News
SOUTH AFRICA: Teachers' Voices Heard in Public Sector Strike
South African teachers - along with other public service employees - have embarked on an indefinite strike over wages. The unions are demanding an 8.6 percent wage increase. Government says it cannot afford to offer 1.3 million striking public servants any more than seven percent.
Trying Pirates Often as Tricky as Catching Them
U.N. member states and regional organisations debated the question of how Somali pirates should be prosecuted in a Security Council meeting Wednesday, following a report submitted last month by Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon outlining seven possible legal options.
AGRICULTURE-SOUTH AFRICA: 'There Is No Dignity'
South African farm workers – especially female labourers – continue to be exploited, despite the existence of national labour laws and regulations designed to protect them. But in the absence of information and education about their rights, workers have a hard time claiming them.
ECONOMY: "Sub-Saharan Africa Is Speeding Towards Affluence"
Africa is heading towards a bright economic future, according to a new book co-authored by the former director of the French state agency for economic cooperation and released recently in Paris.
MALAWI: Campaign Against Female Vice President a Campaign Against Equality
The future of women's political representation in Malawi has come into question as the ruling Democratic People's Party (DPP) launched a smear campaign against its own member, the country's female Vice President Joyce Banda.Many had hoped Banda would become the country's first female president in 2014.
Sao Tome and Principe at Oil Bonanza Crossroads
With the discovery of large amounts of oil in the Gulf of Guinea, the small archipelago of Sao Tome and Principe faces the possibility of benefiting from considerable oil revenues. However, a report released by Human Rights Watch (HRW) on Tuesday documents the difficulties in managing the revenues from the hydrocarbon business in an effective and transparent way.
KENYA: A Bid to Save Macadamia Crops
Joseph Ndirangu Muriithi is a worried man. After watching the fall of coffee farming in Kenya a decade ago, he now fears that his other cash crop will also go into decline as a new disease preys on his macadamia trees.
WORLD: Fair Trade Is Growing But Africans Lag Behind
Despite its minuscule share of world trade, fair trade is a booming business, importing certified foodstuffs and products from all over the world to Northern supermarkets. But there is increasing concern that this growth is yet to benefit poor countries in Africa.
DR-CONGO: Mass Gang Rape Exposes Systematic Sexual Violence
A U.N. human rights investigation mission will be launched in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) Wednesday, U.N. officials announced Tuesday, after gruesome reports surfaced in the media of the systematic gang rape of nearly 200 women in a 21km stretch of 15 villages.
SOUTH AFRICA: Climate Change Policy Ignores Women Farmers
When asked if they have already felt the effects of climate change, Mary-Anne Zimri and Katrina Scheepers eagerly nod their heads. The two small-scale farmers say lack of rain this winter has foiled their planting season, ruined their harvest – and drastically slashed their income.

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