Category: NIGERIA USA NEWS

  • Explosions, gunfire at a military base near Mali’s capital | Conflict News

    Explosions, gunfire at a military base near Mali’s capital | Conflict News

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    Mali’s military says two attackers have been neutralised after the latest attack on a military base.

    Explosions and gunfire were heard in the early morning hours near the Kati military base on the outskirts of Mali’s capital Bamako, according to residents, in a suspected attack by armed fighters.

    The military, which cordoned off the roads to Kati – about 15km (10 miles) northwest of Bamako – said on Friday it repelled a “terrorist attack” that used two explosive-laden vehicles.

    “The provisional death toll is two assailants neutralised,” it said in a tweet. “The situation is under control and clearing operations are under way to flush out the authors and their accomplices.”

    “The Malian Armed Forces vigorously repelled a terrorist attack on the Kati barracks. It was early this morning around 05:00 with 02 vehicle bombs packed with explosives.”

    “We were woken up at five o’clock [in the morning] by firing, by explosions, we don’t know what’s going on,” a resident, speaking on condition of anonymity, said.

    At 8am, an AFP journalist heard detonations from inside the camp.

    Malian special forces personnel were deployed in the area, and two helicopters flew overhead.

    The French embassy sent text messages to French nationals saying “attack under way at Kati” and urging caution.

    The authorities in Kati could not be immediately reached for comment.

    Increasing attacks

    The leader of Mali’s ruling military government, Lieutenant Colonel Asimi Goita, frequently stays at the Kati camp, where he launched the 2020 coup that brought him to power.

    Armed rebels linked to al-Qaeda and the ISIL (ISIS) armed groups have been fighting in the West African country for more than 10 years. Their attacks have mostly been in northern Mali but recently the fighters moved into central Mali and now, closer to the capital.

    At dawn on Friday, at about the same time as the gunfire was heard at Kali, suspected armed fighters carried out further attacks on security forces, including at Kolokani, about 100km (60 miles) north of the capital.

    Last week, gunmen attacked an army checkpoint about an hour outside Bamako, killing at least six people and wounding several others, officials said.

    No group has claimed responsibility for the attack, but there are specualtions by members of the public that it was carried out by Jamaat Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin (JNIM), an armed group linked to al-Qaeda that has carried out several other attacks around Bamako.

    The attacks show “how the al-Qaeda affiliate Jamaat Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin continues to expand its operations outside its traditional strongholds in northern and central Mali,” said Heni Nsaibia, a senior researcher at The Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project.

    “As in other Sahelian countries such as Burkina Faso and Niger … major cities including the capitals themselves, are increasingly surrounded by a steady spread of Islamist militancy that poses an ever-increasing risk and challenge to the security environment.”

    Tensions brewing

    Goita had been facing mounting protests at failures to stem an armed campaign that erupted in northern Mali in 2012 and then spread to the country’s volatile centre, Niger and Burkina Faso.

    Across the three countries, thousands of civilians, troops and police have been killed and more than two million people have fled their homes.

    A spat with France triggered a pullout of French forces that have been fighting rebels in Mali for nearly a decade. The withdrawal is expected to be completed in the coming weeks.

    Meanwhile, a diplomatic row seems to be in the offing with the UN’s peacekeeping force MINUSMA, whose spokesman was told to leave the country this week.



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  • Sadio Mane, Asisat Oshoala win African Player of the Year awards | Football News

    Sadio Mane, Asisat Oshoala win African Player of the Year awards | Football News

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    The Senegal forward is crowned African Player of the Year after helping his country win the first AFCON title.

    Sadio Mane has been named African Footballer of Year after a season that saw him kick the winning penalty for Senegal as they claimed their first Africa Cup of Nations title and repeat the feat when they secured the World Cup qualification.

    The 30-year-old forward player, who signed a three-year deal with German giants Bayern Munich last month, won the award for the first time in 2019 while he was at English side Liverpool.

    “I am really honoured and highly delighted to receive this award again,” Mane said on Thursday. “Thanks to my coaches, my club and national team colleagues and those friends who stood by me during difficult times.”

    “I dedicate this award to the youth of Senegal. I’m very emotional and don’t have the words to express how I’m feeling,” he added.

    Nigerian Asisat Oshoala won the Women’s Player of the Year for a record fifth time, overtaking compatriot Perpetua Nkwocha.

    The 27-year-old Barcelona forward was forced to miss the ongoing Women’s Africa Cup of Nations in Morocco due to an injury.

    sadio mane
    Sadio Mane joined Liverpool in 2016 from Southampton; last month, he signed for Bayern Munich [File: Pablo Morano/Reuters]

    Mane was in the Moroccan capital, Rabat, to receive the award after a dash across the Atlantic having converted a penalty for his new club in a 6-2 pre-season friendly win over DC United in Washington on Wednesday.

    He won ahead of former Liverpool teammate Mohamed Salah from Egypt and fellow Senegal international and Chelsea goalkeeper Edouard Mendy.

    Mane and Salah played pivotal roles last season with Liverpool, who lifted the FA Cup and English League Cup and finished runners-up in the Premier League and Champions League.

    Salah has since signed a new contract at Anfield while Mane opted for a move, with Bayern reportedly paying an initial 32 million euros ($32.5m) that could rise to 41 million euros ($41.7m).

    In February, Mane converted the decisive fifth penalty to give Senegal a 4-2 shoot-out victory over Egypt and a first Africa Cup of Nations title after the final ended 0-0 in Yaounde, Cameroon’s capital.

    A month later, Mane was once again the shoot-out match-winner against Egypt, this time in a World Cup playoff near Senegal’s capital, Dakar, after a 1-1 aggregate impasse.

    Bayern Munich's Senegalese new forward Sadio Mane (2L) with his jersey poses next to Bayern Munich CEO Oliver Kahn (L), President Herbert Hainer (2ndR) and Sporting Director Hasan Salihamidzic during a press conference after he signed a three-year deal with German first division football club FC Bayern Munich, in Munich, southern Germany
    Bayern Munich confirmed the signing of Sadio Mane from Liverpool on June 22 [File: Christof Stache/AFP]

    Born in a village nearly 400km (250 miles) from Dakar, Mane attracted the attention of Metz having played for local second-tier club Generation Foot.

    After enhancing his reputation at Salzburg, Mane joined Southampton, where his feats included scoring a record-breaking 176-second Premier League hat-trick against Aston Villa.

    In mid-2016, the Senegalese signed for Liverpool and went on to form a fearsome front three with Salah and Brazilian Roberto Firmino.

    As Mane moved to Bayern, Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp said: “My only criticism of Sadio is that maybe at times he is the only one not to realise just how good he is.”

    Sadio Mane after winning the African Footballer of the Year award
    Mane won the award for the second time in his career [Abdelhak Balhaki/Reuters]

    Football: African awards winners

    Men

    Player of the Year: Sadio Mane (Senegal)

    Club Player of the Year: Mohamed el Shenawy (Al Ahly/Egypt)

    Young Player of the Year: Pape Matar Sarr (Senegal)

    Coach of the Year: Aliou Cisse (Senegal)

    National Team of the Year: Senegal

    Club of the Year: Wydad Casablanca (Morocco)

    Goal of the Year: Pape Ousmane Sakho (Senegal, Simba/TAN)

    Women

    Player of the Year: Asisat Oshoala (Nigeria)

    Club Player of the Year: Evelyn Badu (Avaldsnes/Norway, Ghana)

    Young Player of the Year: Badu

    Coach of the Year: Desiree Ellis (South Africa)

    Club of the Year: Mamelodi Sundowns (South Africa)

    National Team of the Year: To be announced after Cup of Nations final between Morocco and South Africa in Rabat on Saturday

    Asisat Oshoala
    Asisat Oshoala poses with the trophy next to CAF President Patrice Motsepe (left), after winning the Women’s Player of the Year award [AFP]

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  • Africa’s week in pictures: 15-21 July 2022

    Africa’s week in pictures: 15-21 July 2022

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    A selection of the week’s best photos from across the continent and beyond:

    Short presentational grey line

    Short presentational grey line

    Man and woman both in colourful shawls staring into the camera. They are standing in front of a green house

    On Friday a Maasai man and his wife stand outside their new house in Handeni, Tanzania, after authorities controversially relocated Maasai pastoralists from the Ngorongoro conservation area.

    A young woman standing next to an old yellow Volkswagen. There are red, black and white stripes on the car.

    On Sunday in Lagos, Nigeria, a young woman poses with an old Volkswagen car at the Vintage Africana museum.

    A woman walking amongst a garden full of greenery.

    While in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa, on Monday a woman walks through a project growing vegetables, which has been set up to try and tackle rising food prices.

    Kenyan writer and poet Khadija Abdalla standing on a historical site, there are ruins of brick buildings behind her. She is wearing a green headscarf and a white dress.

    On the same day in the Italian capital, Rome, Kenyan writer Khadija Abdalla attends the International Festival of Rome at the Palatine Stadium.

    A packed crowd of people gathered together. There is one man in the middle smiling with his hands in the air - he looks jubilant.

    In Kenya on Saturday one man celebrates at a political rally in Kisumu as he waits for a cash handout, which are being given out at these events ahead of elections next month.

    Nigerian men on the streets celebrating with talking drums and holding up election poster.

    There is more election fever in Nigeria on Sunday as people celebrate the victory of the Peoples Democratic Party candidate, Ademola Adeleke, in gubernatorial elections in Osun State…

    A man holders political posters with Bola Ahmed Tinubu and his running mate, Shettima, on them

    In the capital, Abuja, a man holds up election posters in support of the ruling All Progressives Congress party on Wednesday, ahead of a presidential vote next year.

    Man sitting on down on a beach in Senegal

    In the village of Djiffer in Senegal, a man sits down by the beach on Tuesday…

    Donkey outside a mosque

    In the nearby village of Palmarin, a donkey is captured outside a mosque.

    Ahmed Al Ahmer mid-air with the handball as Cape Verde defenders try to stop him.

    On Monday an Egyptian handball player goes up against Cape Verde defenders in Cairo at the African Nations Handball Championship.

    Athletes mid-way in the air doing steeplechase

    On the same day at the World Athletics Championships in Eugene, Morocco’s Soufiane El Bakkali takes a leap during the steeplechase race, which he goes on to win.

    Khaya Zondo on pitch, grinning with arms outstretched.

    South African cricket player Khaya Zondo is all smiles as his team trains in the UK city of Manchester…

    John Boyega in a bright red suit smiling widely.

    As is British-Nigerian actor John Boyega as he attends the ESPY awards in Hollywood on Wednesday.

    Man operating equipment nearby to fire. It is dark, but you can see an orange glimmer of the fire in the background.

    On Tuesday a man helps tackle a huge fire in the Borj Cedria forest in the southern suburb of Tunisia’s capital, Tunis.

    A sunset over water, with a palm tree in the distance.

    While the sun sets in Algiers, Algeria, on Friday.

    Short presentational grey line

    Short presentational grey line

    Images subject to copyright.

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  • Africa: Remarks by CEO Alice Albright at the Corporate Council for U.S.-Africa Business Summit

    Africa: Remarks by CEO Alice Albright at the Corporate Council for U.S.-Africa Business Summit

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    Marrakesh — I am delighted to be heading the U.S. Delegation to the 14th annual U.S.- Africa Business Summit, where I am joined by senior leaders from across the U.S. Government.

    And as the CEO of the Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC), one of the 17 government agencies that contributes to the Prosper Africa Initiative, I am excited to be here in Marrakesh to feature our partnership with the Government of Morocco, and to meet with partners from across the continent.

    I would like to extend my thanks to the Corporate Council on Africa and the Government of Morocco for bringing us all together, and all the government and private sector partners who have travelled to Marrakech for this important Summit.

    I will have more to say about the work that lies ahead over the next two days, but before I do, I want to introduce a special guest who could not be with us in person, but who wanted to extend her support for and reinforce the importance of this gathering.

    Colleagues, it is now my distinct honor to introduce the Vice President of the United States, Vice President Kamala Harris.

    [Vice President Kamala Harris Video Remarks]

    As Vice President Harris stated, we are all here and invested in creating more pathways to prosperity across the African continent.

    Through Prosper Africa – the U.S. Government’s initiative to increase trade and investment, and promote sustainable development across the continent – and our collective efforts, we are strengthening partnerships to ensure people on both sides of the Atlantic have the opportunity to create a better life for their children, their families, and their communities, and to realize their full potential.

    Since launching Prosper Africa two years ago, the U.S. Government has supported 800 two-way trade and investment deals in 45 countries in Africa, worth an estimated $50 billion.

    Yet, we can, and we must do more.

    From the pandemic, to the recovery from its devastating economic impact, to the climate crisis— Africa is essential to our collective progress as we work to tackle the complex challenges of the day.

    The Biden-Harris Administration has made deepening our engagement with Africa a priority. The United States is committed to further strengthening our partnerships to foster inclusive and sustainable economic growth and prosperity, expand opportunities for bilateral trade and investment, and promote respect and shared values.

    That is why we are continuing to work to build stronger ties with our African partners to catalyze infrastructure investments and public-private partnerships across the African continent.

    We will also continue to work to support efforts to accelerate policy and regulatory reforms needed to attract that investment.

    The U.S. Government is committed to leveraging the full suite of tools in its toolkit, capitalizing on the unique skills of departments and agencies across our government, many of whom are here today – including MCC, as well as the U.S. Trade and Development Agency, the U.S. Africa Development Foundation, the Departments of State, Commerce, and Agriculture, the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation (DFC), the Office of the U.S. Trade
    Representative (USTR), the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), the U.S. Export-Import Bank (EXIM), as well as Prosper Africa and Power Africa – and harnessing the power of the U.S. private sector toward our shared goals.

    At the recent G7 Summit in Germany, leaders formally launched the Partnership for Global Infrastructure and Investment (PGII) to mobilize hundreds of billions of dollars and deliver quality, sustainable infrastructure that makes a difference in people’s lives around the world.

    The United States aims to mobilize $200 billion for PGII over the next five years through grants, financing, and leveraging private sector investments.

    Through Prosper Africa, and the work of the departments and agencies represented here today, we will work to deliver on PGII’s promise by catalyzing investment across the African continent.

    MCC’s distinct role is to reduce poverty through inclusive and sustainable economic growth. We do this through a partnership based model that pairs large-scale investments in critical infrastructure with policy and institutional reforms that together, will attract private sector investment.

    Our commitment is not a new one.

    We are building on long-standing partnerships with African partners through which the United States has made significant investments that have helped create 21st century jobs for African youth across the continent, deliver clean water and sanitation to help fight disease, made transportation more efficient through the construction of hundreds of kilometers of roads, improved agricultural yields by bringing irrigation to farmers, and increased access to reliable electricity for households and business.