Africa
Rwanda hopes US-brokered accord will advance peace in eastern DRC
Rwanda’s foreign minister said on Wednesday he hoped an accord set to be signed by US President Donald Trump and the presidents of Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo on Thursday would be a step toward peace.
Crops, not cocaine: Obasanjo calls for market incentives to grow African agriculture
Former Nigerian president’s remarks come after the G20 Leaders’ Summit resolved to reaffirm multilateralism and pledged to fight food insecurity on the continent
Nigeria steps up search for 25 abducted schoolgirls in northwestern Kebbi region
Nigerian security forces on Tuesday intensified a search for 25 girls abducted by gunmen from a boarding school in northwestern Kebbi, the latest school abduction as widespread insecurity continues to plague the country.
Senegal has sovereign right to decide how to tackle debt, IMF says
The International Monetary Fund has discussed options with Senegal to address the country’s “significant debt vulnerabilities”, a spokesperson for the fund said on Tuesday.
Afrobeat icon Fela Kuti’s legacy celebrated in Lagos show with photos, live music and bright underwear
Lagos is a vibrant cultural hub, much like during Fela’s lifetime, and the Afrobeat sound, heard everywhere from nightclubs to roadside bars and political rallies, has propelled many Nigerian musicians to global fame.
France leads $2.5bn initiative to safeguard Congo rainforest
The Congo, the Amazon, the world’s biggest rainforest, and the Borneo-Mekong-Southeast Asia basin, the third-largest, all face threats from expanding farm frontiers, logging, mining and other industries.
Nigeria’s Dangote refinery ramps up output on back of new fuel import duty
The continent’s top oil producer has long sought to end its reliance on imported fuel, and the 15% import duty seeks to safeguard recent multi-billion-dollar investments in domestic refining, the government said in a memo announcing the measure this week.
Tanzania’s Hassan declared landslide winner in election marred by violence
Tanzania’s electoral commission declared on Saturday that President Samia Suluhu Hassan had won, with nearly 98% of the votes, an election that set off violent protests across the country this week.
Egypt hopes vast new museum by the pyramids will accelerate tourism revival
Officials believe the Grand Egyptian Museum (GEM) alone could draw as many as 7-million additional visitors annually after it officially opens on Saturday, helping boost total visitors to about 30-million by 2030.
Zimbabwe eases grain import restrictions after downgrading harvest
Zimbabwe is allowing millers to import maize two months after it announced a ban, following an official downward revision of the country’s 2024/2025 harvest.
UAE calls for ceasefire and civilian transition in Sudan
Anwar Gargash, diplomatic adviser to the United Arab Emirates president, called on Wednesday for an immediate ceasefire and civilian transition in war-ravaged Sudan.
Uganda sets general election for January 15
Uganda’s electoral commission on Tuesday named January 15 as the date for the country’s general election, at which octogenarian President Yoweri Museveni will seek to extend his rule to nearly half a century.
DRC’s stand-up comics take aim at country’s grinding war
Comedians in the Democratic Republic of the Congo are mining their country’s chronic instability for laughs, entertaining people displaced by the war with the M23 rebels with their dark humour.
Robert Mugabe Jnr arrested for ‘drug possession’
The son of former Zimbabwean president Robert Mugabe has appeared in court in Harare on a charge of alleged drug possession.
Malawi re-elects Mutharika after economic crisis under Chakwera
Malawi's former president Peter Mutharika won this month's presidential election, as voters rejected incumbent Lazarus Chakwera after five years of worsening economic crisis in one of the world's poorest countries.






















