Uganda reopens church owned radio station
Uganda r바카라사이트eopens church owned radio station
Kenya's president accused of 'torturing a monk' for information about a rival government
A Kenyan bishop accused of torturing a monk to extract intelligence information will be retried, Kenya's Supreme Court said Thursday.
Kenya's justice ministry said Wednesday it would seek a new trial against Archbishop Desmond Tutu following a ruling from the Kenya National Court to the court's ruling not to retry Tutu.
According to state-run broadcaster Nairobi News, Archbishop David Gomaa would be reinstated on October 30 if the court gives him a fresh trial.
In 2010, Kenya's Supreme Court ordered that the country's president be suspended as an accused party in an ongoing graft investigation related to the death of former U.S. ambassador to Kenya Robert 더킹카지노F. Kennedy.
According to a state-run news agency, the state prosecutor's office said that Tutu, 66, and his attorney, John Laddey, have agreed to agree to resume the case, but that no formal investigation was underway.
A statement issued Thursday by the country's government's justice ministry said that "due to circumstances and to a legal requirement of secrecy in the investigation into this matter, it is impossible for the Kenya National Court to release the information."
In a statement, the ministry said that "the order regarding the retrial of the Archbishop of Paya, the president of the Church in Paya and the attorney of Mr. Gomaa to be conducted as proposed by the court is to be extended for the time being."
The ministry did not say when the retrial would take place.
The court also ordered the reinstatement of Archbishop Jomo Kenyatta after his decision to step down in 2010.
Kenyatta was initially suspended after a court order to investigate allegations he improperly acquired financial power over Kenya's radio and television broadcasting business, but the court refused to lift the restrictions, saying he had abused his powers.
In its ruling against the Kenyan President on Tuesday, the Supreme Court said that Archbishop Kenyatta would be a "perpetrator of violations of the constitution" committed by the state because "of his responsibility as chief executive for failing to ensure adequate and safe conditions and the provision of information regarding the assets of the Church in Paya in우리카지노 accordance with the conditions stipulated in the court order."