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Morocco 'bans the sale and production of the burka'

Morocco has banned the sale, production and import of the burka, according to local reports.

Letters announcing the ban were sent out on Monday, giving businesses 48 hours to get rid of their stock, the reports stated.

Army worms hit Zimbabwe

Zimbabwe has been hit by an outbreak of army worms which has destroyed maize crops in a country suffering from a food shortage because of drought. 

The state-owned Herald newspaper reports that the government has sent pesticides to the Midlands and Matabeleland provinces in an effort to curb the outbreak. 

Late last year the country was hit by weeks of protests after students demanded free education [Reuters]
Late last year the country was hit by weeks of protests after students demanded free education [Reuters]

South Africa's ANC marks 105 years amid deep divisions

South Africa's ruling African National Congress is marking 105 years since it was formed but there are deep divisions in the ranks of Africa's oldest liberation movement.

A cow grazes in the dry area of the decommissioned Upper Ncema Dam, Zimbabwe [AFP]
A cow grazes in the dry area of the decommissioned Upper Ncema Dam, Zimbabwe [AFP]

Food security crisis in southern Africa after drought

Southern Africa is still recovering from the devastating effects brought on by a two-year-long El Nino event that ended in early 2016.

Ovaherero men, dressed in military fatigues to honour their fallen ancestors [Kuzeeko Tjitemisa/Al Jazeera]
Ovaherero men, dressed in military fatigues to honour their fallen ancestors [Kuzeeko Tjitemisa/Al Jazeera]

Namibian tribes sue Germany alleging colonial genocide

Two indigenous groups in Namibia have filed a lawsuit against Germany accusing it of genocide committed by colonial rulers more than a century ago.

The decrease in refugees reaching Europe was largely owing to tighter border controls [AP]
The decrease in refugees reaching Europe was largely owing to tighter border controls [AP]

Number of refugees reaching Europe plunged in 2016

The number of refugees who arrived on Europe's shores plunged by nearly two-thirds last year, but the number of those who died on the often perilous journey in the Mediterranean Sea rose sharply, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) and the EU border agency Frontex has said.

Mutinous soldiers are seen during a meeting with Ivory Coast's minister of defence, Alain-Richard Donwahi in Bouake [Thierry Gouegnon/Reuters]
Mutinous soldiers are seen during a meeting with Ivory Coast's minister of defence, Alain-Richard Donwahi in Bouake [Thierry Gouegnon/Reuters]

Ivory Coast minister freed after troops mutiny deal

Mutinying soldiers in Ivory Coast's second largest city Bouake released the defence minister after opening fire on the governor's house where he was staying as a two-day troop revolt came to a violent standoff.

Yahya Jammeh holds a copy of the Quran while speaking to a poll worker at a voting station [Thierry Gouegnon/Reuters]
Yahya Jammeh holds a copy of the Quran while speaking to a poll worker at a voting station [Thierry Gouegnon/Reuters]

ECOWAS holds off on troop deployment to The Gambia

West African leaders are still pursuing mediation to ensure a peaceful transfer of power in The Gambia where President Yahya Jammeh refused to accept defeat in an election last month.

Senegal expats to be allowed to run for parliament

Senegalese people living abroad will be able to run for office in their home country for the first time in July's elections, after MPs voted to increase the number of seats in parliament.

The national assembly will add 15 seats for members of the country's diaspora, bringing the total to 165.

Corruption investigations into judicial bodies are rare in Egypt [Reuters]
Corruption investigations into judicial bodies are rare in Egypt [Reuters]

Senior Egyptian judge 'hanged himself' in jail cell

A senior Egyptian judge arrested on corruption charges has been found dead in his jail cell after he allegedly hanged himself, his lawyer said.

Mogadishu has seen frequent bomb attacks at hotels and military checkpoints [Abdirizak Mohamud Tuuryare/Al Jazeera]
Mogadishu has seen frequent bomb attacks at hotels and military checkpoints [Abdirizak Mohamud Tuuryare/Al Jazeera]

Massive blast hits near Mogadishu airport

Suicide bombers attacked the main peacekeeping base in Somalia's capital, killing at least three Somali security officers.

A Gambian officer speaks to President Jammeh in the capital Banjul in November 2016 [Jerome Delay/AP]
A Gambian officer speaks to President Jammeh in the capital Banjul in November 2016 [Jerome Delay/AP]

The Gambia opposition warns Yahya Jammeh to step aside

The Gambia's opposition says longtime ruler Yahya Jammeh could be considered a rebel leader if he takes up arms and doesn't step down later this month, a warning issued after the president vowed any foreign troop presence would be tantamount to an act of war.

Halifa Sallah, the spokesman of the opposition coalition, said on Monday that Jammeh will be a private citizen as of January 19 and would have no constitutional mandate to be in command of the armed forces of The Gambia.

The president of ECOWAS - the Economic Community of West African States - has said West African leaders will send troops into the country if Jammeh refuses to step down after losing the December 1 election.

"Any president whose term of office expires who takes up arms against an incoming president whose term should begin according to law, would be regarded by the international community as a rebel leader," Sallah said, reading a statement by the coalition.
Jammeh railed against the

Gambian private radio stations shut

Security forces in The Gambia have shut down two private radio stations, the main press union has said, amid a crisis over President Yaya Jammeh's refusal to step down.

The closure of Teranga FM and Hilltop Radio was a "slap in the face" for democracy, said Emil Touray, the head of The Gambia Press Union.

The vice-president is a collector of Michael Jackson memorabilia and luxury cars

Equatorial Guinea's VP on trial in France

Equatorial Guinea's flamboyant vice-president has gone trial in absentia in France on charges of corruption after he failed to stop the landmark case.

Teodorin Obiang Nguema is accused of buying a mansion and sports cars in France with a fortune amassed from oil-rich Equatorial Guinea's public funds.

President Kabila came to power in 2001
President Kabila came to power in 2001

DR Congo deal agreed to end Kabila rule

A deal has been signed to end Joseph Kabila's 15-year rule in the Democratic Republic of Congo - but the president himself has yet to add his signature.

Senior ministers backed the deal, which would see Mr Kabila stay on until elections are held by the end of 2017.

Burundi remains politically unstable since sitting President Nkurunziza made a bid for a third term [Reuters/Jean Pierre Aime Harerimana]
Burundi remains politically unstable since sitting President Nkurunziza made a bid for a third term [Reuters/Jean Pierre Aime Harerimana]

Burundi's environment minister shot dead in Bujumbura

Burundi's environment minister, Emmanuel Niyonkuru has been shot dead by unknown assailants in the capital Bujumbura, police said.

After more than 20 years in power, Jammeh is fighting to remain relevant in The Gambia [Carlos Garcia Rawlins/Reuters]
After more than 20 years in power, Jammeh is fighting to remain relevant in The Gambia [Carlos Garcia Rawlins/Reuters]

Yahya Jammeh calls ECOWAS deployment 'an act of war'

President Yahya Jammeh says the West African community's decision to send troops into The Gambia to force him to accept defeat in last month's presidential election, is "a declaration of war".

The Sultan of Sokoto says Muslims should be allowed to uphold their religious beliefs
The Sultan of Sokoto says Muslims should be allowed to uphold their religious beliefs

Nigeria: Sultan of Sokoto rejects gender equality bill

Nigeria's most senior Muslim cleric has rejected a new gender equality bill, which proposes that women and men inherit an equal share.

The Sultan of Sokoto, Mohamed Sa'ad Abubakar, said Muslims would not accept the violation of Islamic law guaranteeing men a greater share.

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