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Egyptians targeted with blasphemy charges

CAIRO (AP) — The pale, young Christian woman sat handcuffed in the courtroom, accused of insulting Islam while teaching history of religions to fourth-graders. A team of Islamist lawyers with long beards sang in unison, 'All except the Prophet Muhammad.'

 

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This undated photo provided by the lawyer of Dimyana Abdel-Nour, shows Abdel-Nour, 24, a Coptic Christian teacher in the southern Egyptian city of Luxor in a family photo. (AP Photo)

 

by Maggie Michael

CAIRO (AP) — The pale, young Christian woman sat handcuffed in the courtroom, accused of insulting Islam while teaching history of religions to fourth-graders. A team of Islamist lawyers with long beards sang in unison, "All except the Prophet Muhammad."

Last Updated on Sunday, 19 May 2013 11:05

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'Britain's Obama' urges ties with West Africa

A British lawmaker widely viewed as a rising star in the Labour Party says the United Kingdom should more aggressively forge ties with West Africa's growing economies.

 

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CHUKA UMUNNA

 

by Robbie Corey-Boulet

ACCRA, Ghana (AP) — A rising star in Britain's Labour Party, described by some as the "British Barack Obama," Chuka Umunna urged the United Kingdom to more aggressively forge ties with West Africa's fast-growing economies.

Last Updated on Sunday, 19 May 2013 17:27

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Winnie Mandela's items to be sold to pay off debts

Dozens of paintings, a silver tea set and other items belonging to Nelson Mandela's ex-wife Winnie will be auctioned next week to pay off debts she owes to a South African school.

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Winnie Madikizela-Mandela (AP Photo)


by Christopher Torchia
JOHANNESBURG (AP) - Dozens of paintings, a silver tea set and other items belonging to Nelson Mandela's ex-wife Winnie will be auctioned next week to pay off debts she owes to a South African school.

The sale will happen at the home of Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, a polarizing figure who was beloved by many for her role in the anti-apartheid struggle but was also involved in legal troubles over the years, including a kidnapping conviction in the early 1990s.

Madikizela-Mandela collects a salary as a member of parliament, and she is also a member of the national executive committee of the ruling African National Congress, the liberation movement that has led successive governments since the end of white racist rule in 1994.

She defaulted on a $2,150 payment to Abbotts College, which has several high school campuses in South Africa, according to South African media. A relative of Madikizela-Mandela had been studying at Abbotts.

A court ruled against Madikizela-Mandela in 2011. Alan Levy Attorneys, a law firm representing the school system, said the auction will be held Tuesday at her home in the Soweto township of Johannesburg. Items for sale also include tables and chairs, a roomful of books and sculptures.

Her lawyer declined to comment.

Madikizela-Mandela married Nelson Mandela in 1958 but then the couple was separated for 27 years while Mandela was imprisoned by South Africa's racist white government. He and Winnie divorced in 1997, during his term as the country's first black president.

Madikizela-Mandela was an anti-apartheid leader in her own right. However, her behavior grew increasingly erratic in the 1980s as crackdowns against her and the ANC grew increasingly intense. She and her former bodyguard unit, known as the Mandela United Football Club, were accused of committing 18 killings and other crimes during this period.

She was convicted of charges including kidnapping in 1991. Initially sentenced to six years in jail, she was ordered to pay a $3,200 fine on appeal.

In March, forensic experts exhumed two skeletons believed to belong to two young activists last seen at her home 24 years ago. No charges have been filed.

 

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Last Updated on Wednesday, 15 May 2013 12:52

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Greek police arrest 2 for racist abuse

Greece_Far_Right_Char_Broa.jpgRiot police try to stop members of Golden Dawn party to unload a vehicle with food in central Athens, on May 2. (AP Photo/ Newsbeast/ Yannis Kemmos)

 

ATHENS, Greece (AP) - Police on Thursday arrested two Greek men on suspicion of attacking a Cameroonian national and setting fire to his coffee bar in a central Athens neighborhood that has become a flashpoint for racist violence.

Last Updated on Thursday, 16 May 2013 11:23

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Kenyan protester's lonely campaign gets a hearing

Mwangi, a 29-year-old photojournalist and father of three, is also an increasingly visible social campaigner who says he wants to unleash a 'Kenya Spring' for a country bedeviled by poverty, corruption and a culture of impunity.

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Kenyan social campaigner Boniface Mwangi, center, is arrested by security forces during a protest he organized at Uhuru Park in downtown Nairobi, Kenya. (AP Photo/Paul Munene)

 

by Tom Odula
NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — Boniface Mwangi's hands trembled as he typed a Twitter post about his intention to heckle Kenya's top union leader at a rally attended by Kenya's new president.

To an Associated Press reporter in the crowd with him, he said: "There is fire in my belly, but my feet are trembling." He knew that for taking on such powerful forces at an event being broadcast live on national radio and TV, he might be beaten and end up in jail. "My feet can shake all they want, but all I need is my voice."

Mwangi, a 29-year-old photojournalist and father of three, is also an increasingly visible social campaigner who says he wants to unleash a "Kenya Spring" for a country bedeviled by poverty, corruption and a culture of impunity.

"The masses are ignorant... They lost their voice and we want to help them discover that voice," he says.

At the May Day rally, Mwangi and 20 friends planned to shout down Francis Atwoli, the secretary general of the Central Organization of Trade Unions, for supporting a hefty pay raise for members of parliament.

When Atwoli approached the podium, Mwangi stood up and repeatedly shouted "msaliti," Swahili for "traitor." But no one joined in and he quickly found he was alone as big men in black suits bore down on him and Atwoli told the crowd his "army" was taking care of the interruption.

The men in black chased Mwangi into a corner and beat him. Then his supporters arrived and formed a human shield around him. Police moved in and Mwangi emerged with a bloodied mouth. He was arrested, released, and faces a charge of "offensive behavior in a manner likely to breach peace." It carries a penalty of up to six months in jail or a $65 fine.

But Mwangi's lone protest wasn't in vain. It went out live on TV and sparked discussion on social media of MPs' salaries, the union leader's position, and freedom of expression and assembly.

Kenyans are Africa's second most active Tweeters after South Africans, according to a 2011 survey by Portland Communications, an international company. Tony Mbogo, whose company Timisha Solutions monitors social media, says the hashtag (hash)freebonifacemwangi was very popular on Kenyan social media between May 1 and May 3.

Mwangi, who has more than 33,000 Twitter followers, says: "Twitter is my own personal radio station where I broadcast my opinions."

The May 1 event was not the first to pit Mwangi against Kenya's political class. He made a name for himself photographing the violence that followed the 2008 presidential election, and became famous in Kenya and on the Internet for his role in organizing the painting of detailed and colorful anti-establishment graffiti on city walls. In 2009, police arrested and beat him for shouting at then President Mwai Kibaki at a public event.

His protests target a political class seen by many Kenyans as purveyors of corruption, impunity and tribalism that shortchange the poor and hold their country back.

Legislators' salaries are a particularly sore point with Mwangi. In January, he organized the burning of 221 coffins outside Parliament when MPs — or the "MPigs," as he calls them — attempted to award themselves a $110,000 bonus to close their five-year term.

The May Day protest referred to MPs' demands to reverse the ruling of a government commission that shrank their salaries from around $126,000 to $78,500, and impeach its members. Before that ruling, the lawmakers determined their own pay.

The minimum wage in Nairobi is about $1,500 a year.

"How can you demand taxpayers buy you an $80,000 car so that you can drive it into the slum where your constituents have nothing to eat? Are these people normal?" Mwangi asks.

MPs argue that they need high salaries because they are expected to help their poor constituents pay school fees and hospital bills.

A World Bank report released in December said with the money Kenyan firms pay in bribes each year they could hire 250,000 people. Doctors in public hospitals last year went on strike to protest a health care system so deprived that clinics often lack basic medicines and surgical gloves.

But campaigners like Mwangi, are rare. Another, Mwalimu Mati, says Kenyans aren't ready for drastic change. They "are so beaten down that they think if they behave, their leaders will throw them bread crumbs," Mati said. One of the reasons the May Day rally draws crowds is that it's where increases in the minimum wage are announced.

Uhuru Kenyatta, the new president, hasn't said anything specific about the MPs' pay claim since he was sworn in last month, but he complains that civil service salaries in general are eating up half of all revenues collected by the government.

"Sometimes it really hurts. Instead of asking how we are going to serve our people, we are asking ourselves how we are going to get more money in our pockets," he said in a speech Thursday. "Please, let us do what is important first, which is serving Kenyans."



Last Updated on Sunday, 12 May 2013 15:36

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