[wanabidii] Experts say Congo troops, not rebels, killed Tanzanian peacekeepers in DRC. UN launches probe (M&G Africa) Tuesday, February 09, 2016 View a web version of this message 09 Feb 2016 Forward this message Invite a friend Experts say Congo troops, not rebels, killed Tanzanian peacekeepers in DRC. UN launches probe The Tanzanians were meeting Uganda's Allied Democratic Front militants who are based in eastern DR Congo Frank stories from the African tech graveyard: Lessons on failure from Nairobi's innovation leaders "One a scale of one to ten for innovation, I would give us a two," said Safaricom CEO Collymore, much to the surprise of the audience Times are a changing; blackouts shake up African elections as Big Men seek electricity votes "Africa is moving in a direction of industrialisation. People are beginning to see power as a right" Tough love: here are 5 reasons why the world gets away with treating Africa very badly Africa doesn't come with new stacks of cards or new ideas to the game of world politics. It likes to bring blame, and threats to withdraw More from the Mail & Guardian Africa Lagos did a new marathon, and the result wasn't surprising - a Kenyan and Ethiopian won it Runners, some barefoot and others decked out head to toe in candy-coloured athletic gear, braved the haze UN experts say Rwanda recruiting refugees to oust Burundi leader; Kagame says claims 'childish' Burundian refugees allegedly provided details of their military training in Rwandan forest camps Dancing at dawn: S. Africa's new pre-work party scene where folks escape to another world "The point is to get people working towards something that makes the daily grind a little bit less boring" President Zuma schmoozes CEOs as South Africa risks junk rating, recession Zuma "needs to be told that it takes a long time to build a reputation for good business and it only takes minutes to destroy it" Mining chiefs see crisis getting worse before it gets better, but some cautiously optimistic China's slowest economic growth in a generation has led to oversupplies of metals Tough love: here are 5 reasons why the world gets away with treating Africa very badly Africa doesn't come with new stacks of cards or new ideas to the game of world politics. It likes to bring blame, and threats to withdraw Africa needs more than Facebook to narrow digital gap; so what else needs to happen? Only 21% of Africa's population has access to the Internet. In CAR, a month's service costs more than 1.5 times the annual per capita income Frank stories from the African tech graveyard: Lessons on failure from Nairobi's innovation leaders "One a scale of one to ten for innovation, I would give us a two," said Safaricom CEO Collymore, much to the surprise of the audience When it rains it pours: it's not just Africa's wildlife at risk. Extinction faces continent's livestock too 1,458 breeds of livestock are at risk of extinction. In Africa biggest threat is from indiscriminate cross-breeding between imported and local breeds Unsubscribe | Update Profile | View PDF | Pause Subscription | View Online Email Powered By This email was sent to wanabidii@googlegroups.com on 09-02-2016 Mail & Guardian is intended for opt in communication only. If you feel this email is unsolicited please report it to us. Share this : Digg Linkedin Stumbleupon Delicious Tumblr BufferApp Pocket Evernote
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