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Charlotte Nikoi, the associate director Charlotte Nikoi, disappeared more than 10 weeks ago. She was last seen on the main trail in Platteklip Gorge. Her body was found on Tuesday  Image by: SUPPLIED
Charlotte Nikoi, the associate director Charlotte Nikoi, disappeared more than 10 weeks ago. She was last seen on the main trail in Platteklip Gorge. Her body was found on Tuesday Image by: SUPPLIED

Table mountain body is our beloved Ghanaian colleague - UNICEF says

The body found on Table Mountain on Tuesday has been named by Unicef as its associate director‚ Charlotte Nikoi‚ who disappeared more than 10 weeks ago.

Nikoi’s death was confirmed by Unicef in a statement issued in New York on Saturday. “We learned with great sadness that the remains of our colleague Charlotte (Nana Yaa) Nikoi have been found. All of us at Unicef are deeply saddened by this news and express our personal sympathies to her family‚” it said.

Greening Africa’s cities to protect people and growth

A fast urbanizing Africa is rapidly degrading the environmental assets of its cities.

Protecting those assets can increase the productivity and liveability of these cities, improve tourism opportunities, and enhance resilience to the impacts of extreme weather events, according to a new World Bank report, released Thursday, Greening Africa’s Cities.

African journos meet in Dar es Salaam over urbanisation challenges

Seventy-five African journalists drawn from 42 countries in Sub-Saharan Africa have gathered in Tanzania's capital of Dar es Salaam to revisit rising challenges of urbanisation, one of the major setbacks for many African cities.

The four-day workshop led by the Chief Executive Officer of African Media Initiatives (AMI), organisers of the workshop, Mr Eric Chinje is funded by the World Bank.

Mr Botha's website showcases various animals he had hunted across his career
Mr Botha's website showcases various animals he had hunted across his career

Zimbabwe hunter 'crushed to death by shot elephant'

 A professional big-game hunter was crushed to death by an elephant that had been shot, according to reports in South Africa.

The Netwerk24 website said an elephant cow stormed a group headed by Theunis Botha in Zimbabwe on Friday.

President Yoweri Museveni
President Yoweri Museveni

Museveni warns against torture use

Uganda's President Yoweri Museveni has written a letter to his top security chiefs warning against the use of torture.

He described it as "unnecessary and wrong and must not be used again".

Parents are waiting to find out if their children are among the rescued girls
Parents are waiting to find out if their children are among the rescued girls

103 Freed Chibok girls to go back to school

The 103 schoolgirls released from captivity after being taken by Islamist militants Boko Haram in Chibok, north-east Nigeria, will go back to school in September, a minister has said.

Women's Affairs Minister Aisha Alhassan said the girls would be ready psychologically, a BBC report had said.

Tanzanian bank FBME shut down over US terror funding charges

Tanzania has shut down one of the country's largest banking institutions, FBME, following charges of aiding the finance of terrorism by US authorities.

A statement from the central bank said it had revoked its licence.

Nigeria Chibok girls: One refused to be released

One of the Chibok girls kidnapped by Islamist militants Boko Haram chose to stay with her husband instead of being freed, a spokesman for Nigeria's president has said.

She was set to be part of the group of captives who were released on Saturday.

US cuts Kenya health aid money over corruption allegations

The US has suspended $21 million (£16m) of funding to Kenya's Ministry of Health due to concerns over corruption and weak accounting procedures, the state department said.

But this amounts to a "small portion of the overall US health investment exceeding $650 million annually," it added

Robert Mugabe: Zimbabwe second-most developed country in Africa

Zimbabwe is the most highly developed country in Africa after South Africa, President Robert Mugabe has said.

He denied that the country was a fragile state.

"We have over 14 universities and our literacy rate is over 90 [%] - the highest in Africa," he said, adding that the economy was improving.

President Buhari has been under growing pressure to disclose his state of health since he returned from London after two months away
President Buhari has been under growing pressure to disclose his state of health since he returned from London after two months away

Buhari misses cabinet meeting amid health fears

Nigeria's President Muhammadu Buhari missed his third consecutive cabinet meeting on Wednesday because he needed to rest, according to officials, raising concerns about the state of his health.

Vice President Yemi Osinbajo chaired the start of the session, which was open to the media. Buhari has been resting after treatment in the United Kingdom for an unspecific illness.

Madam Sun Baohong - Chinese Ambassador to Ghana
Madam Sun Baohong - Chinese Ambassador to Ghana

China to spend $50b on projects in Africa

A total of 182 newly-signed agreements between China and Africa are estimated to cost $32 billion dollars, a Chinese diplomat in Africa, Dr  Ren  Xiaoping, has revealed.

An additional 61 agreements on projects have been signed in the past three months, summing up to $18.3 billion dollars.

Top conservationist shot in Kenya

Renowned Italian-born conservationist Kuki Gallmann has been shot and injured in an ambush at her conservation park in central Kenya.

The author of the best-selling memoir I Dreamed of Africa was airlifted to hospital for treatment.

Nigeria reopens Abuja airport after runway repairs

Nigeria's airport in the capital, Abuja, has reopened six weeks after it was closed for urgent repairs.

Henrietta Yakubu, a spokesman for the aviation authority, said repair works were completed 24 hours ahead of schedule.

669 People die in anti-govt protests in Ethiopia

Ethiopia's state-affiliated Human Rights Commission says 669 people died, including 63 policemen, in the wave of anti-government protests that began in November 2015.

International rights groups have said hundreds of people lost their lives in clashes between police and protesters.

UN researchers were looking into alleged human rights violations by the Congolese army and local militia groups [Reuters]
UN researchers were looking into alleged human rights violations by the Congolese army and local militia groups [Reuters]

Suspect arrested in Congo murder of UN workers

 Authorities in the Democratic Republic of Congo have arrested two suspects in connection to last month's killing of two UN investigators, but one of the prisoners has escaped, according to a senior prosecutor.

The announcement was the first reported sign of progress in an inquiry into the deaths of American Michael Sharp and Swede Zaido Catalan, investigators monitoring UN Security Council sanctions against individuals and armed groups in Congo.

Attacks on aid workers and obstruction of their efforts has contributed to man-made famine in South Sudan [Sam Mednick/AP]
Attacks on aid workers and obstruction of their efforts has contributed to man-made famine in South Sudan [Sam Mednick/AP]

Three aid workers killed in restive South Sudan

The World Food Programme said on Friday it was "horrified" to learn that three of its South Sudanese workers were killed in violence that claimed at least 16 lives earlier this week.

The three men, contracted as porters, appear to have been killed while trying to get to a WFP warehouse amid fighting between rebel and government troops near the western city of Wau.

Rescue vessels in the Mediterranean worked flat out on Friday to rescue more than 2,000 people [Darrin Zammit Lupi/Reuters]
Rescue vessels in the Mediterranean worked flat out on Friday to rescue more than 2,000 people [Darrin Zammit Lupi/Reuters]

Frenzied rescues save more than 2,000 asylum seekers

More than 2,000 asylum seekers trying to reach Europe were plucked from the Mediterranean on Friday in a series of dramatic rescues.

An Italian coastguard spokesman said 19 rescue operations by the coastguard or ships operated by non-governmental organisations had saved a total of 2,074 people on 16 overcrowded rubber dinghies and three small wooden boats.

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