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Terrified Tigrayans seek to flee renewed tensions in north Ethiopia

This photograh taken on May 24, 2024 shows a general view of the city of Mekele, capital of Ethiopia's region of Tigray. (AFP)
This photograh taken on May 24, 2024 shows a general view of the city of Mekele, capital of Ethiopia's region of Tigray. (AFP)
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Updated 16 March 2025

Terrified Tigrayans seek to flee renewed tensions in north Ethiopia

This photograh taken on May 24, 2024 shows a general view of the city of Mekele, capital of Ethiopia's region of Tigray. (AFP)
  • “A war between Ethiopia and Eritrea could break out at any moment,” said General Tsadkan Gebretensae, senior strategist for the Tigray forces in Getachew’s administration, in remarks published this week

ADDIS ABABA: Residents sought to flee mounting tensions in the Tigray region of Ethiopia as a political faction confirmed they had seized control of the town hall in the state capital Mekele.
Ethiopia’s most northerly state, which borders Eritrea, saw a devastating conflict between Tigrayan rebels and the federal government in 2020-22, which claimed up to 600,000 lives, according to some estimates.
The tensions come from an internal power struggle within Tigray between Getachew Reda, head of the state’s regional administration, and Debretsion Gebremichael, head of the dominant local party, the Tigray People’s Liberation Front.
“People are in terror that if armed conflict breaks out, it will be worse than the war they endured,” said Solomon Hagos, a university lecturer in Mekele, who asked for one of his names to be changed for security reasons.
Another resident said people were trying to flee.
“We were trapped in Mekele during the previous war, we do not want that to happen again,” said Mihret, 27, who only gave one name.
“We are trying to leave the region, and we went to the airport, but all the flights are full. We are looking for ways to leave the region; we are afraid,” he added.
Debretsion’s faction seized control of Mekele’s town hall on Thursday to reinstate its chosen mayor and the local radio station.
A spokesman for Debretsion said: “The previous elected mayor was fired by Getachew, which was not legal. So now the previous one has been put back in place.”
Armed supporters of Debretsion also took over the municipality in Adigrat, Tigray’s second-largest town near the Eritrean border, ousting the mayor appointed by Getachew.
“We are afraid of a new siege, of a civil war between Tigrayans,” said Mehari Gebremariam, a civil servant in Adigrat.
The tensions threaten to draw in Eritrea, which has a history of war with Ethiopia, adding another layer of fear among locals.
A war between Ethiopia and Eritrea in 1998-2000 resulted in tens of thousands of deaths.
Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed was lauded for finally reaching a peace agreement with Eritrea when he came to power in 2018 and won the Nobel Peace Prize.
But relations have soured since the end of the Tigray conflict in 2022.
Eritrea claimed in February that Ethiopia was waging an “intense campaign” against it.
A security source told AFP on condition of anonymity that armed Ethiopian convoys were heading toward the region of Afar, which borders Eritrea, in recent days.
“A war between Ethiopia and Eritrea could break out at any moment,” said General Tsadkan Gebretensae, senior strategist for the Tigray forces in Getachew’s administration, in remarks published this week.
The tensions have led to panic in Mekele.
“People are currently rushing to withdraw from banks because they fear the political tensions could lead to a suspension of basic services,” Hagos told AFP, adding that he had stocked up on food for fear of coming inflation.
He said locals could not cope with the idea of another war.
“Our people are exhausted. Our economy is devastated,” he said.


India says gunmen involved in Indian-administered Kashmir tourist attack killed

India says gunmen involved in Indian-administered Kashmir tourist attack killed
Updated 8 sec ago

India says gunmen involved in Indian-administered Kashmir tourist attack killed

India says gunmen involved in Indian-administered Kashmir tourist attack killed
  • Heavily armed men were killed on Monday, says Indian home minister, over three months after Pahalgam attack
  • April 22 Pahalgam attack sparked days-long military conflict between India and Pakistan before May 10 ceasefire

New Delhi: Indian security forces have killed three gunmen who were involved in an attack on Hindu tourists in Indian Kashmir, home minister Amit Shah said on Tuesday.

The heavily armed men were killed in a military operation on Monday, more than three months after 26 people were gunned down in a popular resort town of Indian Kashmir on April 22.
“I want to tell the parliament (that) those who attacked in Baisaran were three terrorists and all three have been killed,” he said.

Shah identified two of the three killed as members of Lashkar-e-Taiba, a UN-designated terrorist group based in Pakistan.

“Indian security agencies have detailed evidence of their involvement in the attack,” he said in a speech in the lower house of parliament.

Monday’s operation took place in the mountains of Dachigam, around 30 kilometers (18 miles) from the disputed region’s main city of Srinagar, the army said in a statement.

The attack in April saw gunmen burst out of forests near Pahalgam and rake crowds of visitors with automatic weapons.

All those killed were listed as residents of India except one man from Nepal.

India accused Pakistan of backing the attackers, a charge Islamabad denied, sparking an intense four-day conflict between the nuclear-armed rivals in May that killed more than 70 people on both sides.

Muslim-majority Kashmir has been divided between India and Pakistan since their independence from British rule in 1947, and the neighbors — who both claim the region in full — have fought two wars and several conflicts over its control.


Former Colombian President Uribe found guilty in bribery trial that threatens the strongman’s legacy

Former Colombian President Uribe found guilty in bribery trial that threatens the strongman’s legacy
Updated 31 min 45 sec ago

Former Colombian President Uribe found guilty in bribery trial that threatens the strongman’s legacy

Former Colombian President Uribe found guilty in bribery trial that threatens the strongman’s legacy
  • The former president, who governed from 2002 to 2010 is a polarizing figure in Colombia, many credit him for saving the country from becoming a failed state, while others associate him with human rights violations

BOGOTA: Former Colombian President Álvaro Uribe was convicted of witness tampering and bribery Monday in a historic trial that gripped the South American nation and threatened to tarnish the conservative strongman’s legacy.
The ruling followed a nearly six-month trial in which prosecutors presented evidence that Uribe attempted to influence witnesses who accused the law-and-order leader of having links to a paramilitary group founded by ranchers in the 1990s.
Uribe, 73, was not in court in the capital, Bogota, for the verdict as the judge has so far not ordered his arrest. He followed the ruling from his home outside Medellin but did not immediately speak about it.
Uribe faces up to 12 years in prison but a sentencing will be delivered in a separate hearing. He is expected to appeal the ruling.
The former president, who governed from 2002 to 2010 with strong support from the United States, is a polarizing figure in Colombia, where many credit him for saving the country from becoming a failed state, while others associate him with human rights violations and the rise of paramilitary groups in the 1990s.
While the ruling was read, Uribe’s opponents clashed briefly with his supporters outside the courthouse.
In a ruling that lasted more than 10 hours, Judge Sandra Heredia said there was enough evidence to determine that Uribe conspired with a lawyer to coax three former members of paramilitary groups who were in prison into changing testimony they had provided to Ivan Cepeda, a left-wing senator who had launched an investigation into Uribe’s alleged ties to a paramilitary group.
The case dates to 2012, when Uribe filed a libel suit against Cepeda with the Supreme Court. But in a twist, the high court dismissed the charges against Cepeda and began investigating Uribe in 2018.
During Uribe’s presidency, Colombia’s military attained some of its biggest battlefield victories against Latin America’s oldest leftist insurgency, pushing the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia into remote pockets and forcing the group’s leadership into peace talks that led to the disarmament of more than 13,000 fighters in 2016.
Known for his tireless work ethic and short temper, Uribe still has legions of followers in Colombia and is one of the fiercest opponents of the current president, former leftist guerrilla Gustavo Petro.
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio reacted to the ruling, as it became evident that Judge Heredia was going to find the former president guilty of bribery.
“Uribe’s only crime has been to tirelessly fight and defend his homeland” Rubio wrote on Monday on X. “The weaponization of Colombia’s judicial branch by radical judges has now set a worrisome precedent.”
Colombian President Gustavo Petro defended the ruling, writing on X that “a strong justice system” will enable Colombia to emerge from violence. He added in another message that Rubio was interfering with Colombia’s sovereignty.
“The world must respect the judges of Colombia” Petro wrote.
Heredia said that her ruling should not be interpreted as “a victory for anyone” but as “an act of justice.”
Critics also blame Uribe for state crimes. According to a truth commission created in 2017, more than 6,400 civilians were executed by the Colombian military and identified as members of rebel groups by soldiers seeking promotions during the conflict, in a phenomenon that peaked during the Uribe administration.
Prosecutors accused Uribe of sending lawyers to meet with imprisoned former paramilitary henchmen and pressure them to drop testimony that they had provided to Senator Cepeda.
During the trial, Uribe denied trying to flip witnesses but acknowledged seeking interviews with the men as part of his preparation for trial and to verify testimonies that were also being used in a murder trial against his brother, Santiago Uribe, who was also accused of ties to the armed paramilitaries.
Cepeda spoke to journalists after the ruling, and said that he would continue to fight for “truth and justice” for victims of Colombia’s conflict. “No one can defy and taint the rule of law,” he said.


Gunmen involved in Indian Kashmir tourist attack killed: minister

Gunmen involved in Indian Kashmir tourist attack killed: minister
Updated 20 min 8 sec ago

Gunmen involved in Indian Kashmir tourist attack killed: minister

Gunmen involved in Indian Kashmir tourist attack killed: minister
  • The heavily-armed men were killed in a military operation on Monday
  • The operation took place in the mountains of Dachigam, around 30 kilometers (18 miles) from the disputed region’s main city of Srinagar

NEW DELHI: Indian security forces have killed three gunmen who were involved in an attack on Hindu tourists in Indian Kashmir, home minister Amit Shah said on Tuesday.
The heavily-armed men were killed in a military operation on Monday, more than three months after 26 people were gunned down in a popular resort town of Indian Kashmir on April 22.
“I want to tell the parliament (that) those who attacked in Baisaran were three terrorists and all three have been killed,” he said.
Shah identified two of the three killed as members of Lashkar-e-Taiba, a UN-designated terrorist group based in Pakistan.
“Indian security agencies have detailed evidence of their involvement in the attack,” he said in a speech in the lower house of parliament.
Monday’s operation took place in the mountains of Dachigam, around 30 kilometers (18 miles) from the disputed region’s main city of Srinagar, the army said in a statement.
The attack in April saw gunmen burst out of forests near Pahalgam and rake crowds of visitors with automatic weapons.
All those killed were listed as residents of India except one man from Nepal.
India accused Pakistan of backing the attackers, a charge Islamabad denied, sparking an intense four-day conflict between the nuclear-armed rivals in May that killed more than 70 people on both sides.
Muslim-majority Kashmir has been divided between India and Pakistan since their independence from British rule in 1947, and the neighbors — who both claim the region in full — have fought two wars and several conflicts over its control.


Trump caps his Scottish visit by opening a new golf course

Trump caps his Scottish visit by opening a new golf course
Updated 43 min 31 sec ago

Trump caps his Scottish visit by opening a new golf course

Trump caps his Scottish visit by opening a new golf course
  • The new golf course will be the third owned by the Trump Organization in Scotland

BALMEDIE: President Donald Trump is opening a new golf course bearing his name in Scotland on Tuesday, capping a five-day foreign trip designed around promoting his family's luxury properties and playing golf.
Trump and his sons, Eric and Donald Jr., are cutting the ceremonial ribbon and playing the first-ever round at the new Trump course in the village of Balmedie, on the northern coast of Scotland.
The overseas jaunt let Trump escape Washington’s sweaty summer humidity and the still-raging scandal over the files related to Jeffrey Epstein.
It was mostly built around golf — and walking the new course before it officially begins offering rounds to the public on Aug. 13, adding to a lengthy list of ways Trump has used the White House to promote his brand.
Billing itself the “Greatest 36 Holes in Golf,” the Trump International Golf Links, Scotland, course is hosting a PGA Seniors Championship event this week, after Trump leaves. Signs promoting the event had already been erected all over the course before he arrived on Tuesday, and, on the highway leading in, temporary metal signs guided drivers onto the correct road.
Golfers hitting the course at dawn as part of that event had to put their clubs through metal detectors erected as part of the security sweeps ahead of Trump's arrival.
Also from Scotland's north is the president's late mother, Mary Anne MacLeod, who was born on the Isle of Lewis, immigrated to New York and died in 2000 at age 88.
“My mother loved Scotland,” Trump said during a meeting with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Monday at another one of his golf courses, Turnberry, on Scotland's southern coast. “It's different when your mother was born here.”
Trump used his trip to meet with Starmer and reach a trade framework for tariffs between the U.S. and the European Union’s 27 member countries — though scores of key details remain to be hammered out. But the trip has featured a lot of golf, and having the president visit is sure to raise the new course's profile.
Trump’s assets are in a trust, and his sons are running the family business while he’s in the White House. Any business generated at the course will ultimately enrich the president when he leaves office, though.
Visible from various parts of the new course were towering windmills lining the coast — some with blades that showed visible dots of rust. They are part of a nearby windfarm that Trump sued to block construction of in 2013.
He lost that case and was eventually ordered to pay legal costs for bringing it — and the issue still enrages him. During the meeting with Starmer, Trump called windmills “ugly monsters” and suggested they were part of “the most expensive form of energy.”
“I restricted windmills in the United States because they also kill all your birds,” Trump said. “If you shoot a bald eagle in the United States, they put you in jail for five years. And windmills knock out hundreds of them. They don’t do anything. Explain that.”
Starmer said in the U.K, “we believe in a mix” of energy, including oil and gas and renewables.
The new golf course will be the third owned by the Trump Organization in Scotland. Trump bought Turnberry in 2014 and owns another course near Aberdeen that opened in 2012.
Trump golfed at Turnberry on Saturday as protesters took to the streets, and on Sunday. He invited Starmer, who famously doesn’t golf, aboard Air Force One so the prime minister could get a private tour of his Aberdeen properties before Tuesday’s ceremonial opening.
“Even if you play badly, it’s still good,” Trump said of golfing on his course over the weekend. “If you had a bad day on the golf course, it’s OK. It’s better than other days.”
Trump also found time to to praise Turnberry's renovated ballroom, which he said he'd paid lavishly to upgrade — even suggesting that he might install one like it at the White House.
“I could take this one, drop it right down there," Trump joked. “And it would be beautiful.”


Terror threat to Singapore ‘remains high’, says home affairs report

Terror threat to Singapore ‘remains high’, says home affairs report
Updated 29 July 2025

Terror threat to Singapore ‘remains high’, says home affairs report

Terror threat to Singapore ‘remains high’, says home affairs report
  • The ministry said a key threat was online self-radicalization, in a variety of extremist ideologies, especially of youths

SINGAPORE: The terrorism threat to Singapore remains high, said its home affairs ministry in a report released on Tuesday, pointing to the ongoing Israeli-Palestinian conflict and “continued traction of radical narratives.”
While there was no current intelligence of an imminent attack against Singapore, the ministry said Islamic State uses propaganda to exploit the war in Gaza and local grievances to reinforce its narrative of armed violence.
Since the surprise attack by Hamas on Israel in October 2023, six Singaporeans have been found to support or were making preparations to take part in armed violence because of the conflict, said the report.
“Singapore and our interests continue to be viewed as attractive and legitimate targets by terrorist and extremist elements, due to our friendly relations with Western nations and Israel, the presence of iconic structures in Singapore, and our status as a secular and multicultural state,” it said.
The ministry said a key threat was online self-radicalization, in a variety of extremist ideologies, especially of youths.
Since 2015, Singapore has used the Internal Security Act against 17 youth aged 20. Most recently it was used against two teenagers — one planned to shoot mosques, the other planned to join Islamic State.
The law allows suspects to be held for lengthy periods without trial, or to be given a restriction order limiting travel and Internet access, among other conditions.
The threat assessment report also said artificial intelligence was emerging as a terrorism enabler for “generating and translating propaganda, producing convincing synthetic multimedia, creating personalized recruitment messages at scale, and planning and developing attacks.”