US jury finds Trump sexually abused writer in NY store

WASHINGTON – Donald Trump sexually abused magazine writer E Jean Carroll in the 1990s and then defamed her by branding her a liar, jurors decided on Tuesday, dealing the former US president a legal setback as he campaigns to retake office in 2024.

The nine-member jury in Manhattan federal court awarded about $5 million in compensatory and punitive damages.

The jury deliberated for just under three hours. It rejected Trump’s denial that he assaulted Carroll and ruled in her favour. The jury of six men and three women was required to reach a unanimous verdict to find him liable.

Carroll, 79, testified during the civil trial that Trump, 76, raped her in a Bergdorf Goodman department store dressing room in Manhattan in either 1995 or 1996, then harmed her reputation by writing in an October 2022 post on his Truth Social platform that her claims were a “complete con job,” “a hoax” and “a lie.”

President from 2017 to 2021, Trump is the front-runner in opinion polls for the Republican presidential nomination and has shown an uncanny ability to weather controversies that might sink other politicians.

It seems unlikely in America’s polarised political climate that the civil verdict will impact Trump’s core supporters, who view his legal woes as part of a concerted effort by opponents to undermine him.

“The folks that are anti-Trump are going to remain that way, the core pro-Trump voters are not going to change, and the ambivalent ones I just don’t think are going to be moved by this type of thing,” said Charlie Gerow, a Republican strategist in Pennsylvania.

Any negative impact is likely to be small and limited to suburban women and moderate Republicans, he said.

– REUTERS.

Experiment shows thoughts influence tactile perception

If we sincerely believe that our index finger is five times bigger than it really is, our sense of touch improves. Researchers at Ruhr University Bochum demonstrated that this is the case in an experiment in which the participants were put under professional hypnosis. When the participants signaled that they understood the opposite hypnotic suggestion that their index finger was five times smaller than it actually was, their sense of touch deteriorated accordingly.

Tshisekedi claims regional force ‘cohabiting’ with rebels

GABORONE – Democratic Republic of Congo’s President Felix Tshisekedi has said the East African Community Regional Force (EACRF) will be pulled out from the country’s east if it fails to fulfil its peace-making mandate by June.

“We will decide to escort (out) these contingents… and thank them,” he said on Tuesday in Botswana, where he is on a state visit.

The EACRF was deployed in the region in March to help quell the March 23 Movement (M23) rebellion but has since been criticised for failing to force the rebels to relinquish territory.

President Tshisekedi also expressed frustration with the regional force, which he said was not operating as DR Congo had expected and was allegedly colluding with the rebels.

“In some regions, there is cohabitation between the regional force and the M23 terrorists. This was not in the programme.

“It was a question of forcing these M23 forces to ceasefire, to withdraw and to be confined to camps,” he added.

His remark came a day after the Southern African Development Community (Sadc) bloc agreed to deploy troops “with offensive mandate” to eastern DR Congo.

The DR Congo leader also criticised the Kenyan authorities over the resignation and replacement of the first force commander, Gen Jeff Nyagah, over unspecified “threats.”

 Meanwhile, more than 670 women, or 48 new victims per day, have been treated for sexual violence in displacement camps in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo in the last two weeks, medical charity Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) said on Tuesday.

About 600, 000 people are sheltering in the camps near Goma, the capital of North Kivu province, after fleeing rebel conflict in their home towns in the surrounding region.

Most of the victims reported being assaulted when they left the camps to get food or wood, MSF said.

In three sites – Rusayo, Bulengo and Kanyaruchinya – more than half the victims said they were assaulted by armed men, MSF said, without giving more details. – BBC/REUTERS.

Sudan capital rocked by air strikes, looting

KHARTOUM – Residents of Sudan’s capital reported heavy air strikes in central Khartoum on Tuesday amid a surge in looting while Saudi Arabia said negotiators were working toward a short-term ceasefire.

Witnesses said the army unleashed intense air bombardment in the centre of Khartoum and around the presidential palace. The rival Rapid Support Forces (RSF) paramilitary said the palace, which it claims to control, was hit by an air strike and destroyed, but an army source denied the claim.

The fighting in Khartoum, which broke out on April 15, has prompted hundreds of thousands of people to flee their homes and triggered an aid crisis. The number of people internally displaced within Sudan more than doubled in a week to 700, 000, the UN’s migration agency said.

The two forces, which have failed to abide by repeated truce deals, sent representatives to talks in the Saudi port city of Jeddah on Saturday. In the first report on the talks thus far, the Saudi foreign ministry said on Tuesday that the negotiations aimed to reach “an effective short-term ceasefire,” Saudi state TV Al-Ekhbariya said.

Amid warnings that Sudan is on the brink of a humanitarian catastrophe, UN aid chief Martin Griffiths proposed the warring parties back a declaration guaranteeing safe passage of aid supplies and the proposal has been discussed in Jeddah, a UN spokesperson said. The United Nations estimates that five million additional people will need emergency assistance inside Sudan while 860, 000 are expected to flee to neighbouring states that were already in crisis at a time when rich countries have cut back on aid.  – REUTERS.

SAHRC denies letting Malema off the hook for hate speech as judgement is reserved

JOHANNESBURG – SA Human Rights Commission (SAHRC) has defended its decision to let EFF leader Julius Malema off the hook for hate speech in 2019. 

This after Malema had, in 2016, said, “we are not calling for the slaughtering of white people, at least for now,” while addressing supporters. 

On Tuesday, the Gauteng High Court in Johannesburg reserved judgement, with Deputy Judge President Roland Sutherland, who presided in the case, indicating he would send the outcome via email. 

Advocate Kathleen Hardy, who represented the SAHRC, said particular attention was given to the complaint against Malema. 

According to Hardy, contrary to steps usually taken to allow provincial offices to handle matters where the incident occurred, the SAHRC CEO, in this case, was personally involved.

“The commission took this so seriously they instructed two senior staff members to look into this matter, do research, and advise them.

“The two, who were roped in, are senior specialists, one a senior researcher in the area of equality to look at this and advise the commission. 

“That opinion is comprehensive; they listed what they have found necessary to interrogate and considered coming to their conclusion.

“They took the complaint seriously, and they put resources into this because they recognised the importance of the matter; they didn’t have to do that,” said Hardy. 

She added the CEO of the commission at the time instructed the senior researcher for equality to prepare an opinion regarding these matters. 

“Given that the senior researcher is only admitted to the bar of the state of New York, the opinion is supported by a senior legal officer,” said Hardy. 

She added Malema had also qualified his utterances that processes to be taken to take back the land would be done through constitutional procedures. – NEWS24.

Respect ECL, Mundubile tells HH

THE brutal force with which the Zambia Police raided former President Edgar Lungu’s residence was meant to embarrass and humiliate the former head of State and should be strongly condemned by all Zambians, Brian Mundubile has charged.

And Mr Mundubile says the UPND has lamentably failed to deliver on their promises and have resorted to using intimidation and harassment to silence the voices of the majority Zambians who are acutely disappointed by the President Hakainde Hichilema administration. Mr Mundubile, the Leader of the Opposition in Parliament says he was joining the voices of many Zambians including that of the Catholic Church in condemning the barbaric manner in which the Zambia Police invaded the residence of former President Lungu in search of the former First Lady Esther Lungu.

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HH should move into State House – Kalaba

By NATION REPORTER

CITIZEN First President Harry Kalaba is demanding that President Hakainde Hichilema should move into State House because his continued stay at his private residence was not only an inconvenience to the general public but was also a security risk on the presidency.

And Mr Kalaba expressed concern with the lack of transparency that has manifested under the UPND with Hichilema refusal to declare his assets in as dictated by the tenets of good governance.

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ConCourt vested with power to hear Sean Tembo case – Mbula

FORMER Secretary to the Cabinet, Leslie Mbula,  has argued that the Constitutional Court is vested with the power to hear the matter in which he has sued Sean Tembo over his alleged insulting language against President Hakainde Hichilema.

Mr Tembo, the Patriots for Economic Progress (PeP) party leader has raised preliminary issues, questioning the powers of the Concourt as opposed to the local court to interpret whether the disparaging innuendos and insulting words allegedly published by him against President Hichilema were contrary to Articles 8(a) and (b), 20 and 43 (1) (a) and 43(2)(d) of the Constitution of Zambia.

He asked whether Mr Mbula had properly moved the Concourt by way of originating summons as a way of commencement given that the originating summons are both for interpretation and contravention of the Constitution.

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A potential pathway to improved stroke recovery

Ischemic stroke, caused by a blockage of blood flow to the brain, is a common cause of death and disability. Treatments are urgently needed to improve patient outcomes, because recovery currently depends largely on the timely injection of a blood clot-dissolving drug. Priorities for therapy include limiting inflammation at the ischemic site and rebuilding neuronal connections damaged by the stroke. However, a molecule that can achieve these therapeutic effects has remained elusive.