There are reports from north-west Nigeria that gunmen have kidnapped at least 11 people, including a Muslim cleric, in two separate attacks.
They happened on Friday and Saturday in the Sabon Birni area of Sokoto state.
Nigeria’s National Security Adviser Maj Gen Ali Monguno was visiting the region at the time and reiterated the government’s commitment to tackling growing insecurity.
Dozens of passengers were killed in Sokoto state last week when gunmen ambushed and set fire to their bus.
On Friday, there were protests in several cities calling on President Muhammadu Buhari to do more to stop the attacks.
De Klerk was brave but legacy contested - Ramaphosa
AFPCopyright: AFP
In his eulogy to South Africa's last president of apartheid South Africa, FW de Klerk, President Cyril Ramaphosa tried to strike a balance between acknowledging the ill feeling there is still towards him and his contribution to creating a democratic country.
De Klerk, who died last month at 85, was instrumental in leading the country's white minority towards accepting the dismantling of the racist apartheid system in the 1990s.
At the same time, he was a beneficiary of that system and responsible for some of its crimes.
Speaking at a state memorial service in Cape Town, President Ramaphosa said that De Klerk's 1990 address calling for the release from prison of the leader of the anti-apartheid struggle, Nelson Mandela, was a "brave act".
He also praised his "courage and conviction".
But Mr Ramaphosa added that it was important to recognise that "his
contribution and his legacy remain contested".
"We
can neither ignore nor must we seek to dismiss the anger and the pain and the disappointment
of those who recall the place FW de Klerk occupied in the hierarchy of an oppressive
state."
Nevertheless he "played
an important role in the evolution of our new democracy whether we like it or
not".
Before the memorial service, police broke up a small protest outside Cape Town's Groote Kerk with demonstrators demanding "justice for apartheid victims".
Azawi
is taking Uganda by storm, but there’s something endearingly unassuming about
the country’s newest sensation.
She started her professional career in music by writing songs for other people, and could not have been more surprised when the
Ugandan label Swangz Avenue offered to sign her as an artist.
“In
my mind I was just going to their offices to be paid for the music I had
forwarded to them, but the big guy was like 'why don’t we work together?'," she tells This is Africa.
"That
moment I froze! Now I’m getting an opportunity to sing my own music, perform
it, write my own songs. I didn’t see it coming.”
Azawi’s
breakthrough song was Quinamino, released at the start of 2020.
She knew
it was special.
“Within
myself I was like, 'I wish I had everything it takes to bring this song out in
the public'. There was something so organic, so real, so special about the beat.
"It actually took me something like 40 minutes to write that song and I have
to say 40 minutes changed my life.
“Music
is like love honestly. It is something that has to connect with the soul, you
have to feel it deep within… I don’t know if I’m making sense!”
Azawi’s
music is certainly connecting.
After Quinamino, came the hit Slow Dancing, then
an album, African Music.
Her most recent single is the equally accomplished
Ache for You.
In October her image was projected in New York City’s Times Square
after she was chosen as one of just eight artists to represent Africa at the
YouTube Black Voices Class of 2022.
Others included in this mentorship
programme are CKay and Omah Lay from Nigeria, and DJ Lag and Major League DJz
from South Africa.
It
sounds a bit like overnight success, but Azawi has been steadily working up to
this.
As a child she was part of a traditional dance troupe, and then at school
she was in choirs and composed songs under the supervision of an encouraging
teacher.
“I
have always been passionate about music. I would say it’s like an expedition
that was planned out in a way that I wasn’t conscious about, but it made sense.
"Every part of my journey was really fundamental and important in how I create
my music.
“Right
now it’s like magic. At some point it’s really too much for me to even
comprehend and understand - but I just thank God that he let it happen just the
way I was dreaming of it way back.”
You can hear Azawi this
weekend on This Is Africa on BBC World Service radio and partner stations
across Africa, and online here.
'Save the north', demand Nigerian protesters
Ishaq Khalid
BBC News, Abuja
BBCCopyright: BBC
Protesters gathered in several cities including the capital, AbujaImage caption: Protesters gathered in several cities including the capital, Abuja
Hundreds of people have
taken to the streets in several cities in northern Nigeria and the capital, Abuja, demanding action by the authorities to end the worsening violence
sweeping through the region.
Armed gangs have recently stepped up killings and
kidnapping people for ransom including students, travellers and worshippers.
In Abuja, protesters gathered at the popular Unity Fountain square to highlight the deepening
insecurity.
Demonstrators vowed to continue with the protests.
They said the government is not doing enough despite the
deployment of thousands of troops.
In some of the latest attacks this week
at least 16 people were shot dead in a mosque and dozens of passengers burnt
alive by gunmen.
'Telling our own stories, finding our own voices'
As Tanzania marks its 60th independence anniversary this week, a publishing house dedicated to promoting Swahili books also celebrated its birthday.
Mkuki na Nyota, meaning "speared star", was created 40 years ago in Tanzania with the aim of producing "books that contribute to our understanding of our own realities that help people struggle for their own liberation", founder Walter Bgoya told BBC Focus on Africa.
It produces both non-fiction - including biographies of the country's presidents - and fiction. One if its recent novels, known as A Tug of War in English, was turned into a screenplay for a film that was featured at the African film festival, Fespaco.
Creative director Mkuki Bgoya said the works are all about "telling our own stories and finding our own voices".
Listen to the interview here:
Video content
Video caption: Father Walter Bgoya and son Mkuki Bgoya both run publishing house Mkuki na NyotaFather Walter Bgoya and son Mkuki Bgoya both run publishing house Mkuki na Nyota
Vamos Falar de MédicinaCopyright: Vamos Falar de Médicina
Nearly all doctors in Angola’s public hospitals are now on the fifth
day of a national strike to demand better salaries and improvements in working
conditions.
The doctors’ union, Sinmea, says some doctors earn less than $520
(£400) a month. Union spokesperson Domingos Zangão told the BBC that this
figure was “unacceptable and doesn’t reflect the effort and work the doctors do”.
“Doctors are fed up. We work under difficult circumstances, there
are no working conditions for us and we still receive miserable salaries."
Among other demands is the re-employment of union leader Dr
Adriano Manuel, who was allegedly suspended from his job after telling the
press last year about the death of 19 children at the hospital where he was
working.
The Angolan authorities have urged the doctors to return to work
saying that they have heard the complaints and will consider them.
Despite this call the union says that the strike will continue until
the government “reacts and resolves our major complaints”.
The doctors are still attending to emergency work and intensive
care but otherwise there are minimal services available.
Odinga hopes it will be fifth-time lucky in Kenya
ReutersCopyright: Reuters
Veteran Kenyan opposition leader Raila Odinga has ended months of speculation and announced that he will run for president in next August's elections.
The 76-year-old is a popular politician despite having lost presidential races on four previous occasions - 1997, 2007, 2013 and 2017.
The most recent poll saw him run against President Uhuru Kenyatta. But the two men have since moved closer following their famous 2018 "handshake" aimed at ending divisions which have proved so deadly.
"I do hereby accept to present myself as a presidential candidate for the presidential elections of the 9th of August 2022," the AFP news agency quotes him as telling cheering supporters at a Nairobi stadium.
Mr Odinga's main rival for the top job is likely to be the current Deputy President, William Ruto. The current president will be constitutionally barred from running as he will have served two terms.
Mr Ruto has presented himself as being on the side of the "hustlers" against the "dynasties".
Hustlers refer to those - especially young people - who struggle to make ends meet in an economy that is said to be no longer working for them.
The word dynasties, on the other hand, is a moniker to describe wealthy families, like the Kenyattas and Odingas, who are seen to have dominated politics - and the economy - since independence from the UK in 1963.
More than 30,000 flee clashes in northern Cameroon
Will Ross
Africa editor, BBC World Service
BBCCopyright: BBC
More than 30,000 people have fled from northern Cameroon to neighbouring Chad this week following ethnic clashes that left at least 22 people dead, the UN says.
The violence broke out at the weekend in the border town of Ouloumsa during a dispute between herders, fishermen and farmers over dwindling water resources.
It then spread to neighbouring villages - 10 of which have been burnt to the ground.
The UN refugee agency says three-quarters of those who fled to Chad were women - many of them pregnant - and children.
Last August, similar clashes in northern Cameroon left 40 people dead and led to thousands fleeing over the border.
Prince Johnson demands the evidence behind US sanctions
Jonathan Paye-Layleh
BBC News, Monrovia
AFPCopyright: AFP
Prince Johnson, seen here in 2008, is a senator and close ally of President George WeahImage caption: Prince Johnson, seen here in 2008, is a senator and close ally of President George Weah
Liberian senator and former warlord Prince Johnson has said he
wants the US to produce the evidence on which it based a decision to impose
sanctions on him.
Mr Johnson was on a
list of global figures to have so-called Magnitsky sanctions slapped on them,
which are directed against people accused of human rights abuses or corruption.
“As a senator, Mr Johnson has been involved in pay-for-play
funding with government ministries and organisations for personal enrichment,”
a US Treasury statement said.
“As part of the scheme, upon receiving funding from the
Government of Liberia, the involved government ministries and organisations
launder a portion of the funding for return to the involved participants. The
pay-for-play funding scheme involves millions of US dollars.”
In response, Mr Johnson said he was waiting for a more
detailed explanation from the US government and challenged Washington to
explain during which specific administrations in Liberia he had been involved
in receiving money for favours.
“What we want is the fact,” he told the BBC.
“You can accuse people, but the evidence is what is
important; and coming from Uncle Sam’s
website - obviously the most powerful nation on earth whose footprint we follow democratically - so you don’t just
destroy peoples’ names by accusing them without facts.”
Mr Johnson was responsible for the slaying in 1990 of
President Samuel Doe, who had been captured by his forces during the country’s 14-year
civil war.
He is now a very trusted political ally and supporter of President
George Weah.
As we reported earlier, the US has also imposed visa
restrictions on Isabel dos Santos, the daughter of Angola’s former president.
France to open Algerian War archives in goodwill gesture
Ahmed Rouaba
BBC News
Getty ImagesCopyright: Getty Images
France is looking to mend the strained relations with AlgeriaImage caption: France is looking to mend the strained relations with Algeria
French Culture Minister Roselyne Bachelot
has announced her country will soon allow access to archive records related to
criminal investigations during the Algerian War (1954-1962).
The
classified documents are deemed to contain state secrets and it is hoped will help
historians and researchers unravel a lot of cases of missing people and killings
of Algerians under the French colonial administration.
The
move is seen as a goodwill gesture from France to mend the strained
relations with Algeria.
The
North African country had recalled its ambassador to Paris and closed its
airspace to French military flights in October over comments made by French President Emmanuel Macron.
Mr Macron’s
comments questioning the existence of an Algerian nation before the French
occupation in 1830 has caused outrage and anger in Algeria.
Algerian Foreign Minister Ramtane Lamamra described Mr Macron’s comments as "a
memorial bankruptcy" and urged France to "decolonise its history".
French
Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian has made an unexpected visit to Algiers
this week in a mission to break the ice and ease tension between the two
countries.
Benin opposition leader in court on terror charges
Nicolas Negoce
BBC News
AFPCopyright: AFP
Reckya Madougou;s supporters were outside the court in Porto-Novo on FridayImage caption: Reckya Madougou;s supporters were outside the court in Porto-Novo on Friday
The opposition leader in Benin, Reckya Madougou, has appeared at the country's Economic Crime and Terrorism Court on charges of financing terrorism.
The former justice minister has been detained for more than eight months.
She is the leader of Benin's largest opposition party - the Democrats - and had hoped to be the first female presidential candidate to come from a major party.
But her candidacy was rejected for the presidential election held in April this year.
Ms Madougou has been accused of trying to disrupt the ballot and destabilising the country.
She faces a 20-year sentence if found guilty.
Her lawyers and supporters say the trial is entirely political.
Government officials dismiss claims of political interference and say Benin's judiciary is independent.
Another opposition figure, Joël Aïvo, was sentenced to 10 years in prison on Monday.
The court
is expected to deliver its verdict on Friday evening or early Saturday morning.
US imposes visa restrictions on Isabel dos Santos
Getty ImagesCopyright: Getty Images
The US has imposed visa restrictions on Isabel dos Santos, often described as Africa's richest woman, "for her involvement in significant corruption by misappropriating public funds for her personal benefit", a statement from US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken says.
Her name appears among a list of other people from across the globe accused of corruption who are facing US sanctions. It was released as part of the US government's anti-corruption drive.
Ms Dos Santos is the daughter of Angola's former president, José Eduardo dos Santos, who left office in 2017. While he was president, she was chair of the state oil company.
Mr Blinken's statement does not go into details about what Ms Dos Santos is accused of having done.
She got access to lucrative deals involving land, oil, diamonds and telecoms when her father was president of Angola.
The documents showed how she and her husband were allowed to buy valuable state assets in a series of suspicious deals.
At the time, Ms Dos Santos said the allegations against her were entirely false and that there was a politically motivated witch-hunt by the Angolan government.
Two other Angolans - Leopoldino Fragoso do Nascimento and Manuel Helder Vieira Dias Juniorare - who were both former government officials have also been targeted.
They have been given so-called Magnitsky sanctions which means that US companies cannot have financial dealings with them.
The US Treasury has said that the two men "stole billions of dollars from the Angolan government through embezzlement".
Other Africans named by the US Treasury for other alleged corruption were:
Liberian senator Prince Yormie Johnson
South Sudanese businessman Benjamin Bol Mel
SA Covid: More in hospital but not clear if Omicron is more severe
While hospital admissions in South Africa have risen sharply because of the Omicron variant of Covid-19, it is not yet clear if it causes more severe illness, according to comments by Health Minister Joe Phaahla.
Journalist Mia Malan says that the latest figures show that hospital admissions because of the virus have increased by more than 200% this week, compared to last week.
In a series of tweets highlighting the minister's comments, she also said that the reproductive number - sometimes called the 'R rate' - for Omicron is 2.5. In other words, on average, one person infects another 2.5 people.
This is higher than with Delta, reflecting a theory that it is more transmissible.
On Thursday, South Africa recorded more than 22,000 Covid-19 infections. This is a high figure, but below the high-point of 26,000 daily infections reported during the previous wave of infections, the Reuters news agency reports.
About 38% of South Africans have been vaccinated against coronavirus.
All travellers to Ghana need to be vaccinated
The Ghanaian government has said that from midnight on Sunday all visitors to the country need to be fully vaccinated against coronavirus before being allowed to enter.
Ghanaians who intend to return to the country in the next fortnight are exempted, but will be vaccinated upon arrival, a statement from the country's health service says.
"All Ghanaians travelling out of the country are to be fully vaccinated," the statement adds.
The order is part of measures to help control the spread of the Omicron variant of Covid-19.
The health service statement says that most cases of the variant in the country were from people who had arrived at the international airport in Accra - and the majority of those people had been unvaccinated.
Ghana has recorded just over 130,000 cases of coronavirus in total and 1,200 deaths.
Kenyans could help protect 2022 World Cup – minister
Farah Yussuf
BBC Monitoring
Kenya has said it is in talks to send security personnel to
Qatar to beef up protection at next year's football World Cup in the Gulf state.
Kenyan Interior Minister Fred Matiang’i said on Friday that
the East African country had agreed in principle to “provide security personnel
to support” the tournament.
The World Cup will take place across eight venues in five Qatari cities, including the capital Doha, in November and December next year.
Kenya has never reached the finals of the football World Cup.