Minggu, 30 April 2023

‘We tried to stop her’: Kenyan teenager tells how cult starved his mother - The Guardian

Two years ago, Issa Ali’s mother took all her belongings and left her family to join followers of the charismatic church leader Paul Mackenzie Nthenge in the Shakahola forest in south-east Kenya.

“He told them that’s where Jesus’ second coming will happen,” the 16-year-old said.

When he saw his mother again earlier this year, he said she was “nearly unrecognisable”, and had gone from being well built to shockingly frail.

“She told us it could be the last time we would see her, that her earthly life had lost all meaning and that she would be going to heaven soon. We tried to stop her, but couldn’t – she wasn’t herself at all,” Ali said.

The next time he heard of his mother was when his friends told him last week that she had been found dead in shallow graves in the forest, although her death has not yet been officially confirmed to him.

Ali’s mother’s apparent fate is just one story among scores in the case of a “starvation cult” – led by Nthenge – that has gripped and shocked Kenyans since police began unearthing corpses in the forest about two weeks ago.

On 15 April, one day after police raided the forest following a tip-off, Nthenge was arrested on suspicion of luring his followers into the remote area and brainwashing them into fasting to the death in order to “meet Jesus”.

The Shakahola forest has been declared an active crime scene and is cordoned off. A dusk to dawn curfew is in place. Nthenge is in police custody pending a court hearing, as are a few other men suspected of conspiring in the mass killing.

Hassan Musa, a Kenya Red Cross regional manager, said that by Friday 410 people had been reported missing by their loved ones, including 227 children under the age of 18 years. So far more than 100 bodies have been discovered.

As the scale of the deaths emerged last week, the town of Malindi, roughly 50 miles from the forest and known for its sandy white beaches and Swahili-inspired architecture, was thrown into a state of unease.

Fear and speculation dominated conversations in market stalls, bars and hotels as distressed families filled in missing person reports at police stations, or queued at public hospitals and even morgues in an attempt to find out if they had lost a loved one to the cult.

Some had travelled hundreds of miles, including Rogers Mwibo, 30, who had come from the Kenyan capital, Nairobi. Mwibo said his understanding was that two of his missing family members were probably dead and that the whereabouts of a third were unknown.

Mwibo came to the town after watching families of the cult’s victims on TV describe similar behavioural changes in their loved ones to those he had witnessed in his mother before she went missing.

“After Mum joined the church, she used to talk about Jesus all the time,” he said. “She used to even tell me to quit my job because it is not important, saying that I should follow her because Jesus is coming back soon.”

Also in Malindi was Joyce Makori, 38, who counted herself among the fortunate few after finding her husband, Daniel, alive on a roadside by the Shakahola forest.

The couple had grown apart after nearly a decade of marriage when he left her and his children for the cult, though they occasionally spoke over the phone. Makori said that in recent years she had been disturbed by his behaviour. For instance he was adamant, she said, that the world would be ending in June this year.

When news broke of the bodies being found, she decided to try to find him. In the days just before his rescue last week, she said he gave the sense over their phone call that he was under threat.

“Where it has reached, I am going to die,” she recalled him saying. “They have taken away my phone and suspect that I am sharing information outside. On this path I am on I could either be captured, die in the forest or be killed … I can’t leave.”

Makori said she had had a tough time trying to persuade the local authorities to help her locate her husband. She carpooled to Shakahola with 10 other people who also wanted to look for their families, and eventually got some help from the police once she had determined his general location.

Many other cult followers are still believed to be in the forest. Local activist Victor Kaudo, who helped tip off authorities to the cult’s activities, has raised concern over the pace of the rescue missions. The activist and some followers’ families say that exhuming bodies has been prioritised over trying to rescue survivors.

“Everyday we are losing lives,” said Kaudo. “There are many more people there who need our help.”

President William Ruto, whose administration has been perceived as religious-leaning, strongly condemned Nthenge’s cult as a fringe movement, comparing rogue pastors like Nthenge to terrorists who “use religion to advance weird, unacceptable ideology”.

Rescue teams report that Nthenge’s following had wide reach: his followers were not only locals but people from across the country, with a handful from other African countries, including Tanzania, Uganda and Nigeria.

Thirty-four cult followers have been rescued so far, a number in a critical condition. A few others died before they made it to the hospital. The survivors – some of whom tried to resist rescue efforts – were taken to private facilities, such as local schools, where they are receiving counselling. Sources in close contact with the victims say that a number of them have refused to address recent events, and that others are traumatised or don’t buy into suspicions of wrongdoing on Nthenge’s part.

Additional reporting by Ventura Kireki

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2023-04-30 13:24:00Z
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Sabtu, 29 April 2023

Russia blames drone attack for Crimea fuel depot blaze - Al Jazeera English

A drone strike caused a fire at a fuel storage facility in the Crimean port of Sevastopol, sending a vast column of black smoke into the sky before it was extinguished, the city’s Moscow-installed governor has said.

Experts examined the site and “it became clear that only one drone was able to reach the oil reservoir”, Mikhail Razvozhaev said on the Telegram messaging app on Saturday.

He said no one had been injured in the fire and another drone was downed, its wreckage found on the shore near the terminal.

A Ukrainian military intelligence official said more than 10 tanks of oil products with a capacity of about 40,000 tonnes intended for use by Russia’s Black Sea Fleet were destroyed, RBC Ukraine reported.

Andriy Yusov did not claim that Ukraine was responsible for the explosion in comments reported by RBC, instead describing the blast as “God’s punishment” for a Russian strike on a Ukrainian city on Friday.

“This punishment will be long-lasting. In the near future, it is better for all residents of temporarily occupied Crimea not to be near military facilities and facilities that provide for the aggressor’s army,” RBC quoted Yusov as saying.

Earlier a spokesperson for Ukraine’s armed forces said he did not have any information to suggest Ukraine was responsible for the fire.

Sevastopol has come under repeated air attacks since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. Kyiv has repeatedly declared its intention to retake the Crimean Peninsula, which Russia illegally annexed in 2014 to an international outcry.

After previous attacks on Crimea, Ukraine has stopped short of openly claiming responsibility but emphasised it has the right to strike any target in response to Russian aggression.

Razvozhayev reported on Monday the Russian military destroyed a Ukrainian surface sea drone that attempted to attack the harbour and a second drone had exploded. The blasts shattered windows in several apartment buildings but did not inflict any other damage, he said.

The fire in Sevastopol comes a day after a barrage of Russian missiles hit residential areas in Ukraine killing 25 people and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy urged allies to provide his troops with better air defences, including fighter jets.

“Air defence, a modern air force – without which effective air defence is impossible – artillery, armoured vehicles. Everything that is necessary to provide security to our cities, to our villages, both in the hinterland and on the front lines,” Zelenskyy listed in a video message on Friday night.

He condemned the attack in the city of Uman in the early hours of Friday that he said killed at least 23 people, including four children.

Ten residential buildings were hit by missiles in Uman, in the Cherkasy region, officials said. One block of flats was destroyed. Eighteen people were injured in the attack, nine of whom were being treated in hospital.

In the Dnipropetrovsk region, a woman and her two-year-old daughter were also killed by night-time Russian shelling.

“Russian evil can be stopped by weapons – our defenders are doing it. And it can be stopped by sanctions – global sanctions must be enhanced,” Zelenskyy wrote on Twitter earlier in the day.

The commander-in-chief of the Ukrainian army, Valerii Zaluzhnyi, on Friday gave the total number of missiles fired at Ukraine during the night as 23. Of these, 21 were shot down, along with two drones. The Ukrainian military said cruise missiles were also fired near the capital, Kyiv, with air defences downing 11 of them.

Shelling in the Russian-controlled eastern Ukrainian city of Donetsk killed seven people and injured 19, local authorities reported on Friday.

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2023-04-29 16:12:12Z
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Ukraine blog: Fire erupts at Sevastopol fuel depot after drone strike - The Telegraph

A huge fire broke out on Saturday at a fuel depot in Sevastopol, the main port in Moscow-annexed Crimea, with authorities saying it was the result of a drone attack.

Sevastopol is home to Russia's Black Sea Fleet and has been hit by a series of drone attacks since the Kremlin's Ukraine offensive launched last year.

"A fuel reserve is on fire in the Kazachya Bay district" of the city, the Moscow-installed governor of the peninsula Mikhail Razvozhayev said on Telegram in the early hours of Saturday.

"According to preliminary information, it was caused by a drone strike."

He said the fire's size was "around 1,000 square metres" and published images of huge clouds of smoke rising into the air.

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2023-04-29 12:24:48Z
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Fuel tank ablaze in Sevastopol, official says apparent drone attack - Reuters.com

April 29 (Reuters) - A fuel tank was ablaze in the Crimean port city of Sevastopol in what appeared to be a drone strike, the Moscow-installed governor said on Saturday.

"According to preliminary information, the fire was caused by a drone hit," Governor Mikhail Razvozhaev wrote on the Telegram messaging app.

Sevastopol, on the Crimean peninsula that Russia annexed from Ukraine in 2014, has come under repeated air attacks since Russia's full-fledged invasion of its neighbour in February 2022. Russian officials have blamed the attacks on Ukraine.

The Ukrainian military did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Saturday. Kyiv almost never publicly claims responsibility for attacks inside Russia or on Russian-controlled territory in Ukraine.

Razvozhaev said no one was hurt in Saturday's fire.

"The situation is under the control of our firefighters and all operative services," he wrote. "Since the volume of fuel is large, it will take time to localise the fire."

Reporting by Reuters; Editing by William Mallard

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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2023-04-29 05:58:00Z
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Jumat, 28 April 2023

Sudan: British nationals have 24 hours to catch an evacuation flight, says deputy PM - Sky News

British nationals in Sudan have 24 hours to catch a flight before they are stopped, the deputy prime minister has said.

The flights will stop at 6pm UK time on Saturday, Oliver Dowden confirmed.

Speaking to reporters on Friday afternoon, he said more than 1,500 people had now been flown out of the country.

But he said there had been a "significant decline in British nationals coming forward", so the government would cease the flights.

Countries are in a race against the clock to evacuate their citizens from Sudan after the two warring factions extended a ceasefire by 72 hours yesterday.

The initial three day ceasefire was due to expire at 11pm UK time on Thursday. Despite this agreement, there are continued reports of heavy fighting in the capital Khartoum and the western region of Darfur.

Thousands have fled the country in recent days with food becoming scarce, electricity cut off across much of the capital and other cities, and many hospitals shut down.

More on Sudan

At least 512 civilians and fighters have been killed so far in the fighting, according to the country's health ministry, with 4,200 others injured.

Asked if that would mean abandoning British nationals who haven't been able to make it in time, Mr Dowden rejected the claim.

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Sudan rescue flights 'to end in next 24 hours'

He said: "Every single British national that has come forward and their eligible dependents has been put safely onto a plane.

"We are seeing those numbers declining significantly. And just like other countries, as those numbers decline, we have put an end date on this.

"What I would say is that even beyond that, we will maintain consular support in Sudan, particularly at the exit route. So both to the north, to south and particularly Port Sudan itself."

Read more:
How can British nationals get to the RAF base?
Traumatised Sudan evacuees describe 'horrendous' scenes
Explainer: What's behind the Sudan fighting?

Asked what his advice would be for those left behind, Mr Dowden said: "Well, first of all, we have been very clear that this would be a time limited operation.

"We gave a very clear signal over 24 hours ago that people should expect that as the ceasefire comes to an end, we would be winding down the number of flights.

"We are now saying to those people, you have another 24 hours if you are eligible to make your way to the airport and we will get you on a plane, just as we have done for every other person that has come forward who is eligible, making it the longest and largest evacuation effort of any Western country."

Click to subscribe to the Sky News Daily wherever you get your podcasts

Mr Dowden also said the Government was aware of NHS doctors being turned away from evacuation flights, saying: "We are in touch and engaging rapidly with the Sudanese Doctors Association to see what further support we can provide for them."

He added that after the 6pm deadline for flights, the Foreign Office will maintain "consular support at the other exit routes and in particular at Port Sudan".

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2023-04-28 17:37:30Z
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Ukraine war: 25 dead as Russian missiles hit cities - BBC

Rescuers work to clear rubble from a collapsed buildingUkraine State Emergency Service

A wave of Russian air strikes on cities across Ukraine, including Kyiv, has left at least 25 people dead.

23 people - including four children - were killed in an attack that hit a block of flats in the central city of Uman, officials said.

And a woman and her three-year-old daughter were killed in the city of Dnipro, according to the local mayor.

The Russian defence ministry said its military had targeted Ukrainian army reserve units with the strikes.

State-owned RIA news agency said Russia was aiming for the reserve units and used high-precision weapons on Friday.

In Uman, a town that has been largely spared Russian attack, a nine-storey apartment building partially collapsed after it was hit by a missile.

Oleksander, a 35-year-old resident of the block hit in Uman, said he had been woken up after he heard a powerful explosion.

"I couldn't understand what was happening. I went to the balcony and saw glass everywhere. It was horrible," he told the BBC.

"Russia is a terrorist state. You can see, there's no military object here. And it happened at four o'clock in the morning, as people were sleeping".

Another resident, 60-year-old Vanda, said she heard an explosion and "everything shook".

"We tried to find ways to leave the building. I heard a voice of a child who was screaming in the flat next to ours. We wanted to help other people. There was smoke and fire everywhere," she said.

"Peaceful people were just sleeping."

More than 10 hours after the attack, rescuers were still working at the site while residents tried to retrieve some of their belongings. In nearby buildings, some residents were already fixing broken windows.

Damaged residential building said to be in Uman
Social media

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said the apartment block was among 10 residential buildings that were damaged in Uman.

The state rescue service said the child killed in the city was born in 2013 and another 11 people needed hospital treatment.

Mr Zelensky said the attacks showed further international action needed to be taken against Russia.

"Evil can be stopped by weapons - our defenders are doing it. And it can be stopped by sanctions - global sanctions must be enhanced," he said in a tweet..

The head of the Kyiv city military administration said it was the first Russian missile attack on the capital in 51 days.

There are no immediate reports of civilian casualties in the capital.

Twenty-one out of 23 missiles and two attack drones were shot down by Ukraine's air defence system, officials said in a post on the messaging service Telegram.

The Russian-installed mayor of Donetsk said seven people were killed in the separatist-run city when Ukrainian artillery shells hit a minibus. BBC News has been unable to immediately verify the claim.

The attacks come as Ukrainian forces say they are ready to launch a military offensive with new equipment, including tanks, supplied by Western allies.

"As soon as there is God's will, the weather and a decision by commanders, we will do it," Ukrainian Defence Minister Oleksii Reznikov told an online news briefing on Friday.

Russia has struggled to make headway in a winter offensive including a 10-month battle for control of the strategically important city of Bakhmut.

The Russian defence ministry said on Friday its military had targeted Ukrainian army reserve units with long-range strikes using high-precision weapons, according to a report by the state-owned RIA news agency.

Moscow has previously said it does not deliberately target civilians, but thousands have been injured and killed across Ukraine since Russia's invasion.

A flag that shows regions where Russian strikes took place in Ukraine

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2023-04-28 16:39:32Z
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Ukraine war: Eighteen dead as Russian missiles hit cities - BBC

Rescuers work to clear rubble from a collapsed buildingUkraine State Emergency Service

A wave of Russian air strikes on cities across Ukraine, including Kyiv, has left at least 19 people dead.

Seventeen people including a child were killed in an attack that hit a block of flats in the central city of Uman, officials said.

And a woman and her three-year-old daughter were killed in the city of Dnipro, according to the local mayor.

The Russian defence ministry said its military had targeted Ukrainian army reserve units with the strikes.

State-owned RIA news agency said Russia was aiming for the reserve units and used high-precision weapons on Friday.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said the apartment block was among 10 residential buildings that were damaged in Uman.

The state rescue service said the child killed in the city was born in 2013 and another 11 people needed hospital treatment.

Mr Zelensky said the attacks showed further international action needed to be taken against Russia.

"Evil can be stopped by weapons - our defenders are doing it. And it can be stopped by sanctions - global sanctions must be enhanced," he said in a tweet.

The head of the Kyiv city military administration said it was the first Russian missile attack on the capital in 51 days.

There are no immediate reports of civilian casualties in the capital.

Twenty-one out of 23 missiles and two attack drones were shot down by Ukraine's air defence system, officials said in a post on the messaging service Telegram.

The Russian-installed mayor of Donetsk said seven people were killed in the separatist-run city when Ukrainian artillery shells hit a minibus. BBC News has been unable to immediately verify the claim.

Damaged residential building said to be in Uman
Social media

A video posted on Telegram by Ukraine's State Border Service showed a badly damaged apartment building in Uman after the strikes.

A resident of one damaged block of flats, Olga, told the Reuters news agency that windows were blown out of her apartment "then came the explosion".

One man cried as he watched the emergency services carry a body away on a stretcher.

Another local resident said he heard an explosion at 04:30 local time (02:30 GMT), and "there were two very strong explosions, everything started to burn, cars started to burn."

In Uman, a town that has been largely spared of attacks, a nine-storey apartment building partially collapsed after it was hit by a missile.

The pre-dawn attack happened as people were sleeping, and residents were trapped under the rubble.

More than 10 hours after the attack, rescuers were still working at the site while residents tried to retrieve some of their belongings.

In nearby buildings, some residents were already fixing broken windows.

Oleksander, a 35-year-old resident of the bloc hit, said he had been woken up after he heard a "powerful explosion."

"I couldn't understand what was happening. I went to the balcony and saw glass everywhere. It was horrible," he told the BBC.

"Russia is a terrorist state. You can see, there's no military object here. And it happened at four o'clock in the morning, as people were sleeping".

Another resident, 60-year-old Vanda, said she heard an explosion and "everything shook".

"We tried to find ways to leave the building. I heard a voice of a child who was screaming in the flat next to ours. We wanted to help other people. There was smoke and fire everywhere," she said.

"Peaceful people were just sleeping."

The attacks come as Ukrainian forces say they are ready to launch a military offensive with new equipment, including tanks, supplied by Western allies.

"As soon as there is God's will, the weather and a decision by commanders, we will do it," Ukrainian Defence Minister Oleksii Reznikov told an online news briefing on Friday.

Russia has struggled to make headway in a winter offensive including a 10-month battle for control of the strategically important city of Bakhmut.

The Russian defence ministry said on Friday its military had targeted Ukrainian army reserve units with long-range strikes using high-precision weapons, according to a report by the state-owned RIA news agency.

Moscow has previously said it does not deliberately target civilians, but thousands have been injured and killed across Ukraine since Russia's invasion.

A flag that shows regions where Russian strikes took place in Ukraine

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2023-04-28 12:01:44Z
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