Tekijä: Amnewsworld

Our channels shares politics, arts & culture, sports, business, Lifestyle, science, technology, health, education, history and environmental news across the globe.

The 27-yeard Sudanese joined the protests which toppled longtime president al-Bashir in 2019. If her country still grapples with a conjunction of crises, the climate campaigner warns a bigger problem doesn’t receive the attention is deserves: climate change. “There has been a noticeable increase in temperature. Sudan has always been hot, but it has now become hotter. Moreover there are failed rainy seasons”, she says. Erractic weather patterns – harsh droughts, boiling temperatures then severe floods have affected thousands. Sudan is the world’s fifth most vulnerable country to the impacts of climate change, according to a 2020 ranking in the…

Read More

Traders in Ghana’s capital Accra close their stores and businesses in a three-day protest over the soaring cost of living, as the West African country battles the economic fallout from the Ukraine war. Ghana faces a high debt load and inflation at a historic high of 37 percent in September, while the local cedi currency has plummeted against the US dollar. “Prices and import duty have risen due to cedi depreciation and dollar appreciation. So, importers find it difficult to import items due to the hikes in duty and customers no longer come in ” expressed Kwaku Anokye, a merchant. Daily…

Read More

Nigeria witnessed one of the biggest demonstrations in its history in October 2020, when youths marched through the streets and major roads in the country in protest against brutalities by the Special Anti-Robbery Squad, a unit of the Nigeria Police Force (now disbanded). They were, however, ended abruptly after some of the protesters were allegedly killed at the Lekki toll gate on October 20, 2020. Two years on after the incident, organizers and victims of the ENDSARS protests are calling for full implementation of the reports of the judicial panels of inquiry set up by the government to probe the…

Read More

Masked and helmeted Chinese and Nigerian workers hoist giant steel pipes over mounds of earth. Farther away, smoke billows from blowtorches. Camouflaged in the millet fields, heavily armed soldiers are on the lookout. In Gaya, in southwestern Niger, near Benin, the largest oil pipeline in Africa is taking shape. Nearly 2,000 km long – 1,250 km of which is in Niger – the pipeline is to link the oil wells of the Agadem field in the far east, the scene of deadly jihadist incursions, to the Beninese port of Sèmè, from where Nigerien crude will be evacuated for the first…

Read More

Tens of thousands of Catholic faithful gathered in Fatima, Portugal for the traditional pilgrimage. But this year, their prayers and thoughts are also with the Portuguese Catholic church which has been in the spotlight due to cases of alleged sexual abuse but also possible cover-up maneuvers. One of the clerics targeted has been Bishop José Ornelas, a senior official who has been named in investigations involving alleged cover-ups of sex abuse by priests. Earlier in the day Ornelas said his conscience was clear. The head of the Portuguese Bishops’ Conference denied any wrongdoing or improper conduct in the cases dating…

Read More

The UN General Assembly on Wednesday condemned Russia’s “illegal annexations” of Ukrainian territory after Moscow vetoed a similar text in the Security Council in late September. Twenty-six African countries voted in favor of the resolution rejecting Moscow’s controversial referenda in four Ukrainian regions. Nineteen others abstained. Mali, the Central African Republic, Ethiopia, the Republic of Congo, South Africa, Sudan, Uganda, and Zimbabwe were among the African countries that abstained. Eritrea, which had previously voted to reject a UN resolution condemning the Russian invasion of Ukraine, also abstained. Three of these countries hosted Russian diplomatic chief Sergei Lavrov during his tour…

Read More

On Egypt’s Red Sea coast, fish swim among thousands of newly planted mangroves, part of a program to boost biodiversity, protect coastlines and fight climate change and its impacts. After decades of destruction that saw the mangroves cleared, all that remained were fragmented patches totaling some 500 hectares (1,200 acres), the size of only a few hundred football pitches. Sayed Khalifa, the head of Egypt’s agriculture syndicate who is leading mangrove replanting efforts, calls the unique plants a “treasure” because of their ability to grow in salt water where they face no problems of drought. “It’s an entire ecosystem,” Khalifa…

Read More

A new Ebola outbreak in central Uganda has killed 17 people in three weeks, the health ministry in Kampala said on Monday. On 5 October, the World Health Organization (WHO) reported 29 deaths in the country from Ebola since the start of the epidemic. This figure includes deaths among people confirmed to have the virus, as well as suspected cases. The Ugandan government is counting only deaths among confirmed patients, which is 48 people as of 9 October, according to the ministry. Ebola is often fatal, but vaccines and treatments are now available for haemorrhagic fever, which is transmitted to…

Read More

The Tunisian Red Crescent Society said on Monday that eight bodies of migrants, probably Tunisians who had been missing for a fortnight, had been recovered by sailors off the coast of southeast Tunisia. “Sailors found eight bodies of migrants off the coast of Zarzis (south-east) on Monday morning, whose boat is believed to have sunk a fortnight ago,” Mongi Slim, head of the Red Crescent in Medenine, near Zarzis, told AFP. DNA samples have been taken from the bodies to identify them, the same source said. A makeshift boat carrying 18 migrants, including a baby, disappeared 15 days ago, local…

Read More

Heatwaves will become so extreme in certain regions of the world within decades that human life there will be unsustainable, the United Nations and the Red Cross said Monday. Heatwaves are predicted to “exceed human physiological and social limits” in the Sahel, the Horn of Africa and south and southwest Asia, with extreme events triggering “large-scale suffering and loss of life”, the organizations said. Heatwave catastrophes this year in countries like Somalia and Pakistan foreshadow a future with deadlier, more frequent, and more intense heat-related humanitarian emergencies, they warned in a joint report. The UN’s Office for the Coordination of…

Read More