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Police have increased their patrols around Bromley, southeast London, after receiving four separate reports of "perceived" attempted abductions of children.

On 30 April, an 11-year-old boy was approached by a man in a black van on Whitmore Road in Beckenham who asked him if he wanted a lift.

On the same day, an eight-year-old boy was reportedly approached by a man in the wooded area of Kelsey Park.

A third boy said he was followed in the street by a man on Wednesday and reported the incident to staff at his school the following day.

A "lack of similarities" with the incident indicated it was not linked with the first two reports, the Metropolitan Police said.

On Friday, police were alerted to an incident in The Glades shopping centre where two males were reported to have been walking behind a girl, and tried to grab her hand before walking off.

The Met said the incident is not believed to be linked to any of the others.

Superintendent Andy Brittain said: "I am aware of varying reports online both in the news and on social media and I fully understand the concerns of parents in light of these reports.

"I would encourage the public to remain vigilant, but not to be unduly alarmed.

"Child kidnappings or abductions are, thankfully, incredibly rare, but we are not complacent.

"In order to provide reassurance to the community we have heightened our visible presence in areas where youngsters may gather and I urge anyone who feels worried or concerned to approach my officers.

"I would strongly encourage members of the public to approach our officers if they have any concerns or have any information that could prove to be beneficial to our investigations."

None of the children were abducted or harmed in any of the four reported incidents, the Met said.

Anyone with information should contact police on 101 or tweet @MetCC. In an emergency always dial 999. Yahoo News

Morocco’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Nasser Bourita and his Rwandan counterpart Vincent Biruta signed two cooperation agreements in October 2020. Photo Morocco World News

 

Habib El Malki, the Speaker of Morocco’s House of Representatives, has commended the “good quality” of the bilateral cooperation between Morocco and Rwanda, highlighting the shared pan-African visions of the two African countries.

With pan-African commitment underlying the continental goals of both King Mohammed VI and President Paul Kagame, he explained, Rabat and Kigali have taken steps in recent months and years to deepen their bilateral cooperation on a wide range of “questions of shared interests.”

Malki made the comments on Friday while speaking during a commemorative ceremony at the Rwandan embassy in Rabat. The event was organized to commemorate the 27th anniversary of the end of the 1994 genocide in Rwanda. 

In his speech, El Malki hailed the East African country for emerging from the ashes of such a tragic experience to establish itself as an assertive player and an example of development in Africa less than three decades after the genocide. 

He also lauded the values of national reconciliation, coexistence, and tolerance that allowed post-genocide Rwanda to reckon with its past of ethnic cleansing and political violence. 

The Moroccan MP went on to speak at length about the “strong relations” between the two countries and the promising prospects of their evolving, multidimensional partnership. 

For El Malki, King Mohammed VI’s and President Kagame’s resolute commitment to African solidarity and effective South-South cooperation has helped the consolidation of the diplomatic ties between Rabat and Kigali. 

El Malki’s statements come as the Moroccan and Rwandan governments multiply efforts to further their considerably improved relationship.

In August of last year, Rwanda appointed a new ambassador, Zaina Nyiramatama, with the mission of cementing the diplomatic cooperation the two countries have developed since 2007. 

Two months after Nyiramatama’s appointment, Morocco and Rwanda signed two agreements to further their cooperation on peace and security in Africa, South-South diplomacy, food security, sports, sustainable development, and the reform of the African Union (AU).

Morocco has recently signed a similar agreement with Zambia to strengthen ties in fields such as renewable energy, agriculture, infrastructure, training, water, education. Driving the agreement is Morocco’s willingness to help Zambia accomplish its economic and social development goals. - Tamba François Koundouno, Morocco World News

Photograph: Peter Byrne/PA

Liverpool has made history by choosing the UK’s first directly elected black female mayor and the first woman to lead the city. The election of Joanne Anderson was one of the few good news stories for Labour on Friday. Anderson, 50, beat Stephen Yip, an independent, while the Conservative candidate, Katie Burgess, lost her deposit. Anderson won 59% of the total votes (46,493 to Yip’s 32,079), although the race went to second preferences for the first time in its history.

In her victory speech, the 6ft-tall leftwing socialist apologised to the people of the city for the political scandal that had erupted last December when the former mayor, Joe Anderson (no relation), was arrested over corruption claims, leading to a damning emergency inspection of the council. He has denied any wrongdoing, but stood aside from the mayoral race.

Joanne Anderson promised to put the city on “a restorative path” and said she wanted Liverpool to have “the best accountability and transparency structures in the country”. Describing herself as “scouse and proud”, she said she was honoured to be the first black woman in the role. “Liverpool has always been a city of firsts – one that does things differently and that charters its own path. Today, we made history”.

When she was chosen as Labour’s candidate, Anderson spoke of growing up in Thatcher’s Britain in the 80s, feeling as though she was “the bottom of the pile” and “wouldn’t amount to much” and has promised to make politics more inclusive. Her historic appointment may be short-lived, however, as she has has said she would campaign to scrap the mayoralty.

Labour supporters celebrate as Labour’s Joanne Anderson is declared the mayor at Liverpool’s Wavertree tennis centre.
Labour supporters celebrate as Labour’s Joanne Anderson is declared the mayor at Liverpool’s Wavertree tennis centre. Photograph: Peter Byrne/PA

A referendum will be held in 2023 on the continuation of the role.

Anderson, who served as a councillor for two years, has said she was reluctant to get into politics. Describing her decision to put herself forward last month, she said: “It hasn’t been a lifelong ambition, but I could see our city was in peril”. However, she did grow up in a political environment, raised by a “fiesty” single mother who, she said, once locked some political figures in a cupboard “for not doing as they were told”.

Anderson, who has one son, says she will make violence against women and girls a personal priority. She prides herself on her forthright manner, and speaks openly about having been declared bankrupt twice, in 2003 and 2019. She believes many Liverpudlians will identify with her situation, particularly after the pandemic: “It’s actually quite hard to live without getting into debt”.

She worked as a freelance equality and diversity consultant, including for the CPS for 10 years, at a time when Keir Starmer was director of public prosecution.

Simon Woolley, the founder and director of Operation Black Vote, described her victory as “a truly historic win on so many levels”, pointing to the significance of Liverpool, once a major slave port, being run by a black woman.

Yip, her opponent, is founder of the children’s charity Kind and stood on a platform of reforming the local authority, including a big reduction in the number of councillors. By Maya Wolfe-Robinson, Guardian/Yahoo News

 

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