AfDB President Adesina says the bank is keen on boosting integration, economic transformation

AfDB President Adesina says the bank is keen on boosting integration, economic transformation

During the meeting Amb Lang’at lauded the bank’s contribution to Kenya’s development and that of the entire continent, through high-impact financing across infrastructure, food production and economic inclusion of women and youth.

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Senegal signs peace deal with factions separatist rebels but there are doubts it’ll be implemented

Senegal signs peace deal with factions separatist rebels but there are doubts it’ll be implemented

Senegal’s government did not immediately respond to a request for comments about the claims. The rebels’ calls for the region’s independence will be difficult to neglect despite the new deal, said Mohamed Traoré, a doctoral researcher at the Cheikh Anta Diop University of Dakar.

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How education programme for migrant and refugee children in Mauritania is cutting numbers of asylum seekers in Europe

How education programme for migrant and refugee children in Mauritania is cutting numbers of asylum seekers in Europe

The school for children of migrants and refugees, set up in 2018 as an early response to the growing need, is the kind of programme envisioned as part of the 210 million euro ($219 million) accord the European Union and Mauritania brokered last year.

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Publish or perish: Why internet publishing is new storehouse of knowledge for deprived African scholars

Publish or perish: Why internet publishing is new storehouse of knowledge for deprived African scholars

In Africa South of the Sahara, South Africa and Nigeria have progressed fastest in the adoption and use social media in academic libraries. However, it is true to say that in most African universities there is still a lot of hesitation to use academic production in social media such as Researchgate.net and Academia.edu to measure academic success and reward those who publish in these media, however qualitative their work is. This is probably true in most universities of the world.

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Witchcraft case that implicates Zambian president shines light on colonial-era law, exposes how politicians invest in black magic

Witchcraft case that implicates Zambian president shines light on colonial-era law, exposes how politicians invest in black magic

Police say the men in the current case were arrested in a hotel room in the capital, Lusaka, in December after a cleaner reported hearing strange noises. They were found in possession of a bottled chameleon and other items including a mysterious white powder, a red cloth and an unidentified animal’s tail. The men also face charges of cruelty to animals.

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Africa governments must invest more in agroecology to advance food sovereignty, ESAFF forum in Kenya told

Africa governments must invest more in agroecology to advance food sovereignty, ESAFF forum in Kenya told

Executive Director Institute for Research and Promotion of Alternatives in Development (IRPAD) Mamadou Goita said agroecology is essential for safeguarding African biodiversity, enhancing soil quality, improving nutrition and health and increasing resilience to climate and other crises to strengthen local food systems.

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Sudan’s military wrests Obeid city from paramilitary group RSF’s control, restores access to the area

Sudan’s military wrests Obeid city from paramilitary group RSF’s control, restores access to the area

Finance Minister Jibril Ibrahim hailed the military’s advances in Obeid as a “massive step” to lift the RSF siege on el-Fasher, the capital of North Darfur province, as well as delivering humanitarian aid to the Kordofan area.

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Big cat juju: Mystical beliefs in wildlife powers in Senegal fuelling rapid decline of lion and leopard populations in West Africa

Big cat juju: Mystical beliefs in wildlife powers in Senegal fuelling rapid decline of lion and leopard populations in West Africa

The gris-gris, prescribed by influential religious leaders called marabouts, are crafted from bits of skin with written prayers or Quranic verses sewn inside. They are widely used across Senegal; police don them for protection, wrestlers for strength and politicians for clout. Average citizens wear them to ward off curses that other people may have put on them for a variety of reasons – matters of romance, perhaps, or jealousy at economic success.

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At least 430 killed in Sudanese RSF paramilitary attacks in White Nile State, aid agencies say

At least 430 killed in Sudanese RSF paramilitary attacks in White Nile State, aid agencies say

The war in Sudan has killed more than 24,000 people and driven over 14 million people – about 30 per cent of the population – from their homes, according to the United Nations. An estimated 3.2 million Sudanese have escaped to neighbouring countries.

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South African scientists’ research on promising HIV vaccine cut short US president’s aid freeze

South African scientists’ research on promising HIV vaccine cut short US president’s aid freeze

Several other mRNA-based HIV vaccine candidates worldwide have reached clinical trials. BRILLIANT is unique in being Africa-led, aiming to develop capacity for producing vaccines in Africa.

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