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Africa Live this week: 12-19 September 2022
Bringing you the latest news from around Africa at bbc.com/africalive. This is an automated feed overnight and at weekends.
Bringing you the latest news from around Africa at bbc.com/africalive. This is an automated feed overnight and at weekends.
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BBCCopyright: BBC - The Kenyan marathon runner destined for greatness
- From borrowing shoes to breaking world records
GettyCopyright: Getty - Chibok girls
feel let down 10 years after Nigeria kidnapping
- Parents of kidnapped children heartbroken - again
- Niger, Mali and Burkina Faso to form joint force to fight jihadists
- Why does France have military bases in Africa?
- South Africa election 2024: When is the poll and what is at stake for the ANC?
- South Africa election 2024: ‘You see skeletons’ - the deadly migrant crossing
Latest PostSouth Africa bursary scandal suspects granted bail
Rafieka Williams
BBC News, Johannesburg
Three men accused of defrauding a bursary scheme for university students in South Africa have been granted bail.
The trio were arrested less than a month ago on allegations of funnelling more than 16m rand ($863,000, £693,000) from the finance company KPMG to private bank accounts.
The Palm Ridge Magistrate’s court in Johannesburg set bail at 50,000 rand each.
Fidelis Moema, Lebogang Sigubundu and Trevor Machimana are alleged to have worked together between October 2019 and 2022.
All three are reported to be intending to plead not guilty though they have yet to enter a formal plea.
A brief look at Mr Moema’s professional history shows the 32-year-old worked in human resources at Ford Motors and as a brand ambassador for several businesses including the retail chain Woolworths.
Mr Moema was reported to police following disciplinary proceedings at KPMG.
The case is due to continue on 24 May when state prosecutors say more witnesses may be presented.
Evidence so far about the suspected fraud has come from Mr Moema’s ex-girlfriends, according to National Prosecuting Authority spokesperson Phindi Mjonondwane.
"The number of people we are looking at might increase. We prefer to wait for the right moment. When we are at the stage to disclose our docket, we will be able to tell how many people have been added to the case."
Kenya investigates crash that killed military chief
By Wycliffe Muia
BBC News, Nairobi
Gen Francis Ogolla was in the west of the country when his helicopter went down killing 10.
Read moreGhana’s new train collides with lorry in test run
By Wycliffe Muia
BBC News
The train rammed into a lorry parked along the Tema-Mpakadan railway line, damaging its cabin area.
Read moreNigerian attempts to break chess marathon record
By Gloria Aradi
BBC News
The 29-year-old chess master hopes raise $1m for charity by playing for 58 consecutive hours.
Read moreMboma 'did not lose hope' during 20-month lay-off
By Celestine Karoney
BBC Sport Africa, Nairobi
Sprinter Christine Mboma says an enforced hiatus impacted her mental health but she did not lose hope of a return.
Read moreCampaigner returns OBE over Rwanda scheme
By Ross McKee
BBC News NI
Dr Aidan McQuade wrote to the prime minister, Rishi Sunak, and returned the honour by post.
Read moreGoggles, bubbles and puddles: Africa's top shots
A selection of the week's best photos from across the continent and beyond.
Read moreWoman rescued 10 years after Chibok kidnapping
By Alex Therrien
BBC News
The Islamist group Boko Haram seized 276 girls from a school in Chibok in 2014
Read moreKenya's military chief dies in helicopter crash
By Ian Wafula, Africa security correspondent & Malu Cursino
In Nairobi and London
A military helicopter carrying senior military officers crashes and caught fire, killing ten people.
Read moreTurtle could be sent to Cape Verde due to Brexit
A turtle that washed up in Guernsey may not be able to return to Gran Canaria, a charity says.
Read morePeople flee as Tigray forces advance towards disputed areas
Kalkidan Yibeltal
BBC News, Addis Ababa
Tigrayan fighters in northern Ethiopia have reportedly taken control of more disputed areas on the border with the Amhara region, forcing residents to flee their homes.
Fighting flared up on Saturday after Tigray fighters were accused of advancing towards Alamata, a major town, in the disputed Raya district.
Officials in Kobo, a neighbouring Amhara town, told the BBC that"“many" people were arriving in recent days fleeing the clashes.
In a strongly worded statement released on Wednesday, the Amhara regional government accused Tigrayan forces of launching an "invasion" and threatened action against it.
The Tigrayan forces are yet to comment on these latest accusations but Getachew Reda, the head of the interim administration in Tigray, had previously blamed some unnamed "die-hard enemies" for the flare up.
The district had been under the southern Tigray administration until war broke out between the federal government and Tigrayan forces in 2020. The Amhara forces, which fought alongside the federal army during the war, have since seized the areas.
The federal authorities have not commented on the latest clashes, but they had previously said disputed areas would be under the army’s control until a resolution was reached.
The escalation threatens to disrupt the implementation of the peace agreement signed by the federal government and the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF) in Pretoria, South Africa, in November 2022 that ended the civil war.
Burkina Faso's junta expels French diplomats
By Thomas Naadi
BBC News, Accra
The junta has accused three diplomats of "subversive activities", which France has denied.
Read moreBurkina Faso expulsion of diplomats unfounded - France
Richard Hamilton
BBC World Service newsroom
The French government says a decision by Burkina Faso to expel three of its diplomats was based on unfounded allegations.
Earlier the foreign ministry in Ouagadougou said the three advisers in the French embassy had been ordered to leave, because of what it called subversive activities.
Some reports suggest they had been meeting civil society activists.
Since coming to power in a coup in 2022, Burkina Faso's military rulers have distanced themselves from the former colonial power.
They have has forced French troops to leave the country, suspended some Francophone media and demanded that Paris recall its ambassador.
BreakingKenyan military helicopter crashes
Ian Wafula
Africa security correspondent, BBC News, Nairobi
A Kenya Defence Forces helicopter has crashed moments after take off with reports of casualties.
Local news channel Citizen TV is reporting that the head of the military Gen Francis Ogolla was on board - the BBC has not confirmed this.
Zambia's president appeals for help in wake of drought
Kennedy Gondwe
BBC News, Lusaka
Nearly half of Zambia’s population has been affected by the on-going drought with the country needing about $940m (£760m) in aid.
During a national address, Zambia’s President Hakainde Hichilema said the money is rerquired to “effectively implement immediate life-saving and life-sustaining humanitarian and recovery needs”.
He said “9.8 million of our people have been adversely affected by the drought”.
“Of these, 6.6 million people are in need of urgent humanitarian assistance."
Zambia, Zimbabwe and Malawi have also declared states of disasters due to the drought that is sweeping much of Southern Africa.
Mr Hichilema said the effects of the drought were mostly observed in the agriculture sector were one million hectares of planted maize had been adversely affected. Maize meal is Zambia’s staple food.
“With a heavy heart, on behalf of our government and the people of Zambia, we hereby appeal to the international community, our partners within the country, the private sector, the church and civil society organisations, to support our plan financially and materially, in mitigating the devastating effects of the drought,” the president said.
Besides the current food insecurity, Zambia has implemented eight-hour long electricity rationing periods to conserve power as most of the country’s energy is from hydro sources.
World record holder Kiptum to be honoured at London Marathon
The marathon world record holder, Kenya's Kelvin Kiptum, will be honoured at the London Marathon on Sunday.
The 24-year-old died alongside his coach, Rwanda's Gervais Hakizimana, in a car accident in western Kenya in February.
Kiptum was set to compete in this year’s London Marathon, where he was looking to win for the second year in a row.
The event will begin with a tribute to Kiptum.
"What we will be doing... is celebrating him," event director Hugh Brasher said in an interview with BBC Sport Today.
"And we will be saying some words beforehand and asking all the participants to participate in 30 seconds of applause for Kelvin - for the life that we didn't know, for the man that we didn't know, but also for what he had achieved, for the man that he was and for the tragic passing of his life earlier this year."
Kiptum had set records in all the three marathons he ran in his short-lived career.
He set the course record at the last London Marathon.
Shortly after, he ran the fastest marathon in history in Chicago, setting a record of 2:00.35.
Kiptum also set the fastest debut marathon time at his first marathon in Valencia.
The Rotterdam Marathon, in which Kiptum planned to race, also paid tribute to him last Sunday. Participants, including Kiptum's wife Asenath Rotich, took part in a minute's silence in his honour.
More on Kelvin Kiptum:
Survey names Cape Town as Africa's best airport
The airport in the South African city of Cape Town has been named as the best airport on the continent in a customer survey by the consumer ratings organisation Skytrax.
Globally, Cape Town is ranked 54th. It has seen its position on the list drop in recent years - in 2020 it came 23rd.
Two other South African airports, Durban and Johannesburg, came second and third respectively in the continental listing.
The airport in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa was ranked seventh in Africa and Nairobi's Jomo Kenyatta International Airport came 10th.
Chibok abductee and her three children rescued 10 years on
One more of the female students abducted by militants from a secondary school in north-east Nigeria a decade ago has been rescued, the army says.
The army said on Thursday that it had rescued the young woman, who is five months pregnant, along with her three children.
The abduction of the 276 girls from their school in north-eastern Nigeria in 2014 by Boko Haram militants shocked the world and sparked a global campaign to #BringBackOurGirls, which included former US First Lady Michelle Obama.
More than 180 girls have either since escaped or been freed from Boko Haram hideouts in Sambisa forest in north-eastern Borno state.
Some of the freed and rescued girls have returned home pregnant or with children.
About 90 others are still missing and are suspected to still be held by the militants.
Read more:
Burkina Faso expels French diplomats
Burkina Faso has expelled three French diplomats for engaging in "subversive activities", the Burkinabe foreign affairs ministry said in a notice to France.
The notice dated 16 April did not reveal the nature of the activities.
The diplomats, who include two political advisers at the French embassy in Ouagadougou, have been asked "to leave the territory of Burkina Faso within the next 48 hours”, the notice added.
Relations between Burkina Faso and its former colonial power France have soured since Capt Ibrahim Traoré seized power in a coup in September 2022.
The junta leader has pivoted Burkina Faso towards Russia, ending its close ties with former colonial power France.
Under his rule, several French diplomats have been expelled and France's military base in the country shut down.
Read more on the Sahel:
South Africa has longest non-stop power streak for two years
South Africa has now gone for 21 consecutive days without power cuts, the first time such a streak has been achieved in nearly two years.
"The last time Eskom achieved a similar milestone was in June 2022, with 20 consecutive days without load shedding," state-owned power company Eskom said in a statement on Wednesday.
The statement added that Eskom would continue to suspend the power cuts, known locally as loads hedding, "until further notice".
It attributed the stabilisation of power supply to reduced demand for electricity, adequate emergency power reserves and an improvement in its electricity generation capacity.
But some South Africans have voiced scepticism on social media, speculating that the reduced power cuts could be a scheme by the ruling government to appease voters, ahead of next month's crucial general election.
South Africa reached the height of its energy crisis last year, with several homes and businesses going without power for up to 16 hours a day.
Read more from South Africa: