
-
Zahl der Erdbebenopfer in der Türkei und Syrien steigt auf mehr als 6200
-
US-Videokonferenz-Dienst Zoom entlässt 15 Prozent seiner Belegschaft
-
Verteidigungsminister Pistorius zu unangekündigtem Besuch in Kiew eingetroffen
-
Ausmaß von Erdbebenkatastrophe in der Türkei und Syrien wird immer stärker sichtbar
-
Fischer-Anwalt zu Kokain-Ermittlungen: "Riesige Luftnummer"
-
Bayerns Regierungschef Söder fordert Teilnahme von Scholz an Flüchtlingsgipfel
-
EU-Kommissarin: Ähnliche Gefahr durch organisierte Kriminalität wie durch Terror
-
Zahl der Toten in der Türkei auf mehr als 5400 gestiegen
-
Ski-WM: Pinturault gewinnt Kombi - Jocher verpasst Top 10
-
Eltern von getötetem Tyre Nichols Gäste bei Bidens Rede zur Lage der Nation
-
Tausende kommen zu Trauergebeten für Ex-Militärmachthaber Musharraf in Pakistan
-
Weiter keine Einmalzahlung für Studierende - Kritik aus Koalition und Opposition
-
FDP fordert "Bau-Booster" für Deutschland
-
Mehr als 4800 Tote durch Erdbeben im türkisch-syrischen Grenzgebiet
-
Biden droht China nach Ballon-Überflug mit entschiedenem Vorgehen
-
Reallöhne sinken 2022 wegen hoher Inflation um 4,1 Prozent
-
Habeck und Le Maire setzen auf "volle Transparenz" der USA bei Subventionen
-
Bericht: Bundesregierung genehmigt Waffenausfuhren nach Niger und Indien
-
Eisenbahngewerkschaft fordert zwölf Prozent mehr Geld - mindestens aber 650 Euro
-
Berliner Landeswahlleiter rät zu baldigem Einwurf von Briefwahlunterlagen
-
Prozess gegen Pflegerin nach Tod von 27-Jähriger in Berlin begonnen
-
Studie: Elektrisch betriebene Lkw haben beste Klimabilanz
-
Berliner Gericht: Bei sehr langem Studium kein Wohngeld mehr
-
Medien: Zwei HSV-Profis in Straßenrennen verwickelt
-
Stoltenberg trifft Außen- und Verteidigungsminister der USA
-
Ampel-Koalition will weiteres Migrationspaket auf den Weg bringen
-
Industrieproduktion im Dezember gesunken - Starker Rückgang am Bau
-
UN-Bericht: Superbakterien breiten sich auch wegen Umweltverschmutzung weiter aus
-
Wüst fordert von Bund Einhaltung finanzieller Zusagen bei Flüchtlingskosten
-
Südamerika-Quartett reicht Bewerbung für WM 2030 ein
-
Noch keine Entscheidung bei Verkauf von Flughafen Hahn
-
Niedersachsens Gesundheitsminister für schnelles Ende letzter Maskenpflichten
-
Deutschland fordert von EU Verbot tausender "ewiger" Chemikalien
-
Erdogan ruft wegen Erdbeben den Notstand für zehn türkische Regionen aus
-
Tchibo bietet Kinderwagen und -fahrräder zum Ausleihen an
-
Mehr als 4300 Tote durch Erdbeben im türkisch-syrischen Grenzgebiet
-
Bundesregierung erlaubt Lieferung von 178 Leopard-1-Panzern an die Ukraine
-
Scholz hält Regierungserklärung zu EU-Gipfel
-
Deutscher Youtuber soll wegen illegaler Glücksspiele knapp 500.000 Euro zahlen
-
Umfrage: Rund 54 Millionen Deutsche nutzen soziale Medien
-
Buschmann will nach Brokstedt Hürden für Abschiebungen senken
-
Zahl der Todesopfer bei Erdbeben in der Türkei und Syrien steigt auf über 7800
-
Opferzahl nach Beben im türkisch-syrischen Grenzgebiet übersteigt Marke von 5000 Toten
-
Festnahme nach Bränden an Zelt für Flüchtlinge in Bayern
-
Zahl ankommender Flüchtlinge in Berlin stieg 2022 auf Allzeithoch
-
Buschmann lehnt gesetzliche Änderungen bei Indexmieten ab
-
Zehntausende bei unangekündigter Trauerfeier für Ex-Militärmachthaber Musharraf
-
WHO: Bis zu 23 Millionen Menschen von Beben in der Türkei und Syrien betroffen
-
Bundeskabinett befasst sich mit Folgen der Corona-Pandemie für Kinder
-
Bochums Schlotterbeck: "Warum nicht den BVB schlagen?"

Mauritania's ex-leader faces graft charges in landmark trial
The trial of Mauritania's former president Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz opened Wednesday with the dramatic image of the former head of state in a cage-like box answering accusations he amassed an illicit personal fortune during his 11 years in power.
Aziz, a 66-year-old former general, appeared in court in the capital Nouakchott alongside nine other defendants, including former prime ministers, cabinet ministers and businessmen, an AFP reporter saw.
They face charges that include abuse of office, influence peddling, money laundering and illicit enrichment.
Proceedings began with a roll call of the defendants to which Aziz -- dressed in a traditional boubou, a surgical mask concealing part of his thin moustache -- rose and raised his hand.
Hundreds of police stood guard outside as around one hundred lawyers packed the courtroom, where cameras and mobile phones were prohibited.
Outside, dozens of people gathered ahead of the trial, some to support Aziz, others with signs demanding he return allegedly stolen money.
Prosecutions of former heads of state are rare in the world, but especially so in Africa.
"It is a first in the history of Mauritania and perhaps even in the Arab world for a former president to explain his enrichment," Brahim Ebetty, one of several lawyers representing the state, told AFP.
- Denial -
Aziz, a trader's son who came to power in a bloodless coup, stepped down in 2019 after two terms in which he defused a jihadist insurgency that has swept across other countries in the Sahel.
He was succeeded by his former right-hand man, Mohamed Ould Ghazouani, in the first peaceful transfer of power between elected leaders in the history of a country marked by military coups and upheaval.
But within months of the handover, allegations emerged of financial misconduct.
Aziz is suspected of siphoning off money from state contracts or the sale of real estate, amassing a fortune equivalent to more than $72 million.
"All the people in the box have used the name of the state, the function of the state, (to enrich themselves) -- especially Mr Aziz," Ebetty said.
The former president has denied the allegations but refused to answer investigators' questions about the sources of his wealth.
He describes himself as the victim of score-settling and argues that he has immunity from prosecution under the constitution.
"He completely rejects the accusations against him," one of his lawyers, Taleb Khayar Ould Med Mouloud, said ahead of the trial.
"Lots of people have grounds for hating him, including the Muslim Brothers, which he threw out of the country," he said, referring to the Muslim Brotherhood Islamist movement.
- 'My brother, my friend' -
Ghazouani, also a former general, played a key role in Aziz's successful anti-jihadist strategy, and as late as December 2019 described his former boss as "my brother, my friend".
The following year, however, Aziz's fortunes began to falter -- though Ghazouani has denied any involvement in the case.
A parliamentary investigation was opened into financial dealings under his presidency, delving into oil revenues, sales of state assets, the winding up of a public company in charge of food supplies, and the activities of a Chinese fishing company.
The prosecution against the former president is unprecedented in Mauritania, a vast, conservative desert state that gained independence from France in 1960.
Mauritanians interviewed by AFP said they hoped the trial would set a new benchmark in the country's fight against graft.
Mauritania is ranked 140th out of 180 in the Corruption Perceptions Index for 2021 by the organisation Transparency International.
- 'Tired' -
Aziz's daughter, Asma, told AFP the former president was "tired", with his cardiologist contacting her Tuesday night because her father had collapsed after being taken into custody.
Another of his lawyers, Antoine Vey, expressed alarm at his client's "arbitrary" arrest and conditions that he said suggested Aziz would not be given a fair trial.
"The case has been built on work that just looks like political revisionism," he told AFP.
He planned to ask for a postponement of the trial and was preparing to refer the case to United Nations bodies if the request is rejected.
None of the parties interviewed could say how long the trial would last.
M.Furrer--BTB