US, EU Condemn Nigeria’s Twitter Ban

The U.S. and the European Union voiced concern over Nigeria’s decision to indefinitely ban Twitter after the U.S. social media giant deleted a tweet from the president’s account for violating its rules.

International human rights groups have also condemned the move, which followed previous attempts by the government of Africa’s most populous country to regulate social media.

Nigerian telecoms operators complied with a government directive Friday to suspend access to Twitter indefinitely.

The diplomatic missions of the EU, U.S., Britain, Canada and Ireland issued a joint statement late Saturday condemning the ban.

“Banning systems of expression is not the answer,” it said.

“Precisely the moment when Nigeria needs to foster inclusive dialogue and expression of opinions, as well as share vital information in this time of the Covid-19 pandemic.” 

“The path to a more secure Nigeria lies in more, not less, communication,” it added.

More than 39 million Nigerians have a Twitter account, according to NOI polls, a public opinion and research organization based in Nigeria.

The platform has played an important role in public discourse in the country, with hashtags #BringBackOurGirls after Boko Haram kidnapped 276 schoolgirls in 2014, and #EndSARS during anti-police brutality protests last year.

The government’s suspension came after Twitter on Wednesday deleted a remark on President Muhammadu Buhari’s account in which he referred to the country’s civil war four decades ago in a warning about recent unrest.

The 78-year-old president, a former general, referred to “those misbehaving” in recent violence in the southeast, where officials blame a proscribed separatist group IPOB for attacks on police and election offices.

‘Misinformation’

“Those of us in the fields for 30 months, who went through the war, will treat them in the language they understand,” the president had posted on Twitter.

The presidency denied late on Saturday that the Twitter suspension was a response to the removal of that post.  

“There has been a litany of problems with the social media platform in Nigeria, where misinformation and fake news spread through it have had real world violent consequences,” a presidency spokesman Garba Shehu said in a statement.  

Shehu said the removal of Buhari’s tweet was “disappointing” and said “major tech companies must be alive to their responsibilities.”

Twitter said it was “deeply concerned by the blocking of Twitter in Nigeria.”

“Access to the free and #OpenInternet is an essential human right in modern society.

We will work to restore access for all those in Nigeria who rely on Twitter to communicate and connect with the world. #KeepitOn,” the company said in a statement.

“VPN app” was the second most searched trend Saturday on Google in Nigeria, as virtual private networks can enable Twitter users to bypass the ban.

Nigeria warned however that it would prosecute violators.

“Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami, has directed for immediate prosecution of offenders of the Federal Government ban on Twitter operations in Nigeria,” spokesman Umar Jibrilu Gwandu said.

Amnesty International condemned the ban, calling on Nigeria to “immediately reverse the unlawful suspension.”

“This repressive action is a clear attempt to censor dissent & stifle the civic space,” Human Rights Watch researcher Anietie Ewang said.

Source: Voice of America

Cyprus police issue just 11 fines for Covid measures violations

Cyprus police handed out fines to 10 individuals and one establishment owner for not abiding with the measures in place to contain the spread of the coronavirus pandemic in the last 24 hours.

A police spokesperson told CNA the force carried out 3,674 checks throughout the island, reporting 2 people in Nicosia, 6 individuals and one establishment owner in Pafos, one individual in Larnaca and one in Famagusta.

In the last 24 hours ending on 06:00 Sunday, the Police carried out 553 checks in Nicosia, 575 in Limassol, 670 in Larnaca, 674 in Pafos, 523 in Famagusta, 324 in Morphou, while the Traffic Department and Maritime Police carried out 242 and 113 checks respectively finding no violations.

Source: Cyprus News Agency

Cyprus first in the Athletics Championships of the Small States of Europe 2021

Cyprus Athletics team won the first place in the Athletics Championships of the Small States of Europe 2021, that took place in San Marino, with 112 points.

In total, the Cypriot team, which took part in 17 of the 22 games, took 6 first places, 6 second, 3 fourth places, one sixth and one eighth place.

In San Marino two Cypriot athletes achieved the best performance in their career, Marianna Pisiara in women’s 100m.

Source: Cyprus News Agency

Cyprus authorities report 29 new COVID-19 cases on Sunday, while 50 people are treated in hospitals

Authorities in Cyprus reported 29 new COVID-19 cases on Sunday with the positivity rate falling at 0.06%. No deaths were reported. At the same time 50 patients with the disease were treated in hospital, 17 of whom in a serious condition.

According to a Health Ministry press release, the total number of deaths so far in Cyprus remains 363, of which 241 men (66%) and 122 women (34%). The total number of confirmed cases has reached 72,779.

On Sunday, 46,276 tests were carried out, 5,363 by PCR method and 40,913 by antigen rapid test method, with 29 people testing positive.

Of these, 5 cases were detected from 4,052 samples taken as part of the passenger control at Larnaca and Paphos Airports, 3 cases from 976 samples tested privately and 21 cases from 40.787 samples tested by antigen rapid tests in the context of the government testing drive.

Source: Cyprus News Agency

COVID vaccination coverage with the first dose close to 55% in Cyprus, as of June 4

A 54.9% of the eligible population in Cyprus, which is a total of 393,724 people received the first dose of a COVID vaccine and 250,447 people or 34.9% have completed their vaccination, as of June 4. A Ministry of Health press release, points out that the goal for vaccination with the first dose of 65% of the population is feasible by the end of June.

Cyprus vaccination rate is higher than the average vaccination rate in the European Union, where 47% has been vaccinated with the first dose and 22.9% is fully vaccinated.

According to the press release, the vaccination coverage against COVID-19 has increased in all age groups in the last month, a fact that is also reflected in the epidemiological indicators according to the latest National Surveillance Report.

“The significant reduction in the number of cases in all age groups, as well as the

Source: Cyprus News Agency

Recognized in 2020, Somalia’s Cycling Federation Faces Challenges

Bicycling enthusiasts around the globe are celebrating World Bicycle Day Thursday, including in Somalia, a Horn of Africa nation still struggling for stability after years of conflict. Somalia’s cycling federation was just recognized last year and with poor roads and equipment, it’s an uphill battle to prepare for upcoming international competition.

The Somali cycling federation has just 20 professional bicycles accepted in the International Cyclist’s Union (UCI), the world governing body for sports cycling based in Switzerland that oversees competition.

Poor equipment and closed roads due to security threats from the armed militant group Al-Shabab, mainly in the capital, Mogadishu, are a couple of challenges facing young cyclists training for international competition.

The secretary-general of the Somali cycling federation, Saed Ahmed Abukar, said despite the challenges, they are committed to building the sport at a grassroots level.

He said most roads used by cyclist for training in Mogadishu are either dilapidated or closed for security purposes, and therefore it has become a great challenge to achieve a smooth training schedule.

He added they also lack enough equipment, such as helmets, to protect the riders from injuries during accidents, and instead cyclist use football gear as an option.

In April 2018, the United Nations General Assembly declared June 3 International World Bicycle Day.

One of the up-and-coming Somali cyclists, Hassan Bare Ugas, emerged in the second position during Somalia’s cross-country cycling championships held last year.

Bare, who practices in the gym most of his time to avoid poor lanes, said he dreams of flying the flag of his country in upcoming regional and international cycling competition.

He said he is practicing very hard in the gym and sometimes on city streets, wishing to represent his nation in upcoming international competition, such as the African championships and the Olympic Games.

According to the United Nations, apart from its sporting activities, the use of bicycles makes education, health care and other social services more accessible to the most vulnerable populations in Africa and contribute to cleaner air and less congestion on roads.

Source: Voice of America

‘It Was A War’: Ethnic Killings Cloud Ethiopia’s Election Buildup

As gunfire crackled outside, Genet Webea huddled with her husband and seven-year-old daughter, praying they would be spared in the latest bout of ethnic strife to rock central Ethiopia.

But that morning in April, around a dozen gunmen broke down the front door and, ignoring Genet’s pleas for mercy, fatally shot her husband in the chest and stomach.

He was one of more than 100 civilians to die in a recent flare-up of violence in the town of Ataye that also saw the assailants torch more than 1,500 buildings, leaving once-bustling streets lined with charred and twisted metal.

The destruction continues a pattern of unrest that has blighted the tenure of Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, winner of the 2019 Nobel Peace Prize, and now threatens to disrupt elections in which he will seek a new term.

Ethiopia’s polls are scheduled for June 21, but officials say insecurity and logistical challenges make voting impossible — at least for now — in at least 26 constituencies across the country.

That includes Ataye, where Abiy’s vision of unity for Ethiopia’s diverse population of 110 million can seem like a distant dream.

Since Abiy became prime minister in 2018, the town has endured at least six rounds of ethnic killings, and ties between members of the country’s two largest groups, the Oromos and Amharas, have visibly frayed, said mayor Agagenew Mekete.

Genet, an ethnic Amhara, told AFP that since the April attack she blanches when she hears the language of her husband’s ethnic Oromo killers, saying it conjures the painful image of him bleeding out on their kitchen floor.

“I don’t want to see or hear them,” she told AFP.

‘It was a war’

A lowland farming town 270 kilometers (167 miles) northeast of Addis Ababa, Ataye’s population of 70,000 is majority Amhara, but it borders Oromo settlements in three directions. For Agagenew, the mayor, the relentless violence reflects tensions over lush land used to grow wheat, sorghum and maize.

Ethiopia is Africa’s second most-populous country, with different ethnic groups living cheek by jowl in some areas, straining ties as they jostle for land and resources.

In recent years tensions have worsened in parts of the country, leading to deadly violence and displacing millions.

Abiy took office vowing to put an end to the government’s iron-fisted rule, yet this has created space for violent ethno-nationalists to wreak havoc, Agagenew said.

“There has been a looseness after Abiy came to office, in the name of widening the democracy,” he said.

“There is looseness in enforcing the rule of law.”

Like Genet, he blames the killings partly on the Oromo Liberation Army (OLA), a rebel group that lawmakers last month designated a terrorist organization.

But the OLA denies any presence in the area and says officials falsely invoke the rebels to justify “ethnic cleansing” against ordinary Oromos.

Boru, who gave only his first name for safety reasons, is one of several Oromo residents of Ataye who said the OLA were not involved.

Instead, he said, the carnage was set off when Amhara security forces shot dead an Oromo imam outside a mosque, then prevented mourners from retrieving the body.

“It did not come out of the blue,” he said. “It was a war. Each side was attacking the other.”

This jibes with accounts from officials in nearby Oromo communities, who note that the violence extended beyond Ataye and claimed many Oromo victims.

Ethiopia’s chief ombudsman, Endale Haile, told AFP more than 400 were killed in total and more than 400,000 displaced, declining to provide an ethnic breakdown.

Election apathy

Whoever bears responsibility, there is no disputing the killings have left Ataye resembling a ghost town.

The hospital and police station were both ransacked, and demolished storefronts offer only scattered clues — burnt shoeboxes, the ripped sign of a beauty salon — to what they once contained.

Most residents have fled, with crowds gathering only when officials hand out sacks of wheat as food aid.

Ethiopia’s electoral board insists voting will take place in Ataye and other violence-wracked constituencies before a new parliamentary session opens in October.

But no preparations are under way and residents have little enthusiasm.

“Why would we vote in elections? We have no interest in elections,” said 19-year-old Hawa Seid. “We’ve lost our homes.”

‘Politicized’ deaths

The Ataye violence spurred days of protests in cities across the Amhara region, where the bloodshed could shape the election.

“For people whose basic existence is questioned and being violated, I think the security of Amharas all over Ethiopia will determine how people vote,” said Dessalegn Chanie, senior member of the National Movement for Amhara, an opposition party.

The Amhara Association of America, a Washington-based lobbying firm, says more than 2,000 Amharas have been killed in dozens of massacres going back to last July.

The regional spokesman, Gizachew Muluneh, accused rival parties of “trying to politicize the killings and get something from the deaths of others,” adding, “It is not morally good.”

Genet, whose husband was shot dead in their kitchen, participated in the protests herself.

“I was happy to be there because I wanted to show how much they are hurting us and to ask the government to stop the Amhara genocide,” she said.

But she has not given up on the idea that Amharas and Oromos could one day live together in harmony.

She noted that after her husband was killed, Oromo neighbors briefly housed her and her daughter until it was safe to leave.

It was a gesture of kindness that reminded her of a more peaceful era she would like to return to.

“Once,” she said, “we all lived together like a family.”

Source: Voice of America

Employment rate generally lower for non-EU citizens than for EU nationals

In 2020, the employment rate of the population aged 20-64 living in the EU was generally lower for non-EU citizens (57.2%) than for nationals (73.3%) and citizens of other EU Member States (73.0%), according to data released today by Eurostat, the statistical service of the EU. In Cyprus these rates are 68.4%, 75.4% and 78.5% respectively.

Among EU regions with available and reliable data, the highest employment rate for non-EU citizens was 94.7%, recorded in the Czech region of Central Moravia. The next highest regional employment rates of at least 85% for citizens of non-EU countries were also observed in the Czech Republic in the regions of South-West, North-West, Central Bohemia, North-East and South-East.

At the other end of the scale, in 34 regions less than half of non-EU citizens were in employment. Among these, there were seven regions where the emp

Source: Cyprus News Agency

Kickoff event in Nicosia on Conference on the Future of Europe

?n event on the future of Europe took place Tuesday, in Nicosia, marking the start of events in Cyprus, ahead of the Conference on the Future of Europe, as it was presented by the Head of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen in 2019. The kickoff event on a European level took place May 9, on Europe Day, in Strasbourg.

Young citizens from NGOs, other organizations, groups and associations, from Erasmus and colleges and universities in Cyprus participated in the event and shared views, opinions and concerns on the future of Europe and tabled their positions on major issues of their interest such as unemployment, education, climate change, EU’s foreign policy, Erasmus, housing issues etc.

Source: Cyprus News Agency

‘Cyprus is not ready yet’ to enter Schengen, remains the 4th candidate, EU officials note

Cyprus is not ready yet” to enter the Schengen area, said in response to a question by CNA, Commissioner Ylva Johansson, during the presentation of the package for the strengthening of the free movement area in the EU.

As the Commissioner pointed out, “that is why we are preparing to move forward, but it (Cyprus) is not yet in a position to be evaluated and is not considered ready to enter the Schengen area at the moment.”

Replying to the same question, Vice President Margaritis Schinas stressed that “in this revised strategy for us, Schengen enlargement is a priority for the three countries, Bulgaria, Romania and Croatia.

Source: Cyprus News Agency