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US judge allows age-discrimination lawsuit against Musk’s X to proceed

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Elon Musk has drastically slashed X's workforce since he acquired the company last year

A California federal judge has refused to dismiss a lawsuit accusing X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter, of disproportionately laying off older workers when Elon Musk acquired the company last year.

US District Judge Susan Illston said on Tuesday the plaintiff in the proposed class action, John Zeman, had provided enough evidence that the mass layoffs had a greater impact on older employees to continue pursuing the case.

Zeman, for example, claimed X laid off 60 percent of workers who were 50 or older and nearly three-quarters of those who were older than 60, compared with 54 percent of employees younger than 50.

Illston ruled that the United States federal law banning workplace age bias allows plaintiffs to bring so-called “disparate impact” claims in a class action, an issue that has divided courts.

The judge dismissed a claim that X intentionally targeted older workers for layoffs, but gave Zeman a month to file an amended lawsuit fleshing out that claim.

Video Duration 02 minutes 06 seconds 02:06

Musk says fight with Zuckerberg will be livestreamed on X

Shannon Liss-Riordan, Zeman’s lawyer, said, “This decision validates the arguments we are making that the discrimination claims can go forward.”

Source: Aljazeera.com

Nagorno-Karabakh: ‘People are fainting queuing up for bread’

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Demonstrations have been taking place in Nagorno-Karabakh's regional capital Stepanakert

They call it the Road of Life, as it is the only route connecting 120,000 ethnic Armenians living in Azerbaijan’s Nagorno-Karabakh region with the Republic of Armenia.

But for nearly nine months the Lachin Corridor has been blocked by Azerbaijani authorities, resulting in severe shortages of food, medication, hygiene products and fuel in the breakaway region.

Eighteen-year old Hayk is standing on the balcony of a modest hotel in Goris on the Armenian side of the border with Azerbaijan, speaking to his mother on a video call.

“No eggs, no sugar, there are no sweets at all, bread is being rationed, got up at 04:00 the other day to stand in the queue,” says his mother, speaking from the Karabakh town of Martakert.

Hayk is not his real name. I have changed it for his own safety.

Armenians are unable to reach their families on the other side of the Lachin Corridor because it has been blocked by Azerbaijan since December.

No independent media have been able to reach the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave. Photos and videos of empty shops have been circulating on social media.

Source: bbc.com

Family devastated as three die in crash

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Three-year-old Tom lost his life in the crash

A three-year-old boy and his grandparents have died following a road crash near Cashel in County Tipperary.

Thomas O’Reilly, 45, Bridget O’Reilly, 46, and their grandson Tom O’Reilly, died when the car they were travelling in struck a wall.

It happened shortly before 21:00 local time on Tuesday in the Windmill Knockbulloge area of Cashel.

A male and a female, both aged 22, were front occupants of the car and were removed from the scene to Tipperary University Hospital in Clonmel.

The man is being treated for serious injuries, while the woman is being treated for less serious injuries, gardaí said.

Supt Kieran Ruane said every member of the police expressed their sympathies to the family and friends of the deceased.

“Our local community here in Cashel is shocked and deeply saddened by this tragic road traffic collision,” he said.

“I have spoken with the family of the deceased this morning, a family that is devastated by this terrible incident.”

Thomas O Reilly, 45, Bridget O Reilly, 46 Image source, An Garda Síochána

Bridget O’Reilly, 46, and her husband, 45-year-old Thomas

The road remains closed and is not expected to reopen for some time.

Source: bbc.com

Australia sets date for historic referendum on its First Nations people

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Prime Minister Anthony Albanese joined yes vote supporters at Sydney Opera House, August 22, 2023

Australia has set the date for its first referendum in 24 years as polls suggest the government is on course for failure unless it can reverse declining support.

On October 14, more than 17 million registered voters across the country will vote on whether to change the constitution to recognize the land’s original inhabitants through a First Nations advisory group with a direct line to government.

“On that day, every Australian will have a once in a generation chance to bring our country together and to change it for the better,” said Prime Minister Anthony Albanese on Wednesday.

As soon as the date was announced, the no campaign sent a text message calling for tax deductible donations that read: “It’s on! Albo has called it and we have until OCT 14 to beat the Voice!”

Just one question will be asked that requires a “yes” or “no” answer – “A Proposed Law: to alter the Constitution to recognise the First Peoples of Australia by establishing an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Voice. Do you approve this proposed alteration?”

The question has generated hundreds of headlines and hours of debate online and on air, as both sides mount vigorous campaigns to sway the majority in all states and territories.

Source: cnn.com

Gabon president calls for help after ouster in country’s first coup

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President Ali Bongo Ondimba appeared in a video in his residence in Libreville on Wednesday, calling on his 'friends' to 'make noise,' following the coup.

Gabon’s deposed President Ali Bongo Ondimba has solicited help, hours after he was put under house arrest by members of his presidential guard in an ongoing coup attempt on Wednesday.

Bongo, who confirmed his arrest in a video circulating on social media and verified by Al Jazeera, called on calls on citizens to “make noise” after the coup attempt. He said he was in the presidential palace but his wife and children were elsewhere in the video.

The coup leaders said his family and his doctors were with him in his home. They did not give any details about his health.

Al Jazeera correspondents in Dakar said people were out in the streets of the Gabonese capital Libreville, celebrating and waving flags.

Appearing on state-run television channel Gabon 24, the officers who orchestrated the coup said they represented all security and defence forces in the Central African nation.

They also said the election results were cancelled, all borders closed until further notice and state institutions dissolved.

The state institutions they declared dissolved included the government, the senate, the national assembly, the constitutional court and the election body.

“In the name of the Gabonese people … we have decided to defend the peace by putting an end to the current regime,” one officer read out loud from the joint statement while about a dozen others stood silently behind him in military fatigues and berets.

The servicemen introduced themselves as members of the “Committee of Transition and the Restoration of Institutions”.

Source: Aljazeera.com

One family has led Gabon for 55 years. Can this election bring a new era?

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Deposed President Ali Bongo

About 850,000 people are eligible to vote on Saturday when Gabon chooses a president and members of parliament simultaneously on a single ballot paper under a new electoral system.

President Ali Bongo, who has served two consecutive seven-year terms, is standing for a third. The new electoral system is the result of a constitutional reform adopted in April. Among its key measures are the standardisation of all political terms of office to five years and the abolition of a second round in presidential elections.

There are no term limits in Gabon, so if Bongo keeps winning elections, he could be president for life and extend his family’s hold on the Central African nation.

Bongo is the candidate for the ruling Gabonese Democratic Party (PDG), the party founded by his father, Omar Bongo, who ruled with an iron fist from 1967 to 2009. After his death, his son, then the defence minister, took his place as president and has ruled ever since.

Until last week, 19 candidates were to run for the presidency in this election. But on August 18, six candidates sprang a surprise by forming the Alternance 2023 coalition, naming independent candidate Albert Ondo Ossa as their joint candidate.

“Gabon is not the property of the Bongos,” he said after the announcement.

Ossa, an economics professor and education minister under Omar Bongo, was also a contestant in the 2009 election. The opposition candidate told Al Jazeera in an exclusive interview that he is sure of victory this time because “today people realise that [the president] has impoverished the country.”

‘A change of government’

The merger, according to economist and political analyst Mays Mouissi, is the opposition’s best bet to get enough votes to put an end to the Bongo dynasty.

“[This] really means a change of government and a change of leader at the head of the state,” he told Al Jazeera.

Indeed, for many people who have not known another leader outside the Bongo family, there is talk of a need for change.

The president counts successes in environmental conservation and regulation of natural resources as well as the construction of the Owendo commercial port as highlights of his tenure. But his critics say there is not much that he has done otherwise.

With an oil-based economy, Gabon has long been seen as a country with great economic potential, but it has been plagued by endemic corruption.

In 2022, Transparency International ranked Gabon 124th out of 180 countries on its Corruption Perceptions Index.

Citizens said they encounter corruption in the most basic of procedures, including in job recruitment schemes in a country with high unemployment. Justice can often be procured from the courts for a small fee too, some said.

The Bongo family has been involved in a series of major scandals, including most recently, the July 2022 indictment of five of the president’s siblings in a French investigation of embezzlement and laundering of public funds.

Meanwhile, a third of Gabon’s 2.5 million people live in poverty, and basic social services are also lacking despite it having one of the highest gross domestic products per capita on the continent.

“It’s not a very glorious performance,” Mouissi told Al Jazeera of Ali Bongo. “He has only kept 12 percent of his promises. … Quality of life has deteriorated. … Poverty and unemployment have risen by three or four [percentage] points between the previous presidential election and this election, and that’s something I can tell you as an economist.”

The Bongo system

The situation has worsened by the uncertainty surrounding the president’s health.

In 2018, Bongo suffered a stroke during an official trip to Riyadh, Saudi Arabia’s capital. The stroke prevented the president from carrying on in an official capacity for several months and led to political instability, culminating in an attempted coup. He was also absent from any public functions for 10 months, reappearing in August 2019.

Bongo, nevertheless, remained in office although his physical and mental capacity to lead the country continues to be questioned.

During that time, the COVID-19 pandemic caused a slowdown in the economy for two years as a strict curfew was observed months after restrictions were lifted in other countries. Then there was the war in Ukraine, which broke out in February 2022 and had an impact on energy and food prices, creating public frustration.

That, analysts contend, is proof that Bongo’s last term has been unproductive.

“Ali Bongo has been running the country for 14 years, and his record over his two terms in office is really not that great,” Mouissi said. “As I speak now, there are several districts in Libreville that have no water. It’s because the government has not invested enough in this infrastructure.

We were supposed to increase the country’s electrical power, [but] none of the five dams that were planned have been built. But there are people who benefit from this regime, and they will do everything to maintain it.”

Since 2009, the legitimacy of Bongo’s presidency has been a matter of debate.  He was installed after riots followed elections shrouded by alleged rigging. The next election was also marred by irregularities and suspicions of massive fraud. When the results were announced, demonstrations contesting the outcome were dispersed with tear gas and then gunfire.

“At the time, the president was elected because, in his home province, he had officially carried the day with 99.93 percent of the vote. When you look at the details of this result, out of 100 percent of those registered, 99 percent voted, and out of the 99 percent who voted, 99.93 percent voted for Ali Bongo. It’s impossible,” Mouissi explained.

The president’s rivals say a continuation of the status quo benefits the ruling PDG, which has been in power for more than half a century and is unlikely to relinquish power easily. So they said they expect another flawed election.

“We’re talking about a family that has held power for a long time – in business not because they’re very democratic but because they waste and embezzle public money,” said Erichk Mauro Nguemah, who was a presidential candidate in the 2009 election.

A lot of uncertainty

This time it is not just electoral fraud worrying the opposition, but the ballot itself.

Just six weeks to the election, the authorities decided that the legislative and presidential elections would be conducted using a single ballot paper instead of separate ones for each position.

In a country where the priority is voting for the president and where opposition candidates are often independents who stand without parliamentary candidates, voters often abstain from choosing legislative candidates.

Consequently, the chances of having independent members of parliament are low.

Since being chosen as Alternance 2023’s presidential candidate, Ossa has embarked on a series of nationwide rallies at a frenetic pace while calling for a boycott of the legislative elections.

Ossa said he would call for new legislative elections if elected president, a decision that would be in line with the Gabonese Constitution, which allows the dissolution of parliament for a new vote.

It remains to be seen whether enough voters understand the new voting system, given its introduction just before the elections and a lack of communication from the electoral commission. All this uncertainty could end up being to the benefit of the ruling party, analysts said.

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA

PS: This article was written before Gabon’s President Ali Bongo was overthrown by the army in a coup

By Elodie Toto

Karim Zito calls for adjustment of GPL calendar to aid clubs participating in Africa

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Dreams FC head coach, Abdul Karim Zito

Dreams FC head coach, Abdul Karim Zito, says the late start of the BetPawa Ghana Premier League hampers the progress of Ghanaian clubs participating in CAF Inter-Club Competitions.

Despite beating out Guinean side Milo FC on aggregate to progress to the second round of the CAF Confederation Cup, Zito admits his players showed signs of early jitters at the Accra Sports Stadium.

Speaking at a press conference after Dreams FC’s 2-1 win in Accra, coach Zito lamented Ghana’s league schedule negatively affects preparations for CAF competitions.

“We are not playing the league so the match fitness is not there and the other countries are playing the league so here we have to sit down and look at our calendar so it will help those who qualify for Africa.

I am in Ghana preparing for Africa but I don’t have any one to play against. Samartex considered me because the two managers used to be my assistants, Black Galaxies it was because of Didi Dramani, Heart of Lions, their coach used to be my assistant. He’s my boy so you see they agreed to help,” he added.

Dreams will now face FC Kallon of Sierra Leone in the second preliminary round in mid-September for a place in the CAF Confederations Cup group stage.

Credit: citisportsonline.com

Stonebwoy sends heartwarming message to Mohammed Kudus after West Ham move

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Stonebwoy and Mohammed Kudus

Multiple award-winning Ghanaian musician, Stonebwoy has reacted to Black Stars midfielder Mohammed Kudus’ move to English Premier League side, West Ham United.

The 23-year-old signed a five-year deal to join the Hammers from Dutch giants Ajax Amsterdam.

Kudus and Stonebwoy are good friends, with the footballer using any opportunity he gets to promote the songs of the musician.

During Kudus’ photo taking session, the BET award winner’s hit record, Into The Future, was heard being played in the background. West Ham also used the song for the unveiling of the midfielder on their Tik Tok page.

In one of their post, Stonebwoy took the chance to wish the player well on his new adventure.

“You’re blessed, fulfill your mission,” he wrote on Instagram.

Kudus could make his West Ham debut on Friday when the Clarets and Blue travel to Luton Town.

The Right to Dream Academy graduate is expected to join his teammates for training as preparations begin for matchday four of the Premier League.

Kudus made 87 appearances for Ajax, scoring 27 goals for the club.

Credit: ghanasoccernet.com

2023 Afcon Qualifiers: Chris Hughton counts on experienced Andre Ayew for CAR match

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Andre Ayew

Ghana coach Chris Hughton is placing his trust in the experienced Andre Ayew for the upcoming crucial 2023 Africa Cup of Nations qualifier against the Central African Republic (CAR).

Despite currently being unattached to a club, Ayew has been called up for the important match set to take place at the Baba Yara Stadium in Kumasi.

Hughton’s decision to include Ayew in the squad showcases his belief in the midfielder’s value, leadership, and experience. As the captain of the team, Ayew’s presence on the field and his contributions off the pitch are expected to play a pivotal role in Ghana’s quest for qualification to the Ivory Coast-held tournament.

Ghana currently hold the top position in their qualifying group. However, a defeat against CAR, who are also vying for qualification, could potentially result in Ghana’s unexpected elimination from the competition.

Hughton’s squad selection has been hindered by injuries to some players, including midfielders Abdul Salis Samed and Majeed Ashimeru. Kamaldeen Sulemana, who recently resumed training after an injury, is also under consideration.

Andre Ayew, with 24 goals for the Black Stars, will undoubtedly be aiming to make an impact on the field if given the opportunity to feature in the match scheduled for September 7.

His experience and scoring prowess could prove to be crucial in Ghana’s efforts to secure their spot in the prestigious Africa Cup of Nations.

Credit: ghanasoccernet.com

GFA Congress still suspended as King Faisal injunction case is adjourned

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GFA meeting

The Ghana Football Association (GFA) will still have to wait a bit more to proceed with this year’s Elective Congress following the adjourning of the injunction motion by King Faisal.

An Accra High Court was scheduled to hear the case on Wednesday, August 30, but that did not go as planned.

The legal representatives for the parties involved thereafter agreed on a new date for the court to address the motion filed by the Division One League side.

Last Monday, King Faisal and its lawyer filed the motion in the Accra High Court. They contend that the GFA’s statutes prohibit a legal Congress from convening to elect the GFA President until the new members or representatives of the Executive Committee have been duly elected.

As a result, they are asking the court to prevent the GFA from holding the presidential election on September 27 until the necessary elections for delegates from the National League Clubs, Regional Football Associations, and other constituent bodies are completed.

The GFA also announced it had decided to put its 2023 GFA Election Timetable on hold due to the injunction by King Faisal.

The Kumasi-based club is seeking a ruling that opening nominations for the election of a new GFA President before elections for Exco representatives is both erroneous and illegal.

They also want an assertion that any decision purportedly passed by the current Executive Council membership concerning the election of a new GFA President before representatives are chosen for the Exco is a breach of trust, confidence, and loyalty.

In an interview with Joy Sports, a Board Member of Accra Hearts of Oak, Dr Nyaho Nyaho-Tamkloe, called on King Faisal to take the case from court.

“[King Faisal taking the case to court] is very unfortunate. That is going to affect the individual clubs. Because if you have boys now, you have to feed them and pay them,” he said.

Credit: myjoyonline.com

The Ghanaian Chronicle