Tag: US

  • 93 killed in Hawaii wildfire, could be deadliest in over a century

    93 killed in Hawaii wildfire, could be deadliest in over a century

    Anger was growing Saturday over the official response to an inferno that levelled a Hawaiian town, killing at least 93 people in the deadliest wildfire in the United States for over 100 years.

    More than 2,200 structures were damaged or destroyed as the fire tore through Lahaina, according to official estimates, wreaking $5.5 billion in damage and leaving thousands homeless.

    Hawaiian authorities have begun a probe into the handling of the fire, with residents saying there had been no warning.

    “The mountain behind us caught on fire and nobody told us jack,” Vilma Reed told the media.

    “You know when we found that there was a fire? When it was across the street from us.”

    Reed, whose house was destroyed by the blaze, said she was depending on handouts and the kindness of strangers.

    “This is my home now,” the 63-year-old said, gesturing to the car she has been sleeping in with her daughter, grandson, and two cats.

    Lahaina, a town of more than 12,000 and former home of the Hawaiian royal family, has been reduced to ruins, its lively hotels and restaurants turned to ashes.

    A banyan tree at the center of the community for 150 years has been scarred by the flames but still stands upright, its branches denuded and its sooty trunk transformed into an awkward skeleton.

    The County of Maui said in a Saturday night update the number of confirmed fatalities had increased to 93, up from 89.

    Governor Josh Green had warned that the official death toll was bound to grow.

    “It’s going to continue to rise. We want to brace people for that,” he said.

    The new toll makes the blaze the deadliest in the United States since 1918, when 453 people died in Minnesota and Wisconsin, according to the non-profit research group the National Fire Protection Association.

    The death toll surpassed 2018‘s Camp Fire in California, which virtually wiped the small town of Paradise off the map and killed 86 people.

    Maui Police Chief John Pelletier said only a small fraction of the disaster zone has been searched and only two victims have been identified because of how badly they were burned.

    “The remains we’re finding are from a fire that melted metal,” he said. “We have to do rapid DNA to identify every one of these.

    “When we pick up the remains… they fall apart.”

    Firefighters were battling at least one other blaze in Maui on Saturday night, in the inland mountainous Upcountry.

    The Pulehu/Kihei fire in the south was declared 100 percent contained on Saturday night.

    Hawaii congresswoman Jill Tokuda told the media that officials had been taken by surprise by the tragedy.

    “We underestimated the lethality, the quickness of fire,” she said.

    Green, the governor, defended the immediate response, saying the situation had been complicated by the presence of multiple fires and by the strength of the winds.

    “Having seen that storm, we have doubts that much could have been done with a fiery fast-moving fire like that,” he said.

    Hawaii Attorney General Anne Lopez said her office would examine “critical decision-making and standing policies leading up to, during and after the wildfires on Maui and Hawaii islands this week.”

    Maui suffered numerous power outages during the crisis, preventing many residents from receiving emergency alerts on their cell phones, something Tokuda said officials should have prepared for.

    No emergency sirens were sounded, and many Lahaina residents have spoken of learning about the blaze because of neighbors running down the street.

    “We have got to make sure that we do better,” Tokuda added.

    In its emergency management plan last year, the State of Hawaii described the risk wildfires posed to people as being “low”.

    Maui’s fires follow other extreme weather events in North America this summer, with record-breaking wildfires still burning across Canada and a major heat wave baking the US southwest.

    Europe and parts of Asia have also endured soaring temperatures, with major fires and floods wreaking havoc. Scientists say human-caused global warming is exacerbating natural hazards, making them more likely and more deadly.

    For many who fled the flames, the misery was compounded Saturday as they were prevented from returning to their homes.

    Maui police said members of the public would not be allowed into Lahaina, even some of those who could prove they lived there.

    “If your home or former home is in the affected area, you will not be allowed to, enter, until the affected area has been declared safe,” a press release said.

    “Anyone entering the disaster area… is subject to a misdemeanor crime punishable by up to one year in jail and a $2,000 fine.”

    Some residents waited at a roadblock for hours hoping to be allowed in to comb through the ashes or look for missing pets or loved ones.

    Then abruptly the way was blocked, NBC News reported.

    “How are people supposed to get there? The damn roads are closed,” said Lahaina resident Daniel Rice.

    “Get some authority out there. Figure it out. This is nonsense

  • US deploys new forces, warships to red sea

    US deploys new forces, warships to red sea

    US has deployed two warships and more than 3,000 sailors and Marines to the Red Sea in a ramped-up response from Washington to the threat to commercial shipping by Iran.

    The Pentagon says Iran has either seized or attempted to take control of nearly 20 internationally flagged ships in the region over the past two years.

    The new US forces arrived on board USS Bataan and USS Carter Hall, providing “greater flexibility and maritime capability,” the US Fifth Fleet in Bahrain said on Monday. The deployment adds to efforts “to deter destabilizing activity and de-escalate regional tensions caused by Iran’s harassment and seizures of merchant vessels,” spokesman Cdr. Tim Hawkins said.

    Bataan is an amphibious assault ship that can carry fixed-wing aircraft, helicopters and landing craft. The Carter Hall, a dock landing ship, transports Marines and their equipment, and lands them ashore.

    The latest deployment came after US forces blocked two attempts by Iran to seize commercial tankers in international waters off Oman on July 5. Tehran said one of the tankers, the Bahamian-flagged Richmond Voyager, had collided with an Iranian vessel and injured five crew.

    In April and early May, Iran seized two oil tankers within a week in regional waters. Those incidents came after Israel and the US blamed Iran for a drone strike off the coast of Oman in November on a tanker operated by an Israeli-owned company.

    The US said last month it would deploy a destroyer, F-35 and F-16 warplanes, and a marine expeditionary unit to the Middle East to deter Iran from seizing ships in the Gulf. Washington is also preparing to put Marines and navy personnel aboard commercial tankers in the Gulf.

    Iran’s foreign ministry spokesman Nasser Kanani said US deployments served only Washington’s interests.“The US government’s military presence in the region has never created security. Their interests in this region have always compelled them to fuel instability and insecurity,” he said. Countries in the Gulf were capable of ensuring their own security,” he said.

    Torbjorn Soltvedt of the risk intelligence company Verisk Maplecroft said: “Security will remain a friction point in US-Gulf relations even if the threat posed by Iranian attacks against shipping eases in the short term.

    “The perception that the US isn’t doing enough to deter Iranian attacks against international shipping will persist. The need for a new approach is evident.”

  • Niger coup leaders stop US diplomat of meeting with president

    Niger coup leaders stop US diplomat of meeting with president

    A senior U.S. diplomat said coup leaders in Niger refused to allow her to meet Monday with the West African country’s democratically elected president, whom she described as under “virtual house arrest.”

    Acting Deputy Secretary of State Victoria Nuland also described the mutinous officers as unreceptive to U.S. pressure to return the country to civilian rule.

    “They were quite firm about how they want to proceed, and it is not in support of the constitution of Niger,” Nuland told reporters. She characterized the conversations as “extremely frank and at times quite difficult.”

    She spoke after a two-hour meeting in Niger’s capital, Niamey, with some leaders of the military takeover of a country that has been a vital counterterrorism partner of the United States.

    In speaking to junta leaders, Nuland said, she made “absolutely clear the kinds of support that we will legally have to cut off if democracy is not restored.”

    If the U.S. determines that a democratically elected government has been toppled by unconstitutional means, federal law requires a cutoff of most American assistance, particularly military aid.

    She said she also stressed U.S. concern for the welfare of President Mohamed Bazoum, who she said was being detained with his wife and son.

    The meeting was with Gen. Moussa Salaou Barmou, a U.S.-trained officer, and three of the colonels involved in the takeover. The coup’s top leader, former presidential guard head Abdourahamane Tchiani, did not meet with the Americans.

    In other developments Monday, leaders of West Africa’s regional bloc said they would meet later this week to discuss next steps after the junta defied a deadline to reinstate the president. The meeting was scheduled for Thursday in Abuja, the capital of neighboring Nigeria, according to a spokesman for the ECOWAS bloc.

    Meanwhile, the junta’s mutinous soldiers closed the country’s airspace and accused foreign powers of preparing an attack.

    State television reported the junta’s latest actions Sunday night, hours before the deadline set by ECOWAS, which has warned of using military force if Bazoum is not returned to power.

    A spokesman for the coup leaders, Col. Maj. Amadou Abdramane, noted “the threat of intervention being prepared in a neighboring country,” and said Niger’s airspace will be closed until further notice. Any attempt to fly over the country will be met with “an energetic and immediate response.”

    The junta also claimed that two central African countries were preparing for an invasion, but did not name them. It called on Niger’s population to defend the nation.

    The coup toppled Bazoum, whose ascendency was Niger’s first peaceful, democratic transfer of power since independence from France in 1960. The coup also raised questions about the future of the fight against extremism in Africa’s Sahel region, where Russia and Western countries have vied for influence.

    Niger had been seen by the United States and others as the last major counterterrorism partner in the Sahel, south of the Sahara Desert, where groups linked to al-Qaida and the Islamic State group are expanding their influence.

    Also Monday, Mali said it and Burkina Faso, both neighbors of Niger run by military juntas, were sending delegations to Niger to show support. Both countries have said they would consider any intervention in Niger as a declaration of war against them.

    Regional tensions have mounted since the coup nearly two weeks ago, when mutinous soldiers detained Bazoum and installed Tchiani as head of state. Analysts believe the coup was triggered by a power struggle between Tchiani and the president, who was about to fire him.

    It was not immediately clear what ECOWAS leaders will do now. The region is divided on a course of action. There was no sign of military forces gathering at Niger’s border with Nigeria, the likely entry point by land.

    Nigeria’s Senate has pushed back on the plan to invade, urging Nigeria’s president, the bloc’s current chair, to explore options other than the use of force. ECOWAS can still move ahead, as final decisions are made by consensus by member states.

    Guinea and neighboring Algeria, which is not an ECOWAS member, have come out against the use of force. Senegal’s government has said it would participate in a military operation if it went ahead, and Ivory Coast has expressed support for the bloc’s efforts to restore constitutional order.

    The junta has asked for help from the Russian mercenary group Wagner, according to Wassim Nasr, a journalist and senior research fellow at the Soufan Center.

    However, Nuland indicated that coup leaders did not seem receptive to welcoming Wagner mercenaries into the country, as has happened with several surrounding unstable West African countries.

    “I will say that I got the sense from my meetings today that the people who have taken the action here understand very well the risks to their sovereignty when Wagner is invited,” Nuland said.

    The junta is exploiting anti-French sentiments to shore up its support base and has severed security ties with France, which still has 1,500 military personnel in Niger for counterterrorism efforts.

    On Monday, France’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs formally discouraged any travel to Niger, Burkina Faso or Mali, and called on French nationals to be extremely vigilant. France has suspended almost 500 million euros ($550 million) in aid to Burkina Faso.

    It’s not clear what will happen to the French military presence, or to the 1,100 U.S. military personnel also in Niger.

    Many people, largely youth, have rallied around the junta, taking to the streets at night to patrol after being urged to guard against foreign intervention.

  • Russia-Ukraine conflict: Russia intercepts US drone over black sea, fends it off

    Russia-Ukraine conflict: Russia intercepts US drone over black sea, fends it off

    Russia said Saturday it scrambled an Su-30 fighter jet to “prevent a violation of the Russian state border” by a US Reaper MQ-9 military drone over the Black Sea.

    “As the Russian fighter approached, the foreign reconnaissance drone performed a U-turn away from the border,” the Russian defense ministry said.

    The ministry said the drone belonged to the US Air Force.

    “The Russian aircraft returned safely to its air base, there was no violation of the border,” it added.

    Incidents involving Russian and Western aircraft have multiplied over the Black Sea and Baltic Sea in recent months, as Moscow pursues its offensive in Ukraine.

    Tensions grew between Moscow and Washington when another US Reaper drone crashed after colliding with a Russian fighter jet over the Black Sea in mid-March.

    Moscow said in May it had intercepted four US strategic bombers above the Baltic Sea in two separate incidents in the space of one week.

    Russia also said it has intercepted French, German, Polish and British aircraft.

  • Don’t declare war against Niger Republic to please US, France-lawmaker urges Tinubu

    Don’t declare war against Niger Republic to please US, France-lawmaker urges Tinubu

    The member representing Ikwuano/Umuahia federal constituency in the House of Representatives, Hon. Obi Aguocha, has told president Bola Tinubu not to rush into war with Niger Republic in his bid to please the United States of America and France, as doing so could earn Nigeria the wrath of Russia.

    Rep. Aguocha in a statement he personally issued on Friday, urged President Tinubu to jettison any war option as doing so would be putting Nigeria into unnecessary risks

    “We are on the verge of being played by the US and France into going to war in defense of their interests and risking confrontation with Russia and the Wagner Group!

    “May our Government not turn out to be either incompetent or vainglorious or both. Now is the time to speak out. May our Government be properly guided. “

    The lawmaker also argued that Nigeria cutting off power supply to Niger Republic was tantamount to breaching trade agreement she earlier entered into with her Francophone neighbour.

    “Those whom the gods want to destroy, they first make vain and mad!

    “We are intending to violate treaty obligations to supply power to Niger Republic (in return for their not damming the River Niger upstream of Kainji and Jebba) in aid of inchoate foreign policy goals and objectives.

    “We are very broke, and can barely fund our debts to cushion the poor from severe economic hardship; the unemployed, and most especially the military to deal with multifaceted insurgence and domestic threats, yet we are roaring to go to war against the regime in Niamey.”

    The lawmaker insisted that there were other better ways of resolving the political crises in Niger without resorting to war.

     

  • JUST IN: Trump indicted with conspiracy to defraud the United States

    JUST IN: Trump indicted with conspiracy to defraud the United States

    A grand jury indicted former U.S. President, Donald Trump, on Tuesday for a raft of alleged crimes in his brazen efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 election — the latest legal and political aftershock stemming from the riot at the U.S. Capitol two and a half years ago.

    The four-count, 45-page indictment accuses Trump of three distinct conspiracies, charging that he conspired to defraud the U.S., conspired to obstruct an official proceeding and conspired against people’s rights.

    “Despite having lost, the Defendant was determined to remain in power,” the indictment charges, saying Trump unleashed a blizzard of lies about purported mass voter fraud, and then tried to get state, local, and federal officials to act to change the vote result.

    “These claims were false, and the Defendant knew that they were false. In fact, the Defendant was notified repeatedly that his claims were untrue — often by the people on whom he relied for candid advice on important matters, and who were best positioned to know the facts — and he deliberately disregarded the truth,” the indictment states.

    The indictment charges six unnamed and so far uncharged co-conspirators in these efforts. Some of the individuals are easily identifiable, such as Rudolph W. Giuliani, Trump’s former lawyer.

    The indictment also alleges that on the night of Jan. 6, after Trump supporters stormed the Capitol to try to prevent the formal certification of Joe Biden’s victory, “the White House counsel called the defendant to ask him to withdraw any objections and allow the certification. The defendant refused.”

    A spokesman for the former president, Steven Cheung, accused the current administration of trying to interfere with the 2024 election by targeting the current GOP frontrunner, and compared the Biden administration to some of the worst authoritarian regimes in history.

    “President Trump has always followed the law and the Constitution, with advice from many highly accomplished attorneys,” Cheung said in a statement. “Three years ago we had strong borders, energy independence, no inflation, and a great economy. Today, we are a nation in decline. President Trump will not be deterred by disgraceful and unprecedented political targeting!”

    About 5 p.m., reporters observed a prosecutor with special counsel Jack Smith’s office and the foreperson of a grand jury that has been active for many months examining the events surrounding Jan. 6 deliver the indictment to a magistrate judge in federal court in Washington, D.C.

    That grand jury panel gathered Tuesday, and left the courthouse in the afternoon. The indictment is the first known charge or charges to be filed in the special counsel probe of the machinations that led up to the Jan. 6, 2021 riot at the U.S. Capitol, and its aftermath.

    U.S. Magistrate Judge Moxila A. Upadhyaya accepted the grand jury return, saying, “I do have one indictment return before me, and I have reviewed the paperwork in connection with this indictment.”

    The indictment could mark a major new phase in Smith’s investigation of the former president and his aides and allies, coming nearly two months after Trump and his longtime valet were indicted for allegedly mishandling classified documents and scheming to prevent government officials from retrieving them.

    Trump, who has pleaded not guilty in the documents case, denies all wrongdoing related to the 2020 election as well. He announced on social media on July 18 that his lawyers had been told he was a target in the election-focused probe.

    Smith was tapped in November to take charge of the both high-profile investigations, after Trump launched his 2024 presidential election campaign and Attorney General Merrick Garland — an appointee of President Biden — concluded that an independent prosecutor should oversee the probes.

    A state grand jury in Fulton County, Ga., is also considering whether to file broad charges against Trump and his lawyers, advocates, and aides over their efforts to undo the 2020 election results. A decision on that front is expected in August, although previous plans to announce a charging decision have been delayed. Michigan and Arizona are also investigating aspects of the efforts to block Biden’s victory in their states.

    Trump, who is the first former president charged with a crime, is facing a remarkable challenge: as a leading candidate for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination, he is likely to be juggling campaign events with court hearings and criminal trials for months on end.

    In addition to the Justice Department and Fulton County probes, he is scheduled for trial in March on New York state charges of falsifying business records in connection with hush-money payments during the 2016 election.

    Smith’s elections-related investigation has proceeded along multiple tracks, people familiar with the matter have told The Washington Post, with prosecutors focused on ads and fundraising pitches claiming election fraud as well as plans for “fake electors” who could have swung the election to Trump.

    A key element of the investigation is determining to what degree Republican operatives, activists and elected officials — including Trump — understood that their claims of massive voter fraud were false at the time they were making them.

    Each track raises tricky questions about where the line should be drawn between political activity, legal advocacy and criminal conspiracy.

    A key area of interest for Smith has been the conduct of a handful of lawyers who sought to turn Trump’s defeat into victory by trying to convince state, local, federal and judicial authorities that Biden’s 2020 election win was illegitimate or tainted by fraud.

    Investigators have sought to determine to what degree these lawyers — particularly Rudy Giuliani, Jenna Ellis, John Eastman, Kurt Olsen and Kenneth Chesebro, as well as then-Justice Department lawyer Jeffrey Clark — were following specific instructions from Trump or others, and what those instructions were, according to the people familiar with the matter, who like others interviewed spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe an ongoing investigation.

    The Post has reported that Giuliani, a personal attorney for Trump who took over his campaign’s legal efforts after the 2020 election, coordinated the fake-elector effort. Ellis helped him urge state legislatures to reject certified Biden results, while Eastman argued to Trump that Vice President Mike Pence could accept alternate slates when certifying the electoral votes on Jan. 6, 2021. Chesebro wrote several memos on the fake-elector strategy. Olsen urged lawsuits to overturn the election results in several states, and Clark pressed Trump’s fraud claims from within the Justice Department.

  • Nigerian artiste, Rema angrily walks off stage in US, says venue is stuffy

    Nigerian artiste, Rema angrily walks off stage in US, says venue is stuffy

    Popular Nigerian artiste, Divine Ikubor, professionally known as Rema, angrily walked off the stage during his performance in Atlanta.

    Rema abruptly ended his show following the venue’s unsatisfactory conditions.

    According to a viral video, Rema got to the stage and only performed two songs before storming out angrily out of the venue.

    Addressing his fans before walking out of stage, the singer apologised to his audience and promises to reschedule his show in Atlanta as he expresses his discomfort with the heat inside the venue.

    Voicing out his grievances, Rema stated that the show organizers had shown disrespect not just towards him but also towards Afrobeats as a genre.

    Watch the video below

  • Barack Obama’s personal chef found dead near former president’s home

    Barack Obama’s personal chef found dead near former president’s home

    Personal chef for Barack Obama drowned in a paddle board accident near the former president’s home in Martha’s Vineyard.

    The body of Tafari Campbell, 45, was recovered from Edgartown Great Pond near the Obama home on the southern coast of the vacation island by Massachusetts State Police on Monday after a fellow paddleboarder reported he had gone into the water and not resurfaced. Emergency crews were unable to find him through the evening, though his body was eventually recovered using sonar.

    Obama and his wife, former first lady Michelle Obama, were not present at the house at the time of the accident. Campbell worked as a sous chef at the White House during the Obama presidency, and was hired when the Obamas departed to join their household staff.

    “He’s been part of our lives ever since, and our hearts are broken that he’s gone,” the Obamas said in a statement. “Today we join everyone who knew and loved Tafari – especially his wife Sherise and their twin boys, Xavier and Savin – in grieving the loss of a truly wonderful man.”

    The Obama family purchased the nearly 7,000-square-foot mansion on Martha’s Vineyard in 2021 from Boston Celtics owner Wycliffe Grousbeck. The home abuts the coastal pond, which is separated from the Atlantic Ocean by a narrow barrier beach.

  • Mayor of Houston in U.S declares July 7th  ‘Davido day’

    Mayor of Houston in U.S declares July 7th ‘Davido day’

    The City of Houston in United States of America, USA, has declared July 7 as Davido Day in honour of Nigerian afrobeats superstar, David Adeleke, foldly called Davido

    The Mayor of Houston, Sylvester Turner made the proclamation in a statement released in Houston, Texas, on Friday. He declared, “I, Sylvester Turner, Mayor of the city of Houston, do hereby proclaim July 7, 2023, as Davido Day.

    Davido shared a copy of the statement via his Instastory.

    The Mayor made the proclamation following Davido’s soldout show at the iconic Toyota Center in Houston, Texas.

    In 2019 Wizkid was also given similar honour after he made history as the first African artiste to sell out the Skyway Theatre in Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA.

    Mark Dayton, Governor of Minnesota declared October 6 as Wizkid Day.

  • Over $200 billion in Covid loans stolen by fraudsters in US – Report

    Over $200 billion in Covid loans stolen by fraudsters in US – Report

    More than $200 billion may have been stolen from two large COVID-19 relief initiatives, according to new estimates from a US federal watchdog, the media reported. Notably, the watchdog was investigating federally funded programs that helped small businesses survive the pandemic.

    On Tuesday, the inspector general of the Small Business Administration, SBA, released a report that gives the largest estimate yet of how much of the $1.2 trillion disbursed by the SBA was stolen by fraudulent claims.

    The report focused on two programs created during a pandemic to support small businesses, both under the SBA’s purview: the Paycheck Protection Programme, PPP, and the Economic Injury Disaster Loans, EIDL.

    The report said, “At least 17 percent of all COVID-EIDL and PPP funds were disbursed to potentially fraudulent actors”.

    The fraud estimate for the COVID-19 Economic Injury Disaster Loan programme is more than $136 billion, which represents 33 percent of the total money spent on that programme, according to the report. Meanwhile, the Paycheck Protection fraud estimate is USD 64 billion.

    Of the 22.1 million loans and grants disbursed, 21%, or 4.5 million, were handed to potential fraudsters.

    “In the rush to swiftly disburse COVID-19 EIDL and PPP funds, SBA calibrated its internal controls. The agency weakened or removed the controls necessary to prevent fraudsters from easily gaining access to these programs and provide assurance that only eligible entities received funds. Because of the “allure of ‘easy money,’” an overwhelming number of fraudsters were drawn to the program and took “advantage of the economic crisis and [diverted] funding intended for deserving eligible American small business owners,” the report said.

    As a result, multiple federal agencies are working to recover the stolen money. So far, nearly $30 billion in COVID-19 EIDL and PPP funds have been seized or returned to the SBA, the inspector general said.

    The report also noted that as of May, the oversight has resulted in 1,011 indictments, 803 arrests, and 529 convictions, all related to Covid-19 PPP and EIDL fraud, as per Forbes. The inspector general’s office is still working on tens of thousands of investigative leads on waste, fraud, and abuse in the loan programs, expected to continue for years.

    In a 2021 interview with ABC News, SBA Inspector General Hannibal Mike Ware predicted that the amount of fraud from Covid relief programmes would be “larger than any government programme that came before it.”