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Classement de la corruption en Afrique

1- Botswana
2- Cap vert
3- Afrique du sud
4- Namibie
5- Ghana
6- Burkina Faso
7- Swaziland
8- Rwanda
9- Lesotho
10- Liberia
11- Madagascar
12- Sénégal
13- Zambie
14- Bénin
15- Gabon
16- Gambie
17- Niger
18- Mali
19- Togo
20- Ethiopie
21- Erythrée
22- Tanzanie
23- Libye
24- Mauritanie
25- Mozambique
26- Nigéria
27- Ouganda
28- Cameroun
29- Kenya
30- Sierra Leorne
31- Zimbabwe
32- CÔTE D\'IVOIRE
33- Angola
34- RD Congo
35- Guinée Bissau
36- Burundi
37- Guinée Equatoriale
38- Guinée
39- Tchad
40- Soudan
41- Somalie

Botswana: les yeux doux du président aux électeurs

Le président du Botswana Ian Khama a appelé avant-hier les électeurs à reconduire son parti aux législative du 16 octobre en promettant une continuité de la bonne gouvernance de ce pays riche en diamants qui en fait un exemple éclatant en Afrique.

The UN food agency has issued a warning that Kenya faces a dire hunger crisis


Kenya

The UN food agency has issued a warning that Kenya faces a dire hunger crisis due to failed rains, appealing for USD 230 million to feed nearly 4 million Kenyans – nearly one-tenth of the African nation’s population – over the next six months. “Red lights are flashing around the country,” said Burkard Oberle, Kenya director of the World Food Programme (WFP). “People are already going hungry, malnutrition is preying on more and more young children, cattle are dying – we face a huge challenge and are urging the international community to provide us with the resources we need to get the job done,” he added. (UN News Service)

The president of Mali has announced that he is not going to sign the country\'s new family law

The president of Mali has announced that he is not going to sign the country\'s new family law, instead returning it to parliament for review. Muslim groups have been protesting against the law, which gives greater rights to women, ever since parliament adopted it at the start of the month. President Amadou Toumani Toure said he was sending the law back for the sake of national unity. Muslim leaders have called the law the work of the devil and against Islam. Some of the provisions that have proved controversial give more rights to women. (BBC)

Jean-Pierre Bemba Gombo should remain in the custody

Jean-Pierre Bemba Gombo should remain in the custody of the International Criminal Court (ICC) until the start of his trial for war crimes and crimes against humanity, the Court’s Prosecutor stated as he appealed the decision to the former Congolese leader a temporary release. On Aug.. 14, the Court decided to grant Bemba’s the request for interim release, albeit under conditions. The former vice-president of the Congo (DRC) faces charges for alleged crimes committed in the Central African Republic (CAR) between October 2002 and March 2003, including rape, murder and pillaging. Bemba will be released once the conditions have been set, and it has been determined which country will take him in until his trial, a date for which has not yet been set. (UN News Service)