Target ‘Niche’ Chinese Travelers, Not Numbers, Tourism Experts Tell Africa

African countries are investing heavily in trying to attract tourists from the world’s biggest outbound travel market, China, as they battle to recover from losses suffered during the travel bans of the COVID-19 pandemic.

“COVID wiped out large parts of tourism industries, especially in poorer parts of the world like Africa,” said Mike Fabricius, a specialist in tourism management, consulting and marketing for his Johannesburg-based company, The Journey. “Some African countries rely heavily on the foreign exchange that tourists bring in and the money they spend in domestic markets. To lose that for a few years was a heavy, heavy blow.”

In 2019, before the pandemic, the World Travel and Tourism Council (WTTC) estimated that tourism in Africa had a yearly growth rate of 5% and contributed an average of 8.5% to GDP.

The WTTC said direct investments into the tourism sector were about $29 billion, and that tourism created jobs for 24.3 million direct employees, accounting for 6.4% of Africa’s total working population.

It estimated that COVID-19 travel bans cost Africa at least a third to half of these numbers.

“We saw similar losses across all major African tourism markets,” said Peter Masila, a tourism lecturer at Moi University in Kenya.

Nomasonto Ndlovu, chief operations officer of South African Tourism, said 500,000 jobs were lost in the local tourism sector because of the pandemic.

“We’re confident of a good recovery by end 2024, especially because we’re targeting tourists from a huge market like China,” she said.

In 2019, 155 million Chinese tourists visited foreign destinations.

“It’s true that relatively few chose to come to Africa,” said Ndlovu. “Only 95,000 visited South Africa in 2019. So, we can’t blame COVID entirely for low numbers of Chinese visitors. As far as South Africa’s concerned, we’re now spending a lot of money on new plans and strategies to win more Chinese over, and I know other African countries are doing the same.”

Discounts on airfare

South Africa, Egypt, Kenya and Tanzania are some of the countries now offering more direct flights to China.

Kenya is partnering with Chinese social media platforms and marketing attractions such as the Maasai Mara game reserve on WeChat and TikTok.

Tanzania’s national airline is offering discounts of up to 50% on flights to and from China. Still, the country’s tourism board projects that only 45,000 Chinese will have visited Tanzania by the end of the year.

But Fabricius said African authorities were placing too much emphasis on numbers.

He has worked on tourism projects in China and elsewhere for the United Nations and the World Bank and formulated strategies for global tourism authorities.

“I don’t think Africa’s a place for the mass tourism Chinese market,” said Fabricius.

“The Chinese market has evolved a lot. It used to be thrown in one pot, like the Chinese only travel in big groups and take lots of pictures; they only go to the big places,” he said. “But with a new generation of travelers, there’s no longer such a thing as ‘the Chinese tourist’; it’s become a lot more diversified and segmented.”

Fabricius said the Chinese mass market remained focused on “iconic” international travel destinations, such as New York, Paris and London.

“Africa’s not going to attract that bulk market; it remains a niche destination for the Chinese,” he said. “So, what you want to do is attract Chinese tourists with focused interests in things like culture, wildlife and exploring.”

Rosemary Anderson, chairperson of the FEDHASA organization, which represents hospitality industries across Southern Africa, said continental authorities should indeed be promoting “unique experiences.”

“We have rich cultural assets and diverse experiences” she said. “South Africa, for example, offers every experience imaginable — wildlife safaris, stunning landscapes, vibrant culture and adventure activities. We need to emphasize experiences that are distinctive.”

‘Visa access is essential’

According to Anderson and Fabricius, government inefficiency and complicated visa requirements remain challenges to African efforts to lure Chinese tourists.

“Visa access is essential,” Fabricius said. “It’s no good having all this slick marketing and then your government lets you down by making it hard for the Chinese to get visas.”

Anderson agreed. “Although we (South Africa) have an e-Visa system that accepts applications by Chinese nationals, the process remains cumbersome and is not fully optimized.”

She suggested that marketing initiatives should span both the public and private sectors, ensuring that messaging is targeted to attract diverse budgets, ages, travel interests, preferences and travel motivations.

“We also need to do more to ensure that destination and product information is available on Chinese search engines and marketing on Chinese social media channels, like Weibo and WeChat,” she said.

Fabricius said efforts to attract Chinese visitors should “actually begin at home,” not in Beijing.

“China is Africa’s biggest trade partner, and many thousands of Chinese business travelers are visiting the continent every day,” he said.

“That creates another opportunity: These people who come on a business trip and then after that they tell others about their experiences and that creates a second wave of the leisure travel market,” he said.

This story originated in VOA’s English to Africa Service.

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Macron Says Niger’s Bazoum ‘Reachable,’ in ‘Good Health’

French President Emmanuel Macron spoke to Nigerien President Mohamed Bazoum early Friday, French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna told Agence France-Presse. According to Colonna, Macron said Bazoum is “reachable” and “in good health.”

Leaders of Niger’s army have declared their support for Wednesday’s overthrow of Bazoum, defying calls from across the globe condemning the takeover and for respect of the rule of law and the country’s democratic order.

Abdel Fatau Musah, commissioner for political affairs and security of the Economic Community of West African States,  ECOWAS, told VOA’s James Butty, “Bazoum remains the legitimate and legal president and must be reinstated as soon as possible.”

Musah said, “The heads of state of the region will hold an extraordinary summit, an emergency summit, on the situation over the weekend to determine what measures to take to ensure the reinstatement.”

Patrice Talon, the president of Benin, is headed to Niamey, Niger’s capital, in an effort to mediate the crisis.

Bazoum’s whereabouts remained unclear Thursday, a day after a group of soldiers from the presidential guard detained him at the presidential palace and later announced his ouster on state television.

The army, in a statement released to social media, said it had decided to back the coup to prevent “a deadly confrontation” that could lead to a “bloodbath” in Niger.

Nigerien Foreign Minister Hassoumi Massaoudou said the “legal and legitimate” power remains with the elected president.

There was looting in the streets of Niamey on Thursday and burning cars.  Earlier Thursday, the streets were calm, according to VOA’s French to Africa service which reported a group of demonstrators had gathered to support the new military junta, with some waving Nigerien and Russian flags.

Speaking to reporters in New York, United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres urged coup leaders to return the democratically elected Bazoum to power.

“I want to speak directly to those detaining him,” he said. “Release President Bazoum immediately and unconditionally. Stop obstructing the democratic governance of the country and respect the rule of law.”

Guterres expressed worry about the instability plaguing West and Central Africa.

“If you look at the region, you have a dramatic increase of terrorist activity in Mali, Burkina Faso, in Niger and coming closer and closer to the countries of the coast,” he said. “You have military regimes in Mali, Burkina Faso, now eventually in Niger. A fragile transition in Chad, and a horrible situation in Sudan. So we are witnessing that the whole belt south of the Sahara is becoming an extremely problematic area with terrible consequences for their populations and for peace and security in the African continent and further afield.”

The presidential guard members who seized power suggested Niger’s insecurity was a reason for their actions.

“We, the defense and security forces … decided to put an end to the regime,” said Colonel Amadou Abdramane, shown seated and flanked by nine other officers wearing fatigues, reading a statement. His statement mentioned “the deteriorating security situation and bad governance.”

Abdramane said all institutions of the republic were suspended, that the country’s borders were closed, and a nationwide curfew declared.

The soldiers warned against foreign intervention, and said they would respect Bazoum’s well-being, Reuters reported.

In a message posted Thursday to the social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter, Bazoum said democracy would prevail in his country. “The hard won gains will be safeguarded,” he said. “All Nigeriens who love democracy and freedom would want this.”

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken told reporters Thursday in New Zealand that he had spoken with Bazoum and “made clear that the United States resolutely supports him as the democratically elected president of Niger.”

ECOWAS has condemned the events in Niger and called on what it described as coup plotters to free the president “immediately and without any condition.”

The ECOWAS statement vowed to hold those involved in the plot responsible for the safety of the president, his family, members of the government and the general public.

Others condemning the apparent coup attempt included the chairman of the African Union commission, Faki Mahamat, and former colonial power France, which has about 1,500 soldiers in Niger helping the government battle Islamist militants.

Abdoul Aziz Garba Birimaka, Niger’s presidential special security adviser, told VOA’s French to Africa service the main question is what led to the attempted coup.

“Indeed, that is the question, what led us to this extreme? What is happening? Why? … How could all this have happened without any suspicions as we learn that someone who is supposed to protect is now holding you [against your will],” Birimaka said. “Those are many questions that remain unanswered for the moment.”

The West African state is one of the region’s most unstable.  If successful, Wednesday’s coup would be the fifth military takeover since the country won independence from France in 1960.

Michael Shurkin, a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council, told VOA, “President Bazoum has been one of the most effective leaders in the area, if not the most effective leader. He’s somebody who by many standards is doing all the right things in terms of trying to deal with the country’s vast problems and working effectively with Niger’s many Western security partners, including France in the United States.”

He said, “A coup removes from the region a democratically elected and effective civilian official, replacing it with, first of all, a necessary period of uncertainty as the Nigeriens have to figure out what to do and make all the next steps. … Also, it’s a huge blow to the West, which has really been turning to [Niger] to presume that sort of like it’s its last effort to try to shape events in the Sahel as the Sahel otherwise has been swirling down the drain.”

VOA’s Carol Van Dam Falk, Margaret Besheer and French to Africa service contributed to this report. Some information came from Agence France-Presse, The Associated Press and Reuters.

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Nigeria Highlights Campaign Against Human Trafficking

Nigeria just finished a weeklong campaign against human trafficking to mark the World Day Against Trafficking in Persons, which is July 30. The U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime says Nigeria is a major source, transit and destination country in Africa for human trafficking but has a poor conviction rate for those responsible. Timothy Obiezu reports from Abuja, Nigeria.

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Nigeria Stuns Australia 3-2 at Women’s World Cup

Nigeria produced the first major shock of the Women’s World Cup as they stunned Australia 3-2 on Thursday to leave the co-hosts’ tournament hopes on thin ice and home fans reeling.

Asisat Oshoala volleyed into an open goal in the 72nd minute to seal a win for the Africans after Uchenna Kanu canceled out Emily van Egmond’s opener on the cusp of halftime, and Osinachi Ohale nudged Nigeria ahead after the break.

Australia cut the deficit to one goal when Alanna Kennedy nodded home a header in the 10th minute of stoppage time, but Nigeria rode out the final seconds to claim one of the finest wins in their history at the global showcase.

The victory in front of a huge crowd at Lang Park put Nigeria atop the Group B level with Canada on goals scored.

Nigeria coach Randy Waldrum said his players were in party mode in their changing room at Lang Park.

“I think they’re still singing and dancing right now,” the American told reporters. “I can’t get in there and get a word in edgewise.

“So many people didn’t believe in me, didn’t believe in the team. The one thing we’ve done is talk about believing in one another.”

The Matildas must beat Olympic champions Canada, held to a 0-0 draw by Nigeria in their opener, to be assured of making the last 16 at a tournament where they considered themselves among the major title threats.

Lacking striker Sam Kerr and attacker Mary Fowler because of injuries, Australia’s makeshift forward line peppered the Nigeria goal but saw a slew of chances fly wide and over the bar in both halves.

Van Egmond, brought into the starting 11 in place of Fowler, put Australia in front in the first minute of first half stoppage time with a crisp finish from a Caitlin Foord cross.

Australia’s joy was fleeting, though, with midfielder Rasheedat Ajibade setting up Nigeria’s equalizer with a deflected shot that landed at the feet of Kanu, who scored from close-range seconds before the interval.

Waldrum had his main strike threat Oshoala start on the bench in a selection surprise but two minutes after she came on, Nigeria had the lead.

Back from suspension, Ajibade made the difference again as she headed the ball toward the far post after a corner kick, allowing Ohale to force the ball over the line in the 65th minute.

Under pressure, Australia’s defense broke down seven minutes later as a mixup between goalkeeper Mackenzie Arnold and Kennedy allowed Oshoala to pounce.

Arnold came off her line and Oshoala swerved past her on the right to sneak in the volley from a tight angle.

Australia pushed hard in search of goals, and Kennedy popped in her late header at the far post, but Nigeria held on for a huge boost of confidence before the 11-time African champions face Ireland.

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Economists Say Zimbabwe Government Trying to Manipulate Currency as Election Gimmick

Economists in Zimbabwe say the government is artificially manipulating the country’s sinking currency in a bid to secure victory in next month’s general elections. Inflation and the weakness of the Zimbabwean dollar have become issues in the election, with the main opposition party saying it will abandon the currency if voted into office. Columbus Mavhunga reports from Harare. Camera: Blessing Chigwenhembe .

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Interview: Kirby Discusses US Dismissal of Russia’s Offer of Free Grain to Africa

The Biden administration is dismissing Russian President Vladimir Putin’s offer to supply free grain to several African nations whose leaders are attending a summit in St. Petersburg, and calling instead for a full Russian return to the agreement that allowed Ukraine to send products from their Black Sea ports. 

John Kirby, director of strategic communications for the National Security Council, also told VOA on Thursday that the White House is closely watching a coup in Niger, a West African nation seen as a close U.S. partner in the struggle against Islamic extremism and instability caused by violent Russian mercenaries on the continent. 

The interview has been edited for clarity and brevity.

VOA: John, thank you very much for your time. With Russia nixing the grain deal (to allow shipments out of Ukrainian ports), which is vital for the Global South, it turns out that two-thirds of African leaders are not attending the Russia-Africa summit in St. Petersburg. Does this poor showing mean that Putin’s food-weaponizing strategy, as you call it, is now playing against him?

John Kirby: I certainly can’t speak for the African leaders who decided to go or not to go, or what motivated them. I think the whole world, including African nations, are seeing, quite plainly, the effect of Russia’s decision to pull out of the grain deal, the effect that’s going to have on their economies, on food scarcity across the continent. And I hope that for those leaders who did show up, I hope Mr. Putin is honest with you. I hope he tells them, ‘I’m the reason why food prices are volatile. I’m the reason why you’re going to have more problems with starvation, and with access to food and grain in your countries.’ Because it is, there’s only one party responsible for the volatility we’re seeing, and for the fact that the grain is now going to be much harder to get out of Ukraine. And that’s Russia, that’s Mr. Putin.

VOA: Russia, at least publicly, is trying to downplay the impact of terminating the grain deal. And now Putin is offering, to at least six African countries, free grain and is trying to sort of replace Ukraine as a major food supplier to African nations. First of all, is it possible and how dangerous are those statements from Putin?

Kirby: On the face of it, it looks like a desperate attempt by Mr. Putin to try to paper over the impact that his decision to not extend the deal is going to have on African nations. Obviously, each of these sovereign nations have got to decide for themselves whether this new offer by Mr. Putin is legitimate and whether they want to accept it. But it’s increasingly clear that nations around the world and in the Global South are seeing this reckless, irresponsible decision by Putin for what it is.

VOA: As for alternative ways of executing the grain deal, besides ground transportation, are the U.S. and allies considering sending convoys to escort ships in the Black Sea?

Kirby: No, there’s no active discussion now about inserting warships into the Black Sea. I think we all understand that that will only escalate the tensions and increase the odds of conflict between the West and Russia and that’s not what we’re looking for. What we’re looking for is for the grain to get out. What we’re looking for is for the deal to get extended. And short of that we’re going to work with our allies and partners on other ground routes and maybe even river routes.

VOA: It seems like Bolivia is interested in obtaining (drone) technology from Iran to protect its borders, as they say. Do you find this concerning?

Kirby: We’re concerned about any export of Iranian technology that can be destabilizing. We have leveled many sanctions on Iran, some of them tied directly to their support for Russia and their export of this drone technology to Moscow. We urge all nations, no matter where they are, to carefully consider before they enter into defense arrangements with a nation like Iran.

VOA: Can you elaborate on the coup in Niger? What’s the administration’s strategy and next move to try to get the country back on the path towards democratic governance?

Kirby: Well, we also obviously want to see the democratically elected government fully respected and free to govern as the people of Niger want them to govern. We’re watching events there, very closely. … We continue to urge as we did yesterday, that President (Mohamed) Bazoum be released and be allowed to execute the office that he was voted into to represent the people of Niger. Our State Department colleagues are doing the best they can to keep people advised and aware of the situation on the ground. We advise Americans to be safe, safety first. 

VOA: Some American media outlets reported that President Biden ordered the transfer of evidence to the International Criminal Court to investigate Russian war crimes. Can you elaborate on that?

Kirby: President Biden has been exceedingly clear that we want to make sure that Russia is properly held accountable for war crimes and atrocities in Ukraine, that Russian forces and paramilitary forces and private contractors like the Wagner Group are clearly perpetrating on the people of Ukraine. And we’ve been clear from the very beginning that we’re going to help Ukraine. They have a special counsel who’s gathering evidence. We’re going to do what we can to help them collect that evidence, analyze that evidence and have it available for the appropriate international accountability mechanisms that might occur when the war is over. And that will include some coordination, some support of the work that the International Criminal Court is doing. 

VOA: Thank you very much. 

Kirby: Thank you. 

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Putin Promises Grain to Africans in Bid to Ease Isolation

Russia is hosting a summit of African countries as world tensions grow due to the increase in food prices following Moscow’s withdrawal from the grain shipment agreements signed with Ukraine and Turkey. In hosting the two-day gathering that began on Thursday, Russia is seeking to cast its image as a partner of the African continent. Marcus Harton narrates this report from the VOA Moscow Bureau. Camera: Ricardo Marquina

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College in Kenya Helps Refugees Learn Languages

Many refugees living in Nairobi speak neither English nor Swahili, the two most common tongues in Kenya. This language barrier poses a challenge as they try to integrate into society. Hubbah Abdi has more from Nairobi, in this report narrated by Salem Solomon.
Camera: Jimmy Makhulo

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West Africa Had 1,800 Terrorist Attacks in First 6 Months of 2023, Official Says

UNITED NATIONS — West Africa recorded more than 1,800 terrorist attacks in the first six months of the year resulting in nearly 4,600 deaths with dire humanitarian consequences, and a top regional official said Tuesday that’s just “a snippet of the horrendous impact of insecurity.”

Omar Touray told the U.N. Security Council that half a million people in the 15-nation Economic Community of West African States known as ECOWAS are refugees and nearly 6.2 million are internally displaced. If there isn’t an adequate international response to the 30 million people ECOWAS assesses need food right now, he said, the number of people in need will increase to 42 million by the end of next month.

Touray, who is president of the ECOWAS Commission, singled out the following drivers of insecurity in the region: terrorism, armed rebellion, organized crime, unconstitutional changes of government, illegal maritime activities, environmental crises and fake news.

He said the region is worried about the resurgence of the military, with three countries – Mali, Burkina Faso and Guinea – under military rule.

On Wednesday, Nigerien soldiers said they had overthrown the government of Niger President Mohamed Bazoum.

“The reversal of democratic gains runs parallel to insecurity that West Africa and the Sahel have been facing for some time now,” Touray said, and insecurity continues to inflict pain and suffering on millions of people.

For example, Touray said, the 4,593 deaths in terrorist attacks between January and June 30 include 2,725 in Burkina Faso, 844 in Mali, 77 in Niger and 70 in Nigeria. He added that terrorist attacks in Benin and Togo which have coastlines on the Atlantic Ocean are a “stark indication of the expansion of terrorism to littoral states, a situation that poses additional threat to the region.”

Touray said there have been a multiplicity of initiatives to tackle terrorism and insecurity which have had an impact on the ground, but there is a lack of coordination and ECOWAS wants to integrate the various initiatives into a regional plan of action.

ECOWAS military chiefs of staff have held consultations to strengthen a regional standby force “in a manner that will enable it to support member states in the fight against terrorism and against threats to constitutional order,” he said.

Touray said the military chiefs proposed two options, establishing a 5,000-strong brigade at an annual cost of $2.3 billion or deployment of troops on demand at an annual cost of $360 million.

He reiterated the African Union’s request for African peace operations to receive funding from the U.N. regular budget, to which all 193 U.N. member states contribute.

Touray said the military staff recommendations were made before Mali’s military junta demanded that the more than 15,000-strong U.N. peacekeeping force in the country leave, which was followed by the Security Council’s unanimous vote on June 30 to immediately end the mission. Mali has brought in mercenaries from Russia’s Wagner Group to help fight an Islamic insurgency.

Touray told the council that ECOWAS leaders “have reflected on the possible adverse impact of the withdrawal on the region and have decided to convene an extraordinary session on peace and security by the end of August.” Ahead of that meeting, he said, Benin’s president will visit Mali, Burkina Faso and Guinea and press for “an expeditious return to constitutional order.”

The Security Council was also briefed by the new head of the U.N. office for West Africa, Leonardo Santos Simão, who said the security situation in the central Sahel, especially the border region of Burkina Faso. Mali and Niger, “has deteriorated further, with multiple attacks against civilians and defense and security forces.” He also said “the southward expansion of insecurity remains a potent threat.”

Simão appealed for “robust and decisive support” for the ECOWAS action plan to eradicate terrorism in the region and for the African Union and efforts by countries to stem insecurity in the Sahel.

U.S. deputy ambassador Robert Wood told the council “the United States remains gravely concerned by democratic backsliding across the region” and is “deeply concerned by the spread of instability in coastal West Africa.”

He accused the Wagner Group of “committing human rights abuses and endangering the safety and security of civilians, peacekeepers and U.N. personnel.”

Russia’s deputy ambassador Anna Evstigneeva called the security situation in West Africa and the Sahel “difficult,” pointing to increased activity by fighters from the Islamic State extremist group, subversive activities by Boko Haram, and the spread of terrorist activity to coastal West African countries.

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Niger Soldiers Claim President Bazoum Has Been Overthrown

A group of soldiers claimed on national television in Niger on Wednesday that President Mohamed Bazoum has been removed from power.

“We, the defense and security forces … decided to put an end to the regime,” said Colonel Amadou Abdramane, shown seated and flanked by nine other officers wearing fatigues, reading a statement. His statement also mentioned “the deteriorating security situation and bad governance.”

Abdramane said all institutions of the republic are suspended, that the country’s borders are closed, and a nationwide curfew declared.

The soldiers warned against foreign intervention and said they would respect Bazoum’s well-being, Reuters reported. The Associated Press reported that it was unclear where Bazoum was at the time of the announcement or if he had resigned.

Hours earlier, members of Niger’s presidential guard surrounded the presidential palace in what African organizations called an attempted coup against Bazoum, the country’s democratically elected leader.

Niger’s capital, Niamey, remained calm as the situation unfolded Wednesday, though the U.S. Embassy has advised people in the city to limit unnecessary movements and avoid travel along the Rue de la Republique, where the palace is located.

The United States joined African leaders in calling for the release of Bazoum, who was being held inside the country’s presidential palace by members of his presidential guard.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken called for the immediate release of Bazoum late Wednesday. Earlier, he had said on Twitter, the social media site rebranded as X, that he has spoken with Bazoum.

“The U.S. condemns efforts to subvert Niger’s constitutional order by force and underscores that our partnership depends on the continuation of democratic governance,” he said.

National security adviser Jake Sullivan released a statement that said the United States is deeply concerned about developments in Niger.

“We strongly condemn any effort to detain or subvert the functioning of Niger’s democratically elected government, led by President Bazoum,” Sullivan said in the statement. “We specifically urge elements of the presidential guard to release President Bazoum from detention and refrain from violence.”

The West African bloc ECOWAS also condemned the events in Niger and called on what it described as coup plotters to free the president “immediately and without any condition.”

The statement from ECOWAS, known formally as the Economic Community of West African States, vowed to hold those involved in the plot responsible for the safety of the president, his family, members of the government and the general public.

Others condemning the apparent coup attempt included the chairman of the African Union commission, Faki Mahamat, U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres and former colonial power France, which has about 1,500 soldiers in Niger helping the government battle Islamist militants.

U.N. spokesperson Stephane Dujarric said Guterres had spoken to President Bazoum on Wednesday afternoon.

Guterres condemned “in the strongest terms any effort to seize power by force and to undermine democratic governance, peace and stability,” Dujarric said, adding, Guterres called “on all actors involved to exercise restraint and to ensure the protection of constitutional order.”

Local journalist Ousseini Issa told VOA’s French to Africa service the situation in Niamey is “confusing.”

“At first, the presidency was out of reach, including for agents who work there,” Issa said. “Then we got the news that soldiers based in Ouallam, about 100 kilometers from Niamey … have come to Niamey. The whole presidential area is cordoned off, all services are closed.”

Niger’s presidential administration said elements of the presidential guard launched what it called an anti-republican movement on Wednesday morning and “tried in vain to obtain the support of the National Armed Forces and the National Guard.”

Abdoul Aziz Garba Birimaka, Niger’s presidential special security adviser, told VOA’s French to Africa service the main question is what led to the attempted coup.

“Indeed, that is the question, what led us to this extreme? What is happening? Why? … How could all this have happened without any suspicions as we learn that someone who is supposed to protect is now holding you (against your will),” Birimak said. “Those are many questions that remain unanswered for the moment.”

The West African state is one of the region’s most unstable, experiencing four military coups since gaining independence from France in 1960, and a number of unsuccessful coup attempts.

Elements of the military launched a failed coup d’etat two days before Bazoum’s inauguration in April 2021.

VOA’s Carol Van Dam Falk and the French to Africa service contributed to this report. Some information is from Agence France-Presse and Reuters. 

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UN Condemns, Demands Repeal of Uganda’s Anti-Homosexuality Act

A U.N. watchdog committee condemned Uganda’s Anti-Homosexuality Act Wednesday and called on the government to repeal what it calls a harmful, discriminatory law, which criminalizes consenting sexual relations between adults of the same sex.

“We are as appalled as you are as to the content and the effects of this law,” said Jose Santos Pais, vice chair of the U.N. Human Rights Committee.

The 18-member committee, which monitors the implementation of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, issued findings of its latest four-week examination of Uganda and six other state parties to the convention.

In its final observations, the committee expressed “deep concern about discrimination and persecution based on sexual orientation and gender identity,” including the enactment of the Anti-Homosexuality Act in May 2023.

The committee said it has received reports of hate speech, outings and violence against lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex persons, “as well as reports of arbitrary arrests of LGBTI persons” based on the Penal Code Act and the Anti-Homosexuality Act.

Pais said the committee told the Ugandan delegation that it must address the discriminatory policies.

“And, particularly, to repeal the Anti-Homosexuality Act and section 145 of the penal code to end the criminalization of consensual sexual relations between adults of the same sex,” he said, adding that this act “forces, for instance, the death penalty for serial homosexuality.”

The last time the committee reviewed Uganda’s human rights record was in 2004. After the inordinately long 19-year delay, Uganda appeared before the committee with a high-powered, 15-person delegation of government officials to present its case.

Pais said the Ugandan delegation sought to justify the Anti-Homosexuality Act based on what it described as the cultural values and position of most Ugandans toward homosexuality, which it claimed was “unacceptance of same-sex relationships.”

“If I recall correctly, they particularly stressed that this was a decision of the legitimate authorities of Uganda,” said Pais. “And so, they have taken their stand. They will bear the responsibility for that.

“We are not convinced by these arguments, of course,” he added. “But that is how it goes.”

Among its recommendations, the committee called on the Ugandan government to amend the Equal Opportunities Commission Act to prohibit sexual orientation and gender identity as grounds for discrimination.

The 18 human rights experts urged the government to address discriminatory attitudes and stigma toward LGBTQ persons among government officials and the public “through comprehensive awareness-raising and sensitization activities” and to ensure remedies for LGBTQ persons “who are subjected to discrimination, hate speech, violence or arbitrary arrest.”

Western medical and psychiatric associations regard sexual orientation as innate and part of normal human diversity. LGBTQ rights defenders say the proportion of sexual minorities remains constant from country to country — including those with punitive laws.

The committee’s next “constructive dialogue” with Uganda will take place in 2031 in Geneva. Pais said that during the interim the committee would keep tabs on what the Ugandan government was doing to end its discriminatory policies.

“We have a follow-up procedure,” he said. “The fact that we highlight three main concerns for each state-party means that in four years’ time, we will get back to the country to ask what they have been doing regarding these particular recommendations.

“So, the state-party will have to provide its answers … and then we prepare a report, which is made public, and in which we assess gradings for the intervention of the state parties on the recommendations that we have issued.

“And if by any chance in four years’ time the state-party has not repealed the law, most probably the grade that they receive from us will be a very nasty one,” he said.

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Ghana Abolishes Capital Punishment  

Ghana’s parliament has voted to abolish the death penalty. The move comes three decades after the last death sentence was carried out in the West African nation. Rights group Amnesty International has hailed the Tuesday vote, describing it as a “landmark decision,” and urged President Nana Akufo-Addo to sign it into law.

Under current law, the death penalty in Ghana can be imposed after convictions for genocide, piracy, smuggling, murder or high treason. Under the 1960 Criminal and Other Offences Act, the punishment can be carried out by hanging or by firing squad.

However, the West African country has not executed anyone in 30 years, and this week, parliament approved a bill to eliminate capital punishment completely.

Francis-Xavier Sosu, the opposition MP who sponsored the bill, tells VOA the development is a milestone for Ghana’s democracy and called on President Akufo-Addo to commute the sentence of those on death row now to life imprisonment.

“This is a very good news for Ghana because it adds to our democratic credentials and adds to our human rights record as a nation, particularly when since 1993 we haven’t been able to use the death penalty as a means of punishing offending persons and people who were condemned to serve death sentences were only kept in the condemned cells. So, I think it’s a win for Ghana,” he said.

Since 1977, Amnesty International has been campaigning for the global abolition of the death penalty. Reacting to news that Ghana’s parliament voted to abolish the practice, the international rights group issued a statement saying, “it is a victory for all those who have tirelessly campaigned to consign this cruel punishment to history and strengthen the protection of the right to life.”

However, not everyone in Ghana welcomes the lawmakers’ decision. Harry Agbanu, a religious lecturer at the University of Ghana, said the abolition of the capital punishment will be an incentive for people to take the law into their hands.

“The floodgate has been opened for violent, criminal activities by some members of society, and that is unfortunate. I’m praying that the opportunity is not being created for people to take the law into their own hands by engaging in mob action. There has not been any sound argument in favor of the abolishment of the death penalty,” he said.

For his part, Alexander Afenyo-Markin, a lawyer and a governing New Patriotic Party MP, said the decision is not meant to embolden criminals but rather to uphold more humane ways of dealing with criminals.

“This is not to say that those who have taken it upon themselves to take the lives of others are being encouraged to do so. God gives us life and under no circumstances should a person’s life be taken nearly [merely?] because of commission of such an offense. In its place we have introduced a life imprisonment,” he said.

The total number of people facing the death penalty in Ghana at the moment stands at 176, including six women, according to prison authority’s records.

President Akufo-Addo is expected to assent to the bill in the coming weeks, administration sources say. Ghana now joins a league of 29 out of 55 African countries that have abolished the death penalty.

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What Africa and Russia Have to Gain From Summit

JOHANNESBURG — African leaders, including South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, are heading to St. Petersburg this week for the second Russia-Africa Summit, as an isolated Moscow looks to shore up its influence in a key region.

Analysts told VOA that high on the agenda will be President Vladimir Putin’s nixing of an arrangement that allowed Ukrainian grain to reach foreign markets.

Putin will be under pressure to reassure them after he terminated a deal allowing safe passage of Ukrainian grain exports earlier this month — a move criticized by the African Union Commission as something that could negatively affect food security, especially in Africa.

The move has riled African governments, with one senior Kenyan official saying the axing of the agreement is “a stab [in] the back.”

Wandile Sihlobo, chief economist of the Agricultural Business Chamber of South Africa, said the decision not to renew the deal has already caused an increase in global food prices, which could hurt parts of Africa.

“Our very hope is that as the African leaders go to the Russia-Africa Summit, they can actually be able to have a much more sound conversation about the Black Sea grain deal — amongst other things that of course will be negotiated there — so that this can go back on the table and the exports can go,” Sihlobo said.

Earlier this week Putin himself sought to reassure African countries, relations with which have become increasingly important given Russia’s isolation by the West since its invasion of Ukraine last year. Many African countries have been hesitant to take sides in the conflict.

In a statement, Putin promised that Russia could replace the Ukrainian grain itself “both on a commercial and free-of-charge basis.”

Cameron Hudson, an analyst with the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, said Putin is likely to use the St. Petersburg meeting, which starts Thursday, to appeal to African leaders’ direct needs.

“Obviously he’s trying to win back some friends from his exit from the grain deal,” Hudson said, “and also show that he has the power to kind of cut bilateral deals with African countries that put them frankly more in his need, which is exactly the position that he wants to be in.”

Analysts have noted that Russia has an outsized influence in Africa comparative to its trade and investment clout. This is sometimes because of the former Soviet Union’s support for the region’s 20th century liberation movements, and because of shared anti-Western sentiment.

At the first Russia-Africa Summit in 2019, Putin vowed to double trade with Africa to $40 billion over five years. Instead, it has been sitting at about $18 billion a year, compared with China’s record $282 billion worth of trade with Africa.

Despite its relatively minor economic clout, Moscow is keen to use the summit to project political heft, said Denys Reva, a researcher for the Institute of Security Studies in South Africa.

“Despite the fact that the level of investment has been low, the level of trade has been low, Russia has very cleverly learned, or realized, some of the problems that exist between Western states, the European Union and the U.S., and Africa, and has positioned itself, in a way, to separate itself from these traditional partners,” Reva said.

While the summit aims to position Russia as a global player, Russian media reported that fewer than half of the African countries attending are sending their heads of state.

Analysts also said the issue of the Wagner Group — the mercenary group that recently attempted a mutiny in Russia and which has operations in several African nations — will likely be raised on the summit’s sidelines.

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1,000 South Sudanese Per Day Returning Home Due to Sudan Conflict

The U.N says more than 100,000 South Sudanese living in Sudan have returned to their home country since Sudan’s conflict broke out in April. That number is growing rapidly, with an average of 1,000 more arriving each day. Reporter Henry Wilkins reports from Renk, South Sudan.

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Tension Between Sudan, Kenya’s Ruto Impedes IGAD Mediation Effort in Sudan

Analysts say a spat between Sudan and Kenya is hurting regional efforts to mediate an end to the war in Sudan. This week a Sudanese general accused Kenyan President William Ruto of favoring the paramilitary forces battling the Sudanese army, after Ruto suggested deploying East African peacekeeping troops to Sudan.

Anwar Ibrahim Ahmed, an Ethiopian political analyst who monitors the Horn of Africa region, says a recent uptick in tensions between Sudanese army leaders and the Kenyan government could hinder efforts to restore peace and stability in Sudan.

He adds that members of the East African bloc IGAD will have to consider a grievance raised by Sudan over Kenyan President William Ruto.

Ruto leads an IGAD sub-committee, called the Quartet Group, tasked with mediating an end to Sudan’s 3½-month-old war. Sudan’s government has repeatedly accused Ruto of having business ties with the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces. Ruto denies the allegations.

However, Sudanese leaders have refused to cooperate with the Quartet Group until he is replaced.

Ibrahim said IGAD is supposed to have a speedy response to Sudan’s rejection of Ruto’s role as head of the Quartet Group, and said IGAD should have intervened with a new mechanism in response to the demands of Sudanese military leaders, in order to prevent further tensions.

On July 10, the Ruto-led Quartet Group proposed deploying a regional coalition of peacekeeping troops in Sudan to protect civilians and secure humanitarian corridors.

Sudanese army leaders rejected the move as an “invasion.”

Addressing the Sudanese Engineering Corps over the weekend in Omdurman, Lieutenant General Yasser al-Atta, assistant commander-in-chief of the Sudan Armed Forces, criticized Ruto for interfering with Sudanese internal affairs.

He said the Sudanese army is capable of defending its own country and routing what he described as armed “mercenaries.”

Al-Atta challenged Ruto to face the Sudanese army.

“President Ruto should leave East Africa reserve forces alone, and instead he should come along with the Kenyan army to face us,” al-Atta said.

On Monday, Kenyan Foreign Minister Alfred Mutua responded cautiously to the remarks, which were reported by the TRT Africa channel, saying that Kenya has yet to get the full context of what al-Atta said.

Mutua indicated the government cannot rely on information shared through social media to respond to an issue with diplomatic implications.

“We cannot verify the authenticity of the video or whether the Sudanese army officer actually made these statements,” he said.

Zaheer Jhanda, a member of Kenya’s national parliament, condemned al-Atta’s statement.

In a video shared on social media and seen by VOA, Jhanda said Ruto’s intention is to ensure that peace prevails in Sudan and people have access to aid.

He said Kenya has no interest in who governs Sudan but the people must be protected.

“Our business with Sudan is not about who leads Sudan, our business is to ensure that the humanitarian corridor is open so that the people in Sudan should not die. They should be given food; they should be given medicine.”

Mekki El Moghrabi, a Sudanese former diplomat to the U.S., downplayed the tensions between the two countries, saying Kenya has enough internal issues to solve.

He said the statement of al-Atta was not a surprise to many Sudanese because of the long military rule in Sudan.

“Maybe for Kenyan people this is new. But for Sudanese; because they have long history with war, it is normal for army leader to defend the country by strong speeches,” he said.

The United Nations said more than 3 million people have been displaced due to the conflict in Sudan both internally and across the border into neighboring countries.

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Wildfires Bring Death and Destruction to Sun-Scorched Mediterranean

Large areas of the Mediterranean sweltered under an intense summer heat wave on Tuesday, and firefighters battled to put out blazes across the region. 

In Algeria, at least 34 people have died. In Croatia, flames came within 12 kilometers (7.5 miles) of the medieval town of Dubrovnik late on Tuesday. 

Greece has been particularly hard hit, with authorities evacuating more than 20,000 people in recent days from homes and resorts in the south of the holiday island of Rhodes.  

Close to 3,000 tourists had returned home by plane as of Tuesday, according to figures from the Transport Ministry, and tour operators have canceled upcoming trips. 

Two firefighting pilots died when their plane, which had been dropping water, crashed on a hillside close to the town of Karystos on the island of Evia, east of Athens.  

Italy suffered a twin pounding from the elements when severe storms battered the north, killing a woman and a 16-year-old girl scout, while southern regions sweltered. In the south, a bedridden 98-year-old man died when fire swept through his home. 

Fires also swept across Portugal and Spain’s Gran Canaria. 

In the United States, the ocean waters around South Florida soared to typical hot tub levels this week, according to government data. A weather buoy in the waters of Manatee Bay recorded a high of 38.44 degrees Celsius (101.19 degrees Fahrenheit) late Monday afternoon, according to National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration data. On land, heat warnings were issued for stretches of the desert southwest, in central Texas and north into the Midwest.  

Extreme weather throughout July has caused havoc across the planet, with record temperatures in China, the U.S. and southern Europe sparking forest fires, water shortages and a rise in heat-related hospital admissions. 

Without human-induced climate change, the events this month would have been “extremely rare,” according to a study by World Weather Attribution, a global team of scientists that examines the role played by climate change in extreme weather. 

The heat, with temperatures topping 40 degrees Celsius (104 Fahrenheit), is well in excess of what usually attracts tourists who flock to southern European beaches. 

The high temperatures and parched ground sparked wildfires in countries on both sides of the Mediterranean. 

Several dozen firefighters were using aircraft to battle a wildfire that had broken out close to Nice international airport in southern France. 

In north Africa, Algeria was fighting to contain devastating forest fires along its Mediterranean coast in a blaze which has already killed at least 34 people. Fanned by strong winds, fires also forced the closure of two border crossings with neighboring Tunisia. 

Wildfires also broke out in the countryside around Syria’s Mediterranean port city, Latakia, with the authorities using army helicopters to try to put them out. 

Saving the hotel 

Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis said his country was one of those on the front line against climate change, with no easy solution. 

“I will state the obvious: In the face of what the entire planet is facing, especially the Mediterranean, which is a climate change hot spot, there is no magical defense mechanism. If there was, we would have implemented it,” Mitsotakis said. 

The fires will deal a blow to a tourist industry that is a mainstay of the Greek economy. It accounts for 18% of gross domestic product and one in five jobs, with an even greater contribution on islands such as Rhodes. 

 

Lefteris Laoudikos, whose family owns a small hotel in the Rhodes seaside resort town of Kiotari, one of the epicenters of a fire over the weekend, said its 200 guests — mainly from Germany, Britain and Poland — evacuated in rental cars. 

He said his father, cousin and two others were trying to douse the flames using a nearby water tank. 

“My father saved the hotel. I called him, and he didn’t want to leave. He told me, ‘If I leave, there will be no hotel.'” 

‘Silent killer’ 

Scientists have described extreme heat as a “silent killer” taking a heavy toll on the poor, the elderly and those with existing medical conditions.  

Research published this month said as many as 61,000 people may have died in Europe’s sweltering heat waves last summer, suggesting preparedness efforts are falling fatally short. 

The heat has also caused large-scale crop damage and livestock losses, the World Weather Attribution scientists said, with U.S. corn and soybean crops, Mexican cattle, southern European olives, as well as Chinese cotton all severely affected. 

Residents of Milan were surveying the mess after the dramatic overnight storm and winds of over 100 kilometers per hour.  

“It all happened around 4 or 5 a.m. (0200-0300 GMT) this morning. It was very short but very intense. It knocked down several trees … with the wind gusts they took off and broke up,” witness Roberto Solfrizzo, 66, told Reuters. 

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Somali Parliament Speaker Suspects ‘Traitors’ May Have Facilitated Bombing

The speaker of Somalia’s lower house of Parliament has strongly condemned Monday’s “cowardly, merciless and unreligious” bombing of a military base that claimed the lives of 25 soldiers and injured more than 70 others. 

Sheikh Adan Mohamed Nur, popularly known as Adan Madobe, said he suspects “traitors” may have facilitated the bombing. 

“I know among the officers there are good, hard-working, dignified people but that traitors have facilitated this. I suspect that a lot. It’s intolerable,” he said in a video posted by state media. 

The al-Shabab militant group claimed responsibility for the attack. In a statement on Telegram, al-Shabab said one of its suicide bombers carried out the strike. 

Suicide vest used

The bomber detonated a suicide vest as the soldiers lined up after breakfast. The soldiers had been recently deployed to Mogadishu for additional training and re-equipping, officials confirmed.  

Nur, who is now the acting president as President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud and Prime Minister Hamza Abdi Barre are away from the country, ordered a “rigorous” investigation into the matter. 

“I order the officers and all the security personnel in charge of the security, who are honest, to rigorously investigate this,” he said. 

“The criminals who are hiding among the army who are facilitating for the enemy must be apprehended and brought before justice. … I want a satisfactory answer,” Nur said.

Meanwhile, two Somali security officers told VOA that agents investigating the bombing have arrested at least three military officers, including a colonel, in connection with the incident. 

The officers, who asked not to be identified because they are not allowed to publicly speak to the media, insisted that the three officers are suspects only, and that they will be questioned about how the suicide bomber managed to access the base. 

Highly fortified base

One of the officers insisted that the bomber was not a member of the Somali National Army.  

But a second officer said that in addition to the soldiers targeted, the base was being used by different units, including personnel from the land forces and military transport sectors of the army. 

“It’s possible the bomber exploited that lack of knowledge among the soldiers at the base,” he said. 

Nur said he wants answers as to how the bomber was able to access a highly fortified base. 

“This is not a place you can just show up. It’s not a normal place,” he said. 

He said it’s “disappointing” that soldiers who are ready to sacrifice their lives for the country have been “massacred” at their base. 

“If they had been killed [on] the battleground, the Somali people would have just said, ‘May Allah bless their souls.’ But it’s disappointing they have been massacred [on] their base,” he said. 

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Kenya Opposition Leader Raila Odinga Says Protests Will Continue

Kenyan opposition leader Raila Odinga says a wave of protests against high taxes and the rising cost of living will continue, despite a cancellation of Wednesday’s demonstrations. While he didn’t say when the protests will resume, Odinga accused the government of using brutality against protesters and said officials are not willing to sit down and negotiate a way out of the crisis.

Addressing the international media on Tuesday in Nairobi, Odinga said the issue is no longer a party issue but a Kenyan issue.

“The most important discussion in our country today is the high taxes, rising cost of living and the ensuing protests,” he said. “Although the tax protests have been initiated by Azimio, it has since gone beyond the party. After the passage of the finance act, Kenyans have defied party, political divides and united to resist punitive taxation and demand the lowering of the costs of basic commodities.”

The Azimio la Umoja One Kenya Alliance leader said he didn’t anticipate the treatment people received from the police, noting that violence should never be used to disperse protests.

“The unprecedented horrors of police brutality against the protesters. With constitutional guarantee for protests, we never imagine that police would outlaw protests, confront protesters, and kill so many as is the case now,” Odinga said.

In a statement on Tuesday, the interior ministry said that 305 law enforcement officers have been injured and one has died while protecting lives and property. In addition, more than 850 businesses were broken into and looted.

Last week, Human Rights Watch accused Kenyan government officials of using hostile rhetoric against protesters and asked Kenyan officials to respect the demonstrators’ rights to assembly and to peaceful protests. The organization said it has documented 16 people killed, either shot or beaten, by police between March and May.

Collins Orono, a child rights activist, said what’s happening is unfortunate.

“This time around has actually [gone] too far because to an extent where tear gas can be lobbed into schools and in people’s houses and people can be dragged from their houses and all that, that tells you that the cops and the government have been emboldened enough to continue doing this,” Orono said.

But Orono also put blame on both sides, saying: “I think it all starts with our leaders recognizing that the nation is bigger than them; our politicians recognizing that we have over 50 million Kenyans and the politicians are very few — we’ve given a lot of power to the political class to the point that they can do whatever they want, at all costs; whether we are losing lives or not, whether children are being tear gassed or not, they don’t care.”

The Azimio political alliance said about 50 people have been killed since the protests started in March, but official numbers bring it down to about 20 people.

Police insist the protests are illegal and arrested 300 demonstrators last week.

Odinga said he doesn’t want to be part of this government, but the government is not serious about negotiating a solution. He said there’s even been outside intervention recently to mediate the crisis.

“The president from Tanzania came here two weeks ago at the invitation of President [William] Ruto to mediate and she was kept waiting not from our side, we were available, but the other side wasn’t available. She spent two nights here, all in vain,” Odinga said.

He also said other people have tried, and Ruto is the one who is resisting.

Odinga said he called off Wednesday’s planned demonstrations to pray for those who have died and were injured during the protests. He didn’t say when the protests will resume.

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16 Killed as Homes Hit in Sudan Air, Artillery Strikes 

Air strikes and artillery barrages from Sudan’s warring generals killed at least 16 people in a Khartoum neighborhood on Tuesday, a neighborhood group reported.

After more than 100 days of war, the latest bombardments added to a toll of at least 3,900 killed nationwide.

“Sixteen citizens died today in this senseless war” when shells hit civilian homes in the Ombada area of Khartoum’s northwest, the neighborhood group said.

It is one of many pro-democracy “resistance committees” that have cobbled together supplies over the patchy internet, land lines, or by risking their own lives to venture out since the war began.

The total number of casualties from the latest strikes was still unclear, the committee added in statements provided to AFP.

Mohamed Mansour, a local resident, told AFP he “helped pull eight bodies” from the rubble of homes destroyed by the blasts.

“Four people were killed in the house next door, including two children,” said another resident, Hagar Youssef.

The war that began on April 15 between army chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and his former deputy Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, commander of the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), has uprooted more than 3.3 million other people from their homes.

Much of the fighting has taken place in densely populated neighborhoods of the capital Khartoum, where residents on Tuesday reported a renewed RSF attack on the army’s ammunition corps in the city’s south.

Pro-democracy lawyers said late Monday that civilians in the city’s south and center were again being “forcibly evacuated from their homes, to be used by fighters” as bases.

Mediators from the United States and Saudi Arabia have previously accused the RSF of “occupation of civilian homes, private businesses, and public buildings.”

‘Catastrophic humanitarian crisis’

For more than three months, millions have been rationing water and electricity in the stifling heat, shielding their families from blasts and unable to reach the few health care facilities still functioning.

The World Health Organization warned Tuesday of the “catastrophic humanitarian crisis” facing Sudan, “with more than 67 percent of the country’s hospitals out of service.”

Health care and aid facilities have themselves frequently come under attack or been looted by both forces.

Fighters have also been accused of rampant sexual violence, reports which the WHO said it was “appalled by.”

Alleged sexual and gender-based crimes are a focus of a new investigation announced earlier this month by the International Criminal Court into alleged war crimes in Sudan.

The WHO reiterated demands for an urgent response to help prevent outbreaks of disease during the rainy season, which began in June and brought increased reports of malaria, cholera and other water-borne diseases — particularly in remote areas.

“Outbreaks are likely to claim more lives unless urgent action is taken to halt their spread,” said Ahmed al-Mandhari and Matshidiso Moeti, WHO regional directors for the Eastern Mediterranean and Africa, respectively.

On Monday, the U.N. children’s agency said it had documented “2,500 severe violations of children’s rights — an average of at least one an hour” since the fighting began, with at least 435 children killed and 2,025 injured.

More than half of Sudan’s 48 million people are in need of aid and protection, the U.N. says, but only a fraction of those have received assistance because of the security challenges, bureaucratic hurdles and other obstacles cited by aid groups.

The U.N.’s World Food Program said it has reached more than 1.4 million people with emergency food aid as needs intensify.

Civilian talks

Although there is no sign an end to the war is near, peace attempts have taken place.

The Forces for Freedom and Change, Sudan’s main civilian bloc, attended a two-day civilian meeting, which began Monday in Cairo and sought to “restore the path of peace and stop the war in Sudan,” according to FFC spokesman Jaafar Hassan.

The FFC was ousted from power in a 2021 coup orchestrated by Burhan and Daglo, and which derailed the country’s transition to democracy.

The two generals later fell out in a feud that exploded into war.

US- and Saudi-brokered cease-fires were systematically violated, before Washington and Riyadh adjourned talks.

A quartet from East African regional bloc IGAD has also sought to mediate, but with little success.

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Botswana Churches Urge Parliament to Vote Against Bill on Same-Sex Relations

Tensions are rising in Botswana between the LGBTQ and Christian communities after members of the evangelical church community organized a march Saturday against a bill that could decriminalize same-sex relations.

A 2019 High Court ruling supported LGBTQ rights in Botswana, sparking a backlash by conservative groups.

The ongoing tensions come ahead of a National Assembly debate that is expected to begin this week on the controversial bill.  

But members of the LGBTQ community are not pleased with efforts by religious leaders to influence legislators. 

 Thato Moruti is the chief executive of the group Lesbians, Gays and Bisexuals of Botswana, or LEGABIBO. 

“I believe that the church might be starting a very dangerous trend by manipulating the legislators and the courts,” said Moruti. “It is important that we understand that the church’s move may be causing some sort of destabilization of democracy in the country because they are trying to push this Christian fundamentalism on Batswana.” 

Moruti said that there is a need to find common ground instead of confrontation between the church and the LGBTQ community. 

“It is important that we push for non-combative approaches especially with all organizations and institutions,” said Moruti. “This, I believe, will allow for trust with stakeholders and also foster progress on common justice goals. It is also important to focus on issues of prevention and not redress. It is very important that we seek to prevent human rights abuses before they occur.”    

‘Action will open floodgates of immorality”         

   

Handing a petition to parliament during the weekend protest, Evangelical Fellowship of Botswana chairperson Pulafela Siele urged legislators to vote against the measure.      

   

“The EFB believes that if parliament is to act as required by the bill, such an action will open floodgates of immorality and abomination in the nation such as same-sex marriage, changes of school curriculum to teach our children such practices,” said Siele.          

   

Botswana’s High Court ruled in 2019 that laws criminalizing consensual same-sex relations were unconstitutional. Tshiamo Rantao, the lawyer who represented the LGBTQ community in the 2019 case, said parliament has no mandate to debate the bill, but instead must respect the judgement. 

But legislator Wynter Mmolotsi, who received the petition on behalf of the National Assembly, told VOA it is now up to parliament to decide. 

   

“The laws that we make are for the good governance of the republic and therefore I do not think the court can tell parliament what to do,” said Mmolotsi. “What parliament can do is to make laws that are guided by the values of the country, the values of the people. If parliament wants to agree with the court, they can make the law to align, and if they want to disagree with the court, they are also free to come up with a law that will reflect the values of the nation.”                   

There has been a pushback against gay rights in some African countries, with protests held in Malawi last week, while Uganda has passed stiffer anti-LGBTQ laws. 

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Lagos State to Bury More Than 100 Killed in Anti-Police Brutality Protests

Authorities in Nigeria’s Lagos state have acknowledged that at least 103 protesters died in clashes with security forces during 2020 protests over police brutality, a higher figure than previously given.

State officials also said they will conduct a mass burial for the bodies, which they say haven’t been claimed by relatives despite public announcements.

Survivors and rights groups accuse authorities of trying to cover up the true extent of the casualties and crimes committed by security forces and are calling for an investigation. 

Human rights group Amnesty International is among those calling for a new probe into the October 2020 deaths of protesters and told VOA Monday that it is investigating the government’s claims. 

On Sunday, the Lagos state government said it plans to bury 103 people who died in the state during the various protests and relieve overcrowding in the morgue. 

The official statement came after a memo about the planned mass burial was leaked to the media. Activists are now accusing authorities of trying to cover up the extent of the casualties at the Lekki toll gate, the site of a heated clash between protesters and military forces.  

Authorities say bodies unclaimed

In response to critics, Nigerian government officials said Monday the bodies to be buried were rounded up from various clashes that erupted across the state, not solely at the toll gate. 

Lagos state officials said critics are trying to “misinform the public, stir sentiment and cause disaffection against the Lagos State government.” 

Authorities said the measure was a routine exercise to decongest the public morgue and that the bodies remained unclaimed for nearly three years after being deposited there despite public notices. Authorities added that none of the bodies were retrieved from the Lekki toll gate incident. 

Aminu Hayatu is Amnesty International’s lead conflict and crises researcher in Nigeria. 

“The leaked memo has really triggered our intention to revisit this case of police brutality, especially [given] the fact that we’re the first that came out to expose during the End SARS [protests] the nature of [the] army’s assault on protesters and the eventual killing of some of them which was denied by the Nigerian government,” said Hayatu. “We have just been vindicated by the leaked memo.” 

Lekki toll gate protest

In October 2020, thousands of young Nigerians poured onto the streets for two weeks to demand an end to what they called “systemic police brutality” and the notorious SARS unit of the police. 

The protests climaxed at the Lekki toll gate in Lagos on October 20 before security forces arrived and opened fire on protesters. 

In late 2020, during a hearing of an independent panel of inquiry, the military initially denied being at the toll gate, then later admitted soldiers were deployed — who fired blanks in the air— to disperse the crowd.  

End SARS activist Obianuju Iloanya cast doubt on authorities’ claim that the newly discovered victims were not from the toll gate shooting. 

“All of this is a cover up, if we check we might even see bullet wounds on them proving that they were victims of [the] 2020 massacre,” said Illoanya. “So this is a clear case of covering up for the police and inadequacies of the government. This was a figure not made public for a long time, it is unfair, it is unjust.” 

Hayatu said human rights must always be respected by authorities. 

“Amnesty is insisting that human rights must be respected in all the ramifications whenever the government has a business to engage the civilians,” said Hayatu.

Nigerian officials had previously said 51 civilians and 18 security personnel were killed during the unrest in Lagos and other parts of the country. 

The government officially disbanded the SARS police unit in 2020 — but activists say the unit continues to operate in secret, a claim that VOA could not independently confirm.  

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Congolese Soldier Accused of Killing 13 Arrested

A Congolese soldier accused of gunning down 13 people, most of them children, in the northeast of the conflict-plagued country has been arrested and will stand trial Tuesday, a military source said. 

According to witnesses to the killings in Nyakova village on Saturday, the suspect couldn’t bear the fact that his own child had been buried in his absence. 

Nyakova is a fishing village in the Djugu territory, about 65 kilometers (40 miles) east of Bunia, the capital of Ituri province, one of eastern DR Congo’s violence hotspots where deadly attacks are common. 

The angry soldier had returned home and “fired on civilians” gathered “at the place of mourning, on the grounds that… his child had died and been buried without him being informed,” army spokesperson Lieutenant Jules Ngongo told AFP. 

The death toll of 13 was said to include nine children, including two of the soldier’s own offspring, the spokesperson said. 

Magistrate Colonel Joseph Makelele, senior military prosecutor at the Ituri province military court, told AFP that the 32-year-old suspect named Babby Ndombe Opetu would be prosecuted “for murder and violation of orders” Tuesday. 

Ngongo said the suspect was a noncommissioned member of the 332nd naval force based at Tchomia, just two kilometers (1.24 miles) from Nyakova on the shores of Lake Albert bordering Uganda. 

The military spokesman said the suspect had fled the scene of the attack and gone into hiding in Tchomia, where he was found late Sunday and “handed over to the courts for trial.” 

A civil society source said Sunday that a 14th victim had died due to his injuries, but that has not been confirmed. According to another source, a neighbor, panicked by the gunfire, suffered a heart attack and died. 

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Kenyan Activists Seek Climate Change Protections Amid Record Drought, Flooding

Conservationists in Kenya are petitioning the state to enact solutions to avoid the worst impacts from climate change, including record droughts and flooding. Activists say directives such as Kenya’s lifting of a ban on logging is reversing gains made to lessen extreme weather linked to climate change. Victoria Amunga reports from Nairobi, Kenya. Produced by: Jimmy Makhulo

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US Sanctions Malian Officials Over Alleged Ties to Wagner Group

The United States imposed sanctions on three Malian officials Monday, including the minister of defense, over accusations they facilitated the deployment and expansion of the Russian Wagner Group’s activities in the country.

The U.S. Treasury Department said it imposed sanctions on Mali’s Minister of Defense, Sadio Camara, who it said made several trips to Russia in 2021 to solidify an agreement between the Wagner Group and the Malian transition government to deploy the mercenary force to the West African country.

Also targeted in Monday’s action was Mali’s Chief of Staff of the Air Force, Alou Boi Diarra, and Malian Air Force Deputy Chief of Staff, Adama Bagayoko, the department said in a statement.

“These officials have made their people vulnerable to the Wagner Group’s destabilizing activities and human rights abuses while paving the way for the exploitation of their country’s sovereign resources to the benefit of the Wagner Group’s operations in Ukraine,” Treasury Undersecretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence Brian Nelson said.

Both Russia and Mali have said Russian fighters in the African nation are not mercenaries but trainers helping local troops fight a decade-long insurgency by Islamist militants.

In June, the United States said it was concerned about the Wagner Group’s destabilizing activities in Africa and accused the leader of the mercenary force of helping to engineer the departure of U.N. peacekeepers from Mali.

White House National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby told reporters last month that the U.S. has information indicating Mali’s transition government has paid more than $200 million to Wagner since late 2021.

In May, Washington also said the Wagner Group may be working through Mali and other countries to hide its efforts to acquire military equipment for use in Ukraine.

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