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Pope makes final appeal for peace at end of South Sudan trip

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Pope makes final appeal for peace at end of South Sudan trip

Catholic church head joined different Christian leaders in calling for a recommitment to the 2018 peace deal through the Africa journey.

Pope Francis has ended a visit to South Sudan with an impassioned plea for peace and forgiveness within the war-torn nation.

Francis made the enchantment on Sunday as he presided over an open-air Mass attended by 100,000 folks on the grounds of a mausoleum for South Sudan’s liberation hero John Garang within the capital Juba.

He urged worshippers – together with the nation’s president and his opponents – to reject the “blind fury of violence”.

Francis additionally known as for an finish to tribalism, monetary wrongdoing and the alleged corruption on the root of most of the nation’s issues, whereas advising attendees to construct “good human relationships as a method of curbing the corruption of evil, the illness of division, the filth of fraudulent enterprise dealings and the plague of injustice”.

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Ladies attend a mass by Pope Francis on the John Garang Mausoleum [Jok Solomun/Reuters]

Many within the crowd sang, drummed and ululated as Francis entered the grounds. His homily was repeatedly interrupted by loud cheers.

“Pricey brothers and sisters, I return to Rome with you even nearer to my coronary heart,” he stated. “By no means lose hope. And lose no alternative to construct peace. Could hope and peace dwell amongst you. Could hope and peace dwell in South Sudan.”

The go to marked the primary time in Christian historical past that leaders of the Catholic, Anglican and Reformed traditions performed a joint overseas journey, with the Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby, chief of the worldwide Anglican Communion, and Iain Greenshields, moderator of the Basic Meeting of the Church of Scotland, becoming a member of Francis for the “pilgrimage of peace”.

The tour of the continent additionally included a cease within the Democratic Republic of the Congo, residence to Africa’s largest Roman Catholic group, the place Francis condemned what he known as the overseas plundering of Africa.

INTERACTIVE_POPE FRANCIS_PROFILE_JAN31_2023_2 (1)

Francis has lengthy proven curiosity in South Sudan, the world’s youngest nation, which broke away from Sudan in 2011 however rapidly devolved right into a civil warfare that killed 400,000 folks and compelled hundreds of thousands of others to flee their houses. In probably the most exceptional gestures of his papacy, Francis in 2019 knelt to kiss the ft of the nation’s beforehand warring leaders throughout a gathering on the Vatican.

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Nonetheless, regardless of a 2018 peace deal signed by President Salva Kiir, his longtime rival Riek Machar and different opposition teams, violence has persevered in some components of the nation. Violence within the nation’s Central Equatoria state between cattle herders and members of an armed group left 27 lifeless on Thursday, a day earlier than the pope arrived.

In the meantime, a number of of the settlement’s provisions, together with the formation of a unified nationwide military, stay largely unimplemented.

The journey by the three Christian leaders sought a recommitment to the 2018 deal, whereas additionally highlighting the humanitarian scenario within the nation of almost 11 million, which has been additional beset by pure disasters and widespread poverty, regardless of having a few of the largest crude oil reserves in sub-Saharan Africa.

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Pope Francis shakes arms with South Sudan’s President Salva Kiir Mayardit throughout a farewell ceremony earlier than his departure in Juba, South Sudan [Vatican Media/­Reuters]

Among the many worshippers at Sunday’s Mass was Ferida Modon, 72, who misplaced three of her kids to the battle.

“I need peace to return to South Sudan. Sure, I consider that his go to will change the scenario. We at the moment are bored with battle,” she instructed the Reuters information company. “We wish God to take heed to our prayers.”

Jesilen Gaba, 42, a widow with 4 kids, stated: “The truth that the three Church buildings united for the sake of South Sudan, that is the turning level for peace. I need the go to to be a blessing to us. Now we have been at warfare, we now have misplaced many individuals.”

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Donald Trump Trial: Man Lights Himself on Fire Outside Courthouse During CNN’s Live Coverage

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Donald Trump Trial: Man Lights Himself on Fire Outside Courthouse During CNN’s Live Coverage


Donald Trump Trial Video: Man Lights Himself On Fire Live On CNN



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Hackers claim Belarus fertilizer plant infiltrated to demand political prisoner release

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Hackers claim Belarus fertilizer plant infiltrated to demand political prisoner release

TALLINN, Estonia (AP) — A Belarusian hacker activist group claims to have infiltrated computers at the country’s largest fertilizer plant to pressure the government to release political prisoners.

The state-run Grodno Azot plant has made no comment on the claim by the Belarusian Cyber-Partisans group to have done damage including destroying backup systems and encrypted internal mail, document flow and hundreds of PCs. However, the company’s website has been unavailable since Wednesday, the day the group claimed the attack.

A POLITICAL PRISONER IN BELARUS SMUGGLES OUT ACCOUNT OF BEATINGS AFTER WRITING ON TOILET PAPER

Group coordinator Yuliana Shametavets told The Associated Press from New York on Friday that because the plant works with dangerous substances including ammonia the attack was designed to affect only documentation.

The group posted photos on social media that it it claimed showed screens of compromised plant computers.

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A Belarusian hacker activist group claims to have infiltrated computers at the country’s largest fertilizer plant to pressure the government to release political prisoners. (Maksim Konstantinov/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)

Grodno Azot, with about 7,500 employees, is a key producer in the country, whose economy relies heavily on chemical industries.

A harsh crackdown on the opposition in Belarus began after protests swept the country in August 2020 in the wake of presidential elections whose disputed results gave authoritarian leader Alexander Lukashenko a sixth term in office.

Human rights activists say some 35,000 people were arrested in the course of the crackdown and that there are nearly 1,400 political prisoners behind bars today. They include many of the country’s most prominent opposition figures and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Ales Bialiatski, founder of the Viasna human rights group.

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The 2020 protests were the largest and most sustained show of dissent in Belarus since Lukashenko came to power in 1994. Workers struck in protest at several major plants, including Grodno Azot.

Cyber-Partisans said its claimed hack was punishment for “bullying, pressuring & conducting political repression against the company’s employees.”

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Croatia’s top court bars President Milanovic from becoming prime minister

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Croatia’s top court bars President Milanovic from becoming prime minister

Constitutional Court says Zoran Milanovic cannot take up PM post because he did not first step down as president.

Croatia’s top court has ruled that President Zoran Milanovic, who had campaigned to become prime minister before this week’s parliamentary elections, may not head the new government.

“The president has been warned in time that he cannot participate in the campaign but that he must [first] resign. Now it is over. He can no longer be a prime minister-designate,” Constitutional Court President Miroslav Separovic said at a news conference on Friday.

“Everyone is obliged to adhere to the constitution and the law,” he added.

Croatia held parliamentary elections on Wednesday, in which the ruling conservative Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ) won the most seats but not enough to form a government alone.

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The vote was held after a bitter campaign between longtime political foes – the conservative incumbent, Prime Minister Andrej Plenkovic, and the left-wing populist Milanovic.

For months, Plenkovic and his Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ) party seemed poised for an easy victory that would secure his third term as premier.

But in mid-March, Milanovic, who tops opinion polls, made the shock announcement that he would challenge Plenkovic and become the candidate for the Social Democrats.

Milanovic dissolved parliament on March 18, triggering this week’s snap election in the European Union member state of 3.8 million people. He said he would run for prime minister and resign only after winning the polls.

The Constitutional Court then immediately warned him that he could only stand in the elections if he first stepped down as president.

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But Milanovic ignored the warning and campaigned across the country, accusing Plenkovic of leading the “most corrupt government in Croatia’s history”.

Corruption has long been the Achilles heel of the HDZ, which has been in power most of the time since Croatia’s 1991 independence from Yugoslavia.

The HDZ won 61 seats in the 151-member assembly, and a centre-left coalition led by the Social Democratic Party (SPD) won 42. The nationalist, right-wing Homeland Movement party came third with 14 seats, making it a likely kingmaker.

‘Preparation for coup d’etat’

Al Jazeera’s Marina Barukcic, reporting from Zagreb, said President Milanovic’s next move was unclear after the court’s verdict.

“He believes that the Constitutional Court’s decision is a preparation for a coup d’etat led by Prime Minister Andrej Milanovic,” she said.

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Barukcic said the president promised to bring back the will of the people to the state.

Plenkovic said on Thursday that it would be known “very soon” with whom the party would form a new parliamentary majority.

The SDP was also trying to cobble together a majority although its task appears more difficult.

Croatia has a parliamentary democracy in which the prime minister and his cabinet set all major policies. The president nominates the prime minister based on election results, may dissolve parliament and acts as the head of the armed forces with some say in foreign policy.

Final election results are not expected until next week because a rerun is needed in two polling stations after irregularities were recorded.

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