Rape allegation

Nigerian female pastor Busola Olotu makes shocking revelations about Biodun Fatoyinbo, says she believes Busola Dakolo














The last has certainly not been heard in the rape allegation leveled on clergyman, Biodun Fatoyinbo by Busola Dakolo, wife of singer Timi Dakolo.

Reverend Busola Olotu, a clergywoman who Biodun Fatoyinbo saw as a mentor, had an exclusive interview with media personality, Adesuwa Onyenokwe, where she revealed that Busola's sister, Funmi Ayeni, had come to her in 2011 to recount how her sister, Busola, had become troubled after she was allegedly raped by Fatoyinbo who was her pastor at the time.

Pastor Olotu who is a lawyer by training, said she spoke with Busola at the time her sister came with the story and she could tell that Busola was telling the truth as she exhibited the traits of a rape victim who was very troubled. Pastor Olotu said three members of her church who had also come out to seek counsel after they were raped, had also fingered Fatoyinbo as the person who raped them.

Pastor Olotu in her interview said she had a revelation where she saw Fatoyinbo on bed with another lady and when she challenged him in shock, he told her that he had a ''Grace for such things''. Pastor Olotu said after her revelation, she met with Fatoyinbo's then spiritual father, Reverend Emmanuel Oset, and to her shock, Pastor Oset replied ''So he is still doing this thing?''.
Rape allegation: Nigerian female pastor Busola Olotu makes shocking revelations about Biodun Fatoyinbo, says she believes Busola Dakolo (video)
Pastor Oset in another interview with Onyenokwe, also said that many ladies had come to him in the past to make same allegation as Busola against Fatoyinbo. According to Reverend Oset, the allegations were glaringly true. He said he cut ties with Fatoyinbo in 2014 after he tried to reach him when the Ese Walter scandal happened in August 2013.

FFK reacts to Sowore's continued detention


You must live with the consequences of rejecting Jonathan and putting Buhari in power





Femi Fani-Kayode has reacted to the continued detention of Omoyele Sowore, embattled publisher of Sahara Reporters, despite fulfilling his bail condition.

 You must live with the consequences of rejecting Jonathan and putting Buhari in power- FFK reacts to Sowore


In a post shared on his Facebook page, FFK wondered why anyone is surprised Sowore is still in detention. He pointed out that Sowore is living with the ''consequences of fighting to bring President Buhari to power and rejecting Jonathan during the 2015 elections.''

Read his post below   


 What amazes me is the utter gullibility of some of our people. Why would you be surprised that Yele Sowore is still in detention? Has Buhari ever obeyed court orders? They did it to those of us in the mainstream opposition over the last 4 years and you applauded them.
Now they are doing it to others and you are lamenting and expressing surprise and disappointment. You never thought it would affect you but now it has. Well this is just the beginning.
You must live with the new reality which is that we are living in a vicious dictatorship which will not spare anyone it feels threatened by.
I and a number of others warned that this would happen in 2015 if Buhari came to power and you laughed us to scorn and insulted us. You fought for Buhari, you rejected Jonathan and you put him in power.
Thankfully it appears that you are not laughing anymore but now you must live with the consequences of your actions. Now you must live with the monster and tyrant you assisted in putting on the throne and the mess you helped to create.
Even if Sowore is released later today or tomorrow they have made their point: that they can do anything they want, to anybody, for any reason and at anytime.
May God deliver us from these wicked souls and I urge every Nigerian to pray for Yele Sowore, Sambo Dasuki and othersYou must live with the consequences of rejecting Jonathan and putting Buhari in power- FFK reacts to Sowore

LaLiga President Tebas Joins A- List Speaker Line-Up For Inaugural SportBusiness Summit



LaLiga President Javier Tebas, who has masterminded the
phenomenal global growth of Spain’s elite football league,
is to bring his unique perspective on the sport’s
international development to the inaugural SportBusiness
Summit in Miami on September 18-19.
Tebas joins a growing line-up of A-list speakers at an
event which promises fresh perspectives and insights into
the sports business delivered by the people whose
decisions shape the sector.
Among those already confirmed to join Tebas on the
conference platform are Philadelphia 76ers COO Lara
Price, and Keith Bruce of QuintEvents International.
Price, who runs business operations, corporate and team
communications and public relations along with
community engagement at the 76ers was the Women in
Sports  & Events ( WISE) Woman of the Year in 2015 while
Bruce, an event industry veteran, leads QuintEvents new
Formula One Experiences organisation working with all 21
F1 events worldwide.
Under Tebas, LaLiga  has massively expanded its global
footprint and international rights value and built
international recognition of its clubs beyond the
established global brands of Real Madrid and Barcelona.
On his watch the league has made a raft of positive
changes to its product for the global market.
At the SportBusiness Summit he will be among leaders of
sport from around the world to discuss the key issues
impacting the development of the sector in the USA and
globally.  The invitation-only event will fuse SportBusiness’
data and analysis with the unique opinion, assessment
and overview of key decision makers and opinion formers
from leading international and US sports leagues, clubs,
agencies, brands, technology leaders and media
organisations.
Subject strands on the agenda include new business
opportunities in soccer, trends in global media rights,
sponsorship, understanding the globe fan base,
opportunities and challenges arising from new US sports
betting legislation and the strategies of the tech
companies shaping the future of sport.
Tickets and hotel packages for the SportsBusiness
Summit are available now. For details, please visit
sportbusiness.com/summit .

Boogie noches: how erotic cinema boom in 1970s helped shape modern Spain


Madrid, June 1978. A sweltering heatwave is
matched by the tensions bubbling through
newspaper headlines. Nearly three years since
the death of dictator Francisco Franco, politicians
are intensely debating the new constitution at
the Palacio de las Cortes. Will the Left accept the
monarchy or demand a republic? Will the Right
accept abolishing the death penalty and omitting
any reference to the Catholic church? Will
regions such as the Basque Country and
Catalonia receive the sovereignty they demand?
Around the corner, people queue for the latest
hit film. Is it Grease, newly premiered in New
York and on its way to becoming a global
colossus? No. Spanish audiences won’t be
introduced to Danny, Sandy and the gang until
September. Today’s crowd awaits a much more
explicit celebration of cinematic sexuality: Las
eróticas vacaciones de Stela (Stela’s Erotic
Vacations).
Played by Azucena Hernández, the reigning Miss
Catalonia, Stela has returned from her strict
Catholic boarding school and is set on disrupting
this peaceful Castilian town. Unlike the
negotiators in the congress, Stela is not
diplomatic towards the guardians of Catholic
morality. She sexualises everything – even a
banister becomes an erotic toy as she slides
down in ecstasy. She seduces a priest, a maid
and her stepfather – she even flashes her own
mother.
Such films became possible after Spain abolished
censorship in December 1977. This was
monumental – it is hard to convey how much
censorship shaped public consciousness during
the dictatorship. It created such hunger for erotic
images that many made pilgrimages to France to
see Last Tango in Paris (1972), among other
films. Group tours of x-rated cinemas were even
organised.

Rated ‘S’ for sexual


In Franco’s day, some Spaniards believed the
world outside was freer than it was. When
audiences saw Rita Hayworth’s famous scene in
Gilda (1946), where she provocatively removes a
long white glove onstage, many in Spain
assumed she did a full striptease in the uncut
version.
Occasionally censorship even made things more
lurid. In Mogambo (1953), Spanish censors
changed the script to conceal the adulterous
relationship between Grace Kelly and Clark
Gable’s characters, turning Kelly’s husband into
her brother. When she later shares a bed with
him, they appear to be committing a much
greater sin.
Ending censorship gave free rein to what was
known as the destape, literally “the undressing”.
The “S” rating was created, allowing films with
soft porn elements to infiltrate the mainstream.
S-rated films were generally cheap and big
money makers. Stela’s Erotic Variations alone
sold 600,000 tickets, and was followed by other
great successes such as El mundo maravilloso del
sexo (The Marvellous World of Sex), Trampa
sexual (Sexual Trap) and La orgía (The Orgy).
The 17 S-rated films screened in 1978 probably
attracted more customers than the four million
people that went to see Grease.
Neither was the destape limited to cinema. The
magazine Interviú, formed in 1976, was creating
waves with revealing covers of famous actresses,
including a nude photo of Franco-era child star
Marisol – sadly without her permission.
In February 1978 another iconic photograph
appeared. It shows future Madrid mayor Enrique
Tierno Galván giving actress/stripper Susana
Estrada – star of El mundo maravilloso del sexo –
a prize for being the most popular actress of the
year. Her jacket has moved, revealing a breast,
while she smiles unconcerned. The picture
became an emblem of Spain’s transition to
democracy, showing it was much more than a
political process.
The S rating endured until 1983, when it was
replaced by the more permissive but more
marginalised X rating. Where the 1970s releases
often included good scripts and serious social
commentary, the destape was becoming more
purely gratuitous by the early 1980s.
Since then the genre has often been considered
an embarrassing footnote in Spanish cinema. But
that risks missing something important. As one
writer has put it , Stela, like other young S-rated
protagonists, “embodies the myriad ironies of the
transition to democracy, for she does not merely
awaken the village sexually, but reveals what
was always simmering under the surface of
franquista repression”.
Sex and nudity have been especially pervasive in
the nation’s cinema over the past four decades. A
recent book, Spanish Erotic Cinema , argues
convincingly that sensual pleasure on Spanish
screens is bound up with historical, political and
social issues.

Priests and politics

A good example is El sacerdote (The Priest),
another S-rated success during that sultry
summer of ‘78. It shows a priest torn between
conservative ideology and sexual desires,
awakened by a billboard of a woman in a bikini
and the steamy confessions of an unhappy
housewife. His inner turmoil reaches such a
frenzy that he eventually castrates himself.
Director Eloy de la Iglesia’s films are often
criticised for being heavily didactic. Yet some
argue that movies such as El sacerdote helped
broaden the moral horizons of the audience. In
October 1978, de la Iglesia premiered El diputado
(Confessions of a Congressman), one of many
films that featured gay characters and arguably
contributed to Spain’s widespread acceptance of
homosexuality.
The same summer also saw Bilbao , a landmark
in the genre by director Bigas Luna . His work
over the next two decades would blur erotic and
art-house cinema. Penélope Cruz and Javier
Bardem were launched to stardom in his 1992
send-up of Spanish stereotypes, Jamón jamon
(Ham Ham), where they famously make love
under one of the country’s emblematic bull-
shaped highway billboards.
More recently, the popular films Torremolinos 73
(2004), Los años desnudos (The Naked Years,
2008) and Kiki, el amor se hace (Quickie, Love is
So, 2016) all pay homage to the genre. In this
#MeToo era, many might prefer it was buried
instead. Yet in contrast with the female sexual
objects of the original destape, it has been argued
that the women in Kiki, for example, are “utterly
in control of their sexuality, well informed about
various practices, open-minded and confident in
their pursuit of their preferences and desires”.
The Spanish people approved today’s constitution
in the referendum of December 1978, founding a
political order that now appears in disarray. The
Catalan conflict is rooted in that constitution’s
negation of the right of Spanish regions to self-
determination. The former president, Mariano
Rajoy, was recently forced out of office over party
corruption.
Many now question the entire political culture
that was forged in the transition years after
dictatorship. If we consider the conscientious
undressing of old morals and sexual hang-ups
another of the founding acts of democratic Spain,
this parallel process is arguably in much better
health. To give just one example, Spain was one
of the first countries to legalise same-sex
marriage, preceded only by Holland and
Belgium. While the difficulties with the destape
are obvious, we should concede it has played an
important role in creating the culture we see
today.

Spain says EU pledges funds for Spain and Morocco to handle migration

According to news from MADRID  - European leaders have
agreed to increase funds for Spain and
Morocco to help deal with migration flows as
more people choose the route between the
two countries to cross to Europe, Spanish
Prime Minister0 Pedro Sanchez said on
Friday.

“There is a commitment to dispense more
funds to the government of Spain and
Morocco,” Sanchez said during a televised
news conference after a European Union
summit in Brussels, adding there was
recognition that this route was under rising
pressure.

Migrant deal struck as Greece, Germany, Spain agree on returns



Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras said the trilateral agreement on
Friday for the return of migrants and refugees from Germany
to Greece and Spain will not burden the country and will also
expedite the reunification of split families.
The deal’s main aim, he said, is to minimize the flow of the
so-called secondary movement of migrants and refugees from
point-of-entry countries – like Greece and Spain – to
Germany.
He said, moreover, that the deal was not linked to the
acceptance – on the sidelines of the summit of European
Union leaders in Brussels – of the Greek request for a
suspension of the planned VAT hikes on five islands of the
eastern Aegean which have borne the brunt of the crisis.
New Democracy welcomed the VAT hike suspension, saying
however that this had always been a conservative proposal.
When the government follows ND’s cue, it said, positive things
happen for the country.
With critics arguing that the deal could burden Greece with
higher numbers of asylum applicants, Tsipras said he is
confident that this will not be the case as, he claimed, that
current flows to Germany are limited, due to the presence of
Frontex on the northern border, to 100-150 people per month.
Furthermore, the text of the trilateral deal said that “Germany
will gradually accept and conclude the family reunification
cases in Greece and Spain with a view to guaranteeing family
unity.”
Tsipras said that Germany will unblock 2,900 family
reunifications from Greece.
However, given the unbending stance of several countries with
regard to burden sharing and the emphasis placed on
secondary movements, it is widely believed that flows to the
islands of the eastern Aegean will rise and that more migrants
will be stranded in Greece.
Under the specifics of the deal, Tsipras noted that Germany
and Spain are committed to backing the review of the Dublin
Agreement within 2018, and promoting EU initiatives to help
Greece in the event of a new migration crisis and to assist the
five eastern Aegean islands financially.
Referring to the sharp divisions at the EU summit, Tsipras said
the bloc is split between countries with a chauvinistic
approach on the matter and those, like Greece, with a more
humane attitude.

Spanish politician aims to jail journalists who uncovered fraud scandal

The International Press Institute (IPI), a global network
of editors, media executives and leading journalists
for media freedom, today condemned an attempt by a
leading Spanish politician to jail two journalists who
revealed her alleged involvement in a fraud scandal.
In documents filed this week in court, the politician,
Cristina Cifuentes, the former president of the
Community of Madrid, accused the two journalists,
eldiario.es Founder and Editor-in-Chief Ignacio
Escolar and investigative journalist Raquel Ejerique, of
aggravated disclosure of confidential information.
The criminal complaint seeks to jail Escolar and
Ejerique for up to five years. It accuses the pair of
having acted “blindly” in pursuit of a “valuable
exclusive”.
Eldiario.es launched a series of reports on March 21,
written by Ejerique, explaining how Cifuentes had
allegedly obtained her master’s degree from Rey Juan
Carlos University through fraud. The information
published by the news site generated great public
interest in Spain and put political pressure on
Cifuentes, who eventually stepped down several
weeks later following an unrelated shoplifting scandal.
The reports also prompted a criminal investigation
into Cifuentes for falsifying public documents and
bribery.
IPI Deputy Director Scott Griffen called the charges
filed by Cifuentes a “blatant and clumsy attack on
media freedom in Spain”.
“Pursuing a story is not a crime”, he said. “Ignacio
Escolar and Raquel Ejerique are being targeted
because they did their job. The court should dismiss
this case quickly and with prejudice.”
The Madrid-based Platform in Defence of Free
Expression (PDLI), an IPI partner, also condemned
Cifuentes’s move. PDLI said it feared that the case
may be an effort to expose the journalists’ source,
“whose protection is one of the professional duties of
journalists. In that case, it would be a serious attack
on the constitutional right to inform and be informed
and an unacceptable threat against investigative
journalism.”
Earlier this year, an IPI special feature described the
pattern by which Spanish politicians resort to
unfounded legal actions against investigative
journalists to stop their reporting.

Elections in Colombia: Return of Uribism and Uncertainty of the Peace Process

The 2018 Presidential elections in Colombia show several
particularities in comparison with past elections. For the
first time, a dispute between economic and political
models was not as strong as usual because, for the first
time in Colombia’s history, a leftist candidate went to the
second round and became a feasible alternative. In
addition, for the first time in 50 years the presidential poll
was free of the threat of the Revolutionary Armed Forces
of Colombia (FARC in Spanish), so the candidates’
proposals went beyond the fight against terrorism.
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Colombia, where the vote is not compulsory, has one of
the highest abstention levels of the world, traditionally
above 50% in the last 20 years, the two exceptions were
the elections of 1998 and 2018, when more than half of
the electoral registration participated. In the 2014
elections, the abstention levels were 59.35% and 52.03%
in the first and in the second round, respectively. In the
2018 elections, abstention levels decreased to 46.62% in
the first round and 46.96% in the second round. However,
in the second round, there was no significant increase in
the levels of electoral participation, unlike in the previous
elections four years ago. The blank vote grew from 1.76%
in the first round to 4.20% in the second round but is still
lower than in the past elections (5.98% and 4.02% in the
first and the second rounds, respectively).
This article analyses the 2018 presidential elections in
Colombia, the main expected tensions in Duque’s
government and the future of the peace process.

The Return of the Right vs. the Emergence of Alternative
Options

In the first round, the rightist candidate Iván Duque
received 39.14% of the votes, the leftist Gustavo Petro
25.08%, the candidate for the center Sergio Fajardo
23.73% and the other two candidates, obtained less than
10%. In this way, Duque and Petro went to the second
round, and Fajardo, with a very small difference of votes
in relation to Petro, came out of the election contest, but
the votes he received demonstrated the force of a center
option and their anti-political and anti-polarization
speech.
On one side, there was Gustavo Petro who was a
member of the M-19 guerrilla in his youth. The 19th of
April Movement (M-19 in Spanish) aimed to open up
democracy in Colombia. Initially, the guerrilla had a failed
attempt of armed revolutionary struggle, but thereafter
managed a reincorporation into civil society and political
life. This fact, together with the past affinity of Petro with
Hugo Chávez, was used by his detractors to justify the
possibility that Colombia might become a “second
Venezuela”, just like Uribism’s argument.
In the senate, Gustavo Petro exposed the Parapolitics
scandal, accusing congressmen and other politicians who
were followers of Uribe’s government of mingling with
paramilitary groups. Petro accused even the then
president Alvaro Uribe of paramilitary ties. In 2010, Petro
was one of the presidential candidates, obtaining fourth
place in the total votes. Moreover, Petro was Mayor of
Bogotá between 2012 and 2015 but was removed from
his seat for four months because of disciplinary
investigations related to problems in the implementation
of the waste collection system in the city. Petro has
more progressive proposals in issues like environment
protection, LGBT rights and social policies, also he has
defended the peace process, so the continuity of the
peace agreements was not contested.
On the other hand, there was the lawyer Iván Duque of
the Democratic Center, Uribe’s party.
It should be recalled that Colombia’s political reality in
the 21st century must be understood from the end of
bipartisanship and the consolidation of Uribism like a
political trend but also for the emergence of other
alternative political forces from the left and the center
sectors. By this way, Álvaro Uribe Vélez, who was
president between 2002 and 2010, succeeded in
consolidating a political force founded on conservative
ideas and economic liberalism, and the policy of
Democratic security, based on the government’s struggle
against illegal armed groups, like the guerrillas. For that
reason, and a broad support from military sectors,
entrepreneurs, and a large proportion of the population,
he is considered the most powerful politician in
Colombia.
Juan Manuel Santos, Colombian president between
2010-2018, was the former Defense Minister in Uribe’s
administration and was supported by the ex-president in
the 2010 elections, but when Santos began the peace
process with the FARC, Uribe moved to the opposition. In
2013, Uribe founded the Democratic Center party, with
which he was elected senator in 2014 and re-elected in
the 2018 parliamentary elections. Ivan Duque, a little-
known political figure into Uribism, was also a senator for
that period.
Despite the fact that the victory of Santos in 2014 took
power away from Uribism, Uribe, as senator and the main
opponent of Santos and his party, managed to gain the
second largest vote in the parliamentary elections of that
year and in the 2018 elections. The Democratic Center
was the party which received the most votes and Uribe
the senator with the highest number of votes. The power
of Uribism and its opposition to the FARC was also
reinforced in the plebiscite of 2016, the consultation to
ratify the final agreement on the termination of the
Colombian conflict between the government and the
FARC guerillas. The NO option, which’s campaign was led
by Uribism, was the winner by a short difference to the
YES (0,43%) in a controversial campaign, whereby
Uribism used lies and fear as a strategy. The opposition
to the FARC’s party was evidenced in legislative
elections, when no FARC´s candidates were elected.
In that sense, Uribe was considered an obstacle to peace
in Colombia . The opposition alleged impunity in the
peace process, especially about the mechanism of
Transitional justice, the Special Jurisdiction for Peace
(JEP in Spanish).
In the legislative elections, on March 11, 2018, the right
coalition did a query. Duque won with a significant
number of votes. At the time, the Democratic Center was
the most voted party and had more senators.
In this respect, Uribism recovered strength with the
plebiscite and the legislative elections. It went from being
a minority force against the peace to achieving important
support around Duque. Accordingly, after the first-round,
many parties joined the right-wing candidate, including
the leader of the liberal party, the former president César
Gaviria, paradoxically the head of the YES campaign of
the plebiscite in 2016 and a strong critic of the Uribe’s
position about the peace process. The partisan support
became an important weapon in favor of Duque.
Duque is Ivan Duque Escobar’s son, who was Antioquia’s
governor, Minister of Mines and Development, and
National Civil Registrar. Duque worked at the Inter-
American Development Bank and was a senator between
2014 and 2018 with a low profile within the Democratic
Center, consequently he was an unknown figure in
Colombian politics until a couple of years ago. Duque has
been criticized by the opposition because of his lack of
experience in public administration in comparison to the
other four candidates in the first-round. For this reason,
the opposition calls him “Uribe’s puppet” since he
achieved the candidacy and went to the second round
because of the fact of being chosen by Uribe.
Duque has been introduced as a young candidate able to
address the renovation in the Colombian politics. But he
represents the return of “Uribism” to power and the
opportunity to modify the peace agreement signed
between the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia
(FARC in Spanish) and the government of Juan Manuel
Santos. During the election campaign, Duque has shown
conservative positions on themes such as abortion and
equal marriage, the defense of the mining activity, and
did few mentions about education policies in comparison
to Petro and Fajardo.
Contrary to the broad support of the right, center and left
parties were divided between supporting Petro or voting
blank. Fajardo and De la Calle decided to vote blank
despite some approximations. It was not possible to
make a coalition among three candidates, unlike the right
that brought together the traditional political class, such
as former Presidents Gaviria, Pastrana and, obviously,
Uribe. It buried the possibility of a direct support to Petro
and crystallized the division among alternative sectors
and its voters.
Given Duque’s refusal to participate in electoral debates
in the second round with Petro, there was not a chance
to know better Duque’s arguments. In addition, while
Petro was questioned by journalists about his
administration as Mayor of Bogotá, a part of the
Colombian mass media demonstrated some sympathy
with Duque.

Tensions and Worries about Duque’s Victory

In the second round, Duque obtained 53.98% and Petro
41.81%, which made him the most voted president of the
Colombian history and the youngest president of the
contemporary history.
After Duque’s victory, there are two key questions: what
will the role of the “Eternal President”, as Duque called
Uribe in a political meeting in Medellín in March 2018, be
in the new government? And what will be the future of
the peace process in the country?
On one side, it is important to remember that Colombia’s
Supreme Court is investigating Uribe over three
massacres and one homicide. There have been several
accusations linking the former president to paramilitary
groups, and his involvement in the massacres and
attempts to silence witnesses. However, on several
occasions during the election campaign, Duque came out
in Uribe’s defense when he was asked whether, in case
of becoming president, he would respect the
investigations against the former president. Nevertheless,
Uribe has also been accused of alleged links with drug
trafficking, for instance, declassified US cables link Uribe
to Colombian drug cartels when he was Antioquia’s
governor . As a result, there are concerns of Uribism
using its return to power to hinder progress in criminal
investigations against Uribe.
Unless Duque achieves an autonomous government,
direct influence of Uribe is expected in domestic and
foreign policy.
In his victory speech, Duque had a conciliatory tone and
raised several issues about the fight against corruption,
poverty reduction, health care reform, environmental
care, security, and many others. Duque has had a more
moderate speech, criticizing the polarization in the
country between the right and the left and friends and
enemies of peace. Nevertheless, it should be
remembered that Uribe’s position has been radical on
topics like the fight against armed groups and the peace
process. As well, it seems contradictory that Duque has
prioritized the fight against corruption in his speech when
several political parties that supported his candidature are
involved in disciplinary and judicial investigations for
corruption, relationship with armed groups, and other
crimes. Likewise, Duque has defended Uribe’s
government officials who are being prosecuted or
investigated by the justice authorities, for example the
former Minister of Agriculture, Andrés Felipe Arias.
Regarding foreign policy, it is not clear the orientation of
Duque’s administration, but a return of a foreign policy
aligned to the United States is possible, as happened
during Uribe’s administration. For instance, Duque opened
the possibility of relocation of the Colombian Embassy in
Israel to Jerusalem following Trump’s decision. Equally, it
is expected a harder position about the Venezuelan
government, being the growing migration of Venezuelan
people one of the most important issues that the new
government must deal with. In fact, the Venezuelan crisis
and its external consequences, has impacted Colombian
domestic policy and even the elections results, for
instance with the argument that Colombia could become
another Venezuela if the left came to power.
Duque, unlike Petro, will have better governability because
besides the parliamentary caucus of the Democratic
Center, there is the added political support of other
parties obtained after the first round. Nevertheless, the
elected President will probably have the opposition of the
parties of the center and the left, who were strengthened
in this election, led by Petro, who will be senator.
Similarly, an active opposition is expected, specially by
human rights defenders, environmentalists, and some
society sectors like social leaders, victims of the conflict,
teachers, public university students, among others.

The Peace Process: From Hope to Incertitude

The peace agreement, as a result of the negotiation
between the Colombian government and the FARC since
2012, include strategies for rural development, political
participation of the FARC’s members, solution to the
problem of illicit drugs and reparation for victims (with
the creation of the Truth Commission, search unit for
missing people, Special Jurisdiction for Peace and
mechanisms of sanctions and punishments, reparations,
and non-repetition). Also, the agreement is about the end
of the bilateral conflict and achieve a definite ceasefire,
the creation of a Monitoring and Verification Mechanism,
the transitory rural settlement normalization zones and
encampments, decommissioning, reincorporation of the
FARC with transformation into a political party and
security guarantees for FARC’s members.
Although the peace agreement’s implementation is facing
different difficulties, the military option has had high
human and social costs, as has been noted during Uribe’s
government. Indeed, statistics show that the peace
agreement has reduced violent events in Colombia. The
number of injuries, weapons, deaths, displacements,
threats, and mines have since declined considerably .
However, the killings of FARC’s former members, the
systematic murder of social leaders – despite that the
Santos government does not recognize the severity of
this problem – the violent actions of dissident groups, are
extremely worrying. Likewise, the implementation of the
agreement has problems like those associated with
resources management and compliance with some
points of the peace agreements. For that reason, many
people are concerned about the future of the peace
process in Colombia and the possible return of the
military option.
There is no doubt that some sectors of the Democratic
Center Party want to destroy the peace agreement. In any
case, it is probable that the new president, who has the
majority in Congress, will modify some points of the
agreement. Even though, a guarantee of the continuity of
the peace process is that the agreement is protected by
the Constitutional Court, it is important to remember that
in Uribe’s first administration the Constitution was
modified so he could be reelected.
Duque said that the peace agreement’s implementation
has different problems and, in his victory speech,
asserted that he will not destroy the agreements with the
FARC guerrilla, but that he will modify it in order to
ensure security and justice in the country.
For this reason, there might be possible modifications of
the precepts in the Constitution that introduced the
peace agreements and their regulation laws that might
lead to the weakening of the process. The FARC leaders,
who clarified that they will not return to war, asked the
new president to continue the implementation of the
agreement and proposed a meeting with Duque.
But the continuation of negotiations between the
government and the National Liberation Army (ELN in
Spanish), which has gone through several ups and downs,
generates special concern. The dialogues between
Colombian government and ELN rebels was initiated in
Quito in February of 2017 and were finished the fifth
round of the Roundtable of Dialogues for Peace in
Havana in June of 2018 without achieving the bilateral
ceasefire. The negotiation includes discussions about
social participation, democracy, victims, transformations
for the peace, peace security, surrendering of arms and
guarantees for the political action.
About the ELN negotiations, Duque has said that he
disagrees with the negotiations with the ELN guerrilla of a
bilateral ceasefire, but he announced that even with the
ELN ceasefire he will not continue with the negotiations
at the Havana if the guerrilla does not fulfil new
conditions like territorial concentration and suspension of
all “criminal activities”, such as extortion. In turn, ELN
members have asked to continue with the negotiations .
In any case, if Duque insists in penalizing the guerrilla
members, it will be very difficult to continue this peace
process.
In conclusion, with the right recovering strength, and
Uribe being once more one of the most powerful
politicians of the country, with a disciple in the
presidency and the majorities of his party in the
Congress, and the support of a big percentage of the
Colombian society governability is guaranteed, but the
power will be concentrated. Also, it is uncertain whether
Duque will be able to govern without the direct influence
of Uribe. On the other hand, opposition from advocates
of the peace agreements is expected if Duque decides to
modify essential parts of the agreement and there are
serious concerns about the return of Uribe’s policies and
impunity in Uribe’s investigations in cases such as of
extrajudicial executions during his government.

Spain passes delayed budget as new government looks to 2019

From Madrid Spain Spain’s parliament on
Thursday passed its long-delayed 2018 budget
on Thursday, clearing the way for the
minority Socialist government to start work
on next year’s accounts.
Approval of the budget, originally submitted
by the previous conservative administration,
was postponed last year after its efforts to
find allies to support the bill in parliament
were undermined by a unilateral
independence declaration in the northeastern
region of Catalonia.
The budget, the last one drafted by the
conservatives after six years in office, aims to
bring the public deficit below the European
Union ceiling of 3 percent of economic output
for the first time since before the 2008
economic crisis.
The EU set Spain a target of 2.2 percent for
this year, but concessions to an austerity-
weary population means the fiscal shortfall
will be closer to 2.7 percent, according to
Bank of Spain forecasts.
Work on the 2019 budget will begin almost
immediately, with the Socialists, who hold
just 84 seats in the 350-seat parliament,
proposing hikes in social security
contributions to help cover rises in pensions
and civil servants’ pay.
Reporting by Paul Day; Editing by Julien Toyer

and John Stonestreet

Spanish FM reaffirms commitment to deepening strategic partnership with Morocco

RABAT, June 28 (Xinhua) -- Visiting Spanish
Foreign Minister Josep Borrell reiterated here
on Thursday his country's commitment to
deepen and further diversify the strategic
partnership with Morocco.


International partnership with Spain and Morocco it we bust our economy says spain foreign minister  "Morocco and Spain are not only friendly and
neighboring countries, but also strategic
partners that share the same ambition to
reinforce this relation, based on respect,
dialogue and mutual trust," Borrell said at a
joint press conference after talks with his
Moroccan counterpart Nasser Bourita.
The newly-appointed foreign minister said the
two sides shared convergent views on a
number of issues of common interest.
He mentioned the bilateral cooperation in
areas such as the migratory flow and the fight
against terrorism.
Borrell also said Spain is now Morocco's top
trading partner, as the bilateral trade doubled
in the last six years.
For his part, Bourita hailed the bilateral
relations based on a constructive historical
and geographical neighborhood and a
promising economic partnership.
Bourita also highlighted a better and more
sincere political dialogue between the two
sides that covers all bilateral, regional and
international issues.
He said that he agreed with his Spanish
counterpart to continue working to further
enrich this partnership and prepare for the
upcoming events, including the second
session of the High Joint Committee.
He commended Spain's "constructive and
decisive" role in strengthening the relations
between Morocco and the European Union,
noting the crucial importance of cementing
these ties "not only for Morocco, but also for

the Mediterranean region and North Africa."

Spanish PM Sánchez signals softer approach to Catalonia

Jailed officials should be ‘close to their families,’
new premier says.

New Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez
signaled Sunday his government would take a
less confrontational stance toward Catalan
separatists, while remaining opposed to
independence for the region.
In an interview with El País published Sunday,
Sánchez said he supported moving imprisoned
former Catalan government officials to Catalonia.
He also said he will reopen a bilateral
commission to resolve governance disputes
between the central government and Catalonia.
“The times in which the government aggravated
the problems with Catalonia has ended,” Sánchez
told the newspaper
Sánchez, the Socialist leader, became prime
minister earlier this month after his predecessor
Mariano Rajoy lost a no-confidence vote over
corruption allegations within his conservative
Popular Party. Rajoy took a hard line against
Catalan separatists, refusing offers to meet their
leaders as a crisis over the region’s status
escalated.
Sánchez said both sides need to rebuild trust
after last year, when the pro-independence
Catalan regional government held an illegal
independence referendum, which Madrid used
harsh tactics to suppress.
Sánchez said he supported moving former
Catalan government officials including ex-Vice
President Oriol Junqueras to Catalonia from their
current prison in Madrid. “The reasonable thing
is that the prisoners … are close to their families
and their lawyers. It is not a matter of tactics,”
Sánchez said.
The prime minister also said the moribund
bilateral commission between Madrid and the
Catalan government could be revived to solve a
range of disputes, although it could not be used
to further moves toward independence.
“There are some [issues] that are by far
unconstitutional, such as those linked to
[independence]. But there are others that have to
do with energy poverty and other social issues

that can be perfectly addressed,” Sánchez said.

Catalonia to ask Spanish PM to agree to another independence referendum

The Spanish prime minister and the Catalan
president will meet in Madrid on July 9

Indipendent prosess according to news from the Spain Catalonia seek freedom from the Spain government in Madrid
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez said the
debate about the future of Catalonia will likely
outlast his administration and will require “a lot
of dedication, generosity and time.”
In a joint interview with the Guardian , Le Monde
and the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, the
prime minister reiterated previous comments
that his immediate focus was on reducing
tension following last year’s illegal independence
referendum held by the pro-independence
Catalan regional government, which Madrid used
harsh tactics to suppress.
Catalan President Quim Torra told reporters in
Washington on Wednesday his “first request”
to Sánchez will be for the prime minister to
agree an independence referendum for the
autonomous region. The leaders will meet in
Madrid on July 9.
“At last someone sits at our table,” Torra said,
adding that Catalonia’s “right to self-
determination” would be the dominant theme of
their discussions. “If we don’t want to tackle the
issue, these meetings don’t make much sense.”
The Catalan president’s five-day visit to
Washington is part of his efforts to promote
Catalonia’s independence cause internationally.
But Sánchez has repeatedly said that self-
determination is not the way froward for
Catalonia as it would only divide the region
further.
“There’s one bloc — which isn’t a majority —
that backs pro-independence parties,” Sánchez
said, according to the Guardian. “I think that
what the majority of Catalan society wants is a
relationship between its distinct region and the
rest of the country.”
The prime minister said Catalan leaders should
respect the country’s unity and its laws but
indicated he was open to revising the powers of
Spain’s central and regional governments “once
temperatures had cooled [down].”
Speaking ahead of a European Council summit in
Brussels, Sánchez also said that Europe needed
“a shared response to a shared challenge,”
referring to the migration crisis which has
divided EU leaders. Earlier this month, Sánchez
ordered Spain to “offer a safe port to the people
on board” a rescue ship which had been
stranded in the Mediterranean for several days
with more than 600 people on board after both
Italy and Malta refused to let the vessel dock in
their ports.

Tough female judge rejects Nyame’s bail application

A bail application made by convicted former Governor
of Taraba state, Jolly Nyame, has been rejected by a
Federal High Court sitting in Abuja.

The former governor had made the post-
conviction bail application to the court, on the
basis of ill-health; but the application was
rejected by the trial judge, Justice Adebukola
Banjoko, Daily Trust reports.

According to what NAIJ.com gathers that Banjoko ruled that Nyame
had not placed anything before the court to
prove that his health situation could not be

handled by the prisons authority.
Recall that  previously reported that a
high court of the Federal Capital Territory
sentenced ex Governor Jolly Nyame to 14 years

in prison without an option of fine.

Obasanjo visits Plateau, recalls what happened during his administration

Chief Olusegun Obasanjo paid a condolence visit to
Plateau state over he recent killings in some
communities
- He said the government needed to punish the
perpetrators
- According to him, his administration had similar
problems

According to former president chief OLUSEGUN OBASANJO he tolk about how government can stop this killing 
Former president, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, has
expressed his condolence over the renewed
killing in Jos, saying the government must find
the root cause of the problem in order to provide
solution.
Vanguard reports that the former president
spoke when he visited the state on Wednesday,
June 27.
Obasanjo called on the government to deal with
the perpetrators so the people will get reprieve.
He noted that similar problem occurred during
his administration but said it was not of this

magnitude.
He said: “I’m here to express my condolences, what
happened is very sad that in this day and age this type of
barbaric act is taking place in our country. I have suggested
and I will say it again that we should find out the root
cause of this problem and deal with it
“There must be remote and immediate cause, if we deal
with it, we are not going to be multiplying condolence visits.
I believe that any human problem has human solution, I do
hope and plead with government at the federal level, those
of you in States and even local government level to join
hands even at the community level to find the causes and
deal with them permanently.
“We offer our condolences to the bereaved families, all we
can say is that God knows the best. Even in my time, we
had problems but not in this magnitude, we thought we
were dealing with them as at that time but the earlier we
deal with it, the better. I believe we can find solution, we
must find solution."
Governor Simon Lalong who is the governor of
Plateau appreciated the former president for his

visit.
He said: “Insecurity is not new to me, we thought we
could handle it. When we came in, we quickly put up a
team including Berom and Fulani. They came out with a
roadmap to proffer solutions, we adopted the
recommendations and have implemented some and was in
the process of implementing the remaining ones. We have
done our best, we have learnt our lessons, we will be very
firm.”
Meanwhile, the president of the Senate, Bukola
Saraki, has given insights into what he discussed
with President Muhammadu Buhari over the
violence in Plateau state.
Saraki and the speaker of the House of
Representatives met with Buhari on Wednesday,
June 27, at his official residence before the
president went to attend the meeting of the
Federal Executive Council (FEC).
While speaking with journalists after they
emerged from the meeting, Saraki said they
commiserated with the president and then got a
briefing from him. “ Part of the briefing is that he
explained how steps are being taken to forestall re-
occurrence and restore sanity because this is a great

concern to him and to us also,” Saraki said.

How VAR rules denied Nigeria second penalty against Argentina after Rojo's hand ball

Argentina leave it late to pip Nigeria and Iceland for
the second knock out spot in Group D
- Argentina advanced to the round of 16, and have a
mouth-watering tie with France, after a fittingly
dramatic conclusion to their chaotic Group D
campaign
Lionel Messi’s 14th minute goal was cancelled
out by a Victor Moses penalty early in the second
half, before Marcos Rojo handed Argentina the
win with the two minutes remaining on the

clock.
But there was a moment of drama in the game,
with the biggest talking point being a penalty
appeal which the referee waved away despite the
ball appearing to hit the hand of Argentina
defender Marcos Rojo.
An attempted header from the Manchester
United rear-guard ended up hitting his hand off
his shoulder, sparking wild protests from Nigeria
players.
However, Turkish referee Cuneyt Cakir would
have none of that, despite consulting the VAR.
After the game, Nigeria captain Mikel Obi
described the situation as a “clear penalty”, but

it has been explained why it was not given.
According to the VAR rules, once the ball comes
off another part of the body before hitting the
player’s hand, it is no longer a penalty.
The rules state: “ If the ball hits the hand, off another
part of the body first, then it will not be considered a

voluntary hand ball. ”

NDLEA raises alarm over Adamawa youths' use of urine, dry plantain leaves, burnt tyres to get high

Youths in Adamawa have been reported by the
National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) to
have turned to human urine, dry plantain leaves and
burnt tyres as substances for intoxication
- The NDLEA said that because suspects involved in
the act use motorcycles to sell the substaces, arresting
them is very difficult
- Yakubu Kibo, the command of the agency in the state
called for joint effort of the public to curb the crime

According to the news from the (NDLEA)

The National Drug Law Enforcement Agency
(NDLEA) command in Adamawa has cried out
over some youths in the state who now use
human urine for intoxication.
NDLEA's commander in Katsina state, Maryam
Sani, had said that suspected drug dealers no
longer stay in the shops, but use their
motorcycles and cars to sell drug, making it
difficult for the command to arrest them,
Vanguard reports.

Moreover, the Adamawa state commander of the
agency, Yakubu Kibo, speaking in Yola, said
other new items abused include dry pawpaw
leaves, dry plantain leaves, burnt tyres, as well
as a solution made from candies and beverages.
Kibo said: “It is important for parents to know and pay
attention to the recently discovered substances of abuse like
dry paw paw leaves, tom tom in lacasera drink, 10 days old
human urine, methylated, spirit in coke drink, dry plantain
leaves, burnt tyres among others.”
Kibo appealed for joint effort to create a drug
free society. He said: “For the drug war to be
successful, the supply and demand reduction must go hand
in hand.
“To that effect, since January, the Adamawa Command has
seized 2,742.358 kg of assorted illicit drug.” Katsina state
commander, Maryam Sani, raising alarm over
new method devised by suspects to outwit the
agency, remarked: "The suspects have gone mobile, with
the sellers not stationed in a place or shop.
“They now use their motorcycles and cars to sell the illicit
drug which now make it difficult to apprehend them. But we
would not relent as they are devising other means we would
also be coming up with strategies to ensure that the menace
is reduced to the barest minimum.”


Garba Ahmadu, the NDLEA commander, Murtala
Muhammed Airport command, gave the warning
at an event to mark the "UN International Day
against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking” in
Lagos.
Ahmadu said that the quantity of Tramadol
coming into the country was of high volume
because traffickers were bringing a lot of it,
apart from other pills such as Methamphetamine
and Ephedrine.

Man pays N2.1 million bride price then finds out his bae is already taken

A man paid N2.1 million for a woman who played
him, and now her family won't give the money back
- His story led to another man sharing a similar
incident, where he paid N1. 8 million for a woman
who cheated on him
- Their stories led to social media users thinking
fathers were using their daughters to get rich

According to a post on Facebook man pay 1.8million 
A man paid N2.1 miilion for a woman he loved in
then he found out she was busy with someone
else. Now, her family won't give his money back.
Metro FM posted the man's story on their
Facebook page. In 2016, an unidentified man
paid a lot of money to marry the woman of his
dreams, but after he found out he was not the
only man in her life, he asked for his N2.1
million back.
However, her family has since refused to pay

back the lobola he paid for their daughter.
I paid N2.1 million for the woman I loved back home in
KZN in 2016 but found out that she’s busy with someone
else. All I want is my bride price money back ", he said.
Bride-price
Man pays N2.1 million bride price. Photo credit: MetroFM/
Facebook
And, he is apparently not the only man who got
swindled out of a lot of money. A Facebook user
named Nathan Simonson had a similar incident.
However, Simonson does not care about getting
his money back.
"I paid N1.8 million. Bought a house for her. SHE cheated
on me and i don't want anything to do with her ever again.
I don't want my money back....no one forced anyone to pay
bride price #fellas if you paid pride price and ended up not
making her your wife, let it go. forget the money and move
on.act as if you bought her a gift.(she'll never forget
you).she might even come back to you to ask for your

forgiveness.", he said.
Social media users gave their opinions on the
two men's stories, with many feeling families
should not hide behind culture- they should give
back the men's money.
George Ash wrote, " People need to stop using culture
to cover bullish, he must get his money back. If it was a
women, most of y'all would recommend her to leave."
Man pays R80 000 lobola then finds out his bae is already
Facebook users weigh in on the man's issue: Photo credit:

MetroFM/Facebook

Sudanese bride's death sentence for killing her husband gets changed to 5 years in jail

A 19-year-old girl who was sentenced to death for
killing her 35-year-old husband receives overturned
sentence
- The young lady has been given five years jail term
after Amnesty International came to her rescue
- Young Hussein who married her husband at 16 had
killed him after he attempted to rape her

According to the post on the amnesty international account on tweeter
A 19-year-old Sudanese girl identified as Noura
Hussein who killed her husband for attempting
to rape get five years jail sentence. The young
lady was originally given a death sentence before
Amnesty International intervened.
The young lady had been married off to her
husband at 16 by her father. It was gathered that
her husband had raped her the previous day
with the help of his brothers who held her down.
He reportedly tried to do the same the next day
when she grabbed a knife from the kitchen and
stabbed him with it. Hussein's death sentence
had been overturned after her case sparked

international outrage.



Amnesty International led the campaign for the
young lady's justice. Her campaign was tagged
'Justice For Noura'.
Seif Magango, the Amnesty's regional deputy
director, expressed that she was a victim of an
attack and she acted in self defense. Magango
said: "She was the victim of a 'brutal attack' by her
husband and acted in self defense."
Magango further stated that the country needs to
reform her laws on child marriages. "The Sudanese
authorities must take this opportunity to start reforming
the laws around child marriage, forced marriage and
marital rape, so that victims are not the ones who are
penalised."
Hussein was ordered to pay 337,500 Sudanese
pounds (N4,380,000).
According to DailyMail, the young lady was
married off against her wish to Abdulrahman
Hammad and the marriage ceremony involved a
signing of contract between her father and her
husband.
She was forced to move into her husband's home
after completing secondary school in April 2017.
It was gathered that her husband invited two of
his brothers and a male cousin to help him rape
her after she refused to consumate the marriage.
Hussein was said to have been handed over to
the police by her father after she fled the scene
and went back home. She was sentenced to death
in July 2017, and her sentenced was overturned
this June.

Libya demands Spain return smuggled antiquities

According to International newsnow 
Libya's UN-
backed deputy Prime Minister Ahmed Maiteeg
on Sunday demanded Spain hand over
smuggled Libyan antiquities recently seized by

Madrid.

Libya want there peaple back from Spain in Madrid



Maiteeg made his remarks during a meeting
with Spanish Ambassador to Libya Francisco
de Miguel in the capital Tripoli, according to a
statement by the prime minister's media and
communication department.
The Spanish ambassador expressed his
country's readiness to cooperate with Libya on
the return of the smuggled items.
Meanwhile, Maiteeg confirmed that the Libyan
embassy in Madrid has presented a
Memorandum of Understanding regarding
judicial cooperation and protection of Libyan
cultural heritage.
He also expressed hope for the return of
Spanish companies to Libya, especially in the
field of water desalination.
The Libyan Archaeological Authority said in
March that smuggled Libyan antiquities of the
Greek era would soon be restored after the
negotiation with the Spanish authorities.
According to the authority chief Mohamed
Faraj, there are nearly 25 smuggled pieces
held in Spain.
In 2017, the Libyan Ministry of Foreign Affairs
revealed it was following up 11 antiquities
smuggled to Spain, the sale of which was

stopped by the Spanish authorities.

Catalan Chief to Ask Spain for Secession Vote

According to Association press

(The president of the Catalonia regional
government, Quim Torra, speaks during an
interview with the Associated Press at the Palau
de la Generalitat in Barcelona, Spain, June 25,
2018,.)


From Barcelona SpainCatalonia's new
separatist chief plans to deliver one message to
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez in their
highly-anticipated meeting next month: an
authorized ballot over Catalan secession from
Spain is the only solution to the country's worst
political crisis in decades.
"We will go to the meeting with the Spanish
Prime Minister ready to discuss the major
issue... which is the right to self-determination
for Catalonia,'' Catalonia's regional president
Quim Torra told The Associated Press in an
interview on Monday. "We won't budge from it."
Sanchez, who like Torra has come to power in
recent weeks, invited Torra to a meeting in
Madrid on July 9.
It will be the first meeting between the heads of
Spain's central and Catalonia's regional
governments since Torra's predecessor Carles
Puigdemont defied Spanish authorities and held
an illegal referendum before making an
ineffective declaration of independence last
October. The moves won no support
internationally and led to a crackdown by Spain,
which took over running regional affairs until
earlier this month.
Sanchez's predecessor, former Prime Minister
Mariano Rajoy, had repeatedly rejected requests
to authorize a formal Catalan referendum on
independence.
Torra said that he welcomed the new Spanish
government's willingness to talk, but he added:
"Until we can vote, and vote in a referendum
that is legal, binding and has been recognized by
both parties as valid, then it is possible that we
will never find a solution."
Polls and recent elections show that the 7.5
million residents of the wealthy region are
roughly split down the middle over the question
of independence. When asked about the millions
of Catalans who do not want to put up a border
and cease being Spanish, Torra said that "all of
us form part of the same community."
Torra, 55, is a fervent Catalan nationalist who
has had to apologize for his anti-Spanish views
expressed in articles and social media posts that
his critics have called xenophobic. He was hand-
picked by Puigdemont in May to carry on
leading the independence cause while
Puigdemont fights extradition back to Spain from
Germany.
Sanchez, the head of Spain's Socialists, took
power at the beginning of this month by ousting
Rajoy in a no-confidence vote after a major
court ruling into a corruption case involving
Rajoy's conservative party.
Sanchez's government has distanced itself from
Rajoy's hard-line approach by proposing to
amend the Spanish Constitution to create what it
calls a "federal model" for Spain that would
apparently increase the already significant
degree of self-governance enjoyed by the
regions. Catalonia, for example, has a large
amount of control over education — which is
mainly in the Catalan language — and runs its
own police, hospitals and prisons.
Torra, however, said that the only reworking of
the Constitution that would satisfy Catalonia's
secessionists would be one that includes the
right to vote on founding a new European state
for the northeastern corner of the Iberian
Peninsula.
"Nobody should expect [.] that we will
renounce'' aspirations on independence, Torra
said. "Until we resolve the question of self-
determination it is very difficult for the situation
in Catalonia to change."
Before his meeting with Sanchez, Torra will visit
Washington, D.C. this week to attend an event at
the Smithsonian "Folklife Festival," which this
year will feature Catalan traditional culture.
Torra said he will use the trip to the United
States to try to drum up support for the
separatist cause and the release of nine high-
profile Catalan separatist who are in jail while
they await trial for their role in last year's failed
breakaway attempt.
"We are going to make use of every chance we
have [in Washington] to send this message,"
Torra said.
The separatists were jailed while Puigdemont
and other collaborators fled the country to avoid
summons by a Spanish judge. Those leaders who
remained in Spain were imprisoned due to the
flight risk they posed and the threat of them
continuing to push for secession.
In another move that many hope marks a
thawing of relations between Madrid and
Barcelona, Torra met with Pablo Iglesias, the
leader of Spain's far-left Podemos party, on
Monday. Torra said he would also meet with
Alberto Garzon, the leader of Spain's United
Left, next week, ahead of his sit-down with
Sanchez.

Major EU states will block UK access to single market, warns Spain

Influential EU states such as Germany, France and
Spain will block any attempt by the UK to remain
within the single market for goods without freedom
of movement, the Spanish foreign minister has said.

Josep Borrell said that some smaller EU states might privately
be willing to negotiate reform of the bloc’s free movement
rules in order to keep easy access to UK products.
But he told The Guardian: “They will not win the battle. They
have not enough power. Germany will say no, France will say
no, Spain will say no.”
Mr Borrell said that Berlin and Paris were “angry” with Britain
over Brexit, which he described as a “pain in the ass” which
was distracting energy from issues such as immigration and
eurozone reform.
This week’s summit of the European Council will focus on
migration, security and the economy on Thursday, though
leaders of the remaining 27 EU countries will discuss Brexit in

Theresa May’s absence 
               
 (When we should be discussing eurozone
and immigration, we are discussing what
to do with someone who wants to leave

Josep Borrell, Spanish foreign minister)
Asked how he would characterise the progress of Brexit talks
since the last summit in March, European Union spokesman
Margaritis Schinas told a Brussels press conference: “Average,
with a potential of improvement.”
The comment came as Mrs May celebrated Royal Assent for
her flagship EU Withdrawal Bill, telling Cabinet it was “a major
building block for the UK’s bright future outside the EU”.
Reports suggest that plans for a future trading relationship
expected to be outlined by the Prime Minister in next month’s
Brexit white paper could include proposals for regulatory
alignment on goods, to preserve continental markets for UK
producers without tying Britain to accepting foreign workers.
The expected move comes as major companies including
BMW and Airbus warn of the risk of activities being
transferred to the EU if Britain leaves the customs union in a
“hard Brexit”.
And London Mayor Sadiq Khan told MPs that major job losses
can be expected in the capital if the Government allows
service industries to “fall off a cliff edge” after Brexit.
Speaking ahead of a meeting of the EU’s General Affairs
Council in Luxembourg, Mr Borrell told The Guardian: “There
are many European countries who would support the (UK)
idea. Because they are against free movement of people. But
not the big, powerful ones.
“Spain will not accept. I don’t think France or Germany will
accept that.
“They are quite angry with the United Kingdom. Because of all
this mess, all the trouble created, all this time lost on
negotiations. When we should be discussing eurozone and
immigration, we are discussing what to do with someone who
wants to leave. It is really a very bad allocation of intelligence,
resources and money.”
Mr Borrell dismissed the idea of a hard border in Ireland as
“impossible” and said the UK Government’s “maximum
facilitation” proposal to use technology to avoid the need for
customs checks would not work, leaving only the options of
keeping Northern Ireland or the whole of the UK in the
customs union.
Speaking to the House of Commons Public Administration
and Constitutional Affairs Committee, Mr Khan said Mrs May
had her “priorities all wrong” in Brexit negotiations and should
give greater emphasis to sectors such as financial services,
accountancy and the legal profession.
City of London warnings of 10,000 job losses in a cliff-edge
Brexit were “a conservative estimate”, he told the cross-party
committee.
“I welcome the Government announcing there should be a
backstop agreement in relation to frictionless trade for
goods,” he told MPs. “It needs to extend though to frictionless
trade for services as well.
“We can’t afford that situation where after (a) transition period
we fall off a cliff edge in relation to trades in services.”
Around 92% of London’s economy is made up of the service
sector, the same as Manchester, while it accounts for 91% in
Edinburgh, 83% in Leeds and 82% in Birmingham.
Mr Khan said: “We are already seeing major banks establishing
subsidiaries in other EU countries, or moving part of their
business out of the capital because EU law requires them to
be legally compliant from the day the UK leaves the European
Union.
Sadiq Khan says the PM has her priorities wrong on Brexit


“If the Government does not change its approach and strike a
deal that secures access to the single market for services, this
trend will only continue.
“The result will be fewer jobs, less investment and less
prosperity the length and breadth of the country.”
Mr Khan’s message was echoed by the chairman of the
European Services Forum Noel Clehane, who said: “The
business community requires legal certainty as early as
possible.
“We therefore call on the negotiators to take all necessary
steps to minimise business disruption, to provide clarity as
soon as possible on the withdrawal agreement, and to allow
some flexibility in the management and duration of the
transition period.”
Mr Khan’s intervention came as the Society of Motor
Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT) called for the
Government to end uncertainty over Brexit as it
said investment in the British motor industry has fallen by
nearly a half in a year.
The SMMT said £347 million of investment was earmarked for
new models and facilities in the UK in the first half of this
year, compared with £647.4 million in the same period in
2017.

Podemos meets with Catalan nationalists on behalf of Madrid

From the Spain news pepper

According to the news from Spain
Podemos leader Pablo Iglesias met Catalan regional premier
Quim Torra Monday in an attempt to work out a deal between
the regional Catalan authorities in Barcelona and the new
minority Spanish Socialist Party (PSOE) government in Madrid.
The meeting showed that a key purpose of the installation of
the PSOE, in which Podemos played a leading role, was to try
to put a more “democratic” face on the brutal police
repression last October of the Catalan independence
referendum. Iglesias acted throughout as an emissary of
PSOE Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez.
After nearly a decade of escalating conflict between Madrid
and Barcelona over how to impose European Union (EU)
austerity, violent conflict erupted last year in Catalonia.
Madrid declared the independence referendum illegal. The
right-wing Popular Party (PP) government tried and failed to
crush the referendum, mounting a massive police crackdown
on peaceful voters that left nearly 1,000 people injured. With
declarations of support from the PSOE, the PP arrested
Catalan nationalist leaders and imposed an unelected
government.
After January elections held under this police jackboot led to
Torra’s installation, and after Podemos helped install the
PSOE in power, Iglesias is now trying to smooth over the
conflicts on the basis of accepting Madrid’s anti-democratic
policies in Catalonia. He said, “My will is to help ensure that
there is a climate of understanding between the Spanish
Government and the Catalan political forces.”
Details of the hour and a half discussion in the Catalan
government headquarters emerged after the meeting during
the press conference. A key issue discussed was the jailing of
Catalan nationalist politicians such as Omnium Cultural
president Jordi Cuixart, former Catalan National Assembly
head Jordi Sànchez, former Catalan Vice Premier Oriol
Junqueras and other Catalan regional government ministers.
Iglesias told Torra that Sánchez is willing to transfer them to
Catalan jails. “I know that because Sanchez has said this to
me,” he assured, adding that this would “de-stress” relations
between Catalonia and Spain.
Catalan government spokeswoman Elsa Artadi replied that
“the position of the [Catalan] government is not to negotiate
the transfer of the prisoners nor to improve their situation, but
to free them.”
Podemos did not support freeing the political prisoners,
however. Iglesias only proposed a transfer that would “be a
first step and an improvement of the current situation”, that is,
that they would rot in jail in Catalonia rather than in Spain.
Iglesias added that he would visit the imprisoned leaders,
demagogically claiming that Podemos supports a referendum
on self-determination in Catalonia. Iglesias proceeded to
downplay the significance of the jailings. He claimed that the
conflict between the Catalan and Spanish governments over
self-determination should “in no way prevent dialogue and
exploring democratic means to manage the conflict in
Catalonia.”
Also present in the meeting was the leader of Podemos-
backed Catalonia in Common party, Xavier Domènech. Earlier
this month, Domènech offered to support the Catalan regional
government as it passes an austerity budget. The Catalan
government has already said it would reduce the deficit set at
0.4 percent of the GDP for 2018, at 0.1 percent for 2019, and
at zero for 2020, to comply with Madrid’s commitments to the
EU. This will mean around 688 million euros in social cuts or
tax hikes in the region this year.
During the meeting, the Catalan nationalists hailed Iglesias.
Artadi said, “the role of Podemos in Spanish politics is
important,” as a “much of its [the Spanish government’s]
strength comes from Podemos.” She added that even though
they are not in government, “we should not underestimate the
importance that this party can have for the future”, calling
Podemos a party that “recognizes the situation” in Catalonia.
Iglesias also promised to develop Torra’s ties with Sanchez: “I
have found the regional premier with an absolute disposition
for dialogue, so I will convey this to the President of the
Government.”
Iglesias said they both shared “republican values,” though
Torra is infamous for his anti-worker and anti-Spanish vitriol
when he worked as a journalist, when he praised Miquel and
Josep Badia as the “best examples” of Catalan nationalism.
Both founded fascist para-military squads in the region during
the 1930s to terrorise the working class and gun down
anarchist leaders.
Iglesias is working to prepare talks between Torra and
Sánchez scheduled for July, acting on behalf of Sánchez and
Spanish finance capital. Podemos and the PSOE speak for
factions of the ruling class, in Spain and internationally, who
fear that amid growing strike action by workers in Spain, anger
over the Catalan crisis could prove politically explosive and
needs more careful handling.
In this, they speak for powerful sections of the ruling class.
The president of Santander Bank, one of Spain’s largest
banks, recently called for “rebuilding bridges” between
Barcelona and Madrid who, he said, need to “work together”.
He said Spain should “make all Catalans attracted to Spain
again.”
The anti-secessionist Barcelona business lobby Círculo de
Economía also released a statement calling for the end of
Spain’s “worst crisis since the Constitution was approved in
1978.” In line with the traditional Catalan-nationalist demands,
it called for “greater powers to legislate, manage, collect and
inspect” tax revenues by regional governments, which would
share their “tax bases” with Madrid.
Iglesias’ alignment with the banks and business lobbies
exposes the role of Podemos. At the height of the crisis last
October, it sought to defuse deep-seated opposition among
workers and youth to police-state measures, issuing bankrupt
appeals to Madrid and Barcelona to negotiate with the
Catalan separatists while the PP escalated repression.
At the time, the PSOE backed the PP. In a letter to PSOE
members just after the crackdown, Pedro Sánchez defended
PP repression as “a response comparable to that of any
country” and “the inevitable response to an unprecedented
attempt to break the integrity of the state.”
Now, Podemos is championing a PSOE-Catalan nationalist
settlement that would be a reactionary deal made at the
expense of the workers.
The Catalan nationalist parties, Torra’s Catalan Democratic
Party (PdeCat) and the Republican Left of Catalonia (ERC),
have already signaled that they are open to such a deal. They
accepted the legitimacy of this year’s elections held at
gunpoint by Madrid’s unelected regime in Catalonia. They are
seeking a deal, that could perhaps be passed off as a victory
based on the improvement in the conditions of the political
prisoners, but based on militarism and stepped-up austerity.
The Sánchez government, barely a month old, has signaled
that it will keep the previous PP government’s budget, which
imposes deep cuts to social spending and massive hikes in
military spending. A new austerity budget is in preparation for
the end of this year.
On Sunday, in an interview to daily El País, Sánchez said, “The
days when the Spanish government made the problems with
Catalonia even worse are over. We have to take this one step
at a time and rebuild the trust and loyalty that were broken
during these years of conflict between the governments of
Catalonia and Spain. That is the message I am going to
deliver to Torra when I meet him on July 9. There are many
things that can be done.”
The policy Sánchez is laying out would be a right-wing and
militarist policy, sealed on the basis of police-state repression,
and in which Podemos is fully implicated.