Donation Amount. Min £2

East Africa

Women and girls walk back after getting food in Bentiu, a 38-kilometer journey, using a path through the bush for fear of being attacked on the main road, near Nhialdu in South Sudan. Rape has been used widely as a weapon in South Sudan. Photo AP

 

BOR, SOUTH SUDAN - A South Sudanese man has been sentenced to seven years in prison for raping a minor, a rare example of a rape conviction in the African country.

Rapes and sexual assault are vastly underreported in South Sudan, and very few perpetrators are punished for their crimes, although the conviction of two soldiers last year who raped a woman in the town of Yei has raised hope for activists.

While announcing the verdict Thursday in the Jonglei state capital, Bor, Judge John Yel ordered convicted rapist Magai Manyang to also pay five cows to the victim’s family as compensation, in line with Dinka customary law.

"The convict will pay five heads of cattle as compensation for the victim or its equivalence on the day of execution,” said Yel.

Prosecuting attorney Manyang Ngueny welcomed the ruling, saying justice had prevailed.

“I agree with the judgment pronounced today by the president of the High Court,” Ngueny told South Sudan in Focus. “Judgment has to be pronounced in accordance with the crime actually committed.”

Manyang, who proclaimed his innocence, said he would appeal the verdict in Juba’s Court of Appeals within 15 days, as allowed by the court.

“This thing that is alleged I have done hasn’t happened,” Nanyang told South Sudan in Focus. “The girl escaped from UNMISS [U.N. Mission in South Sudan] camp and came to my home. I was absent during that time. When I came and found her at home, I asked who she is and my wife told me she was her relative, and I then didn’t bother to send her away.”

He said the victim “made up such allegations and her relatives want to force me to marry her.”

Strong message

David Garang of the Jonglei Civil Society Network praised Manyang’s sentencing, saying it sent a strong message to men who abuse women.

“There are a lot of gender-based violence cases happening in Jonglei state but most of them are not reported, so this one will be a lesson to scare the perpetrators,” Garang told South Sudan in Focus.

Garang urged state authorities and NGOs to sensitize citizens about sexual violence so that such cases are reported, adding that all South Sudanese who commit violence against women or children should be arrested, tried and sent to prison. - Deng Ghai Deng, Voice of America

Former president of Somalia Ali Mahdi Muhammad. He died in Nairobi. [Courtesy]

Former Somalia President Ali Mahdi Muhammad has died in Nairobi, the spokesperson of the Ministry of Information Isamel Mukhtaar Omar has confirmed.  

The 82-year-old ex-president died on Wednesday night at the Nairobi Hospital.

Somalia President Mohamed Abdullahi Farmaajo has announced the lowering of the Republic flag for three days to mourn the death of the former President and the appointment of a National Funeral Committee for the deceased.

Ali Mahdi Mohamed was the fourth president of Somalia. He came to power on January 26, 1991, and served until January 1997. 

President Ali was born in the Mahaday District of the Middle Shabelle region in 1939 and became a member of parliament in 1968.

In 1969 he joined the civilian parliament before the military coup.

He was also a businessman before he was elected president of Somalia in 1991 when the military government was overthrown. Standard

The Board of Directors of the African Development Bank has approved a grant of $1.024 million for artificial intelligence enabled systems to process customer complaints on behalf of the national banks of Ghana and Rwanda and the Competition and Consumer Protection Commission of Zambia.

The grant resources are from the special fund of the Africa Digital Financial Inclusion Facility (ADFI), a financing vehicle to accelerate digital financial inclusion across Africa.

The project will establish a complaints-handling system for the financial regulators, using multi-lingual chatbots and artificial intelligence that will interface with key financial service providers in the three countries. The system will incorporate key local languages for ease of use, record customer complaints, including audio complaints from those unable to read and write, and track their resolution.

The project is expected to yield three results: improve the tracking of customer complaints made to financial services providers; strengthen the support for marginalized groups, which will build confidence in the use of financial services; and improve the collection of consistent data to be used for the development or improvement of consumer-protection policies.

“Facilitation of sound policies and regulations, including those that enhance consumer protection and catalyze financial inclusion, is a key mandate for ADFI. With the proliferation of digital financial services, the financial industry needs innovative mechanisms for customer recourse and tracking for regulators. The Sinitic project is one such solution,” said Sheila Okiro, ADFI’s Coordinator.

The system will be developed by Sinitic Africa in collaboration with BFA a leading consultancy firm specializing in human-centred design and DFS regulation. Sinitic Africa is a subsidiary of Sinitic Inc., a financial technology firm based in Canada. The two companies have already worked together to develop and successfully deploy a similar project for the Philippines' central bank.

The Sinitic solution will be deployed in the three target countries in the following languages: Kinyarwanda, Swahili, French and English in Rwanda; English and Nyanja/Chewa in Zambia; and English and Twi in Ghana. ABC

  • Presidents Uhuru Kenyatta and John Magufuli at the 19th Ordinary Summit of East African Community Heads of State in Munyonyo, Kampala, Uganda in February 2017- THE STANDARD 
A District court in Tanzania has sentenced 26 Kenyans to one year in prison or a fine of Ksh23,000 two days after they entered Tanzania without valid permits.                     
 
Rombo District Court magistrate Baraka Kibululu said they had entered the country illegally since they did not have any passport. 
 
       "So for committing the crime the court sentenced them to one year in jail or pay a fine of Ksh23,000 each," said Kibululu.
 
Tarakea
 
File image of traders walking through the Oloitoktok-Tarakea border in May 2017. FILE
 
The 26 Kenyans were arrested on March 9 after Paschal Mayunga, the Assistant Inspector of Immigration received reports of non-locals spotted in Tanzania. 
Mayunga later handed them to the police officers who arraigned them in court on March 10.
 
 
According to the acting magistrate, the accused confessed to committing the offense after they were arrested, hence informing the decision of the punishment
 
"Since all the accused have pleaded guilty to the offense and the court convicts all of them for the offense they were charged with," read part of the ruling.  
 
 
 
 

Tanzanian President John Pombe Magufuli 

NAIROBI, Kenya

An opposition leader in Tanzania has claimed that the country's president was hospitalized in Kenya with severe COVID-19 and is in critical condition.

Citing government sources, Tundu Lissu urged authorities on Thursday to publicly disclose the health condition of President John Pombe Magufuli.

"He hasn't been seen in public since Feb. 24," Lissu told the Kenya-based KTN news, claiming that Magufuli had been hospitalized in Dar es Salaam for three days before his condition worsened and "they had to fly him out."

Numerous local news outlets in Kenya have reported since Monday night that an African leader was admitted to the Nairobi Hospital.

Multiple people who attend the same church as Magufuli have reportedly confirmed a two-week absence of the Tanzanian leader, who is known to be a regular churchgoer.

Magufuli had previously urged Tanzanians not to observe measures put in place to curb the spread of the novel coronavirus, declaring the disease eradicated from his country.

He has urged Tanzanians not to seek COVID-19 vaccines, but to observe religious rituals and inhale herbal-infused steam to protect themselves from disease, including the coronavirus.

His administration has also refused to share data on COVID-19 infections since May 2020, prompting nations from across the globe to warn their nationals against traveling to Tanzania, citing a high risk of contracting the disease. AA

About IEA Media Ltd

Informer East Africa is a UK based diaspora Newspaper. It is a unique platform connecting East Africans at home and abroad through news dissemination. It is a forum to learn together, grow together and get entertained at the same time.

To advertise events or products, get in touch by info [at] informereastafrica [dot] com or call +447957636854.
If you have an issue or a story, get in touch with the editor through editor[at] informereastafrica [dot] com or call +447886544135.

We also accept donations from our supporters. Please click on "donate". Your donations will go along way in supporting the newspaper.

Get in touch

Our Offices

London, UK
+44 7886 544135
editor (@) informereastafrica.com
Slough, UK
+44 7957 636854
info (@) informereastafrica.com

Latest News

Romance scam horror: R520,000 vanishes from FNB account while victim was 1,000 km away

Romance scam horror:...

A 46-year-old woman based in North West has opened a case with South African Police Service after h...

European Union and Tanzania Celebrate Completion of TZS 278 Billion AGRI-CONNECT Programme, Benefiting Over 177,000 Farmers

European Union and T...

© European Union, 2025 A celebratory event held at Mbeya Food Park in Mbeya City , marked the progr...

Those with Less Share More: What the World Must Do for Rights, Equality, Empowerment

Those with Less Shar...

The road stretched endlessly, dust curling in the air, and the sun hanging heavy, unrelenting, press...

It is evil to amass wealth at the expense of other human beings

It is evil to amass...

Catholics and other mainstream churches worldwide celebrated Ash Wednesday on March 5, 2025 to mark...

For Advertisement

Big Reach

Informer East Africa is one platform for all people. It is a platform where you find so many professionals under one umbrella serving the African communities together.

Very Flexible

We exist to inform you, hear from you and connect you with what is happening around you. We do this professionally and timely as we endeavour to capture all that you should never miss. Informer East Africa is simply news for right now and the future.

Quality News

We only bring to you news that is verified, checked and follows strict journalistic guidelines and standards. We believe in 1. Objective coverage, 2. Impartiality and 3. Fair play.

Banner & Video Ads

A banner & video advertisement from our sponsors will show up every once in a while. It keeps us and our writers coffee replenished.