You are here

Africa

FCL-Noten gegen den FCZ: Sturm überzeugt – Notbremse kostet Youngster eine Top-Bewertung

Blick.ch - Sat, 02/14/2026 - 21:39
Wer hat wie abgeschnitten? Hier findest du die Noten des 4:1-Siegs von Luzern gegen den FCZ.
Categories: Africa, Swiss News

Nachwuchs in der Skischule: Auf der Piste mit Barbara und Maxime

Blick.ch - Sat, 02/14/2026 - 20:46
Barbara und ihre Tochter Maxime haben in Zuoz – La Punt den Einführungskurs für Skilehrerinnen absolviert und erzählen, was sie an diesem Beruf reizt – und was er heute verlangt.
Categories: Africa, Swiss News

Schweden nur auf Platz drei: Slowakei im Viertelfinal – Finnland hofft nach Kantersieg

Blick.ch - Sat, 02/14/2026 - 20:41
Die Slowakei, Finnland und Schweden beenden die Gruppe B allesamt punktgleich. Während die Slowaken fix einen Platz in den Viertelfinals haben, müssen die Schweden sicher in die Zusatzschlaufe. Die Finnen könnten als bester Gruppenzweiter diese womöglich umgehen.
Categories: Africa, Swiss News

In Nawalnys (†47) Gewebe nachgewiesen: Das steckt hinter dem Gift Epibatidin

Blick.ch - Sat, 02/14/2026 - 20:30
Der berühmte russische Oppositionelle Alexej Nawalny soll offenbar durch Gift getötet worden sein – das ergaben Gewebeproben. Doch was steckt hinter dem Wirkstoff Epibatidin?
Categories: Africa, Swiss News

Cas de « leptospirose » détectés à Tizi Ouzou : La Direction de la Santé réagit

Algérie 360 - Sat, 02/14/2026 - 19:54

Alors que des messages de vigilance circulaient dans certaines communes de la wilaya, la Direction de la Santé et de la Population (DSP) de Tizi […]

L’article Cas de « leptospirose » détectés à Tizi Ouzou : La Direction de la Santé réagit est apparu en premier sur .

Categories: Africa, Afrique

Air Algérie réduit les vols vers cette destination et prépare une nouvelle liaison internationale

Algérie 360 - Sat, 02/14/2026 - 18:07

La compagnie aérienne nationale, Air Algérie, a lancé une nouvelle phase de restructuration de son programme de vols à destination du Moyen-Orient et de l’Asie. […]

L’article Air Algérie réduit les vols vers cette destination et prépare une nouvelle liaison internationale est apparu en premier sur .

Categories: Africa, Afrique

Planned US-funded baby vaccine trial in Guinea-Bissau blasted by WHO

BBC Africa - Sat, 02/14/2026 - 17:20
Giving some newborns in Guinea-Bissau an established hepatitis B treatment but not others is "unethical", it says.
Categories: Africa, Afrique

22 Monate Qualen: Spanier hält Frau (38) zwei Jahre lang gefangen

Blick.ch - Sat, 02/14/2026 - 14:48
Schockierender Fall in Spanien: Nach 22 Monaten Gefangenschaft gelang Salma R. nun die Flucht. Ihr damaliger Partner hatte die 38-Jährige entführt, misshandelt und vergewaltigt. Ihr Peiniger wurde mittlerweile festgenommen.
Categories: Africa, Swiss News

Zürcher AL-Politiker teilt aus: «SP benimmt sich, als wären wir eine Hilfstruppe»

Blick.ch - Sat, 02/14/2026 - 14:23
In Zürich spitzt sich der Wahlkampf zu: Am 8. März entscheidet sich, ob die linke Mehrheit im Stadtparlament hält und wer die Regierung prägt. Drei Sitze werden neu besetzt, darunter das Stadtpräsidium.
Categories: Africa, Swiss News

«Viel reingeblättert»: Oliver Pocher und Pietro Lombardi offenbaren ihre Rente

Blick.ch - Sat, 02/14/2026 - 14:23
Oliver Pocher und Pietro Lombardi sprechen in ihrem Podcast offen über ihre finanzielle Situation. Während Lombardi auf eine Rente von 2635 Euro hofft, erwartet Pocher nur 336 Euro – trotz Millionenvermögens.
Categories: Africa, Swiss News

Kenyans drop flowers for Valentine's bouquets of cash. Not everyone is impressed

BBC Africa - Sat, 02/14/2026 - 01:02
Bouquets of cash have been blooming in popularity in Kenya but recent warnings may slow the trend.
Categories: Africa, Swiss News

Multilateralism Reaching Breaking Point

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Fri, 02/13/2026 - 20:22

Credit: Jonathan Ernst/Reuters via Gallo Images

By Samuel King
BRUSSELS, Belgium, Feb 13 2026 (IPS)

The latest World Economic Forum made clear the current crisis of multilateralism. Over 60 heads of state and 800 corporate executives assembled in Davos under a ‘Spirit of Dialogue’ theme aimed at strengthening global cooperation, but it was preceded by a series of events pointing to a further unravelling of the international system.

On 3 January, Donald Trump launched an illegal military strike on Venezuela to abduct President Nicolás Maduro, which was widely condemned as a violation of international law. On 7 January, he signed an executive order withdrawing the USA from 66 international bodies and processes, including 31 UN entities, such as the UN Democracy Fund, the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change and UN Women. Then came the launch of Trump’s Board of Peace, evidently an attempt to supplant the UN Security Council. The country that helped build the multilateral system is walking away from the parts it doesn’t like and seeking to reshape the rest in its interests.

Trump’s approach to multilateralism is nakedly transactional. His administration engages with international processes only when they advance immediate US interests and withdraws from those that impose obligations. This disassociates multilateralism from its core principles: accountability over shared standards, equality among nations and universality. It encourages other states to follow suit.

This approach brings devastating financial impacts. US threats to defund international bodies have left institutions scrambling. UN development, human rights and peacekeeping programmes all depended heavily on US financial contributions. The World Health Organization faces shortfalls that threaten its ability to respond to health emergencies because the US government quit without paying its overdue contributions.

The USA’s closest allies aren’t safe. Trump threatened NATO member Denmark with 25 per cent tariffs unless it agreed to the USA’s purchase of Greenland, and suggested he might seize the territory by force. NATO’s Article 5 on collective defence – invoked only once, by the USA after 9/11 – lies in doubt. European states are reacting by seeking strategic autonomy, slashing development aid and reducing UN contributions while finding extra billions for military spending.

Problematic alternatives are looking to capitalise on crisis. At Davos, China positioned itself as the grown-up alternative to Trump, promoting its Friends of Global Governance initiative, a group of 43 mostly authoritarian states including Belarus, Nicaragua and North Korea.

The queue of heads of government meeting China’s leader Xi Jinping shows many states are pivoting this way. But it comes at a cost: in China’s vision of international cooperation, state sovereignty is paramount and there’s no room for international scrutiny of human rights or cooperation to promote democratic freedoms.

It’s the same story with the new Board of Peace. The body originated in a controversial November 2025 Security Council resolution establishing external governance for Gaza, but Trump clearly envisions a permanent, wider role for it. He chairs it in a personal capacity, with full power to veto decisions, set agendas and invite or dismiss members. Permanent membership costs US$1 billion, with the money’s destination unclear.

The Board’s draft charter makes no mention of human rights protections, contains no provisions for civil society participation and establishes no accountability mechanisms. Most members so far are autocratic states such as Belarus, Egypt and Saudi Arabia. Its credibility is further undermined by the fact that Israel has just joined, despite having made a mockery of international humanitarian law. More democratic states have declined invitations, mostly due to concerns about the body’s unclear relationship with the UN. Trump’s response was to threaten increased tariffs against France and withdraw Canada’s invitation. He has made clear he considers himself above international law, casting himself as a de facto world president able to resolve conflicts through personal power and pressure.

As the old order dissolves, civil society must play a critical role in defining what comes next. While the UN – particularly its Security Council, hamstrung by the use of veto powers by China, Russia and the USA – needs reform, it remains the only global framework built on formal equality and universal human rights. As the UN faces assault from those abandoning it or seeking to dilute its human rights mandate, civil society must mobilise to keep it anchored to its founding principles and challenge the hierarchies that exclude global south voices.

It falls on civil society to organise across borders to uphold international law, document violations of international humanitarian and human rights law and demand accountability. Not for the first time, civil society needs to win the argument that might doesn’t make right.

Samuel King is a researcher with the Horizon Europe-funded research project ENSURED: Shaping Cooperation for a World in Transition at CIVICUS: World Alliance for Citizen Participation.

For interviews or more information, please contact research@civicus.org

 


!function(d,s,id){var js,fjs=d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0],p=/^http:/.test(d.location)?'http':'https';if(!d.getElementById(id)){js=d.createElement(s);js.id=id;js.src=p+'://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js';fjs.parentNode.insertBefore(js,fjs);}}(document, 'script', 'twitter-wjs');  
Categories: Africa, Swiss News

Africa at the Epicenter of Child Labour Crisis as Migration Fuels Exploitation

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Fri, 02/13/2026 - 19:52

13-year-old Ojulu Omod comes to the gold mine site before the day gets too hot. He is out of school and supports his family by mining gold the traditional way. Credit: UNICEF/Demissew Bizuwerk

By Oritro Karim
UNITED NATIONS, Feb 13 2026 (IPS)

Although global rates of child labour have declined since 2020, the practice remains a serious and persistent violation of children’s rights, undermining their safety, social development, and long-term economic stability. These risks are intensified by structural pressures— poverty, climate shocks, protracted conflict, and unsafe migration— that continue to push vulnerable children into crisis, and in some cases, trafficking and exploitation. The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) warns that African countries remain among the most affected regions, underscoring the urgent need for coordinated policy action, cross-border cooperation, and sustained investment to protect children on the move and those at risk of labour exploitation.

Roughly 137.6 million children across the world are engaged in child labour, representing 7.8 percent of all children globally. Of this number, approximately 54 million children are engaged in particularly hazardous work—such as mining and construction, or work performed for over 43 hours per week.

In a newly-released data brief analyzing child labour trends across Eastern and Southern Africa, UNICEF found approximately 41 million children—nearly one third of the global total—are engaged in child labour as of 2024, accounting for roughly one in five children in the region. While this represents progress from the 49 million children recorded in 2020, UNICEF warns that these gains remain fragile and could be reversed without strengthened policies and adequate financing.

“Children belong in classrooms, not workplaces,” said Etleva Kadilli, UNICEF Regional Director for Eastern and Southern Africa. She emphasized that ending child labour requires an inclusive approach that aims to revitalize education systems and strengthen protection measures for children worldwide.

“Supporting parents with decent work is essential so children can go to school, learn, play, and build a brighter future,” Kadilli added, urging governments, the private sector, civil society, and communities to work together to build a coordinated response aligned with “national and continental commitments” to put a definitive end to child labour.

The report highlights the severity of the crisis: 13.4 million children in Eastern and Southern Africa are engaged in hazardous work. It is only second to West and Central Africa when it comes to the prevalence of child labour globally. Education disparities are particularly pronounced, with six in ten adolescents engaged in child labour out of school, compared with just two in ten of their non-working peers.

According to the report, Eastern and Southern Africa has a disproportionately high share of young children engaged in child labour compared to other regions. Roughly 65 percent of children in child labour in the region are between the ages of 5 and 11, which greatly contrasts with other parts of the world where older adolescents make up a larger share. Although notable progress has been made in reducing child labour across all age groups, the decline has been slowest among the youngest children.

UNICEF notes that child labour in Eastern and Southern Africa is heavily concentrated in agriculture, which accounts for approximately 78 percent of all cases among children aged 5 to 17. This is even more pronounced among younger children, with more than 80 percent of those aged 5 to 11 working in agricultural fields. However, hazardous work is disproportionately concentrated in other sectors, with 55 percent of child labor in industry and 56 percent in services being classified as hazardous, compared to the 26 percent found in agriculture.

On February 11, during the Sixth Global Conference on the Elimination of Child Labour in Marrakesh, Morocco, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) called on governments to strengthen protection measures, enhance international cooperation, and improve monitoring systems to ensure that migration and trafficking are central to efforts to end child labour. The agency emphasized that unsafe migration is a key driver of child labour, as displaced communities often resort to it in the absence of access to basic services, stable livelihoods, and social protection.

“If we are serious about ending child labour, we must face a reality that is still too often overlooked: migration,” said Amy Pope, IOM Director-General. “Today, millions of children are on the move, they’re forced by conflict, they’re pulled by poverty, they’re displaced by the impact of climate shocks. And they’re searching for opportunity and for safety. Evidence shows that migrant children are often the most exposed to child labour. They work longer hours, they earn less, they are less likely to attend school, and they face higher risks of injury, exploitation, and death.”

According to the latest figures from IOM, approximately 30,000 child victims of trafficking have been identified globally, though the true number is likely far higher due to widespread underreporting and gaps in detection. Children account for nearly one in four detected trafficking victims worldwide, with roughly 20 percent aged between 9 and 17 years of age.

Among all identified victims, 61 percent face sexual exploitation, with girls being disproportionately affected. Recruitment into armed groups is common among boys. Traffickers commonly exert control through psychological, physical, and sexual abuse, as well as threats against victims or their families and restrictions on finances, medical care, essential services, and freedom of movement.

Pope underscored the urgency of closing systemic gaps in labour governance and protection systems that leave migrant children vulnerable to trafficking and exploitation. “These children are often missing from child labour policies, overlooked in protection systems, and invisible in the data that guides decisions,” she said. “Along migration routes, children are exploited in agriculture, domestic work, hospitality, and construction — and these abuses follow them across borders wherever protection fails. Protection must move with the child: prevention must reflect real labour and mobility realities, and systems must work together across sectors and borders.”

UNICEF is calling on the international community to address both the root causes and consequences of child labour. The plan includes expanding social protection programs for vulnerable families, promoting universal access to quality education, strengthening monitoring efforts to identify at-risk children, ensuring decent work opportunities for youth and adults, and enforcing stronger labour laws to enhance corporate accountability and eliminate exploitation across supply chains. Together, these efforts aim to ensure that families are not forced to rely on their children for survival—and that children are free to learn, grow, and simply be children.

IPS UN Bureau Report

 


!function(d,s,id){var js,fjs=d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0],p=/^http:/.test(d.location)?'http':'https';if(!d.getElementById(id)){js=d.createElement(s);js.id=id;js.src=p+'://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js';fjs.parentNode.insertBefore(js,fjs);}}(document, 'script', 'twitter-wjs');  
Categories: Africa, Swiss News

Sudan war crimes saw 6,000 killed in three days, UN says

BBC Africa - Fri, 02/13/2026 - 19:01
Paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) committed the atrocities in the city of el-Fasher, says a UN report.

Warten auf nächste Woche: Probleme bleiben – Max flucht: Testsieger Antonelli: «Das ist wie Blitzschach!»

Blick.ch - Fri, 02/13/2026 - 17:36
Der Mann mit den wenigsten Runden, Kimi Antonelli (19), holte mit 1:33,669 den Testsieg in Bahrain. Der Mercedes-Star: «Im Cockpit ist es wie beim Blitzschach. Du hast für den nächsten Zug kaum Bedenkzeit!» Der Italiener war 0,249 schneller als Teamkollege Russell.
Categories: Africa, Swiss News

Nationalratskommission lehnt Vorschlag ab: Morde sollen weiterhin verjähren

Blick.ch - Fri, 02/13/2026 - 17:27
Der Ständerat wollte, dass Morde sollen in der Schweiz nicht mehr verjähren. Die Nationalratskommission sieht das anders - und will stattdessen die Fristen ändern.
Categories: Africa, Swiss News

La SoBAPS S.A. recrute un Directeur Général

24 Heures au Bénin - Fri, 02/13/2026 - 17:18

La Société béninoise pour l'Approvisionnement en Produits de Santé (SoBAPS S.A.), lance un avis pour le recrutement d'un directeur général. Les personnes intéressées par cet avis devront remplir les critères ci-après :

être titulaire d'un diplôme de Docteur d'État en pharmacie (ou équivalent) et être inscrit à l'Ordre National des Pharmaciens ;
Avoir au moins 10 ans d'expérience professionnelle, dont 5 ans spécifiquement dans le domaine de l'approvisionnement pharmaceutique ;
Etre prêt à s'investir à 100 %.
Le dossier de candidatures doit être constitué des pièces ci-après :
Une lettre de motivation signée et adressée au Président du Conseil d'administration ;
Un CV détaillé (2 pages maximum) ;
Un extrait d'acte de naissance sécurisé ;
Un casier judiciaire de moins de 3 mois ;
Copies du diplôme et des certificats de travail ;
Un certificat médical d'aptitude.
La détention d'une officine privée selon l'avis, est incompatible avec ce poste.

Lire l'intégralité de l'avis

Categories: Africa, Afrique

Africa Cup of Nations 2027 set for June-July slot

BBC Africa - Fri, 02/13/2026 - 16:18
Afcon 2027 will be held in June and July next year and reports the finals could be delayed are "totally unfounded", says African football boss Patrice Motsepe.
Categories: Africa, Swiss News

Africa Cup of Nations 2027 set for June-July slot

BBC Africa - Fri, 02/13/2026 - 16:18
Afcon 2027 will be held in June and July next year and reports the finals could be delayed are "totally unfounded", says African football boss Patrice Motsepe.

Pages

THIS IS THE NEW BETA VERSION OF EUROPA VARIETAS NEWS CENTER - under construction
the old site is here

Copy & Drop - Can`t find your favourite site? Send us the RSS or URL to the following address: info(@)europavarietas(dot)org.