News headlines for “Conflicts in Africa”, page 420

  1. Obstetric Fistula Haunts Pakistani Women

    - Inter Press Service

    KARACHI, Jun 17 (IPS) - The word on the street was that if there were one place on earth that could treat Mohammad Lalu's wife, it would be the Koohi Goth Women's Hospital in Pakistan's port city of Karachi.

  2. South Sudan’s Wildlife Become Casualties Of War and Are Killed to Feed Soldiers and Rebels

    - Inter Press Service

    , Jun 17 (IPS) - While South Sudan's President Salva Kiir and his former deputy Riek Machar agreed last week to end the country's devastating six-month conflict by forming a transitional government within the next two months, it may come too late for this country's wildlife as conservation officials accuse fighters on both sides of engaging in killing wild animals to feed their forces.  

  3. From Religious Conflict to an Interfaith Community

    - Inter Press Service

    UNITED NATIONS, Jun 16 (IPS) - Holy men and their holy books have etched a trail of tears and blood in the annals of human history. From the depths of peaceful temples, mobs have been dispatched with flaming torches; from steeples and minarets messages of hatred have floated down upon pious heads bent in prayer. For too long religion has incited violence and fueled conflict.

  4. Mosul Refugees Victims of "Victory of the Revolution”

    - Inter Press Service

    KHAZAR, Iraq, Jun 15 (IPS) - "People with long beards and dressed like Afghans broke into our neighbourhood after they had bombed it. We were lucky to escape from that nightmare," Aum Ahmad, a46-year-old woman from Mosul – 400 km northwest of Baghdad – told IPS from the recently set up Khazar refugee camp, 25 km east of the besieged city.

  5. Cameroon, Where Poor Infrastructure Doesn’t Dim Love for Football

    - Inter Press Service

    YAOUNDE, Jun 11 (IPS) - It is almost 6pm. A group of kids are plying their craft in a dusty, dirty courtyard in a poor neighbourhood in Yaounde, Cameroon's capital. That craft is football.  They kick the once-white-but-now-brown, aged football around. One child is barefoot, the other wears worn shoes and is dressed in the kit of the national team. 

  6. Mothers Light Up Homes in Rural Tanzania

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    UNITED NATIONS, Jun 10 (IPS) - "My mother used to just stay at home, now she has come back and is an engineer and a leader. She is on the Village Energy Committee," said a 10-year-old girl from the village of Chekeleni, in Tanzania's southeastern Mtwara district.

  7. Shona, Zimbabwe’s Local Language, Takes on Urban Grooves and Gets Street Cred

    - Inter Press Service

    HARARE, Jun 10 (IPS) - "Ndipei sand dzangu," (give me my hammers) sings Zimbabwean artist Winky D. He may be singing in Shona, the local language spoken by some 80 percent of Zimbabweans, but his Shona is different. It's Street Shona. So what he really means, loosely translated, is that someone is exceptionally good at what they do and therefore needs to be recognised for this.

  8. Mauritian Sugar Farmers Squeezed by Low Prices as Bagasse and Ethanol Become Popular By-products

    - Inter Press Service

    PORT LOUIS, Jun 10 (IPS) - While Mauritius has been forced to transform its sugar industry because of low prices for the commodity, the country's small-scale sugarcane farmers who contribute to it say they are barely earning a living.

  9. Q&A: Developing World Leads in Advancement of Climate Change Laws

    - Inter Press Service

    MEXICO CITY, Jun 08 (IPS) - Developing countries in Africa, Asia and Latin America are increasingly leading the way in providing a legal framework for climate security and are being hailed for their continued advancement in formulating climate change laws and policies.

  10. Ethiopia Shoots for the Stars and Galaxies as it Aims to Become Space Science Hub

    - Inter Press Service

    ADDIS ABABA, Jun 06 (IPS) - High up in the eucalyptus-strewn Entoto Mountains, which overlook the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa, work is nearly complete on the country's first observatory. Studying the stars and the galaxies will be vital for this Horn of Africa nation's development and will hopefully also go a long way to developing brotherly love, say scientists who are part of the project.

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