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Alpha Condé, le parrain des corrompus ! (opinion) - Societe Sufafos Ltd

Alpha Condé, le parrain des corrompus ! (opinion)

Libre opinion

Last updated Oct 4, 2020

[dropcap]L[/dropcap]e 8 février 2011, par le décret D/2011/029/PRG/SGG, Alpha Condé a mis en place le Comité d’Audit et l’a rattaché à la présidence à la République .A la création du comité, il avait été clair : ‘’Auditez les gestions passées et nous les publierons’’.

Abduction of Nanjangud beggar’s daughter sparks fresh probe into child trafficking

Police questioning suspects, checking CCTV footage

The abduction of a beggar’s three-year-old daughter in Nanjangud earlier this week, about four years after her elder son was similarly kidnapped from the pavement near the Srikanteshwara Temple, has set the police on the path of a fresh investigation into a possible case of child trafficking.

The investigation into the abduction of Parvathi’s eight-month-old son in April 2016 had helped the police uncover a well-organised child trafficking racket, which also involved sale of new-borns from two private maternity hospitals in Mysuru to childless couples.

In her complaint to the Nanjangud police, Parvathi said she was approached by an unidentified man on Thursday asking her to give away her daughter to a childless couple. Minutes after she reproached the stranger and threw away the currency note he handed to her, Parvathi found her daughter missing. She lodged a complaint after she was unable to locate her.

Refusing to rule out the involvement of child traffickers in the abduction, the Nanjangud police’s investigation also involves looking for the whereabouts of the accused involved in the 2016 case in which a chargesheet had been filed and trial is under way.

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13 okt 2020

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Au centre de détention de Caen, la première époque de la publication “Quand ?” (1999-2003)

Au centre de détention de Caen, la première époque de la publication “Quand ?” (1999-2003)

PAR MARC RENNEVILLE · PUBLIÉ 24 OCTOBRE 2010 · MIS À JOUR 15 OCTOBRE 2020

Quand ? février 2003 n°22

C’est en mai 1999 que trois détenus du Centre pénitentiaire de Caen persuadent la direction de l’établissement de tenter une nouvelle fois une expérience de presse au sein de la détention. Les éphémères expériences antérieures s’étaient limitées à la publication de quelques numéros de Drôle d’immeuble, d’Oxygène, du Grillon. ils parviennent à persuader le directeur de l’époque Jean-Louis Daumas, un ancien éducateur entré dans l’Administration pénitentiaire en 1985, ancien directeur du centre de jeunes détenus de Fleury-Mérogis sur lequel il a publié La zonzon de Fleury, et reçoivent le soutien du Juge d’application des peines qui avait alors en charge les 420 prisonniers du centre, parmi lesquels 45 condamnés à perpétuité. A cette époque, la moyenne d’âge est élevée, 46ans, et ce vieillissement de la population carcérale, composée principalement d’auteurs de crime sexuels, ne sera pas sans influencer la tenue d’une chronique médicale régulière et la publication de notices sur les difficultés de la libération conditionnelle.

Nous avons choisi d’étudier une première période de cette publication, de 1999 à 2003, car l’actualité pénitentiaire est fort riche et est commentée par le périodique. Des lacunes dans les collections disponibles de Quand ? en 2003-2004, un changement de maquette et d’équipe à partir de juillet 2004 ( de la couleur dans le bandeau de couverture) incitent, par prudence, à isoler ce premier moment d’une publication qui continue son bonhomme de chemin en 2010. La régularité et la durée de cette publication doivent être soulignées, car elles tranchent avec des essais de presse plus éphémères, notamment dans les maisons d’arrêt. La longue durée des peines explique probablement la stabilité des comités de rédaction, des noyaux de 4 à 6 détenus.

VACANCIES Communication advisor project Distance and Adoption (8 hours per week) - Ministry of Justice and Security, at home

Introduction

For the Ministry of Justice and Security we are looking for a Senior Communication Advisor for 8 hours a week for the Distance and Adoption project. Are you strong in strategic communication advice? Do you have experience with / within the (national) government and with communication to vulnerable groups of citizens? Then we would like to get in touch with you.

Organization

Prevent crime. Protect victims and vulnerable people. Punishing perpetrators and offering them perspective. And in doing so, collaborate with partners such as municipalities, healthcare, the social domain, probation organizations, companies and various others. That is what the Directorate-General for Punishment and Protection (DGSenB) stands for. DGSenB is collaborative and innovative. The social task is central to them; they focus on sanction implementation and assistance to victims. In this way, DGSenB and its partners contribute to a safe and liveable Netherlands by means of compensation and reintegration. Victim policy, high impact crimes, prison system, probation, youth, integrity policy, games of chance, philanthropy, international child abduction, intercountry adoption and international child protection: these are a few of DGSenB's areas of activity that are diverse. Every employee has their own role, responsibility and expertise. What do they have in common? They are inspired by the outside world, work together and are open to the development of themselves, colleagues and the team. They do this in an open and transparent manner.

Position

Fwd: Moeder vindt zoon bijna 16 jaar na tsunami Sri Lanka terug (Mother finds son again almost 16 years after tsunami Sri Lanka)

COLOMBO - A boy who went missing when a deadly tsunami hit Sri Lanka in 2004 has been tracked down by his mother after years of searching the eastern part of the country, police reported Tuesday.

The boy, identified as Akram Rizkhan, was 5 years old when the tsunami devastated his village of Karativu, 367 km east of the capital, on December 26.

The child was initially admitted to a hospital in the area and then adopted by a family, the boy's mother said.

“I searched for my son for years, but could not find him. I appealed to the president and sought help from the police, ”she told reporters after the reunification.

DNA test

Read more at: http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/78353587.cms?utm_source=contentofinterest&utm_medium=text&utm_cam

Pune: State woman and child development (WCD) minister Yashomati Thakur has said that all care and precautions had been

taken to prevent the spread of coronavirus at the 362 childcare protection homes in the state.

With the rising number of Covid-19 cases in the state, a detailed plan had been drawn up by the WCD department for taking

care of children at these homes.

There are currently 10,000 children at shelter homes across the state. Before the pandemic, there were 21,000 children. The

Dutch NGO calls for probe after KZN girls adopted without father’s consent

Durban - A Netherlands based non-governmental organisation, Against Child Trafficking (ACT), has called for the Dutch government to do a comprehensive review of all adoptions from South Africa and open a criminal investigation.

The children’s right advocacy organisation which opposes inter-country adoption alleged that inter-country adoptions in the Netherlands have been “riddled with scandals”. The organisation was responding to the recent reports by Sunday Tribune where a father of two daughters from Kwangcolosi, near Hillcrest, complained about the adoption of his girls by a Netherlands couple in 2014.

The father believed there were discrepancies in the adoption process as he was not made aware, he now wants the process reviewed and his girls returned home.

The girls, aged six and eight at the time of adoption, lived in Ikhethelo Children’s Village in Kwanyuswa near Bothas Hill, after their mother died.

The Camperdown Children’s Court granted an order for the girls to be adopted by a foreign couple after an investigation by an adoption agency which facilitated the process.

“Kroongetuige in zaak van adoptiefraude wordt met de dood bedreigd”

"Crown witness in adoption fraud case is threatened with death"

Today at 03:00byDirk Coosemans

Crown witness Dieumerci K. was in a Congolese cell for a long time, but the investigation would have shown that he and his entire family were misled. PHOTO: AFP

The witness in the case of the adoption fraud involving Congolese children would have been threatened with death, according to a complaint to the Brussels police. Dieumerci K. currently resides in Congo and has already received people from the entourage of the suspects there several times. The federal prosecutor's office will investigate the complaint.

The adoption fraud case came to light four years ago. The court found that the Belgian-Congolese Julienne M., and her seven officials from the French-speaking Community in our country, would have taken at least five children from parents in Congo to be put up for adoption in Belgium. The court wants to prosecute the eight suspects for human trafficking.

Iranian Christians Forced to Separate from Adopted Daughter

The appeals court in the Persian Gulf port of Bushehr has ruled that a Christian couple must give up custody of their adopted two-year-old daughter.

Maryam Fallahi and Sam Khosravi, an Iranian Christian couple, adopted a girl by the name of Lydia when she was 10 weeks old. The court’s verdict stated that a Christian family cannot have custody of Lydia because she was born to a Muslim mother.

This two-year-old child suffers from heart and digestive ailments and Iran’s Welfare Organization had not informed the couple of her condition before they adopted her. Nevertheless, both the Welfare Organization and the Medical Examiner confirmed that, throughout their custody, the couple gave Lydia the best care possible. The judge in his ruling conceded that the chances of another family adopting Lydia “is zero.”

“The verdict by the judge to separate Lydia from this Christian couple completely contradicts fatwas by [grand ayatollahs] Makarem Shirazi and Yousef Saanei, two Shia religious authorities,” said the couple’s lawyer. In response to the lawyers query, Ayatollah Makarem Shirazi had ruled that because of “necessity” the child can remain with the couple. And Ayatollah Saanei’s fatwa stated that, under Sharia law, there is no problem with the couple retaining custody of Lydia.

Maryam Fallahi and Sam Khosravi were among seven Christian converts who were arrested in the summer of 2019 by security forces in Bushehr, tried by a Revolutionary Court in June of this year, and later sentenced to prison, exile, a fine, and a ban on work and social activities. Sam Khosravi was sentenced to one year in prison and two years of exile from Bushehr while Maryam Fallahi was fined 80 million rials ($2,000) and was banned from government service for life.