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Sunday, April 26, 2026
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‘Animal’ Father Arrested Over Gruesome Murder of 13-Year-Old Girl

An Ohio neighborhood is in shock after a horrifying murder of 13-year-old Keimani Latigue, whose mutilated body was discovered in an abandoned home just six days after she was reported missing.

Authorities described the case as one of the most horrific they have ever encountered.

Keimani, who was just days away from her 14th birthday, was found with severe injuries, including the severing of her hands and multiple incised wounds to her neck.

An autopsy confirmed the teenager had been raped prior to her death. Lt. Brian Steel of the Columbus Police expressed disbelief at the brutality involved in the case, labeling the perpetrator as an “absolute animal.”

The investigation took a startling turn when Keimani’s father, Darnell Jones, appeared on local television pleading for help in finding his daughter.

However, inconsistencies in his statements led to a search warrant for his arrest. Following Keimani’s discovery, he was charged with murder and felonious assault.

In a dramatic turn of events, Jones was apprehended in Columbus during a SWAT operation, where he was shot after reportedly displaying a firearm. He was later hospitalized for his injuries.

Keimani’s death has left family, friends, and classmates devastated. She was set to receive a kindness award at her school, and was remembered as a bright student with a promising future.

Judge Considers Limiting Ruling on Mass Firings of U.S. Government Workers

A U.S. federal judge has signalled he may limit the scope of his ruling that ordered the reinstatement of nearly 25,000 federal workers fired by the Trump administration.

Judge James Bredar, who had previously blocked the mass firings, said on Wednesday that he was reluctant to impose a nationwide injunction and could instead restrict his order to Washington, D.C., and the 19 states that brought the lawsuit.

“This court has great reluctance to issue a national injunction,” Bredar told lawyers in a Baltimore hearing. However, he did not rule out the possibility, asking the states involved to justify why a broader order was necessary.

Legal Dispute Over Firings

The case stems from the Trump administration’s decision to terminate thousands of probationary federal employees, part of broader plans by former President Donald Trump and his adviser, Elon Musk, to shrink the federal workforce. The states suing the administration argue that the dismissals violated federal regulations requiring agencies to give 60 days’ notice to state and local governments before large-scale layoffs.

Judge Bredar had initially ordered the reinstatement of the affected employees on 13 March, but extended his temporary order until 1 April as he considers the states’ request for a longer-term injunction.

While the U.S. Department of Justice defended the firings, it acknowledged that any injunction should apply only to the states that sued. The government has also appealed a separate ruling in San Francisco that ordered the reinstatement of probationary workers at six federal agencies.

The outcome of the case could have major implications for federal employment policies and executive authority.

Walmart’s 2025 Easter Meal Kit Cheaper Than 2024—But Eggs Are Missing

Walmart has launched its 2025 Easter meal kit, promoting it as a more affordable option than last year’s. However, a key holiday staple is missing from the lineup: eggs.

The U.S. retail giant’s meal kit includes ham, russet potatoes, corn on the cob, and a cream cake, serving eight people for less than $6 per person.

Walmart says this is a cheaper option compared to its 2024 meal, which served 10 people for under $8 per person. However, unlike last year’s kit, which included ingredients for deviled eggs and an 18-pack of large brown eggs, this year’s offering excludes eggs entirely.

The omission comes as egg prices remain high due to supply shortages caused by the ongoing bird flu outbreak, which has led to mass culling of poultry. The U.S. government is currently considering importing eggs from Brazil and broiler chicken eggs to help stabilize prices. Meanwhile, some retailers have imposed purchase limits, and restaurants have increased prices on egg-based menu items.

A Walmart spokesperson explained that the 2025 kit was curated based on “popular Easter meal items” and does not include pantry staples like salt, pepper, butter, milk, and eggs. However, critics argue that eggs, closely tied to Easter traditions such as egg decorating and hunts, should have been included.

Despite the missing eggs, Walmart is offering additional Easter promotions, including themed gift baskets priced under $20 and $40. The Easter meal kit will be available for purchase until April 20.

Egypt Approves Whooping $91 Billion Budget

Egypt’s cabinet has approved a draft state budget of 4.6 trillion Egyptian pounds ($91 billion) for the upcoming financial year starting in July, as the country continues financial tightening under an $8 billion International Monetary Fund (IMF) program.

According to a government statement released Wednesday, expenditures will rise by 18%, while revenues are projected to increase by 19%, reaching 3.1 trillion pounds. However, the budget deficit is expected to be around 1.5 trillion pounds ($30 billion).

The increased spending partly reflects Egypt’s ongoing battle with inflation, which stood at 12.8% in February. This marks a significant improvement from the 38% inflation peak in September 2023, thanks to financial reforms implemented under the IMF program. Earlier this month, the IMF approved a $1.2 billion disbursement to Egypt following its fourth program review.

The new budget aims for a primary surplus of 795 billion pounds, or 4% of GDP, surpassing the previous target of 3.5%. Public debt is also projected to decline to 82.9% of GDP, down from an expected 92% in the current financial year.

A significant portion of the budget—732.6 billion pounds—has been allocated for subsidies, grants, and social benefits, reflecting a 15.2% increase. Notably, food and bread subsidies will rise by 20% to 160 billion pounds, with additional allocations for petroleum and electricity subsidies.

Egypt’s continued fiscal discipline and IMF-backed reforms signal a cautious yet ambitious approach to economic stabilization and debt reduction.

Uganda’s EACOP Pipeline Secures 5 Million Dollars Financing from Global Institutions

The company developing Uganda’s East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP) has closed its first round of external financing, marking a crucial step in the $5 billion project.

In a statement released Wednesday, EACOP Ltd confirmed that a syndicate of institutions, including commercial banks and Afreximbank, participated in this funding phase.

Among the financiers are Standard Bank, Stanbic Bank Uganda, KCB Bank Uganda, and Saudi Arabia’s Islamic Corporation for the Development of the Private Sector.

While the statement did not disclose the total value of this initial tranche, it described the successful closing as a “significant milestone.”

Uganda’s Energy Minister Ruth Nankabirwa had previously warned that additional cash injections were necessary to prevent delays in the project, as debt financing had faced obstacles.

Several Western banks, including BNP Paribas, Société Générale, and Barclays, declined to fund the pipeline due to environmental concerns raised by climate activists.

The 1,443-kilometer pipeline will transport crude oil from Uganda’s Kingfisher and Tilenga oilfields near Lake Albert to Tanzania’s Tanga port. It is part of a broader $15 billion energy investment spearheaded by TotalEnergies, China’s CNOOC, and other partners.

A source familiar with the financing confirmed that investors are committed to funding the full $5 billion cost, with additional support secured from Chinese backers. “Oil companies already involved will take both equity and debt. The Chinese are in,” the source told Reuters.

This funding breakthrough brings EACOP closer to completion, ensuring Uganda’s oil export ambitions remain on track.

Kenya Recognizes Kosovo as an Independent State, Ending Five-Year Stalemate

Kenya has officially recognized Kosovo as an independent state, becoming the first country to do so in nearly five years.

The announcement was made by former Kosovo president Behgjet Pacolli, who shared photos with Kenyan President William Ruto as he signed the recognition letter.

Kosovo declared independence from Serbia in 2008, but its efforts to gain broader international recognition have faced resistance, particularly from Serbia and its allies, including U.N. Security Council members Russia and China.

As a result, Kosovo remains excluded from the United Nations.

Despite these challenges, over 110 countries, including the United States and most European nations, have acknowledged Kosovo’s sovereignty.

The last country to do so was Israel in September 2020. Kenya’s recognition marks a diplomatic breakthrough after years of stalled progress.

Kosovo’s President Vjosa Osmani welcomed Kenya’s decision, calling it a historic moment for both nations. “The Republic of Kosovo extends its deepest gratitude to President William Ruto and the Republic of Kenya for this recognition. This strengthens our friendship and paves the way for enhanced bilateral cooperation.”

She further urged other nations to follow Kenya’s lead. “We urge all nations, in Africa and beyond, to stand on the right side of history and recognize Kosovo. Recognizing Kosovo contributes to strengthening peace and stability in the region and across the broader European continent.”

“Kosovo remains committed to deepening its global partnerships, and we look forward to building a strong and lasting relationship with Kenya,” she added.

Pacolli, who has been actively lobbying for Kosovo’s international recognition since 2009, expressed his satisfaction with the development. “I have gone door to door, office to office, with only one goal—to make the voice and the right of the people of Kosovo for freedom, independence, and sovereignty heard,” he stated.

Kenya’s decision is expected to strengthen diplomatic ties and may encourage other nations to recognize Kosovo’s statehood. However, Serbia continues to oppose Kosovo’s independence, maintaining that it remains part of its territory.


Burhan Declares ‘Khartoum is Free’ as Sudan Army Recaptures Capital

Khartoum witnessed a major shift in Sudan’s ongoing civil war as the army reclaimed control of key areas, including the presidential palace and the international airport.

Sudan’s military leader, Gen Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, visited the palace on Saturday, declaring, “Khartoum is free,” while surrounded by cheering soldiers.

The Rapid Support Forces (RSF), which had held most of the city since April 2023, have been rapidly retreating south. An army spokesperson confirmed that troops had secured Manshiya Bridge—the last RSF-held bridge—along with a key military camp in Jebel Awliya, the group’s remaining stronghold in southern Khartoum. The military now controls all bridges connecting Greater Khartoum.

Residents in central Khartoum celebrated the army’s advance, after enduring months of looting and violence by the RSF, which occupied civilian homes.

However, the humanitarian crisis remains dire. The UN warns of famine-like conditions due to looted markets and restricted aid.

Reports of indiscriminate shelling, sexual violence, and other abuses by both sides continue to emerge.

The military-led government, previously forced to relocate to Port Sudan, now holds a strategic advantage with the capital back under its control.

However, the RSF still dominates western Sudan, particularly the Darfur region. Both factions receive foreign military support, and previous peace efforts have failed.

While the army’s recent victories mark a turning point, Sudan’s war remains far from over, with fears of prolonged conflict and further humanitarian catastrophe.

Secretive Chinese network tries to recruit recently fired US government workers

A network of companies operated by a secretive Chinese tech firm has been trying to recruit recently laid-off US government workers, according to job ads and a researcher who uncovered the campaign.

Max Lesser, a senior analyst on emerging threats with the Washington-based think tank Foundation for Defense of Democracies, said some companies placing recruitment ads were “part of a broader network of fake consulting and headhunting firms targeting former government employees and AI researchers.”

Little information is publicly available on the four consultancies and recruitment companies allegedly involved in the network, which in some cases shared overlapping websites, were hosted on the same server, or had other digital links, according to Reuters’ reporting and Lesser’s research.

The four companies’ websites are hosted at the same IP address alongside Smiao Intelligence, an internet services company whose website became unavailable during Reuters’ reporting. Reuters could not determine the nature of the relationship between Smiao Intelligence and the four companies.

The news agency’s attempts to track down the four companies and Smiao Intelligence ran into numerous dead-ends including unanswered phone calls, phone numbers that no longer work, fake addresses, addresses that lead to empty fields, unanswered emails and deleted job listings from LinkedIn.

Lesser, who uncovered the network and shared his research with Reuters ahead of publication, said the campaign follows “well-established” techniques used by previous Chinese intelligence operations.

“What makes this activity significant,” he said, “is that the network seeks to exploit the financial vulnerabilities of former federal workers affected by recent mass layoffs.”

Reuters could not determine if the companies are linked to the Chinese government or whether any former federal workers were recruited.

Asked about the research, three intelligence analysts told Reuters the network appeared to be a prime example of how foreign-linked entities are trying to gather intelligence from staff fired or forced into retirement by President Donald Trump and billionaire tech tycoon Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency.

Once employed by the network, federal employees could then be asked to share increasingly sensitive information about government operations, or recommend additional people who might be targeted for willing or unwitting participation, the analysts said.

A spokesperson for the Chinese Embassy in Washington told Reuters in an email that China was unaware of any of the entities allegedly involved in the campaign and Beijing respects data privacy and security.

A White House spokesperson said China was constantly trying to exploit the United States’ “free and open system” through espionage and coercion. “Both active and former government employees must recognize the danger these governments pose and the importance of safeguarding government information,” the spokesperson said.

CNN reported February 28 that US intelligence believes Russia and China are targeting disgruntled US government employees, something both countries have done for years. The companies in the network – which posted job ads to Craigslist, LinkedIn and other job sites – could be concrete evidence such operations are underway, Lesser said.

Reuters reported earlier this month that some US government workers with top security clearances were not given standard exit briefings which, in part, cover what to do if approached by foreign adversaries.

“GEOPOLITICAL RISK CONSULTING”

One of the companies in the network, RiverMerge Strategies, bills itself on its website as a “professional geopolitical risk consulting company” and posted two since-deleted job listings on its since-removed LinkedIn page in mid-February.

One ad that sought a “Geopolitical Consulting Advisor” with experience with government agencies, international organizations, or multinational corporations, displayed that it had more than 200 applications, according to a screenshot of the LinkedIn post.

The other sought a human resources specialist who could “utilize a deep understanding of the Washington talent pool to identify candidates with policy or consulting experience,” and “leverage connections to local professional networks, think tanks, and academic institutions.”

The US number for RiverMerge Strategies listed on the company’s home page is no longer in service. A separate Chinese phone number, until recently listed on the website’s contact page, is the same number listed by Shenzhen Si Xun Software Co., Ltd, an information technology company focused on online retail, commercial automation and catering, according to a Google translation of the company’s website.

Reuters could not determine the nature of the connection between the network of companies, Smiao Intelligence, and Shenzhen Si Xun Software Co., Ltd. Calls to a phone number listed on the company’s website did not go through.

RiverMerge Strategies until recently listed two addresses on its website, one in Singapore and the other in Colorado. The Singapore address led to a hostel building within the campus of the Management Development Institute of Singapore, but the company could not be located during a Reuters visit. Its other address led to an address in Boulder, Colorado, tied to Northwest Registered Agent, a business services firm.

A person listed on LinkedIn as an employee of RiverMerge, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told Reuters an acquaintance he met at a networking event in China reached out and asked him to help promote job listings for RiverMerge Strategies.

The acquaintance, who he knows as “Eric,” as well as another contact, “Will,” pays the employee $1,000 or $2,000 every two or three months to post the job listings, he said.

A person identifying themselves as William Wells and RiverMerge’s “strategies project manager” responded to an initial Reuters email and asked about Reuters’ request for information.

Even though the Reuters email identified the sender as a reporter, Wells also inquired whether Reuters was seeking a job, and said they would review a resume and set up a short call.

Another company in the network, Wavemax Innovation, placed an ad February 6 on Craigslist offering “Job Opportunities for Recently Laid-Off US Government Employees.” The ad, which has since expired, sought workers with backgrounds in project management, research, technology, communications, policy analysis and more.

Reuters could not establish who saw the ad or whether anyone applied to Wavemax as a result.

An email to the address posted in the ad was not returned. When Reuters visited the Singapore address posted to the company’s website there was no sign of the company, just a vacant field. A search of Singapore’s corporate registry for the company was equally barren.

Asked how it verifies job listings, LinkedIn said it uses automated technologies and a team of reviewers to find and remove inauthentic activity and profiles. The spokesperson said on Tuesday RiverMerge Strategies’ profile had been restricted.

In response to questions about Reuters’ findings, an FBI spokesperson warned that Chinese intelligence officers can represent themselves as think tanks, academic institutions and recruiting firms to target “current, former, and prospective” US government employees.

Agents for the Chinese government have used similar tactics in the past.

In 2020 a Singaporean national named Jun Wei Yeo pleaded guilty in a US federal court to acting as an agent of a foreign power, starting in 2015. Prosecutors alleged he worked to spot and assess Americans with access to non-public sensitive information and paid them to write reports for unnamed Asian clients, without disclosing the work was actually for the Chinese government.

That operation relied on a fake consulting company and job advertisements, according to court records.

Chinese intelligence operatives told Yeo how to recruit targets, including by asking them if they were “dissatisfied with work, were having financial troubles [or] had children to support,” according to court records.

China’s foreign ministry denied any knowledge of Yeo’s case and accused the US of repeatedly accusing Beijing of espionage, saying “it has reached a state of extreme suspicion,” the South China Morning Post reported at the time.

Foreign intelligence services often use job recruitment scams to recruit sources without them even knowing they are working for a foreign government, David Aaron, a former Department of Justice prosecutor now in private practice, told Reuters.

“I would expect China’s intelligence services to dial those efforts up as they see a wave of government employees suddenly having to look for new jobs,” Aaron said, adding that while many former government employees are motivated by patriotism, some may be vulnerable to deceptive tactics.

Club World Cup winners to receive up to Sh16bn

The winners of this year’s 32-team Club World Cup to be held in the US will earn up to $125 million (Sh16 billion), FIFA said on Wednesday.

World soccer’s governing body had announced earlier this month a total prize pot of $1 billion (Sh129 billion) for the June 14-July 13 event, significant in the current climate of financial regulation for clubs.

“FIFA will neither retain any funding for this tournament, as all revenues will be distributed to club football, nor will it touch FIFA’s reserves, which are set aside for global football development through the 211 FIFA Member Associations,” FIFA president Gianni Infantino said in a statement.

About half of the $1 billion total will be divided between all 32 clubs, with the amount per club based on sporting and commercial criteria, meaning clubs such as Manchester City and Real Madrid will receive a greater percentage than smaller clubs in a model FIFA developed with the European Club Association.

A further $475 million (Sh61.5 billion) will be awarded on a performance-related basis, meaning the team with the most wins over a potential seven matches will bank more cash, with a maximum pot of $125 million (Sh16 billion) available.

Numerous players and coaches, including England captain Harry Kane, have voiced concern over player welfare with the revamped Club World Cup meaning less time off between seasons.

“Of course it’s another summer where you don’t really have a break,” Kane said this week. “I think we’re getting used to it. There’s nothing really we can do about it.”

The Bayern Munich striker said he had high hopes for the event, however, telling FIFA.com that his goal was: “To win it. We’re one of the best teams in the world, without a doubt, so every tournament we go into, the idea is to win.”

Late Journalist Nick Mudimba to be laid to rest in Siaya on April 5

CGTN Africa Journalist Nick Mudimba will be buried on April 5, family has said.

In a statement showing the sequence of events leading up to the burial, the family said Mudimba’s body will be airlifted to Kisumu then driven to Busia on April 4.

On the same day, there will be a mass at home.

“There are buses that stop near the homestead. The committee is exploring the possibility of group/joint travel,” the statement read.

On April 3, family and friends will hold a Mass at Holy Family Basilica.

“There will be viewing afterwards,” the statement added.

The proposed budget for the preparation of and the burial is Sh2 million.

Family and friends will be having daily meetings and a fundraising is to be scheduled to meet the budget.

Further, CGTN Africa will cover the announcement of Mudimba’s death in the dailies.

Mudimba, who is a former KTN journalist, collapsed and died in his house in Syokimau, Machakos County, on Sunday, March 23, 2025, evening.

He was with his family when the incident happened

A family member said Mudimba was unwell and was diagnosed on Saturday with uric acid.

He was prescribed medication on Sunday, hours before his sudden death. 

He was in a good mood and watched the football match between Harambee Stars and Gabon before he took his medication as advised.

Witnesses said he later collapsed and started convulsing and died in the house.

The body was moved to a mortuary in Syokimau, where the preliminary results of an autopsy pointed to respiratory distress.

It was said that his airways were blocked and his lungs were filled with liquid.

His colleagues mourned him as a hardworking and dedicated journalist whose work touched and changed many.

He had, among others, worked at KTN and Switch TV before moving to CGTN where he was a senior reporter based in Nairobi.

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