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S/Leonean Judge, Barnett, seeks W/African Envoys’ support for AU rights job

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Justice Tonia Barnett
Justice Tonia Barnett
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A Sierra Leonean Judge, Justice Tonia Barnett has sought the support of diplomats from West African states for her candidature for the position of Commissioner of the African Commission on Human and Peoples Rights.

Barnett, the Sierra Leonean nominee, said at a dinner hosted for Ambassadors and High Commissioners from West African countries, that protection of rights had been her passion hence the zeal for the position.

The dinner was organised by the Sierra Leonean High Commission led by High Commissioner Solomon Gembeh.

The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the Commission, based in Banjul, Gambia was established in 1987 and the term of the current Commissioner Solomon Ayele Dersso from Ethiopia lapses in 2021.

NAN also reports that some of the countries whose diplomats were present at the dinner with the Sierra Leonean nominee include: Burkina Faso, Guinea Bissau, Ghana, Liberia among others.

Barnett sought the support of their home governments for her candidacy, saying that having withnessed war and rights deprivation, she is very committed to the tenets of the position.

She said: “As a woman whose teenage life were robbed by rebel incursion in Sierra Leone, my upbringing made me strong and has given me an opportunity to be here tonight.

“My nomination by my President Julius Bio has garnered support from the Judiciary in Sierra Leone and Key Civil Society Organisations including the Human Rights Organisation.”

The nominee said that being a judge who has never been investigated and whose morality never questioned, she had met the qualification criteria for the job as stipulated by Article 31 of the Charter of African Human and Peoples Rights.

She said that her work as a legal practitioner and judge over the years, working mainly to protect and promote human rights, also lent credence to her work experience as a precondition.

“Before I was appointed Judge, I was a Magistrate for 11 years, hearing and determining sexual abuse cases, cruelty to children.

“As a judge of the High Court; I hear and determine cases that border on human rights. Cases like the right to family life, rights of association and right to belong to political parties.

“These are rights that border on the African Charter and human rights, treaties and conventions.

“Presently in Sierra Leone, the Chief Justice is pushing very hard to ensure that access to Justice is a right and must be enhanced and enjoyed by every citizens.

“We hold view that it is not only fair hearing, but you must have the right to make a complaint and be heard by a competent court,” she said.

Barnett who holds LLM in Women and Children Affairs, stressed that in discharging her work she upheld treaties and conventions which her country had signed and ratified.

She said that her believe in human rights resulted in a perceived controversial bail which she granted a frail-looking 75-year-old man who had prostate cancer in a case of sexual abuse.

The man, she said, had not been found guilty and could not be allowed to suffer in the poor prison facilities in his old age and ill health condition while the case was being determined.

The nominee recalled that her passion for human rights and fair hearing was kindled during the war when she saw a man hacked to death over an accusation even without hearing from him.

“Article for of the Charter on African Human And Peoples Right stipulates that the rights of man must be enhanced and that is also entailed in our constitution.

“During the campaign for the abolition of the death penalty, my position was – because death is irreversible and wrongful conviction can be detrimental, I said that we should reconsider death penalty.

“To every right, there must be a corresponding responsibility. I want to enjoy my freedom of expression but I must not defame.

“With that in mind and all citizens living up to that, I think we would have a peaceful society.

“So as a candidate for the position, what I bring is vitality. We need to go down, we need to get up from the chairs and walk. We need to canvass with state parties to understand that human right issues is not just a one party issue, it is everybody’s issue.

“If the citizens’ rights are being jeopardised, it allowed for uprising and a peaceful society will not be enhanced. As Africans we want a peaceful society, we have cried too much.

“Those who have not experienced war would want war,” she said.

She assured that the role will avail her opportunity to achieve some of her dreams to impact the lives of African in slums and fostering their rights as well. (NAN)

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International

Over 300 Dead as Monsoon Rains Unleash Devastating Floods in Pakistan

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Pakistan after flood incident
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Pakistan is reeling from one of its deadliest monsoon disasters in recent years, as raging floods and relentless rains have claimed more than 300 lives.

The National Disaster Management Authority confirmed the death toll on Saturday, warning that the numbers may rise as scores remain missing. Entire communities have been swept away in the mountainous Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, where most of the casualties occurred.

Many victims were trapped in collapsing houses or swept off by sudden flash floods. At least 21 others have been injured, while families continue to search desperately for missing loved ones.

“This is devastation beyond words,” officials said, as the country’s meteorological department issued fresh warnings of more heavy rains in the north-west, urging residents to take precautionary measures.

The monsoon season, which usually runs from June to September, brings life-sustaining rains—but this year it has turned deadly. Experts warn that climate change is fueling more frequent and more intense downpours, leaving vulnerable communities in constant peril.

Across the border, parts of India and Nepal are also counting their losses from widespread flooding and landslides.

Pakistan’s deputy prime minister and foreign minister, Ishaq Dar, said civilian and military rescue teams are battling against the odds to reach stranded families and deliver urgent relief.

 

 

 

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Air Canada Cancels 100,000 Flights as Flight Attendants Threaten Strike

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Air Canada on Friday cancelled more than 100,000 passenger bookings as its flight attendants prepared to go on strike, raising the prospect of a shutdown of the airline’s services.

The Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE), representing 10,000 flight attendants, was legally inableo strike from 12:01 a.m. (0401 GMT) on Saturday, following a 72-hour strike notice issued on Wednesday. The puoadcaster CBC reported that the walkout could begin at about 1:00 a.m. if no last-minute deal is reached.

Air Canada, which carries about 130,000 passengers daily, said it had begun winding down operations ahead of the potential strike. By 8:00 p.m. Friday, the airline had cancelled 623 flights, affecting more than 100,000 passengers.

The union is demanding wage increases and compensation for ground duties, including boarding, which currently go unpaid. CUPE has described Air Canada’s latest offer—projected to raise a senior flight attendant’s average pay to CAN$87,000 ($65,000) by 2027—as “below inflation and below market value.”

Both the federal government and Air Canada have called for independent arbitration, but the union has rejected the proposal.

Rafael Gomez, director of the University of Toronto’s Centre for Industrial Relations, said the union had effectively highlighted the unpaid boarding issue, which resonated with the public.

“An average passenger could think, ‘I’m waiting to board the plane and there’s a flight attendant helping me, but they’re technically not being paid a flight attendant is helping issue to highlight,” he noted.

Gomez added that if a strike goes ahead, it is unlikely to last long.

“This is peak season. The airline does not want to lose hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue… They’re almost playing chicken with the flight attendants,” he said.

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Trump To Meet Putin As Pressure Mounts Over Russia-Ukraine War

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United States President Donald Trump may meet Russian President Vladimir Putin as early as next week in a bid to pressure Moscow to end the ongoing war in Ukraine, a senior White House official confirmed on Wednesday.

If confirmed, the meeting would mark the first direct engagement between a sitting U.S. president and the Russian leader since former President Joe Biden met Putin in Geneva in June 2021—eight months before Moscow launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the largest military conflict in Europe since World War II.

The move comes amid escalating diplomatic efforts by Washington to broker a resolution to the conflict, now in its fourth year.

According to The New York Times, Trump disclosed to European leaders during a conference call on Wednesday that he intends to first meet with Putin and subsequently hold a trilateral summit involving Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy.

“There’s a good chance that there will be a meeting very soon,” Trump told reporters.

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt confirmed that Moscow had expressed interest in a face-to-face meeting and that President Trump is open to separate engagements with both Putin and Zelenskiy.

Meanwhile, U.S. Special Envoy Steve Witkoff held a closed-door session with Putin in Moscow on Wednesday. In a post on Truth Social, Trump described the meeting as having achieved “great progress,” though he stopped short of calling it a breakthrough. A Kremlin aide characterised the talks as “useful and constructive.”

The diplomatic momentum comes just 48 hours before the expiration of a deadline set by Trump for Russia to commit to a peace agreement or face new economic sanctions.

Trump has grown increasingly frustrated with what he describes as Moscow’s “lack of serious commitment” to peace talks and has warned of hefty tariffs on nations continuing to purchase Russian exports, including oil.

“We did it with India. We’re probably doing it with a couple of others. One of them could be China,” Trump said on Wednesday, referring to the recent imposition of 25% duties on Indian oil imports.

The last time Putin and Zelenskiy met was in December 2019. Since then, both leaders have traded barbs and refused direct contact, signalling deep personal and political animosity.

As anticipation builds around a possible Trump-Putin-Zelenskiy summit, the international community watches closely, hopeful that this high-level diplomacy may unlock new paths toward ending the protracted war.

 

 

 

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