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Trump won’t campaign for Alabama candidate Roy Moore

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MooreImage copyright Getty Images
Image caption Roy Moore denies claims he molested a 14-year-old and tried to rape another teenager

US President Donald Trump does not plan to campaign for a Republican candidate who is embroiled in allegations of child sex abuse, the White House says.

Mr Trump last week defended former Alabama judge Roy Moore, pointing out he “totally denies” the claims.

But White House officials said on Monday the Republican president is not scheduled to hit the trail for Mr Moore ahead of the election on 12 December.

Mr Trump attacked Mr Moore’s Democratic opponent on Sunday.

A number of top Republican senators have called on 70-year-old Mr Moore to step aside following claims he molested or harassed teenage girls as young as 14 while he was in his 30s.

Ten things Roy Moore believes

Media playback is unsupported on your device

Media captionRoy Moore: How Alabamans are defending the accused judge

“Liberal Jones would be BAD!” Mr Trump wrote over the weekend about Doug Jones, who polls show is nearly neck and neck with Mr Moore in the staunchly conservative Deep South state.

White House spokeswoman Lindsay Walters told The Hill, a political newspaper, “there is nothing on his schedule at this time” when asked about the possibility of Mr Trump travelling to Alabama.

Seven women have accused Mr Moore of pursuing sexual relationships with them when they were teenagers and he was a 30-something prosecutor.

One was 14 and alleges he molested her. Another says he tried to rape her.

Two other women who were in their 20s at the time accuse him of making unwanted advances.

Media playback is unsupported on your device

Media captionRoy Moore: ‘Sexual perversion and sodomy sweep this land’

Meanwhile, Mr Trump has reportedly been saying a recording in which he infamously bragged that his fame entitled him to grab women’s vaginas is a fake.

Despite the fact that he immediately apologised for the remarks when the Access Hollywood tape surfaced in October 2016, Mr Trump has recently disputed the veracity of the video, according to the New York Times.

The newspaper reported: “He suggested to a senator earlier this year that it was not authentic, and repeated that claim to an adviser more recently.”

During last year’s election campaign, Mr Trump was accused by several women of sexual impropriety.

The Democrats have their own problems with sexual misconduct claims.

Minnesota Senator Al Franken is fighting for his career amid accusations he groped women.

At a press conference on Monday, he maintained he would not resign and said: “To all of you, I just want to again say I am sorry.

“I know there are no magic words that I can say to regain your trust and I know that’s going to take time.”

And John Conyers is stepping down as senior Democrat on the House of Representatives Judiciary Committee as lawmakers investigate sexual harassment claims against him.

The 88-year-old Michigan representative’s office has acknowledged resolving a harassment case with a payment but no admission of guilt.

Appearing on an NBC political talk show on Sunday, House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi called for “zero tolerance” on sexual harassment.

Asked if she believed in Mr Conyers’ accusers, she said: “I don’t know who they are. Do you? They have not really come forward.”

Note: This story is auto-generated from BBC syndicated feed and has not been edited by AFRICA PRIME NEWS

CFPB in chaos as chief refuses to step aside for Trump’s man

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White House Budget Director Mick Mulvaney, President Donald Trump's pick for acting director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, walks back to the White House from the CFPB buildingImage copyright Getty Images
Image caption Mick Mulvaney – who has previously called the CFPB a “sick, sad joke” – brought donuts for staff on Monday

The US consumer financial watchdog was plunged into turmoil on Monday as rival directors vied to take charge amid a lawsuit against the White House.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) director resigned last week and appointed his former chief of staff, Leandra English, to replace him.

She has sued after President Donald Trump instead named his budget chief Mick Mulvaney to lead the CFPB.

The CFPB, unpopular on Wall Street, was set up after the 2007 financial crash.

Who’s in charge?

Leandra English sent the agency’s staff a brief email on Monday saying: “It is an honor to work with all of you.”

Ms English signed it, “Acting Director”.

But Mr Mulvaney – who has previously called the CFPB a “sick, sad joke” that should be scrapped – arrived at the bureau on Monday morning carrying a bag of donuts for employees.

He wrote in a memo to staff: “Please disregard any instructions you receive from Ms English in her presumed capacity as Acting Director.”

Mr Mulvaney also signed off as “acting director”, urging staff to pop by his office on the fourth floor and “grab a donut”.

Beware of small-government conservatives bearing donuts

Analysis by Anthony Zurcher, BBC News

“High drama” and “bureaucratic power struggle” are words that don’t usually go together, but these are unusual times in Washington, DC.

A donut-carrying Republican who seemingly hates the controversial agency he’s been tasked with running is up against a Democratic-appointed official who has filed a lawsuit that reaches new heights of legal snarkiness.

Behind it all is the fact that the CFPB is a key component of Democratic attempts to rein in what they viewed as the recklessness and cruelty of big US financial institutions that contributed to the financial collapse of 2008. Republicans, on the other hand, consider the bureau to be a regulatory beast stifling economic growth.

Given that conservative attempts to change the agency through legislation have run aground in the political morass that is the US Congress, the future of the CFPB largely rests in who is put in charge.

In other government entities, such as the Environmental Protection Agency, the State Department and the Justice Department, Trump loyalists are hard at work altering the culture and curtailing the ambitions of federal bureaucrats.

Now the administration has a chance to go to work on the CFPB. Democrats, however, are seemingly eager for a high-profile fight.

What is the CFPB?

The 1,600-employee watchdog was set up in 2010 to protect Americans from predatory lenders.

Republicans say it has placed an excessive regulatory burden on Wall Street.

Democrats say the CFPB is reining in the very excesses that helped spur the global financial crash a decade ago.

Mr Trump took to Twitter on Saturday to criticise the agency, calling it a “total disaster”.

He argued that because of the CFPB “financial institutions have been devastated and unable to properly serve the public”.

Richard Cordray quit as CFPB director on Friday amid speculation he may run for governor of Ohio next year.

What about this lawsuit?

On Sunday, Ms English asked a judge at a federal court in Washington DC to issue a temporary restraining order against Mr Trump’s appointment of Mr Mulvaney.

In her lawsuit, she called herself the “rightful acting director” of the CFPB.

The legal action said: “The President’s purported or intended appointment of defendant Mulvaney as Acting Director of the CFPB is unlawful.”

The White House says the president has the authority to appoint Mr Mulvaney under the Federal Vacancies Reform Act.

But a lawyer for Ms English says the law states that as deputy director she is entitled to take power until the Senate can vote to confirm another director.

The lawsuit has been assigned to a judge who was appointed this year by President Trump, Reuters news agency reports.

A Trump administration lawyer who wrote the memo defending Mr Mulvaney’s appointment reportedly represented a Canadian payday lender before the CFPB last year.

Image copyright Getty Images
Image caption Supporters of the consumer bureau held a demonstration on Monday

What’s the reaction?

Arkansas Republican Senator Tom Cotton, a member of the chamber’s banking committee, called Ms English’s lawsuit “just the latest lawless action” by the CFPB, which he called “rogue” and “unconstitutional”.

“The President should fire her immediately and anyone who disobeys Director Mulvaney’s orders should also be fired summarily,” Mr Cotton wrote in a statement.

But Illinois Democratic Senator Dick Durbin told CNN the White House decision was aimed at eradicating the CFPB.

“Wall Street hates it like the devil hates holy water,” he said.

Note: This story is auto-generated from BBC syndicated feed and has not been edited by AFRICA PRIME NEWS

Zimbabwe Officially Declares Mugabe National Holiday

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Zimbabwe has officially declared 21 February to be Robert Gabriel Mugabe National Youth Day, thereby making the former president’s birthday a public holiday, the Herald newspaper reports.

New President Emmerson Mnangagwa is expected to form a cabinet this week.

There is speculation as to whether he will break from the past and select a broad-based government or keep figures from the Mugabe era.

Mr Mugabe quit last week after military intervention and mass protests.

Calls for the former president’s birthday to be made a national holiday were adopted by the government in August, following intense lobbying by the Zanu-PF Youth League, the Herald reports.

The decision was officially recorded on Friday, it adds.

Last week, President Mnangagwa said the former president needed to be given the respect and recognition he deserved as one of the founders and leaders of Zimbabwe.

“To me personally, he remains a father, mentor, comrade-in-arms and my leader,” he said during his acceptance speech at his inauguration on Friday.

Reports that Mr Mugabe was granted $10m (£7.5m) to ease him out of office have not been confirmed.

The opposition Movement for Democratic Change has called for an inclusive “transitional authority” to mark a break with his 37-year rule and bring in reforms to pave the way for free elections next year.

There are fears that President Mnangagwa, who is associated with some of worst atrocities committed under the ruling Zanu-PF party since independence in 1980, will not usher in the democratic reforms that many in Zimbabwe are hoping for.

Emmerson Mnangagwa was sworn in to replace Mr Mugabe as president on Friday.

Mr Mnangagwa, long a close ally of Mr Mugabe, was sacked earlier this month, triggering the political crisis that eventually saw his boss’s downfall.

Mr Mugabe and his wife, Grace, remain at their house in the capital, Harare, and have no plans to leave the country.

The military takeover came in response to Mr Mugabe’s decision to position his wife as his successor and sack Mr Mnangagwa from the vice-presidency.

Source:www.myjoyonline.com

Pakistan Minister Resigns as Officials Bow To Islamists’ Demands

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Supporters of Pakistani religious party celebrate the victory in Islamabad, Pakistan, Monday, Nov. 27, 2017. Pakistani Islamists announced they were disbanding their sit-in near Islamabad after the country's law minister resigned, caving in to the protesters who have been demanding his ouster in a three-week-long rally. (AP Photo/B.K. Bangash)
Supporters of Pakistani religious party celebrate the victory in Islamabad, Pakistan, Monday, Nov. 27, 2017. Pakistani Islamists announced they were disbanding their sit-in near Islamabad after the country’s law minister resigned, caving in to the protesters who have been demanding his ouster in a three-week-long rally. (AP Photo/B.K. Bangash)

Islamabad – Pakistan’s law minister resigned on Monday as the embattled civilian government bowed to demands from a small Islamist group whose anti-blasphemy protest in the capital has fuelled deadly violence and sparked demonstrations across the nuclear-armed nation.

Protest leader Khadim Hussain Rizvi called off the sit-in after state media reported minister Zahid Hamid’s resignation early on Monday. Rizvi said he had military assurances that the demands of his Tehreek-i-Labaik Ya Rasool Allah Pakistan (TLY) group would be met.

“On the assurance of the Chief of Army Staff, we are calling off the sit-in”, he told a crowd of around 2 500 demonstrators, adding that his group was abandoning plans to issue a fatwa against Hamid and was calling for roads and schools to be reopened.

There was no immediate confirmation from the government of the resignation and no comment from the military.

The decision to capitulate to the protesters’ demands is a major embarrassment for the ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) as it eyes elections in 2018, analysts said, and underscores the influence of religious groups in the nuclear-armed country of 207 million.

Rizvi’s previously obscure group has been calling for weeks for Hamid’s ousting over a hastily-abandoned amendment to the oath which election candidates must swear. It has occupied a main highway into Islamabad since November 6 and virtually paralysed the capital.

The protesters have linked the amended wording to blasphemy – a highly contentious charge in Muslim Pakistan which carries the death penalty. Even unproven allegations have spurred mob lynchings and murders.

Ordered ‘to stand down’

Monday’s announcement came after Saturday’s botched operation to disperse the demonstrators sparked violence in Islamabad that left at least seven people dead and hundreds wounded.

It fuelled the spread of the protests and blockades to major cities across the country including Karachi and Lahore.

The government ordered police and paramilitaries to stand down after the clashes and called on the army to intervene to restore order. By Monday morning there still had been no official response from the military.

As he called off the sit-in, Rizvi referred to what he said was the text of an army-brokered agreement between TLY and the government, though the document could not be verified with officials or the military.

“We all now need to heal the fault lines that dharna (sit-in) has invoked on religious & sectarian basis & ensure it doesn’t reoccur. It is a priority,” tweeted Interior Minister Ahsan Iqbal, without further details.

‘Major embarrassment’

Authorities initially hesitated to act over the sit-in.

Pakistan’s civilian government has long pulled its punches in such situations, fearing that a crackdown on a religious group would incite blowback, as it has in the past. Critics have warned that this attitude allows extremism to flourish.

But as the weeks dragged on the hesitation enraged millions of commuters in Islamabad and neighbouring Rawalpindi. The demonstration caused hours-long traffic snarls and the death of at least one child whose ambulance could not reach hospital in time.

Hamid’s ousting is the latest in a series of heavy blows to the ruling party.

In July Nawaz Sharif was deposed as prime minister by the courts over graft allegations, while finance minister Ishaq Dar – also accused of corruption – has taken indefinite medical leave.

Observers had previously warned that capitulation would set a dangerous precedent.

“Politically, this is a major embarrassment for the PML-N,” analyst Hasan Askari told AFP, adding that it would undermine their credibility and predicting more defections.

He also warned it had strengthened the position of hardline groups like TLY.

TLY comes from the Barelvi sect of Islam that has strong ties to Sufism, a mystical branch of the religion that is seen as moderate. It emphasises personal devotion by its followers to the Prophet Mohammed.

However the execution in 2016 of Barelvi follower Mumtaz Qadri – who assassinated liberal Punjab governor Salman Taseer over his stance on the blasphemy laws – appears to have galvanised Rizvi and his followers.

Askari warned that the decision by TLY and other Islamist parties to campaign in the upcoming elections could further weaken the PML-N. The party has previously benefited from the right-wing religious vote.

Source:www.news24.com

Meghan Markle’s ‘low profile’ in Toronto

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[unable to retrieve full-text content]Note: This story is auto-generated from BBC syndicated feed and has not been edited by AFRICA PRIME NEWS

Zimbabwe Forces Say Situation ‘Normal’, But Report Problems

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Harare – Zimbabwe’s security forces say there are reports of looting and illegal occupation of farms and houses following the resignation of former President Robert Mugabe and the inauguration of his successor, Emmerson Mnangagwa.

However, the military and police also said in a joint statement on Monday that the “situation in our country has returned to normal” after a crisis during which the military staged a takeover and crowds demonstrated against Mugabe at the end of his 37-year rule.

The statement said the police, largely absent from the streets of Harare during the tumultuous leadership transition, will assume its role “as stipulated in the Constitution.”

It said the police and army will conduct joint patrols.

Many Zimbabweans applauded the military for its role in Mugabe’s resignation, but resent the police for alleged corruption.

Source: www.news24.com

England beat Malawi 61-53 to win series with a Test to spare

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England travel to Australia for the Commonwealth Games in April before hosting the World Cup in 2019

England beat Malawi 61-53 at the Copper Box to secure a series victory with a Test to spare.

England began with the same starting line-up that secured a narrow 66-60 victory in the first match.

The world number three side failed to dominate early on against their sixth-ranked opponents in a physical encounter in London.

But the flying defence of Jodie Gibson and England captain Ama Agbeze helped Tracey Neville’s side to a second win.

“We did our homework and put our gameplan in place today,” Gibson told Sky Sports. “It was a whole-court defence and that’s why I got so many turnovers.”

The two sides meet in the final match on Wednesday, 29 November in Birmingham.

England dominate in defence

Malawi fell to an 11-goal deficit in the opening quarter of the first Test but they began brightly on Sunday.

The visitors forced England into countless attacking errors before Gibson stepped up the defensive pressure with two clean steals as the hosts opened up a seven-goal gap.

Kadeen Corbin, fresh off the back of her player of the match performance in the first meeting, was once again influential for England on her 50th international cap against heavy contact in the circle.

Malawi defenders Joanna Kachilika and Loreen Ngwira both received cautions from the umpires before the break as their shooters netted three quick goals before half-time to stay in touch.

Eleanor Cardwell was introduced after the interval as Corbin moved back to goal-shooter, but the Queens got within four goals in the third quarter and Australian-based shooter Mwai Kumwenda set up a tense finale.

With Malawi on the charge, Neville called on wing-attack Sasha Corbin to steady the ship and her combination with sister Kadeen and Severn Stars’ Cardwell saw England finish strongly.

But Gibson, in only her second full game in an England dress, was the standout player as Neville looks to confirm her squad for the Commonwealth Games in April.

England squad in full:

Ama Agbeze (capt), Jade Clarke, Eleanor Cardwell, Beth Cobden, Kadeen Corbin, Sasha Corbin, Rachel Dunn, Jodie Gibson, Natalie Haythornthwaite, Josie Huckle, Vicki Oyesola, Natalie Panagarry.

Note: This story is auto-generated from ‘BBC News’ syndicated feed and has not been edited by Africa Prime News staff.

Last day for BBC African Footballer 2017 vote

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Voting for the BBC African Footballer of the Year closes at 18:00 GMT on Monday, 27 November – so you still have time to choose your favourite if you have not already done so.

The five-man shortlist is comprised of Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, Naby Keita, Sadio Mane, Victor Moses and Mohamed Salah.

Borussia Dortmund and Gabon striker Aubameyang is on the shortlist for the fifth consecutive year, while Liverpool’s Senegalese star Mane is nominated for a third time.

Nigeria’s Moses (Chelsea) makes the list for a second time while Guinean Keita (RB Leipzig) and Egypt’s Salah (Liverpool) feature for the first time.

The winner of this year’s award will be announced on Monday, 11 December live on BBC World TV and BBC World Service Radio, starting from 17:35 GMT.

The BBC Sport and BBC Africa websites will also carry the announcement.

You can watch all five nominees in action below.

Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang – Gabon and Borussia Dortmund

African Footballer of the Year 2017: Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang profile

Naby Keita – Guinea and RB Leipzig

African Footballer of the Year 2017: Naby Keita profile

Sadio Mane – Senegal and Liverpool

African Footballer of the Year 2017: Sadio Mane profile

Victor Moses – Nigeria and Chelsea

African Footballer of the Year 2017: Victor Moses profile

Mohamed Salah – Egypt and Liverpool

African Footballer of the Year 2017: Mohamed Salah profile

Note: This story is auto-generated from ‘BBC News’ syndicated feed and has not been edited by Africa Prime News staff.

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