News And PoliticsCommunications And EntertainmentSports And FitnessHealth And LifestyleOthersGeneralBusiness And MoneyWorldnewsNigerianewsRelationship And MarriageStories And PoemsArts And EducationScience And TechnologyCelebrityEntertainmentMotivationalsReligion And PrinciplesNewsFood And KitchenHealthPersonal Care And BeautyBusinessFamily And HolidaysStoriesIT And Computer ScienceRelationshipsSportsLawLifestyleComedyReligionLifetipsEducationMotivationAgriculturePoliticsAnnouncementUSMLE And MedicalsMoneyEngineeringPoemsSocial SciencesHistoryFoodGive AidBeautyMarriageQuestions And AnswersHobbies And HandiworksVehicles And MobilityTechnologyFamilyPrinciplesNatureQuotesFashionAdvertisementChildrenKitchenGive HelpArtsWomenSpiritualityQuestions AnsweredAnimalsHerbal MedicineSciencePersonal CareFitnessTravelSecurityOpinionMedicineHome RemedyMenReviewsHobbiesGiveawayHolidaysUsmleVehiclesHandiworksHalloweenQ&A
Top Recent
Loading...
You are not following any account(s)
profile/8037BFA3DAF6-5B0C-4ED2-A62B-1B33E3540F5D.jpeg.webp
GambiaUpdates

GRA Honoursover 30runner-up Taxpayers
~3.8 mins read

Key Among Them Was The Point Newspaper, Having Been Named Second Most Compliant Newspaper Of The Year 2024.
Meanwhile, The GRA Under The Leadership Of its Commissioner General Yankuba Darboe Deemed It Very Fitting To Organise A Unique Ceremony For The Runners Up Of This Year’s Award Since There Was No Enough Time On Occasion Of The Award.
According To CG Darboe, this Would Serve As An Encouragement And Motivation To Push Hard So That Next Year They would Be At The Top Of The Podium.
He Commended The Runners Up, Saying They Have Done Extremely well To Get To This Position. He Added That GRA Highly Appreciates Their Efforts, While Encouraging Them To Redouble Their Efforts And Come Up As Winners Of Taxpayers Awards Next Year.
The GRA Boss Assured Continuous Recognition Of The Taxpayers, While Highlighting The Importance Of The Annual Taxpayers’ Award Ceremony. He Thus Encouraged Taxpayers To Come Forward Voluntarily and Pay their Taxes On Time For Better Tax Compliance And For Better Revenue Generation For The Government.
According To CG Darboe, There Were Over 600 Active Business Companies And Individuals In The Country And Out Of Which 33 Companies Were Selected As Most Tax Compliant. “GRA Is So Proud and Cannot Just Put It Under The Table,” He Said, Adding That It’s Landmarks Cause And Worth Celebration With The Runners Up Who He Said Have worked Very Hard To Come Up To This Position.
GRA Boss Admitted That The Cooperation Of Both The Winners And Runners In The Payment Of Their Tax Obligation On Time Have Yielded Dividends in Helping the Authority Achieve Its Annual Revenue Target For 2024.
CG Darboe Spoke Extensively On The Impact Of Digitalization Reforms, Citing As The Main Driving Tools For The Success Of GRA in Achieving Its Annual Revenue Target Yearly.
CG Darboe Also Spoke About The Importance Of Tax Payment, Saying that There Is No Nation That Can Develop Without Taxation.
According To CG Darboe, The Level Of Cooperation That Exists Between The GRA and Its Esteemed Taxpayers Over The Years has Helped GRA Register Unprecedented Revenue Performance.
“We Will Continue To Cooperate And Collaborate And Have An Excellent Working Relationship To Ensure Massive Voluntary Tax Payment Which Is The Ultimate Objective Of Organising annual Taxpayers’ Award,” CG Darboe Underlined.
For His Part, The GRA Board Chair Dawda Ndure, Hailed The Leadership Of The Gambia Revenue Authority Under The Visionary Leadership Of The Commissioner General Darboe For Introducing Numerous Reforms, Which He Said Have Positive Impact On Revenue Mobilization.
He Further Praised CG Darboe For Being The Champion Of Digital Transformation. He Cited That GRA Has Now Been The House Of Excellence Of Revenue Generation For National Development.
He Therefore Encouraged All Taxpayers To Respect Their Tax Obligation, Saying That Is Key For Nation Building.
Mr. Ndure Also Commended The Runners Up For This Year While Encouraging Them To Speed Up So That Next Year They Could Emerge As Winners Of The GRA Annual Awards.
profile/8037BFA3DAF6-5B0C-4ED2-A62B-1B33E3540F5D.jpeg.webp
GambiaUpdates
Burkina Faso President Summons Military Chiefs Amid Foiled Coup
~2.0 mins read
This Secret Meeting, Described As “highly Strategic,” Follows A Deranged Putch Attempt Involving Active Soldiers And Fugitives. The Intelligence Has Revealed Disturbing Links Between The Military And Armed Groups, Plunging The Country On Maximum Security Alert.
Among The Suspects: Lieutenant Abdrahmane Barry And Captain Jouani Compaoré. Authorities Are Continuing Investigations To Prevent Any Destabilization As The Country Is Already Fighting A Jihadist Uprising. The Government Shows A Firm Will To Protect The Nation At All Costs.
dataDp/1032.jpeg
Worldnews

Musk Says Hell Spend Less Time Working With Trump After Tesla Profits Sink
~1.5 mins read
Tesla CEO says he will spend ‘far more’ of his time running carmaker after putting cost-cutting team in place. Tesla CEO Elon Musk has said he will scale back his work with the administration of United States President Donald Trump following a steep plunge in the electric carmaker’s first-quarter profits. Musk, who leads Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), said on Tuesday that he would allocate “far more” of his time to running Tesla and cut back his work in the government to one or two days per week from May. “The large slog of work necessary to get the DOGE team in place and working with the government to get the financial house in order is mostly done,” Musk said in a conference call with Wall Street analysts. Tesla shares, which have dropped more than 40 percent since the start of the year, rose 4.6 percent in after-hours trading following Musk’s remarks, which cheered investors concerned about the tech billionaire’s divided attention. Musk’s comments came just hours after Tesla reported a 71 percent decline in net profit for January-March, with income of $409m compared with $1.39bn the previous year. Tesla’s global sales fell 13 percent over the period amid a consumer backlash against Musk’s involvement in the Trump administration. The electric carmaker has become a focal point for protests against Trump’s policies in recent months, with the company’s vehicles, dealerships and charging stations targeted in dozens of acts of vandalism and arson in several countries. The company, which builds its cars for the US market in Texas and California but relies on parts from Mexico, is also facing the fallout of Trump’s 25 percent tariff on auto imports. In his conference call, Musk, the world’s richest man, defended his work with DOGE, saying that his efforts were aimed at fighting fraud and waste and getting “the country back on the right track”. “If the ship of America goes down, we all go down with it, including Tesla and everyone else,” he said. Follow Al Jazeera English:...
Read this story on Aljazeera
dataDp/1032.jpeg
Worldnews

Kremlin Critic Decried For Racist Rant On Minorities Fighting For Russia
~4.2 mins read
Vladimir Kara-Murza has suggested ethnic minority troops find it ‘easier’ to carry out fatal attacks in Ukraine. Kyiv, Ukraine – Vladimir Kara-Murza barely survived two suspected poisonings in 2015 and 2017 that he claimed were orchestrated by the Kremlin. The bearded, balding 43-year-old may not be as outspoken as opposition leader Alexey Navalny, who nearly died of similar nerve agent poisoning in 2020. But Kara-Murza, a Cambridge-educated historian, has been instrumental in convincing Western governments to slap personal sanctions on dozens of Russian officials. In 2023, a Moscow court sentenced him to 25 years in jail for “treason” and while behind bars, he won a Pulitzer Prize for his columns for The Washington Post. Released last year as part of a prisoner swap, Kara-Murza settled in Germany and continued his advocacy work against Russian President Vladimir Putin’s government and Moscow’s war in Ukraine. But last week, Kara-Murza’s remarks about the ethnic identity and alleged bloodthirst of Russian servicemen rattled many on both sides of Europe’s hottest armed conflict. “As it turns out, [ethnic] Russians find it psychologically difficult to kill Ukrainians,” Kara-Murza told the French Senate on Thursday while explaining why Russia’s Ministry of Defence enlists ethnic minorities. “Because [ethnic Russians and Ukrainians] are the same, we’re similar people, we have an almost similar language, same religion, hundreds and hundreds of years of common history,” said Kara-Murza. Russians and Ukrainians are ethnic Slavs whose statehood dates back to Kyivan Rus, medieval Eastern Europe’s largest state torn apart by Mongols, Poles and Lithuanians. “But to someone who belongs to another culture, it is allegedly easier” to kill Ukrainians, Kara-Murza added. His remarks made observers and Indigenous rights advocates flinch and fume. A former Russian diplomat said “measuring the degree of one’s cruelty by their ethnicity is a dead end.” The Kremlin does not specifically “recruit minorities, they recruit people from the poorest regions, and those are, as a rule, ethnic autonomies”, Boris Bondarev, who quit his Ministry of Foreign Affairs job in protest against Russia’s 2022 full-scale invasion of Ukraine, told Al Jazeera. “Only a dull man could say that in the war’s fourth year in a multiethnic society,” said Indigenous peoples activist Dmitry Berezhkov, of the Itelmen nation on Russia’s Pacific peninsula of Kamchatka. Russian liberal opposition figures, mostly middle-class urbanites, “drown as soon as they tread on the thin ice” of ethnic minority issues, he added. Ethnic Russians constitute more than two-thirds of Russia’s population of 143 million. The rest are minorities – from millions of ethnic Ukrainians and Tatars to smaller Indigenous groups in Siberia and the Arctic that have regional autonomy, albeit mostly nominal. Even in regions rich in hydrocarbons, rare earths or diamonds, the minorities live in rural, often inhospitable areas, co-existing and mingling with ethnic Russians. They all rely on Kremlin-funded television networks more than urban dwellers, often have no internet access and see the sign-up bonuses and salaries of servicemen fighting in Ukraine as a ticket out of the dire poverty their families live in. Recruits receive up to $50,000 when they sign up, and earn several thousand dollars a month – a fortune for anyone from those regions irrespective of their ethnic background. “This is colossal money for them, they will never earn it in their lives, no matter whether they are Buryat or Russian,” Bondarev said. In response to a squall of criticism, Kara-Murza wrote on Facebook on Monday that the accusations were mere “lies, manipulations and slander”. To Berezhkov, the comment further tainted Kara-Murza’s image. “In the past, [Kara-Murza’s words] could be seen as a mistake – but now, they are his position,” he said. To another minority rights advocate, Kara-Murza’s diatribe sounded like a “signal for future voters” in the post-war, liberal Russia that exiled Kremlin critics hope to return to. Oyumaa Dongak, who fled Tyva, a Turkic-speaking province that borders China, thinks Kara-Murza and other exiled Russian opposition leaders are “competing” with Putin. “It’s not him, it’s us who defend [ethnic] Russians,” she told Al Jazeera. In 2024, Kara-Murza said Western sanctions imposed on Moscow after the 2022 invasion are “unfair and counterproductive” and hurt Russians at large. He wanted the West to lift wider sanctions and instead target individual officials. A Ukrainian observer said Kara-Murza does not want ethnic Russians who can potentially vote for now-exiled opposition leaders to feel collective guilt for the atrocities committed in Ukraine. “People don’t feel guilty. If you club them in the head with moral condemnation every day, people will not admit their guilt but will hate anyone who clubs them,” Kyiv-based analyst Vyacheslav Likhachyov told Al Jazeera. “That’s why the tales about the atrocities of Chechen executioners and Buryat rapists are and will be popular,” he said. Fighters deployed by Chechnya’s pro-Kremlin leader Ramzan Kadyrov were dubbed a “TikTok army” for staged videos of them “storming” Ukrainian strongholds. Their actual role in the war is mostly reduced to guarding occupied areas, terrifying and torturing ethnic Russian servicemen who refuse to fight. But Buryats, Buddhist natives of a scarcely populated and impoverished region near Mongolia, have become notorious in Ukraine in 2022. Human rights groups and Ukrainian officials identified personal details of some Buryat soldiers that tortured, raped and killed civilians in Bucha and other towns north of Kyiv. But as ethnic Buryats are hard to distinguish from other minority servicemen with distinctly Asian features, Ukrainians often label them all “Buryats”, a community activist said. “All Caucasus natives are seen as Chechens, and all Asians are considered Buryats,” Aleksandra Garmazhapova, who helps Buryat men escape mobilisation and flee abroad, told Al Jazeera. However, the overwhelming majority of servicemen who committed alleged war crimes in Bucha were reportedly ethnic Russians. Garmazhapova survived because Ukrainian forces started shelling Russian positions, and his captors fled to a basement. “Slavs, Slavs, they were all Slavs,” Viktor, a Bucha resident who was doused with fuel by Russian servicemen who placed bets on how far he would run once they set him on fire, told Al Jazeera in 2022, just days after his ordeal. Follow Al Jazeera English:...
Read this story on Aljazeera
Loading...