International
JUST IN: President Tinubu in Closed Door Meeting with President of Benin in Aso Rock

Nigeria’s President Bola Tinubu is currently in a closed door meeting with President of the Republic of Benin, Patrice Talon at the Presidential Villa in Abuja.
This is the second time in nine days President Talon is visiting Abuja, after he visited on July 18 along with two other colleague-presidents; Mohamed Bazoum of Niger and Umaro Sissoco Embalo of Guinea-Bissau, for a Troika+ meeting.
Today’s meeting is coming just as news filtering out of Niamey, the capital of Niger Republic, that President Bazoum, had been held hostage by elements within his Presidential Guards in an apparent coup.
International
Pope Francis for burial tomorrow (Saturday)
A nine-day mourning period will then begin.

Image: Getty images
The funeral of Pope Francis will take place on Saturday, in front of St Peter’s Basilica in Vatican City.
BBC reports that the preparations have begun for the conclave, the process by which cardinals will elect the next Pope.

What will happen at the Pope’s funeral?
The Pope’s body is lying in state inside St Peter’s Basilica.
Tens of thousands of mourners have queued to say a final goodbye before his funeral takes place on Saturday, at 10:00 local time (09:00 BST).
Papal funerals have historically been very elaborate, but the instructions set out by Francis are much simpler.
He will be the first Pope in more than a century not to be buried inside the Vatican. Instead, he will be laid to rest in Rome’s Basilica of St Mary Major.
Francis asked to be buried in a simple wooden casket lined with zinc – unlike his predecessors, who were buried in three nesting coffins made of cypress, lead and oak.
The service will be led by Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re, dean of the College of Cardinals. Patriarchs, archbishops, bishops, and priests from across the globe will also take part.
After a concluding prayer formally entrusting the Pope to God, the pontiff’s body will be moved to St Mary Major for the burial.
A nine-day mourning period will then begin.
Dozens of world leaders and thousands of worshippers will be at the funeral.
UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, US President Donald Trump, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, and French President Emmanuel Macron have said they will attend, as has Javier Milei, the president of Argentina, Francis’s home country.
The Prince of Wales will represent King Charles.
International
Trump hints at softening China tariffs and says no plan to sack Fed boss

US President Donald Trump has appeared to soften his recent comments on China and the head of the US Federal Reserve after recent clashes as he pursues his economic agenda.
He said he has “no intention of firing” Jerome Powell after repeatedly criticising the head of the central bank, but he added that he would like Powell to be “a little more active” on cutting interest rates.
Speaking in the Oval Office on Tuesday, Trump also said he was optimistic about improving trade relations with China.
He said the level of tariffs – or import taxes – that he had imposed on Chinese imports would “come down substantially, but it won’t be zero”.
The president’s tariffs are an effort to encourage factories and jobs to return to the US. This is a pillar of his economic agenda – as is a cut in interest rates, aimed at reducing the cost of borrowing for Americans.
Trump has ratcheted the rate on Chinese goods up to 145% – sparking reciprocal measures from Beijing and warnings from economists about the global impact of a trade war.
In his comments to reporters on Tuesday, Trump said he would be “very nice” in negotiations with Beijing – in the hope of securing a trade deal.
Earlier, US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent reportedly said he expected a de-escalation of the trade war, which he said was unsustainable. Responding to comments from China, he said the current situation was “not a joke”.
The trade war has led to turbulence in financial markets around the world – to which Trump’s comments on Powell have also contributed.
The Fed has not cut rates so far this year, after lowering them by a percentage point late last year, a stance Trump has heavily criticised.
Last week, the president intensified his attacks on the Fed chief, calling him “a major loser”.
The comments sparked a selloff of stocks, bonds and the US dollar – though markets have since been recovering from those losses.
National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett said on Friday that Trump was looking into whether it would be possible to sack Powell – who he first nominated to lead the central bank in 2017.
Powell was then renewed in 2021 by Joe Biden.It is unclear whether Trump has the authority to fire the Fed chair. No other US president has tried to do so.
Most major Asian stock markets were higher on Wednesday as investors appeared to welcome the latest remarks.
Japan’s Nikkei 225 index rose about 1.9%, the Hang Seng in Hong Kong climbed by around 2.2%, while mainland China’s Shanghai Composite was down less than 0.1%.
That came after US shares made gains on Tuesday, with the S&P 500 ending Tuesday’s session up 2.5% and the Nasdaq rose 2.7%.
US futures were also trading higher overnight. Futures markets give an indication of how financial markets will perform when they open for trading.
Investors feared that pressure on Powell to lower interest rates could cause prices to rise at a time when trade tariffs are already seen boosting inflation.
Trade tensions between the world’s biggest economies, as well as US tariffs on other countries around the world, have triggered uncertainty about the global economy. Those concerns triggered turmoil in financial markets in recent weeks.
On Tuesday, the forecast for US economic growth for this year was given the biggest downgrade among advanced economies by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) due to uncertainty caused by tariffs.
The sharp increase in tariffs and uncertainty will lead to a “significant slowdown” in global growth, the Fund predicted.
Trump has imposed taxes of up to 145% on imports from China. Other countries are now facing a blanket US tariff of 10% until July.
His administration said last week that when the new tariffs are added on to existing ones, the levies on some Chinese goods could reach 245%.
China has hit back with a 125% tax on products from the US and vowed to “fight to the end”.
The Chinese government has not yet officially responded to the latest statements from the Trump administration.
However, an article in the state-controlled Global Times on Wednesday quoted commentators who said the remarks showed that the US is beginning to realise the tariffs do more harm than good to America’s economy.
BBC
International
Ghana president suspends chief justice in unprecedented move

Ghanaian President John Mahama has suspended the country’s Supreme Court chief justice – Gertrude Torkornoo.
An investigation has been launched and three undisclosed petitions have been filed making allegations against Gertrude Torkornoo, calling for her permanent removal.
Chief justices in Ghana enjoy security of tenure – meaning they can only be removed from office on a few grounds, which include incompetence and misbehaviour.
The content of the petitions has not been made public and she is yet to comment, while Ghana’s former attorney general has claimed her suspension is an attempt to undermine the judiciary.
“I think it is a complete charade,” Godfred Yeboah Dame told the BBC.
“It’s the biggest assault on the [judiciary] in the nation’s history, the greatest assault on the independence of the judiciary under the constitutional dispensation of this country.
“Ms Torkornoo is Ghana’s third female chief justice and was nominated in 2023 by former president Nana Akufo-Addo.
It is her responsibility to oversee the administration of justice in Ghana.
According to news agency Reuters, Ms Torkornoo survived a removal request earlier this year when former President Akufo-Addo said a petition to have her dismissed had “several deficiencies”.
Copies of the three recently filed petitions against Ms Torkornoo were not initially made available to her.
But some lawyers argued that withholding the documents was a violation of Ms Torkornoo’s right to a fair hearing.
Copies of the petition were subsequently made available to the chief justice, allowing her to respond to the allegations privately and in writing.
Ms Torkornoo will be invited by the five-member committee to respond again to the petitions before a final decision is reached as to whether she should be removed from office or not.
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