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Africa

Daughter of Zambia's unburied ex-president loses seat as MP

BBC Africa - Fri, 11/28/2025 - 17:33
Zambia's government is accused of 'hypocrisy' as fallout from ex-president's death deepens.

Tunisia hands prison terms to dozens of opposition figures

BBC Africa - Fri, 11/28/2025 - 16:03
The defendants were accused of attempting a coup - but human rights groups say the trial was politically motivated.

Ex-president's daughter resigns over allegations she duped South Africans to fight for Russia

BBC Africa - Fri, 11/28/2025 - 14:54
Her resignation comes as a South African allegedly recruited to fight in Ukraine recounts the horrors of war to the BBC.

Erreur comptable à Bettingen: Comment 20 millions de pertes ont été prises pour des recettes

24heures.ch - Fri, 11/28/2025 - 13:53
Pendant trois ans, la commune bâloise de Bettingen a cru percevoir des millions de francs supplémentaires. En réalité, il s’agissait de pertes.
Categories: Africa, Swiss News

Météo du week-end: La neige reviendra-t-elle en Suisse romande?

24heures.ch - Fri, 11/28/2025 - 12:58
Le beau temps de vendredi sera de courte durée. Dès dimanche, les précipitations reprendront avec une limite pluie-neige qui descendra jusqu’à 900 mètres.
Categories: Africa, Swiss News

Accident aux Grisons: Un homme de 66 ans meurt dans le Lago Bianco

24heures.ch - Fri, 11/28/2025 - 11:59
L’homme équipé de raquettes à neige est tombé dans le lac partiellement gelé. Un conducteur de train a donné l’alerte.
Categories: Africa, Swiss News

Conflit israélo-palestinien: La Suisse doit-elle s’engager pour protéger les journalistes à Gaza?

24heures.ch - Fri, 11/28/2025 - 11:31
Le conseiller national genevois MCG Daniel Sormanni demande une intervention de la Confédération à l’ONU. Reporters sans frontières applaudit.
Categories: Africa, Swiss News

The UN’s “International Days” Range from the Sublime to the Ridiculous

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Fri, 11/28/2025 - 10:21

When the UN General Assembly adopted a resolution to designate 25 May as World Football Day. Credit: UN Photo/Loey Felipe

By Thalif Deen
UNITED NATIONS, Nov 28 2025 (IPS)

The 193-member General Assembly, the UN’s highest policy-making body, routinely designates ”International Days” and “World Days’” on a wide range of subjects and events – from the sublime to the ridiculous: described as “a sudden shift from something grand and awe-inspiring to something silly and unimportant”.

The commemorations range from the International Women’s Day and the International Day to Combat Islamophobia to the International Moon Day and World Bicycle Day (not forgetting World Tuna Day, World Bee Day, International Day of Potato, World Horse Day, World Pulses Day and International Day of the Arabian Leopard).

According to the UN, the world body observes 218 international days annually (and counting).

One of the first designations came from the UN General Assembly’s declaration in 1947 that 24 October should be celebrated as United Nations Day, the anniversary of the adoption of the UN Charter that founded the Organization.

Since then, UN Member States have proposed more than 200 designations, presenting draft resolutions to the General Assembly so the entire membership, representing 193 nations, can vote.

But a new resolution aimed at revitalizing the work of the General Assembly “notes with concern the significant increase in the number of proposals to proclaim international days, weeks, months, years or decades”.

The resolution decides, on a trial basis, to put on hold consideration of new proposals for international days, weeks, months, years and decades during the eighty-first and eighty-second sessions.

The resolution also requests the President of the General Assembly, effective from the eighty-first session in 2026, to group all proclamation requests for international commemoration into a single resolution per agenda item, where each proposed commemoration contains its own operative paragraph focused on its establishment.

The upcoming International Days in March 2026 include:
1 March – World Seagrass Day
1 March – United Nations Zero Discrimination Day
3 March – International Day for Ear and Hearing Loss
3 March – World Wildlife Day
5 March – International Day for Disarmament and Non-Proliferation Awareness
8 March – International Women’s Day
10 March – International Day of Women Judges
15 March – International Day to combat Islamophobia
20 March – International Day of Happiness
20 March – French Language Day
21 March – International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination
21 March – World Poetry Day
21 March – International Nowruz Day
21 March – World Down Syndrome Day
21 March – International Day of Forests
21 March – World Day of Glaciers
22 March – World Water Day
23 March – World Meteorological Day
24 March – World Tuberculosis Day
24 March – International Day for the Right to the Truth concerning Gross Human Rights
25 March – International Day of Remembrance of the Victims of Slavery
25 March – International Day of Solidarity with Detained and Missing Staff Members
30 March – International Day of Zero Waste

The list for December includes:
01 Dec – World AIDS Day
02 Dec – International Day for the Abolition of Slavery (A/RES/317(IV)
03 Dec – International Day of Persons with Disabilities (A/RES/47/3)
04 Dec – International Day of Banks (A/RES/74/245)
04 Dec – International Day Against Unilateral Coercive Measures (A/RES/79/293)
05 Dec – International Volunteer Day for Economic and Social Development (A/RES/40/212)
05 Dec – World Soil Day (A/RES/68/232)
07 Dec – International Civil Aviation Day (A/RES/51/33)
09 Dec – International Day of Commemoration and Dignity of the Victims of the Crime of Genocide and of the Prevention of this Crime (A/RES/69/323)
09 Dec – International Anti-Corruption Day (A/RES/58/4)
10 Dec – Human Rights Day (A/RES/423 (V)
11 Dec – International Mountain Day (A/RES/57/245)
12 Dec – International Day of Neutrality (A/RES/71/275)
12 Dec – International Universal Health Coverage Day (A/RES/72/138)
18 Dec – International Migrants Day (A/RES/55/93)
18 Dec – Arabic Language Day
20 Dec – International Human Solidarity Day (A/RES/60/209)
21 Dec – World Meditation Day (A/RES/79/137)
21 Dec – World Basketball Day (A/RES/77/324)
27 Dec – International Day of Epidemic Preparedness (A/RES/75/27)

Categories: Africa, Balkan News

Authorities Urged to Take Lawful Measures to Stop Mass Abductions in Nigeria

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Fri, 11/28/2025 - 09:45

Newspaper headlines reflect the abductions of girls and others in Nigeria’s northern states. Credit: Hussain Wahab/IPS

By Hussain Wahab
ABUJA, Nov 28 2025 (IPS)

On the morning of 17 November 2025, darkness cloaked Maga town in the Danko/Wasagu Local Government Area, Kebbi State, until gunfire shattered the silence. It was around 4 am when armed attackers stormed the Government Girls Comprehensive Secondary School, firing into the air to terrify residents before heading to the staff quarters. There, they killed two, including Hassan Yakubu, the school’s Chief Security Officer and then abducted 26 female students.

Two later escaped, said Halima Bande, the state’s commissioner for Basic and Secondary Education. This brazen raid came less than 72 hours after the killing of Brigadier-General Musa Uba in an ambush by the insurgents.

A rescue mission by Nigerian soldiers to intervene in Kebbi’s abduction was itself ambushed and injured by the insurgents, heightening fears that such violence is spiraling beyond the reach of conventional security responses.

Since then, 24 girls have been released, Nigerian President Bola Tinubu announced.

Abubakar Fakai, whose nine nieces are among the 26 abducted schoolgirls, told IPS that his family and the entire community have been plunged into unbearable grief.

A father of four of the kidnapped girls, Ilyasu Fakai, is still in shock. Almost every household in the close-knit village has been affected. For more than a week they received no credible information about the girls’ condition or whereabouts, Abubakar said.

“Every night we try to sleep, but we can’t, because we keep thinking of the girls lying somewhere on bare ground, scared and cold. These are teenage girls, and we fear for their dignity and their lives. We just want the government to rescue them quickly and reunite them with us. This pain is too much for our community to bear,” he told IPS.

The Kebbi raid was one of several mass abductions that occurred within days of each other.

At least 402 people, mainly schoolchildren, have been kidnapped in four states in the north-central region—Niger, Kebbi, Kwara and Borno—since 17 November, the UN human rights office, OHCHR, said on Tuesday.

Call to Authorities

“We are shocked at the recent surge in mass abductions in north-central Nigeria,” OHCHR Spokesperson Thameen Al-Kheetan said in Geneva.

“We urge the Nigerian authorities—at all levels—to take all lawful measures to ensure such vile attacks are halted and to hold those responsible to account.”

A day after the Kebbi incident, a church was attacked in Eruku, Kwara; two were killed and about 38 abducted during a live church session. State Gov. AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq, in a statement, said President Bola Tinubu deployed an additional 900 troops to the community.

In Niger State, a St. Mary’s School in Papiri was also attacked on Friday, November 21, and 303 boys and girls, plus 12 teachers, were abducted; only 50 are said to have escaped as of Sunday, November 23. This number surpasses the number of girls kidnapped in Chibok, prompting an international “Bring Back Our Girls” campaign.

The same day, militants launched another deadly attack in Borno State. The list is not exhaustive, underscoring how Nigeria’s overlapping insurgency and banditry crises are converging in devastating ways.

Insurgency a Threat to Food Security

The rise in insurgent attacks is threatening regional stability and causing a spike in hunger, according to the the World Food Programme (WFP)

The latest analysis finds nearly 35 million people are projected to face severe food insecurity during the 2026 lean season from June to August—the highest number ever recorded in the country.

Insurgent attacks have intensified this year, the UN agency said.

Jama’at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin (JNIM), an al-Qaeda affiliate, reportedly carried out its first attack in Nigeria last month, while the insurgent group Islamic State in West Africa Province (ISWAP) is apparently seeking to expand across the Sahel region.

“Communities are under severe pressure from repeated attacks and economic stress,” said David Stevenson, WFP Country Director and Representative in Nigeria.

“If we can’t keep families fed and food insecurity at bay, growing desperation could fuel increased instability with insurgent groups exploiting hunger to expand their influence, creating a security threat that extends across West Africa and beyond.”

Human-rights activist Omoyele Sowore drew national attention to the lawlessness in a viral post.

A Long Shadow Over Schools

Human-rights activist Omoyele Sowore drew national attention to the lawlessness in a viral post.

These recent incidents are not isolated—they are part of a deepening national crisis that has targeted schools for more than a decade. According to Save the Children, 1,683, schoolchildren have been kidnapped in Nigeria from April 2014 through December 2022. UNICEF similarly reports that over 1,680 schoolchildren have been abducted within that period and according to a SBM report, 4,722 people were abducted and N2.57 billion (about USD 1.7 million) was paid to kidnappers as ransom between July 2024 and June 2025.

These statistics reflect both past challenges and an enduring failure—despite Nigeria’s endorsement of the Safe Schools Declaration, the protections promised on paper have not reached many of its most vulnerable schools.

Experts and analysts say these incidents reflect a broader model: criminal gangs and insurgents are increasingly seeing schoolchildren as high-value targets. This surge underscores a chilling truth: educational institutions, especially in rural and poorly guarded areas, are no longer safe havens. They are strategic targets.

“This has now become a national and international discussion, giving Nigeria a very bad name,” said Colonel Abdullahi Gwandu, a conflict expert, in an interview with IPS, criticizing the government’s failure to anticipate such attacks and the slack competency of security forces, putting not only education but every sphere of the nation in mayhem.

Trauma, Trust, and Retreat

In the wake of the Kebbi abduction, fear rippled across communities. Uncertain of their children’s safety, parents in Maga and nearby areas rushed to withdraw their daughters from schools. Community leaders responded with grief and prayer. Maga’s traditional ruler announced a special prayer gathering, calling on God to bring the girls home safely.

Habibat Muhammad, a youth advocate, said it concerned her that these trends put the education of girls at risk.

“When you train a girl child, you train a nation but how do you train a nation when girls who should be sitting in class are dragged out of their hostels by people who have learned to exploit government negligence?”

She said many rural girls’ schools lack basic security infrastructure: trained guards, perimeter fencing, early-warning systems and proper lighting. She argued that this absence of protection contrasts sharply with the layered security given to public officials or financial institutions. “Education must be treated as a national priority, not a soft target,” she told IPS.

Why the State Can’t Seem to Stop Attacks

Security experts and community voices agree that the Kebbi attack exposed major systemic flaws. Gwandu described the incident as a stark reminder of how fragile rural school security has become. He noted that the deliberate killing of a school security officer signals a shift in tactics: attackers are now targeting authority figures in addition to students. He stressed the need for a more intelligence-driven strategy and urged the military to take firmer action. “

The Northwest Division, headquartered in Sokoto, should be given full authority and resources to respond quickly and aggressively by combining human intelligence with AI to track bandits and their informants while addressing poverty and poor education to reduce criminal recruitment, Gwandu said.

Beyond immediate security, he argues, the government must tackle root causes: poverty, lack of education, and widespread youth unemployment make banditry and kidnapping more appealing for disenfranchised young people.

The Cost Beyond the Kidnapping

Dr. Shadi Sabeh, an educationist and the vice-chairman of the Iconic University, argues that closing these wounds must be central to Nigeria’s recovery strategy.

“We have to be there for our children. Guidance and counselling are almost absent in our education system.” he calls for trauma-informed curricula, peer support groups, bravery training, and sustained mental health services within schools to help students cope, heal, and reclaim their futures. This highlights the need to keep youth productive.

“A hungry man is an angry man and an idle hand is a devil’s workshop.

Jeariogbe Islamiyyah Adedoyin, Vice President of the School of Physical Sciences, added a more personal plea.

“No child should ever have to go through something like that just to get an education. Our girls deserve to learn without fear. She said when schools are no longer safe, the future of the nation is at risk.”

What the Government Is Doing—And Why It’s Not Enough

In response to the crisis, authorities have initiated both immediate and longer-term measures. Short-term responses include deployment of troops to high-risk regions like Kebbi and Niger, search-and-rescue operations involving military, police, and local vigilantes, closure of some schools deemed vulnerable and public condemnation from religious and political leaders.

However, high levels of poverty, unemployment, and illiteracy, and lack of parental care make marginalized youth vulnerable to recruitment by armed groups and defeat these efforts.

A legal expert, Waliu Olaitan Wahab, told IPS that the roots of insecurity in northern Nigeria run far deeper than the activities of Boko Haram, herdsmen, or bandit gangs. He described the crisis as multifaceted, arguing that decades of neglect by northern elites have created a system where millions of children grow up without support, opportunity, or protection—making them easy targets for recruitment.

IPS UN Bureau Report

 


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Categories: Africa

'Zaire president killed my grandad and targeted my dad' - TKV's family story

BBC Africa - Fri, 11/28/2025 - 08:31
Heavyweight Jeamie TKV and his father share a most fascinating family story shaped by poisoning, plots and presidents.

'Zaire president killed my grandad and targeted my dad' - TKV's family story

BBC Africa - Fri, 11/28/2025 - 08:31
Heavyweight Jeamie TKV and his father share a most fascinating family story shaped by poisoning, plots and presidents.

Guinea-Bissau president flees to Senegal after coup

BBC Africa - Fri, 11/28/2025 - 08:29
Sissoco Embaló has arrived in Senegal "safe and sound" on a chartered military plane, authorities say.
Categories: Africa, Swiss News

Augen auf beim Shopping: Wie wir beim Einkaufen manipuliert werden

Blick.ch - Fri, 11/28/2025 - 06:00
Wer kennt es nicht: Man will nur eine Sache einkaufen und kommt mit einer vollen Einkaufstüte wieder aus dem Laden. Läden wenden verschiedene psychologische Tricks an, damit wir möglichst viel einkaufen. Was sind die neusten Strategien und wie können wir sie erkennen?
Categories: Africa, Swiss News

The kidnap gangs, jihadists and separatists wreaking havoc in Nigeria

BBC Africa - Fri, 11/28/2025 - 01:42
The country faces many deadly security challenges, leaving the army and police severely overstretched.
Categories: Africa, Afrique

The kidnap gangs, jihadists and separatists wreaking havoc in Nigeria

BBC Africa - Fri, 11/28/2025 - 01:42
The country faces many deadly security challenges, leaving the army and police severely overstretched.
Categories: Africa, Afrique

Neues Chaos bei McLaren: Piastri enthüllt: «Ich war gegen eine Stallorder»

Blick.ch - Thu, 11/27/2025 - 20:16
Weltmeister McLaren wurstelt sich dem Saisonfinale entgegen. Nach der peinlichen Doppel-Disqualifikation in Las Vegas wollen die Briten mit Norris und Piastri gegen Verstappen den Fahrertitel heimschaukeln.
Categories: Africa, Swiss News

Iran chancenlos: Nati-Handballerinnen mit Kantersieg bei WM-Debüt

Blick.ch - Thu, 11/27/2025 - 19:54
Bei ihrer ersten WM-Teilnahme feiern die Schweizer Handballerinnen in 's-Hertogenbosch den erwartet klaren Auftakterfolg. Das Team von Trainer Knut Ove Joa besiegt den Aussenseiter Iran 34:9.
Categories: Africa, Swiss News

General named new Guinea-Bissau leader a day after coup

BBC Africa - Thu, 11/27/2025 - 16:07
Gen Horta N’Tam is sworn in during a ceremony at the army headquarters.
Categories: Africa, Afrique

South Africa hits back after Trump says US won't invite it for G20 next year

BBC Africa - Thu, 11/27/2025 - 15:24
The US boycotted the G20 summit in Johannesburg over widely discredited claims of persecution of the white minority.
Categories: Africa, Afrique

Les moyens pour le Nigéria et les États-Unis de relever les défis sécuritaires

BBC Afrique - Thu, 11/27/2025 - 14:38
La semaine dernière, le Nigeria a dépêché une délégation de hauts responsables gouvernementaux aux États-Unis pour discuter avec leurs homologues américains des moyens de relever les défis sécuritaires qui accablent le pays le plus peuplé d'Afrique.
Categories: Africa, Afrique

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