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Malawi election a battle of two presidents

Malawi election a battle of two presidents
Motorcycle taxi operators wait in line for their turn to take customers on a road, a day before Malawians vote for their next president, members of parliament and local councilors, in Lilongwe, Malawi, September 15, 2025. (Reuters)
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Updated 40 min 10 sec ago

Malawi election a battle of two presidents

Malawi election a battle of two presidents
  • Malawi votes Tuesday in the third bout of a battle for power between two presidents

LILONGWE, Malawi: Malawi votes Tuesday in the third bout of a battle for power between two presidents, incumbent Lazarus Chakwera and his predecessor, Peter Mutharika.
First-time candidate and former Reserve Bank governor Dalitso Kabambe could become a deciding factor should the race move to a second round, as is widely expected.
Here are short profiles of the three:

Chakwera, second term?

A charismatic former evangelical preacher who says he was called by God to govern his country, Chakwera’s first term has been overshadowed by climate-linked disasters and economic crisis.
The leader of the country’s oldest party, the Malawi Congress Party (MCP), he strode past Mutharika to first take office in 2020 with around 59 percent of ballots.
The vote was a rerun after the nullification of the 2019 “Tippex Election” in which courts upheld opposition claims that correction fluid was used to alter vote tallies. Mutharika had been narrowly ahead in the first take.
Chakwera lost his first duel against Mutharika in 2014, afterwards taking a seat in parliament as leader of the opposition.
Born in a village with no electricity or running water, the 70-year-old has degrees in philosophy and theology, and studied in Malawi, South Africa and the United States.
He is a strong orator with an inclusive leadership style but has been accused of failing to tackle incompetence and corruption in his administration.
His campaign has urged voters to not “Stop the Progress” of his first term, during which several road, school and hospital construction projects were undertaken.

Mutharika, a comeback?

The reserved 85-year-old leader of the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) is a former Washington law professor, who was first voted in as president in 2014.
With law degrees from the University of London and Yale, Mutharika worked as a constitutional law expert at Washington University, returning to Malawi in the early 1990s to help draft its first democratic constitution.
Following another stint in the United States, he came back in 2004 when his brother, Bingu wa Mutharika, was elected president, and became his right-hand man. He was elected to parliament in 2009 and went on to head several ministries.
After Bingu died in office from a heart attack in 2012, Peter was accused of attempting to conceal his death for two days in an alleged bid to secure the job for himself and prevent the vice president from taking over.
He narrowly won his first stint in power with just over 36 percent of votes and the term was dominated by food shortages, corruption scandals and ballooning national debt.
Running on a platform of a “return to proven leadership,” Mutharika has promised to revive the struggling economy, including by challenging mismanagement.
“This country is in big trouble,” Mutharika told a weekend rally. “I agreed to return because I want to change the way the country is run,” he said.

Kabambe, a kingmaker?

Kabambe, 51, headed the Reserve Bank of Malawi from 2017 to 2020, afterwards starting out in politics in the DPP and later defecting to the United Transformation Movement.
With a calm and professional demeanour, Kabambe holds a PhD in development economics from the University of London and has spent more than two decades in government economic branches.
He presents himself as a technocratic outsider capable of transforming the economy, including by decentralising governance, establishing state-run development corporations, and expanding agriculture and manufacturing.
Trailing a distant third in the latest opinion poll, Kabambe has credibility among policymakers but allegations of graft and money laundering from his time as governor have marred his public image.


East Timor police clash with protesters over plan to buy vehicles for MPs

Updated 24 sec ago

East Timor police clash with protesters over plan to buy vehicles for MPs

East Timor police clash with protesters over plan to buy vehicles for MPs
DILI: East Timor police on Tuesday clashed for a second day with protesters angry over a plan to buy SUVs for lawmakers in one of southeast Asia’s poorest nations, whose leader issued a rebuke over the violence.
Demonstrators in the capital Dili burned tires, a government vehicle near the parliament building and hurled rocks toward the officers, who responded with tear gas.
The over 2,000 protesters — mostly university students from the capital — gathered near the National Parliament to oppose a plan to procure Toyota Prado SUVs for each of the 65 members of parliament.
It followed a similar protest on Monday, which prompted several political parties to announce they would ask parliament to cancel the plan.
Those same parties had previously approved the 2025 budget that included the funding for the vehicles.
Protesters have vowed to continue their rallies until the plan is formally scrapped.
“We want the decision to purchase the car to be canceled. This decision needs to be taken by the president of the National parliament,” activist Domingos de Andrade, 34, told reporters Tuesday.
Protesters carried a banner urging authorities to “Stop thieves.”
East Timor President Jose Ramos-Horta told reporters Tuesday that there would be “no tolerance” of violence during the demonstrations.
“You can hold demonstrations to protest the government, parliament when they do wrong, but you must not resort to violence,” Ramos-Horta added.
In a joint statement on Monday, the National Congress for Timorese Reconstruction, the Democratic Party and the Enrich the National Unity of the Sons of Timor said the vehicles for lawmakers “did not reflect public interests” and pledged they would ask parliament to walk back on the plan.
East Timor, Southeast Asia’s youngest country, gained independence from Indonesia in 2002. The former Portuguese colony grapples with high inequality, malnutrition and unemployment, with an economy heavily reliant on oil.
Deadly riots erupted in neighboring Indonesia last month after a video of a police vehicle running over a motorcyclist ignited public anger over lawmakers’ lavish perks, low wages and unemployment.

Luxembourg to recognize Palestinian State at UN summit next week

Luxembourg to recognize Palestinian State at UN summit next week
Updated 40 min 12 sec ago

Luxembourg to recognize Palestinian State at UN summit next week

Luxembourg to recognize Palestinian State at UN summit next week
  • ‘A movement is now emerging in Europe and around the world to demonstrate that the two-state solution is still relevant’

BRUSSELS: Luxembourg has said it will join a raft of countries recognizing the State of Palestine at a United Nations summit in New York next week.
French President Emmanuel Macron is spearheading the drive on recognizing a Palestinian state as international condemnation grows of Israel over its nearly two-year offensive in Gaza.
Speaking to journalists late Monday, Luxembourg’s Prime Minister Luc Frieden said that “the situation on the ground has deteriorated considerably in recent months.”
“A movement is now emerging in Europe and around the world to demonstrate that the two-state solution is still relevant,” Frieden said.
“That is why the Luxembourg government intends to join those who recognize the State of Palestine at next week’s conference on the two-state solution.”
Countries including Britain, Australia, Canada and Belgium have said they plan to recognize a Palestinian state at the meeting at the UN General Assembly.
Israel and its ally the United States have blasted the push, with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio saying Monday the move “emboldened” Hamas.
The war in Gaza was sparked by Hamas’ October 2023 attack on Israel that resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, most of them civilians, according to an AFP tally of official figures.
Israel’s retaliatory campaign in Gaza has killed at least 64,905 people, also mostly civilians, according to figures from the territory’s health ministry that the United Nations considers reliable.
UN investigators on Tuesday accused Israel of committing “genocide” in Gaza in a bid to “destroy the Palestinians,” blaming Israel’s prime minister and other top officials for incitement.

The long road to Palestinian statehood
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UN official says conflicts, disasters and funding cuts a ‘perfect storm’ causing acute hunger

UN official says conflicts, disasters and funding cuts a ‘perfect storm’ causing acute hunger
Updated 47 min 17 sec ago

UN official says conflicts, disasters and funding cuts a ‘perfect storm’ causing acute hunger

UN official says conflicts, disasters and funding cuts a ‘perfect storm’ causing acute hunger
  • Conflicts in Myanmar, Sudan and Gaza have made it extremely difficult to reach people in need, and the latter two are already facing famine conditions

BANGKOK: A string of natural disasters and global conflicts, combined with drastic cuts to international aid means that some of the world’s neediest people are suffering from serious food shortages, and will face further reductions in assistance soon, a United Nations official said Tuesday.
Carl Skau, deputy executive director and chief operating officer of the World Food Program, said that with needs rising and funding dropping, the agency is pushing every efficiency it can find, promoting greater self-reliance in the communities it helps, and looking for new sources of donations to help fill the growing gap.
“We are managing globally a perfect storm... with food security needs going up dramatically,” Skau told The Associated Press during a visit to Bangkok, where he was to meet with Thai officials to press for assistance, following a trip to India.
“We’ve seen a three-fold increase only in the past five years, and this year has been really tough also with conflict increasing, extreme climate events and on top of that we now have a funding crunch where the WFP is losing some 40 percent of our funding.”
In the region, he said recent flooding in Pakistan and a massive earthquake and drought in neighboring Afghanistan have exacerbated already difficult situations in both countries, leaving millions in need.
The decision by US President Donald Trump earlier this year to cut more than 90 percent of the United States Agency for International Development’s foreign aid contracts and $60 billion in overall assistance around the world — coupled with cuts to international aid from several European countries — has meant that the WFP and others have less means to respond, he said.
“In Afghanistan two years ago we were assisting 10 million people, today we are at around 1.5 (million) and we don’t have the resources to preposition food in areas that won’t be accessible during the winter,” Skau said.
Already in Afghanistan, there has been a surge in malnutrition recorded, particularly among young children, over the last few months, he said.
“We know that through this winter, children will die and it’s not only about children dying, I mean when children are severely, acutely malnourished, there are damages to their brains and to their organs that will remain with them for their life,” Skau said.
Meantime, conflicts in Myanmar, Sudan and Gaza have made it extremely difficult to reach people in need, and the latter two are already facing famine conditions. A 7.7 magnitude earthquake in Myanmar in March has led to even greater needs there, and new challenges in reaching people with humanitarian assistance.
The civil war in Myanmar has also meant that even more Rohingya refugees have fled to Cox’s Bazar in neighboring Bangladesh, and there are no immediate prospects for them to safely return home, Skau said.
“So we have a situation where we basically have 1.3 million people in a camp that is like a prison where they do 100 percent depend on international assistance,” said Skau, who visited Cox’s Bazar earlier this month.
The WFP currently provides refugees there with a $12 monthly voucher for food that has been enough for them to survive, but with funding running out for that by the end of November, it may have to either reduce the amount or the number of people it supports.
When the agency temporarily had to reduce monthly assistance to $8 in 2023, it saw tension and violence spike in the camp and people turning to criminality, and many desperate people piling into boats to head to Indonesia, Malaysia or elsewhere, Skau said.
“There are all kinds of negative implications,” he said. “Frankly, regional stability is somewhat at stake here, and that also has implications beyond the immediate region.”


Spain summons Israeli diplomat to protest FM’s ‘liar’ comments

Spain summons Israeli diplomat to protest FM’s ‘liar’ comments
Updated 16 September 2025

Spain summons Israeli diplomat to protest FM’s ‘liar’ comments

Spain summons Israeli diplomat to protest FM’s ‘liar’ comments
  • Israel’s charge d’affaires, Dana Erlich, was called in over “the unacceptable words and positions of the Israeli foreign minister,” the foreign ministry said in a statement
  • Spain’s leftist government has been one of Europe’s most outspoken critics of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his military campaign in Gaza, launched in response to the Hamas attack on Israel on October 7, 2023

MADRID: Spain summoned Israel’s top diplomat on Tuesday for the second time in five days over remarks by Israel’s foreign minister that Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez was antisemitic and a “liar.”
Israel’s charge d’affaires, Dana Erlich, was called in over “the unacceptable words and positions of the Israeli foreign minister,” the foreign ministry said in a statement.
Israel has not had an ambassador in Spain since the Sanchez government recognized the state of Palestine in 2024.
Spain’s leftist government has been one of Europe’s most outspoken critics of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his military campaign in Gaza, launched in response to the Hamas attack on Israel on October 7, 2023.
Madrid recalled its ambassador to Israel last week after announcing new measures aimed at “ending the genocide in Gaza,” further straining relations.
Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar recently described Sanchez as “antisemitic” and a “liar” after the Spanish leader expressed admiration for pro-Palestinian protesters who disrupted Spain’s Vuelta cycling race.
Last Friday, Erlich was summoned after Netanyahu accused Sanchez of inciting genocide against Israel.


Afghan man handed life sentence in Germany after fatal stabbing at anti-Islam rally

Afghan man handed life sentence in Germany after fatal stabbing at anti-Islam rally
Updated 16 September 2025

Afghan man handed life sentence in Germany after fatal stabbing at anti-Islam rally

Afghan man handed life sentence in Germany after fatal stabbing at anti-Islam rally
  • Sulaiman A attacked a speaker and several demonstrators at the event before stabbing a police officer who rushed in to help. The officer later succumbed to his injuries

STUTTGART: An Afghan man with suspected Islamist motives was sentenced to life in prison by a German court on Tuesday for a knife attack that killed a police officer and injured five others at an anti-Islam rally last year.
The verdict comes at a time of heated debate about immigration and security in Germany, and a strong surge in support for the country’s far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party.
The defendant, named only as Sulaiman A to protect his privacy, was found guilty of using a large hunting knife to attack people during a demonstration in the western city of Mannheim that was organized by the anti-Islam group Pax Europa in late May 2024.
Sulaiman A attacked a speaker and several demonstrators at the event before stabbing a police officer who rushed in to help. The officer later succumbed to his injuries.
The attacker was taken into pre-trial custody in June 2024 after leaving intensive care for injuries he sustained during his arrest.
Though prosecutors say he sympathized with the Daesh group, he was not tried as a terrorist. He faced one count of murder and five counts of attempted murder.