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Infos: Central Sahel: Ten million children threatened by insecurity, says UNICEF

A kid looks outside the window while playing with Chinese juggling plates at Rabec (Network of Community Welfare Associations), which offers activities to street children   –   Copyright © africanews CARMEN ABD ALI/AFP or licensors By Rédaction Africanews and AFP Last updated: 4 minutes ago UNICEF Ten million children living in Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger

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Infos: Central Sahel: Ten million children threatened by insecurity, says UNICEF
A kid looks outside the window while playing with Chinese juggling plates at Rabec (Network of Community Welfare Associations), which offers activities to street children   –  

Copyright © africanews

CARMEN ABD ALI/AFP or licensors

UNICEF

Ten million children living in Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger are in urgent need of humanitarian aid, twice as many as in 2020, in the face of intensifying conflict, Unicef said Friday.

Burkina Faso, the scene of two military coups in 2022, has been caught since 2015 in a spiral of jihadist violence that began in Mali and Niger a few years earlier and has spread beyond their borders. 

“Armed conflicts are increasingly affecting children, who are victims of intensified military clashes or targeted by non-state armed groups,” observes Unicef’s regional director for West and Central Africa, Marie-Pierre Poirier, in a statement. 

According to UNICEF’s Chief of Emergencies for West and Central Africa Nicola Bennett, in humanitarian emergencies, children tend to suffer first, and often they suffer most, especially in the Sahel region.

‘The Sahel’ refers to 10 countries in West and Central Africa — Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Chad, The Gambia, Guinea, Mauritania, Mali, Niger, Nigeria and Senegal. It is a region that rarely makes the front page or leads the news cycle. It is one of the toughest places in the world for children to grow up.

Twelve percent of the world’s children live in the region, but that 12 percent suffers a disproportionate burden of child deprivation. For example, the region is home to one-third of the world’s children who die before they reach age 5, and one-third of the world’s children who are out of school. Forty percent of all mothers who die in childbirth are in this region.

“The year 2022 has been particularly violent for children in the central Sahel. All parties to the conflict must urgently stop the attacks against them, but also against their schools, their health centers and their homes,” Marie-Pierre Poirier continued. 

According to the UN agency, armed groups opposed to the state-run education system are burning and looting schools, as well as threatening, abducting or executing teachers. 

More than 8,300 schools have closed in the three countries (Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger), either because they have been targeted or because parents have been displaced or are afraid to send their children there.  – Catastrophic” food insecurity –

In Burkina Faso, data collected by the United Nations showed that the number of children killed in the first nine months of 2022 had tripled compared to the same period in 2021.  

Most of these children died from gunshot wounds during attacks on their villages, or were victims of improvised explosive devices or munitions. 

This crisis is taking place in one of the regions of the world most affected by climate change, with rising temperatures and more erratic rainfall causing flooding. 

At the same time, some armed groups are resorting to tactics of blockading towns and villages and sabotaging water supply systems. 

All of these factors contribute to food insecurity. According to UNICEF, more than 20,000 people living in the border area between Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger will reach a level of food insecurity described as “catastrophic” by June. 

Hostilities extend beyond the central Sahel to border areas in northern Benin, Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, and Togo, where isolated communities lack infrastructure and resources, and where children’s access to essential services and protection is very limited. 

But humanitarian interventions are underfunded. In 2022, UNICEF received only one-third of the $391 million it requested to fund its activities in the region. For 2023, it is requesting $473.8 million.

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              Infos: Cameroon: Biya’s party wins all Senate seats

              In this Oct. 7, 2018 file photo, Cameroonian President Paul Biya during the …   –   Copyright © africanews Sunday Alamba/Copyright 2018 The AP. All rights reserved. By Rédaction Africanews with AFP Last updated: 24/03 – 15:44 Cameroon The party of President Paul Biya, who has ruled Cameroon for more than 40 years, unsurprisingly won all

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              Infos: Cameroon: Biya’s party wins all Senate seats
              In this Oct. 7, 2018 file photo, Cameroonian President Paul Biya during the …   –  

              Copyright © africanews

              Sunday Alamba/Copyright 2018 The AP. All rights reserved.

              Cameroon

              The party of President Paul Biya, who has ruled Cameroon for more than 40 years, unsurprisingly won all 70 seats in the indirectly elected Senate on March 12, the Constitutional Council announced Thursday.

              The 90-year-old omnipotent head of state must also appoint 30 more senators in the next 10 days.

              The Rassemblement démocratique du peuple camerounais (RDPC) has even strengthened its total domination of the upper house of parliament since the opposition had seven seats in the outgoing Senate.

              The CPDM lists, which came out on top in each of Cameroon’s ten administrative regions, won all the seats in each of these regions, according to the results read out by Clement Atangana, the president of the Constitutional Council, during a ceremony broadcast live on CRTV, the public television.

              In the ten regions of this central African country of some 28 million inhabitants, 10 parties had presented candidates to 11,134 electors: regional councillors, municipal councillors and traditional chiefs.

              The CPDM was the only party to present lists in all ten regions. It controls 316 of Cameroon’s 360 communes.

              In the National Assembly, Mr. Biya’s party and its allies also have an overwhelming majority of 164 deputies out of 180, elected in February 2020.

              The only issue at stake in the senatorial elections is the election, once the 30 additional senators are appointed by the head of state, of the president of the Senate, who is constitutionally responsible for the interim in case of vacancy at the head of power. But he must organise a presidential election within 120 days, in which he is not allowed to run.

              The incumbent, Marcel Niat Njifenji, 88, who is very close to Mr Biya, has held the post for 10 years.

              The “succession” of Paul Biya is on everyone’s lips. In case of death or incapacity of the president, the CPDM will have to designate a successor who will have every chance of winning the presidential election. But no personality, even among those closest to Mr. Biya, dares to step forward publicly.

              Paul Biya has ruled Cameroon since 1982 with an iron fist, regularly accused by the UN and international NGOs of ruthlessly repressing the opposition in the streets and a bloody separatist rebellion in the two western regions populated mainly by the English-speaking Cameroonian minority.

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                        Infos: Marburg virus kills 20 in Equatorial Guinea – WHO

                        In this Oct. 8, 2014 photo, a medical worker from the Infection Prevention and Control …   –   Copyright © africanews Ben Curtis/AP By Rédaction Africanews with AFP Last updated: 23/03 – 16:02 Equatorial Guinea The World Health Organization (WHO) said Thursday that the death toll from the Marburg virus epidemic in Equatorial Guinea has risen

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                        Infos: Marburg virus kills 20 in Equatorial Guinea – WHO
                        In this Oct. 8, 2014 photo, a medical worker from the Infection Prevention and Control …   –  

                        Copyright © africanews

                        Ben Curtis/AP

                        Equatorial Guinea

                        The World Health Organization (WHO) said Thursday that the death toll from the Marburg virus epidemic in Equatorial Guinea has risen to 20, with Malabo reporting six more deaths in 10 days.

                        The cases of this haemorrhagic fever, which is almost as deadly as Ebola, have spread from the province of Kie-Ntem, where it caused the first known deaths on 7 January, to Bata, the economic capital of this small central African country, which is partly an island and partly a continent.

                        This expansion “suggests wider transmission of the virus” and requires “intensified response efforts to avoid a large-scale epidemic and loss of life,” WHO warned in a statement.

                        “Between 11 and 20 March, eight cases were confirmed, six of which died,” the Equatoguinean government said on its website, without establishing a total toll since the beginning of the epidemic. The last official death toll was 11 on 28 February.

                        “To date, there are 20 probable cases and 20 deaths,” the WHO said, adding that the new cases are reported in the provinces of Kié-Ntem, Litoral and Centro Sur, which all have international borders with Cameroon and Gabon.

                        The epidemic is now raging in three of the four mainland provinces, from the east to the Atlantic Ocean. Bata, the port on the Gulf of Guinea with a population of about 250,000, is “affected”, according to the government.

                        The efforts of the authorities, aided by the WHO, to contain the virus in Kié-Ntem have therefore not been enough. “Additional WHO experts (…) will be deployed in the coming days,” the UN agency said, adding that it is also “helping Gabon and Cameroon to strengthen their preparedness and response to the epidemic.

                        Tanzania also announced on Tuesday the start of a Marburg epidemic, with five deaths.

                        The virus is transmitted to humans by fruit bats and is spread in humans through direct contact with bodily fluids of infected people, or surfaces and materials. The case fatality rate is up to 88%.

                        There is no approved vaccine or antiviral treatment for the virus. However, supportive care – oral or intravenous rehydration – and treatment of specific symptoms increase the chances of survival.

                        A range of potential treatments, including blood products, immune therapies and drugs, as well as candidate vaccines with phase 1 data are being evaluated, according to WHO.

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                                    Infos: Niger: Army claims to have killed about 20 “terrorists” near Nigeria

                                    A Nigerien military patrol from the “Faraouta Bouchia” operation, …   –   Copyright © africanews -/AFP or licensors By Rédaction Africanews with AFP Last updated: 22/03 – 16:24 Niger The Nigerien army said last week it killed “about 20 terrorists” of the jihadist group Boko Haram and captured 83 other suspected fighters during an operation on

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                                    Infos: Niger: Army claims to have killed about 20 “terrorists” near Nigeria
                                    A Nigerien military patrol from the “Faraouta Bouchia” operation, …   –  

                                    Copyright © africanews

                                    -/AFP or licensors

                                    Niger

                                    The Nigerien army said last week it killed “about 20 terrorists” of the jihadist group Boko Haram and captured 83 other suspected fighters during an operation on the border with Nigeria.

                                    This “air-land sweep” operation aimed to “neutralize” the bases of the Islamic State in West Africa group (ISWAP, a splinter faction of Boko Haram) installed in the Matari forest in Nigeria from where attacks against towns and military positions in Niger are planned, according to the military operations bulletin in the Diffa region (south-east of Niger), consulted on Wednesday by AFP.

                                    It also aims to “maintain pressure on ISWAP” and “cut its supply lines”, the text describes.

                                    According to a report drawn up by the army, some 20 “terrorists have been neutralized” and “83 suspected Boko Haram terrorists” captured and handed over to the Nigerian authorities.

                                    In addition, three “enemy” bases, logistical depots, and motorcycles were destroyed and weapons were seized.

                                    The operation was conducted from March 13 to 19 by the Nigerien military of the Mixed Multinational Force (MMF) an 8,500-strong force launched in July 2015 by Niger, Nigeria, Chad, and Cameroon, to fight armed jihadist groups.

                                    Meanwhile, the Nigerien military claims to have intercepted and handed over to Nigerien authorities a total of 1,121 suspected Boko Haram members, including women and children.

                                    These people live in the Sambissa forest in northeastern Nigeria and travel to the Nigerian islands of Lake Chad to flee fighting with their rivals in the Islamic State in West Africa (Iswap).

                                    On March 11, it had also killed “some 30 terrorists” who refused to surrender.

                                    According to the Nigerien army, clashes between ISWAP and Boko Haram over “several months” have forced families to leave Sambissa and take refuge on the islands of Lake Chad in Niger.

                                    The basin of this lake, which stretches its shores between Nigeria, Niger, Cameroon, and Chad, is a vast expanse of water and swamps where the jihadist groups Boko Haram and Iswap have set up lairs in the countless islands.

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