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Mobile phones are getting smarter in rural Africa

Imagine you are in Yokadouma, a rural community in eastern Cameroon with little electricity and inaccessible roads. You have an old, inexpensive mobile phone with which you can only make and receive calls. The good news is that it is now possible for that phone to be smarter — to send and receive e-mails, check a Facebook account and chat online, even without internet access

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Abdoulaye Wade Loses Runoff Presidential Election in Senegal

Senegalese state media report that President Abdoulaye Wade has acknowledged defeat in Sunday’s runoff presidential election, and has called his opponent Macky Sall to congratulate him. Unofficial results being announced by the media show Mr. Sall with a huge lead over Mr. Wade. Mr. Sall’s supporters are celebrating in the streets of Dakar

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Carter Centre condemns Power seizure in Mali

The Carter Center has condemned the seizure of power in Mali by elements of the military and has therefore called for the immediate and peaceful return to constitutional order

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Soldiers Overthrow Mali President, Seize Control

Malian soldiers angered over the government’s mishandling of the two-month-old Tuareg rebellion in the North say they have overthrown President Amadou Toumani Toure – just weeks before the election that would have marked an end to his mandate

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ECOWAS Observation Mission returns to Senegal for second round of Presidential Elections

The ECOWAS Observation Mission to the March 25, second round Presidential election in Senegal arrived in Dakar on Tuesady, March 20. A statement from ECOWAS Commission said Former Togolese Prime Minister, Koffi Sama, who headed a 150-member ECOWAS Mission to the first round Presidential election in Senegal on Sunday, February 26, would lead the mission of 100 observers

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Diamond Revenues Not Helping Zimbabwe’s Weak Economy

Zimbabwe has one of the world’s largest diamond fields, but revenues are not making an impact on the economy. The country’s finance minister is warning the government will have to virtually shut down if projected revenues do not make it into the treasury

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Feature: Improving Africa’s governance, before it’s too late

The ongoing agitation in Africa triggered by the “Arab Spring” demonstrates yet again the importance of good political and economic governance for the continent’s development. Through their street demonstrations, Africans are expressing their will to reassert control over their own destinies. They are struggling for dignity, freedom, genuine social justice and access to economic opportunities

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Feature: In human development, Africa makes slow progress

For some African countries, there is cheery news in the 2011 Human Development Report.* Published by the UN Development Programme (UNDP), it ranks countries according to three measures of human development: life expectancy, education and income. In both Kenya and Nigeria extreme poverty has declined due to improvements in water, sanitation, health and other living standards, while Ghana has made steady progress and is now ranked as having medium human development

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Feature: Power from the wind in South Africa

Three blades — each the length of a tennis court — revolve atop a wind energy tower reaching 50 metres into the sky, equal in height to a 17-storey building. There are four such turbines whirling in the hot, dry and windy landscape near the town of Darling in South Africa’s Western Cape, generating 7 gigawatt hours per year of green energy

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There is clean energy in the ground in Kenya — a lot of it — and Kenya has already moved to start tapping the Rift Valley’s vast steam reserves. The government hopes to generate about 27 per cent of the country’s electrical power from geothermal sources by 2031

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American Cities to strengthen relations with Commonwealth countries

Mrs Mary Kane, President of Sister Cities International, (SCI) has said the United State of America (USA) is looking forward to strengthening partnership with Commonwealth countries towards socio-economic advancement

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Sudan: Bashir Slams ICC Over Arrest Warrants

Sudanese President Omar Omar al-Bashir Saturday condemned the International Criminal Court for ordering the arrest of his defense minister. Mr. Bashir addressed the crowd during a rally in Khartoum, accusing the ICC of trying to undermine a symbol of the country’s armed forces. He then said he and his minister would defend the dignity and pride of Sudan

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Call Me Kuchu: Documentary Looks Into Uganda’s Activist Gay Community

Two U.S.-based filmmakers have made a riveting documentary looking into the struggles and activism of Uganda’s embattled gay community. The film is called Call Me Kuchu. Kuchu is the name used in Uganda to describe members of the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community

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South Africa: ANC Expels Julius Malema

The African National Congress (ANC) has expelled Julius Malema, the firebrand leader of the party’s youth league, for sowing divisions within the party and putting the party’s standing with South African citizens at risk. Malema may appeal the decision but must do so within two weeks

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Ivory Coast media adopts new Code of Ethics

Media Practitioners and Associations in Cote d’Ivoire on Monday adopted a new Code of Ethics for journalists at a forum in Abidjan. The adoption of the Code marks an important milestone in an ongoing effort to improve professionalism and position the media as key stakeholder in the peace building, reconciliation and democracy in that country

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Christian Youths Kill 2 Muslims In Nigeria Church Bombing Revenge

The radical Nigerian Islamist sect Boko Haram says it bombed a Christian church Sunday in Jos, killing three people and wounding dozens more. The suicide bombing was one in a series of recent attacks by the group on Christian targets in northern Nigeria, including a Christmas day bombing of a Catholic church near Abuja that killed at least 37 people

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