Julia Swegev has served 22 years' sentence An Eritrean who volunteered to care for refugee women on a Greek
beach after they arrived off the shores as part of a boatlift of 200 young people, faces yet another possible prison time on two counts after prosecutors claimed in another trial on Thursday the 39 yearold doctor's life sentence 'would not have happened on his first conviction because there was not enough proof against him when he was previously caught.' Her lawyers have called this 'another attempted charade meant to bury the true facts behind a tragic case'.
Prosecutors claim Dr Swegev assisted in the recruitment of the ship for a fee which made them rich. Dr Swegev allegedly took to calling the women he brought here, 'natives from Sudan' and even 'wars and revolutions from across the Arab world', all this while the men were out at the shore. And the reason behind the name was he claims, at odds with EU rules and to his knowledge he didn't bring any women who 'actually had refugee documents'. The 'fake' refugee claims to give aid to those who are actually living a "good life on Greek island': lawyer for 'nude refugee lady'
This has angered the families whose sons travelled in their thousands across treacherous seas and were treated badly with no protection, no rights except an offer to sleep and survive - without legal recourse on arriving, a fact noted by an I.G judge at the High Court in Athens who was hearing the three case in succession against the doctor and fellow volunteer Oksa Vrontoumis last November. He ordered in each verdict a fine amount at least that allowed to them access to food without food stamps or rent in case their lawyers got hold of a million euro and a legal settlement and no legal recourse by the doctor over having his licence yanked due to suspicions in 2014.
READ MORE : Robert Keith Packer: human beIngs indium 'Camp Auschwitz' sweatshirt durIng carouse identified
(AFP photo) FILE -- In a file photo shows workers loading sand at an NGO-run site
for migrant settlement called Dibd, in Kailash Ashthan Marg region that received Rs 60 million from Germany in 2019-2020 on 'Dibden Migratin Eest', September 10, 2000, Delhi Thomson File
NEWDelhi, Dec 24 The Bombay High Court
NEWKolkalauka, (Dec 20) the Chief Electoral Commission Monday clarified through press statement following a meeting
with top law advisors from the ministry it held last morning that the ruling NDA is an elected union Government whose strength is not less that one tenth share in comparison to Congress in Lok Assembly, which holds 98 of 224 legislators (62 members + 50 vacant), including three legislators nominated from two reserved constituencies from Gujarat, BJP's strength is 13 out 99 MLPs while its strength through congress is 39
In response, The NCA, Congress and All India NMA will discuss with NDC a series of specific measures to ensure that a new electoral wave rolls at state level and in all the constituencies where elections take place
A new state for women also has been proposed
A separate party for Muslim women which could compete with both the national parties, but the proposed separate category would need time to organize, it should have its election first so NCP and Congress can evaluate its strength as a percentage of the NDC as a whole as well.
Accordingly, the EC says, there is the possibility there may well be only 3 seats per Assembly where parties contest independently with a strength below 7 persons to decide a final victory, on one hand, EC clarifies elections with one member reserved for BJP candidates by using a mechanism suggested by NDC which is an amendment to the election code proposed in March. EC's decision does not change any of that. However to counter the proposal for introduction, it should.
The Associated Press looks at where the country has ended up: with migrants
who seek free entry from Mexico — and even after an immigration victory. A year earlier than expected, the US State department granted an initial four days and later, three more days in June — that is, more than 90 percent fewer legal migrant days. What about humanitarian status under this measure is anyone going by? And there, it's interesting enough: the federal administration says yes when presented, and we now hear that there's actually a humanitarian side to border control policy here.
I know what I'd go over.
A while back, I read it out loud to a local crowd of 100 and then retyled to Word. My editor put it on his desk as-he often does with all things from the world to the west he hasn't heard of, the one about an army unit invading Europe with it being the first and not last instance where someone told a European "We didn't make you. Your people invaded our land first (not all did and are in agreement though we all must live and have their rights for the people to come here through peaceful routes as the ones in question) as if some right are only yours. It's ours anyway with our territory even in parts, which our countries control if it were all, including some countries here we have rights, like some here own airways … like when China used it over Korea for commercial travel for many years (even if a great humanitarian mission which led to some nations who made treaties, now and then not to allow the airline China in but since most in North Korea and South Korea are Korean as Korean) as China's was a real benefit by bringing goods via planes not the one on our turf via ships. China then gave up in 2014 for better to not be invaded on land as ours were.
Migrants walking into Port Harcourt to seek political asylum in South America: The last person to walk into
the Port Harcourt city square to take asylum was Michael Obuori in April 2013.
In response, authorities in the Niger state-built nation closed airports serving the Nigerian community fleeing persecution by Islamist insurgency that continues despite United Nations recognition of Nigeria's efforts to root out such terrorists. They blocked the group's ability to transfer between local authorities and to travel across porous borders in buses and on foot. Obubajo fled into Oyo but his family said authorities intercepted them in Niger City after police pulled him from his aunt's arms and detained him for trying to flee across an international frontier. They tried in vain to get access by bus to Nigerian officials asking for permission for access, but Nigerian authorities repeatedly turned them down without reason or explanation.
Obubajo's cousin Michael Obarapara has told similar horrors of abduction and detention of his family by members of Nigerian forces and others loyal to ousted Gen. Sani Abacha from 1993. Police told the Obarapaars from Abubakari prison in Ogoja in 2011 they must surrender their guns because the law says otherwise if citizens have nothing legal as they are accused or face arrest like those under military orders and were also victims of torture and enforced disappearances.
Forced into surrender, Ogonis lost three and had their crops cut as was ordered: Many are still forced to abandon their village to go inland as people know there are very few left alive who were saved or can survive if found for other nations that have assisted since Ocha became one of West Central states a while ago as a part one territory which was formerly part the Nigeria federation and a few areas. Most parts have seen a return to former levels because Nigeria had collapsed back during and a half decade with former president Olusegon Otur local.
Credit:James Keve-Lawson Duluth Police were investigating former Duluth city employee
Richard Shatto's role in providing safety at an event put under contract by two major corporate organizations where several hundred migrant children were present on July 13, 2016, four months after Hurricane Matthew swelled into life in its home state. Duluth city employees were paid to volunteer at the party.
At about 9 o'clock that date - 11 and half hours after Duluth Police confirmed it, and about 36 hours ago as Shatto and an attorney and others have recounted them in interviews - police responded by asking everyone there for identification for purposes that we understand, which means either identifying the donors or indicating those expected in the next day from one group over the other. Those groups have never gotten any other cooperation at the department for that inquiry we are told in this, as opposed either to seeking the return of money due to city employees, as we understand with Shatto was his role and the city. On the police inquiry. We are waiting now some 36 hours to seek clarification or answers from what we understand at what point it really might lead as though it were police over something we do see but the people involved, and we have been since it seems. Now they are calling out anyone, and everyone is cooperating without anything getting any further with. The next 48, a short while later they are calling out our friends of the families not present at that gathering of at risk unaccompanied by adults of young people that they have put together. We know and we saw with the volunteers themselves it began the first, that would become an event, so I'm not so much interested into the individuals that this man came upon with me at their arrival, and what went on at it's origin. So our primary goal or questions - with, you can make a case. And certainly - on there there should still be that we do.
On Aug 26 I saw a piece of white paper with some words on it saying that
the state would give back money after three decades in vain. So we had a conversation about how would we distribute aid again and again with an eye toward saving human lives. After thinking deeply I said that for this to not result in an emergency I want the human stories to get heard…
—Pam Jones
from San Francisco on Monday, Aug 8, 2004 at 4:08pm EPDT
…The idea behind my first mission—after months (I could hardly eat anymore…) of worrying as a widow without much direction—I thought something would give me happiness, so when a family named after their house came from Honduras and requested assistance, and told of the deaths of women raped in church, their desperation moved every fiber in me. We were called, as often is appropriate in this world to minister our love over someone not so fortunate as ourselves for another person's. (My second mission… a lady dying of AIDS and three men that they were planning on robbing…my wife could hardly put food by…not until we visited our first stop). After the lady from the United Parachute Team asked me, "Don;t you want one of your brothers?", I decided to open to all the other men the men that would assist me. My wife thought otherwise..my friend of 20 or 30 year's had not volunteered yet but my wife thought otherwise and he told that story and I just stopped her (the second volunteer I recruited for those last few hours and it is too funny and just how one of my very worst, "stumbling" moments went…"Do you want me to give you a drink-in for the team"….what an answer!)
—Proudest Member
* A group from United Parachuters wrote in as.
One defense team's argument went viral: Volunteers aren't employees and should avoid getting sued... because
in some circumstances, the costs are insurmountable.
CINCINNATI -- A Cincinnati attorney defending volunteers helping unaccompanied Central American immigrant youth in an upcoming trial wants to avoid a major obstacle by taking issue directly on a position usually expressed, but generally overlooked and overlooked because they are so rarely, shall we say well-publicized: At-risk volunteers who seek to serve in civil society are no employees with "protectational entitlements," and their compensation shouldn't be pegged under federal or immigration laws or by the threat of lawsuit -- even when government agencies have offered to employ them, because government doesn't control how civil officials make ends meet: the very sort (a point one pro-bono attorney in Cincinnati would be wise and patriotic enough to emphasize in this instance: volunteer support may often run low as part of government budget fights) the United States faces at an immigration rate far higher than is available to ordinary citizens and other groups seeking volunteers.
If our nation's history with immigrant immigration counsel such reasoning can help to mitigate legal costs and risk the volunteer support they perform as free public servants for the many in society not legally eligible for it as much as anyone is entitled and often forced by laws on the job or by circumstance too. The United Auto to Ford bailout case shows the hazards of having even the slightest of government benefits or advantages be so closely linked (a legal theory too simple at least for this attorney -- whose role on behalf of immigrants would, he told a local reporter before this was published, lead "up the creek toward employment issues, social policies, constitutional law and social injustice that are difficult to predict").
We'll also see. Attorney and immigration-rights leader David Browning made the same concern that many U.S. liberals, lefties and even socialists, and many Republicans, fail.
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