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Norway to extradite Rwanda genocide suspect
Norway to extradite Rwanda genocide suspect

Arab News

time2 days ago

  • Politics
  • Arab News

Norway to extradite Rwanda genocide suspect

OSLO: Norway will extradite a man sought by Rwanda for his suspected role in the country's 1994 genocide, police said Friday. In 1994, an estimated 800,000 Rwandan Tutsis and moderate Hutus died in 100 days of slaughter triggered by the assassination of the country's president, Juvenal Habyarimana. The man, whose identity has not been disclosed, was detained in October 2022 by Norway's criminal police Kripos. He was wanted by Rwanda for 'committing a murder during the 1994 genocide,' Kripos said in a statement. The Oslo district court ruled in September 2023 that the conditions were met for the man's extradition, a decision confirmed by an appeals court in April 2024. The suspect then lodged an appeal with Norway's Supreme Court which was rejected in June 2024. With the man's legal options exhausted, the justice ministry decided in February that the extradition could go ahead, a ruling ultimately confirmed by the government's Council of State. 'The accused is now to be extradited to Rwanda, where he will stand trial for participating in the genocide,' police attorney Thea Elize Kjaeraas said in a statement. Norway has seen a string of extradition requests for genocide suspects in recent years, and is among half a dozen Western countries where courts have handed down convictions since 2009.

U.S. soccer investor fighting extradition from Spain, wanted on multiple allegations of fraud
U.S. soccer investor fighting extradition from Spain, wanted on multiple allegations of fraud

New York Times

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • New York Times

U.S. soccer investor fighting extradition from Spain, wanted on multiple allegations of fraud

Prominent multi-club investor Paul Conway has been in a Barcelona prison for more than five weeks and is fighting extradition to Belgium, where he is wanted for questioning in relation to six allegations of fraud linked to the 2024 bankruptcy of KV Oostende. The American has strongly denied any wrongdoing and his wife has described the experience as a 'nightmare', likening it to a scene from Victor Hugo's novel Les Miserables. Advertisement Conway, 55, is the co-owner of Pacific Media Group (PMG), a Hong Kong-based sports and entertainment firm that combined with other Chinese and U.S.-based investors to build a stable of European clubs that numbered seven at its peak. He has either sold or lost control of three of those clubs now, though, with Oostende being his most acrimonious exit, as a local administrator seized control in early 2024 but could not prevent the Belgian side from collapsing that summer. The club's demise, however, sparked an investigation by the Belgian federal police's Sports Fraud Team and, in March this year, an investigating judge at the District Court of West Flanders issued a European Arrest Warrant (EAW) for Conway. It was done 'in absentia', which means the Florida-based Conway was not present. As a result, Conway was blindsided when he was arrested on arrival in Spain on May 20 for a short non-football-related business trip. He was immediately taken into custody and had his first court hearing, via video link, with a judge in Madrid the following day. His lawyers managed to block his immediate transfer to Belgium, but he has remained in prison while the legal arguments have continued, causing great concern to his family and friends. Speaking to The Athletic, his wife, Louisa Conway, explained that the first she knew of it was when her husband's Spanish lawyer informed her. She had been expecting him to return to Florida on May 23 to take one of their daughters on a college-visiting tour. 'It was a shock and the beginning of a nightmare for our family,' she said. 'Paul has no criminal record, so we struggle to comprehend why the Belgian government issued the EAW. 'The best way to describe this nightmare is to say it's like waking up in Victor Hugo's Les Miserables, where a person is thrown in jail for stealing bread. No facts, just emotional allegations.' Advertisement This is a reference to the family's view that the Belgian authorities want a scapegoat for the death of a community asset that was much loved but had been in well-publicised financial difficulties before Conway's group of investors arrived, then went bust after they were removed from power. While there is no disputing how unpopular Conway was by the end of his time at Oostende, he was initially greeted as a saviour. The Belgian police and investigating judge have not responded to requests for comment. The EAW outlines the six crimes it believes Conway may have committed, with the central allegation relating to Oostende's 2021 purchase of striker Mikael Biron from French team AS Nancy, another of the clubs in the PMG portfolio. Biron, now 27, cost a reported €5million (£4.25m), but was promptly loaned back to Nancy and then sold to Belgian team RWD Molenbeek a year later for €2.5m. The initial transfer raised eyebrows and many Oostende fans thought it was done to boost Nancy's finances when they were struggling to obtain a licence to continue as a professional side in France. The EAW explains that the football fraud squad were alerted to the issue by a July 2022 article in Belgian newspaper Het Nieuwsblad. The EAW also refers to other 'unusual costs' incurred by Oostende for Nancy's benefit, as well as a €1m (£850,000) payment made to a French law firm's client account that was later 'partially reimbursed' by some of Nancy's shareholders. Conway's family, however, in strenuously denying his involvement in any possible fraud, point out that Conway never had sole control at either Oostende or Nancy and his personal shareholdings at the clubs amounted to 7.5 per cent and 2 per cent, respectively. They also note that Oostende's local shareholders appear to be blaming PMG for the collapse of a proposed rescue by a group led by Mark Campbell, a British businessman who had previously failed with bids to buy Stirling Albion, Sunderland and West Bromwich Albion in the UK. As previously reported by The Athletic, Campbell was declared bankrupt in 2010 and has been involved with dozens of dissolved businesses in England and Spain. Advertisement Describing the Belgian authorities' action as 'mind-boggling' and 'an arbitrary abuse of power', Louisa Conway believes they are 'weaponising their judicial system to settle financial disputes related to a bankrupt soccer club'. '(They) have the right to conduct an investigation into Oostende's bankruptcy, but, oddly, they have only issued one arrest warrant,' she said. 'The club had a board of directors, which my husband was a member of between 2000 and 2023, and it was managed by several locals. Why is the Belgian management team not under investigation (too)? 'Belgium's use of the EAW here is truly frightening, and they have incarcerated my husband on the musings of a blogger. If they want to investigate, that's their prerogative. But why not call him? Why issue this arrest warrant? 'I still cannot believe this mess is emanating from Belgium, the 'heart of Europe', a land of diplomacy and cooperation. The USA needs to pay close attention to how American business people could be wrongfully detained by these EAWs.' While her anger at her husband's plight is understandable, there will be fans at the clubs Conway has invested in who will be thinking there is no smoke without fire, although Conway has strongly denied any wrongdoing. PMG, which is co-owned by Hong Kong-based businesswoman Grace Hung, first teamed up with Chinese-American hotelier Chien Lee to buy a majority stake in OGC Nice in 2016. A year later, after looking at several other British clubs, it bought struggling Championship side Barnsley, with famous Oakland Athletics executive vice-president Billy 'Moneyball' Beane joining the investment group. Barnsley were relegated that season, but Nice enjoyed some success and PMG and Lee's New City Capital were able to quadruple their initial investment when they sold the French club to Sir Jim Ratcliffe in 2019 for €100m (£85m). But it is what they did with that money over the next three years that catapulted them to wider attention, as they bought stakes in Swiss side FC Thun, Oostende, Nancy, Danish team Esbjerg, Den Bosch in the Netherlands, Germany's Kaiserslautern, and GKS Tychy in Poland. Advertisement In 2021, with Oostende flying high in the Belgian top tier and Barnsley reaching the Championship play-offs, it looked like the group's strategy of playing high-energy, hard-pressing football, with German coaches and young players, was working. The aim, Conway freely admitted, was to fund the group's activities by regularly selling its best young talent. However, problems hit in 2022 when Barnsley, Esbjerg and Nancy were all relegated in varying states of financial difficulty. The ownership group, which had evolved as more clubs were added, also started to fracture. Conway and Lee were pushed out at Barnsley in 2022 — and later fined by the EFL for failing to fully disclose who all of their partners were in 2017 — and lost control at Esbjerg in 2024, the same year they sold their Den Bosch shares to a Chinese group. With Oostende declared bankrupt last summer, PMG now only holds tiny stakes in Barnsley and Nancy, and larger but not controlling stakes in Kaiserslautern, Thun and Tychy. These five clubs are on firmer footing, but there is little sign of them operating as a multi-club group anymore. In the meantime, Conway is approaching his 40th day in custody, while lawyers in Belgium, Spain and the U.S. argue about his fate.

British Man Charged by US in ‘IntelBroker' Company Data Hacks
British Man Charged by US in ‘IntelBroker' Company Data Hacks

Bloomberg

time3 days ago

  • Bloomberg

British Man Charged by US in ‘IntelBroker' Company Data Hacks

A 25-year-old British man known as 'IntelBroker' was accused by US authorities of conspiring with a group of hackers to steal data from dozens of companies and offer it for sale online, causing more than $25 million in damages to victims around the world. Federal prosecutors in New York on Wednesday announced an indictment had been unsealed charging Kai West, 25, with four counts including conspiracy to commit computer intrusions. West was arrested in February in France, where he remains in custody, prosecutors said in a statement. The US is seeking his extradition.

Judge blocks request to extradite teacher over child sex offence
Judge blocks request to extradite teacher over child sex offence

BBC News

time3 days ago

  • BBC News

Judge blocks request to extradite teacher over child sex offence

A British teacher accused of sexually assaulting a young child while teaching in Turkey will not be extradited, following a court's decision to discharge the had requested the extradition of Rebecca Richardson, 54, from Herefordshire, after she was accused of sexually assaulting a child at an international school in Istanbul in a hearing at Westminster Magistrates' Court on Wednesday, Judge Paul Goldspring discharged Richardson from the extradition Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) has been granted two weeks to appeal the decision in the High Court. A spokesperson for the CPS said: "On 25 June 2025, a district judge sitting at Westminster Magistrates' Court discharged Ms Richardson from an extradition request made by the government of the Republic of Turkey."The CPS will now consider the judgement carefully."Ms Richardson, who lives in Cradley, near Ledbury, was released on bail ahead of the next hearing at the same court on 9 court previously heard the teacher left the UK in 2000 and spent nearly 20 years living lived in Turkey between 2013 and 2019, and previously lived in Mexico and Hong Kong, the hearing was told. Follow BBC Hereford & Worcester on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.

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