Algeria Arrests 17 Separatist Suspects For Plotting Armed Operations: State-Run TV

ALGIERS, Algerian police said yesterday that, it arrested 17 suspects, belonging to a separatist group listed by the government as a terrorist organisation, state-run ENTV channel, reported.

The 17 suspects from the Movement for Self-determination of Kabylie (MAK) were arrested, in provinces near the capital, Algiers, for plotting criminal acts targeting homeland security, ENTV said, quoting a statement of the National Security Department.

The collected evidence and the suspects’ confessions, revealed that MAK members were in constant contact with foreign forces through cyberspace, operating under the cover of Zionist civil society organisations based in a North African country, it added.

At the suspects’ homes, the police seized weapons and military equipment, banners and leaflets praising the MAK, as well as, documents providing contacts with Israeli organisations, according to ENTV.

Algeria declared the France-based MAK a terrorist organisation last year. MAK seeks independence of the Berber-speaking Kabylie region in northern Algeria.

In late Aug, in explaining Algeria’s decision to cut diplomatic ties with Morocco, Foreign Minister, Ramtane Lamamra, said, Morocco had been supporting MAK and the Britain-based Rachad movement, which is also listed by Algeria as a terrorist organisation.

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Americans Being Warned of Deadly Fake Medication

Americans are being warned to beware of potentially deadly fake prescription pills that are laced with the powerful opioid fentanyl and the highly addictive stimulant methamphetamine. The counterfeit tablets are linked to a wave of drug overdoses killing unsuspecting users.

In its first warning in six years, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) said international and domestic criminal networks were mass-producing fake pills and falsely marketing them as legitimate prescription medication.

“Counterfeit pills that contain these dangerous and extremely addictive drugs are more lethal and more accessible than ever before,” said DEA Administrator Anne Milgram at a news conference in Washington.

The notification was issued last week after the DEA announced it had seized more than 1.8 million fake pills during a two-month undercover operation and had arrested more than 810 people. In a statement, the agency said it had confiscated more than 9.5 million potentially lethal pills in the last year.

“Illicit fentanyl was responsible for nearly three-quarters of the more than 93,000 fatal drug overdoses in the United States in 2020,” said Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco. Health officials report fentanyl was responsible for nearly 70,000 of the overdose deaths.

Powerful pills

U.S. law enforcement investigators say the majority of counterfeit medication found in America is being made in labs in Mexico using chemicals imported from China. The DEA believes Chinese traffickers have switched from primarily manufacturing finished fentanyl to exporting precursors of the synthetic opioid to Mexican cartels, which then manufacture illicit fentanyl. U.S. officials are now seeking greater cooperation from Mexican law enforcement agencies to disrupt trafficking in the country.

DEA laboratory testing revealed that two out of five fentanyl-laced fake pills seized contained a potentially deadly dose of just 2 milligrams. Fentanyl can be 100 times more powerful than morphine. Drug researchers say a deadly dose of fentanyl is small enough to fit on the tip of a pencil.

“The fake pills seized were capable of killing more than 700,000 people,” Milgram noted, adding that law enforcement agencies have sought to shut down criminal distribution networks selling tablets that look exactly like name-brand prescription medications. “We are alerting the public to this danger so that people have the information they need to protect themselves and their children.”

The DEA alert said medications prescribed by doctors and dispensed by licensed pharmacists were safe, but pills acquired by other avenues were potentially deadly.

Decades of death

Since 1999, more than 500,000 Americans have died of opioid overdoses, both prescription and nonprescription. Deaths rose in nearly all states, with the highest increases in California, Kentucky, Vermont, South Carolina and West Virginia, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The more than 9.5 million fake tablets seized this year represented 430% more than the number seized in 2019. The DEA also confiscated ingredients used to make tens of millions of pills, including more than 4,000 kilograms of methamphetamine.

“The pervasiveness of these illicit drugs, and the fatal overdoses that too often result, is a problem that cuts across America from small towns to big cities and everything in between,” said Monaco.

The most common counterfeit pills are being made to look identical to prescription medications such as Oxycontin, Xanax, Vicodin or stimulants like amphetamines. Investigators say the fake medications are widely available and sold on social media platforms as well as on the streets.

“The illicit drug supply introduces even greater uncertainty about what people are taking, and that contributes to overdoses.” Dr. Caleb Alexander, a professor of epidemiology and medicine at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore, Maryland, told VOA. “If someone combines fentanyl with heroin or methamphetamine or another illicit product, it can be deadly.”

Source: Voice of America

Lesotho collaborates with South Africa to combat human trafficking

— As human trafficking incidents between Lesotho and South Africa increase, Lesotho’s Home Affairs Minister Motlalentoa Letsosa said collaboration between the two countries could be crucial in combating the scourge.

“People working at the border as the police and transport people, those are critical partners. If we work together, I strongly believe that we can combat trafficking in persons,” he said to the South African Broadcasting Corporation at the Maseru Bridge Border Post on Thursday.

Speaking with Xinhua, Kutloano Lerotha, Lesotho consulate officer in Welkom in the Free State, South Africa, said they had observed a spike in the number of young Lesotho women and boys becoming victims of trafficking, with around 10 human trafficking cases reported to their office every week.

“Most vulnerable are the young ladies and young men due to illegal mining,” he said, “Lesotho nationals get promised jobs and are brought to South Africa but to be involved in sex trafficking and some get exploited in homes.”

“They are recruited to work in illegal mining and there’s a syndicate behind this,” he said, adding that it was important to raise awareness about the issue so more young people who fell victim to this could be saved.

Lesotho was working with security agencies in South Africa such as the Hawks, South Africa’s Directorate for Priority Crime Investigation, and the police to tackle the issue

Source: Nam News Network

Japan renews commitment to food and nutrition assistance in Lesotho

MASERU- The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) today welcomed a JPY 200 million (US$ 1.8 Million) contribution by the Government of Japan to strengthen food assistance support to 50,000 pre-primary school children through the Government of Lesotho’s national school feeding programme.

An online ceremony was held today to mark the contribution which will be used to procure canned fish to further diversify nutritious meals offered in Early Childhood Care and Development (ECCD) centres, reaching 26,000 girls and 24,000 boys across the country. The ceremony was officiated by the Lesotho Minister of Education and Training, Honourable Mamookho Phiri.

The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated food insecurity in the country as sources of livelihoods (casual labour, remittances, crop sales, petty trade, livestock sales or sale of livestock products) remain slightly lower than normal. It is estimated that some 312,000 Basotho will face acute food insecurity and require urgent humanitarian assistance, between October 2020 and March 2021.

“The support from Japan has come at a critical time when WFP is appealing for more resources to respond to increasing humanitarian needs,” said Ms. Aurore Rusiga, WFP Lesotho Representative and Country Director. “The timely contribution will reach the most vulnerable Basotho children in the form of a hot and nutritious meal, allowing them to remain in school and as such to reach their full potential.”

Results from the latest Integrated Phase Classification (IPC) Food Insecurity Analysis of August 2021 predict that currently (September 2021) about 179,000 people are facing high acute food insecurity (IPC Phase 3) and require humanitarian action to reduce food gaps, protect and restore livelihood and prevent acute malnutrition.

Japan has been one of the most consistent donors to WFP Lesotho having donated over JPY 1 billion (US$10 million) since 2014. The online ceremony was attended virtually by the Ambassador of the Embassy of Japan in Pretoria, His Excellency Mr. Norio Maruyama and WFP southern Africa Regional Director, Mr. Menghestab Haile.

“The donation will help meet the heightened need for food assistance during this unprecedented time. Together we can work towards reducing the country’s development challenges, and strengthening our bilateral relations through humanitarian assistance,” said His Excellency Ambassador Norio Maruyama

“I would like to take this opportunity to thank the Government of Japan for this direct investment in the future of our country through the national school feeding programme,” said Mamookho Phiri, Honourable Minister of Education and Training. “This invaluable donation will complement the maize meal and highly fortified nutritious porridge that the children are currently enjoying and make a tangible difference to the lives of Basotho children across the nation.”

The contribution supports the National School Feeding Programme, which aims to ensure that vulnerable pre-primary school children in Lesotho have access to adequate, safe and nutritious food all year round.

The Government of Japan has been contributing towards humanitarian food assistance in developing countries since 1968 and is a long-standing partner of WFP in Lesotho.

Source: World Food Programme

Lesotho / Southern Africa: Windstorms – Emergency Plan of Action, DREF Operation n° MDRLS005

A. Situation analysis

Description of the disaster

From 27 to 31 August 2021, Lesotho experienced windstorms which affected several districts across the country. Out of the ten districts, two (Qacha’s Nek and Thaba Tseka) were severely affected while the remaining eight districts experienced minor effects of the wind.

Soon after the disaster, Lesotho Red Cross Society (LRCS) and the Disaster Management Authority (including stakeholders from the District Disaster Management Team (DDMT) and the National Society) conducted a rapid assessment between the 29 and 31 of August 2021 revealed that in Qacha’s Nek and Thaba Tseka, cumulatively, 510 houses were affected by the storm. Out of the affected households, 162 were destroyed and families have been displaced, currently hosted by neighbours or relatives. The remaining 348 families whose houses were damaged are using undamaged part of the houses, although they have lost their basic household items. In Qacha’s Nek (Sehaba Theebe) 81 family latrines were blown away. The table below shows the number of affected families per district.

Based on the above, this DREF request will initially focus on supporting the urgent needs of the affected communities which include, immediate food support, temporary shelter materials, WASH and psychosocial support. Continuous assessments by volunteers will allow monitoring and any new development on the ground impacting the operation will be used to update the response as necessary. The DREF operation will focus in Qacha’s Nek and Thaba Tseka areas, where the impact of storms was greatest.

Source: International Federation of Red Cross And Red Crescent Societies