
A Nigerian man was arrested at the Mohammed V
International Airport, Morocco after he was found in
possession of 1.99kg of cocaine. According to the
National Police, the Nigerian passenger, who arrived
onboard a flight coming from the Brazilian city of São
Paulo on Tuesday August 30th allegedly concealed the
banned substance in his luggage. He is remanded in
custody pending the completion of the investigation.
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Nigerian man caught with cocaine
Friday, 9 September 2016 0 commentsSA to honour Adelaide Tambo
Sunday, 28 October 2012 0 commentsSA to honour Adelaide Tambo
The "grand dame" of the liberation movement, Adelaide Tambo, will be remembered at Wattville in Benoni today. Tambo's gravesite and that of her late husband, Oliver, will be declared a national heritage monument. A cultural precinct will also be opened in their honour.
Adelaide Tambo, who devoted her entire life to the anti-apartheid struggle, died at the age of 77 in Johannesburg almost six years ago.
Her
political career began at the tender age of seven in 1936 following a
riot and police raid at Vereeniging in the Vaal Triangle. She witnessed
her 82-year-old grandfather being arrested and falling to the ground. A
young policeman pushed him around and called him a 'boy'. In hurt and
anger, she vowed to fight apartheid to death.
At
15, Adelaide Tambo was smuggling documents and letters for the ANC.
Two years later, she joined the ANC Youth League and was elected as a
branch chairperson. She met her late husband, Oliver, at an ANC meeting
when she was a student nurse in Pretoria. They got married while he was
out on bail during the Treason Trial in December 1956.
Following
the Sharpeville Massacre in 1960, the ANC sent them separately into
exile to mobilise support for the liberation struggle and to isolate
apartheid South Africa.
Former
Speaker of Parliament, Dr Frene Ginwala, who met Adelaide Tambo in
exile describes her as a strong woman, who was a mother to countless
exiled South Africans. "She gave them love. She opened her home
to them. One of the tragedies of current South Africa is that they
didn't have an opportunity to really know people like Adelaide or OR
Tambo."
At 15, Adelaide Tambo was smuggling documents and letters for the ANCOliver Tambo's biographer, Luli Callinicos, describes Adelaide Tambo as a woman of tremendous vitality. "When she was in exile with her husband, OR, away from her - he was based in Africa and she was in London and worked as a nurse, she used to work double-shifts so that she could have enough money to support her three children because the ANC could not afford to pay their cadres, even the most senior ones."
Upon her return to South Africa in 1991 Adelaide Tambo was disappointed to find black South Africans living in shacks and appearing to be worse off than in 1960. In 1994, she was elected as an ANC Member of Parliament for five years and also as the Treasurer of the ANC Women's League.
Former
President Thabo Mbeki honoured Tambo with the National Order of the
Baobab in Gold for her dedication to community service and
nation-building.
AFRICA: BENIN PRESIDENT ARRESTED FOR POISON PLOT
Thursday, 25 October 2012 0 comments Benin President Yayi: Three arrested 'over poison plot'
Three people have been arrested over an alleged plot to poison Benin's head of state Thomas Boni Yayi, officials say.
The suspects include one of the president's nieces, his
personal doctor and an ex-minister, public prosecutor Justin Gbenameto
told reporters.He said those detained faced charges of criminal conspiracy and attempted assassination of the West African leader.
Mr Yayi, a former banker, took office in 2006 and chairs the African Union.
The arrests were made on Sunday.
Prosecutors have named the suspects as Benin's former minister of commerce, Moudjaidou Soumanou, Dr Ibrahim Mama Cisse, and Zouberath Kora-Seke, one of the president's nieces who allegedly worked at his residence.
Authorities said they also intended to issue an arrest warrant for businessman Patrice Talon, a former ally of Mr Yayi who fell out with the leader.
Signs of weakness Suspicion was aroused when the president showed signs of weakness and started vomiting, the BBC's Vincent Nnanna, in the Beninese city of Cotonou, reports.
"Thankfully, the plot was not successful," Mr Gbenameto said.
"Zouberath spoke about it with her sister and others, and it was those people who warned the head of state."
He added that prosecutors "have requested [the suspects'] indictment for criminal conspiracy and attempted assassination".
Mr Yayi won presidential elections in March 2006 and again in 2011.
He had quit his job as president of the Togo-based West African Development Bank, where he had worked since 1994, to run for president.
In 2007, he survived an ambush by gunmen who attacked his convoy during an election campaign tour
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