From Cape Verde to South Africa, from South Africa to Senegal, from Senegal to Tunisia, from Tunisia to Nigeria, from Nigeria to Congo and to ALL OF AFRICA AND AFRICANS
News from Africa brought under one roof as well as ongoing open discussion of the lifestyle, values, culture, beliefs, challenges and triumphs of the contemporary African family in Africa and in Diaspora.
Wednesday, 31 December 2014
Police in Tanzania arrest 4 over the kidnap of albino girl
Police in Tanzania said on Wednesday they have
arrested four people over the kidnapping of an albino girl in the north of the
country, where many are killed and their body parts sold as lucky charms.
Pendo Emmanuelle Nundi, 4, was snatched on Saturday from her home in the Mwanza region by attackers armed with machetes, regional police chief Valentino Mlowola told state television.
"We have arrested four people, including the girl's father. We are still in the process of interrogating them so we can find out where the girl is - if she is still alive," the official said, adding the attackers may have been tipped off by neighbours.
Pendo Emmanuelle Nundi, 4, was snatched on Saturday from her home in the Mwanza region by attackers armed with machetes, regional police chief Valentino Mlowola told state television.
"We have arrested four people, including the girl's father. We are still in the process of interrogating them so we can find out where the girl is - if she is still alive," the official said, adding the attackers may have been tipped off by neighbours.
President Zuma tags 2014 a special year in his New Speech to South Africans
President Jacob Zuma
said in his New Year speech that South Africa has come to the end of a
special year, which marked 20 years of freedom and progress made in
building a united, democratic, non-racial, non-sexist and prosperous
nation. He said South Africa is a much better place to live
in today than it was before 1994, and that the lives of millions of
people have improved since the ANC took power.
Two Germans killed in Nigeria last weekend.
Two German men have been killed in Nigeria, the foreign ministry in
Berlin said on Wednesday, as media reported they were engineers shot
dead while on a motorcycle trip.
"Unfortunately we can confirm that two German nationals were killed in Nigeria last weekend," a foreign ministry spokesperson told AFP.
"The German embassy in Abuja is seeking clarification and is in close contact with Nigerian authorities."
The ministry did not release further details, either on the victims or the suspected killers.
Regional German newspaper Ostseezeitung said the men, one aged 34 and the other in his mid-50s, were engineers working for German construction company Julius Berger.
Originally from the eastern German state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, they had lived in Nigeria for years and were on a private trip when they were killed last Saturday, the newspaper said.
"Unfortunately we can confirm that two German nationals were killed in Nigeria last weekend," a foreign ministry spokesperson told AFP.
"The German embassy in Abuja is seeking clarification and is in close contact with Nigerian authorities."
The ministry did not release further details, either on the victims or the suspected killers.
Regional German newspaper Ostseezeitung said the men, one aged 34 and the other in his mid-50s, were engineers working for German construction company Julius Berger.
Originally from the eastern German state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, they had lived in Nigeria for years and were on a private trip when they were killed last Saturday, the newspaper said.
Ashes of South African couple who died in a domestic row in Ireland to be brought home
A family member of slain Mpumalanga couple, Angelique Booysen and
Cornelius Billing, has flown to Ireland to bring home their ashes and
their children.
Billing, 44, and his wife, Booysen, 27, died when they apparently knifed each other on December 17, in a bloody custody fight in Kildystart, Ireland.
Billing’s sister, Ursula Venter, arrived in Ireland on Sunday. Booysen’s mother, Mossie van Niekerk, said she had not spoken to Venter since then. “Financially, we are not sure what amount we need. We have completed various forms and paperwork which was e-mailed to Irish officials.”
Billing, 44, and his wife, Booysen, 27, died when they apparently knifed each other on December 17, in a bloody custody fight in Kildystart, Ireland.
Billing’s sister, Ursula Venter, arrived in Ireland on Sunday. Booysen’s mother, Mossie van Niekerk, said she had not spoken to Venter since then. “Financially, we are not sure what amount we need. We have completed various forms and paperwork which was e-mailed to Irish officials.”
Tuesday, 30 December 2014
Fears of coup attempt in the Gambia
Heavy gunfire has erupted near the presidential palace in The Gambia's capital, Banjul, reports say. Details are sketchy but military and diplomatic sources say
soldiers from the presidential guard tried to stage a coup, AFP news
agency reports. The fighting was reported while President Yahya Jammeh is abroad.
Mobile site Badilisha Poetry X-Change offers audio recording of African poets
“These days, the language of death
is a dialect of betrayals; the bodies
broken, placid as saints, hobble
along the tiled corridors, from room
to room. Below the dormitories
is a white squat bungalow, a chapel
from which the handclaps and choruses
rise and reach us like the scent
of a more innocent time.”
These are the opening lines of Hope’s Hospice, written by Ghanaian-born Jamaican poet Kwame Dawes. He is among nearly 400 African poets from 24 countries in 14 languages who can now be heard reading their work via mobile phones – a first for Africa and the world.
is a dialect of betrayals; the bodies
broken, placid as saints, hobble
along the tiled corridors, from room
to room. Below the dormitories
is a white squat bungalow, a chapel
from which the handclaps and choruses
rise and reach us like the scent
of a more innocent time.”
These are the opening lines of Hope’s Hospice, written by Ghanaian-born Jamaican poet Kwame Dawes. He is among nearly 400 African poets from 24 countries in 14 languages who can now be heard reading their work via mobile phones – a first for Africa and the world.
MTN Launches entertainment streaming service in South Africa
Mobile phone operator MTN has launched a streaming internet
entertainment service in South Africa that can be viewed on any
connected device.
TV series such as US hit ‘Breaking Bad’ and movies like ‘22 Jump Street’ are available on the video on demand (VOD) service dubbed ‘MTN FrontRow’.
Costs for the service range from R179 a month “for all you can watch” to a monthly price of R399 that includes 10GB of streaming data.
TV series such as US hit ‘Breaking Bad’ and movies like ‘22 Jump Street’ are available on the video on demand (VOD) service dubbed ‘MTN FrontRow’.
Costs for the service range from R179 a month “for all you can watch” to a monthly price of R399 that includes 10GB of streaming data.
Authorities in Liberia report more ebola cases
Authorities in Liberia say there have been dozens of new Ebola cases erupting along the border with Sierra Leone.
The announcement by Assistant Health Minister Tolbert Nyenswah on Monday marks a setback for Liberia, which has seen the number of cases stabilise somewhat after having been the hardest hit country in West Africa.
The announcement by Assistant Health Minister Tolbert Nyenswah on Monday marks a setback for Liberia, which has seen the number of cases stabilise somewhat after having been the hardest hit country in West Africa.
Air Tanzania passengers left stranded after pilots fail to report to work
More than 100 passengers
are stranded after pilots at Tanzania's main airport failed to report to
work following their Christmas break, officials said.
Angry passengers accused the carrier, state-owned Air Tanzania, of treating them badly.
An Air Tanzania spokeswoman said it did not know why the pilots had failed to turn up for work.
The pilots were off on Christmas Day and the next day and were expected back at work on Saturday.
US airstrike into Somalia targets al-Shabab senior leader
The US says it has conducted an air strike against the Islamist insurgent group al-Shabab in Somalia. Its target was a "senior leader" in the area of Saakow, according to a statement by the US defence department.
The US has supported the African Union (AU) force that has driven al-Shabab out of the capital Mogadishu and other towns since 2011.
Monday, 29 December 2014
More fighting in Libya as Misrata is attacked
An oil storage tank caught fire after a rocket attack at the oil export terminal in Sidra on Saturday
Libya's
air force has struck the western city of Misrata for the first time in
the latest clash between government and militant forces. A Misrata source confirmed the strikes to the BBC, adding that there were no casualties or material damage.
Militants were "still in high spirits, and [the] bombings will not affect our resolve," the Misrata official told the BBC,
Former international football star George Weah wins a seat in Liberia's senate
The
former football star George Weah has won a landslide victory in
Liberia's senate elections, in polls disrupted by the Ebola outbreak. Mr Weah got 78% of the vote for the Montserrado county seat, which includes the capital Monrovia.
He beat Robert Sirleaf, the son of President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, who took nearly 11%.Low turnout in the poll, which was first planned for October, was blamed on concerns about Ebola. Strict health controls were in place to try to prevent the spread of the disease.
Somalia says top al-Shabab militant surrenders to police
A top al-Shabab militant, Zakariya Ahmed Ismail Hersi, has given himself up, Somali officials say. Mr Hersi, a leading figure in the militant group's intelligence wing, surrendered to police in the Gedo region, they add.
A Somali intelligence officer, quoted by the Associated Press news agency, suggested Mr Hersi may have surrendered because of a dispute with al-Shabab members loyal to the former leader.
Saturday, 27 December 2014
South African toddler bitten by cobra recovering
A 10-month-old baby who was bitten by a Mozambican spitting cobra earlier this month is recovering successfully, Beeld newspaper reported on Saturday.
"He is still in the hospital because the wound has to be treated, but he is doing very well," social worker Berdine Venter told the Afrikaans daily.
She said the baby was responsive and recognising people and had already been moved from intensive care to an ordinary ward.
The baby, a foster child living with a couple in Rustenburg in the North West, was bitten in his cot on 17 December.
It was suspected that the Mozambican spitting cobra had fallen from the thatched roof onto the cot.
The baby was removed from his biological parents when he was four-months-old and placed in the care of the Rustenburg couple.
"He is still in the hospital because the wound has to be treated, but he is doing very well," social worker Berdine Venter told the Afrikaans daily.
She said the baby was responsive and recognising people and had already been moved from intensive care to an ordinary ward.
The baby, a foster child living with a couple in Rustenburg in the North West, was bitten in his cot on 17 December.
It was suspected that the Mozambican spitting cobra had fallen from the thatched roof onto the cot.
The baby was removed from his biological parents when he was four-months-old and placed in the care of the Rustenburg couple.
African Union troops killed in Somalia
The
African Union (AU) force in Somalia says three of its peacekeepers and a
civilian contractor have been killed in an attack on its headquarters
in the capital, Mogadishu.
An AU statement said al-Shabab gunmen had entered the base disguised as Somali government troops. Former first lady of Ivory Coast set to face trial
The
trial has begun in Ivory Coast of the ex-first lady, Simone Gbagbo, for
her alleged role in post-election violence five years ago.
Thursday, 25 December 2014
Sierra Leone declares three-day lockdown in north
Sierra Leone has declared lockdown of at least three days in the north of the country to try to contain the Ebola epidemic.
Sierra Leone has already banned many public Christmas celebrations.
More than 7,500 people have died from the outbreak in West Africa so far, the Word Health Organization (WHO) says, with Sierra Leone the worst hit.
Sierra Leone has the highest number of Ebola cases in West Africa, with more than 9,000 cases and more than 2,400 deaths since the start of the outbreak.
The other countries at the centre of the outbreak are Liberia and Guinea.
Tuesday, 23 December 2014
Essebsi wins Tunisian election
Veteran politician Beji Caid Essebsi has won Tunisia's first free presidential election, official results showed on Monday, the final step in a transition to democracy after an uprising that ousted autocrat Zine El-Abidine Ben Ali in 2011.
But rioting broke out in one southern city, with police firing teargas to disperse hundreds of youths who burned tyres and blocked streets to demonstrate against the victory of an official from Ben Ali's old guard.
Monday, 22 December 2014
President Mugabe sacks more ministers linked to former VP
Photo: Nehanda Radio President Robert Mugabe at Heroes day celebrations
In what is seen as a continued purge of the ex-VP Joice Mujuru
faction President Mugabe has fired seven more cabinet ministers, a
government notice said Sunday.Chief Secretary to the President and Cabinet, Misheck Sibanda, said the ministers have been fired with "immediate effect".
Sibanda said "it had become apparent that their conduct and performance were below the expected standard and outcome".
Tunisian elections - Candidates refuse to concede
Moncef Marzouki has
refused to admit defeat in Tunisia's first free presidential election
after exit polls suggested Beji Caid Essebsi had won.
The caretaker president, a former exile, said his rival's declaration of victory was "undemocratic".Mr Marzouki said his rival's claims of victory in the presidential poll were premature
Mr Essebsi, 88, has been celebrating with supporters, telling them all Tunisians now need to "work together", and promising to bring stability. Critics say his success marks the return of a discredited establishment.
Zimbabwe issues special coins in the run up to Christmas
Special coins issued by Zimbabwe's central bank have gone into circulation in the run-up to Christmas. Zimbabwe abandoned its currency in 2009 due to hyperinflation and mainly uses the US dollar and South African rand. But with very few coins for these currencies in circulation, shoppers are given change in sweets or pens.
South Africa offer reward for help in finding killers of five women amidst fears of a serial killer on the loose
The City of Cape Town is offering a reward to anyone who can help the
police catch the killers of five women whose bodies have been found
dumped near train station.
The bodies had been discovered close to the Century City and Akasia train stations over the last ten months, Mayor Patricia de Lille said in a statement on Sunday.
The bodies had been discovered close to the Century City and Akasia train stations over the last ten months, Mayor Patricia de Lille said in a statement on Sunday.
Sunday, 21 December 2014
Egyptian court tries 26 men for debauchery
An Egyptian court today tried 26 men for alleged debauchery after
accusing them of homosexual activity at a Cairo public bathhouse in a
case that sparked international condemnation.
The handcuffed defendants, many of whom were crying, arrived at a Cairo court with their heads bowed as police pushed them inside a metal cage, an AFP correspondent reported.
“I am innocent. I was in the hammam for therapy, I swear in the name of Allah,” said a defendant as he wept inside the cage.
The handcuffed defendants, many of whom were crying, arrived at a Cairo court with their heads bowed as police pushed them inside a metal cage, an AFP correspondent reported.
“I am innocent. I was in the hammam for therapy, I swear in the name of Allah,” said a defendant as he wept inside the cage.
Villagers in DR Congo flee machete and ax attacks as violence increases
The U.N. High
Commissioner for Refugees said Friday it had credible reports that at
least 256 people, including children, had been killed in ax and machete
attacks since October in the Beni area of North Kivu province.
Boko haram release new video of their atrocities in Northern Nigeria
A new video from Nigeria's home-grown Boko Haram extremists shows gunmen mowing down civilians lying face down in a dorm, and a leader saying they are being killed because they are "infidels" or non-believers.
There are so many corpses the gunmen have difficulty stepping to reach bodies still twitching with life. Most appear to be adult men.
"We have made sure the floor of this hall is turned red with blood, and this is how it is going to be in all future attacks and arrests of infidels," the group leader says in a message. "From now, killing, slaughtering, destructions and bombing will be our religious duty anywhere we invade."
Zambia's railways director of finance dies mysteriously
Zambia Railways Director of Finance Elijah Nyirenda has died
mysteriously a day after objecting to Patriotic Front manoeuvres to
syphon money from the railway company to fund Presidential campaigns.
Nyirenda who was put to rest at Ndola’s Kansenshi cemetery on Saturday fell ill in his office at the new offices in Lusaka. He asked a company driver to drive him to his residence. He was stating alone as his family was still in Ndola. When the driver went to check on him later, he found him struggling for his life. He was rushed to UTH where he died shortly afterwards.
Nyirenda who was put to rest at Ndola’s Kansenshi cemetery on Saturday fell ill in his office at the new offices in Lusaka. He asked a company driver to drive him to his residence. He was stating alone as his family was still in Ndola. When the driver went to check on him later, he found him struggling for his life. He was rushed to UTH where he died shortly afterwards.
Kenyan president's new security bill leaves MP's at loggerheads
Kenya's President Uhuru Kenyatta has signed into law a controversial security bill which saw MPs trade blows in parliament. It was passed on Thursday during a chaotic parliamentary
session, with opposition MPs warning that Kenya was becoming a "police
state". The government has said it needs more powers to fight militant Islamists threatening Kenya's security.
Liberia defies Ebola and heads to the polls
Voters who turned out yesterday for senate elections in Liberia were met
with health workers at the door of polling stations to check for Ebola.
The elections had been delayed twice due to the outbreak.
The vote for 15 of the 30 seats in the upper house of parliament had been postponed twice since October because of the Ebola outbreak. More than 3,340 people have now died from Ebola in Liberia, making it the country with the highest number of fatalities in the current outbreak, followed by Sierra Leone and Guinea.
Assistant Health Minister Tolbert Nyenswah had warned that anyone running a temperature higher than 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit (37 Celsius) could be removed from the line, asked to cast their ballots in a separate area, and then sent for screening. A sudden fever is one of the signs of the highly contagious Ebola infection.
The vote for 15 of the 30 seats in the upper house of parliament had been postponed twice since October because of the Ebola outbreak. More than 3,340 people have now died from Ebola in Liberia, making it the country with the highest number of fatalities in the current outbreak, followed by Sierra Leone and Guinea.
Assistant Health Minister Tolbert Nyenswah had warned that anyone running a temperature higher than 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit (37 Celsius) could be removed from the line, asked to cast their ballots in a separate area, and then sent for screening. A sudden fever is one of the signs of the highly contagious Ebola infection.
Tunisians vote in landmark elections
Voters
in Tunisia have been choosing their first freely elected president in a
run-off election seen as a landmark in the country's move to democracy. Beji Caid Essebsi, who won the first round with 39% of the vote, is challenging interim leader Moncef Marzouki.
Mr Essebsi represents the secular-leaning Nidaa Tounes party. Tunisia was the first country to depose its leader in the Arab Spring and inspired other uprisings in the region.Polls closed at 18:00 local time (17:00 GMT). Voter turnout had reached 36.8% after four and a half hours of voting, Tunisia's election authority said.
Shortly after polls closed, Mr Essebsi's office said that there were "indications" that he had won. However, a spokesman for Mr Marzouki said the claims were "without foundation".
'Peaceful' transition Mr Essebsi, who turned 88 this week, held office under both deposed President Zine el-Abedine Ben Ali and Tunisia's first post-independence leader, Habib Bourguiba. He is popular in the wealthy, coastal regions, and based his appeal to voters on stability and experience.
Friday, 19 December 2014
Over 200 kidnapped by boko haram in north-east Nigeria
Militants
have stormed a remote village in north-eastern Nigeria, killing at
least 33 people and kidnapping about 200, a survivor has told the BBC. He said that suspected Boko Haram militants had seized young men, women and children from Gumsuri village. The attack happened on Sunday but news has only just emerged, after survivors reached the city of Maiduguri.
The state of Borno has seen at least two militant attacks over the past few days.
Residents told the BBC that armed militants attacked the
border town of Amchide on Wednesday, arriving in two vehicles with many
others on foot. They raided the market area, setting fire to shops and more than 50 houses.No group has said it carried out either attack but officials have blamed Boko Haram militants.
More than 2,000 people have been killed in militant violence this year alone, mostly in north-eastern Nigeria, near the border with Cameroon.
HIV tagged in South Africa's top three leading causeof death
More men than women are dying from HIV
despite a decrease in the number of deaths related to infectious diseases.
According to City Press Statistician General Pali Lehohla on Tuesday released last year’s statistics on the causes of deaths in South Africa at a press briefing in Pretoria.
Lehohla revealed that HIV has become the third-leading cause of death in the country, slowly climbing up as one of the leading causes of death after it was pegged at number six in 2012 and seventh between 2009 and 2011.
The findings were released a day after South Africa commemorated World Aids Day held earlier in the month.
“Ranking natural causes of death that occurred in 2013 placed HIV as the third-leading cause of death in South Africa. The virus has moved from being the seventh leading underlying natural cause of death during 2009 - 2011 and sixth in 2012.
“In 2013 it was responsible for 6% of all deaths, affecting relatively more males than females,” said Lehohla.
He said the results could be an indication that doctors were becoming more “comfortable” recording HIV as an underlying cause of death. In the past doctors were reluctant to state it as a cause and opted to use euphemisms such as “immune compromised” or “retroviral disease positive”.
Lehohla said reporting HIV as the main cause of death could also be as a result of the training of doctors on how to record deaths when certifying deaths.
According to City Press Statistician General Pali Lehohla on Tuesday released last year’s statistics on the causes of deaths in South Africa at a press briefing in Pretoria.
Lehohla revealed that HIV has become the third-leading cause of death in the country, slowly climbing up as one of the leading causes of death after it was pegged at number six in 2012 and seventh between 2009 and 2011.
The findings were released a day after South Africa commemorated World Aids Day held earlier in the month.
“Ranking natural causes of death that occurred in 2013 placed HIV as the third-leading cause of death in South Africa. The virus has moved from being the seventh leading underlying natural cause of death during 2009 - 2011 and sixth in 2012.
“In 2013 it was responsible for 6% of all deaths, affecting relatively more males than females,” said Lehohla.
He said the results could be an indication that doctors were becoming more “comfortable” recording HIV as an underlying cause of death. In the past doctors were reluctant to state it as a cause and opted to use euphemisms such as “immune compromised” or “retroviral disease positive”.
Lehohla said reporting HIV as the main cause of death could also be as a result of the training of doctors on how to record deaths when certifying deaths.
Thursday, 18 December 2014
Uber makes Christmas shopping in South Africa a lot easier
With Christmas around the corner and most mall shopping a nightmare
at the best of times, an online solution aims to bring the "ho ho ho"
into the festive season.
The kalahari gang was swamped by Capetonians as they made a whistle stop visit in the city bowl. (Duncan Alfreds, Fin24)
Online retailer kalahari.com has partnered with Uber in Cape Town to deliver gifts in the week up to 25 December.
"Named the #UBERSleigh, the service launches officially in Cape Town on 18 December, and will be running between 10:00 and 16:00 daily up until 24 December," kalahari said of the service, which is available to Uber subscribers.
Three vans have been decorated with Christmas trim and marked with both Uber and kalahari branding. They will carry gifts priced at under R1 000 which is payable directly from the Uber application via a credit card.
The idea of the pilot project which launches officially on Thursday is to boost online shopping, particularly at a time of year when malls are notoriously busy.
The kalahari gang was swamped by Capetonians as they made a whistle stop visit in the city bowl. (Duncan Alfreds, Fin24)
Online retailer kalahari.com has partnered with Uber in Cape Town to deliver gifts in the week up to 25 December.
"Named the #UBERSleigh, the service launches officially in Cape Town on 18 December, and will be running between 10:00 and 16:00 daily up until 24 December," kalahari said of the service, which is available to Uber subscribers.
Three vans have been decorated with Christmas trim and marked with both Uber and kalahari branding. They will carry gifts priced at under R1 000 which is payable directly from the Uber application via a credit card.
The idea of the pilot project which launches officially on Thursday is to boost online shopping, particularly at a time of year when malls are notoriously busy.
Tanzania's attorney general resigns amid corruption scandal
Tanzania's
Attorney General Frederick Werema has resigned, making him the first
casualty of a corruption scandal that has rocked the government. MPs last month accused him of authorising the fraudulent transfer of about $120m (£76m) to an energy firm.
Popular Kenyan blogger in court for 'undermining' President Kenyatta
Blogger Robert Alai was on Wednesday charged in a Kiambu court with undermining President Uhuru Kenyatta in a post on Twitter.
Mr
Alai was freed on bond and warned by the magistrate not post on
Facebook, Twitter, WhatsApp or any other publication any content that is
similar to the subject before the court.
Mr Alai, who
was arrested on Monday, denied the charge read out to him by Principal
Magistrate Diana Mochache and was freed on a bond of Sh300,000 with an
alternative of a Sh200,000 cash bail.
54 Nigerian soldiers sentenced to death for mutiny
A Nigerian court martial has sentenced 54 soldiers to death for refusing to fight Boko Haram Islamist militants.
A lawyer for the soldiers said the 54 would face a firing squad while five others were acquitted.
Wednesday, 17 December 2014
Islamic sect blamed for beheading in Somalia
A Quran teacher in central Somalia was the fifth beheading victim in
one week at the hands of Al-Shabaab, the al Qaeda-linked militant group
based in Somalia.
"The Quran teacher was
snatched from his house in Qandho by Al-Shabaab militants on Friday and
they dumped his headless, beheaded body near his home town on Saturday
morning," local town spokesman Abdiaziz Durow told CNN.
The teacher was
identified as Mohamed Hussein, 45, a resident of the Qandho near the
besieged town of Bulo Burde, 217 miles north of Mogadishu in central
Somalia.
"The reason the Quran
teacher was murdered is that he was one of the few residents that
refused orders from Al-Shabaab to leave his village that was recently
seized by Somali and AU troops," Durow said.
Rescue operation continues in Kenya after building collapse
Four people have been referred to Kenyatta National Hospital
Wednesday morning, after a five-storey building they were in collapsed
trapping several other people in Nairobi's Makongeni estate.
The four were among seven people rescued from the building in an ongoing operation that begun shortly after the residential property collapsed at 3am.
The cause of the collapse is yet unknown although construction work on a sixth floor had begun on the building. Nairobi county's director of communications Walter Mong'are confirmed the incident and said the National Youth Service is among groups conducting the rescue operation
The four were among seven people rescued from the building in an ongoing operation that begun shortly after the residential property collapsed at 3am.
The cause of the collapse is yet unknown although construction work on a sixth floor had begun on the building. Nairobi county's director of communications Walter Mong'are confirmed the incident and said the National Youth Service is among groups conducting the rescue operation
Tuesday, 16 December 2014
Government in Malawi susspends its anti corruption bureau
Malawi Government has indefinitely suspended the works of the Anti
Corruption Bureau (ACB) and the judiciary with effect from Tuesday this
week, Malawi24 has established.
A well placed source confided to Malawi24 that to effect the suspension, government has issued a directive to the Malawi Police to seal off all office building belonging to the ACB and Judiciary respectively and stop people from getting in the premises.
The directive, our source understands, follows the recent decision by judiciary to snub government's proposed 20% pay rise.
A well placed source confided to Malawi24 that to effect the suspension, government has issued a directive to the Malawi Police to seal off all office building belonging to the ACB and Judiciary respectively and stop people from getting in the premises.
The directive, our source understands, follows the recent decision by judiciary to snub government's proposed 20% pay rise.
Zambian National team members survive fatal crash ahead of AFCON
CHIPOLOPOLO defender, Nyambe Mulenga will miss the 2015 Africa Cup of
Nations (AFCON) finals after fracturing his right leg in a fatal road
traffic accident which claimed four lives in Kabwe yesterday.
Mulenga with two other players, Green Eagles goalkeeper Satchmo Chakawa and Under-17 midfielder Changwe Kalale, called by coach Honour Janza for preliminary AFCON preparations, sustained serious injuries after a head-on collision involving a Zesco United executive bus and a Toyota Prado near Green Restaurant in Kabwe on the Great North Road.
Mulenga with two other players, Green Eagles goalkeeper Satchmo Chakawa and Under-17 midfielder Changwe Kalale, called by coach Honour Janza for preliminary AFCON preparations, sustained serious injuries after a head-on collision involving a Zesco United executive bus and a Toyota Prado near Green Restaurant in Kabwe on the Great North Road.
Monday, 15 December 2014
Ugandan abuse nanny sentenced
A
Ugandan maid has been sentenced to four years in jail for assaulting a
toddler, in a case which sparked outrage across the country after a
video was released.
Jolly Tumuhiirwe, 22, was filmed beating, kicking and stamping on the 18-month-old child. On Friday, she told a court in Kampala the attack was revenge after she was beaten by the child's mother.
The mother denied beating her. Earlier charges of torture were dropped.
Chief Magistrate Lillian Buchan told Tumuhiirwe she had committed an "unjustifiable and inexcusable" crime.
Nigerian oil workers go on strike just before the Christmas break
Nigeria's
two main oil workers' unions have begun a nationwide strike,
threatening to hurt the output of Africa's largest oil producer.
BBC reporters say long queues have formed at many petrol stations.The unions, Pengassan and Nupeng, said the strike would continue until the government addressed its concerns.
Probe into the citizenship status of Liberian President's son
Photo: FrontPage Africa
The National Elections Commission (NEC) has ordered an inquiry into an allegation that Robert Sirleaf voted in the November 4, 2014, mid-term senatorial election in the United States of America, which if true might disqualify him from contesting the December 16, special senatorial election here in Liberia.
Mr. Robert Sirleaf is a senatorial candidate for Montserrado County and a son of President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf. He recently filed a lawsuit against his mother's executive order #65, which is yet to be decided upon by the Supreme Court of Liberia.
Miss South Africa crowned Miss World in London
Miss South Africa, Rolene Strauss, has made the
country proud after she was crowned Miss World in London on Sunday,
President Jacob Zuma said.
"We are very proud that our very own has earned this prestigious title after months of hard work and dedication."
"Ms Strauss has demonstrated the capability of South Africans to shine on the world stage," Zuma said in a statement.
"We are confident that she will fly the South African flag even higher as she performs her new responsibilities. On behalf of all South Africans, we extend our hearty congratulations and wish her the very best in this new role."
The University of Free State medical student beat out first princess Miss Hungary Edina Kulcsar and second princess Miss USA Elizabeth Safrit to bring the title home.
Many dead afer DR Congo ferry mishap
Local transport minister Laurent Sumba Kahozi said the search for survivors was continuing.
Rescue workers found passengers in the water on Sunday, clinging on to petrol cans and other objects.
Correspondents say such accidents are fairly common in the region as ferries are often overloaded.
Life jackets are also often missing and many people cannot swim.
Rescue workers found passengers in the water on Sunday, clinging on to petrol cans and other objects.
Correspondents say such accidents are fairly common in the region as ferries are often overloaded.
Life jackets are also often missing and many people cannot swim.
Sunday, 14 December 2014
Last week in Africa 4 - 11 December
ICC ends war crimes probe on Sudan's president
The
president of Sudan has claimed victory over the International Criminal
Court after it ended its probe into allegations of war crimes in Darfur.
The ICC charged Omar al-Bashir in 2009 for crimes in the
region dating back to 2003, but he refused to recognise the authority of
the court in The Hague. He said the court had failed in its attempts to "humiliate" Sudan.
Saturday, 13 December 2014
Zimbabwe's new VP survives an assassination attempt
Photo: New Zimbabwe
President Robert Mugabe and his wife Grace talk with
vice president-elect Emmerson Mnangagwa after the announcement of his
appointment.
A plot to assassinate vice president-elect Emmerson Mnangagwa
suffered a still-birth on Tuesday but left his personal assistant
fighting for her life in hospital as the country’s dirty succession
struggle took a nasty turn.The assassination bid was revealed by President Robert Mugabe at the Zanu PF extraordinary Central Committee meeting in Harare last Wednesday where Mnangagwa was confirmed as the country’s first vice president.
At least 50 dead in Somalia after drinking from contaminated well
At least 50 people have died in Somalia after drinking contaminated
water from a well in northern Mogadishu, an official in that East
African country said Thursday.
Osman Mohamed, the deputy
commissioner for Somalia's Yaqshid district, told CNN about the deaths
among those who drank from the newly constructed well. More than 150
people who had water from that well were recently hospitalized.
The parliamentary elections in Mauritius saw the opposition snatch 47 of the 62 available seats
Final results released on Friday showed an opposition coalition led
by ex-President Anerood Jugnauth winning Mauritius'
parliamentary elections by a large margin.
Jugnauth's center-right Alliance Lepep snatched 47 of the 62 seats in parliament, leaving Prime Minister Navinchandra Ramgoolam's coalition to lick its wounds with just 13.
Jugnauth's center-right Alliance Lepep snatched 47 of the 62 seats in parliament, leaving Prime Minister Navinchandra Ramgoolam's coalition to lick its wounds with just 13.
Sierra Leone bans Christmas and New Year celebrations because of the Ebola crisis
Sierra Leone has banned public celebrations over Christmas and the New Year, because of the Ebola crisis.
Soldiers are to be deployed on the streets throughout the festive period to keep people indoors, officials say.Christmas is widely celebrated in Sierra Leone, even though Islam is the largest religion.
Sierra Leone has the most cases of Ebola in the current outbreak. Some 6,580 have died, mostly in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone.
President Ernest Bai Koroma told traditional leaders to stop traditional practices as part of efforts to end Ebola in the country, Awoko newspaper reports.
The president added that despite international aid, it seemed "as if the cases are increasing", especially in north-western areas such as Port Loko and the Bombali region.
Meanwhile in Mali, the last person still to be treated for Ebola has been cured leaving no more cases in the country, the health ministry announced.
The country recorded eight cases of Ebola - including six deaths - and is continuing to monitor a number of people who were in contact with patients.
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