Russian men are fleeing their motherland in droves to avoid to military service in Ukraine
Military-aged men fled Russia in on Friday, filling planes and causing traffic jams at border crossings to avoid being rounded up to fight in Ukraine following the Kremlin’s partial military mobilisation. Queues stretching for 10 kilometres (six miles) formed on a road leading to the southern border with Georgia, according...
13.5 million people in Africa projected to fall into poverty by 2050 due to climate change
Up to 13.5 million people across Africa’s Sahel region could fall into poverty due to climate change-related shocks by 2050, according to a new World Bank report. Sahelian countries need $33.16 billion for climate adaptation by 2030, the Country Climate and Development Report for the G5 Sahel region, released September...
Revealed: Iconic Lionel Messi plans Barcelona return at expiry of his contract with PSG this season
Lionel Messi will reportedly decide where his future lies following the conclusion of this winter’s World Cup. The Argentina international, who moved to Paris Saint-Germain last summer after Barcelona were unable to offer him a new contract, has been tipped to return to the Nou Camp when his deal at...
Young voters vow to change top leadership because Nigeria has been ‘ruled by one old person to another’
Two years after Samuel Ashola was shot in the leg during a peaceful protest in Nigeria’s economic capital Lagos, the unemployed artist boils with anger as he prepares to vote. “My blood is hot,” said the 30-year-old, before campaigning for the 2023 general elections starts later in September. “I’m from...
African countries pile pressure on US, EU and UN to lift debilitating economic sanctions on Zimbabwe
African countries and the African Union (AU) at the 77th session of the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) in New York, piled more pressure on the US, EU and UK to lift all sanctions against Zimbabwe. AU chairman and Senegal’s President Macky Sall who addressed the gathering on September 20...
UN peacekeepers, aid workers on the spot over alleged sexual abuse in South Sudan’s refugee camps
Accounts of sexual abuse by aid workers at a UN-run camp in South Sudan first surfaced in 2015, two years after the civil war erupted. Seven years on, such reports not only continue but have recently increased, an investigation by The New Humanitarian and Al Jazeera found. The revelations come...