Rights summit in Zambia is canceled after Chinese pressure to exclude Taiwanese activists

CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) — The U.S.-based organizers of an international human rights conference said they canceled it days before it was due to open becauseChinapressured the African host country to exclude Taiwanese activists.

Associated Press A children hold a Chinese national flag near the Hall of Prayer for Good Harvests at the Temple of Heaven in Beijing, China, Friday, April 3, 2026. (AP Photo/Vincent Thian) Members of Taiwan's main opposition Nationalist Party, or Kuomintang (KMT) wave national flags to the protesters against KMT chairperson Cheng Li-wun meeting's with Chinese President Xi Jinping on April 10, in front of the party's headquarter in Taipei, Taiwan, Tuesday, April 14, 2026. (AP Photo/Chiang Ying-ying) China's President Xi Jinping attend a signing ceremony with Mozambique's President Daniel Chapo, not pictured, at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing Tuesday, April 21, 2026. (Haruna Furuhashi/Pool Photo via AP)

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Organizers Access Now, a New York-based advocacy group, said late Friday it had canceled the RightsCon summit in Zambia that was due to take place next week after the Zambian government initially said it was postponed.

Access Now said it had been informed by Zambian officials that the government had been pressured by China over the conference “because Taiwanese civil society participants were planning to join us in person.” Access Now said it pushed back on any move to exclude delegates from Taiwan.

“We believe foreign interference is the reason RightsCon 2026 won’t proceed in Zambia,” Access Now said in a statement.

“What the government wanted from us in order to lift the postponement was conveyed to us informally from multiple sources: ... we would have to moderate specific topics and exclude communities at risk, including our Taiwanese participants, from in-person and online participation.”

The Zambian government earlier announced it was postponing the conference because it wanted information on the themes and topics of discussion to ensure they aligned with the country's “national values, policy priorities and broader public interest considerations.”

Zambia has strong political and economic ties with China, largely throughChinese mining interestsin the mineral-rich southern African nation.

RightsCon is an annual conference focused on human rights and technology and deals with issues like internet censorship, electronic surveillance and cyberwarfare. More than 2,600 participants were due to attend in Zambia, with another 1,100 attending online, Access Now said. They represented more than 150 countries.

Last year’s summit was held in Taiwan.

Taiwanese Minister of Digital Affairs Lin Yi-jing said in a statement on Facebook on Saturday that the cancellation of the summit showed China’s unease over “the ideas of freedom, democracy and rule of law that Taiwan and RightsCon represent.”

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Human Rights Watch said Zambian authorities should explain their actions.

The move by the Zambian government came just a week after Taiwan claimed thatBeijing intervenedto stop Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te from visiting another southern African country, Eswatini on April 22.

Lai's visit to Eswatini, the only African nation that maintains formal diplomatic relations with Taiwan, was called off after the Indian Ocean islands of Madagascar, Mauritius and Seychelles were pressured by China to withdraw permission for Lai's plane to fly over their territory, Taiwan said.

The Chinese Foreign Ministry praised the actions of the three nations and said their "adherence to the one-China principle is in full compliance with international law.”

Chinaclaims self-ruled Taiwanas its breakaway province, to be retaken by force if necessary, and prohibits countries it has diplomatic relations with from maintaining formal ties with Taipei. China has significant influence across Africa.

Taiwanese leader Lai made a surprise announcement on Saturday thathe had arrived in Eswatiniafter the first visit was called off. This time, Lai had not announced publicly that he was traveling.

Taiwan “will never be deterred by external pressures,” Lai wrote on X.

AP journalist Johnson Lai in Taipei contributed.

AP Africa news:https://apnews.com/hub/africa

Rights summit in Zambia is canceled after Chinese pressure to exclude Taiwanese activists

CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) — The U.S.-based organizers of an international human rights conference said they canceled it days before ...
US charges Mexican government, law enforcement officials in alleged cartel scheme

Current and former high-ranking Mexican government and law enforcement officials were charged Wednesday in New York with allegedly conspiring with the Sinaloa cartel to distribute “massive” quantities of illicit drugs inside the United States in exchange for bribe payments and political support.

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Among the defendants is the current governor of Sinaloa, Ruben Rocha Moya.  Neither he nor his codefendants are in U.S. custody.

Moya released a statement on Wednesday, saying, "I categorically and unequivocally reject the allegations brought against me by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York, as they are entirely unfounded and lack any basis in truth."

US is engaged in formal 'armed conflict' with 'terrorist' drug cartels, Trump says

"We will prove the baselessness of this slander," Moya added, calling the indictment a "perverse strategy aimed at undermining the constitutional order."

He and nine others are accused of playing central roles in a violent and corrupt drug trafficking conspiracy that federal prosecutors said brought fentanyl, heroin, cocaine and methamphetamine from Mexico into the United States, including shielding cartel leaders from investigation, passing sensitive military information to cartel leaders and providing protection for traffickers.

In exchange, the defendants have collectively received millions of dollars in drug money from the faction of the cartel run by the Chapitos, the sons of Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, according to the indictment.

STOCK/Hola Images/Getty Images - PHOTO: Stock photo the Mexico and U.S. flags.

The indictment said another defendant, Juan Valenzuela Millan, a high-level commander in the Culiacan Municipal Police, received more than $1,600 every month from the Chapitos in exchange for using the Culiacan Municipal Police to carry out arrests, kidnappings and murders.

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In October 2023, Millan allegedly helped the Chapitos kidnap a DEA confidential source and the source’s relative, who was then tortured and killed.

“The Sinaloa Cartel is a ruthless criminal organization that has flooded this community with dangerous drugs for decades,” said U.S. Attorney Jay Clayton.  “As the indictment lays bare, the Sinaloa Cartel, and other drug trafficking organizations like it, would not operate as freely or successfully without corrupt politicians and law enforcement officials on their payroll.  The support of corrupt foreign officials for deadly trafficking of drugs must end.

2 US Embassy staffers killed in Mexico car accident were working for CIA: US official

Mexican Special Prosecutor for the Investigation of Relevant Matters, Ulises Lara, said during a press conference on Wednesday that Mexico will open its own investigation into the allegations.

Lara said authorities will review the evidence to determine whether it meets legal standards and whether the requests are viable under Mexican law.

Mexican law requires evidence indicating probable commission of a crime before any arrest warrant can be issued, according to Lara.

Lara said that if public officials are involved, a formal process is required to lift legal immunity before proceeding.

U.S. Ambassador to Mexico Ron Johnson released a statement on Wednesday saying, "Combating corruption and transnational criminal activity is a shared priority for the United States and Mexico. Our countries have pledged to strengthen transparency, enforce anti-corruption laws, and uphold the rule of law."

"While we cannot comment on the individual facts of these indictments, and the legal process will need to play out, one thing is certain: corruption that enables organized crime and harms both our countries will be investigated and prosecuted wherever U.S. jurisdiction applies," Johnson added.

US charges Mexican government, law enforcement officials in alleged cartel scheme

Current and former high-ranking Mexican government and law enforcement officials were charged Wednesday in New York with allegedly cons...
Senate Republicans block measure to curb Trump's power to invade Cuba

WASHINGTON — A group ofDemocratic senatorsled by Virginia Sen. Tim Kaine tried — and failed — to advancea resolution prohibitingPresidentDonald Trumpfrom taking unilateral military action in Cuba, days after Havanapublicly rejectedU.S. demands.

USA TODAY

In a mostly party-line April 28 vote, 50 Republicans and one Democrat blocked the Senate from taking up the measure. Sen. John Fetterman of Pennsylvania was the Democrat who voted across the aisle.

Two GOP lawmakers, Sens. Susan Collins of Maine and Rand Paul of Kentucky, bucked their party, joining with Democrats in hopes of curbing Trump's actions in the Caribbean nation.

Democrats were aiming to keep the U.S. military from engaging in hostilities in or against Cuba without congressional approval. Trump has been warning of a takeover of Cuba, feeding anxiety among Democratic lawmakers who are fearful that negotiations with Havana are a pretense for an invasion.

"When there are efforts by an executive to go too far, then it is up to Congress to stand up and provide a check," Kaine said in remarks on the Senate floor ahead of the failed vote. He has led similar attempts in the Senate to stop military hostilities in Iran.

More:Democrats try to blunt Trump in Cuba — before it's too late

Sen. Peter Welch, D-Vermont, told USA TODAY he thinks the Trump administration’s strategy in Cuba “is to crush them into dust.”

“It’s a policy that’s going to result in suffering for even more people,” he said. “There was a very solid basis for Sen. Kaine’s war powers resolution.”

The Trump administration has been engaged in talks with the Cuban government to lift the United States' near-total blockade on oil in exchange for expansive economic and governance reforms and the release of detainees. But the Cuban government blew off a U.S.-imposed deadline this week to release high-profile political prisoners as a show of good faith.

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The president has not said what he will do in response, although he promised a "new dawn for Cuba" this month and said the U.S. "may stop by" the communist nation when it finishes a military campaign in Iran. USA TODAYreported exclusivelyin April that the Pentagon was preparing for a potential operation on the island, located 90 miles south of Florida, in case Trump decides to take military action.

Democratic lawmakers have used their limited resources to try to keep diplomatic talks alive. After two House progressives visited Havana, Democrats revived a push to lift the U.S. trade embargo on Cuba. They're also trying to bring a bill to the floor that would halt Trump's ability to attack Cuba using federal funds.

After the Senate resolution failed, Kaine hurried out of the chamber. Asked on his way out whether regime change in Cuba could be imminent, he told a reporter, “I have no reason to believe that it is. I’m not saying that it isn’t.”

Sen. John Hoeven, R-North Dakota, wouldn’t elaborate on whether the Trump administration’s priorities in Cuba have been made clear to GOP lawmakers like himself. He told USA TODAY he trusts Secretary of State Marco Rubio, an ex-Florida senator who's leading the talks, to handle issues in the Western Hemisphere.

“They could not have a better point person," Hoeven said of Rubio, who's Cuban American.

Exclusive:Pentagon ramps up planning for possible military ops in Cuba

Kaine said in the days leading up to the vote that he was optimistic about Republican support for his bill. Yet hours beforehand, GOP senators who might have sided with him indicated they would not buck Trump.

Sen. Todd Young, an Indiana Republican who voted for a similar measure to restrict strikes in Venezuela earlier this year, told reporters the war powers votes "have devolved into a partisan political exercise."

"There hasn't been a serious effort, in my mind, to grapple with issues like what happens if you precipitously withdraw troops," Young said.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Democrats seek to curb Trump's power to invade Cuba

Senate Republicans block measure to curb Trump's power to invade Cuba

WASHINGTON — A group ofDemocratic senatorsled by Virginia Sen. Tim Kaine tried — and failed — to advancea resolution prohibitingPreside...
Actress Claudine Longet Shot and Killed Her Olympian Boyfriend Spider Sabich — But Only Spent 30 Days In Jail. Inside the Twisty Case

Claudine Longet shot and killed her boyfriend, Olympian Vladimir “Spider” Sabich, on March 21, 1976

People Claudine Longet and Spider Sabich in 1974Credit: Michael Ochs Archives/Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • She claimed the gun accidentally discharged while Sabich was showing her how to use it

  • Longet and Sabich's relationship was reportedly strained before his death

Olympian Vladimir “Spider” Sabich was preparing to take a shower on the evening of March 21, 1976, when he was shot in the stomach by his girlfriend, Claudine Longet.

Longet, who had been holding an imitation World War II model Luger pistol at the couple's Aspen, Colo., home, called an ambulance, but Sabich was pronounced dead from the gunshot wound before reaching the hospital. The American alpine skier died at 31.

Longet was arrested, but insisted that the gun had accidentally discharged while Sabich was showing her how to use it. While Longet was initially charged with reckless manslaughter, percourt papers, a series of mistakes by investigators limited the evidence that could be used in court. She was ultimately convicted of a much lesser charge.

Here's everything to know about the death of Vladimir “Spider” Sabich — and Claudine Longet's involvement.

Claudine Longet was a French-born actress and singer

Claudine Longet and Andy WilliamsCredit: Bettmann/Getty

Longet, who was born in Paris, moved to Las Vegas in 1960 to perform at the Tropicana casino, where she metAndy Williams, the host of theEmmy-winningThe Andy Williams Show, according toGQ. The two got married in December 1961 and welcomed three children — Noelle, Christian and Bobby.

With the help of Williams, Longet began to establish herself as a singer and actress in the U.S. She appeared many times onThe Andy Williams Show, costarred in the 1968 box office hitThe Partyalongside Peter Sellers and released two albums through Williams' record label.

However, their romance didn't last. The couple separated in 1970 and divorced in 1975.

Longet went on to meet Sabich in 1972 at a celebrity ski race in Bear Valley, Calif., according toTahoe Quarterly. Sabich's friend Moose Barrows recalled their first meeting in a restaurant during the race, when Sabich walked in to see Longet sitting withLiza Minnelli,Clint Eastwoodand Robert Conrad.

Sabich introduced himself, and they struck up a romance. “We thought she was crazy,” Barrows toldThe Denver Post. “She had a temper and a few other things — she was French.”

After splitting time between California and Aspen for a year, Longet and her three children moved to Aspen to be with the skier, per theAspen Times.

Spider Sabich was a decorated Olympic skier

Spider Sabich in 1971Credit: Duane Howell/The Denver Post via Getty

Sabich was a successful star in his own right, having been a member of the U.S. Ski Team at the World Cup for its first four seasons. He placed fifth in the slalom at the 1968 Winter Olympics, won the slalom at the World Cup later that year and was the pro ski racing champion in 1971 and 1972.

“He was just instantly likeable, a typical California kid,” Billy Kidd, a fellow ski racer, toldTahoe Quarterly. “Within five to 10 minutes, you feel like you've known him for a lifetime.”

In fact, Sabich and Kidd were the inspirations behindRobert Redfordand James Salter's 1969 filmDownhill Racer.

“[Sabich] was one of the most charismatic and fun people to ever be on this planet,” Kidd said. “There wasn't any girl around who, from the instant she heard the word 'Hello,' didn't want to spend more time with him.”

However, Sabich had been suffering from ski-related knee and back injuries around the time of his death, perGQ.

Sabich died in March 1976

Spider Sabich and Claudine LongetCredit: Bettmann/Getty

During the afternoon of March 21, 1976, Sabich went home after a training session to change his clothes before meeting a friend, Bob Beattie, for dinner, perThe Denver Post. But while he was preparing to take a shower, Longet shot him in the stomach.

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Responding officers found Sabich's body slumped on the floor of the bathroom, perGQ. He was 31 years old.

During Longet's trial, Aspen detective David Garms testified that immediately after the shooting, the actress claimed it had been an accident. Garms said that Longet claimed she had found the .22-cal. pistol in their house and asked Sabich how to work it, thinking it would be helpful when she was home alone, perTIME.

“I raised the gun and playfully went ‘Boom, boom,' and it went off," Garms said Longet told him.

While on the stand, Longet told the jury, “I continued walking toward him, telling him I wanted to know more about it." She then insisted that she didn't do so “playfully” as Garms testified, because “I wouldn't joke with guns.”

After the gun went off, “Spider called my name many, many times,” Longet said on the stand, according toThe New York Times. “He sort of slid down and I told him I would call the hospital and not to move. I told him to try to make it. He was fainting, and I tried to give him mouth-to-mouth resuscitation."

Their relationship was rocky before Sabich's death

Claudine Longet after her trialCredit: Bettmann/Getty

However, Longet and Sabich's relationship reportedly wasn't in a good place before his death.

Sabich's ex-girlfriend, Marty, toldGQthat, shortly before his death, the two went out to dinner and Sabich told her “he could not get rid of Claudine” and “she was throwing tantrums.” Beattie claimed that their relationship was about to end, according to the outlet.

While responding to their house on the afternoon of Sabich's death, officers found a diary that revealed "explosive" details about the couple's relationship, according toGQ.

On the stand, Longet said that “Spider and I loved each other very much," perThe New York Times. However, she later admitted that she was looking for another place to live at the time of his death.

Significant pieces of evidence were inadmissible in court

Claudine Longet leaving courtCredit: Bettmann/Getty

Pitkin County Sheriff's Office deputies did not have warrants when they took Longet's diary and blood and urine samples from her, which made them inadmissible in court, perThe New York Times.

The prosecution claimed that her sample contained cocaine, but it could not be used as evidence, according toGQ.

The weapon was also handled improperly. It had been wrapped in a towel from someone at the crime scene and stashed away in a police car glove compartment for days, rather than properly stored as evidence. The defense claimed that this was evidence tampering, perEBSCO.

Longet was found guilty of misdemeanor negligent homicide and sentenced to 30 days in jail

Claudine Longet ahead of her trialCredit: Bettmann/Getty

On January 14, 1977, Longet was found guilty of misdemeanor negligent homicide, perThe New York Times. Longet was given two years' probation and ordered to spend 30 days in jail — which she could serve on consecutive weekends — starting on a date she chose, and was charged a $25 fine to pay the costs of her probation report, according to theoutlet.

“There is not really very much to say,” Longet said after receiving her sentence, per EBSCO. “Only that I have too much respect for living things to do that. I'm not guilty.”

In May 1977, Sabich's family filed a civil lawsuit against Longet for $1.3 million, which was settled out of court. Longet signed a confidentiality agreement that she would not speak publicly about Sabich or the killing, and promised never to publish a book about her life or the trial.

Read the original article onPeople

Actress Claudine Longet Shot and Killed Her Olympian Boyfriend Spider Sabich — But Only Spent 30 Days In Jail. Inside the Twisty Case

Claudine Longet shot and killed her boyfriend, Olympian Vladimir “Spider” Sabich, on March 21, 1976 NEED TO KNOW S...

 

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