News
What son’s conviction means for President Biden

Hunter Biden’s conviction for lying about his drug use on a handgun licence application will be a devastating personal blow for his father, Joe Biden.
The US president doubles as the patriarch of a tight-knit family that has seen its share of personal tragedy and trauma.
Now his surviving son has been found guilty of three federal crimes that carry a potentially lengthy prison term.
But Hunter’s verdict is unlikely to change how Americans vote in November’s election.
His father’s name will be on the ballot, not his. There’s no evidence connecting the president to his son’s offences. And there has been scant polling evidence that the public is following this trial closely.
After the verdict was announced, the president released a statement hinting at the dual obligations demanding his attention.
“I am the president, but I am also a dad,” he said.
He added that he continued to support his son and was proud of the man he is today.
At the start of the trial, Joe Biden said he wouldn’t comment on the proceedings, but his son’s courtroom drama has followed him for weeks, as he conducted his official duties and campaigned for re-election. Hunter’s yet-to-be determined punishment may be similarly distracting as the president prepares later this month for a pivotal presidential debate.
“This will, of course, be a personal distraction for the president, as it would be for any father,” says Michael LaRosa, who served as press secretary for First Lady Jill Biden during the first two years of the Biden presidency. “It’s not a distraction from his duties as president, but I’m sure it will take an emotional toll on the family.”
While in France for D-Day commemorations last week, President Biden said that he would not consider using his authority to pardon his son. And he added that he would accept the jury’s verdict – a contrast from Donald Trump’s rejection of his own conviction as rigged and corrupt.
The former president’s response to the Hunter Biden verdict was also markedly different. In a statement released by the campaign, Trump said the trial was “nothing more than a distraction” from what he asserted were more serious crimes committed by the Biden family.
News
Police sack officer who killed one, injured two in Calabar

By Francesca Hangeior
The Cross River State Police Command has dismissed an officer, Inspector Effiong Bassey, who killed one person and injured two others in Calabar, the state capital.
The state police spokesman, Irene Ugbo, confirmed the dismissal in a statement on Monday, saying Bassey had been charged to court and remanded at the Afokang Correctional Centre.
She said “The Police Officer has been duly dismissed, charged to court and remanded at Afokang Correctional Centre. We visited the deceased family on the same day and also went to the University of Calabar Teaching Hospital to see the injured victims, who underwent a successful surgery.
“As we speak, the victim is recuperating, and we are making efforts to ensure that all affected parties are well taken care of. At no time did we abandon any of the victims, including the family of the deceased.
“As a matter of fact, we gave financial support from day one when the incident happened, and nobody including the deceased family, victims and their families who were not carried along . I can assure that the surgery on the victim who was shot in the neck was successful and he is recovering fast, and we shall give further update on his health.”
She criticised what she described as unverified reports suggesting that the police had neglected the victims, urging journalists to confirm details before publication.
News
Six feared dead as plane crashes in New York

By Francesca Hangeior
A small plane carrying six people has crashed in New York state, authorities said on Sunday, with US media reporting that there were no survivors.
The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) is investigating a “fatal crash” in Copake, eastern New York, official Todd Inman told reporters on Sunday, without specifying the number of deaths.
The Mitsubishi MU2B40 aircraft crashed into a field 10 miles (16 kilometers) from the local Columbia County airport shortly after noon on Saturday, Inman said.
The New York Times reported that all six people on board were dead, citing a family member.
The victims were Michael Groff, the pilot and a neurosurgeon, his surgeon wife Joy Saini, their two children and the children’s partners, the New York Times said.
The group had been traveling to a 25th birthday party and a Passover gathering, it added.
Inman said the aircraft was intact as it came down, before it “compressed, buckled and embedded into the terrain” from the force of the impact.
“During the approach at Columbia County Airport, the pilot reported a missed approach (and) he requested vectors for another approach,” he said.
Visibility was falling before the crash happened, Inman said.
The pilot was experienced and the aircraft’s cockpit was recently updated.
The incident is the latest in a string of aviation disasters in recent days, coming after a helicopter plummeted into the Hudson River last week, killing six people.
In January, 67 people died in a collision between a military helicopter and a passenger jet in Washington in January.
A light aircraft also crashed after departing Boca Raton airport in Florida on Friday, with local media reporting three people had been killed after the plane developed a mechanical issue.
News
Benue traditional rulers caution against negotiating with herders

By Francesca Hangeior
The traditional rulers in Gwer West Local Government Area of Benue State have warned against negotiating with herders to cede land within the council.
This resolution was made at the end of an extraordinary expanded sitting of Gwer West LG Traditional Council held on Saturday at the palace of Ter Tyoshin in Naka and presided over by His Royal Highness, Daniel Abomtse, and a copy was made available to journalists on Monday.
According to the communique signed by other traditional rulers and prominent people in the council, they called on youths to mobilise themselves ti exercise in their various communities.
Gwer West Local Government had witnessed a series of violent attacks in recent times, leading to the burning down of the palace, the local government secretariat and other private properties by youths who protested incessant killings and kidnapping in their communities by suspected armed herders.
Rising from the expanded extraordinary sitting, the traditional rulers urged all Tyoshin sons and daughters to show commitment to the programme of insecurity in the land in whatever capacity they will be called upon to serve
The communique read in parts, “The sitting vehemently condemned the unabated activities of marauding herdsmen, who wittingly attack, murder, rape, and maim our people, destroying houses and farms, and laying siege on all communities cutting across fifteen (15) council wards and appealed to Government to continue to support the people to send away the enemy.
“The sitting acknowledged security agents for their efforts in handling the security challenges bedeviling the people of Gwer West and urged them to double their efforts in combating insecurity in the land.
“The sitting urged Traditional rulers to take charge of their communities and exercise traditional authority to ensure the security and safety of their people and not betray the trust reposed in them as custodians of the lands and the areas within their domain.
“Nobody is allowed to negotiate with herders to cede land, co-exist or strike any deal on behalf of the people of Gwer West. Any person found wanting in this regard shall be handed over to law enforcement agents. The sitting urged the youth to mobilise themselves to continue to exercise vigilance in their various communities.”
The traditional rulers also called youths in the council to show remorse and apology over acts of arson, looting, sacking and burning of Ter Tyoshin’s palace, annex and extension buildings, and also properties of other individuals, they also frowned at the activities of cultism in the land and called on the youth to desist from any form of criminality.
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