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Cuba ends maximum age limit of 60 for presidential candidates
Cuba ends maximum age limit of 60 for presidential candidates

Arab News

time4 days ago

  • Politics
  • Arab News

Cuba ends maximum age limit of 60 for presidential candidates

HAVANA: Cuba scrapped the maximum age limit of 60 for its presidential candidates as part of a constitutional reform approved Friday by parliament. The communist-ruled island's restriction of two five-year presidential terms and minimum age of 35 for candidates were left unchanged. The measure, approved by the Council of State, imposes no age limits on people 'in the full exercise of their physical and mental faculties, with... loyalty and revolutionary trajectory,' national assembly president Esteban Lazo said. Former president Raul Castro, who at age 94 still holds a seat in the assembly, was the first to vote for the reform that will be on the books for the 2028 presidential elections. Cuba's current president, 65-year-old Miguel Diaz-Canel, was elected in 2018 and then re-elected in 2023. No favored successor has been publicly designated. The inclusion of term and age limits in the 2019 constitution marked a radical shift after the six decades in which Fidel Castro and his brother Raul were in power. In 2016, Fidel had to hand over the reins to his brother due to health problems. He died later that year, after nearly half a century leading Cuba. Raul Castro officially became president in 2008, at the age of 76. In 2021, he retired as Communist Party first secretary, handing over power to Diaz-Canel. The nation of nearly 10 million people is suffering its worst economic crisis in three decades, with shortages of all kinds of supplies, power outages, and unprecedented emigration.

Nude photo leak meant to be ‘distraction' from political goals, McGregor says
Nude photo leak meant to be ‘distraction' from political goals, McGregor says

National Post

time6 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • National Post

Nude photo leak meant to be ‘distraction' from political goals, McGregor says

Not much has phased Conor McGregor in the Octagon and he's not letting another online controversy get to him, either. Article content The former UFC champion broke his silence after allegedly sending unsolicited nude photos of himself to rap star Azealia Banks, who posted about it online Monday. Article content Article content McGregor directly addressed the X-rated snapshots on his X account on Tuesday evening. Article content After reposting several complimentary comments about his manhood, McGregor replied to another post calling out one of his Irish political rivals. Article content 'Don't let them distract you with my G C while they rob our country blind!' McGregor posted in response to a supporter who shared a story about a presidential candidate's alleged fraud. Article content Earlier this year, McGregor announced his intention to run in his home country's presidential elections. His platform has been heavily focused on anti-immigration. Article content Don't let them distract you with my G C while they rob our country blind! — Conor McGregor (@TheNotoriousMMA) July 15, 2025 Article content Article content The post followed the former UFC champion allegedly sending some X-rated pictures of himself, unprompted, to Banks earlier this week. Article content The 212 hitmaker shared the content on X, calling out McGregor for his behaviour as well as his threats for her to not tell anyone about it. Article content 'How you gonna send a b—- some crooked d— pics then threaten her not to tell,' the rapper posted on X, tagging McGregor. 'N—- do you know who the f— I am? Article content 'This is HARAM.' Article content Banks attached two screenshots — which have since been deleted due to X's content policy — allegedly sent by the MMA superstar via direct messages on Instagram. Article content In the X-rated snaps, McGregor is fully naked in what appears to be a closet while taking pictures in a mirror. In one, he appears to be wearing a weighted band around his penis. Article content Article content 'Don't be a rat cos (sic) all rats get caught,' a message in the screenshots says. Article content 'Like how are you really going to sexually harass me with the potato farmer d— then threaten me not to tell??' she wrote in a follow-up post, also calling out McGregor's political aspirations in his home country.

The Irish Times view on diaspora voting: broaden the franchise for presidential elections
The Irish Times view on diaspora voting: broaden the franchise for presidential elections

Irish Times

time09-07-2025

  • Politics
  • Irish Times

The Irish Times view on diaspora voting: broaden the franchise for presidential elections

The question of whether Irish citizens living abroad and in Northern Ireland should be allowed to vote in presidential elections has lingered for too long in the realm of deferral and indecision. This is despite previous commitments on the matter and the importance of the office for many Irish people who live outside the State but still identify with the nation. Only citizens ordinarily resident in the jurisdiction may vote in national elections. This excludes over a million Irish-born people living overseas and an even larger number in Northern Ireland who have a right to Irish citizenship. The rationale for this has traditionally rested on the idea that only those who live with the consequences of State policy should have a say in shaping it. But the presidency is not a policy-making office. It is a symbolic and unifying institution, often acting as a bridge between Ireland and its global citizens. Every president since Mary Robinson has embraced that role. The office embodies not only the State but the wider idea of the Irish nation. There is a strong argument that the franchise should reflect the broader Irish family, including those who have left. Extending voting rights to Irish citizens living north of the Border would be an act of constitutional generosity consistent with the spirit of the Belfast Agreement. It would recognise them as part of the national community without prejudicing their political preferences. READ MORE A referendum on the issue was announced in 2017 with cross-party support. It was delayed by Brexit and then shelved during the pandemic. Since then, political will has quietly dissipated. The Government now appears unwilling to reignite the debate, despite previous commitments and strong support from diaspora organisations. Minister of State for the Diaspora, Neale Richmond, said this week that the Government was concerned a referendum on the issue could be defeated if there was insufficient debate and consultation in advance of the vote. But it is in the Government's own gift to start that process. It should do so without further delay.

Ivory Coast ex-minister released after apologising for election criticism
Ivory Coast ex-minister released after apologising for election criticism

Free Malaysia Today

time08-07-2025

  • Politics
  • Free Malaysia Today

Ivory Coast ex-minister released after apologising for election criticism

Supporters of Alassane Ouattara, President of the Ivory Coast, attend a rally at the Ebimpe Olympic Stadium in Abidjan. (EPA Images pic) ABIDJAN : A former minister for Ivory Coast's ruling party who was arrested in June for criticising the exclusion of opposition candidates from upcoming presidential elections was released Monday after apologising, his lawyer said. Joel N'Guessan, who served as human rights minister in 2006-2007 and is a former spokesperson for the current ruling party, was arrested June 18 for 'discrediting the judicial institution and magistrates', according to prosecutors. The courts have banned four opposition figures, including former president Laurent Gbagbo, from the Oct 25 poll. In an interview with just before his arrest, N'Guessan stated that he was 'convinced that the exclusion of certain political actors will lead to a national crisis'. This past Saturday, N'Guessan apologised for his comments, and on Monday his lawyer Ange Rodrigue Dadje said in a statement that he has been granted a 'provisional release' and had returned to his residence, though he omitted whether his client still faces charges. 'I realised that my interview shocked many people in the justice system, particularly judges,' the ex-minister wrote in a statement Saturday. 'I therefore wish to offer my sincere apologies to the judicial system and the judges for my comments in this interview,' he added. Casting 'discredit on institutions' can be punished by three to five years of prison in the Ivory Coast. The West African country has experienced numerous outbreaks of violence during elections. In late 2010 and early 2011, the election of President Alassane Ouattara – an outcome contested by his rival Gbagbo – sparked turmoil which left some 3,000 people dead. The ruling party has regularly denied intervening in the electoral process, saying it leaves decisions to what it claims is an independent judiciary.

Government fears referendum to give Irish diaspora vote in presidential elections ‘could be lost'
Government fears referendum to give Irish diaspora vote in presidential elections ‘could be lost'

Irish Times

time07-07-2025

  • Politics
  • Irish Times

Government fears referendum to give Irish diaspora vote in presidential elections ‘could be lost'

There is a significant concern that the Government could lose a referendum to extend the vote in presidential elections to Irish citizens living abroad, the Minister of State for Diaspora has said. Neale Richmond said he was personally in favour of giving the right to vote in presidential elections to the Irish diaspora 'anywhere ... if they are entitled to Irish citizenship'. He said it should not just be limited to Irish citizens living in Northern Ireland . [ Should people in Northern Ireland vote in Irish presidential elections? Opens in new window ] 'It is my personal opinion, my party's policy and it is the Government's policy that we will introduce voting for the Irish abroad for presidential elections,' said the Fine Gael TD during a visit to London. READ MORE Mr Richmond noted the Government recently accepted an opposition Dáil motion on the issue. 'But it's a tricky debate,' he said. However, he complained of 'deliberate disinformation from the commentariat', which he suggested had misled some to believe that extending presidential votes could also bring into play voting for the Oireachtas or local councils. He said there is a 'major concern' a poll on giving the diaspora votes for the presidency could be defeated 'if we hold this referendum without a proper debate, without a proper consultation and without letting people know what this means'. In response to the suggestion that there was relative political unanimity on the issue, he said: 'We had relative unanimity on the last two referendums [held last year on expanding the definition of the family and on references to a woman's place in the home] and we lost those spectacularly badly.' The Dublin Rathdown TD said he was not trying to be a 'killjoy' on the issue. 'But as a politician, I don't want to run a referendum and lose it because then you can't have another referendum on this issue for a generation.' Why does Ireland's presidential race still have no one at the starting line? Listen | 42:06 The Minister was speaking at the Irish Embassy in London at the launch of the Global Irish Survey, a Government survey of the diaspora that is available at and will run until the end of August. He said the Government wanted to canvass the views of Irish people living abroad before formulating a new strategy for the diaspora; the existing five-year strategy runs out at the end of the year. Mr Richmond said he hoped a new strategy would be in place by next April. In addition to maintaining connections with people who had recently left the Republic, he said it would also seek to 'go deeper' with second, third and fourth generation descendants. In addition to launching the survey, he was also due to hold talks with Jenny Chapman, the British Labour government's development minister.

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