
Judges in Maradona trial reject request to step aside
BUENOS AIRES: Judges appointed to try the medical team of late Argentine football legend Diego Maradona over his death rejected on Wednesday a request by the defense for two of the judicial panel to be recused. The first trial into Maradona's 2020 death collapsed in May after one of the judges was sensationally revealed to have taken part in a clandestine documentary about the trial. A new three-judge bench was appointed in July to conduct a fresh trial. Lawyers for Maradona's personal physician, Leopoldo Luque, one of seven people charged with culpable homicide over the star's death, had asked for two judges to be removed from the case, saying they feared they would 'not be impartial.'
The judges rejected the request, saying it was based on 'conjecture' and 'speculation.' No date has yet been set for the new trial. Maradona, considered one of the world's greatest ever players, died in November 2020 at the age of 60 while recovering from brain surgery.
He died of heart failure and acute pulmonary edema—a condition where fluid accumulates in the lungs—two weeks after going under the knife. His medical team was put on trial over the conditions of his home convalescence, which prosecutors described as grossly negligent. They risk prison terms of between eight and 25 years if convicted of 'homicide with possible intent,' or pursuing a course of action despite knowing it could lead to his death. – AFP

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Kuwait Times
12 hours ago
- Kuwait Times
Malnutrition in Sudan's El-Fasher kills 63 in a week
PORT SUDAN: Malnutrition has killed 63 people, mostly women and children, in just one week in Sudan's besieged city of El-Fasher, a senior health official said Sunday, as fighting between the army and rival paramilitaries intensifies in the western region. The official from North Darfur's health ministry, who spoke to AFP on condition of anonymity, said the death toll only included those who managed to reach hospitals, adding that many families buried their dead without seeking medical help due to poor security conditions and a lack of transportation. Since May last year, El-Fasher, the capital of North Darfur, has been under siege by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), which has been battling Sudan's regular army since April 2023. The city remains the last major Darfur urban center in army control, and has recently come under renewed attack by the RSF after the group withdrew from Sudan's capital Khartoum earlier this year. A major RSF offensive on the nearby Zamzam displacement camp in April forced tens of thousands of people to flee again—with many of them now sheltering inside El-Fasher. Community kitchens, once a lifeline, have largely shut down due to a lack of supplies. Some families are reported to be surviving on animal fodder or food waste. At the largest community kitchen in the city, around 1,700 people receive the traditional Sudanese dish aseeda—a porridge made from millet or sorghum flour—every morning, but portions have shrunk dramatically. 'Six months ago, we served two meals daily, but now, due to shortages and dry markets, only one meal is provided,' Magdi Youssef, one of the kitchen's managers, told AFP. He added a plate once shared by three people is now eaten by seven. Children and women arriving at the kitchen show clear signs of malnutrition, including swollen bellies and sunken eyes, Youssef said. According to UN figures, nearly 40 percent of children under five in El-Fasher are now acutely malnourished, with 11 percent suffering from severe acute malnutrition. — AFP Famine was declared a year ago in the displacement camps surrounding El-Fasher, and the UN estimated it would take hold in the city itself by last May. A lack of data has prevented an official famine declaration. The UN has repeatedly warned of the plight of an estimated one million people trapped in El-Fasher and its surrounding camps, who are virtually cut off from aid and basic services. The World Food Programme said this week that thousands of families in El-Fasher are 'at risk of starvation'. An attack on a UN humanitarian convoy heading towards the city in June killed five aid workers. The rainy season, which peaks in August, is further complicating efforts to reach the city. Roads are rapidly deteriorating, making aid deliveries difficult if not impossible. The war, now in its third year, has killed tens of thousands, displaced millions and created what the United Nations describes as the world's largest displacement and hunger crises. 'Those eating at the community kitchen are still hungry,' Youssef said. 'I see fear in the children's eyes because of food scarcity,' he added. A pediatrician at El-Fasher hospital reported a surge in critically malnourished children arriving at the facility. 'Most cases are severely malnourished and medical supplies to treat them are dangerously low,' she told AFP. In the nearby famine-stricken Abu Shouk camp, community leader Adam Essa told AFP he had just returned from burying five children. He said the child mortality rate in the camp ranges between five and seven deaths daily. Across Sudan, nearly 25 million people are suffering dire food insecurity. UNICEF's Sudan representative Sheldon Yett called the situation this week a 'looming catastrophe'. 'We are on the verge of irreversible damage to an entire generation of children.' – AFP

Kuwait Times
12 hours ago
- Kuwait Times
Chad court jails ex-PM, opposition leader for 20 years
N'DJAMENA, Chad: A court in Chad jailed former prime minister and opposition leader Succes Masra for 20 years Saturday, convicting him of hate speech, xenophobia and having incited a massacre. The court in N'Djamena jailed Masra, one of President Mahamat Idriss Deby Itno's fiercest critics, for his role in inciting inter-communal violence in which 42 people were killed on May 14. It also imposed a fine of one billion CFA francs (1.5 million euros). Most of the massacre victims were women and children in Mandakao, southwestern Chad, according to the court. On Friday, the state prosecutor had called for a 25-year sentence. 'Our client has just been the object of a humiliation,' lead defence lawyer Francis Kadjilembaye told AFP. 'He has just been convicted on the basis of an empty dossier, on the basis of assumptions and in the absence of evidence,' he added. He called it a weaponization of the courts. Activists with Masra's Transformers Party gathered later Saturday to protest the conviction and condemn Deby. They said former finance Bedoumra Kordje had been appointed interim party leader. Masra was arrested on May 16, two days after the violence, and charged with 'inciting hatred, revolt, forming and complicity with armed gangs, complicity in murder, arson and desecration of graves'. He stood trial with nearly 70 other men accused of taking part in the killings. Originally from Chad's south, Masra comes from the Ngambaye ethnic group and enjoys wide popularity among the predominantly Christian and animist populations of the south. Those groups feel marginalised by the largely Muslim-dominated regime in the capital N'Djamena. During the trial, Masra's lawyers argued that no concrete evidence against him had been presented to the court. He went on hunger strike in jail for nearly a month in June, his lawyers said at the time. Like other opposition leaders, Masra had left Chad after a bloody crackdown on his followers in 2022, only returning under an amnesty agreed in 2024. Trained as an economist in France and Cameroon, Masra had been a fierce opponent of the ruling authorities before they named him prime minister five months ahead of the presidential election. He served as premier from January to May last year after signing a reconciliation deal with Deby. Masra faced off against Deby in the 2024 presidential elections, winning 18.5 percent against Deby's 61.3 percent, but claimed victory. Of the May 14 killings, one local source said they were thought to have sprung from a dispute between ethnic Fulani nomadic herders and local Ngambaye farmers over the demarcation of grazing and farming areas. Conflicts between pastoralists and sedentary farmers are estimated by the International Crisis Group to have caused more than 1,000 deaths and 2,000 injuries in Chad between 2021 and 2024. – AFP

Kuwait Times
3 days ago
- Kuwait Times
Ukraine's funeral workers bearing the burden of war
SUMY, Ukraine: At a funeral home in the northeastern Ukrainian city of Sumy, Svitlana Ostapenko paced around as she prepared the dead for their final journey. After five years of working in the funeral home, she was used to seeing dead bodies, but the growing number of dead—including young people from Russia's invasion—was starting to overwhelm even her. 'Death doesn't discriminate between young and old,' the funeral director told AFP, breaking down in tears. Ukraine's funeral workers, who are living through the war themselves and have been repeatedly exposed to violent death throughout Russia's invasion launched in early 2022, are shouldering a mounting emotional toll while supporting grieving families. What's more, Ostapenko's hometown of Sumy near the Russian border, has come under bombardment throughout the invasion but advancing Russian troops have brought the fighting to as close as 20 kilometers (12 miles) away. Every day, Ostapenko lays the region's dead in coffins. 'One way or another, I'm getting by. I take sedatives, that's all,' the 59-year-old said. There has been no shortage of work. On April 13, a double Russian ballistic missile strike on the city killed 35 people and wounded dozens of others. Residents pass without giving a second thought to the facades of historic buildings that were pockmarked by missile fragments. 'We buried families, a mother and her daughter, a young woman of 33 who had two children,' said Ostapenko. During attacks at night, she said she takes refuge in her hallway—her phone in hand in case her services are needed. Every day, the Ukrainian regional authorities compile reports on Russian strikes in a war that has claimed tens of thousands of lives. Petro Bondar, Svitlana's colleague, said he noted the names of the victims in his notebook to 'understand how much grief these bombings cause.' 'They're not just numbers,' he told AFP. 'They were living people, souls.' Igor Kruzo knew them only too well. His job is to immortalize their names in granite tombstones, along with portraits he paints stroke by stroke. The 60-year-old artist and veteran said he found it difficult to live with the faces he has rendered for gravestones. Soldiers, civilians, children, 'all local people,' he said. 'When you paint them, you observe their image, each with their own destiny,' he said, never speaking of himself in the first person, avoiding eye contact. At the cemetery, bereaved families told him about the deaths of their loved ones. 'They need to be heard.' The conversations helped him cope psychologically, he said. 'But it all cuts you to the bone,' he added. He used to paint elderly people, but found himself rejuvenating their features under his brush. He remembered a mother who was killed protecting her child with her body at the beginning of the war. 'A beautiful woman, full of life', whom he knew, he said. 'And you find yourself there, having to engrave her image.' In recent months, his work had taken an increasingly heavier toll. In the new wing of the cemetery reserved for soldiers, a sea of yellow and blue flags was nestled among the gravestones. Enveloped by pine trees, workers bustled around a dozen newly dug holes, ready to welcome young combatants. In February, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky announced that 46,000 Ukrainian soldiers had been killed since 2022, and 'tens of thousands' more were missing or in captivity—a figure that observers believed to be an underestimate. Russia has not published its combat losses, but a tally by the independent newspaper Meduza and the BBC estimates the military death toll at more than 119,000. 'The dead appear in my dreams,' Kruzo said. He said he saw soldiers crying over graves, or his daughter's friends lying lifeless in the cemetery aisle. 'For the past three years, all my dreams have been about the war. All of them.' Ironically, he said he was drowning himself in work because 'it's easier'. He said he had never broken down, that he was tough man who served in the Soviet army, but that he was living in a 'kind of numbness.' 'I don't want to get depressed,' he said, taking a drag on his cigarette. Behind him, a young, pregnant woman fixed her eyes on the portrait of a soldier smiling at her from the marble slab set in the earth. – AFP