Saturday, 19 April 2008
Madonna seeks delay in Malawi adoption case: lawyer
BLANTYRE (Reuters) - U.S. pop star Madonna has asked a Malawian court to delay a hearing to finalize her adoption of a boy from the southern African nation, a lawyer close to the case said. The singer's law firm in Malawi filed an application requesting the High Court in Lilongwe to hear her adoption of David Banda on May 15 instead of April 22, as originally scheduled, the lawyer said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
Malawi: Two Journalists Arrested, One Beaten By Police
Journalist Maxwell Ng'ambi was arrested by police on suspicion that he intended to interview a former speaker of parliament and cabinet minister, Sam Mpasu, from prison without permission to do so.
Mpasu was convicted by a magistrate's court on 8 April 2008 on three charges of abuse of office involving procurement of education materials in 1994 and was sentenced to six years' imprisonment.
In a related development, the police also detained another journalist, Chinyeke Tembo, who went to enquire about the arrest of his colleague.
Tembo told MISA Malawi that he was beaten by the police and detained for complimenting the beauty of a policewoman. Malawi laws provide for indecent assault, which include gestures toward women.
When MISA Malawi visited the journalists at the police station on the afternoon of 17 April, the two had not been charged. Police Public Relations Officer Willie Mwaluka could not provide details on their cases.
The arrest of the two brings to five the total number of journalists who have been arrested in 2008.
BACKGROUND:
In February 2008, police arrested a reporter working for Blantyre Newspapers Ltd, Mike Chipalasa, and his editor, James Mphande, for publishing an allegedly false story "likely to cause public alarm and fear". They were released on bail and have not been taken to court to date. In March, police also arrested Wanangwa Tembo, an intern for the same publisher, for taking pictures of police officers who had gathered outside Anti-Corruption Bureau offices where their colleague was detained.
For further information on the Chipalasa and Mphande case, see: http://www.ifex.org/en/content/view/full/90645
For further information on the Tembo case, see: http://www.ifex.org/en/content/view/full/91634
Mpasu was convicted by a magistrate's court on 8 April 2008 on three charges of abuse of office involving procurement of education materials in 1994 and was sentenced to six years' imprisonment.
In a related development, the police also detained another journalist, Chinyeke Tembo, who went to enquire about the arrest of his colleague.
Tembo told MISA Malawi that he was beaten by the police and detained for complimenting the beauty of a policewoman. Malawi laws provide for indecent assault, which include gestures toward women.
When MISA Malawi visited the journalists at the police station on the afternoon of 17 April, the two had not been charged. Police Public Relations Officer Willie Mwaluka could not provide details on their cases.
The arrest of the two brings to five the total number of journalists who have been arrested in 2008.
BACKGROUND:
In February 2008, police arrested a reporter working for Blantyre Newspapers Ltd, Mike Chipalasa, and his editor, James Mphande, for publishing an allegedly false story "likely to cause public alarm and fear". They were released on bail and have not been taken to court to date. In March, police also arrested Wanangwa Tembo, an intern for the same publisher, for taking pictures of police officers who had gathered outside Anti-Corruption Bureau offices where their colleague was detained.
For further information on the Chipalasa and Mphande case, see: http://www.ifex.org/en/content/view/full/90645
For further information on the Tembo case, see: http://www.ifex.org/en/content/view/full/91634
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)