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Africa

Wilfred Ndidi: Leicester City midfielder eyes Nations Cup spot

BBC Africa - Sat, 11/10/2018 - 20:22
Leicester City's Wilfred Ndidi is confident Nigeria will return to the Africa Cup of Nations in 2019 after missing the last two tournaments.
Categories: Africa

New bridge spans Mozambique capital Maputo

BBC Africa - Sat, 11/10/2018 - 18:36
President Filipe Nyusi opens a Chinese-built suspension bridge worth more than $750m across Maputo Bay.
Categories: Africa

Bamba hits late winner for Cardiff

BBC Africa - Sat, 11/10/2018 - 17:20
Brighton boss Chris Hughton is "angry" over an offside claim in the build-up to Sol Bamba's last-minute winner for Cardiff.
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Sol Bamba's shirt: 'The ref asked if I took it off, I said 'no'', says Cardiff defender

BBC Africa - Sat, 11/10/2018 - 16:55
How do you avoid getting booked for taking your shirt off? Just tell the referee you didn't do it.
Categories: Africa

Guinea coach drops Soumah for lack of 'commitment'

BBC Africa - Sat, 11/10/2018 - 15:35
Guinea coach Paul Put says he has dropped Seydouba Soumah for the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualifier against Ivory Coast because of a lack of 'commitment.'
Categories: Africa

Study finds 'huge' fall in FGM rates among African girls

BBC Africa - Sat, 11/10/2018 - 10:54
Activists say female genital mutilation is still common in Africa - but a study finds it is falling.
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Bricks made using urine invented by South African scientists

BBC Africa - Sat, 11/10/2018 - 08:20
Scientists in South Africa have come up with an innovative way to make bricks from urine.
Categories: Africa

The 'painted wolves' of Zimbabwe

BBC Africa - Fri, 11/09/2018 - 23:29
The endangered African wild dog will enthral TV viewers when it features in David Attenborough's new Dynasties series.
Categories: Africa

Esperance beat Al Ahly to win African Champions League

BBC Africa - Fri, 11/09/2018 - 22:34
Saad Bguir is the unlikely two-goal star as Esperance of Tunisia defeat Egyptian side Al Ahly 3-0 to win a third CAF Champions League title.
Categories: Africa

Suspended for Two Years, IOM Resumes Voluntary Humanitarian Return Flights from Southern Libya

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Fri, 11/09/2018 - 19:48

Nigerian returnees boarding a plane to Lagos from southern Libya. Photo: IOM/Moayad Zaghdani

By International Organization for Migration
TRIPOLI, Libya, Nov 9 2018 (IOM)

The UN Migration Agency, IOM, resumed its Voluntary Humanitarian Return Programme (VHR) in Libya’s southern city of Sebha yesterday (08/11). VHR provides support to stranded migrants wishing to return to their home countries. In recent months, IOM has been expanding its outreach in the south through multiple field missions to make VHR operations possible.

The charter, which landed in Lagos, Nigeria, came after IOM’s outreach activities with local authorities and Nigerian communities in the south. In close coordination with the Nigerian Embassy in Tripoli, the Organization facilitated the provision of online consular support which enabled the embassy to conduct consular authentication and issue travel documents.

“We have been working intensively in the South to make sure that migrants living in urban settings or detention centres, who wish to return home safely, can receive our support,” said IOM VHR Operations Assistant, Mohamed Hmouzi.

The land transportation for migrants from BraK AL Shati and Sebha, located 80 kilometres and 30 kilometers – subsequently, from Tamanhent International Airport, was secured in collaboration with the local authorities. The migrants were also provided with food and non-food items. IOM provided protection screenings for vulnerable migrants and medical screening prior to their departure.

The charter carried 120 migrants (75 men, 30 women, 6 children and 9 infants) to Lagos. IOM will be working closely with the local authorities to ensure they reach all stranded migrants in the south who are interested in VHR assistance.

So far in 2018, IOM has provided voluntary humanitarian return assistance to a total of 14,622 migrants in Libya, out of which 3,503 were Nigerian migrants. Nigeria is the top country of return from Libya, followed by Mali and Niger.

IOM will continue monitoring and assessing the needs of stranded migrants in southern Libya for the provision of humanitarian assistance, VHR registration, medical care, as well as other pressing needs.

This charter was funded by the European Union Emergency Trust Fund for Africa.

For more information, please contact Maya Abu Ata at IOM Libya, Tel: + 00216 58601336, Email: mabuata@iom.int or Safa Msehli, Tel: +216 22 241 842 Email: smsehli@iom.int

The post Suspended for Two Years, IOM Resumes Voluntary Humanitarian Return Flights from Southern Libya appeared first on Inter Press Service.

Categories: Africa

Family tragedy of Somalia's Mogadishu hotel owners

BBC Africa - Fri, 11/09/2018 - 19:38
The owner of a hotel dies in bomb blasts, three years after his father was killed in a similar attack.
Categories: Africa

Brighton & Hove Albion midfielder Yves Bissouma dropped by Mali

BBC Africa - Fri, 11/09/2018 - 16:28
Brighton & Hove Albion's Yves Bissouma is dropped from the Mali squad for an Africa Cup of Nations qualifier in Gabon.
Categories: Africa

Gabon include Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang after he missed last match

BBC Africa - Fri, 11/09/2018 - 14:25
Gabon include Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang in their squad after he chose to miss the last Africa Cup of Nations qualifier against South Sudan.
Categories: Africa

Khirkee Voice: The Delhi newspaper bridging the Indian-African divide

BBC Africa - Fri, 11/09/2018 - 13:57
Khirkee Voice aims to bridge the divide between Indians and the large local African population.
Categories: Africa

Cameroon target first Women's Africa Cup of Nations title

BBC Africa - Fri, 11/09/2018 - 11:54
Veteran Cameroon forward Madeleine Ngono Mani is targeting a first Women's Africa Cup of Nations title at her seventh attempt.
Categories: Africa

Equatorial Guinea name West Ham's Pedro Obiang

BBC Africa - Fri, 11/09/2018 - 10:16
Equatorial Guinea name West Ham midfielder Pedro Obiang in their latest squad for an Africa Cup of Nations qualifier against Senegal.
Categories: Africa

Netherlands-born Osama Idrissi yet to decide on Morocco

BBC Africa - Fri, 11/09/2018 - 09:47
Netherlands-born Osama Idrissi is yet to decide on his international future despite been included in the Morocco squad for upcoming matches.
Categories: Africa

Didier Drogba loses USL Cup final with Phoenix Rising in what could be his last game

BBC Africa - Fri, 11/09/2018 - 09:10
Didier Drogba loses what could be the final game of his career, as his Phoenix Rising team are beaten in the United Soccer League Cup final.
Categories: Africa

Marco Napoli, 86, Ensured the Survival of IPS at UN

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Fri, 11/09/2018 - 08:48

By Thalif Deen
UNITED NATIONS, Nov 9 2018 (IPS)

Marco Napoli, who passed away on November 6, began his early professional career as a New York-based correspondent for several international news organizations, including the Italian Il Progresso News, back in the 1960s, long before he was Regional Director, IPS North America.

Marco Napoli

As part of his beat, he had to cover some of the shenanigans of reputed Mafia families in New York, relying largely on anonymous sources in New York City Police Department’s (NYPD) Organized Crime Control Bureau.

Marco once recounted one of his more memorable experiences interviewing a legendary Mafia boss in the backseat of a black limousine in New York’s famed Central Park.

Fearful of any possible attacks on the head honcho, who was apparently on a hit list, Marco was uneasily looking over his shoulder as he continued with his interview. Sensing Marco’s nervousness, the Mafia boss looked at him, tapped at the car window with his clenched fist, and told Marco: “Don’t worry, it’s bullet proof.”

And so began some of Marco’s adventurous days reporting from the asphalt jungle—a crime-infested 1960s New York City where a bank robber could get mugged fleeing to his get-a-way car.

At IPS, Marco led a more restrained life as an administrator and financial controller— graduating from shoe-leather reporting to shoe-leather fund-raising, as he pounded the sidewalks of the UN neighborhood, personally following up on project proposals as he shuttled from one UN agency to another – UNICEF, UNFPA, UNDP, all in the shadow of the UN secretariat where he had a third floor office.

As a longtime Regional Director, Marco was very protective of IPS staffers. When the head of UN media accreditation complained that he does not see any IPS reporters at the daily UN news briefings to justify press credentials, Marco angrily shot back: “Are you now spying on my staff”?

When I first walked into the IPS office in the late 1970s, IPS had a full complement of four staffers—all women, two Americans, one Indian and one French Moroccan. Talk of gender parity at the UN? I found myself a minority of one.

We all worked under the leadership of Marco who not only believed in perseverance and hard work but also punctuality. While Marco’s primary task was the economic survival of IPS, he scrupulously kept away from editorial assignments which were coordinated by an editor-in-chief, first in Rome, later in Amsterdam.

Over the years, Marco successfully extended the IPS empire, to include Canada and the Caribbean. With strong support from Director-General Roberto Savio, Marco was an aggressive fund raiser in the UN system, and sustained strong personal links to all of the UN agencies based in New York.

Marco’s crowning glory was the annual IPS International Achievement Award ceremony held at the UN delegate’s dining room– a high profile event attended by ambassadors, senior UN officials, representatives of civil society and the press corps.

The recipients of the awards, who added a tinge of political glamour, included two UN secretaries-general — Boutros Boutros-Ghali and Kofi Annan and three heads of state: Jean-Bertrand Aristide of Haiti, Martti Ahtisaari of Finland (also a Nobel laureate in 2000) and President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva of Brazil.

Marco, almost singlehandedly, organized and coordinated the annual events, which in the hands of a novice, would have been a logistical nightmare.

As Marco would recollect, there was only one IPS correspondent, Deodoro Roca, when he joined the UN Bureau in January 1979.

And then began a wave of correspondents and stringers, including Jim Lobe, Mario Dujisin, Joan Draper, Karl Meier, Madeleine Eisner, Asma bin Hamida, Maria Blaque-Belair, Shalini Dewan, Farhan Haque, Jaya Dayal, Alejandro Kirk and Yvette Collymore.

“We shared the office with Japan’s Kyodo news agency and the New York Times (which used part of our office as its archives),” said Marco, who was the political live wire of the Bureau.

Marco, who retired on 31 December 1999, said the UN Bureau had very strong working relationships with successive Secretaries-General, including Kurt Waldheim (Austria), Javier Perez de Cuellar (Peru), Boutros Boutros-Ghali (Egypt) and Kofi Annan (Ghana).

Under Marco, IPS had one of the most spacious press offices on the third floor of the Secretariat building, which he jealously safeguarded as he presided over several successive IPS UN, Bureau Chiefs, including Claude Robinson (Jamaica), Appan Menon (India) and Rajiv Tiwari (India).

The only drawback was that it was a windowless office– perhaps one of the few such offices among the UN press corps on the third floor. But as one wisecracking IPS Bureau Chief remarked: “We never had a room with a view– but all our new computers had windows.”

The post Marco Napoli, 86, Ensured the Survival of IPS at UN appeared first on Inter Press Service.

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