GABON'S LEADER NGUEMA ELECTED PRESIDENT WITH 90.35% OF VOTE, INTERIOR MINISTER SAYS

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 Gabon's leader Nguema elected president with 90.35% of vote, interior minister says Brice Oligui Nguema, who led a coup in Gabon in August 2023, won Saturday's presidential election with 90.35% of votes cast, according to provisional results, the Central African country's interior minister said on Sunday, Reuters reported. The result cements Nguema's grip on power 19 months after the coup ended more than half a century of rule by the Bongo family in Gabon, an oil producer with a population of around 2.5 million. Nguema's most prominent opponent in the eight-candidate race was Alain Claude Bilie By Nze, who was serving as prime minister under President Ali Bongo at the time of the coup. Nze, 57, finished with 3.02% of the total, according to the provisional results announced. Campaigning in a baseball cap bearing his "We Build Together" slogan, Nguema pitched himself as a change agent cracking down on the corrupt old guard. He vowed to diversify the oil-re...

RUSSIA RELEASES FEMALE PRISON INMATES TO JOIN UKRAINE WAR. (PHOTO).


 Russia Releases Female Prison Inmates to Join Ukraine War


About 30,000 women were serving time in Russia at the start of the invasion.


Military recruiters began touring prisons for women across the European part of Russia in the fall of 2023, more than a year after the countryā€™s forces started offering convicted men pardons and salaries in return for combat service. Until now, however, convicted women who had enlisted remained incarcerated without an official explanation, according to interviews with former and current inmates of four Russian prisons for women.


Tens of thousands imprisoned Russian men have taken up the militaryā€™s call, replenishing the countryā€™s invasion force at a crucial moment in the war and helping it regain its military advantage over Ukraine.

The recruitment of women convicts comes as the Russian government has resorted to increasingly unorthodox schemes to attract volunteers from the margins of Russian society, trying to avoid another round of unpopular conscription. Apart from prison inmates, these recruitment schemes have targeted debtors, people accused of crimes and foreigners.


Russiaā€™s defense ministry and prison service have in the past left unanswered all requests for comment on the countryā€™s prison recruitment program.


It is also unknown what roles the recruited women would assume at the front. The military recruiters who visited their prison near St. Petersburg last year offered inmates contracts for serving as snipers, combat medics and frontline radio operators for one year, a significant departure from the largely auxiliary positions occupied by most Russian servicewomen. About 40 of the prisonā€™s 400 inmates signed up at the time.


They were offered pardons and the equivalent of about $2,000 a month, about 10 times the national minimum wage.


Two women who have witnessed the recruitment at the prison in 2023 told The New York Times that fellow inmates signed up despite the dangers outlined by the visiting military officers.


The former inmates said the strict conditions in Russiaā€™s prisons for women have contributed to the decision of some women to enlist. Inmates at the prison near St. Petersburg had to remain silent at all times, and spent up to 12 hours a day doing compulsory labor at the jailā€™s sawing workshop, even in subzero temperatures in winter, the women said.

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