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  1. Congolese rebels urged to lay down arms for talks

    DR Congo soldiers
    Image caption: Government soldiers, pictured, have recently been battling M23 rebels

    Kenya's President Uhuru Kenyatta has urged armed groups in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo to lay down their weapons and work with government "in nurturing peace and stability".

    The representatives of armed groups are meeting in Kenya's capital, Nairobi, for direct talks with DR Congo officials. More than 20 groups are said to be represented.

    The talks are part of resolutions passed at a recent summit of East African heads of state.

    Groups that won't participate in the talks will be dealt with militarily, a statement from the summit said.

    "Without laying down weapons and forging an unbreakable national compact to secure the [DR Congo], the fruits of prosperity, that you all deserve from the teeming rich endowments, will remain elusive," President Kenyatta said in arecorded address on Wednesday.

    East African heads of state have agreed to deploy a joint military force to eastern DR Congo to deal with the armed groups operating in that region.

  2. Fighting resumes in Sudan's Darfur - reports

    Will Ross

    Africa editor, BBC World Service

    A picture shows burnt utensils in the village of al-Twail Saadoun, which was attacked during inter-ethnic violence, 85 kilometres south of Nyala town, the capital of South Darfur, on February 2, 2021.
    Image caption: Communities in Darfur have clashed over land for decades

    There are reports that fighting has resumed in the city of El Geneina in the Sudanese region of Darfur where at least 200 people died over the weekend.

    Following a lull in the fighting on Tuesday the sound of heavy gunfire can once again be heard.

    Tension has been high between Arab nomads and members of the Massalit community who have clashed over land for decades.

    On Sunday members of the Janjaweed militia backed up by a paramilitary unit known as the Rapid Support Force launched an attack on El Geneina.

    The city is home to many thousands who fled their homes during the Darfur war that took place almost two decades ago.

  3. Somali MPs elect new speaker to pave way for polls

    Farah Lamane

    BBC Somali

    Newly elected Somali MPs
    Image caption: The MPs, pictured here last week, voted overnight in the tight contest

    Somalia's members of parliament have elected Sheikh Adan Madobe as the speaker of the country's lower house of parliament.

    Mr Madobe's election comes a day after the upper house re-elected its speaker.

    The election of speakers is a crucial step towards the conclusion of the country's long-drawn electoral process.

    The new parliamentary leaders are expected to spearhead the process of electing the country's next president and that process must be done by the end of May.

    Mr Madobe, 66, previously held the speaker's position for two years in 2007 during the transitional administration of the late President Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed.

    He garnered 163 votes against his closest contender Hassan Abdinur's 89 votes in a hotly contested election that ended in the early hours of Thursday.

    He took the oath of office at the end of the election that was held in an air force hangar near the African Union peacekeeping mission base in the capital, Mogadishu.

    The country had missed several deadlines to conclude elections, resulting in sanctions against MPs by the US.

    Related stories:

  4. Nigerian senate outlaws ransom for kidnap victims

    Ishaq Khalid

    BBC News, Abuja

    The remaining wares of kidnapped students of Bethel Baptist High School in Nigeria
    Image caption: Nigeria has been struggling with a deadly wave of kidnappings for ransom

    The Nigerian senate has passed a bill imposing jail terms of at least 15 years on anyone paying a ransom to free someone who has been kidnapped.

    Critics say the move is unfair as it criminalises people who are desperate to free their relatives.

    The new law will also provide the death penalty or life in prison for anyone found guilty of kidnapping.

    For more than a decade, Nigeria has been struggling to deal with a deadly wave of kidnappings for ransom by armed groups.

    The bill needs to be debated and passed by the lower house before the president signs it into law - a process that could take weeks or months.

    More on Nigeria's kidnapping crisis:

  5. Uganda may deploy troops to Mozambique - Museveni

    Patricia Oyella

    BBC News, Kampala

    A photograph shows a burnt armoured personnel carrier (APC) in the port city of Mocimboa da Praia, northern Mozambique, on August 13, 2021
    Image caption: The militants have waged an insurgency in Mozambique since 2017

    Uganda's President Yoweri Museveni says Uganda may deploy a large force to help fight Islamic militants in Mozambique’s Cabo Delgado province.

    His Mozambican counterpart, Filipe Nyusi, is on a three-day visit to Uganda to strengthen ties between the two nations.

    Ugandan troops are currently deployed in Somalia and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

    Troops from Rwanda and others from the regional bloc, the Southern African Development Community (Sadc), are helping Mozambique fight the insurgents.

    Uganda has so far helped the Mozambican forces with military equipment.

    A study by the Geneva-based Global Initiative Against Transnational Crime warned in February that the militants had expanded their operations inside and outside of Mozambique despite the intervention of regional forces.

  6. Muslim worshippers killed in Ethiopia - cleric

    Will Ross

    Africa editor, BBC World Service

    Addisu Gebeya family perform evening prayer after a fast-breaking (iftar) dinner in the first day of Muslim's holy month Ramadan inside their house as mosques and squares are closed due to the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, on April 24, 2020
    Image caption: Muslims constitute a minority in Ethiopia (archive shot)

    There are reports that 20 Muslim worshippers have been attacked and killed in Ethiopia's Amhara region as they were on their way to a burial.

    The violence appears unrelated to the conflict between pro-government forces and Tigrayan rebels.

    The head of the Islamic Affairs Supreme Council in Amhara said an explosive device thrown into the crowd killed three people.

    He said the other victims died when clashes broke out which also saw shops looted.

    The cemetery where the attack occurred has been the subject of a dispute between Muslims and Orthodox Christians who account for the majority of Ethiopia's population.

  7. Charity challenges UK-Rwanda asylum deal

    A charity has begun what it says is the first legal challenge to the British government's policy of removing asylum seekers from the UK to Rwanda.

    Campaign group Freedom from Torture said it had “serious concerns about the lawfulness of the policy”. The government has defended it.

    In a pre-action letter - the first step in applying for a judicial review of the policy - the charity asked the Home Office to disclose details of the policy, including risk assessments.

    Read: Is Rwanda a land of safety or fear?

  8. Landmines continue to kill in Tripoli - rights group

    At least 130 people, mostly civilians, have been killed by landmines and other explosives left after heavy fighting in 2020 around the Libyan capital Tripoli, Human Rights Watch (HRW) has said.

    The explosives were scattered in the suburbs of Tripoli during heavy fighting in 2019-2020, when military strongman Khalifa Haftar tried to capture the capital.

    "Forces allied with Khalifa Haftar laid landmines and improvised explosive devices that have killed and maimed several hundred civilians including children, and hinder southern Tripoli residents from returning home," said HRW's Libya director Hanan Salah.

    A landmine is exploded during Turkish demining operations in the Salah al-Din area, south of the Libyan capital Tripoli, on June 15, 2020
    Image caption: Turkey has helped to remove landmines in Tripoli
  9. Saudi crown prince hosts Chad's leader

    BBC Monitoring

    Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has met Chad's leader Mahamat Idriss Déby in the Saudi city of Jeddah.

    Saudi Arabia's official news agency SPA said that the two leaders had discussed cooperation in a multitude of fields.

    It did not provide further details.

  10. Tigray fighters completely pull out of Afar - TPLF

    Tibebeselassie Tigabu

    BBC Amharic service

    Tigrayan forces have completely withdrawn from the neighboring Ethiopian Afar region, Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF) spokesman Getachew Reda has said on Twitter.

    A note to the international community and to all concerned: for the record, there are no Tigray Forces, literally none, left in Afar,” he tweeted.

    Mr Getachew told Reuters on Monday that he hoped that it meant much-needed food aid would reach famine-stricken Tigray.

    Since the Ethiopian government and Tigriayn forces reached a truce last month, only 144 trucks of food aid have made it into the region, according to the World Food Programme. The UN said at least 100 trucks are needed every day.

    On Monday, the latest World Food Programme humanitarian convoy of 74 trucks arrived in Tigray.

    The head of the Afar regional government's Peace and Security Bureau, Ibrahim Hamed Mohammed, told the BBC that Tigray forces had withdrawn from most of the region but still remained in some parts.

    "They did not fully leave. There is a small army in the districts of Araju and Hida in the Magal district. They are still within 15 km (10 miles) of our border," he told the BBC.

    Conflict broke out in Tigray in November 2020 and spread to the neighbouring Amhara and Afar regions, killing thousands, forcing millions to flee their homes and leaving hundreds of thousands on the brink of famine

    Demonstrators march in Washington, DC on November 4, 2021, marking the one-year anniversary of the Ethiopian government's decision to deploy troops into the country's northernmost Tigray region
    Image caption: Tigrayans around the world have been campaigning for an end to the war and hunger
  11. CAR adopts Bitcoin as legal tender

    Will Ross

    Africa editor, BBC World Service

    Bitcoin
    Image caption: Bitcoin is a form of digital money (this is just a visual representation)

    The Central African Republic (CAR) has adopted the cryptocurrency Bitcoin as legal tender.

    It's the second country to do so after El Salvador.

    Members of parliament unanimously approved the move and President Faustin Archange Touadera signed a bill into law that makes bitcoin legal tender alongside the CFA franc.

    An official in the presidency said the move placed the CAR on the map of the world's boldest and most visionary countries.

    The landlocked state, which is one of the world's poorest, has suffered from a devastating armed conflict in recent years

  12. Nigeria warns of possible Eid al-Fitr bomb attacks

    Ishaq Khalid

    BBC News, Abuja

    An emblem of the Nigerian Police

    Nigeria’s secret police have warned of possible bomb attacks during celebrations for Eid al-Fitr, which marks the end of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan.

    In a statement, spokesperson Peter Afunanya said the Department of State Services (DSS) had uncovered a plot by suspected gangs to carry out attacks on critical infrastructure, places of worship and recreation centres.

    The warning comes after recent explosions at bars in the north-eastern states of Taraba and Yobe that killed several people.

    A splinter faction of Boko Haram known as Islamic State West Africa Province (Iswap) said it carried out the attacks.

  13. Apple under pressure over minerals from DR Congo

    Will Ross

    Africa editor, BBC World Service

    In this photo illustration, the Apple Inc logo is seen in the background of a woman's silhouette holding a mobile phone
    Image caption: Tantalum is used in mobile phones

    A new report has warned that a scheme set up to ensure mining in the Democratic Republic of Congo does not fuel conflict is being abused to launder tainted minerals.

    Global Witness says companies - including Apple, Tesla and Intel - are relying on the due diligence scheme to source minerals that are widely used in electronic equipment such as mobile phones, computers and automotive and aeronautical systems.

    Those behind the initiative have denied the allegations.

    For years there have been warnings that some minerals sourced in DR Congo that are used in electronic devices are from mines controlled by armed groups.

    A scheme was launched to try to prevent these so-called "blood minerals" reaching the international market.

    But Global Witness says it has uncovered compelling evidence that the International Tin Supply Chain Initiative (ITSCI) is failing.

    It says the scheme is being used to launder tin, tantalum and tungsten from mines controlled by militia or where children work.

    Global Witness says companies like Apple, Tesla and Intel need to do more to ensure their minerals are not fuelling conflict.

  14. Mounting concern about police brutality in Kenya

    Joice Etutu

    BBC News, Nakuru

    Photo

    Cases of police brutality and enforced disappearances are on a steady increase in Kenya, according to a joint report by Amnesty International Kenya and 16 local NGOs.

    The report found 189 cases of police killings, as well as at least 30 people who have gone missing in police custody.

    “We’re noticing a significant increase since 2020, and the numbers are steadily going up," said the executive director of Amnesty International Kenya, Irũngũ Houghton.

    "The new trend we’ve noticed is the enforced abduction and disappearances of suspected criminals, terrorists, or just everyday civilians. Some of them have been found dead in Yala river or in Siaya county among other places,” he added

    In response, a Kenyan government spokesperson said they are committed to abide by the rule of law and ensure that human rights are protected.

    Woman

    One woman, Anne Wanjiku Kariuki, who is pregnant with her third child, said the last time she saw her husband, he was being dragged through their home by suspected police officers in plain clothes.

    They were searching for something but refused to tell her what it was. Her husband managed to mutter "I’m being arrested’" before he was taken away. He hasn’t been seen since.

    “It’s been a month and two weeks since they took him. The children are asking where he is and why he was arrested. I don’t know what to do, or how to feel, I’m constantly wondering whether he is alive or not,” she said.

    Humans rights activist David Kuria said that regional police officers have denied involvement in his disappearance.

  15. Miss Rwanda organiser held for alleged sex abuses

    Samba Cyuzuzo

    BBC Great Lakes

    Dieudonné Ishimwe, the chief executive of Rwanda Inspiration Back Up
    Image caption: Dieudonné Ishimwe has not responded to the accusations against him

    The organiser of Miss Rwanda beauty pageant has been arrested on allegations of sexually abusing contestants, the authorities have said.

    The arrest of Dieudonné Ishimwe, the chief executive of Rwanda Inspiration Back Up, the company that organises the contest, comes just a month after this year's edition.

    Mr Ishimwe has not responded to the accusations against him.

    The Miss Rwanda pageant is one of the most followed events in Rwanda.

    An employee of the organising company told the BBC that four girls who contested last year and in this year’s edition had made complaints to investigators before his arrest.

    “While the case was still under investigation, he was arrested on Monday”, she told the BBC under a condition of anonymity.

    A state investigator is quoted by local media as saying that Mr Ishimwe "is suspected of sexual abuse charges towards Miss Rwanda contestants on different occasions”.

    Leading one to sex acts “by force, threats, trickery or by use of authority over that person” is punishable by up to 15 years in prison in Rwanda.

    The spokesperson of Rwanda Inspiration Back Up, who is the winner of Miss Rwanda 2019, resigned last week.