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South Africa’s leader reshuffles cabinet, unveils new Electricity minister
In a long-awaited Cabinet reshuffle late Monday (Mar. 6), South Africa's leader unveiled a new government of 11 ministers and 11 deputy ministers. President Ramaphosa hopes that Electricity Minister Kgosientso Ramokgopa will help curb corruption and mismanagement that put the nation in the dark.
Calls to protect Libyan heritage site spoilt by vandals
UNESCO included Sabratha and four other Libyan sites on the List of World Heritage in Danger in July 2016 because of the damage caused to it and the many threats surrounding it
Nigeria: opposition party leader heads protest outside electoral commission offices
The electoral body last week declared Bola Tinubu of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) as the winner to take over from President Muhammadu Buhari in May
Central African Republic: ex-president Francois Bozizé leaves Chad for Guinea-Bissau
Umaro Sissoco Embaló, the president of Guinea-Bissau, tweeted from his official account welcoming the ex-president of the Central African Republic François Bozizé, who had previously been living in exile in Chad.
DR Congo: Hundreds displaced by fighting protest in Goma
"We are demonstrating because we knew that our head of state is sending us assistance but the minister and the governor have hijacked this, it has been three weeks since we knew it but nothing has been done, we are suffering and we are hungry. Every day we are burying people ... ." Nsabimana Fiston
UN says human rights situation in Eritrea remains “dire
The United Nations said Monday that the human rights situation in Eritrea remains "dire" and shows "no sign of improvement", citing cases of torture and enforced disappearances committed with "total impunity".
South African leader grapples with ever-worsening power cuts
South Africa's ever-worsening power crisis in which homes and businesses go without electricity for up to 10 hours per day is strangling Africa's most developed economy.
In a Paris parking lot, migrants survive out of sight
Charity workers say that there are thousands of homeless migrants in France. In 2020, French authorities tore down makeshift camps housing migrants near Paris, prompting criticism by rights organisations
Dutch slavery exhibition on display at UN headquarters
“We wanted to show through this exhibition that this history belongs to all of us. It's national history. It's about your ancestors. My ancestors. It's about a people who were part of the system, the people who were enslaved and the people who fought against it. Dr. Valika Smeulders, Head of History
Talon: the use of Wagner “condemnable” if the objective is “not safe”
The recourse of certain African States to a paramilitary group like the Russian Wagner is "not reprehensible in principle" unless its mission is not "purely security", estimated Sunday the President of Benin, Patrice Talon, on the French channel LCI.