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  1. Nine killed in Ethiopia attack

    Ameyu Etana

    BBC Afaan Oromo

    The authorities in Ethiopia have blamed fighters from the banned Oromo Liberation Army for an attack that killed nine people in the outskirts of the capital, Addis Ababa, on Wednesday

    The victims included people working on a bridge construction in Metta Wolkitte district, 100km (62 miles) from the capital, a local administrator, Dirirsa Wakuma, told the BBC.

    A street trader who was selling coffee was also killed, he added.

    "The bandits were repeatedly threatening them to stop working, but he continued as he did not want to lose his job," a relative of one of the victims said.

    Such incidents are not uncommon as federal troops continue to battle armed groups in the western and southern part of the Oromia region.

    Officials have said that despite growing security concerns, the incidents would not affect Monday's election.

  2. Concern over missing girls in Nairobi

    A woman stands on a street corner in Eastleigh, a predominantly Muslim Somali neighborhood on August 18, 2009 in Nairobi, Kenya
    Image caption: Eastleigh is a popular neighbourhood for Kenyan Somalis

    Two Kenyan MPs have expressed concern after three girls from the Somali community went missing.

    Two of the girls have been reported missing since Tuesday and a photo of a wounded girl was shared on social media.

    A video of another girl saying her abductors wanted up to $50,000 (£36,000) in ransom was also shared online, BBC Somali reported.

    MP Yusuf Hassan, representing the Eastleigh district in the capital Nairobi, where the girls are from, termed the disappearances as "kidnappings" and urged the police boss to follow up the investigations.

    View more on twitter

    Local media report that police have footage of two of the girls leaving a shoe shop in the Eastleigh area.

  3. Kiir: creating unified South Sudan army not easy

    Nichola Mandil

    Juba

    President Salva Kiir Myardit and Riek Machar
    Image caption: President Kiir (R) and Mr Machar agreed that the government should spped up the graduation of the 83,000 strong unified force

    South Sudan’s President Salva Kiir Myardit has said that it was "not easy" to form a unified army between former foes, national broadcaster South Sudan Broadcasting Corporation (SSBC) has reported.

    “For you to organise the army made up of soldiers who used to fight one another, you need time,” President Kiir told army generals during the opening of a three-day consultative meeting of the South Sudan’s People’s Defence Forces (SSPDF) in the capital, Juba, on Thursday.

    A unified army was among a list of agreements in a peace deal signed by President Kiir and his former rival, Riek Machar, now first vice-president, in 2018.

    Earlier this week, President Kiir and Mr Machar agreed that the government should speed up the graduation of the 83,000-strong unified force.

    Observers fear that if it's not implemented it could trigger conflict in the country.

  4. Egypt jails airport worker for taking photos of women

    BBC World Service

    An Egyptian court has sentenced an official at Cairo airport to three years in jail for secretly photographing women passengers.

    One of them filed a complaint after noticing the man taking shots of intimate parts of her body.

    An investigation of his phone found that he had subjected nearly 20 women to similar treatment.

  5. Video content

    Video caption: 'On the march with Olu's Army': Scotland's Nigerian supporters back team for Wembley win
  6. Ethiopian couple forego wedding party for Tigray aid

    Teklemariam Bekit

    BBC News Tigrinya

    A child lying on top of aid supplies
    Image caption: There are growing concerns about the humanitarian crisis in Tigray

    An Ethiopian couple has donated funds they had set aside for a lavish wedding to buy food and other supplies for people displaced in war-torn Tigray region.

    Bride Meaza Tadese and groom Kalab Belay gave away $8,500 (£6,100).

    "Our donation will not solve the issues of the Tigray people, but we are just contributing what we have," Ms Meaza told the BBC.

    Tigray has been devastated by a humanitarian crisis after Ethiopia sent its troops in November last year to fight against the TPLF, the-then regional ruling party, which had attacked army bases in the region.

    Thousands of people are thought to have been killed and about 1.7 million people displaced from their homes.

    Earlier this week the UN humanitarian chief said the situation in the Ethiopian region of Tigray is worse than previously thought.

    But the Ethiopian government rejected suggestions that the northern region was experiencing a famine.

  7. Cameroon musicians persecuted for singing about politics

    Wams Mr. Klassic
    Image caption: Wams Mr Klassic was asked if he was a secessionist

    Cameroon's internal conflict in the English-speaking regions is a sensitive topic and artists singing about it sometimes face persecution.

    Gospel artist Evangelist Daisy Ruth fled the country after soldiers started looking for her after her song was widely shared online.

    "The final time the pastor just advised me that wherever you are it would be preferable you just look for your way out and that was how I fled," she told the BBC.

    Another artist Wams Mr Klassic was performing at a concert when he was asked to end the show and he was interrogated by police.

    "I was asked if I was a secessionist," he told the BBC.

    Songs about the conflict have been shared on social media with artists writing how it could have been avoided.

    The English-speaking North-West and South-West regions have been plagued for four years by a bloody conflict between armed groups demanding the independence of the two regions and government security forces.

    Listen to the full interview with the musicians on BBC's Focus on Africa:

    Video content

    Video caption: Cameroon musicians persecuted for singing about conflict in the English-speaking regions
  8. Sudan to deploy joint protection force in Darfur

    BBC Monitoring

    The world through its media

    The Sudanese government has announced the formation of a joint force to maintain security and protect civilians in the troubled western region of Darfur following repeated ethnic clashes, the state-owned Suna news agency reported.

    The force will consist of "the armed forces, the [paramilitary] Rapid Support Forces (RSF), the police forces, representatives of the parties to the peace process, the General Intelligence Service and a representative of the attorney general", the agency reports.

    The force will be made up of 20,000 soldiers, Paris-based Sudan Tribune website reported.

    Darfur has been been plagued by inter-communal violence since December when the hybrid United Nations-African Union peacekeeping mission (Unamid) ended its presence in the region.

  9. Is South Sudan the new king of the hoops?

    Alan Kasujja

    BBC Africa Daily podcast

    South Sudan's Makuei Puondak during a Fiba Afrobasket 2021 pre-qualifier basketball match between Somalia and South Sudan in Nairobi on January 14, 2020.
    Image caption: South Sudan is rapidly growing into a basketball powerhouse

    Watch out for the new kid in the block.

    South Sudan may be a young country – but, when it comes to basketball, it’s rapidly growing into a powerhouse for the sport in Africa.

    “What’s fascinating now is how good the national team has got, how powerful they are becoming,” says the BBC’s James Copnall, formerly a correspondent in the country.

    The men’s team will be aiming high when it travels to Kigali, Rwanda in August to join the AfroBasket tournament.

    “Being [there] for the first time is already a huge accomplishment, something that would never be taken out of the history books,” says former NBA star Luol Deng, who now heads South Sudan’s Basketball Federation.

    “I feel that we’re the team that’s most feared by most of the teams and groups – and that’s because of the unknown.”

    Could this be their moment? Find out in Friday’s episode of Africa Daily.

    Subscribe to the show on BBC Sounds or wherever you get your podcasts.

  10. SA police hunt alleged rhino poacher's killers

    South African police are looking for suspects who gunned down an alleged rhino poaching kingpin on Thursday afternoon.

    Petros Sydney Mabuza, who was also known as "Mr Big", died from gunshot wounds after his vehicle was shot at multiple times by three gunmen in Hazyview in Mpumalanga, the South African Police Service said.

    An elderly woman passer-by was also injured in the incident.

    Pictures of Mabuza's bullet-riddled vehicle were widely shared on social media:

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    The police said the deceased had previously been arrested on several charges of rhino poaching and the cases were currently in court.

    "No one has a right to take another person's life regardless of the reasons. We are optimistic that members of the community will share information with the police so that the perpetrators can be brought to book in an instant," Mpumalanga Police Commissioner General Thulani Phahla said in a statement.

    No arrests have been made and the motive for the killing is not yet known.

  11. War crimes verdict due for ex-Liberian commander

    BBC World Service

    Switzerland recognises the principle of universal jurisdiction
    Image caption: Alieu Kosiah was tried in a Switzerland court

    A court in Switzerland is due to announce its verdict in the trial of a former Liberian rebel commander later on Friday.

    Alieu Kosiah is accused of committing war crimes including rape and murder between 1993 and 1996, during Liberia’s long running civil war. He denies the charges.

    Mr Kosiah fled to Switzerland more than 20 years ago and was arrested in 2014.

    He is the first Liberian national to be tried for war crimes related to the conflict.

    Switzerland recognises the principle of universal jurisdiction and allows trials in its courts of people accused of committing serious crimes in other countries.

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