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Suspected outbreak of Marburg virus kills eight in Tanzania, WHO says

Suspected outbreak of Marburg virus kills eight in Tanzania, WHO says
The viral hemorrhagic fever has a fatality rate as high as 88 percent, and is from the same virus family as the one responsible for Ebola. (AFP File photo)
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Updated 15 January 2025

Suspected outbreak of Marburg virus kills eight in Tanzania, WHO says

Suspected outbreak of Marburg virus kills eight in Tanzania, WHO says
  • The viral hemorrhagic fever has a fatality rate as high as 88 percent, and is from the same virus family as the one responsible for Ebola

NAIROBI: A suspected outbreak of the Marburg virus in northwest Tanzania has infected nine people, killing eight of them, the World Health Organization has said, weeks after an outbreak of the disease was declared over in neighboring Rwanda.
The viral hemorrhagic fever has a fatality rate as high as 88 percent, and is from the same virus family as the one responsible for Ebola, which is transmitted to people from fruit bats which are endemic to that part of East Africa.
The WHO said it received reliable reports of suspected cases in the Kagera region of Tanzania on Jan. 10, with symptoms of headache, high fever, back pain, diarrhea, vomiting blood, muscle weakness and finally external bleeding.
Samples from two patients were awaiting testing at Tanzania’s national laboratory for confirmation of the outbreak, WHO said in a statement on Tuesday.
The patients’ contacts, including health care workers, have been identified and were being followed up, WHO reported.
The outbreak in Rwanda, which shares a border with Tanzania’s Kagera region, infected 66 people and killed 15 before it was declared over on December 20.
Marburg virus can spread between people through direct contact or via blood and other bodily fluids of infected people, including contaminated bedding or clothing.
An outbreak in the Kagera region in March 2023 killed six people and lasted for nearly two months.


EU chief’s plane hit by suspected Russian GPS jamming in Bulgaria

EU chief’s plane hit by suspected Russian GPS jamming in Bulgaria
Updated 43 sec ago

EU chief’s plane hit by suspected Russian GPS jamming in Bulgaria

EU chief’s plane hit by suspected Russian GPS jamming in Bulgaria
  • The European Commission said Bulgarian authorities suspected the disruption ‘was due to blatant interference’ from Moscow
  • The aircraft landed safely at Plovdiv International Airport, in the south of the country, without having to change route
BRUSSELS: A plane carrying EU chief Ursula von der Leyen was hit by GPS jamming as it readied to land in Bulgaria on Sunday, Brussels said Monday, alleging Russia was thought to be behind the incident.
The European Commission said Bulgarian authorities suspected the disruption “was due to blatant interference” from Moscow but it was not clear if the chartered flight was deliberately targeted.
“We can indeed confirm that there was GPS jamming,” Commission spokeswoman Arianna Podesta told a press conference in Brussels.
The aircraft landed safely at Plovdiv International Airport, in the south of the country, without having to change route.
Commission president Von der Leyen, 66, was in Bulgaria as part of a seven-country tour of “frontline” European Union states which, sitting on the 27-nation bloc’s eastern flank, are more exposed to Russian hybrid threats.
The region has experienced “a lot of such jamming and spoofing activities,” the commission said, adding it has sanctioned several companies believed to be involved.
The Bulgarian government confirmed the incident.
“During the flight carrying European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen to Plovdiv, the satellite signal transmitting information to the plane’s GPS navigation system was neutralized,” a government statement said.
“To ensure the flight’s safety, air control services immediately offered an alternative landing method using terrestrial navigation tools,” it said.
The Financial Times newspaper, which first reported the incident, said the plane was forced to land using paper maps.

Australia will pay Nauru to resettle foreign born criminals

Australia will pay Nauru to resettle foreign born criminals
Updated 49 min 33 sec ago

Australia will pay Nauru to resettle foreign born criminals

Australia will pay Nauru to resettle foreign born criminals
  • Nauru has become a political solution for the government after Australia’s High Court ruled in 2023 that non citizens with no prospects of being resettled outside Australia could no longer be held indefinitely in immigration detention
  • Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke surprised Australian media on Friday by visiting Nauru, where he signed a memorandum of understanding with Nauruan President David Adeang

MELBOURNE: Australia will pay the small Pacific island of Nauru to resettle foreign-born criminals who the courts have ruled cannot be imprisoned indefinitely, Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said on Monday.
Nauru has become a political solution for the government after Australia’s High Court ruled in 2023 that non-citizens with no prospects of being resettled outside Australia could no longer be held indefinitely in immigration detention.
Albanese did not confirm media reports that Australia would pay the tiny Pacific Island nation, population 13,000, 400 million Australian dollars ($262 million) to establish the deal then AU$70 million ($46 million) annually to maintain it.
“People who have no right to be here need to be found somewhere to go, if they can’t go home,” Albanese told Australian Broadcasting Corp.
“If they can’t be sent back to their country-of-origin because of refoulement provisions and obligations that we have, then we need to find another country for them to go to,” Albanese added.
Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke surprised Australian media on Friday by visiting Nauru, where he signed a memorandum of understanding with Nauruan President David Adeang.
Adeang said in a statement on Sunday the agreement “contains undertakings for the proper treatment and long-term residence of people who have no legal right to stay in Australia, to be received by Nauru.”
“Australia will provide funding to underpin this arrangement and support Nauru’s long-term economic resilience,” Adeang said.
The agreement will be activated when Nauru received the first “transferees,” who will be given long-term visas, the president said.
Australia’s Asylum Seeker Resource Center, an advocacy group, reported Nauru planned to issue 280 visas to non-citizens that Australia wanted to deport.
The center said legislation to be introduced to Australia’s Parliament on Tuesday would strip the right of fairness from deportation decisions under the new Nauru deal. Canceled visas that are under appeal in court would be canceled by the new law.
The center’s deputy chief executive Jana Favero said the legislation could enable 80,000 people to be deported.
“That’s tens of thousands of lives at risk — not the tiny number the government would have Australians believe,” Favero said in a statement.
Albanese said the full details of the agreement would be made public simultaneously by both governments.
“There’re complexities and detail here, including the number of people who go,” Albanese said.
An Australian High Court decision in 2023 overturned the government’s policy of leaving in detention immigrants who failed Australia’s character test, usually because of criminal conduct. The government said they could not be deported.
Countries including Afghanistan are considered unsafe for their nationals to be repatriated. Iran refuses to accept Iranians who are not returning voluntarily.
The test case was brought by a member of Myanmar’s persecuted Rohingya Muslim minority identified in court as NZYQ. He was brought to Australia in a smuggler’s boat in 2012, and raped a child soon after being released into the Australian community. He served a prison sentence and was then transferred into indefinite immigration detention until he won his court case.
More than 200 immigrants who cannot be deported have been released from detention as a result of the NZYQ case. Some have committed more crimes and have returned to prison.
Burke announced in February that three violent criminals, including a convicted murderer, had been issued with 30-year visas to live in Nauru. But their deportations have been challenged in Australian courts.


Putin meets Erdogan, praises Turkiye’s mediation efforts on Ukraine

Putin meets Erdogan, praises Turkiye’s mediation efforts on Ukraine
Updated 01 September 2025

Putin meets Erdogan, praises Turkiye’s mediation efforts on Ukraine

Putin meets Erdogan, praises Turkiye’s mediation efforts on Ukraine

TIANJIN: Russian President Vladimir Putin praised Turkiye’s mediation attempts around the Ukraine war at a meeting with his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan in China on Monday.
“I’m confident that Turkiye’s special role in these matters will continue to be in demand,” the Russian president said during talks with Erdogan on the sidelines of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) summit.
Putin added that the three rounds of direct talks with Ukraine in Istanbul have made some progress on the humanitarian track.
The talks have failed to yield a breakthrough over Russia’s three-and-a-half-year invasion and resulted only in exchanges of prisoners and soldiers’ bodies.
The warring sides have radically different positions and Ukraine has accused Russia of sending low-level officials with no real decision-making power to the Istanbul talks.
Russia has called on Ukraine to effectively cede four regions that Moscow claims to have annexed, a demand Kyiv has called unacceptable.
US President Donald Trump has called for a meeting between Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, but Moscow said it was too early to do so before key issues are resolved.
Russia’s full-scale invasion, launched in February 2022, has ravaged swathes of eastern and southern Ukraine, killing tens of thousands of soldiers and civilians.


Zelensky to meet European leaders in Paris

Zelensky to meet European leaders in Paris
Updated 01 September 2025

Zelensky to meet European leaders in Paris

Zelensky to meet European leaders in Paris

KYIV: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky will meet European leaders on Thursday in Paris, a source told AFP, amid international efforts to broker an end to Russia’s three-and-a-half-year invasion.
“We’re planning such a meeting” between Zelensky and “European leaders,” the source said, adding that “(US President Donald Trump) is not so far expected to be there.”


Ukraine suspects Russia involved in killing of former parliamentary speaker, says police chief

Ukraine suspects Russia involved in killing of former parliamentary speaker, says police chief
Updated 01 September 2025

Ukraine suspects Russia involved in killing of former parliamentary speaker, says police chief

Ukraine suspects Russia involved in killing of former parliamentary speaker, says police chief
  • ‘We know that this crime was not accidental. There is Russian involvement. Everyone will be held accountable before the law’
  • Russia has not commented on the killing or on the suggestion that it was involved in the incident

KYIV: Ukraine suspects Russian involvement in the murder of former parliamentary speaker Andriy Parubiy, the head of the Ukrainian police said on Monday.
Parubiy was shot dead in the western city of Lviv on Saturday and President Volodymyr Zelensky said earlier on Monday that a suspect had been arrested for what he called “a horrific murder” that impacted “security in a country at war.”
“We know that this crime was not accidental. There is Russian involvement. Everyone will be held accountable before the law,” police chief Ivan Vyhivskyi said on Facebook.
Russia has not commented on the killing or on the suggestion that it was involved in the incident.
Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko said on the Telegram messaging app that the suspected shooter had been detained overnight in the Khmelnytskyi region in western Ukraine.
“Many details cannot be shared at this time,” Klymenko said. “I will only say that the crime was carefully planned: the victim’s movements were studied, a route was mapped out, and an escape plan was thought through.”
Police chief Vyhivskyi said the suspect had disguised himself as a courier and had opened fire on Parubiy in broad daylight, firing his weapon eight times.
The shooter even made sure that the victim was dead, Vyhivskyi added.
“He spent a long time preparing, watching, planning, and finally pulling the trigger. It took us only 36 hours to track him down and arrest him,” Vyhivskyi added.
Police published two photographs from the scene of the arrest that show two special forces officers holding a handcuffed man by the arms. Naked to the waist, he has his back to the camera and his face is not visible.
Parubiy, 54, was a member of Ukraine’s parliament and had served as parliamentary speaker from April 2016 to August 2019. He was one of the leaders of protests in 2013-14 demanding closer ties with the European Union that led to the ousting of Ukraine’s then pro-Russian president, Viktor Yanukovich.
Parubiy was also secretary of Ukraine’s National Security and Defense Council from February to August 2014, a period when Russia annexed the Crimea peninsula and Moscow-backed separatists began fighting government forces in eastern Ukraine.