votes to any of the three,625 candidates vying for election. Candidates in Papua New Guinea routinely pay poor constituents to vote for them.

Advertisement

Papua New Guinea is a various tribal society of principally subsistence farmers with greater than 800 languages.

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

World

Dan Schneider Files Defamation Suit Against Quiet on Set Producers, Says Docuseries Is a ‘Hit Job’

Published

on

Dan Schneider Files Defamation Suit Against Quiet on Set Producers, Says Docuseries Is a ‘Hit Job’


Dan Schneider Sues ‘Quiet on Set’ Producers — Lawsuit Details



Advertisement



















Advertisement





















Advertisement



Advertisement

ad


Advertisement





Advertisement


Quantcast



Continue Reading

World

University of Tehran professor says protesters at US colleges will support Iran in American conflict

Published

on

University of Tehran professor says protesters at US colleges will support Iran in American conflict

A University of Tehran professor said in an interview that Iran likes seeing protests on U.S. college campuses, adding those are their supporters if there is ever a conflict between the two countries.

Professor Foad Izadi, who, according to the University of Southern California Center on Public Diplomacy, earned his master’s degree from the University of Houston, was seen in a video being interviewed about the protests in the U.S.

“Sooner or later, this kind of support for the Zionist regime by the American regime will diminish. It might not stop completely, but its diminishing is important,” he said. “This is why the demonstrations [on U.S. campuses] are important.”

Izadi spoke as a member of the Islamic Republic, and oftentimes said, “we,” referring to him and the republic.

Advertisement

TRUMP SAYS 4 WORDS ABOUT ANTI-ISRAEL PROTESTS ON COLLEGE CAMPUSES AS ARRESTS SKYROCKET

State troopers in riot gear try to beak up an anti-Israel protest at the University of Texas on Wednesday, April 24, 2024. (Jay Janner/American-Statesman)

“We are watching the demonstrations and like what we see, but it should not end with this,” Izadi said. “If not for the Islamic Republic, the case of the Palestinian idea would have been closed years ago. The idea of resistance belongs to Iran, but on the operational level, when it comes to recruiting connections and building networks, the [Iranian] state has not been involved in a sufficient level.

“These (American students) are our people,” he continued. “If tensions between America and Iran rise tomorrow or the day after, these are the people who will have to take to the streets to support Iran.”

Izadi said there are Hezbollah-style groups in the U.S. that are much larger than those in Lebanon.

Advertisement

VIDEO SHOWS ANTI-ISRAEL PROTESTERS BLOCK JEWISH STUDENT FROM GETTING TO CLASS; UCLA RESPONDS

“America is the Great Satan and our main enemy, but we have hope in these areas,” he said.

Iran expert and Foreign Desk Editor-in-Chief Lisa Daftari provided insight on Izadi’s comments.

“Quite rich to see the same regime that is fixated on torturing, raping, blinding, executing its own college students, is applauding the ignorant college students on American campuses,” she said. “It speaks to their focus on growing their influence outside of Iran.”

UCL ANTI-ISRAEL PROTESTERS ASK SUPPORTERS FOR VEGAN AND GLUTEN-FREE FOOD, ZIP TIES, SHIELDS AND EPIPENS

Advertisement
A protester holds a sign during a march on Columbia University campus in support of a protest encampment supporting Palestinians

A protester holds a sign during a march on Columbia University campus in support of a protest encampment supporting Palestinians in New York City, April 29, 2024.  (REUTERS/David Dee Delgado)

Daftari explained that Iran has been beefing up terror proxies in the region and paying their way into American universities.

But at the same time, she said, the Iranian people have suffered under the rule of their “barbaric” leaders.

After watching the comments, Daftari also said it was interesting to hear Izadi say they have more Hezbollah followers in the U.S. than in Lebanon.

“Regardless of when these pro-Hamas protests quiet down here in the U.S., it’s apparent the regime has its sights set on manipulating this momentum to launch more attacks here in the West,” she said. “The question then remains will they focus on a physical attack or just the information war, or both?”

Advertisement

Continue Reading

World

France's May Day march turns into political arena ahead of EU election

Published

on

France's May Day march turns into political arena ahead of EU election

Many left-wing contenders didn’t miss the opportunity to attend the traditional May Day protest in Paris, while the far-right politician Jordan Bardella, currently leading the polls, announced the rest of his candidate list in southwestern France.

ADVERTISEMENT

The usual chants for higher salaries and equal pay echoed across the streets of Paris this Wednesday during the traditional May Day labour rights march. 

Ten of thousands of protestors took to the streets of the French capital against a backdrop of new demands such as peace in Gaza and against the upcoming Paris Olympic Games. 

But with less than six weeks left before the European elections on 9 June, the event turned into a highly political one. 

Many left-wing candidates didn’t miss the opportunity to present their campaign, all vying for attention. 

Representing the Communist party for the EU elections, Léon Deffontaine, the 28-year-old candidate is focusing his campaign on energy bills — a topic that catalysed numerous protests in France and Europe since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

Advertisement

“The first measure I want to put in place is to take France out of the European electricity market to reduce energy bills. Today, we’re paying far more than the price we pay to produce electricity,” he told Euronews. 

Others emphasised the importance of protesting the rise of the far-right, currently leading the polls, represented by Jordan Bardella of the Rassemblement National party (RN). 

“May 1st is also an opportunity to remember that we must always fight against these anti-democratic, anti-republican parties that unfortunately swarm our country,” said Marie Toussaint, leader of the Green Party for the 9 June elections. 

According to a poll by IPSOS ordered by Euronews, Macron’s centrist alliance Renaissance is lagging by 15 points behind Bardella’s party. 

Meanwhile, in the southwestern city of Perpignan, Jordan Bardella gathered more than 2,000 people to announce his party’s first 35 candidates for the elections. 

Advertisement

These include candidates such as Fabrice Leggeri, ex-boss of Frontex, the European Border and Coast Guard Agency.

End of April, two NGOs filed a civil complaint against Leggeri accusing him of being complicit in crimes against humanity for enabling ‘pushback’ of boats full of illegal migrants between 2015 and 2022.

Bardella’s move was highly criticised by left-wing parties, claiming the far-right politician was taking away the attention from worker’s issues.

“Taking advantage of May 1st  to launch a campaign shows that he couldn’t care less about French workers,” reacted Léon Deffontaines, the Communist candidate. 

In Saint-Etienne (near Lyon), the head of the socialist party, Raphaël Glucksmann, was prevented from joining the march. 

Advertisement

Multiple protesters threw paint and eggs at the EU election candidate, currently third in the polls after the far-right and Marcon’s centrist alliance. 

In total, about 121,000 people marched across France according to the Ministry of the Interior, while the main labour union CGT claimed “more than 210,000” participated in the marches in the country.

Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending