Farmers in Kisumu County claim that the red-billed quelea bird population has exploded there, ravaging 300 acres (120 hectares) of rice.
To the satisfaction of the farmers, the ministry of agriculture authorised spraying of avicide
“West Kano alone is producing 5,000 metric tonnes (of rice) but three-quarters of that is consumed by the birds and I know that our farmers are borrowing money from the bank and after borrowing they intend to return the money with some interest. This has been a hindrance in terms of paying back and now we are overburdened by loans,” expressed Jared Odoyo, chairman, West Kano Irrigation Scheme.
The government started looking at approaches of controlling the bird and the quick fix for the government — they looked at aerial spraying using avicides and these are chemicals which they spray over the birds and the birds die.
Environmental lobby groups say it is a “quick fix” that has adverse effects on the environment. They say the avicide is toxic to humans but also to non-targeted organisms.
According to Paul Gacheru, wildlife ecologist, Nature Kenya, a local affiliate of Birdlife International, it is important for the government to consider other environmentally-friendly methods.
“It is unfortunate that this species has already been considered as a pest within our law. However, aerial poisoning of this bird is a bigger danger to the ecosystem because this would kill other species which are not targeted in this control and this by itself increases the risk of environmental contamination which is a danger to us and a danger to the entire ecosystem.”
“The control measures that we want the government to think of is something which would minimise the risk of killing other species and also promote other agricultural practices that would help not to proliferate this bird to become in big numbers …. .. I think agricultural systems can be improved and helped to control this bird because spraying is not the right way of controlling this specie,” he added.
An ongoing drought has decimated the horn of Africa and led to a reduction in native grass — the quelea’s main source of food.
This leaves the birds with no alternative but to feed on grain fields.
According to the Food and Agricultural Organization, a single quelea can eat up to 10 grams of grain in a day.
In 2021, crop losses attributed to the bird amounted to $50 million.
Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed is in Sudan on an official visit to the country for talks with the country’s military ruler, Lt-Gen Abdel Fattah al-Burhan.
On Thursday, Mr Abiy was welcomed by the military leader on arrival in the capital city Khartoum.
Ethiopia’s state television ETV reported that the prime minister would discuss ways to bolster “all-round relations” between the two countries.
Mr Abiy’s office said that during the discussions, the Prime Minister shared Ethiopia’s “solidarity with Sudan in the political dialogue process that they have embarked upon”.
Sudan’s military and civilian groups have been in long-running negotiations to end the political crisis that followed the October 2021 coup.
Prime Minister @AbiyAhmedAli and his delegation have arrived in Khartoum, Sudan for a one day working visit and have been received by General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, President of the Transitional Sovereignty Council of the Republic of Sudan.#PMOEthiopiapic.twitter.com/dhYLipelHv
— Office of the Prime Minister – Ethiopia (@PMEthiopia) January 26, 2023
Relations between Ethiopia and Sudan are thawing after years of tensions over a fertile agricultural land in Al-Fashaga border area and the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam.
France is recalling its ambassador to Burkina Faso, a day after it announced that its military mission there was to end.
The French foreign ministry said Luc Hallade was returning for consultations on the state of relations between Paris and its former West African colony.
There have been weeks of demonstrations against the French presence in Burkina Faso, whose military rulers have been seeking military assistance from Russia to help defeat an Islamist insurgency.
Nine Palestinians, including an elderly woman, have been killed in an Israeli military raid in the occupied West bank, Palestinian officials say.
The Palestinian health minister warned that the situation was “critical” in Jenin, with many other people injured and ambulances unable to reach them.
The children’s ward of a local hospital was hit by Israeli tear gas, she said.
Israel’s military released few details, but Israeli media said it had acted to foil “a major attack” by militants.
The Palestinian militant groups Hamas and Islamic Jihad said they were battling Israeli troops in the flashpoint town, where there have been repeated Israeli raids.
Tensions have recently risen in the West Bank as the Israeli military continues what it describes as an anti-terrorism offensive.
At least 29 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces in the West Bank so far this year, including militants and civilians.
Last year, more than 150 Palestinians were killed, nearly all by Israeli forces, while a series of Palestinian attacks targeting Israelis, as well as militant gunfire at troops during arrest raids, killed more than 30 people, including civilians, police and soldiers.
A court in Mali has sentenced a man to death over the killing of three UN peacekeepers (Minusma) in the country’s south in 2019.
The accused, who was not named, was convicted of acts of terrorism, criminal association, murder, robbery and illegal possession of firearms.
The death penalty has not been applied in Mali since a moratorium on executions was put in place in 1980.
In a statement, Minusma said this was the second time that specific attacks against its troops had been at the heart of a legal charge that has resulted in a trial and convictions
The Minusma peacekeeping force which has had 12,000 troops in Mali since 2013 – is the UN’s largest and deadliest operation.
Peacekeepers are frequently killed or wounded in attacks by al-Qaeda and Islamic State fighters.
The authorities in Nigeria say at least 27 Fulani herders were killed in an explosion near the border between the central states of Nasarawa and Benue on Tuesday.
The police say they are investigating the cause of the explosion.
The area has seen frequent disputes over resources between pastoral and farming communities.
Some local media reported that the explosion may have been a botched air strike by the Nigerian military – but this has not been independently confirmed.
A Kenyan court on Wednesday convicted a Venezuelan diplomat over the murder of the Latin American nation’s acting ambassador 10 years ago at her official residence in the capital, Nairobi.
Dwight Sagaray, who was the Venezuelan embassy’s first secretary, was found guilty of the killing of Olga Fonseca on 27 July 2012.
Three Kenyan nationals who had been charged alongside Mr Sagaray were also convicted.
The diplomat was tried for the murder after his diplomatic immunity was waived by Venezuela.
The court found that Mr Sagaray was heading the mission before the arrival of Ms Fonseca and was angered by her presence since he wanted to continue overseeing the embassy, Reuters news agency reports.
Ms Fonseca, 57, was killed less than two weeks after she started her new role in Nairobi on 15 July.
The United States government has announced a visa ban on some unnamed Nigerians “for undermining the democratic process in a recent Nigerian election”.
In a statement on Wednesday, US Secretary of State, Antony Blinken described the action as a reflection of his government’s “commitment to supporting Nigeria’s aspiration to combat corruption and strengthen democracy and the rule of law”.
The senior US diplomat explained that the individuals affected will not be granted visas to enter the US, “under a policy to restrict visas of those believed to be responsible for, or complicit in, undermining democracy in Nigeria”.
He also said that their family members may also be subject to these restrictions.
“Additional persons who undermine the democratic process in Nigeria—including in the lead-up to, during, and following Nigeria’s 2023 elections—may be found ineligible for US visas under this policy,” the statement said further.
Mr Blinken, however, clarified that the visa ban was not targeted at the Nigerian people or the government.
It comes barely two months after the political counsellor at the US embassy in Nigeria, Rolf Olson, made a similar statement.
In the lead up to the Edo and Ondo governorship polls of 19 September and 10 October 2020, the US government had also announced visa restrictions on some individuals.
The country is due to hold general elections on 25 February.
A giant iceberg almost the size of London has broken off the Brunt Ice Shelf in western Antarctica on Sunday (Jan. 22) after years of cracking.
The shelf calved during the spring tide, the regular swelling of the ocean that coincides with full and new moons, according to a statement (opens in new tab) from the British Antarctic Survey (BAS), which reported the iceberg’s separation from the shelf.
Since the iceberg broke off, multiple satellites have flown over the area, taking images of the now-orphaned triangular ice fragment. BAS, which operates the Halley Research Station on the Brunt Ice Shelf, estimated the size of the calved iceberg to be 600 square miles (1,550 square kilometers). That’s about the size of the London metropolitan area and a little larger than Houston.
The calving is not related to climate change, BAS said in a statement, and was caused by “natural processes” that have been underway for more than 10 years. The iceberg calved along a crack known as Chasm-1, which BAS scientists have monitored since 2012. The gradual widening of Chasm-1 in fact prompted BAS to move the Halley Research Station 14 miles (23 km) inland in 2016. The outpost has not been affected by the calving, BAS said.
“Our glaciologists and operations teams have been anticipating this event,” BAS director Jane Francis said in the statement.
That said, the moon may have nudged the new iceberg on its way as the parting happened during the so-called spring tide, the “springing forth of the tide” that takes place around the new and full moons as a result of the moon’s gravitational pull, according to the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (opens in new tab). In spite of the name, these phenomena have nothing to do with the season of spring!
The Sunday calving is the second such event in the past two years affecting the Brunt Ice Shelf, BAS said in the statement. BAS monitors the area using an automated network of high-precision GPS sensors located around the station as well as data from Earth-observing satellites.
A summit on food security across Africa has heard calls for the continent to feed itself, rather than relying on aid or imports.
The current African Union chairman – Senegalese President Macky Sall – told the meeting in Dakar that Africa had huge potential that was not exploited.
According to the head of the African Development Bank, Akinwumi Adesina, two-thirds of the world’s uncultivated arable land is in Africa.
He said Africa can and must feed itself.
#IsDB President Dr. Al Jasser among African Head of States and Prime Ministers gathered in Senegal for the opening of #AfricaFoodSummitDakar2, to map out plans to unlock Africa's potential in feeding itself and to further position the continent as the breadbasket of the world. pic.twitter.com/NdbIewT90a
Tens of millions of people in East Africa and the Sahel region face hunger because of drought, conflict and a rise in the cost of food and fuel.
Leaders attending the meeting have been urged to re-commit to a pledge agreed two decades ago to devote 10% of government budgets to agriculture and rural development.
Hours after his return from a six-year self-imposed exile, opposition leader Tundu Lissu addressed a sizable gathering in Dar es Salaam, saying that Tanzania’s high costs for essential foods and supplies could be properly controlled by a new constitution.
He said the high cost of living was a fundamental political problem.
“I don’t have the legal authority to reduce the prices of food and other commodities in the country, I don’t have it… for now, I just have the right talk about it and other challenges,” he said.
The opposition leader returned home after the government recently lifted a ban on political rallies.
Jioni hii Msafara wa Makamu Mwenyekiti (Bara) Mhe. @TunduALissu umewasili katika uwanja vya Bulyaga, ambapo unafanyika mkutano wa hadhara. pic.twitter.com/Y8blkcXcu9
Malawi has recorded more than 1,000 cholera deaths since the outbreak started in March last year.
This is the highest figure the country has ever recorded for a cholera outbreak.
There are fears health officials are struggling to contain the outbreak as they are running low on medical supplies including vaccines – most of which were used up last week.
More than 30,000 infections have been reported in Malawi.
Most cases and deaths have been recorded in the capital, Lilongwe and Blantyre, where the opening of schools was delayed to control the spread of cholera.
The widespread cases are linked to the impact of climate change that caused extensive flooding last year and destroyed the country’s water and sanitation systems.
Health Minister Khumbize Chiponda has urged people to use safe water and observe basic hygiene, but very few people have access to safe water and improved sanitation facilities.
Two weeks ago, the country launched an international appeal asking for medical supplies to contain the outbreak.
The health ministry has also asked the World Health Organization to assist them in getting 7.6 million doses of cholera vaccines.
However, with only two manufacturers producing this vaccine and a global cholera outbreak, it’s unlikely that they’ll get them any time soon.
Germany’s foreign office has come under fire after taking aim at Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov’s tour of Africa using an unpopular generalisation about the continent.
In a tweet, Germany’s foreign office had said: “The Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov is in Africa, not to see [leopard emoji], but to bluntly claim that Ukraine’s partners “want to destroy everything Russian”.”
Many were angered by the suggestion that Africa’s wildlife was the only thing worth bringing the Russian envoy to the continent.
The Russian Foreign Minister #Lavrov is in Africa, not to see 🐆, but to bluntly claim that #Ukraine’s partners “want to destroy everything Russian”. Here is a 🧵 with all of his “evidence”: 1/3
Ebba Kalondo, the spokesperson to the African Union chairperson, wondered whether “the continent of Africa, its people and wildlife is a joke to you?”
Ms Kalondo noted that German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock recently visited the African Union headquarters in Ethiopia. “Did she come to see animals?” she posed.
“How many times should we tell you that Africa is more than seeing wild animals?” Kofi Yeboah tweeted.
“Using terrible stereotypes of Africa (“Africa is a vast landscape of wild animals in the bush”) to score a geopolitical upper cut to an adversary in a European war will not win you any African friends,” added Zainab Usman.
The authorities in Ghana are investigating the circumstances that led to the drowning of eight schoolchildren on Lake Volta in the south-eastern region.
Local authorities say 12 other children, who were on board the capsized boat, survived Tuesday’s accident.
The group was travelling from Atikagome fishing village to the Wayokope community where their school is located
The bodies of five boys and three girls between the ages of five and 12 died have been retrieved, Ghana’s National Disaster Management Organisation said.
The incident has ignited calls for the government to improve transport infrastructure in rural communities.
Boat accidents are frequent on Lake Volta partly due to overloading, poorly constructed boats, and the presence of tree stumps in the water.
In April last year, seven people died in a similar accident.
Donald Trump will be allowed back on to Facebook and Instagram, after Meta announced it would be ending its two-year suspension of his accounts.
The suspension will end “in the coming weeks”, the social media giant said.
In a statement, Nick Clegg, Meta’s president of global affairs, said the public “should be able to hear what their politicians are saying”.
The then-US president was indefinitely suspended from Facebook and Instagram after the Capitol riot in 2021.
The firm had taken action following Mr Trump’s “praise for people engaged in violence at the Capitol”, Mr Clegg said.
“The suspension was an extraordinary decision taken in extraordinary circumstances,” he added.
He said a review found that Mr Trump’s accounts no longer represented a serious risk to public safety.
But because of Mr Trump’s past “violations” he would now face heightened penalties for repeat offences.
Republicans have been pressing for Mr Trump to be allowed back on Facebook as he prepares to run for the presidency again next year.
Mr Trump posted on his own social media company, Truth Social, in response on Wednesday, saying that Facebook had “lost Billions” after banning “your favorite President, me”.
“Such a thing should never again happen to a sitting President, or anybody else who is not deserving of retribution!” he wrote.
Donald Trump now has a decision to make.
Truth Social, a social media platform he set up in 2021, has vastly fewer users than Facebook.
Facebook has three billion users.
Truth Social may have as many as five million accounts – though it’s likely it has far fewer active users.
However, Mr Trump has an exclusivity agreement with Truth Social – that means he is legally required to post first on the platform – six hours before any other platform.
It means if he posts on Facebook or Twitter – there is a chance he could get sued.
Analysts also warn that if Mr Trump were to stop using Truth Social, or post content elsewhere, the platform would struggle to survive.
He could simply ignore that exclusivity agreement – and start posting content straight away.
However, that could open him up to legal problems.
What is also possible is that he simply waits until June, when the agreement times out.
Or, he could take the decision never to go back to platforms that he has criticised consistently.
However, if he is going to have a tilt at the White House, being on Facebook – the world’s biggest social media platform – would make a lot of sense.
Whatever happens next, the ball is firmly in Mr Trump’s court now.
If he does decide to come back, though, he will have to follow Meta’s rules. The company has left the door open for another suspension if he flouts them.
It means Mr Tump will have to hold his tongue (to a certain extent) on Facebook, in a way that he doesn’t currently have to on Truth Social.
News of Mr Trump’s re-instatement was quickly criticised by Democrats and some activist organisations who expressed concern that the former president could again use the platform to repeat false claims that he won the 2020 election.
“Trump incited an insurrection,” California Democratic Representative Adam Schiff wrote on Twitter. “Giving him back access to a social media platform to spread his lies and demagoguery is dangerous.”
Derrick Johnson, the president of the NAACP, a civil rights organisation, told the Associated Press that he sees the move as a “grave mistake” that is a “a prime example of putting profits above people’s safety”.
“It’s quite astonishing that one can spew hatred, fuel conspiracies, and incite a violent insurrection at our nation’s Capitol building, and Mark Zuckerberg still believes that is not enough to remove someone from his platforms,” he said.
Twitter had also banned the former president following the 6 January 2021 US Capitol riot, saying he had broken its rules on the glorification of violence.
But in November, Twitter’s owner Elon Musk said Mr Trump’s account ban had been lifted, after running a poll in which users narrowly backed the move.
Mr Trump has not yet returned to Twitter, having earlier said: “I don’t see any reason for it.”
A Chinese engineer has been jailed for eight years for spying in the US, in a case linked to Chinese efforts to steal aviation trade secrets.
Ji Chaoqun, 31, had identified scientists and engineers for possible recruitment, according to the US Department of Justice.
He also enlisted in the US Army Reserves and lied to recruiters.
US authorities said Ji worked under the direction of a key Chinese state intelligence unit.
Last September he was convicted for acting as an agent of a foreign government without notifying the US attorney-general – a charge used in espionage cases – and of making false statements to the US Army.
Ji had arrived in the US on a student visa a decade ago, according to a Justice Department statement.
He was accused of supplying information to the Jiangsu Province Ministry of State Security (JSSD) about eight individuals for possible recruitment.
The individuals are all naturalised US citizens who were originally from China or Taiwan, with some working as US defence contractors.
Ji also enlisted in the US Army Reserves in 2016 under a programme that recruits foreign nationals with skills considered vital to national interest. He had lied in his application and in an interview that he had not had contact with a foreign government within the past seven years, said US officials.
Ji was eventually arrested in September 2018 after he met with an undercover US law enforcement agent who posed as a representative of China’s Ministry of State Security (MSS).
During those meetings, Ji had explained that with his military identification he could visit and take photos of aircraft carriers. He added that once he obtained his US citizenship and security clearance, he would seek a job at the CIA, FBI or Nasa.
Ji intended to perform cybersecurity work at one of those agencies so that he would have access to all their databases, including ones that contain scientific research, according to US officials.
US authorities said Ji had received his orders from Xu Yanjun, a prominent MSS official who became the first ever Chinese intelligence officer extradited to the US for trial.
Last year Xu was sentenced to 20 years in federal prison for plotting to steal trade secrets from US aviation and aerospace companies, including General Electric.
Earlier this month, former General Electric employee Zheng Xiaoqing was given a two-year sentence in the US for passing confidential information from his employers to the Chinese government.
Last July FBI director Christopher Wray said that China aimed to “ransack” the intellectual property of Western companies so it can speed up its own industrial development and eventually dominate key industries.
China at the time responded saying that Mr Wray was “smearing China” and had a “Cold War mentality”.
A two-day visit to Rwanda by the director of the International Monetary Fund is intended to “help developing resilience on climate.”
Kristalina Georgieva is expected to attend a roundtable discussion on climate change financing with East African finance ministers and governors of central banks, the East African newspaper reports.
She announced on Twitter that she was looking forward to “hearing local and regional perspectives on how the IMF can be even more helpful – especially in boosting climate resilience”.
Just arrived in Rwanda🇷🇼 the land of a thousand hills! Over the next 2 days, I’m looking forward to hearing local & regional perspectives on how the IMF can be even more helpful—esp. in boosting climate resilience. [1/2] pic.twitter.com/3UmOja0auo
The Rwandan government says “defensive measures were taken” on a Democratic Republic of Congo fighter jet that “violated” its airspace on Tuesday evening.
Images shared on social media show a military plane being shot at while flying at a low altitude between the towns of Goma in DR Congo and Gisenyi in Rwanda.
Other images show the damaged plane – a Soviet Union-made Sukhoi-25 – being cooled down with water at Goma airport.
In a statement, DR Congo’s information ministry condemned the incident and denied that its jet had flown over Rwandan airspace.
It said the government “does not intend to let this [incident] go” and had the “legitimate right” to defend itself.
“The government considers this umpteenth attack by Rwanda as a deliberate action of aggression that is equivalent to an act of war,” the ministry noted.
Rwanda said this was the third incident involving a Congolese fighter jet on its airspace and asked its neighbour “to stop this aggression”.
Last November, a Congolese Sukhoi-25 jet briefly landed at Gisenyi airport in Rwanda. Kinshasa said the fighter jet had “mistakenly landed” there.
DR Congo accuses Rwanda of supporting M23 rebels, which Kigali authorities have consistently denied.
The latest incident adds to the tensions between the two neighbours.
Kenyan high school physics instructor has come up with a creative way to use old laptop batteries even though they only cost him KSH 50 ($0.50) a piece.
The teacher collects the batteries from dealers in Nairobi, takes the haul back to his workshop where he uses them to power bikes.
He sorts them, dividing the working cells from those which are not working.
Waweru then assembles them into a battery that can be used to power electric motorbikes. He was inspired to come up with this innovation after running into trouble with a bike he’d bought.
“Nobody was selling electric bikes in Kenya, so I had to import one,” he explains.
“It came with some batteries known as lead acid. Then, after a few months, the batteries were no longer working because of the technology. I was again grounded, I could no longer go to my workplace because, of course, my bike was no longer working. So, through my ingenuity, through my innovation, I was able now to source for low-cost batteries and that is how I ended up bumping into laptop batteries.”
He’s founded a company called Ecomobilus to supply his laptop-battery powered bikes.
He collects frames from old motorbikes, removes the engines and replaces them with a battery and a motor to propel the bike.
They run on a 60V direct current. The batteries take hours to charge but can take 45 minutes if on a fast charger.
A fully charged battery can travel a distance of up to 100 kilometres. He says his invention compares very well to traditional motorbikes.
“Ecomobilus bikes are more advantageous compared to other gasoline powered bikes. Number one, because of the cost of maintenance. Ecomobilus bikes require zero maintenance because there are no mechanical parts that need to be repaired every often, we give it at least two years for services because the engines are no longer there, we are dealing with motors,” he says.
“Number two, the charging as compared to the fuelling is much, much (more) affordable. For a full charge, we are saying we are using less than $3 and for the same for the bodabodas (referring to motorbike taxis), they end up spending more than $7 a day to run the same bike. So, cost-wise, this would be more cost effective, and number two, in terms of maintenance, this will be very, very easy to maintain.
Couriers and delivery drivers
They are being used around the city by couriers and delivery drivers.
Some say they are saving money since ditching petrol (gas) fuelled bikes for these electric versions.
“The other one was expensive in terms of fuel, in terms of time but with the electric one, it consumes less time it is efficient, I save on fuel I do not use fuel anymore. I only consume 200 ($2) on tokens and am good for the rest of the day,” says driver John Mwangi.
He has been using the bike for around six months.
They also get a seal of approval from Dennis Wakaba, an electric mobility specialist.
“Having new batteries gives you longer life in an electric vehicle, but the use of secondary battery is very significant, especially in the play of climate change mitigation. In this way, first of all, you save the processes that are involved in the manufacture, assembly shipping of new batteries. So, definitely, you are saving a lot of emissions coming from these processes,” he says.
“The other one is to do with increasing the number of electric vehicles through making sure that secondary batteries can go into conversions of motorcycles and other electric vehicles. Here we are going now to reduce air pollution, through tailpipe emissions from internal combustion engines, which now don’t have to be bought. The other way is noise pollution, which definitely when we have less noise pollution, we improve the well-being of the people.”
Not only do they help the environment, the batteries are easy to source in Kenya, so they are long term option for residents who need to get around.
Eight Arsenal supporters who were imprisoned in Jinja, Uganda after being caught celebrating the team’s Premier League victory over Manchester United, have since been released.
They were wearing the club’s red jersey and carrying a symbolic trophy during their arrest on Monday.
Police said they didn’t have a permit to hold the procession which is a public order offence.
But on Tuesday a joint security team agreed to free them with a caution, said James Mubi, the regional police spokesman.
One of the fans told journalists that they would “seek for permission [to celebrate] if Arsenal wins the premier league”.
“We shall have the celebrations in Bugembe stadium,” the self-proclaimed ambassador of Arsenal in Uganda added.
Police in Jinja have released Arsenal fans who were arrested on Monday after 24 hours of detention The Fans were accused of carrying an illegal procession on different streets of Jinja Kiira region @PoliceUg spokesperson James Mubi says Police leadership agreed to release them pic.twitter.com/OtZuivJqbo
The police spokesman claimed the fans did not know the basics about the club – that they didn’t know which year Arsenal had their unbeaten run and had named a former Ugandan goalkeeper as an Arsenal player.
As the mortality toll from a continuing heatwave in some parts of the country increases to eight, the South African government has encouraged citizens to exercise caution.
State broadcaster SABC quoted a state official as expressing concern over the impact of the hot weather that the country had been experiencing.
“We are extremely sad to hear about the passing of eight people that have died of heat stroke in the Northern Cape after a heatwave hit the province over the week. Government sends its deepest condolences to the bereaved families,” Michael Currin, the head of the government communication service (GCIS), is quoted as saying.
Some parts of the country have recently been experiencing temperatures of above 40C.
The government has urged people to take measures such as drinking water and wearing light clothing to avoid heat exhaustion.
Tanzania’s former presidential candidate, Tundu Lissu, is expected to return to his home country on Wednesday from exile in Belgium.
The opposition leader returns home after the government recently lifted a ban on political rallies, and he is expected to address supporters later in the afternoon.
The ban, imposed by former president John Magufuli in 2016, allowed only elected politicians to conduct rallies in their constituencies.
Mr Lissu was shot 16 times in an assassination attempt in 2017 in the country’s capital, Dodoma, and has spent most of the years since in Belgium.
He then returned for a few months in 2020 to challenge Mr Magufuli in a presidential election where he only secured 13% of the votes.
His Chadema party rejected the outcome over claims of widespread irregularities.
After their coworker and government critic Martinez Zogo was killed, Cameroonian journalists demanded more protection.
Mr Zogo’s multilated body was found near the capital, Yaoundé, on Sunday, five days after being abducted by unknown people.
Prior to his death, he had threatened to expose corruption in government.
Media rights group Reporters Without Borders called on the authorities to conduct an independent investigation into the killing, calling it a “grave blow to democracy and press freedom”.
“We urge the Cameroonian authorities to conduct an independent investigation that does not falter, and to end the climate of violence against media personnel,” it said.
The government spokesman said an initial investigation revealed the the journalist had been tortured. Rene Emmanuel Said said the killing was “barbaric and unacceptable”
The European Court of Human Rights is set to announce whether it will hear a Dutch case against Russia over the downing of flight MH17 in 2014.
All 298 people on the Malaysia Airlines flight were killed when it was shot down by a Russian-made missile fired by Moscow-backed Ukrainian separatists.
The Dutch government argues that Russian disinformation about Moscow’s role in the incident is a violation of the relatives’ human rights.
Russia denies the allegations.
The decision will be read out at 14:30 local time (13:30 GMT).
The Boeing 777 was flying from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur when it was hit by a surface-to-air missile in July 2014 during a conflict between pro-Russia rebels and Ukrainian forces in the Donbas region of Ukraine.
The Netherlands argues that Russia played a key role in the air disaster and the case hinges on whether or not Moscow had “effective control” over the area of Ukraine where the missile was fired from.
At this stage, the ECHR will only rule on whether the criteria has been met for it to deal with this application.
Even if it decides to hear the Dutch case, it could be years before a ruling is issued. However, if the ECHR issues a guilty verdict against Russia, Moscow could be obliged to pay damages to the victims’ relatives.
Last September, Russia stopped being party to the European Convention on Human Rights, but the court can still deal with claims against Russia regarding actions up until that date.
In November, a Dutch court at the Schiphol Judicial Complex found three men – two Russians and a Ukrainian – guilty of murder in absentia for their part in the downing of MH17.
The court concluded that the missile had been fired deliberately to bring down a plane, even if the target had been military rather than civilian.
The three men were sentenced to life in jail but are all thought to be in Russia.
Since Moscow condemned the verdict as scandalous and politically motivated it is extremely unlikely that they will be handed over to face justice.
Russia has repeatedly denied involvement in the attack.
The northern Shanxi province’s coffin manufacturers have been quite busy. Expert carvers are seen carving intricate ornamentation into the recently-cut wood. They claim that they haven’t had time to stop lately.
One villager, a customer, told us that at times the coffins have sold out. Laughing with a dose of the black humour you find in the area, he added that those in the funeral industry had been “earning a small fortune”.
There has been much debate about the real number of Covid deaths in China, after the virus ripped through its megacities.
Some 80% of the population – more than a billion people – have been infected since China scrapped restrictions in December, according to leading epidemiologist Wu Zunyou. Last weekend China reported 13,000 Covid-related deaths in less than a week, adding to the 60,000 deaths it has counted since December.
But these deaths have been in hospitals. In rural areas there are only sparse medical facilities and those who die at home are mostly not being counted.
There is not even an official estimate for the number of village deaths. But the BBC found evidence of a considerable, mounting death toll.
We visited a crematorium and they too have been busy, mourners dressed in white walking forward carrying the ceremonial box which would eventually contain the remains of a loved one.
In another village, we saw one man and woman loading huge tissue paper birds onto the back of a flatbed truck. “They’re cranes. You ride the crane into the afterlife,” the woman said.
As they packed up other elaborate, Buddhist images newly made from tissue paper they said they’d had an explosion in demand for their funeral decorations, two or three times what’s normal.
Everyone we met in this part of Shanxi who is connected to the funeral industry told us a similar story about an increase in deaths and they all attributed it to the coronavirus.
Image caption,Wang Peiwei is determined to put on a good funeral for his sister-in-law
“Some sick people are already very weak,” one man said as he continued to load the truck. “Then they catch Covid, and their elderly bodies can’t handle it.”
We followed the truck to where the artworks were being delivered and met Wang Peiwei, whose sister-in-law had just died.
The mother-of-two in her 50s had suffered from severe diabetes for years and then she caught the coronavirus.
“After she got Covid she had a high fever, and her organs began to fail. Her immune system wasn’t strong enough to make it,” said Mr Wang.
The courtyard at the family house was filling up with decorations for the ceremony. Mr Wang told us there were still more images, flowers and the like to come.
Standing in front of a tent in the courtyard where her body was covered up he explained that, on the day of the funeral, 16 people would carry her coffin and bury her in accordance with tradition.
He said that, though the cost of funeral arrangements had skyrocketed because of the number of Covid deaths, they would pay the extra money in her honour.
“She was a great person. We must hold a grand event to send her off, the best we can afford,” he said.
Every year, hundreds of millions of younger people go back to their hometowns at this time to celebrate the Lunar New Year. It’s China’s most important festival.
The villages they are returning to are now places where mostly older people live – people who are more vulnerable to Covid.
Image caption,Millions of people have travelled back to their hometowns from big cities
There has been great concern that this year’s Spring Festival mass migration could quickly spread the coronavirus into more remote areas, to deadly effect.
The government warned those in the cities not to go home this year if their elderly relatives had not yet been infected.
Doctor Dong Yongming, who operates a very small village clinic, thinks at least 80% of residents there had already caught Covid.
“All the villagers come to us when they’re sick,” he said. “We’re the only clinic here.”
Most who had died there had underlying diseases, he said.
In terms of managing the medicine they had as Covid hit the village, Dr Dong said they would not sell medicine to people beyond their needs.
“For example, I would only give out four Ibuprofen tablets per person,” he said. “They don’t need two boxes. It’ll just be wasted.”
However he said he believed the worst of this Covid wave was already behind them: “We haven’t had any patients in recent days.”
Those who die in this region are buried in the fields. Farmers then continue to plant crops and raise livestock around the mounds of their ancestors.
Driving along the road we noticed fresh mounds of earth with red flags placed on the top. A lot of them. A farmer herding goats confirmed that they were new graves.
“Families have been burying elderly people here after they die. There are just too many,” he said.
Image caption,Fresh graves dot the nearby fields
In his village of a few thousand, he said that more than 40 residents had died during the most recent Covid wave.
“One day someone would die, then the next day someone else. It’s been non-stop over the past month,” he said.
But in the countryside here, they are quite philosophical about life and death. This farmer said people would still celebrate the new year like they always have.
“My son and daughter-in-law will come back soon,” he said.
I asked if locals were worried that family members returning could mean more infections.
“People shouldn’t worry. No fear!” he said. “You will still become infected even if you hide. Most of us have already got it and we are fine.”
He, and many others are hoping that Covid’s most deadly work has already been done and that, for the time being at least, their energy can be spent on being with the living rather than burying the dead.
On the eve of his trial for abuse of authority and accumulating an illegal fortune, police detained former president of Mauritania Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz on Tuesday, according to a lawyer.
The 66-year-old was first told to report to police, but refused, defence lawyers said.
The police “came to look for him at home” in the capital Nouakchott, armed with a warrant. He was arrested without incident, the lawyers said.
The rare prosecution of a former African head of state was due to open on Wednesday morning, with Abdel Aziz spending the night in custody.
Several other figures from his former regime, also facing charges of corruption, money laundering and illicit enrichment, were also arrested, a security source said.
The ex-general came to power in a coup and spent 11 years at the helm. He stepped down in 2019 after two presidential terms in which he defused a jihadist insurgency threatening the conservative West African state.
He was succeeded by his former right-hand man, Mohamed Ould Ghazouani in the first transfer of power between elected leaders in the history of a country marked by military coups and upheaval.
In 2020, a parliamentary investigation was opened into financial dealings under Abdel Aziz’s presidency.
It delved 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.
Charges were then brought against Abdel Aziz and 11 others, including one of his sons-in-law, two former prime ministers and several ex-ministers and businessmen.
The former president is suspected of amassing a fortune equivalent to more than $72 million.
He has refused to answer questions about the source of his wealth and decries a political machination.
Abdel Aziz wrote in a note released by lawyers on Tuesday that he will appear in court “to defend his honour” against “extravagant and fallacious accusations”.
On Tuesday January 24, 2023 the Ivory Coast presented prestigious honors to 49 troops whose imprisonment by Mali sparked a tense diplomatic standoff between the two West African countries.
The troops had been arrested at Bamako airport in July.
Mali accused them of being mercenaries, while Ivory Coast and the United Nations said they were flown in to provide routine backup security for the German contingent of the UN peacekeeping mission.
On December 30, a Bamako court sentenced 46 soldiers to 20 years in prison, while three women soldiers who had been released received death sentences in absentia.
All 49 were pardoned by junta leader Assimi Goita on January 6.
In a ceremony on Tuesday, the 49 were named knights of the National Order of the Republic — the lowest of three rungs in the top award for services to the nation.
They were among 852 service personnel honoured for their deployment in the UN’s MINUSMA peacekeeping operation.
Armed forces chief Lassina Doumbia hailed their work as “contributing to guaranteeing the security of our borders”.
He described the row over the detained troops as “an unfortunate episode”, without elaboration.
The roadways connecting Mahajanga’s many districts to Antananarivo, the country of Madagascar’s capital, have also been inundated. More than 15,000 people have been affected by Cyclone Cheneso, which is still affecting the island.
“I left my house because it was destroyed by the strong winds of the cyclone. The house tilted, so I ran away. My house was totally destroyed,” said flood victim Bonne Fehy.
“All our things got wet, but we had put them up high. I am disabled, so some young people took me, and that’s how I escaped. They carried me in a tricycle,” said Perline Razanamalala, another flood victim.
In addition to the floods, the National Office of Risk and Disaster Management has recorded numerous landslides and landslides.
Olga Rasoanirina, director of the Boeny region, Ministry of Population and Social Affairs said “we have housed people since Sunday when there were big storms. We have housed people in this site, which is a public elementary school in the neighborhood, we have set up shelters for the victims and we have also distributed meals.”
The latest official death toll is four, 14 missing and more than 8,000 affected.
The US and Germany apparently intend to send tanks to Ukraine after months of delaying the move, which Kyiv hopes will shift the combat dynamic.
US President Joe Biden’s administration is expected to announce plans to send at least 30 M1 Abrams tanks.
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz has also reportedly decided to send at least 14 Leopard 2 tanks. He is set to speak in parliament on Wednesday morning.
Russia’s ambassador to the US said the news was “another blatant provocation”.
And the Kremlin spokesman said Germany’s reported decision would “bring nothing good” and leave “a lasting mark” on relations with Russia.
Ukrainian officials say they are urgently in need of heavier weapons, and say sufficient battle tanks could help Kyiv’s forces seize back territory from the Russians.
But until now, the US and Germany have resisted internal and external pressure to send their tanks to Ukraine.
Washington has cited the extensive training and maintenance required for the high-tech Abrams.
Germans have endured months of painful political debate amid concerns that sending tanks would escalate the conflict and make Nato a direct party to the war with Russia.
US media is reporting that an announcement regarding Abrams shipments to Ukraine could come as soon as Wednesday, with unnamed officials cited as saying at least 30 could be sent.
However the timing remains unclear, and it could take many months for the US combat vehicles to reach the battlefront.
German officials had reportedly been insisting they would only agree to the transfer of Leopard 2s to Ukraine if the US also sent M1 Abrams.
“If the Germans continue to say we will only send or release Leopards on the conditions that Americans send Abrams, we should send Abrams,” Democratic Senator Chris Coons, a Biden ally, told Politico on Tuesday.
Britain has already said it will send Challenger Two tanks to Ukraine.
Poland – one of 16 European and Nato countries that has German-made Leopard 2 tanks – has been pushing to send the vehicles to Ukraine, but under export rules needs Berlin’s permission.
Ukraine is still unlikely to get the 300 modern main battle tanks it says it needs to win the war.
But if half a dozen Western nations each provide 14 tanks, then that would bring the total to nearly 100 – which could make a difference.
Western tanks – including the UK’s Challenger 2, Germany’s Leopard 2 and the US-made Abrams – are all seen as superior to their Soviet-era counterparts, like the ubiquitous T-72.
They will provide Ukrainian crews with more protection, speed and accuracy.
But Western modern main battle tanks are not a wonder weapon or game-changer on their own. It’s also what’s being supplied alongside them.
In recent weeks, there’s been a step change in heavy weapons being supplied by the West – including hundreds more armoured vehicles, artillery systems and ammunition.
Combined together, they are the kind of military hardware needed to punch through Russian lines and to retake territory.
If Ukrainian troops can be trained and the weapons delivered in time, they could form key elements of any spring offensive. A missing element for offensive operations is still air power.
Ukraine has been asking for the West to provide modern fighter jets since the war began. So far, none has been delivered.
While there has been no official statement from the German government, Marie-Agnes Strack-Zimmermann of the liberal FDP party, who chairs the defence committee of the German parliament, welcomed the reports.
“The decision was tough, it took far too long, but in the end it was unavoidable,” she said, adding that it would come as a relief to “the battered and brave Ukrainian people”.
Watch: Poland’s PM: “Free world cannot afford not to send Leopard tanks”
Allied nations had become frustrated at what they perceived as German reluctance to send the armoured vehicles in recent days.
German Defence Minister Boris Pistorius earlier said that Berlin had given other nations the green light to train Ukrainians to use Leopard 2 tanks, but did not commit to sending their own.
The Ukrainian president’s chief of staff, Andriy Yermak, on Tuesday called on Western countries to give Kyiv hundreds of tanks to form a “crushing fist” against Russia.
“Tanks are one of the components for Ukraine to return to its 1991 borders,” he wrote on Telegram.
Anatoly Antonov, the Russian ambassador to Washington, wrote on Telegram: “If the United States decides to supply tanks, then justifying such a step with arguments about ‘defensive weapons’ will definitely not work.
“This would be another blatant provocation against the Russian Federation.”
Armed men opened fire on a bus station in southern Sudan on Monday January 23, 2023, officials said, killing at least four people and prompting authorities to declare a monthlong state of emergency.
Officials in South Kordofan province said the attack in the provincial capital of Kadugli wounded at least four others.
No group immediately claimed responsibility for the attack, which took place as the victims were heading to areas controlled by a rebel group, known as the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement-North, local media reported.
Mousa Gaber Mahmoud, South Kordofan’s acting provincial governor, called the attack “unfortunate,” pledging that local authorities “will spare no effort to regain security and stability” in the province.
He said a state of emergency took effect Monday across the southern province on the border with South Sudan.
The Sudan People’s Liberation Movement-North, led by Abdel Aziz al-Hilu, controls large swaths of the province, including the Nuba mountains. It has been fighting the government in Sudan’s capital of Khartoum for decades.
A cease-fire was established between the military and the group following the removal of longtime strongman Omar al-Bashir in April 2019 amid a popular uprising against his three decades of repressive rule.
There were tensions between the two sides after a military coup removed a transitional government in October 2021, plunging the entire country into further chaos.
The multiplication of weather disasters, which pushes millions of people onto the roads, is now one of the “main causes” of human trafficking, according to a UN report published Tuesday (Jan. 24), also mentioning the risks posed by the war in Ukraine.
“Climate change increases vulnerability to trafficking,” the study by the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) said, based on data collection from 141 countries over the 2017-2020 period and analysis of 800 court cases.
Over time, “entire regions will become uninhabitable,” which “disproportionately affects” poor communities that live primarily on agriculture or fishing.
They find themselves “deprived of their livelihoods and forced to flee their communities”, becoming easy prey for traffickers, Fabrizio Sarrica, lead author of the text, explained to the press ahead of publication.
In 2021 alone, climate-related disasters caused the internal displacement of more than 23.7 million people, while many others had to move abroad.
The report cites devastating typhoons in the Philippines and Bangladesh, which is particularly prone to cyclones and storms.
In both countries, an increase in trafficking was noted, with, for example, the organization of “large-scale recruitment campaigns” to trap the poorest people in forced labor.
Ghana, suffering from droughts and floods, and the Caribbean region, subject to hurricanes and rising sea levels, are also in the front line.
– Wars and pandemics –
Armed conflicts are another breeding ground for trafficking. If Africa is by far the most affected continent, the UN body points to a potentially “dangerous” situation in Ukraine, while welcoming the measures taken by European Union countries to receive and protect millions of refugees.
“It is a challenge to know how to manage the trafficking generated by war and instability,” said Ilias Chatzis, head of the UNODC’s Human Trafficking and Migrant Smuggling Section, interviewed by AFP.
“Regarding Ukraine, for example, we should not only help the neighboring countries, but also increase our support to the country’s authorities”, weakened by the war effort.
For the first time since the collection of data in 2003, which has so far gathered elements on more than 450,000 people, the number of victims identified in the world has declined in 2020 (-11% over one year).
The Covid-19 pandemic “has limited the ability to detect cases,” particularly in low-income countries in Asia, Latin America and Africa, the report says.
With the closure of places open to the public (bars, discos…) due to health restrictions, some forms of trafficking, including sexual exploitation, have also moved to “less visible and even less safe places”.
The body described it as the highest productivity in the history of the mineral sector in Sudan.
The Director of the General Administration for Supervision and Control of Production Companies, Engineer Alaeldin Ali, said in a press statement on Monday (Jan. 02) that productivity increased by one ton and 611 kilograms, compared to the highest production in the last period, which was achieved in 2019.
The 18 tons and 637 kilograms of gold produced in 2022 originated from the production of the organised sector of concession companies and companies dealing with traditional mining waste.
It is estimated that over 50% of Sudan’s gold is smuggled out of the country, with proceeds frequently used to finance the internal conflict.
Central Bank of Sudan issued a new circular to banks and related authorities in March 2022, banning the export of gold by government agencies and foreigners, individuals, and companies, excluding concession companies operating in mining.
The circular also limited the role of the Central Bank of Sudan to purchasing gold for the purpose of building reserves only.
A gold mining company said that three workers have been killed after a blast in western Kenya and blamed illegal mining activities.
Karebe gold mining company said in a statement late Monday (Jan. 23) that a wall built to prevent flooding and illegal incursion was blasted by illegal miners, causing an explosion.
Three other workers were injured and hospitalized for treatment. Their conditions weren’t immediately available.
Karebe said it had been reaching out to local government officials since 2021 to intervene and stop illegal miners from encroaching in its license area.
The company said an official had visited the area on Monday (Jan. 23) and instructed illegal miners to stop their activities.
Journalists in Cameroon gathered on Monday (Jan.23) in Yaoundé to pay respect and demand justice for the killing of their colleague Martinez Zogo, whose was abducted last week and whose body was found this weekend near the capital.
Gathered among candles, flowers and banners demanding justice, friends and colleagues stood outside the radio station Amplitude FM, where Martinez Zogo worked.
Journalist Jean Bruno Tagne said during the event that he believed the killing was “a message that was sent to all independent journalists and to all those who think that this country can function differently.”
Tagne added: “Journalists must continue to do their job. We absolutely must not cede to fear so that we don’t play into the hands of Martinez’s executioners and so that he didn’t die for nothing.”
The mutilated body of Zogo was found on Sunday near Yaounde, the capital of Cameroon, five days after he was kidnapped.
Zogo hosted a popular daily show on Amplitude FM where – according to the Committee to Protect Journalists – he recently commented on alleged embezzlement in public-sector procurement that benefitted a prominent businessman. Zogo served a two-month prison sentence for criminal defamation in 2020, the CPJ said.
One of the first female referees ever to serve at a men’s World Cup has been insulted and physically threatened during a match in her home country, where some fans called her a “prostitute”.
Salima Mukansanga officiated a 0–0 draw on Saturday between Kiyovu Sport and Gasogi United, but “game reports show that she was insulted”, a Rwanda Football Federation (RFF) spokesman told the BBC
Rwanda’s football body is now investigating harassment and attempted assault by fans in the local male’s league against her, and it says measures will be taken by the disciplinary committee after investigation.
People who attended the game told the BBC that a group of Kiyovu Sport fans repeatedly chanted, calling Ms Mukansanga “a prostitute”. After the game security staff had to intervene to prevent some of them from physically attacking her,” Jules Karangwa of the RFF says.
In an open letter, Kiyovu Sport fans President Hemedi Minani condemned the “harassment and insults” against Mrs Mukansanga and apologised to her.
Last year in Qatar, Ms Mukasanga was part of the first team of three female referees to ever officiate a male’s world cup. Months earlier she had also become the first female to officiate the men’s Africa Cup of Nations.
Zambia’s finance minister says China has shown “optimism” in negotiations to ease the country’s debt, a day after US treasury secretary said Beijing was a barrier to ending the crisis.
The country is straining under an immense debt burden and became Africa’s first nation to default on its debts during the pandemic, when it failed to make a payment in 2020.
Talks to try to ease Zambia’s debt have been dragging on – with China being blamed by some.
But Finance Minister Situmbeko Musokotwane, soon after meeting Secretary Janet Yellen in the capital, Lusaka, told the BBC’s Newsday programme that he was encouraged by the last meeting with the creditors:
Quote Message: I don’t want to accuse anyone… but there is an internationally constituted common framework which governs how countries should be able to access debt relief.
I don’t want to accuse anyone… but there is an internationally constituted common framework which governs how countries should be able to access debt relief.
Quote Message: What encourages me is that from the last meeting of the official creditors, there seems to be optimism – including the Chinese.”
What encourages me is that from the last meeting of the official creditors, there seems to be optimism – including the Chinese.”
He added that talks on restructuring the debt could be completed by the end of March.
Akpema is the rite of passage for young maidens in the West African nation of Togo. It is held shortly after the initiation ceremony for boys which is known as Evala wrestling. Akpema is often held a week after Evala.
The ceremony is to deepen the knowledge of girls’ self-worth and help them preserve their virtues. The significance of Akpema is also to groom the young maidens to preserve their virginity before marriage.
While the initiation rite for the girls starts at the age of 1, the rite for the boys begins at the age of eight, according to Exploring Africa.
The main initiation ceremony is performed for the girls when they are 18 years old. It is maintained that the girls are virgins and need to be prepared for marriage. The ceremony begins with the shaving of the hair on their heads. They are then stripped of their clothes.
They walk in a procession with no clothes. What the girls are permitted to wear on that day are only necklaces and a pearl belt while holding the hands of their companions. The girls are later taken to the sacred wood where the initiation rites are held. The girls are accompanied by elderly women and traditional priests while being led to the sacred wood.
The girls are made to sit on a sacred stone as evidence that they are pure. Any girl who is able to undergo this part of the ceremony brings honor to their family. Once this is done, the girls are passed as suitable for marriage and ushered into adulthood.
Fresh fighting has erupted in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, despite an agreement between the government and rebel groups to end hostilities.
The fighting between the army and M23 rebels on Tuesday is said to have caused many people to flee their homes, according to local reports.
“There is mass displacement towards the town of Mweso,” a local journalist told the BBC on Tuesday morning.
The military has not commented on the latest fighting, but a spokesman for the rebels accused government forces of attacking their positions as they prepared to further withdraw as outlined in an agreement reached in Angola’s capital, Luanda.
Last week in Davos President Félix Tshisekedi said the rebel group was not withdrawing but “moving around and redeploying to other areas”.
The rebels have accused President Tshisekedi of being more keen on “destroying the M23” instead of peacefully resolving the conflict.
The UN says more than 400,000 people have fled their homes in the conflict since last year.
The previous week, I had a passing thought and impression which must have been born out of years of observation. It slipped out of my jaws and I went further to write it,drawing reactions from discerning people,mostly Christians.
Many affirmed my observation and found it in-depth. Religion is such a delicate subject, so it is prudent for one to tread cautiously when running commentary of any sort on it. People may go to varying extents to do incredible and ridiculous things in the name of their faith than they may do for the love of money(arguable). It is not part of my intentions to bring any form of disrepute to the faith I and many have subscribed to for several years, however from a panoramic view, this reflection is quite accurate.
Still wondering what the heck I wrote to still be winding around words? here it is ,”As Christians,we pray to God for things made by unbelievers to prove to unbelievers that we are the favorites of God”.I choose to call that “the irony of a paradoxical life”.
From our homes to our religious grounds, we have lived off the geniusness of people we finger as “unbelievers ” and unworthy of our company and presence. Moreover, we pray earnestly to God to bless us with material things made predominantly made by unbelievers, and when we by any means acquire them, we flaunt it to show unbelievers we a blessed by God.
In effect, material possessions of unbelievers have unrepentantly being the benchmark for our blessings and measure of success. For instance, our pastors and religious heads as a status symbol, may be wearing suits by Versace, a design founded by a gay genius on their pulpits to read a Bible that speaks against homosexuality.
Have we had a reflection about the ego and status boosting iPhones we clamor for? Isn’t the successful company run by Tim Cook a known gay? I am not canvassing for support or doing advocacy for any sexual orientation or expressiveness though.
Karl Benz, an unreligious inventor’s Mercedes-Benz, is what most Christians may acquire as we claim to be drenched by heavenly showers of blessings.Is this not double standards?
I can go on with my analysis for long,however it may be needless as my point has been conveyed in simplicity. We seek approval and validation from unbelievers,using things made by unbelievers to prove that we are blessed by God in a world that has unbelievers as the richest and arguably the most successful.
Although we keep contradicting ourselves because of various reasons, I believe clarity may come someday and love will be our ultimate religion. Long live mother Ghana,long live Africa.
Source: Dumenu Charles Selorm
DISCLAIMER: Independentghana.com will not be liable for any inaccuracies contained in this article. The views expressed in the article are solely those of the author’s, and do not reflect those of The Independent Ghana
I find the IGP’s vision and approach to leading the Police very inspiring. We may all agree that the level of professionalism has appreciated and public confidence has been greatly bolstered.
The police, a sworn friend of the public, is with the mandate of preventing and detecting crime, apprehending offenders, maintaining public order and safety of persons and properties.
The National Road Safety Commission (N.R.S.C), recorded about 16% decline in road accidents as of August 2022 in comparison to 2021.I am of the view that the Police,The Motor Transport and Traffic Directorate (MTTD) and other agents will not relent and rather remain consistent in their efforts so that this year may record an unprecedented decline in road accidents.
Rapid urbanization has come with traffic overload on our roads which has added up to the stress of living in our cities.Indeed, necessity is the mother of all inventions and in our ingenuity,we have seen a significant preference for motorbikes (okada) and tricycles as means of mobility. This service may have helped in the fluidity of people but has also intensified the reckless driving or riding on our roads.There’s been a willful and carefree disregard for the safety of persons or property generally.
The Road Traffic (Amendment) Act 2020, is against dangerous, reckless and inconsiderate driving.Stunts such as wheelies, stoppies, and burnouts on public roads may be met with stiff punishments.
The Road Traffic Regulations Regulation 74(3) of L.I. 2180 of the Act provides that a siren may be fitted as a warning appliance and used on certain categories of motor vehicles. These categories include government vehicles used for official purposes by the Head of State.Although other public office holders may not have been prescribed,it has become a norm to see people of high repute move around accompanied by sirens and dispatch riders.I will like to reserve that subject for another day.
I have watched the police dispatch riders make stunts admirably on independence day celebrations and more.We may all find it entertaining at such a setting. However,I am alarmed when I watch them deploy such antics on our roads.As much as this is a dangerous use of the road,it is a paradox and contradiction to the mandate of the police.As they are authorized to protect life and property,they can’t be an accessory to the inverse of their mandate.
What is the point in arresting a young man from Nima for reckless motor bike riding or perhaps doing wheelies and stoppies when police dispatch riders are on our roads flipping their bikes dangerously and zigzagging.Thet have personally been involved in accidents in times past. How helpful is these stunts in helping the Police to achieve it’s fundamental role and indispensable mandate? I will be glad to be furnished with such valuable information. Long live mother Ghana.
Source: Dumenu Charles Selorm
DISCLAIMER: Independentghana.com will not be liable for any inaccuracies contained in this article. The views expressed in the article are solely those of the author’s, and do not reflect those of The Independent Ghana
Portugal has announced that all debt repayments it receives from its former colony of Cape Verde will be fully reinvested into the African country to drive its transition to a greener and more sustainable future.
The archipelago of 10 small islands, off Africa’s west coast, owes Portugal more than $650m (£524m), of which $13m is due to be repaid by 2025.
Speaking in Cape Verde, Portugal’s Prime Minister António Costa said that money will now be ploughed back into Cape Verde to support renewable energy and other green projects.
Dr. Marinus Iwuchukwu, a beloved Nigerian college professor in Pennsylvania, was fatally stabbed by his wife before she shot and killed herself in a murder-suicide case. In a statement, Allegheny County Department of Police said officers went to a Wilkins Township home on Wednesday morning after they received a report about a “violent domestic” dispute involving a couple, PEOPLE reported.
An individual informed police that a woman in the residence was armed with a gun while another person inside had been stabbed. A SWAT team later responded to the scene to help after the officers were unable to get a response from the people inside the home. Upon entry, the SWAT officers found the bodies of Dr. Iwuchukwu and his wife, Charte Dunn.
The release also stated that the two deceased individuals also had stab wounds. But the cause of the fatal incident isn’t known. Per marital records obtained by the Duquesne Duke, Dr. Iwuchukwu, 59, and Dunn, 50, married in 2017. And though the deceased college professor filed for divorce in 2020, their separation was yet to be formally approved.
Dr. Iwuchukwu had a doctorate degree in systematic theology and an M.A. in journalism. Since 2008, the Nigerian native had been working as an associate professor of theology at Duquesne University. He also authored and edited several books.
Responding to his death, a spokesperson at Duquesne said the incident was a “tragedy for all involved.” A theology department student aide who previously worked with Dr. Iwuchukwu described the deceased professor as a “kindhearted person” who was very interested in what was happening in her life.
“Marinus became an incredibly accomplished academic theologian … and our world is enriched by his work,” Richard Hanson, who said he was in grad school with Iwuchukwu, wrote on a Catholic Theological Society of America announcement of his death, PEOPLE reported. “But I know that I personally felt even more deeply his kindness, warmth, and ability to communicate peace and love in the most simple and profound ways with all those whom he encountered.”
Dr. Iwuchukwu’s neighbors also said he was an “outstanding neighbor”, adding that his death had left them in shock. “I’m still looking across the street,” Carl Mosley told the Duquesne Duke. “There’s no words, really. I’m kind of speechless, because he was a good guy.”
As much as some may have decided to live in denial, perhaps a way to cope as times have become really hard for all, no level of partisanship will insulate any of us from the plagues and harsh realities that the failing economy has come with. The debt restructuring programme tailored for domestic bondholders is like a pebble in the shoes of Ghanaians.This is so ridiculous and feels like a dream.
In the heat of all the turmoil, our president is bent on building a cathedral. If he has failed woefully in building an economy, what could be the source of his motivation of building a cathedral for God. At least I know pleasing humans is far more easier than pleasing God. What happened to our dear president? What happened to our priorities as a nation? I am at a fix.
As I judiciously manage what I have in hand, I can’t help but share my daily experience. Each day my phone rings, my heart beats faster as it is most likely to be another contact that may eventually say the words “can you do me a favor”. No disrespect intended but times are really hard and people who respect themselves, very independent, responsible and self reliant have been humbled by the difficult times and can’t help but ask for financial assistance from others. People are becoming destitute. “Helpers” are looking for help themselves so how can they even be helpful to others?
And I have seen and heard divided opinions about the popularity of religious fellowships like “Alpha Hour”.However, this is very much a sign that things are hard.The religiosity of Africans appreciates in the face of hardship.Religion remains “the opiate of the masses”.
In times like this, it is surprising that government is still showing opulence and seem detached from the terrible experience of the masses.It feels Ghanians are being taken for granted and government seems insensitive.Times are hard yet decisions of our leaders continue to be bad.
Couple of days ago, two ministers resign from the present administration,with the hope of being elected as presidential candidates for the 2024 elections.Well wish them the best.
I am sure the president will soon make appointments to fill the void. However, as a well meaning Ghanaians, Mr President, may I know when you intend to shrink your government? Ghanaians are growing LEAN but your government is not LEAN. Ghanaians are struggling to eat three square meals. The pattern for eating lately has become 011,101,001,010 for many.
Why will you be defiant in down sizing your herd of elephants to have a LEAN government? Many ministries in your government are a duplication of others and a wastage. This may save the taxpayers money and inspire confidence in resuscitating the economy but you have taken an entrenched position.
With 30 ministries, packed with 30 ministers and about 2 or 3 deputy ministers. 16 regional ministers with their deputies and more who haven’t given Ghanaians value for the tax payers money and yet they remain leaches on our economy.
This is a government of “elephants” who have a big appetite naturally so it has taken a fortune to maintain them.Now they are eating Ghanaians out of their own home.A lot of ministers and ministries bring nothing to the table and are white elephants.Yet our government refuses to downsize.
The economy we have toiled to build is facing structure failure.The weight of running the government in itself is to huge.It is costing tax payers too much and the president must be bold to down size his cabinet. GHANAIANS ARE GROWING LEAN,BUT THE GOVERNMENT REFUSES TO BECOME LEAN. May God help Mother Ghana.
Source: Dumenu Charles Selorm
DISCLAIMER: Independentghana.com will not be liable for any inaccuracies contained in this article. The views expressed in the article are solely those of the author’s, and do not reflect those of The Independent Ghana
A high court in Rwanda has sentenced a former youth and culture minister to five years in prison over corruption charges, extending a previous sentence by a year.
The original sentence, which came last year, against Edouard Bamporiki was a rare case of a top official convicted over corruption in the country.
He was suspended from cabinet last May and put under house arrest while being investigated for corruption and misuse of power. He remained under house arrest until this ruling.
Bamporiki confessed to the charges on Twitter and asked President Paul Kagame for forgiveness, but in September a court sentenced him to four years – which he appealed.
On Monday, a high court judge in the capital, Kigali, said “justice needs to be served to set an example”.
The 39-year-old poet and filmmaker was previously a vigorous supporter of President Kagame and the ruling party and rose rapidly through the ranks.
His lawyer, Evode Kayitana, told the BBC that they had not decided on whether to appeal.
Uganda will on Tuesday start drilling its first oil well in the Kingfisher oil field, the state petroleum agency said.
It is hoped that by 2025 the first of a potential 1.4 billion barrels of oil will be pumped from wells across the mid-western region.
“Today we mark another milestone and move a step closer to first oil with the launch of the drilling of development and production wells for the Kingfisher oil fields,” the Petroleum Authority of Uganda (PAU) said on Twitter.
Today we mark another milestone and move a step closer to first oil with the launch of the drilling of development and production wells for the Kingfisher oil fields. H.E @KagutaMuseveni is the Chief Guest at the Spudding (drilling) campaign launch. @CNOOCUgandaLtd@MEMD_Ugandapic.twitter.com/YkwjeHVG3u
The military government in Burkina Faso has confirmed that a military agreement with France has been terminated.
The government was reported over the weekend to have asked French troops to leave the country wracked by terrorist violence.
Paris subsequently asked for clarity on the issue.
In a January 23 interview with the state-run boardcaster, Ouagadougou confirmed the new arrangement with government spokesperson Jean-Emmanuel Ouedrago stating:
“We are terminating the agreement which allows French forces to be in Burkina Faso. This is not the end of diplomatic relations between Burkina Faso and France,” the said.
Relations between French and neighbouring Mali has gone south with Bamako also ordering troops of the Operation Berkhane (anti-terrorism force) to leave.
Brazil football legend Pele gave a share of his will to a woman he had long denied was his daughter, the Mirror reported. Sandra Regina was born in 1964 but died 17 years ago. Before her death, she was heartbroken that her father had refused to accept her as his daughter, the platform said.
Even though the football star never acknowledged her, he named her alongside his six other children in his will. Regina’s share of his estate will pass to her two sons, Octavio Felinto Neto and Gabriel Arantes do Nascimento. The two met their grandfather for the first time on December 28, just one day before he died. It was Pele’s final wish to meet them.
“I thank God for providing this moment, it was what my mother dreamed of most. I spoke to my aunts, and they said that our grandfather wanted to see us,” Gabriel Arantes do Nascimento said, according to the Mirror. “We were very excited, it was an opportunity we had been waiting for. Every family has fights and rows, ours is no different, but there are moments when union and love are more important than anything else. We are extremely happy.”
Regina, who died in 2006 of cancer, was born after Pele had an affair with his cleaner, Anisia Machado. Pele refused to admit he was the father, even after DNA tests showed he was. A 1991 court ruling also proved that he was Regina’s father, the Mirror said.
Pele’s estate is said to be worth around £13 million ($16m). The three-time World Cup winner had three kids from his first marriage, twins from his second, and a daughter from another affair.
Born Edson Arantes do Nascimento (his real name) in 1940 in the city of Tres Coracoes in southeastern Brazil, Pele became a household name, playing for a Brazilian club called Santos and then the Brazil national team. Widely regarded as the greatest player of all time, Pele is the only player in history to win three World Cups (1958, 1962 and 1970).
In 2000, FIFA named him the greatest footballer of the 20th century alongside Diego Maradona of Argentina.
Kenya’s opposition leader, Raila Odinga, has said his political coalition does not recognise William Ruto as the President of Kenya and declared the new Kenyan government as “illegitimate”.
Mr Ruto beat him in last August’s poll, but Mr Odinga – who appeared at Nairobi’s Kamukunji Stadium along with his running mate Martha Karua, and other allies – repeated claims that the results were manipulated. Claims that had already been rejected in court.
He declared that he and his movement “reject the 2022 election result totally”, which was received with great cheers and applause from an adoring crowd.
“We cannot and we don’t recognise the Kenya Kwanza regime,” he continued.
The 2022 election was Mr Odinga’s fifth attempt at the presidency, but he was beaten by Mr Ruto who was declared winner in the absence of four election commissioners who dissented and accused the commission chairman of delivering what they called “opaque” results.
Mr Raila then rejected the results and took the case to court .
But the Supreme Court upheld Mr Ruto’s victory. The aftermath has been dramatic with accusations and counter accusations.
Election chief Wafula Chebukati has claimed he was under intense pressure from unspecified forces to announce different results, and most recently, President Ruto sensationally said there had been an assassination plot against Mr Chebukati.
Some of Mr Odinga’s partners in his Azimio Coalition have since decamped and declared their support for the Kenya Kwanza administration.
Others have remained steadfast with him in this renewed fight for what they call electoral justice.
The next general election is four years away, however the main opposition is already calling for sweeping electoral reforms, and is calling for the current administration to leave office.
Nigeria’s President Muhammadu Buhari has officially opened a new port near Lagos which could have an economic impact across West Africa.
The vast $1.5bn-Lekki Deep Sea Port, which took six years to complete, will serve as a gateway for cargo vessels in the region.
Lagos state Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu said the new facility will create about 200,000 jobs both directly and indirectly and generate billions of dollars in revenue for the country.
The port is expected to reduce the high cost of bringing goods into the country by reducing the vessel turnaround time, which has hampered business at the country’s other ports.
Lagos currently relies on old and congested ports whose waters are unable to dock larger vessels and contribute to traffic congestion within the city.