BLORD IS OUT FROM KUJE PRISON AFTER PERFECTING ALL HIS BAIL CONDITIONS.(PHOTO).

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 So Linus Williams (Blord) has been released from Kuje prison after fulfilling his bail conditions, finally, freedom after a few weeks in custody. However, here’s the current position of his case:  He is still expected to show up and stand his trial.  If he fails to appear in court even for one day, his bail can be revoked and a bench warrant may be issued against him, meaning a return to Kuje. If the prosecution cannot prove the charges against him, he will be discharged and acquitted. If the prosecution proves the charges, he may be sentenced and sent back to Kuje. I think he should seek a peaceful resolution to the case. Congrats to him on his freedom for now.

CHAGOS DEAL WILL SECURE U. S MILITARY BASE: MAURITIUS. (PHOTO).


 Chagos deal will secure US military base: Mauritius


A prospective deal on returning the Chagos islands to Mauritius will ensure the United States maintains its strategic military base on the Indian Ocean archipelago, Mauritius's prime minister said on Sunday, AFP reported.


"There is a disinformation campaign in the United States claiming that we are close to China, that we are going to let them open bases, which is completely untrue," Prime Minister Navin Ramgoolam told the Le Mauricien newspaper.


"Mauritius is close to India, not China. Donald Trump must understand that by supporting this deal he is securing the base at Diego Garcia," he said, ahead of the US businessman's inauguration as president on Monday.


Britain and its former colony reached a deal in October to hand back Chagos, which it had kept control of after Mauritius gained independence in the 1960s, on the condition that a UK-US military base would remain on the largest island, Diego Garcia.


But Ramgoolam's government, in office since November, has reopened the talks, reportedly seeking greater financial compensation and to renegotiate the length of the proposed lease for the base.


The British government said this week that it would consult the incoming US administration of Donald Trump after the deal was criticised by some of his Republican allies.


Britain set up the Diego Garcia base after independence and leased it to the United States, which has used it as a hub for long-range bombers and ships, notably during the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.


But in doing so, Britain evicted thousands of Chagos islanders who have since mounted a series of legal claims for compensation in British courts.


Under the proposed agreement, the UK would retain a 99-year lease on the base for a payment of £90 million ($110 million) a year, according to British media.


London "has realised that it would be inelegant to sign a deal just before Trump takes power, as he might take it badly," Ramgoolam said.


Trump's pick for secretary of state, Marco Rubio, said in October that the agreement posed "a serious threat" to US national security.


A spokesperson for UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer said on Wednesday: "It is perfectly reasonable for the new US administration to actually consider the detail and we will obviously have those discussions with them."


But the spokesperson rejected suggestions that Trump could "veto" any agreement, saying: "We will only agree to a deal that is in the UK's best interests and protects our national security."


If Washington refuses to support the deal, Ramgoolam said Mauritius would pursue its fight for full sovereignty over the Chagos islands.

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