Saturday, 4 November 2017
US Africa command launches airstrikes againt ISIS militants in Somalia
Friday, 28 April 2017
Thug Robs Couple, Rapes Woman as Husband Watches in Umoja Estate
Police officers arrested a man Wednesday on suspicion of rape, gun possession and robbery with violence.
The arrest comes after a couple reported that they were attacked and robbed by a gunman while on their way home in Nairobi’s Umoja 3 estate on Wednesday 4 am.
According to the report, the gunman ordered the man to leave his wife behind then dragged her to a nearby building and raped her as he watched while hiding nearby.
“After the ordeal, the couple then followed the man and saw him enter a nearby house,” a police report says.
They reported the incident at Mowlem police post before police officers from Buru Buru police station were alerted. The officers followed the couple and arrested the suspect without any incident.
The officers recovered a Kenya Police revolver inside the suspect’s car registration number KBL 948Q.
Upon interrogation, the suspect confessed to have bought the revolver from a police officer stationed at Buru Buru police station at a cost of Sh50,000.
The officer was arrested and confessed to having stolen two guns and sold them to the suspect and another person who is still at large.
Wednesday, 19 April 2017
Vladimir Putin opens a top-secret military base in the Arctic allegedly in preparation for Cold War (Photos)
Russian president, Vladimir Putin is believed to be preparing for a new Cold War by opening a top-secret military base in the Arctic. The base situated on the northern ice cap is believed to be fully armed with nuclear-ready fighter jets and missile systems.Putin had overseen plans for the giant complex, which is painted in the colours of the Russian flag and built on Alexandra Land, an Island in Russia.
The project is believed to be part of a drive to take advantage of trillions of pounds worth of natural resources believed to be buried beneath the snow. Russian economists believe this could hold the key to the Kremlin unearthing almost £24 trillion of oil and gas buried deep beneath the snow, The Times reports.
Monday, Moscow released the first pictures of the giant Arctic Trefoil complex on the Arctic island of Alexandra Land - where temperature can drop to -50°C. Over 150 troops will be based at the compound. Moscow's defence minister Sergei Shoigu confirmed nuke-ready Su-34 fighter jets will be deployed at a nearby air base. Putin has ordered elite special forces troops to train for Arctic warfare, including training on how to use reindeer sleds as a means of transportation in the freezing conditions.
The training is to be completed before they move to the base where they will have to deal with the threat of killer temperatures and dangerous polar bears residing nearby.
Russia unveiled the five-storey complex yesterday, shortly after the US expressed its concern over Russia building up its military near the North Pole. The United States are strongly opposed to the Putin's plans for the Arctic.
Thursday, 13 April 2017
Police issue terror alert, urge public to remain vigilant
Police in Kenya have issued a terror alert following reports that some nine Al Shabaab terrorists are headed back to the country to launch attacks.
Police Spokesman George Kinoti confirmed that security forces are on a high alert after receiving intelligence that the terrorists are planning to strike, once in the country.
He is however assuring that tight security measures have been put in place to thwart the threats but urged the public to remain vigilant.
Capital FM News has seen a confidential document with names and photographs of the suspected terrorists which has been circulated internally within the security agencies.
The threat of terror remains real in the country due to the Somalia-based militants, despite losing a lot of operating ground in the war-torn country.
Though the number of attacks have drastically dropped, the militia have managed to launch some, more so in the border towns claiming tens of lives.
Kenya Defence Forces under the African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM) continue to engage the militants in Somalia despite their continued resistance, at times targeting military camps.
Saturday, 1 April 2017
Two US Women Jailed For Financing Terror In Kenya And Somalia
Two women in the US were Friday sentenced to more than a decade in prison for providing support to terror groups in Kenya and Somalia.
Muna Osman Jama and Hinda Osman Dhirane who were arrested in 2014 were sentenced to twelve years and eleven years consecutively for conspiracy to provide material support as well as providing material support to Al-Shabaab.
Jama, 36, and Dhirane, 46, had been charged with sending money to the terror group which was used to fund military operations and safe houses. The accused are said to have used chatrooms to raise the funds and they openly expressed support for the Al-Shabaab.
According to the US Department of Justice (DOJ), one of the safe houses was used by Al-Shabaab to store weapons and prepare for attacks.
Tuesday, 28 March 2017
Kim Jung Un conducts another missile engine test in North Korea
US defense officials confirmed that North Korea conducted another ballistic missile engine test last Friday. The officials said the latest engine trial is the third such test in recent weeks using similar technology.
One official said that the initial assessment indicates that the engine technology could possibly be used in an eventual intercontinental ballistic missile.
The biggest fear of the US is that possession of an intercontinental ballistic missile could allow North Korea to threaten the continental United States. ICBM technology is considered difficult to develop, with advanced rocket design being a necessary step.
Monday, 20 March 2017
I am here to die for Allah, says attacker shot dead at Paris airport after he attempted to take soldier's gun
A 39-year-old man was shot and killed by soldiers at Orly Airport outside Paris on Friday morning after he attacked a soldier and attempted to steal her rifle.
Paris prosecutor Francois Molins said the attacker identified as Ziyed Ben Belgacem, a French-born national, held a pistol to the soldier's head and used her as a shield. He reportedly yelled that he wanted to "die for Allah and whatever happens, there will be deaths."
He was a serial offender with 44 offences on his criminal record - his most recent being for armed robbery. The police source initially said the man was a radicalised Muslim who was known to the authorities.
However, later the French Interior Ministry confirmed the man was on a crime watchlist, not a terror watchlist. According to the Paris prosecutor's office, the 39-year-old had previously been on the authorities' radar for suspected Islamic extremism.
His house was among many searched in the days after the 2015 Paris suicide attack. Judicial sources say they have arrested Belgacem's father and brother. The suspect allegedly send his family a text after the first shooting, saying: "I did a bullsh*t, I shot at the police".
The family are French citizens of Tunisian descent, and believed to be living on a council-run estate in Garges-lès-Gonesse. French interior minister Bruno Le Roux said the man was who had shot a police officer earlier in the day during a routine traffic stop, and hijacked a car.
The female police officer was injured during the road check, while three officers were shot at, a police source told news agency Reuters. He is believed to have stolen two cars to make his getaway - the first was stolen near the road check.
This vehicle was found abandoned at Vitry, containing a bloodied t-shirt. The second was later found abandoned at Orly airport.The man fled into McDonalds at the airport before being shot.
French president Francois Hollande has praised the courage and efficiency of troops and police following the incidents.
In a written statement, the President reaffirmed the state's "determination to act without respite to fight terrorism, defend our compatriots' security and ensure the protection of the territory."
He says the Sentinelle operation —about 7,500 troops patrolling on the country's streets and sensitive sites— has proved useful in addition to police forces.
French presidential hopeful Emmanuel Macron has also paid tribute to the French troops who have been deployed to secure the streets of France in the wake of a string of deadly Islamic extremist attacks, saying the soldiers "have demonstrated one more time calm, control and professionalism.
Terminals at Orly Airport have now reopened. Some flights that landed while the incident unfolded sat on the tarmac for hours; other flights were rerouted to Charles de Gaulle, the largest airport in Paris.
Saturday, 18 March 2017
North Korea is behaving very badly, says Donald Trump on tweeter
US president, Donald Trump took shots at China and North Korea aiming at the recently ballistic missile tests by Kim Jung Un. He tweeted:
US Secretary of State, Rex Tillerson is currently on s state visit to South Korea where he said all options are on the table including military options in dealing with North Korea.
Tuesday, 21 February 2017
Donald Trump gets new security adviser
Mr Trump has praised Herbert Raymond McMaster as "a man of tremendous talent and tremendous experience" who is "highly respected by everybody in the military".
Gen McMaster served in Afghanistan and Iraq, and is known as a thoughtful, if straight-talking, military strategist, the BBC's Aleem Maqbool reports from Washington.
He does not appear to have close ties to Moscow, and was recently commissioned to study the ways the US could counter some of Russia's military advances, our correspondent adds.
Gen McMaster is no stranger to questioning authority . In a 2014 interview, he said: "The commanders that I've worked for, they want frank assessments, they want criticism and feedback."
Time magazine named him as one of its 100 most influential people in the world in 2014, saying he "might be the 21st Century Army's pre-eminent warrior-thinker".
He criticised the US military's involvement in the Vietnam War in his book Dereliction of Duty.
He has a PhD in US history from the University of North Carolina.
Gen McMaster has said it is "a privilege... to be able to continue serving our nation" and that he looks forward to joining the national security team.
What will his role as national security adviser involve?
The role involves serving as an independent adviser to the president on issues of national security and foreign policy.
It is one of the most senior roles in the US government. Observers say the role's influence varies from administration to administration, but the adviser is seen as one of the president's key confidantes.
The adviser attends the National Security Council, and may act as a broker between different government departments.
The role is not subject to US Senate confirmation.
Monday, 20 February 2017
Rosemary Odinga in ICU After She Tried doing The Unimaginable…See Full Story Here
Cord leader Raila Odinga’s daughter Rosemary Odinga has been admitted in ICU at the Nairobi Hospital.
It is not yet clear what she is suffering from but sources close to the family say she was admitted at the Agha Khan hospital on Friday after she complained of a headache.
She was later transferred to Nairobi Hospital on Sunday. The sources said only immediate family members are being allowed to visit.
Man On A Motorbike FIRED LIVE BULLET at Raila Odinga’s Official Car Injuring His Bodyguard Outside His Karen Home
Unconfirmed news just in is that suspected shots were fired today with one hitting Raila’s car.Those who were with the Rt Hon PM Raila believe it was an assassination attempt. The CORD leader had just arrived at Anniversary towers when police fired in the air.
Journalists who covered the incident told the reporter that the shooting was intentional and may be rightly interpreted as an assassination attempt.
Pence in Brussels, seeking ‘deeper’ ties with European Union
United States Vice President Mike Pence told senior European Union officials in Brussels on Monday that the Trump administration was looking at ways to “deepen our relationship” with the EU.
President Donald Trump alarmed EU leaders by endorsing Britain’s decision to leave the bloc and by suggesting last month that other states might follow. Pence spent the weekend in Germany seeking to reassure Europeans that Trump was committed to the NATO defense pact, but left some unconvinced.
Speaking to EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini before meetings with the heads of the European Council, European Commission and NATO, Pence said he was “very grateful to have the opportunity to visit with you and explore ways that we can deepen our relationship with the European Union”.
He met Mogherini at the U.S. mission to the EU. The last U.S. ambassador, who was dismissed by Trump as he took office, warned the new administration against reversing decades of postwar U.S. encouragement of European integration and said supporting Brexit was “the height of folly”.
Mogherini told Pence that Europeans and the United States had much to work on and that discussions were already under way.
In a statement, she later said she and Pence had “an open and warm conversation” in which she “reaffirmed a strong willingness of the EU to continue building a strong EU-U.S. partnership on the basis of clear values and interests”.
She said they discussed Syria, Ukraine, Libya, the Middle East, Afghanistan and North Korea among other topics.
Mogherini stressed “the need to preserve and fully implement the Iran deal” on controlling Iran’s nuclear developments.
No plan to seize Iraqi oil, says US Defense Secretary Mattis:
U.S. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said Monday the United States does not intend to seize Iraqi oil, shifting away from an idea proposed by President Donald Trump that has rattled Iraq's leaders.
Mattis' arrived on an unannounced visit in Iraq as the battle to oust Islamic State militants from western Mosul moved into its second day, and as the Pentagon considers ways to accelerate the campaign against IS in Iraq and Syria.
Those efforts could be complicated by Trump's oil threat and his inclusion of Iraq in the administration's travel ban — twin blows that have roiled the nation and spurred local lawmakers to pressure Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi to reduce cooperation with Washington.
"I think all of us here in this room, all of us in America have generally paid for our gas and oil all along, and I'm sure that we will continue to do that in the future," Mattis told reporters traveling with him. "We're not in Iraq to seize anybody's oil."
His comments may provide some reassurance to the Iraqis. But the tensions come at a critical point in the war against IS, with two key battles in the works: the fight to take control of west Mosul, and the start of a campaign in Syria to oust IS from Raqqa, the capital of its self-declared caliphate.
Al-Abadi has taken a measured approach, but the issues can roil already difficult internal politics.
Under the president's deadline, Mattis has just a week to send Trump a strategy to accelerate the fight and defeat the Islamic State group. And any plan is likely to depend on U.S. and coalition troops working with and through the local forces in both countries.
"We're going to make certain that we've got good situational awareness of what we face as we work together and fight alongside each other," Mattis said.
His key goal during the visit is to speak about the military operations with political leaders and commanders on the ground, including his top commander in Iraq, Lt. Gen. Stephen Townsend.
Asked about the tensions, Mattis said he has been assured that the travel ban — it has been stalled by a legal challenge — would not affect Iraqis who have fought alongside U.S. forces.
The oil issue, however, may be more difficult. Trump brought it up during the campaign, and he mentioned it again late last month during a visit to the CIA.
"To the victor belong the spoils," Trump told members of the intelligence community. He said he first argued this case for "economic reasons," but added it made sense as a counterterrorism approach to defeating IS "because that's where they made their money in the first place."
"So we should have kept the oil," he said. "But, OK, maybe you'll have another chance."
Trump, however, has also been clear that defeating IS is a top priority. In his inauguration address, he pledged to eradicate radical Islamic terrorism "completely from the face of the Earth." And he talked during the campaign about greatly increasing the number of U.S. troops in order to "knock out" IS.
He signed an order Jan. 28 that gives Mattis and senior military leaders 30 days to come up with a new plan to beef up the fight.
Mattis would not discuss specifics, saying he wants to gather information first. But he has been talking with military leaders about the possible options, and has largely supported the U.S. strategy of fighting IS with and through local forces.
The military options range from putting more troops in Iraq and Syria to boosting military aid to Kurdish fighters backed by the U.S.-led coalition.
More specifically, officials have talked about expanding efforts to train, advise and enable local Iraqi and Syrian forces, increasing intelligence and surveillance, and allowing U.S. troops to move forward more frequently with Iraqi soldiers nearer the front lines.
The Pentagon also would like more freedom to make daily decisions about how it fights the enemy. Former and current U.S. officials discussed the likely options on condition of anonymity because they weren't authorized to talk publicly.
In Syria, a possible option would be sending more U.S. forces, including combat troops, there as the Raqqa fight heats up.
Another move would be to provide heavy weapons and vehicles to the U.S.-backed Syrian Kurds, known as the YPG, and boost training. They have been the most effective force against IS in northern and eastern Syria, but the proposal is sensitive. Turkey, a key U.S. and NATO ally, considers the group a terrorist organization.
There are more than 5,100 U.S. forces in Iraq, and up to about 500 in Syria.
-abc News
Saturday, 18 February 2017
50 Ugandan pupils admitted after eating suspected poisoned food
At least 50 pupils of Kangulumira Church of Uganda Primary School in Kangulumira sub-county, Kayunga district have been admitted at various hospitals after they allegedly ate poisonous food.
It is said that the pupils developed stomach complications and began vomiting along with having running stomachs.
The pupils after having their supper on Wednesday evening began crying endlessly as they complained to their matron of the painful experience.
As a result, the matron barred them from drinking water.
The 50 were shortly thereafter rushed to Kangulumira Health Centre III where they were all admitted and put on water drips.
However, the condition of 18 of the pupils worsened and they were on Thursday morning rushed to Jinja Regional Referral Hospital in critical condition.
The girls were admitted in Ward 3 while the boys in Ward 2.
Of the 18 pupils, 16 were from primary seven while the rest were of primary six.
A female teacher who preferred anonymity said blood samples were taken from the pupils as early as 9AM but by 7PM they had not yet received results.
“We brought our children while in critical condition and blood samples were taken in the morning but we have not yet received the results, we can’t confirm it was poison” said the teacher.
Patrick Munaabi, 15, of primary seven said a woman, only identified as Yaki came along with a saucepan containing beans at the time he was serving his colleagues.
Yaki claimed that she had been sent by the school cook, known as Kabaya to bring the beans and mix them with what Munaabi was serving which he adhered to.
He said the students who were served earlier were not affected apart from those who were served last.
According to Esther Nantale, another victim, the woman bragged that the beans were very delicious unlike the ones they were already eating.
As a result, she told them to pour away what they had been served and consume what she had brought.
Sharifa Namuyomba, 13, said the woman frequents their school because her home borders the school.
“We occasionally see her interacting with our cook at the school compound” Namuyomba said.
Meanwhile Sylvia Namuwaya, Munaabi parent expressed fear that her son had not vomited or suffered a running stomach yet he was still feeling stomach pain.
Kalisa Kalangwa, the Kayunga district NRM chairperson said he improvised transport means to take the pupils to hospital.
Kalangwa told journalists that this could have been a planned move to frustrate the school because it is one of the best performing UPE schools in Kangulumira sub-county.
He said three suspects including Yaki and the cook had been arrested. Efforts to get a comment from the Kayunga District Police Commander were futile.
-New vision
Mexicans form HUMAN WALL along US border to protest Trump
Thousands of Mexicans linked arms Friday to form a “human wall” on their country’s border with the United States, protesting President Donald Trump’s plan to build a massive barrier between the countries.
The protest, organized by local authorities and Mexican advocacy groups, brought together people armed with flowers, including politicians, social leaders and crowds of students to the border town Ciudad Juarez — which already is separated by extensive fencing from its American neighbor city El Paso.
Protestors hurled slogans at Trump, whose plans to build the wall to keep undocumented immigrants out of the US — and make Mexico foot the bill — has enraged many people here.
“The wall is one of the worst ideas,” said Carolina Solis, a 31-year-old student. “It won’t stop anything — not drugs or migrants.”
“It’s just a symbol of Donald Trump’s hatred, the president’s racism.”
Under the watchful eye of US Border Patrol officers, protestors — among them El Paso Mayor Oscar Leeser — formed a human barrier of nearly 1.5 kilometers (0.9 miles).
Many people on both sides of the border cross it daily, calling one country home while going to work in the other.
“Ciudad Juarez and El Paso are one city — we will never be apart,” said Leeser, who was born on the Mexican side of the border.
His Ciudad Juarez counterpart Mayor Armando Cabada vowed to help resettle migrants deported from the US.
“Trump only generates fear in our US compatriots. We must show solidarity with them and tell them that they have our support,” he said.
“If they are deported, we will welcome them with open arms.”
Last week, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents arrested some 680 people across the United States as part of a crackdown by the new administration on the estimated 11 million undocumented immigrants living in the United States.
Officials insist the raids targeted known criminals but rights advocates say people with no serious criminal records were also detained.
A similar protest was planned on Mexico’s Pacific coast, at the border between the city of Tijuana and its US neighbor San Diego.
- Reuters
Destroy Cayla dolls over hacking fears, German parents told
The Federal Network Agency, an official watchdog that oversees telecommunication in Germany has urged parents to destroy and boycott a talking doll called 'Cayla' over hacking fear. The warning by Germany's Federal Network Agency came after Stefan Hessel, a student from the University of Saarland, raised legal concerns about the doll 'My Friend Cayla.'
Researchers say hackers can use an insecure Bluetooth device embedded in the toy to listen and say offensive things to the child playing with it.
According to a BBC report, Vivid Toy group, which distributes 'My Friend Cayla', had previously said that examples of hacking were isolated and carried out by specialists. However, it said the company would take the information on board as it was able to upgrade the app used with the doll.
But experts have revealed that the problem has not been fixed.
Mr. Hessel, an expert quoted by the German website Netzpolitik.org, said a Bluetooth-enabled device could connect to Cayla's speaker and microphone system within a radius of 10m (33ft). He said an eavesdropper could even spy on someone playing with the doll 'through several walls'.
- Mirror
Thursday, 16 February 2017
Kim Jong-nam: Second woman arrested over airport poisoning
A second woman has been arrested in connection with the death of Kim Jong-nam, the brother of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un.
Mr Kim died on Monday after apparently being poisoned while waiting to board a flight in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
Police say they have now finished their post-mortem examination of his body, though the results have not yet been made public.
One woman, travelling on a Vietnamese passport, is due to appear in court.
The inspector general of the Royal Malaysia police, Sri Khalid Bin Abu Bakar, said the second woman was detained on Thursday over the death of "a Korean male".
She was identified from airport CCTV footage and had an Indonesian passport.
Malaysia has yet to formally confirm that the dead man, who was travelling under the name Kim Chol, is Kim Jong-nam, but South Korea says it is certain.
North Korea's foreign assassinations
What led to the demise of Kim Jong-nam?
North Korea's secretive first family
There is widespread speculation that North Korea was behind the killing, but there has been no confirmation.
North Korea is on Thursday celebrating what would have been the 75th birthday of Kim Jong-il, the late leader and father of both Kim Jong-nam and Kim Jong-un.
Kim Jong-un was seen attending a ruling party meeting on Wednesday . Footage aired on state media showed him grim-faced, reported South Korea's Yonhap news agency, and he did not wave when he left, as is customary.
No request from North Korea
Selangor Police Chief Abdul Samah Mat told the BBC the examination of Mr Kim's body was completed on Wednesday evening, but there has been no indication of whether the results will be made public.
Reports on Wednesday said North Korea had asked to claim the body, but Mr Samah said that while officials from the embassy did visit the hospital they had not officially asked to remove the body.
He said Malaysia had no objection in principle to releasing the body to North Korea, if such a request were made.
Woman due in court
Mr Kim is believed to have been attacked by two women, using some form of chemical.
A grainy image taken from security camera footage in the airport, which has been broadcast in South Korea and Malaysia, shows a woman wearing a white T-shirt with the letters "LOL" written on the front.
It is not clear whether either is the woman in the footage, and police say they are still looking for "a few" other suspects.
Tuesday, 14 February 2017
Photos: Beautiful Somali MP and fashion designer escape assassination in Mogadishu
Somali MP and fashion designer, Muna Khalif Sheik popularly known as Muna Kay reportedly survived an assassination attempt in Mogadishu on Saturday, February 11.
Her driver was wounded and is said to be in critical condition. Muna Kay was elected last year as Somali MP representing South West state in the lower house of Somali federal parliament.
Thursday, 9 February 2017
No closure of Dadaab refugee camp, rules court
In a ruling delivered by Justice John Mativo, the court indicated that the directive issued by Interior Cabinet Secretary, Major Gen. (Rtd.) Joseph Nkaissery, on the intended repatriation of refugees and asylum seekers of Somali origin on May 10, 2016 violates the Constitution and the International legal obligations adding that Nkaiserry and his Principal Secretary, Karanja Kibicho, acted in excess powers in announcing the closure of the camp.
“A declaration that the decision of the government of Kenya to collectively repatriate all refugees in Dadaab Refugee Complex to the frontiers of their country of origin against their will violate the principle on international convention as expressed in Article 33 of the 1951 UN convention relating to the status of refugees as well as Section 18 of the Refugee Act 2006,” the court ruled.
The court further ruled that the decision specifically targeting Somali refugees is an act of group persecution, illegal, discriminatory and, therefore, unconstitutional.
In the case, Kituo Cha Sheria, Legal Advice Centre and Amnesty International sued CS Nkaissery seeking to stop the directive to close the world’s largest refugee camp, Daadab.
Wednesday, 8 February 2017
My country has betrayed me yet i have fought many extremists in Syria and Iraq, it now treats me like a terrorist, says Joanna Palani
Joanna Palani, 22, fought extremists in Syria and Iraq but says she is shunned after returning home to Copenhagen.
A Danish student who gave up her studies to fight ISIS believes she has a $1million bounty on her head but claims she is being treated as "a terrorist" back home.
Joanna Palani, 22, claims to have killed 100 militants during battles in Iraq and Syria as a crackshot sniper.
She also says she freed a group of women and children being held as sex slaves by ISIS and then taught them how to become soldiers and fight back.
Palani is of Iranian-Kurdish ancestry and her father and grandfather were both Peshmerga fighters.
She was born in a UN refugee camp before moving to Copenhagen as a toddler and learned to fire a gun at nine-years-old.
But she says life has been a struggle since she returned home from her heroics.
She said: "I was willing to give up my life and my freedom to stop ISIS advancing, so that everyone in Europe can be safe.
"This was my choice.
"But I am seen as a terrorist by my own country."
Joanna added: "I live in one of the best countries in the world but I am hungry and homeless and freezing cold in bed at night, even though I am working full time. I don't trust anyone."
Speaking about her battles with ISIS, the former student had boasted of her success.
"ISIS fighters are very easy to kill," she previously told Vice .
"ISIS fighters are very good at sacrificing their own lives, but Assad's soldiers are very well-trained and they are specialist killing machines."
-Mirror