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The nine bodies with ‘visibile marks of torture’ were found in an abandoned quarry near a police station.
Kenya’s police watchdog has said it is investigating whether there was any police involvement following the discovery of nine mutilated bodies in an abandoned quarry in Mukuru, a collection of slums south of Nairobi.
The Independent Policing Oversight Authority (IPOA) said at least “nine deceased persons” were dumped less than 100 metres from the Kware police station south of the Kenyan capital.
“Seven deceased persons are believed to be female while two are males,” it said on Friday. “The bodies, wrapped in bags and secured by nylon ropes, had visible marks of torture and mutilation,” according to the statement.
Kenyan police are under intense scrutiny after dozens of people were killed during antigovernment demonstrations last month, with rights groups accusing officers of using excessive force.
Inspector General of Police Japhet Koome resigned over the crackdown and deaths, the presidency announced on Friday.
IPOA statement on the discovery of deceased persons in Nairobi. ^DD pic.twitter.com/XHJoV629Qr
— IPOA (@IPOA_KE) July 12, 2024
Meanwhile, the IPOA said that due to the location of the dumping site and the “widespread allegations of police involvement in unlawful arrests, [and] abductions”, the agency was undertaking preliminary inquiries to establish whether there was any police involvement.
It also called on the police to take “immediate and hastened forensic investigations” to identify the bodies.
Miriam Nyamuita, an activist with the Mukuru Community Justice Centre, told the Reuters news agency that most of the bodies that were found have decomposed except one that was “fresh”.
“We don’t know if we can relate it to protests or it’s femicide since most of them are women,” she added.
The Kenya Human Rights Commission, a non-governmental organisation, also urged a “comprehensive investigation” to determine the cause of the deaths and those responsible.
“The perpetrators must be held accountable,” it said on X, and the government “must take accountability for this heinous crime”.
The demonstrations began over the government’s proposed tax hikes in a new finance bill. While President William Ruto scrapped the tax increases, protesters are demanding that he step down and for the police to be held accountable for the excessive violence against them.
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On Tuesday (June 25), thousands of protestors in Kenya stormed the parliament building, setting parts of it on fire, per The Associated Press. Now, global social media users are calling for more conversations about what’s happening in the African country.
But the question remains: WHAT exactly caused these protests and the escalation on Tuesday? Here’s a breakdown of what’s going on, the impact so far, and the ultimate goal of the protests.

According to AP, President William Ruto came to power by appealing to the common people, describing himself as a “hustler” and vowing relief from economic pain. Country officials swore him into his role in Sept. 2022. Less than two years later, support for him has taken a drastic turn.
President Ruto ran on the promise of implementing policies to put more money in Kenyans’ pockets. When his government removed crucial fuel and maize flour subsidies, many Kenyans saw it as a betrayal.
Ruto, now fabulously wealthy, frequently urges Kenyans to tighten their belts. But his state visit to the United States in May created controversy when he chartered a luxury private jet instead of using the presidential jet or Kenya’s national carrier. Ruto later said friends paid for the chartered jet, but he didn’t name them.
As mentioned, on Tuesday, part of parliament burned as protesters rushed in and lawmakers fled. AP reports that bodies lay in the streets as police opened fire, per witness reports from medical workers and watchdogs. Military forces are also on the ground.






The country’s youth, in particular, have been strongly opposed to a finance bill officials made public for the first time on June 18. They have advised that it would worsen Kenya’s economic issues, including the already high cost of living.
To lawmakers, though, the finance bill is supposed to raise or introduce taxes or fees on a range of daily items and services. That list includes internet data, fuel, bank transfers, and diapers. Some of the bill’s measures have already been stripped as anger grew.
Still, lawmakers moved forward with passing during a second-round vote amid opposition. The bill now awaits President Ruto’s signature, and he’s expected to sign it this week, per AP. He has two weeks to act but, obviously, faces calls from protesters, religious and other leaders to think again.
For context, the proposals are part of the Kenyan government’s efforts to raise an extra $2.7 billion in domestic revenue. The government says the changes are necessary to pay interest on national debt, reduce the budget deficit, and keep the government running.
Note that this isn’t the first finance bill by President Ruto to face opposition. A 2023 finance bill Ruto signed into law was also unpopular, though anger didn’t escalate like this. That bill featured a tax on salaries for housing.
Since June 18, young Kenyans have been organizing on social media and taking to the streets. Their actions have included peaceful street demonstrations meant to force authorities to drop this finance bill altogether.
The protests began in Nairobi but have spread to other parts of Kenya, including the Indian Ocean city of Mombasa and even in Eldoret.








According to TMZ, former U.S. President Barack Obama’s half-sister, Auma Obama, got caught in the escalation. While CNN interviewed her, Auma was tear-gassed in the streets of the capital.


Responding to the incident at parliament, President Ruto called it a national security threat and reportedly vowed that such unrest wouldn’t happen again “at whatever cost.”
“Today’s events mark a critical turning point on how we respond to threats to our national security,” Ruto said, calling the events “treasonous.”
Ruto had been outside Nairobi attending an African Union retreat.
Kenya’s defense minister said they’ve deployed military to support police during the “security emergency” and “breaching of critical infrastructure.”
At least five people were shot dead while treating the wounded, per the Kenya Medical Association. More than 30 people were wounded, at least 13 with live bullets.
Additionally, police fired live ammunition and threw tear gas canisters at protesters who sought treatment at a medical tent at a nearby church. Elsewhere in town, Kenyatta National Hospital said it received 45 “victims.”
Associated Press staff Rodney Muhumuza and Evelyne Musambi contributed to this report.
What Do You Think Roomies?
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Cassandra S
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THIS is the terrifying moment a huge mushroom cloud of flames erupts just yards away from busy apartment blocks in Kenya.
Horrified residents were forced to flee from their homes as several people were reportedly rushed to hospital with serious injuries.
A set of explosions were thought to have started after a gas leak that caused the massive inferno and quickly took over the surrounding area.
Clouds of black smoke were sent billowing through the air as around 100 homes were quickly evacuated, according to Kenya Red Cross.
The chilling blast happened in Embakasi, Nairobi near a building thought to be owned by Kentainers LTD – Kenya‘s leading brand for water tank storage, food and grain.
An eyewitness told Nation: “Huge explosions, huge fireballs, people screaming and running everywhere for fear of more explosions, power cuts and some people driving out of the estate.”
The Government Spokesperson of Kenya Isaac Mwaura said: “There has been a fire outbreak at Kentainers Company ltd near Kabansora in Embakasi, Nairobi.
“The company was refilling gas cylinders when a fire broke out and several people were injured and rushed to hospital. The building hosting the company is badly damaged.
“The cause of the fire remains unknown. Members of the public are advised to avoid the area as rescue operations are underway including fire engines being deployed to the area.”
Video footage filmed from residents living near the fire showed the devastating explosion as it sent flames soaring into the sky.
The giant, fiery mushroom cloud can then be seen sending sparks flying around the apartment blocks below.
Terrified people can be heard screaming in the background as they watch the horrors unfold just in front of them.
The chilling scenes happened minutes after midnight in Kenya as the loud blasts sent shockwaves across the town.
Emergency services and medics quickly arrived to the scene of the fire to help put out the roaring flames and help those who were left with injuries.
This is the second fire to rip through Nairobi this week after a massive blaze was seen in a commercial area near a stadium in Kenya, on Tuesday evening.
People dressed in civilian clothes were seen helping firefighters on the scene in the distressing clip.
Hundreds of onlookers stood by to witness the flames while others fled the area and made it to safety.
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Georgie English
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As temperatures rise amid climate change, the world’s remaining rhinos may not be able to withstand the sweltering weather.
Both black and white rhinos across southern Africa are expected to be severely impacted by the climate change-driven increasing temperatures facing national parks, where a large proportion of the remaining populations of the species are found, according to a new paper in the journal Biodiversity.
Rhinos are especially vulnerable to intense heat, as they don’t sweat, instead cooling off by sheltering in the shade or bathing in water. The paper marks the first analysis of how climate change may affect these endangered species.
“Generally speaking, most, if not all, species will, in one way or another, be negatively affected by the changing climate,” lead author Hlelowenkhosi S. Mamba, a research student at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, said in a statement. “It is therefore important for conservationists to conduct macroecological assessments over large areas to catch trends and model futures for some of the world’s most vulnerable species to prepare to mitigate climate change’s effects, hence minimizing global biodiversity losses.”
Both species of African rhino have seen rapid population decreases, mainly due to poaching. White rhinos once comprised two species, the northern white rhino and southern white rhino, but the northern white rhino is now considered extinct in the wild. The southern white rhino is listed as “near threatened” on the IUCN Red List, with only around 10,000 individuals left in the wild. Black rhinos are listed as “critically endangered”, with about 3,100 remaining.
The researchers investigated how increasing temperatures in large national parks across South Africa, Namibia, Zimbabwe, Kenya, Botswana, Tanzania and Eswatini could impact the future of the rhino species living there. They modeled two scenarios in the parks, one based on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s (IPCC) high greenhouse gas emissions scenario, and the other being a more mild emissions future, and predicted the amount of rain and temperature that each park would see in 2055 and 2085.
They found that in each park it was expected to rise by 2.2 degrees Celsius by 2055 and 2.5 degrees by 2085 in the moderate emissions future, while in the IPCC emissions scenario, each park increased by 2.8 degrees Celsius by 2055 and 4.6 degrees by 2085. All but one park was expected to become increasingly dry in these scenarios.
They then calculated the probability that each park would remain suitable for the rhinos, and found that the increase in temperatures would be more than the rhinos can handle, exacerbated by the decreased precipitation.
“The temperature conditions in all study parks will become increasingly unsuitable for both species, but it is predicted that white rhinos will be affected earlier than black rhinos,” the authors wrote in the paper. “All the parks are showing drastic changes in the occurrence probability of rhinos.”
In the high-emissions scenarios, the likelihood of both species still existing will shrink to zero by 2085.

“All study parks will have zero probability of occurrence for the species throughout their ranges should conditions reach those represented by the [IPCC high emissions 2085] scenario late in the century,” they wrote.
These findings, while bleak, may help to prepare conservation efforts for the challenges of the future.
“This paper highlights the importance of using climate predictions for both park and rhino management,” co-author Timothy Randhir, a professor of environmental conservation at UMass Amherst, said in the statement. “We propose that park managers think now about increasing water supplies, tree cover, watching for stress and planning to allow rhino migration as the world warms.”
Do you have a tip on a science story that Newsweek should be covering? Do you have a question about rhinos? Let us know via science@newsweek.com.
Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.
Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.
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As the sun sets on the narrow streets of Africa’s largest informal settlement, children hurry to change from daily clothes into pointe shoes and other ballet gear.
Fifteen-year-old Brenda Branice is among the dancers and can’t hide her joy. It’s time for the Christmas performance in Kibera, one of the busiest neighbourhoods of Kenya’s capital, Nairobi.
Instead of a stage, there is dust-covered plastic sheeting in an open field. The holidays have come early for residents as more than 100 local ballet students perform. They have been practicing every day after school.
“I am happy to be a ballerina,” Branice said. “I am also happy to entertain my friends.”
Eyeshadow sparkles. A girl’s braided hair swings. Some dancers go barefoot.
The mother of another ballerina, Monica Aoko, smiles as she watches the performance. Hundreds of residents, young and old, have come to the annual holiday event.
“This dance has given me a Christmas mood. Now I know Christmas is here,” Aoko said. She said she’s impressed knowing that when her daughter steps outside their home, she’s engaged in something meaningful.
The ballet project is run by Project Elimu, a community-driven non-profit that offers after-school arts education and a safe space to children in Kibera.
“Dance has the ability of triggering resilience, creativity, and also calmness in you as an individual,” said founder Michael Wamaya. “I want to use dance for emotional well-being of children here in Kibera.”
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The Worldcoin (WLD) cryptocurrency project is reportedly planning to secure up to $50 million via a discounted token sale.
The project, co-founded by OpenAI’s Sam Altman, will offer WLD tokens at a suggested price of $1, according to BitKe. This presents a significant markdown from the current $2.51.
Tools for Humanity, the principal developer firm behind Worldcoin, is overseeing the sale.
In October, Worldcoin faced suspension in Kenya as numerous individuals gathered at various locations to register and undergo eye scans in return for 25 WLD tokens, equivalent to approximately Ksh7,700 ($54.60) at that time.
The project came under scrutiny for allegedly collecting data from locals without proper licensing from authorities. Despite this, the program witnessed participation from over 2.5 million individuals globally.
Tools For Humanity (TFH) has initiated discussions with investors to potentially raise additional funds through the sale of WLD tokens.
Recent talks suggest TFH is exploring an over-the-counter sale of WLD, aiming to secure up to $50 million. The proposed token price is $1 for WLD, a considerable discount compared to the current spot price of $2.50.
Worldcoin utilizes WLD as an incentive to drive user engagement in the protocol, rewarding individuals with tokens for undergoing eye scans. The token officially launched on July 24, 2023, with an initial eligibility of over 2 million people to receive their allocation.
The project has unveiled plans to decentralize the network and introduced an inaugural grants program designed to support developers.
In its latest funding round, a Series C investment totaling $115 million was led by Blockchain Capital, with additional support from FT Partners. TFH has notable investors, including a16z crypto, Bain Capital Crypto, Distributed Global, and Khosla Ventures.
In earlier fundraising endeavors, investors participated in acquiring both equity in TFH and token warrants.
Worldcoin, under the helm of CEO Alex Blania, aims to establish an advanced digital identity system by utilizing biometric verification methods, such as facial and iris authentication.
In development for three years, the project looks to assign a unique World ID to each user, employing a so-called ‘proof of personhood’ concept. This is expected to have significant economic implications as it becomes increasingly challenging to distinguish between humans and AI bots.
With $125 million raised since its 2019 inception, notable backers include Andreessen Horowitz, Khosla Ventures, and Reid Hoffman.
Despite facing flaws in data privacy and marketing practices, including allegations of collecting undisclosed personal data, the startup had secured $115 million in funding, boasting over two million unique World IDs.
As outlined in a blog post on Dec. 6, the grants from Worldcoin will be distributed in WLD tokens, with 2 million coins designated across three tracks within the Worldcoin Tech Tree.
The first track, community grants, reserves up to 5,000 WLD for sponsorships, hackathons, and similar initiatives. Moving to the second track, project grants aim to back substantial projects with grants of up to 25,000 WLD.
The “Wave0” program, a $5 million grant initiative, supports developers in creating resilient technology and equitable systems on the Worldcoin blockchain.
These grants, distributed in WLD tokens, aim to empower innovative projects within the Worldcoin community, focusing on areas like privacy, biometrics, and applications leveraging World ID. Aligned with the “Worldcoin Tech Tree,” this initiative targets creators, technologists, and organizations contributing to the Worldcoin ecosystem’s growth.
This may underscore Worldcoin’s commitment to a robust community addressing global challenges, raising awareness, and promoting technology’s role in combating issues like income inequality and governance.
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Ogwu Osaemezu Emmanuel
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An elephant in Kenya has given birth to a set of twins, a conservation group said on Friday, a rare event for the planet’s largest land mammals.
Save the Elephants said that the twins, both female, were born in the Samburu National Reserve in northern Kenya to a mother named Alto, describing it as “double joy.”
Twins make up only about one percent of elephant births, although another pair — one male and one female — were born in the same reserve in early 2022.
A video posted to social media by Save the Elephants, showed the baby elephants feeding from their mother, alongside other members of the herd with the caption: “Amazing odds!”
African elephants have the largest gestation period of any living mammal, carrying their young for nearly 22 months, and give birth roughly every four years.
However, elephant twins do not often fare so well. About two years ago, an elephant named Bora gave birth to twins in the Samburu National Reserve.
“Bora’s twins (male and female) were born during one of the worst droughts but despite her excellent mothering skills, the female twin sadly died,” Save the Elephants said in a Facebook post.
Jane Wynyard/Save the Elephants/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
Still, the conservation group says it remains optimistic about the prospects for Alto’s babies.
“Elephant twins rarely survive in the wild but we’re optimistic about Alto’s twins as there’s lots of food in the park following the rains so Alto should be able to produce plenty of milk to feed her hungry brood plus she also has the amazing support of her herd,” the group wrote.
A previous pair of twins born in Samburu in 2006 failed to survive more than a few days.
The African savanna elephant is classified as endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), which says poaching and habitat destruction had a devastating effect on elephant numbers in Africa as a whole.
According to the Kenya Wildlife Service, there are more than 36,000 elephants in the East African country, with efforts to stem poaching halting a decline in numbers.
The elephant population in Kenya stood at 170,000 in the 1970s and early 1980s but plunged to only 16,000 by the end of 1989 because of the demand for ivory, it said.
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The world’s top climate summit has become embroiled in a hypocrisy scandal, days before the start of key talks.
The United Arab Emirates (UAE) schemed to use its position as host country of the imminent COP28 United Nations climate talks to discuss oil and gas deals with more than a dozen countries, leaked documents published by the BBC show.
Briefing notes prepared by the UAE’s COP28 team for meetings with foreign governments during the summit, which starts Thursday in Dubai, include talking points from the Emirati state oil and renewable energy companies, according to documents published Monday by the Centre for Climate Reporting.
Germany, for example, is to be told that the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC) — whose CEO, Sultan Ahmed al-Jaber, is COP28’s president — “stand[s] ready to expand LNG supplies to Germany.”
The briefing notes for China say that ADNOC is “willing to jointly evaluate international LNG opportunities (Mozambique, Canada, and Australia).”
They also propose telling oil-rich giants Saudi Arabia and Venezuela that “there is no conflict between sustainable development of any country’s natural resources and its commitment to climate change.”
With COP28 just days away, the leaked documents have cast a shadow over the start of the crucial forum.
Zakia Khattabi, Belgium’s climate minister, told POLITICO: “If confirmed, these news reports add to the existing concerns regarding the COP28 presidency. The credibility of the U.N. climate negotiations is essential and is at stake here.”
The documents also sparked an outcry from climate NGOs.
In a statement, Greenpeace’s Policy Coordinator Kaisa Kosonen said, “if the allegations are true, this is totally unacceptable and a real scandal.”
“The climate summit leader should be focused on advancing climate solutions impartially, not backroom deals that are fuelling the crisis,” Kosonen said.
“The significant representation of EU and European countries in this list is alarming and a direct contradiction to the EU’s position to achieve a phase out of fossil fuels at this year’s COP,” Chiara Martinelli, director of Climate Action Network Europe, said in a written statement to POLITICO.
“Any deal with the UAE’s oil and gas companies is a slap in the face of the U.N. process on climate change,” Martinelli added.
The documents also include estimates of ADNOC’s commercial interests in the targeted countries, as well as an outline of energy infrastructure projects led by Masdar, the UAE’s state renewable energy company.
ADNOC’s business ties with China, for example, are valued at $15 billion over the past year, while those with the United Kingdom are worth $4 billion and the Netherlands’ stand at $2 billion.
Every year, the country hosting COP appoints a president to lead negotiations between countries. The president meets foreign dignitaries and is expected to “rais[e] ambition to tackle climate change internationally,” according to the U.N.
Home to some of the largest oil reserves in the world, the UAE has attracted criticism for appointing al-Jaber as COP president in spite of his role as chief of the country’s national oil company. Al-Jaber is also chairman of the board of directors of the national renewable energy company.
In a statement, a COP28 spokesperson said: “The documents referred to in the BBC article are inaccurate and were not used by COP28 in meetings. It is extremely disappointing to see the BBC use unverified documents in their reporting.”
This article has been updated to clarify Ahmed al-Jaber’s role at the national renewable energy company and to add comments fro, COP28 and Greenpeace.
Barbara Moens contributed reporting.
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Nicolas Camut
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Nairobi, Kenya — King Charles III is in Kenya for his first state visit to a Commonwealth country as monarch. He will acknowledge the “painful aspects” of the countries’ shared history while underscoring his commitment to an organization that’s been central to Britain’s global power since World War II.
The four-day visit is full of symbolism. Charles’ mother, the late Queen Elizabeth II, learned that she had become the U.K. monarch while visiting a game preserve in the East African nation, at the time a British colony, in 1952.
The king and Queen Camilla touched down in the capital, Nairobi, late Monday and were given a ceremonial welcome Tuesday by Kenyan President William Ruto at State House. Charles later planted an African fern tree seedling in its lawn.
Tim Rooke/Pool/Samir Hussein/WireImage
The royal couple also visited the Tomb of the Unknown Warrior at gardens named Uhuru, which is Swahili for freedom. The king and Ruto laid wreaths, then proceeded to the site of the declaration of Kenya’s independence in 1963.
Comments by the king and Kenya’s president were not immediately made available.
Kenya is celebrating the 60th anniversary of its independence this year. It and Britain have enjoyed a close and sometimes challenging relationship after the prolonged struggle against colonial rule, sometimes known as the Mau Mau Rebellion, in which thousands of Kenyans died.
Colonial authorities resorted to executions and detention without trial as they tried to put down the insurrection, and thousands of Kenyans said they were beaten and sexually assaulted by agents of the administration.
The British High Commission said Charles would “meet veterans and give his blessing to efforts by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission to ensure Kenyans and Africans who supported British efforts in the World Wars are properly commemorated.”
Salim David Nganga, 64, speaking in Jevanjee Gardens in Nairobi, where colonial statues were brought down in 2020, said the king ought to apologize to Kenyans first.
“The king should never have been allowed to step in this country, considering the dark history of British colonialists,” he said.
The king’s visit reignited some tensions over land in parts of Kenya.
Joel Kimutai Kimetto, 74, said his grandfather and father were kicked out of their ancestral home by the British.
“What is most painful is that years after the brutalities and the stealing of our land, British companies are still in possession of our ancestral homes, earning millions from their comfortable headquarters in the U.K., while our people remain squatters,” he told the AP in a phone interview. “We ask President William Ruto and our leaders to use this golden opportunity to address our plight with the king.”
Elsewhere, a planned protest and press conference by victims of a fire at a conservancy in central Kenya that was allegedly started by British soldiers in training was cancelled ahead of the king’s visit.
The king also plans to visit Nairobi National Park and meet with environmental activist Wanjira Mathai, the daughter of late Nobel laureate Wangari Maathai, as he emphasizes his commitment to environmental protection.
The royal family has long ties to Africa. In 1947, the future queen pledged lifelong service to Britain and the Commonwealth during a speech from South Africa on her 21st birthday. Five years later, she and her late husband Prince Philip were visiting Aberdare National Park in Kenya when they learned that her father had died and she had become queen.
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In some African cultures, the combination of rain and sunshine means that a leopard and a lioness have given birth to a cub.
I was hoping that this was the case as we traversed Kenya’s Maasai Mara National Reserve in a four-wheel drive jeep in the midst of a sunny downpour.
In the seven years that I’ve been a travel journalist in Africa, the game drive experience has always been one of my favorites. Wildlife is Africa’s treasure, and tourists revel in watching the animals — particularly the cats — in their natural habitats.
Travel journalist Harriet Akinyi watches a herd of elephants in a game drive at Mugie Conservancy, Kenya.
Source: Harriet Akinyi
There are 10 countries in Africa that have a strong wildlife focus: Kenya (my motherland), Tanzania, South Africa, Uganda, Mozambique, Botswana, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Malawi, Namibia and Rwanda.
Here are highlights that I recommend.
For more than 25 years, professional safari guide Geoff Mayes has taken tourists to the best parks in Africa. He believes that many choose Kenya — and in particular, Maasai Mara — for their first trip to Africa because it’s safe and fairly accessible.
Known as one of the eight wonders of the world because of the wildebeest migration, Masaai Mara is one of Africa’s most renowned parks, said travel journalist Harriet Akinyi.
Wldavies | E+ | Getty Images
“It’s easier to catch flights to Kenya, making it high on peoples’ bucket list,” he said. “Also a game drive experience in Kenya will be able to meet the travelers’ expectations in terms of catching ‘the Big Five.'”
Less than an hour flight from the capital city of Nairobi is Nairobi National Park, where there’s a good chance of seeing lions and rhinos, he said.
And “if you come to the Maasai Mara, you’ll see the elephants and leopards and lions,” he explained as we drove through it.
In total, Kenya has 25 national parks and 16 national game reserves with countless private conservancies, which are smaller, private-owned wildlife reserves.
Amboseli National Park, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, is known for its massive elephant population and spectacular views of Mount Kilimanjaro.
Harriet Akinyi having a bush breakfast with a view of the rhinos after a game drive in Solio Conservancy in Kenya.
Source: Harriet Akinyi
Tsavo National Park, Kenya’s biggest park, is one of the world’s largest game sanctuaries. It was highlighted by President Barack Obama in the five-part Netflix docuseries “Our Great National Parks.”
Kenya is not the only country where I’ve gone on game drives.
South Africa is another and is home to some of the oldest and most iconic national parks in Africa. It’s a year-round safari destination, but the best game-viewing conditions are in the cooler winter months from May to September.
A game drive at Kruger National Park, South Africa.
Luis Davilla | Photodisc | Getty Images
There are 20 national parks, including the world–famous Kruger National Park — which has Africa’s “Big Five” game animals: lions, leopards, elephants, rhino and buffaloes.
There’s also Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park, near the border of Botswana, and Pilanesberg National Park. The latter is about 150 kilometers (93 miles) from Johannesburg. It’s smaller than Kruger, but rich in wildlife — and, fascinatingly, it’s inside the crater of an ancient volcano believed to be some 1.2 billion years old.
Another highlight, Hluhluwe-iMfolozi Park, has the “Big Five” as well as a thriving population of African wild dogs.
I’ve also been to Addo — the biggest park in the Eastern Cape and third-largest in South Africa — which is famous for its elephants. According to Ncediso Headman Nogaya, a game guard at Addo, October to April is the best time to visit.
“We are more likely to receive rains from May to September and while the season is great because it gives food to the wildlife … it might be a slippery drive and muddy,” he noted.
Uganda is known for its diverse wildlife and stunning landscapes in its 10 national parks and 12 game reserves. Of the national parks, seven are located on savannahs and three in forests. In those three, one can track mountain gorillas in Mgahinga National Park and Bwindi Impenetrable National Park.
Around 1,000 mountain gorillas exist today, more than half which live in Uganda, according to the Uganda Wildlife Authority.
Jason Edwards | Photodisc | Getty Images
My favorite memories at Queen Elizabeth National Park are of tracking chimpanzees in Kyambura Gorge, watching tree-climbing lions and a herd of elephants walking majestically on the plains, and observing buffaloes, warthogs, hippos and Nile crocodiles while cruising the Kazinga Channel.
Another park to consider is the Kidepo Valley National Park, with its sweeping plains and valleys overshadowed by the brooding Mount Morungole. The mountain is sacred to the Ik tribe, one of the smallest tribes in Uganda. The park ranks among the best birding safari destinations in the country too.
I loved my game drive experience at Lake Mburo National Park, even though it’s one of the smallest national parks in the country.
It’s the only park where travelers can enjoy boat cruises, walking safaris and horseback riding, tour operator Dennis Kahungu told CNBC Travel.
A group of big horn Ankole Cattle in Lake Mburo National Park, Uganda.
Christopher Kidd | Photodisc | Getty Images
Plus “it’s the only national park in Uganda with the impalas,” he said. “It’s also where you will find the big horned Ankole cows.”
Located in eastern Rwanda, Akagera National Park is a protected wetland and the last remaining refuge for savannah-adapted species in Rwanda. Park visitors can take boat safaris along Lake Ilhema, the second largest lake in Rwanda, for wildlife and birdwatching.
Weaver birds and nests over Lake Ihema, Rwanda.
Inti St. Clair | Photodisc | Getty Images
Travelers in search of mountain gorillas usually go to Volcanoes National Park in the northern part of the country. It’s also home to golden monkeys, and well regarded for hiking and mountain climbing.
Recently inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List, Nyungwe National Park is another part to explore and is situated in southwest Rwanda and is known for its chimpanzees and colobus monkeys. It’s also popular for canopy walks on a suspended bridge some 70 meters (230 feet) above the forest floor.
While the parks can be visited all year round, it’s best to avoid April, as that’s when Rwanda typically receives heavy rains.
Botswana is a fast-emerging ecotourism destination — visitors are drawn to the vast elephant herds of Chobe National Park and the canoe-based wildlife safaris in the Okavango Delta.
A herd of elephants at Chobe National Park, Botswana.
Williececogo | Moment | Getty Images
One can also see the “Big Five” at Moremi Nature Reserve, Nxai Pan National Park, Makgadikgadi Pans National Park as well as Central Kalahari Game Reserve.
In Tanzania, I visited the iconic UNESCO-listed Serengeti National Park, which rivals Kenya for one of the best wildlife experiences in Africa.
Tourists watch a herd of wildebeest from a land cruiser in the Serengeti National Park, Tanzania.
Patrick J. Endres | Corbis Documentary | Getty Images
My first time there was during the calving season when the wildebeests and the zebras give birth on their way to Kenya during the Great Migration.
Another wonder is the Ngorongoro Crater, one of the largest calderas in the world.
Some consider it one of the best places to go on safari in Africa.
Apart from the renowned Hwange National Park, I have also visited Matobo National Park, which has a wide diversity of fauna and plenty of white rhinos. The area around Matobo Hills is home to the remains of early settlements and the graves of historical figures like Cecil Rhodes.
The rock formation in Matobo National Park in Zimbabwe, Africa, which is home to the grave of Cecil Rhodes.
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The best time to visit the parks is during the dry season, from June to October. That’s when the bush is thinner — making wildlife easier to spot.
Mayes said the best time for safaris in Kenya and Tanzania is, of course, during the migration season. But he recommends visiting Zimbabwe and Zambia from July to October.
In other parts of the continent, months like February, June and September can be very rewarding too.
“The wildlife is fantastic and there are fewer vehicles around,” he said. “And you can often benefit from a low season price structure which of course is always nice.”
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United Nations — The U.N. Security Council voted Monday to approve sending a multinational force to Haiti with the goal of combatting extreme gang violence that has spiraled in recent years.
With 13 votes in favor, the Security Council approved sending a one-year, non-U.N. force that will be led by Kenya, which has committed to sending 1,000 security personnel. The force is expected to include personnel from Jamaica, Barbados and several other nations. The mission was authorized under the “use of force” provision of the U.N. Charter.
Both Russia and China abstained, allowing the measure to pass.
Although it is not a U.N. peacekeeping mission, the U.N. Security Council resolution gave its “blessing” to the mission, according to Sérgio França Danese, Brazil’s U.N. ambassador who currently holds the rotating presidency of the council.
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The U.N. has been trying for some time to send forces to Haiti to as civilians face hunger and gang violence that has cut off water and gas supplies, left thousands dead and driven an increasing number of Haitians to flee to the U.S.
The new international force — dubbed the Multinational Security Support Mission or “MSS” — is being sent at the request of the Haitian government and U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres. It will be tasked with protecting hospitals, schools, airports, ports and traffic intersections in conjunction with the Haitian National Police.
A senior Biden administration official told reporters on a call Monday that the Kenyan forces will not supplant the Haitian police, but “support and strengthen its ability to provide security for the Haitians over the long term.”
The vote was “an expression of solidarity with people in distress,” Haitian Foreign Minister Jean Victor Geneus told the Security Council. “It is a glimmer of hope for people who have been suffering the consequences of a difficult political, socioeconomic, security and humanitarian situation for too long.”
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The Biden administration has been clear that it will not commit to “boots on the ground,” but it is seeking $100 million from Congress to support the mission. It’s expected that the Pentagon will also provide another $100 million of support — including intelligence, airlifts, communications and medical funds — to support training for the Haitian National Police.
These funds would be in addition to the $500 million that the U.S. already provides in development and humanitarian assistance to Haiti.
U.S. National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan, in a statement issued Monday, called the U.N. vote “an important milestone in bringing much-needed help to the people of Haiti who have suffered for far too long at the hands of violent criminals.”
He thanked the nations that committed forces to the mission and said it was “now crucial that we focus on making progress in mobilizing the international support necessary to deploy this mission swiftly, effectively, and safely. The people of Haiti deserve to feel safe enough to leave their homes, restore their livelihoods, and go to the polls to democratically elect a government that represents their interests.”
“Haitians are leaving the country because of fear… because of intimidation and being terrorized,” U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Linda Thomas-Greenfield told reporters in a call late Monday, adding that it was the Biden administration’s hope that the mission “works to provide stability, it works to provide security [so] that fewer Haitians will feel the need to leave the country.”
Knowing that past missions to help Haiti have been ill-fated, including an international peacekeeping force that brought cholera, Monday’s resolution provides a mechanism for oversight to prevent abuses and sexual exploitation.
RICHARD PIERRIN/AFP via Getty Images
Those who know Haiti’s history remained skeptical after the Security Council vote.
A senior Biden administration official told reporters on a call Monday that the Kenyan force of roughly 1,000 officers will not supplant the Haitian National Police, but “support and strengthen its ability to provide security for the Haitians over the long term.”
But the official expressed doubt as to whether sending forces alone would be enough, saying such action would be “insufficient without progress on the political side.”
Amy Wilentz, author of “The Rainy Season: Haiti Since Duvalier” and a professor at the University of California, Irvine, told CBS News the mission was “unlikely to be a success.”
“First, it’s too small,” Wilentz said. “There are an estimated 20,000 active gang members in Port-au-Prince, and they are heavily armed. So in combat, the Kenyans will be outmanned and perhaps outgunned.”
Wilentz also noted the Kenyan police “have a quite poor human rights record in Kenya. In Haiti, they don’t know the turf, don’t speak the language.”
Wilentz noted that the international force will be contending with the aftermath of twin crises — the assassination of former Haitian President Jovenel Moïse in 2021 and the devastating 2010 earthquake erased decades of progress in rebuilding stability in Haiti.
Haitian journalist and broadcaster Michele Montas, who ran Radio Haiti Inter with her husband Jean Dominique for 30 years until he was assassinated, was positive about some aspects of the mission.
“In the terrible war that the gangs are waging against the population, the force might give some temporary breathing space to people who have been fleeing their neighborhoods for months as the gangs are gaining more and more territory,” Montas told CBS News. But she added that, “without a real change and a responsible transitional government, the violence might be temporarily reduced, lives would be saved, major critical infrastructures might be functional again, but it can only be, in the long run, another failure.”
China’s U.N. Ambassador Zhang Jun said that while Beijing “appreciates Kenya’s willingness” to lead the mission, “without a legitimate, effective, and responsible government in place, any external support can hardly have any lasting effects.”
“If the council had taken this step at an earlier time, the security situation in Haiti might not have deteriorated to what it is today,” Zhang said.
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Opposition leader Raila Odinga has accused police of using violence against demonstrators.
Kenyan President William Ruto has said he is ready to meet opposition leader Raila Odinga “anytime” after months of anti-government protests that have sparked international alarm and calls for dialogue.
“As you have always known, am available to meet one on one with you anytime at your convenience,” Ruto said in a post addressing Odinga on Twitter.
Critics accuse Ruto of raising taxes as the country buckles under spiralling inflation and of rowing back on promises made during the August 2022 election campaign, when he declared himself the champion of impoverished Kenyans and pledged to improve their economic fortunes.
Ruto’s government argues higher taxes are necessary to help deal with growing debt repayments and to fund job creation initiatives.
My friend @RailaOdinga ,am off to Tanzania for a human capital meeting to harmonise the expansion of employment opportunities in our continent. Am back tomorrow evening, and as you have always known, am available to meet one on one with you anytime at your convenience.
WsR— William Samoei Ruto, PhD (@WilliamsRuto) July 25, 2023
Since March, Odinga’s Azimio coalition has staged nine days of street protests against the government, with the rallies sometimes degenerating into looting and deadly clashes between security forces and demonstrators.
Earlier on Tuesday, Odinga accused the police of using violence against demonstrators.
“We are witnessing unprecedented police brutality,” Odinga told a press conference in the capital Nairobi. “Police and hired gangs have shot and killed or wounded scores of people at close range,” he said.
The opposition leader called off demonstrations in April and May after Ruto agreed to dialogue, but the talks broke down, prompting the Azimio coalition to organise several rounds of protests this month.
In a statement late on Monday, the coalition asked “Kenyans to come out and light candles and lay flowers, preferably white, in remembrance of and respect for the victims.”
Odinga’s team had called for another round of demonstrations on Wednesday but said they were changing tack to hold “solidarity parades and vigil for victims of police brutality”.
At least 50 people have been killed in the skirmishes since March, according to Azimio. Official figures put the death toll at 20.
Ruto has defended the conduct of the police, saying last week: “We do not want a country of violence or fighting or destruction of property”.
The Kenya National Commission on Human Rights, an independent watchdog created by parliament, on Tuesday said it was “disheartening to witness the escalating tensions and the blatant disregard for human rights principles” by both rogue demonstrators and police.
Rights groups including Amnesty International last week denounced “repression” by police and said they had evidence of 27 “extrajudicial, summary and arbitrary executions” in July alone.
Several Odinga allies were arrested last week. Lawmaker Babu Owino was arrested on Wednesday at the airport in the coastal city of Mombasa, where he had planned to lead the protests.
Member of parliament Ken Chonga was also arrested with some of his loyalists during a gathering ahead of a march in Kilimo county in coastal Kenya.
Police also arrested Calvin Okoth, a youth leader in the Jacaranda Grounds People’s Parliament.
Odinga claimed earlier this month that the government had hatched a plot to assassinate him during the demonstrations and said his car was shot at multiple times while he was driving around the capital, rallying protesters.
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African leaders have long been reluctant to criticize Russia and now that President Vladimir Putin has killed off a deal to allow Ukraine to export grain, they know they are more dependent than ever on Moscow’s largesse to feed millions of people at risk of going hungry.
Having canceled the pact on Monday, Moscow unleashed four nights of attacks on the Ukrainian ports of Odesa and Chornomorsk — two vital export facilities — damaging the infrastructure of global and Ukrainian traders and destroying 60,000 tons of grain. In the latest assault, on Thursday night, a barrage of Kalibr missiles hit the granaries of an agricultural enterprise in Odesa.
“The decision by Russia to exit the Black Sea Grain Initiative is a stab [in] the back,” tweeted Abraham Korir Sing’Oei, a senior foreign ministry official from Kenya, one of the African countries that has received donations of Russian fertilizer in recent months.
The resulting rise in global food prices “disproportionately impacts countries in the Horn of Africa already impacted by drought,” he added.
Sing’Oei’s was a solitary voice, however. Rather than reproaching Moscow, African leaders have remained largely silent as they prepare to attend a summit hosted by Putin in St Petersburg next week. This follows an African mission led by South African President Cyril Ramaphosa last month to Kyiv and St Petersburg in a bid to broker peace.
The diplomatic stakes could hardly be higher.
Putin had been due to make a return visit to Africa next month to attend a summit of the BRICS emerging economies in Johannesburg. That trip has been called off, however, “by mutual agreement” to avoid exposing the Kremlin chief to the risk of arrest under an indictment for war crimes issued by the International Criminal Court in The Hague.
Without the Black Sea Grain Initiative, a deal brokered a year ago by the United Nations and Turkey that enabled Ukraine to export 33 million metric tons of grains and oilseeds, many African governments now have nowhere else to turn to but Russia.
“It’s going to be based on political alignments,” said Samuel Ramani, an Oxford-based academic and author of a book on Russia’s resurgent influence in Africa.
Comparing Russia’s tactics to blackmail, Ramani added: “They’re going to be offering free grain to some, they’re going to be selling to others. It’s full-fledged grain diplomacy.”
Russia said on Monday it would no longer guarantee the safety of ships passing through a transit corridor as it announced its official withdrawal from the deal, declaring the northwestern Black Sea to be once again “temporarily dangerous.” It followed up by threatening to fire on all ships going across the Black Sea to Ukrainian ports, sparking a tit-for-tat warning from Kyiv that it would do the same to all vessels sailing to Russian-controlled Black Sea ports.
Over the 12 months it functioned, the grain deal helped bring down global food prices by as much as 20 percent from the peak set in the aftermath of Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022. It also provided aid agencies with vital supplies.
Russia repeatedly claimed it has not seen the benefits of the three-times extended agreement, however.
Although Western sanctions carve out exemptions for food and fertilizer the Kremlin argues that sanctions targeting Russian individuals and its state agriculture bank are hindering its own exports, thus contravening a second deal agreed last July under which the U.N. committed to facilitating these exports for a three-year period.
The Kremlin said Wednesday that it would resume talks on the Black Sea grain deal only if the U.N. implements this part of the deal within the next three months.
Another of Moscow’s criticisms is that cargoes of Ukrainian grain have headed mostly to rich countries; not to those in Africa and Asia bearing the brunt of the global food crisis.
Over the last year, a quarter of all the grain and oilseeds shipped under the initiative have headed to China, the largest recipient, while some 18 percent went to Spain and 10 percent to Turkey, according to U.N. data.
This is not the whole story, however. Trade data from the World Bank shows that much of the wheat exported to Turkey is processed and re-exported, as flour, pasta and other products, to Africa and the Middle East.
Most importantly, all grain that flows onto global markets reduces prices, wherever it ends up, counter the U.N. and others.
“It is not a question of where the Black Sea food actually goes; it is a question of it [bringing] international prices down, so whether you are a rich country or poor country, you can benefit,” said Arif Husain, the U.N. World Food Programme’s chief economist, speaking at an event on the Black Sea Grain Initiative in Rome recently.
These arguments have been at the center of a months-long propaganda battle between Moscow and Kyiv over who can rightly claim to be feeding the world and who is responsible for soaring food prices.
In the aftermath of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine last year, the Kremlin’s narrative — that western sanctions are to blame — was quick to take hold in many parts of Africa.
Ukraine sought to counter this with a humanitarian food program, Grain from Ukraine, launched in November 2022, but shiploads of fertilizer donated to countries, including Malawi and Kenya, served to sweeten the Kremlin’s message.
“A true friend knows no weather. A true friend comes to the rescue when you need them the most. And you just demonstrated that to us,” Malawi’s Agriculture Minister Sam Dalitso Kawale said upon receiving a fertilizer gift from Russian firm Uralchem in March.
Now, countries like Malawi need friends in Moscow more than ever. Not only does the end of the grain deal cut them off from flows of Ukrainian grain, leaving them dependent on Russian supplies, but it also pushes up prices.
Moscow’s withdrawal from the agreement is unlikely to have the same impact on prices as its full-scale invasion in February 2022. Over the last year, Ukraine has opened up alternative export routes and a slowdown in shipments moving under the initiative also meant commodity markets had been expecting Moscow to quit the deal.
While Ukraine can continue to export grain through alternative routes, these come with extra logistical and transport costs, squeezing prices for Ukrainian farmers, at one end, and pushing up costs for buyers, at the other.
For food-insecure countries in the Horn of Africa even a small increase in prices could spell disaster, said Shashwat Saraf, emergency director in East Africa for the International Rescue Committee (IRC).
Domestic production has dropped amid conflict and severe drought, leaving the region increasingly reliant on food imports and food aid. As such, higher food prices will hit hard, he said, adding that traders already report “feeling the pinch.”
With the cost of food rising, the IRC and other humanitarian organizations will be forced to either reduce the number of people they provide cash transfers or reduce the value of these themselves — and this at a time when the number of food insecure people is rising, said Saraf. “When we should be expanding our coverage, we will be actually reducing [it].”
African leaders attending Putin’s summit next week will be silent on such issues, predicted Christopher Fomunyoh, African regional director at the U.S. National Democratic Institute for International Affairs and one of the Grain from Ukraine ambassadors appointed by Kyiv.
But they must not return empty-handed again, he said. Russia’s discontinuation of the grain deal, following the South African-led visit to St Petersburg, is a “slap in the face,” Fomunyoh told POLITICO. “Their own credibility is now at stake. And my hope is that they will have to speak out in order to not further lose credibility with their own populations.”
In 2022, Russia’s narrative was dominant in Africa, but that has slowly changed through the course of this year, he explained, adding that Africans were starting to see through Moscow’s propaganda.
“There is always a time delay,” said Fomunyoh. “But my sense is that in the days and weeks to come, people are going to see very clearly [that] the destruction of infrastructure in Odessa, the destruction of stock, wheat, and grain in Chornomorsk is contributing to scarcity and the inflation in prices.”
This story has been updated.
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Susannah Savage
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Washington and Beijing pledge to stabilise relations after the US secretary of state’s visit to China.
China and the United States have been fighting a trade war for years. But, the economies of the two global powers are deeply interdependent.
And tensions between the world’s two largest economies, which have caused relations to sink to a historic low, are hurting businesses.
During a rare meeting in Beijing, the US secretary of state and China’s president agreed on a need to stabilise relations.
Elsewhere, Kenya’s president wants to reduce the country’s massive public debt. But, many Kenyans are outraged by proposed tax increases.
Plus, Japan’s fishing industry faces a new threat, 12 years after the Fukushima nuclear disaster.
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Romania is recalling its ambassador to Kenya after the diplomat allegedly made a comment equating Africans to monkeys at a meeting in Nairobi.
“Any racist behavior or comments are absolutely unacceptable,” the Romanian Foreign Ministry in Bucharest said in a statement Saturday. The ministry has “initiated the procedure of recalling” Ambassador Dragos Viorel Tigau from his post in Kenya, according to the statement.
The ministry “deeply regrets this situation, apologizes to all those affected and strongly rejects and condemns any behavior and any attitude incompatible with mutual respect,” the statement reads further.
The move came in reaction to allegations that Tigau said “the African group has joined us” after a black monkey appeared at the window of the conference room ahead of a meeting. The incident took place at a UN building in the Kenyan capital on April 26.
The Romanian Foreign Ministry said it had only been informed of the incident last week and Tigau was recalled as soon as the government found out. The ambassador has apologized after the incident, including in writing, according to the ministry.
Kenyan diplomat Macharia Kamau said in a tweet that the remarks “appalled and disgusted” him. “This intolerable and unacceptable,” he added.
The Romanian government “hopes that the incident will not affect the relationship with the countries of the African continent,” the Foreign Ministry said in its statement.
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Wilhelmine Preussen
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