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Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Police send report to prosecutors after former Glasgow City Council leader charged
Police have submitted a report to prosecutors after a former Labour leader of Glasgow City Council was charged in connection with alleged fraud offences. Frank McAveety was arrested over alleged offences said to have taken place in Glasgow between 2022 and 2024. He served as leader of Glasgow City Council from 2015 to 2017, and is a Scottish Labour politician who also previously served as an MSP. READ MORE: Warrant out for bookkeeper who 'stole £500k' from two companies In a statement first issued in April, Police Scotland said: 'A 62-year-old man has been arrested and charged in connection with fraud offences in the Glasgow area between 2022 and 2024. 'A report will be submitted to the Procurator Fiscal in due course.' READ MORE: Woman due in court after over '£2000 worth of drugs' seized Police have now confirmed to the Glasgow Times that a report has been submitted to the Procurator Fiscal. A Police Scotland spokesperson said: 'A 62-year-old man has been arrested and charged in connection with fraud offences in the Glasgow area between 2022 and 2024. "A report has been sent to the Procurator Fiscal .'


News24
2 hours ago
- News24
NCOP steps in as KZN police battle staff shortages and poor infrastructure amid rising crime levels
SAPS NCOP delegation meets with KwaZulu-Natal police amid allegations of infiltration by criminal syndicates. Only 23 000 officers serve a population of 12 million, raising alarm over SA Police Service capacity to fight crime. Umlazi Police Station still crippled after 2021 unrest, while rural communities remain underserved. KwaZulu-Natal Police Commissioner Lieutenant General Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi held a closed-door meeting this week with a delegation from the National Council of Provinces (NCOP) as Parliament intensifies efforts to strengthen its relationship with the SA Police Service (SAPS) across the country. The engagement, which formed part of NCOP's constituency work in the province, focused on the challenges facing law enforcement, including chronic under-resourcing, infrastructure shortages and rising crime levels. This comes after Mkhwanazi's explosive allegations last month. He claimed that criminal syndicates had infiltrated the highest levels of government and accused Police Minister Senzo Mchunu of interfering with police investigations. Mchunu has since been placed on special leave by President Cyril Ramaphosa, with Firoz Cachalia stepping in as interim minister. However, the NCOP delegation emphasised that these allegations were not on the agenda during their meeting with Mkhwanazi. DA provincial whip Mzamo Billy, who led the delegation, said that the oversight visit was part of their broader mandate to understand and address the challenges faced by the SAPS in the province. The engagement was purely about crime in the province and the operational challenges the SAPS is facing. We aim to help raise these issues in the national Parliament. Mzamo Billy According to Billy, during the meeting, the provincial police leadership painted a bleak picture of the reality on the ground. With a population of about 12 million, only 23 000 police officers service KwaZulu-Natal, a ratio that Billy described as 'shocking' and inadequate to meet the demands of communities. 'This tells you we are unable to deal with crime the way that we should or respond in time,' he added. Infrastructure concerns were also raised. The current SAPS provincial headquarters has been in rented premises for years and lacks basic amenities such as parking. Police here don't even have a proper headquarters. That's unacceptable. Mzamo Billy One of the pressing concerns was the state of the police stations, particularly those affected during the July 2021 unrest. The Umlazi Police Station, which was looted during the violence, is still not fully operational. Firearms were allegedly stolen and were now allegedly being used in crimes in the area. Billy said the oversight visit revealed deeper systemic issues, including an insufficient number of police stations, especially in the rural and poor communities. People in some areas still have to travel long distances to get to a police station. There are also mobile police stations in some areas that don't operate 24 hours, which is a serious concern for communities. Mzamo Billy Staff shortages also dominated the challenges. There are numerous vacancies within the SAPS, including in Crime Intelligence units, which further hamper the province's ability to effectively tackle crime. 'Even with committed officers, the police are severely under-capacitated,' Billy stressed. As part of the oversight week, the NCOP delegation was scheduled to meet with Premier Thami Ntuli and members of the provincial cabinet. These meetings are aimed at escalating the issues identified during engagements with the SAPS and exploring ways to address them through legislation or collaboration with other government departments. Billy said the delegation had agreed with the provincial police management to isolate specific challenges that require intervention at different levels, including those needing a legislative approach and others requiring engagement with departments such as public works. 'The matter of the police buildings, for example, falls under the public works department. It's our job to help facilitate that process so our officers can work in a safe and proper environment,' he said. He added that the MPs across the country should be doing similar oversight visits during the constituency weeks. 'It's what they get paid to do,' he said.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Moldova jails pro-Russian regional leader for election fraud weeks before crucial vote
A court in Moldova has sentenced a Kremlin-friendly regional politician to seven years in prison for funneling money from Russia to finance a political party. Evgenia Gutul, the leader of Gagauzia, a historically pro-Russian ethnic region in southern Moldova, was detained in March on suspicion of electoral fraud and sentenced on Tuesday. Prosecutors said that from 2019 to 2022, Gutul channeled undeclared funds into the country to finance a political party founded by Ilan Shor, Reuters reported. Shor is a pro-Russian businessman who has been convicted of fraud in Moldova and now lives in exile. Gutul's conviction comes just weeks before Moldovans vote in a crucial parliamentary election, in which Maia Sandu, the pro-Western president of the former Soviet country, is hoping to retain her governing majority. Sandu was reelected as president last year in a vote held on the same day as a referendum on joining the European Union, which Moldovans backed by a razor-thin majority. Both votes were marred by what prosecutors said was a massive vote-buying scheme orchestrated by Shor, who has spent much of his time in Russia since he was convicted for his role in the 2014 theft of $1 billion from Moldovan banks. Before the referendum, Moldova's national police chief said some 130,000 citizens had received a total of $15 million from Shor in exchange for voting 'no' or persuading others to do so. The police chief said it was 'clear' that Russia was financing the scheme; Moscow has denied meddling in Moldovan politics. Gutul, a former secretary for Shor's now-banned party, was elected governor of Gagauzia in 2023. That election also drew accusations of vote-buying. Last year, Gutul was sanctioned by the EU for actions 'destabilizing' Moldova and promoting separatism in her region. Gutul denies wrongdoing and claims her prosecution was politically motivated. In March, she penned a letter to Donald Trump, claiming that she, like the US president, had been subjected to 'propaganda efforts and pressure from the corrupt globalist elites.' Responding to her sentencing Tuesday, Gutul said she would appeal the ruling, which she claimed was an attempt to intimidate Gagauzians 'who dare to vote' for a party other than Sandu's Party of Action and Solidarity (PAS). 'This decision has nothing to do with justice. This is a political reprisal, planned and executed on orders from above,' she wrote on Telegram. The Kremlin also claimed the verdict was politically motivated, and that Moldova was systematically suppressing the opposition. 'In effect, people are being deprived of the opportunity to vote for those they prefer. Of course, what we are seeing is a clear violation of democratic rules and norms in this country,' Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said Tuesday. Moldova's parliamentary election will be held on September 28. Although Sandu's PAS won by a landslide in the last vote in 2021, Moldova has since faced major economic and security challenges spilling over from Russia's invasion of Ukraine, stirring anti-government sentiment in parts of the country.