
Ethiopian troops 'executed' aid workers in Tigray conflict, MSF official says
MSF said it was releasing its findings as the government had failed to provide a "credible account" of the deaths despite 20 face-to-face meetings over the last four years. Thirty-five-year-old Spaniard María Hernández Matas, along with 32-year-old Yohannes Halefom Reda and 31-year-old Tedros Gebremariam, were killed on 24 June 2021 while travelling in central Tigray to assess medical needs. "They were very professional and passionate," Ms Ayora told the BBC. She added that the three were fully identifiable in MSF vests and their vehicle had the charity's flag and logos on either side when they were shot."So, they [Ethiopian troops] knew that they were killing humanitarian aid workers," she said, adding that the team's travel route had also been shared in advance with fighting groups.The Tigray conflict broke out in 2020 following a massive fall-out between the regional and federal governments, with neighbouring Eritrea entering the war on the side of the Ethiopian National Defence Force (ENDF).The conflict ended two years later following a peace deal brokered by the African Union (AU). Its envoy, former Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo, put the number of people who died in the conflict at around 600,000.Researchers said the deaths were caused by fighting, starvation and a lack of health care.The killings took place at a time when the conflict was intensifying, and Ethiopian and Eritrean troops were becoming increasingly hostile towards aid workers in the region, MSF said in its report. Ms Matas had been working in Tigray since before the war and "was very much loved" by people in the region, Ms Ayora said.Her death has been particularly devastating for her mother as she was her only child, the MSF official added. Mr Tedros was killed soon after his wife had given birth to a baby girl. His widow named the baby Maria, after her father's killed Spanish colleague, Mr Ayora said.
The bodies of Ms Matas and Mr Yohannes were found between 100m (300ft) and 400m from the wreckage of their vehicle. The body of Mr Tedros, the driver, was found by the vehicle."In line with MSF travel policy, the driver stays close to the vehicle", Ms Ayora said.The vehicle was shot at multiple times and burned on the main road from the town of Abi Adi to Yech'illa, Ms Ayora said.Ms Matas and Mr Yohannes were walking when they were shot, she said, adding: "We don't know if they were called for interrogation or they decided to engage with the soldiers."MSF said it had relied on satellite images, witnesses and publicly available information on the Ethiopian military's movements at the time of the killings to draw its conclusions.Its investigation placed Ethiopian troops at the "precise location" where the killings occurred, the charity added. MSF's report quoted witnesses as saying they overhead an officer informing the local commander of an approaching white car and the commander giving an order to shoot. Moments later, the commander was allegedly informed that the soldiers had tried to shoot but that the car had turned towards Abi Adi and stopped, at which point the commander gave the order to "go and catch them" and "remove them", the report alleged.Ms Ayora told the BBC that officials from Ethiopia's Ministry of Justice had verbally informed MSF in mid-2022 that their preliminary investigation showed that government troops were not at the scene of the killing. However, the officials refused to give this in writing, and the charity kept engaging with the government in order to end "impunity" at a time when an increasing number of aid workers were being killed in conflicts around the world, Ms Ayora said.
More BBC stories on Tigray conflict:
'I lost my leg on the way home from school'How a massacre in the sacred city of Aksum unfoldedThe war is over but the rapes continue
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The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
Yemen postpones execution of Indian nurse Nimisha Priya on death row
The execution of an Indian nurse who is on death row in Yemen has been postponed at the eleventh hour amid negotiations for a pardon. Nimisha Priya, 38, from the southern Indian state of Kerala, was found guilty of murdering her business partner in 2017 and was sentenced to death in 2020. Priya has denied killing Talal Abdo Mahdi, a Yemeni national who co-owned a clinic with her in Sanaa and whose chopped-up remains were found in a water tank. The Indian foreign ministry sources said the government "made concerted efforts in recent days to seek more time for the family of Ms Nimisha Priya to reach a mutually agreeable solution with the other party'. The ministry's officials had been in regular contact with Yemeni jail authorities and the prosecutor's office there. The postponement of the sentencing is only a temporary relief for Priya, as only a pardon by the victim's family can save her from the imminent execution. According to Yemen's Islamic judicial system, murder, drug trafficking, apostasy, adultery, and same-sex relations are punished by death and it allows a murder convict to be pardoned by the victim's kin in exchange for diyat, or 'blood money '. Her family in India has said they have already raised $1m (£735,000) and offered the money to Mahdi's family, which is reluctant to pardon her. Samuel Jerome Baskaran, a social worker who has been negotiating on behalf of the nurse with Yemeni officials and the victim's family, said the postponement came after the ruler of the Al Wasab region met the president of Yemen on Friday on his request while the Indian government also got involved, according to The Indian Express. He said a plea from Priya's mother, Prema Kumari, requesting a postponement, was formally submitted. On Saturday, the president of Yemen Rashad al-Alimi consented to defer the execution, he said, adding that a directive not to disclose further details about the case or the postponement, possibly was issued due to its sensitivity. 'The final step (to stop the execution) is the consent from the Talal family. The key to Nimisha's life rests with the family of Talal. They have to forgive her, and our job is to convince the family to forgive her,' he said. Mahdi's family have said they only want to implement God's Law in Qisas, which means retaliation in kind and said they have suffered from the brutal crime. His brother, Abdelfattah Mahdi, told BBC Arabic that they have suffered at the hands of the exhausting litigation process and called it a 'horrible and heinous' crime case. "Any dispute, whatever its reasons and however big, can never justify a murder – let alone dismembering, mutilating and hiding the body." Priya arrived in Yemen to work as a nurse in 2008. She launched a clinic in partnership with Mehdi, in line with Yemeni law that required foreign entrepreneurs to collaborate with citizens. However, she was arrested in 2017 after Mahdi was murdered and his body was found in a tank. Her family previously alleged that Priya faced mental, physical and financial abuse at his hands. She had even filed a police complaint against him in 2016, leading to his brief arrest. He allegedly resumed threatening her after getting out. In 2020, a local court sentenced her to death. The decision was challenged in the Supreme Court but the appeal was rejected in 2023. The nurse's mother, a domestic worker in Kochi city, has been in Yemen for the past year trying to save her daughter.


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Trust in the US is eroding. Now the question isn't if the dollar will lose supremacy: it's when
For more than eight decades, the US dollar has reigned supreme as the world's reserve currency – a position cemented at the Bretton Woods Conference in 1944 and reinforced by America's postwar industrial power and military dominance. Today, that supremacy is facing growing resistance from multiple directions – from African revolutionary movements to economic recalibrations in Europe, and from the counterbalance efforts of Brics nations to the geopolitical entanglements of Ukraine and Israel. As global trust in Washington's stewardship of the international financial order declines, the long-predicted transition to a multi-polar monetary world may finally be close. At the heart of the de-dollarisation movement is Brics – the economic bloc of Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa, recently joined by Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Argentina, Ethiopia, Iran, and the United Arab Emirates. Brics has already surpassed the G7 in terms of purchasing power parity (PPP), amplifying its demands for a more fairly balanced global financial system. The group has increasingly moved to conduct bilateral trade in national currencies, bypassing the need for US dollars. India and Russia, for instance, are now trading oil in rupees and rubles. China and Brazil have established settlement mechanisms in yuan and Brazilian reals. Russia's invasion of Ukraine and its subsequent exclusion from the Swift (Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication) system has accelerated these transitions. The economist Jeffrey Sachs has frequently commented on Washington's ongoing weaponisation of the dollar, wielding it through financial sanctions and trade barriers to assert its geopolitical agenda. Nations across the global south are pushing back in a determined effort to reclaim their sovereignty. In Africa, particularly the Sahel region, a quiet revolution is gathering steam. Guided by leaders such as Ibrahim Traoré of Burkina Faso, they have officially announced their intention to abandon the CFA franc – a colonial relic tied to the euro and ultimately to French control. Traoré has emerged as a pan-African voice calling for economic independence, including a return to sovereign monetary policies. A potential African currency, shared by west African nations, is being proposed not just as a financial tool but as a symbol of decolonisation. With support from Mali, Niger and Guinea, and with discussions by the powerful west African bloc Ecowas on the long-delayed 'Eco' currency, the African continent is poised to challenge US and European monetary dominance. This isn't just economic policy; it's identity. As pan-African voices demand sovereignty, a shared currency could signal an economic awakening decades in the making. This movement is gaining moral backing from African intellectuals and economists such as the Kenyan professor PLO Lumumba, who argue that you cannot be politically independent if you are not economically free. This shift is not merely about money, but about dignity and direction. In recent months, there have been renewed calls in Italy and Germany to repatriate portions of their gold reserves from the US, a development that has gone largely unreported in western media. The Bundesbank had previously signalled distrust during the Obama administration by recalling more than 300 tonnes of gold from both New York and Paris. The fresh moves are linked to the return of Donald Trump, his unpredictability and aggressive tariffs, especially toward Nato and EU members. The second Trump presidency is upending transatlantic trust. European nations are hedging against weaponised financial systems. If France or the Netherlands follow suit, it may signal the beginning of the end of US custodianship over Europe's monetary assets. While much of the world is expected to maintain strict fiscal discipline, the US continues to run jaw-dropping deficits. Its national debt has ballooned to more than $36tn (£25tn), with annual interest payments exceeding $1tn – more than the entire defence budget. Sign up to Global Dispatch Get a different world view with a roundup of the best news, features and pictures, curated by our global development team after newsletter promotion Unlike other nations, the US can finance these deficits by simply printing more dollars – a privilege afforded by the dollar's reserve status. But this creates an asymmetry: trading partners must earn dollars through exports or debt in order to interact with the global economy, while the US absorbs the benefits of infinite liquidity. Nobel laureate economist Joseph Stiglitz has in the past warned this exorbitant privilege will not last for ever. The rest of the world is essentially lending to the US at zero interest, while suffering from inflationary pressures caused by its dollar creation. Stiglitz has argued that the dollar-based system has become inherently unjust and unstable – especially for emerging economies that must endure volatility they did not create. Open-ended military aid to Ukraine and Israel is further eroding confidence in the US fiscal outlook and the dollar's value. These wars, justified by national security and ideological imperatives, are increasingly funded through deficit spending. The paradox is glaring: Washington prints money to fund arms shipments abroad, while inflationary effects ripple through developing countries still tied to the dollar. As inflation bites and interest rates climb, capital flows are redirected back to the US in search of yield, strangling credit and growth in the global south. US foreign policy is no longer compatible with economic prudence. The military-industrial complex is crowding out sustainable development. However, more than 58% of global reserves remain in – and nearly 90% of all currency exchanges still involve – dollars. Its network effect, deep capital markets, and geopolitical leverage are formidable. But that dominance rests on trust – the true foundation of any currency – and that trust is eroding. What we are witnessing is not a collapse, but a transition. A multipolar currency system may emerge over the next few years, with regional blocs relying on national or collective currencies, from the Chinese yuan and Indian rupee to a potential African Eco and Brics-backed financial instruments. The question isn't if the dollar loses supremacy, it's when. The challenge for Washington now is whether it will reform and share the financial order – or cling to outdated privileges until the world has moved on without it. Just this week, Donald Trump threatened increased tariffs of 10% for 'un-American' Brics nations and any countries aligning themselves with the 10-member bloc. The dollar was born in a world where the US commanded moral authority, industrial might and trust. But the post-Covid, post-colonial world is different. Countries across the globe are reclaiming their monetary agency, questioning the rules of a game long rigged in Washington's favour. Now in 2025, the ongoing genocide against the Palestinian people has profoundly deepened global outrage, and in the eyes of the global south, it has shattered the last vestiges of moral authority once claimed by the US and Europe. De-dollarisation is not a threat to global stability. It is a rebalancing – one that demands fairness and equity. The global south is no longer asking for change, they are enacting it. If the US fails to recognise this, it risks not only its currency but its global influence. Reform or retreat. As Sachs said, the US cannot lead the world by force for ever. Sooner or later, people will stop following. The reality is the world isn't walking away from the US – it's walking toward itself. One currency at a time.


Times
2 hours ago
- Times
Crackdown on international students is self-harm, says Sadiq Khan
The mayor of London will describe plans to charge universities a levy on international students as 'an act of immense economic self-harm' during a speech in west Africa on Wednesday. Khan, who is on a five-day trade mission to Ghana, Nigeria and South Africa, will use a keynote speech in Accra, the Ghanaian capital, to take aim at the British government's proposal to bring in a tax on income generated from foreign students. 'There are people at home who believe we should pull up the drawbridge to international students, or punish universities that choose to welcome people from around the world,' he will say. 'Closing our country to global talent would be an act of immense economic self-harm, one that would slow down growth and leave working people in Britain worse off than before. 'That's why I'm calling on our government not to make it harder for international students to study in the UK.' The issue, in the government's immigration white paper, is the latest flashpoint in an increasingly contentious relationship between the Labour mayor of London and the Labour government. Khan pointedly criticised the chancellor's spending review last month, saying that Rachel Reeves had made a 'colossal mistake' in pitting London against the rest of the country. He was also among those who successfully lobbied the government to row back on proposed welfare changes. Khan will be speaking at Imperial College London's Accra hub and will release new data from London Economics, a think tank, suggesting that international students contribute £12.5 billion in wider economic benefit in London every year during their studies. In the immigration white paper, the government also said it would reduce to 18 months, down from two years at present, graduates' right to stay in the UK after their studies. The levy on income would, the document suggested, be 'reinvested into the higher education and skills system'. More details are expected in the autumn budget. The number of international students coming to the UK has ballooned in recent years. The cohort appeals to universities because they can be charged more than domestic students, whose fees are capped at just shy of £10,000 a year. In the academic year 2023-24, there were 296,655 undergraduate entrants to the UK system whose permanent addresses were overseas, compared with 1.75 million who had UK addresses, according to data from the Higher Education Statistics Agency. There were also more international postgraduates, at 435,620, than UK postgraduates, at 410,870. Substantial increases in recent years have come from India — which passed China in numbers for the first time in 2022-23 — as well as from other Asian countries and Nigeria. The number of students from the European Union has dropped substantially in the same period. London Higher, a membership organisation for universities and higher education institutions, backed Khan's call for the levy to go no further. Its chief executive, Liz Hutchinson, said: 'Our universities are world-leading because they are international, with overseas students enriching not just the economy but also the learning experience and the vibrant, creative communities that the capital is famous for.' She added: 'This is a time when we should be strengthening our position as a hub for talented individuals from across the world; the government's proposed levy on international students does the opposite.'