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8 Apr 2026, 20:16 GMT By Clarisse FORTUNÉ

In tonight’s edition, Djibouti heads to the polls this weekend in a presidential election widely expected to extend President Ismaïl Omar Guelleh’s rule. Meanwhile, Pope Leo is set to become the first head of the Catholic Church to visit Algeria. And the Bijagos Archipelago in Guinea-Bissau has been added to UNESCO’s World Heritage List.

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Strategic Djibouti heads to polls in presidential vote
7 Apr 2026, 20:43 GMT By Clarisse FORTUNÉ

In tonight's edition: As leaders gather for the “One Health” summit in France, antimicrobial resistance has emerged as a bigger killer in Africa than malaria, HIV or TB. Also, in Kinshasa, a woman seeking care was beaten by her doctor. The video has gone viral, sparking outrage in the DRC and exposing a crisis in maternity wards and violence against women. And Rwanda marks the 32nd anniversary of the genocide against the Tutsi.

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Antimicrobial resistance threatens the lives of millions on the African continent
6 Apr 2026, 20:19 GMT By Clarisse FORTUNÉ

In tonight's edition: Dozens of people have been killed in multiple attacks in Nigeria over the Easter weekend. Also, disruption to shipping routes linked to the Iran war has left about 8 million kilograms of tea stuck in warehouses in Kenya. And in the DRC, tens of thousands of jubilant fans welcomed their football team as heroes after they qualified for the World Cup for the first time in 52 years.

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Dozens killed in Easter attacks in Nigeria
3 Apr 2026, 21:48 GMT By Clémence WALLER

Uganda is in shock after four children were killed in a brutal attack at a kindergarten in Kampala. Meanwhile, Sudan’s military leader and head of state, Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, has appointed Yasir al-Atta as the armed forces’ new chief of staff. And, with a week to go before Benin heads to the polls for its general election, opposition parties are in crisis.

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Uganda in shock after 4 children killed in kindergarten attack
2 Apr 2026, 20:20 GMT By Jean-Emile JAMMINE

In tonight’s edition: Human Rights Watch reports that Burkina Faso’s government forces and jihadist groups together killed more than 1,800 civilians between 2023 and 2025. In Accra, a collapsed and unfinished school has left four people dead and nearly 30 injured, raising concerns over unsafe classrooms. Meanwhile, Belgium is pushing back against a US-backed AI firm seeking access to historic mining maps that could reveal valuable mineral deposits.

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Burkina Faso: More than 1,800 civilians killed by army and jihadists since 2023
1 Apr 2026, 20:23 GMT By Yinka OYETADE

In tonight’s edition: South Africa ramps up its fight against crime with the deployment of soldiers in Cape Town. Also, the Democratic Republic of Congo gets a chance at World Cup glory for the first time in over half a century. And top African leaders and changemakers gather in Paris for the ChangeNOW international climate summit — we speak to one of them, Elizabeth Wathuti.

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South Africa deploys troops to tackle crime in Cape Town townships
31 Mar 2026, 20:21 GMT By Yinka OYETADE

In tonight’s edition, Doctors Without Borders sounds the alarm over Sudan, warning that sexual violence against women and girls is being used as a weapon of war. Also, a Tunisian court has handed down a two-year prison sentence to news website editor Ghassen Ben Khelifa, in the latest prosecution targeting media workers. And after stops in New York, London and Melbourne, the Africa Fashion exhibition arrives in Paris.

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No safe places for women in Darfur, report warns
30 Mar 2026, 20:19 GMT By Clémence WALLER

In tonight's edition: Nigerians are feeling the consequences of the war in the Middle East at the pump, with petrol prices soaring. Also, DR Congo's armed forces begin a disarmament push against the FDLR, a militia linked to the 1994 genocide in Rwanda. And in South Africa, a mine owner has reached an understanding with illegal miners, allowing them limited access to his property once formal operations end for the day.

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Nigeria's gasoline pump ⁠prices rise by 65%, ​highest in Africa
27 Mar 2026, 21:43 GMT By Yinka OYETADE

In tonight's edition: Egypt orders shops, restaurants and shopping malls to shut their doors from 9:00pm on Saturday as it hopes to cushion the blow of energy prices that have more than doubled because of the Iran war. Also, rising jihadist violence in the Sahel is hitting tourism in Benin. Plus Somali women defy Al Shabaab threats and conservative norms to play football.

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Egypt imposes business curfew to counter soaring fuel costs