Tag: AfricaNews

  • Libya sends 2 planes of aid to Türkiye, Syria

    “We sent airplanes carrying relief items as well as more than 70 medical, emergency and recovery personnel,” Gibril Shtewi, a Libyan aid official told Xinhua.

    The Libyan teams so far rescued 27 people, recovered 53 bodies, and provided medical assistance to more than 400 people in southern Türkiye.

    The Libyan government has sent 55 rescue and safety specialists as well as four tracing dogs to “help authorities in Türkiye deal with the consequences of the earthquakes.”

    More than 30,000 people were killed and many more were injured so far after two strong earthquakes hit Syria and Türkiye on Monday.

    Supplies provided by Libya as humanitarian aid to quake-hit Türkiye and Syria are seen at Mitiga International Airport in Tripoli, Libya, Feb. 12, 2023. The Libyan government on Sunday sent two airplanes full of relief items to Syria and Türkiye to help deal with the impacts of the deadly earthquake. (Photo by Hamza Turkia/Xinhua)Supplies provided by Libya as humanitarian aid to quake-hit Türkiye and Syria are loaded onto a plane at Mitiga International Airport in Tripoli, Libya, Feb. 12, 2023.

  • Egypt’s largest oil expo kicks off with over 500 exhibitors

    The opening ceremony of the three-day expo was attended by Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi and leaders of global energy, oil and gas companies.

    With over 500 exhibitors, the expo is expected to attract over 32,000 attendees to engage in dialogue, create partnerships, do business, and explore solutions and strategies that will reshape the global energy markets.

    Speaking at the opening ceremony, Egyptian Minister of Petroleum and Mineral Resources Tarek El-Molla said EGYPS is a platform for exchanging views and presenting distinguished initiatives to support regional and global integration and cooperation in the field of oil and gas.

    The minister revealed that Egypt’s oil exports increased in 2022 to reach 18.2 billion U.S. dollars, in addition to achieving a surplus in the oil trade balance for the third year in a row.

    The total investments in Egypt’s oil and gas sectors from 2014 to 2020 hit 74 billion U.S. dollars, according to the Egyptian Ministry of Petroleum and Mineral Resources.

    Egypt aims to become a regional hub for the trade of oil and liquefied natural gas after major discoveries were made in recent years, including the Zohr gas field in the Mediterranean which holds an estimated 30 trillion cubic feet of gas.

  • Algeria condemns terror attack against Niger army

    The Algerian Foreign Ministry said in a statement that “Algeria strongly condemns the terrorist attack that targeted on Friday a detachment of the Nigerien army, which was patrolling the locality of Intagamey near the border with Mali, causing multiple fatalities and injuries among the soldiers, some of whom are still missing.”

    The statement notes that the North African nation “expresses its solidarity with Niger and restates its call for the eradication of terrorism that has a negative impact on peace, security, and development in Africa.”

    Quoting a statement from the Nigerien Defense Ministry, media reported on Sunday that at least 10 Nigerien soldiers were killed in an ambush, and more than a dozen others were injured by armed assailants near the border with neighboring Mali, adding that 16 people are still missing.

  • At least 25 killed in Burkina Faso attack in Sahel region

    In a statement, Lieutenant Colonel Rodolphe Sorgho, who is the governor of the Sahel Region, said that armed terrorist groups perpetrated a violent attack Saturday afternoon in the commune of Bani of the province of Seno, killing 25 people, including 22 civilians and three police officers.

    Since 2015, insecurity in the West African country has claimed many lives and displaced thousands more.

    Last week, at least 28 people, including soldiers and civilians, were killed in two separate gunmen attacks in Burkina Faso, a regional governor and the army revealed.

  • UN agencies call for renewed commitment to end female genital mutilation in Ethiopia

    The UNFPA and UNICEF made the joint call in line with the International Day of Zero Tolerance for Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) which is annually commemorated on Feb. 6. This year’s event is being commemorated under the theme “Partnering with Men and Boys to Transform Social and Gender Norms to End FGM.”

    The two UN agencies called for a sustainable partnership and engagement with men and boys of Ethiopia to enforce the actions against FGM and transform the deeply rooted social and gender norm, and allow girls and women to fully realize their rights and potential.

    According to figures from the UN, Ethiopia has made remarkable progress in the last decade in the reduction of FGM prevalence among girls and women aged 15-49 from 74 percent in 2005 to 65 percent in 2016. However, Ethiopia is still home to 25 million circumcised women and girls.

    “I would like to congratulate the Ethiopian government for the progress made so far and for their commitment to ending FGM,” the statement quoted UNICEF Representative in Ethiopia Aboubacar Kampo as saying. “Girls are subjected to FGM without a choice, and it is a clear violation of their protection rights.”

    “We must collectively redouble our efforts to end this harmful practice including scaling up our engagement with men and boys to change attitudes so that the next generation of girls can live healthier lives,” Kampo said.

    In Ethiopia, the most common rationale for the practice of FGM on girls and women is meeting societal expectations including traditions, culture, and norms exerting control over women’s sexuality, and preserving women’s virginity until marriage and family honor.

    This reasoning is claims founded on false beliefs and culture and is passed on from one generation to another over time until they are believed to be true, the statement said, adding that partnering and engaging men and boys are critical steps in communicating the facts about FGM and its inherent risks.

    According to the two UN agencies, Ethiopia has been making progress in attitude change towards FGM with 86.7 percent of boys and men, and 79.3 percent of girls and women aged 15-49 believing that FGM should not continue as a practice.

  • WFP launches school feeding program in South Sudan

    Mary-Ellen McGroarty, country director for WFP in South Sudan, said during the launching ceremony in the South Sudanese capital of Juba that the support will be channeled into areas impacted by conflict and climate shocks, both of which cause significant disruptions to education and access to food.

    “When conflict or climate shocks strike a community, impacting livelihoods and food availability, schooling is often one of the first things to be deprioritized by families,” said McGroarty.

    South Sudanese Minister of General Education and Instruction Awut Deng Acuil said school feeding is a fundamental aspect of education in the country. “Data from the annual education census 2021 indicated that schools that have a feeding program are better attended than schools that do not provide feeding.”

    “Therefore, if we want to address the problem of out-of-school children in South Sudan, we must provide feeding in schools to retain our children and especially those who are vulnerable,” said Acuil.

    Prolonged school closures during the COVID-19 pandemic caused enrolment rates to plummet across the country and a slow uptake in enrolment when they reopened in early 2021.

  • Egyptian researchers find golden amulets inside 2,300-year-old mummy through “digital unwrapping”

    The fully wrapped mummy, belonging to a 15-year-old boy buried in a late Ptolemaic cemetery at around 300 BC, was found in Edfu city in Aswan province, southern Egypt, in 1916 and has been stored at Cairo’s Egyptian Museum ever since, said the statement.

    Its examination process didn’t start until 2015, nearly a century after it was discovered.

    Through CT scanning, the researchers at Cairo University conducted non-invasive “digital unwrapping” that revealed a well-preserved mummy, according to the results published in the scientific magazine Frontiers in Medicine.

    The scanning detected a high-quality mummification process that included brain and viscera removal, while the heart remained in the chest as a spiritual symbol, the results showed.

    Among the 49 detected amulets, 30 were made of gold while the others of faience, stones, or fired clay, said the statement.

    All these amulets were beautifully stylized in a unique arrangement that represented the power of different Egyptian gods and afterlife beliefs, said Sahar Selim, one of the researchers, adding that the amulets included the eye of Horus, the scarab, the Akhet amulet of the horizon, the placenta, the Knot of Isis and others.

    Among them, a golden tongue leaf was found inside the mummy’s mouth, a two-finger amulet next to its uncircumcised penis, and a golden heart scarab inside its thoracic cavity.

    According to ancient beliefs, the golden tongue was placed in the mouth to ensure he or she could speak in the afterlife, and the same with the heart to proceed life, Ahmed Amer, an Egyptian Egyptologist, told Xinhua.

    The amulets placed on and inside the body indicated a high-socioeconomic status of the boy, the statement said.

    Based on the new findings, the Egyptian Museum has decided to display the mummy inside its main hall under the moniker “Golden boy.”

  • 8 school children killed after boat capsizes in Ghana

    National Disaster Management Organization (NADMO) told the media that the eight — five boys and three girls aged five to 12 — were among 20 pupils who were on their way to school in Wayokope, a community across the lake.

    Ibrahim Wudonyim, a coordinator of NADMO, said the Marine Police Unit of the Ghana Police Service, assisted by some locals, have recovered the bodies of the deceased.

    Investigations are underway to find out the cause of the accident.

  • Algeria, Italy agree to build new energy pipeline

    At a joint press conference with visiting Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, Algerian President Abdelmadjid Tebboune said the project will make Italy “a key distributor of Algerian energies to Europe.”

    For her part, Meloni said in the light of the energy crisis in Europe, Algeria can “become a pioneer supplier at the African and global levels via Italy to all Europe,” noting Algeria is Italy’s first trading partner in Africa.

    She also expressed Italy’s aspiration to diversify partnership with Algeria, especially in the areas of digital infrastructure, communications, biomedicine, industry, and renewable energies.

    Earlier in the day, Algeria and Italy signed several cooperation agreements during a ceremony co-chaired by Tebboune and Meloni.

    The Italian prime minister arrived on Sunday in Algeria for a two-day working visit.

  • Somalia closes militant group al-Shabab’s bank accounts

    Additionally, 70 mobile money accounts of the militants were shut down as part of the government’s efforts to block their financial flow, senior Somali officials told a press conference here.

    Somalia has declared an all-out war against the al-Qaida-linked militants. Although driven out of Mogadishu in 2011, the militants are still conducting ambushes in rural areas.