Dr Tedros Ghebreyesus says he does not even know who in his family is dead or alive amid the war.
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Russia burns off gas as Europe's energy bills rocket
Russia is burning off millions of dollars in gas every day at a plant near the Finnish border.
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Russia burns off gas as Europe's energy bills rocket
Russia is burning off millions of dollars in gas every day at a plant near the Finnish border.

World narrowly avoided nuclear accident - Zelensky
The Russian-occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant was briefly reliant on back up power, Ukraine says.

Microsoft co-founder's art to sell for $1bn
The proceeds of the largest art auction ever will go to charity, Christie's auctioneers said.

Judge orders release of Trump search court papers
A redacted version of the affidavit used to justify the Mar-a-Lago investigation will be released on Friday.

Pakistan floods affect 33 million people: Minister
Historic downpours and major floods have battered the nation since June, killing hundreds.

Women at first league match in Iran for 40 years
The rare move for Iran to allow women into stadiums where men are playing followed appeals by Fifa.

WHO boss: I can't help my starving Ethiopian family
Dr Tedros Ghebreyesus says he does not even know who is dead or alive amid the war in Tigray.
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Russia burns off gas as Europe's energy bills rocket
Russia is burning off millions of dollars in gas every day at a plant near the Finnish border.

World narrowly avoided nuclear accident - Zelensky
The Russian-occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant was briefly reliant on back up power, Ukraine says.

Microsoft co-founder's art to sell for $1bn
The proceeds of the largest art auction ever will go to charity, Christie's auctioneers said.

Judge orders release of Trump search court papers
A redacted version of the affidavit used to justify the Mar-a-Lago investigation will be released on Friday.

Pakistan floods affect 33 million people: Minister
Historic downpours and major floods have battered the nation since June, killing hundreds.

Women at first league match in Iran for 40 years
The rare move for Iran to allow women into stadiums where men are playing followed appeals by Fifa.

WHO boss: I can't help my starving Ethiopian family
Dr Tedros Ghebreyesus says he does not even know who is dead or alive amid the war in Tigray.

World narrowly avoided nuclear accident - Zelensky
The Russian-occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant was briefly reliant on back up power, Ukraine says.

Microsoft co-founder's art to sell for $1bn
The proceeds of the largest art auction ever will go to charity, Christie's auctioneers said.

Judge orders release of Trump search court papers
A redacted version of the affidavit used to justify the Mar-a-Lago investigation will be released on Friday.
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Video caption: Tedros Ghebreyesus: 'I don't know even who is dead or who is alive' WHO boss Tedros Ghebreyesus says he is struggling to send money to his starving family in Ethiopia's war-torn Tigray region.
Help offered to Zimbabwe victim of SA hospital rant
Copyright: LIMPOPO PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENTImage caption: Phophi Ramathuba told the Zimbabwean patient: "You're killing my health system." A private hospital in Zimbabwe has offered to pay for the treatment of a Zimbabwean patient who went to South Africa for surgery and was rebuked by an official in a rant that was recorded and went viral.
The woman, who could not be seen in the video, had been in a car accident in Zimbabwe, but went to a government hospital in the South African province of Limpopo for treatment - to the annoyance of the provincial health minister who blamed foreign nationals for the country's ailing healthcare system.
Leaning over the patient's bed, Dr Phophi Ramathuba said that Zimbabwe's President Emmerson Mnangagwa did not contribute to South Africa's health budget, and that her country's health system was not a "charity".
Now Arundel Hospital in Zimbabwe's capital, Harare - which on Twitter said it followed a philanthropic policy of offering "free medical assistance to individuals from all walks of life", has said it will settle all outstanding bills for the woman - though it has yet to find her.
"Our efforts to locate the Zimbabwean patient are still ongoing and we are grateful for the leads that we have received so far," the hospital said in a tweet.
It added that it was "not soliciting donations" despite "generous offers of donations from well-wishers".
But not everyone is impressed by the gesture, with one Twitter use likening it to a cover-up of the government's failures, urging the hospital to “stop aiding bad governance”.
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By Frances Mao
BBC News
Murdered Kenya election official to be buried
Richard Kagoe
BBC News, Nairobi
A Kenyan poll official who was murdered after the 9 August elections will be buried on Friday at his rural home in Machakos County in central Kenya.
The tortured body of Daniel Musyoka was found near Mt Kilimanjaro along Kenya’s southern border with Tanzania, some 200km (124 miles) from his base in the capital, Nairobi.
Officials from the electoral agency held a peaceful demonstration in Nairobi on Thursday to protest about the killing of their colleague:
Copyright: Getty ImagesThey petitioned parliament, the Director of Public Prosecution, and the police chief to ensure security for poll officials.
The demonstration came ahead of voting to be held in some areas next Monday. This is because there was a mix-up on polling day with some ballot papers.
These delayed votes - for a couple of governors, MPs and county assembly seats - were meant to be held this week, but the electoral commission chairman Wafula Chebukati postponed them, citing profiling, intimidation, harassment and arbitrary arrest of election officials.
He has urged investigating officers to expedite their probe into Mr Musyoka's murder and charge those found culpable.
He will also lead the commission in bidding farewell to the late Mr Musyoka, who was the returning officer for Nairobi's Embakasi East constituency.
Staff at the commission have also expressed concern over their safety after a presiding officer was shot three times in the leg by unknown assailants posing as police officers in the north-eastern town of Wajir.
In 2017, a senior election official was found dead just days before the country went to the polls.
Tanzania minister's son fined for ramming cars
The son of a Tanzanian state minister been fined after he was accused of ramming cars last week and allegedly bragging about his father's influence.
James Simbachawene, the son of George Simbachawene, was fined for the offences of reckless driving, driving under the influence of alcohol and driving an uninsured vehicle..
He was fined a total of 250,000 Tanzanian shillings ($107, £90).
The 24-year-old was arrested after a video of the incident in Dar es Salaam, Kinondoni area, went viral.
His father had asked the authorities to take full legal action against him, adding that he was "a grown man now".
Father arrested after his young son drives to school
Copyright: Getty ImagesImage caption: Kenyan law prohibits those under 18 from driving A nine-year-old in school uniform was stopped by police in Kenya's capital, Nairobi, while driving to school with his father in the front passenger seat.
The saloon car was stopped before it entered a private school in Athi River, on the fringes of the city, after police gave chase when the boy accelerated after being flagged down.
His younger sister was found seated at the back also in school uniform.
Kenyan law prohibits those under 18 years of age from driving.
The boy was reportedly speeding on the Nairobi-Mombasa highway, one of the busiest in the country.
The father was arrested following the incident on Wednesday, but the two children were later taken to school in a police vehicle, the Daily Nation newspaper reports.
"This action, which is not only irresponsible but also contravenes traffic laws, exposed the minor and other road users to grave danger," police tweeted, saying the father would be taken to court.
"The suspect further acted against the Children Act that vests statutory parental responsibility on the protection of children from harm and danger."
By Leo Sands
BBC News
Niger begins making artificial rain to curb drought
Copyright: AFPImage caption: The country has been experiencing cycles of drought Niger has deployed rainmaking technology aimed at alleviating the effects of drought in the country, weather authorities said Thursday.
The desert country has faced a food crisis for years because of extended dry spells.
The head of the national meteorology institute, Katiellou Gaptia Lawan, told AFP news agency: “We had to do something about this drought.”
The "induced rain" technology involves using an aircraft to spray chemicals into clouds.
The intervention is targeting areas where people farm.
Some parts of the country have experienced flooding further adding to the food crisis.
WHO boss unable to send money to starving Tigrayan kin
The World Health Organization (WHO) Director General Tedros Ghebreyesus has lamented that he was unable to send money to his starving relatives in Ethiopia's Tigray region.
Dr Tedros, an ethnic Tigrayan, said the region has remained completely sealed off for two years since the beginning of the conflict and people were suffering.
"I have many relatives there. I want to send them money. I cannot send them money. They're starving, I know, I cannot help them," Dr Tedros said.
"I don't know even who is dead or who is alive," he said as he was unable to speak to them.
Here is a video excerpt from the briefing:
The conflict, which began in November 2020, has led to the deaths of tens of thousands of civilians and left millions in need of food aid.
The region has been without basic services such as electricity, telecommunications and banking.
Fighting resumed this week after months of calm following the humanitarian truce agreed in March between Tigrayan forces and the Ethiopian government.
Hijab-wearing women 'facing discrimination' in Egypt
BBC World Service
Copyright: Getty ImagesImage caption: There are venues denying access to women wearing the hijab A BBC investigation has found evidence that some businesses in Egypt are discriminating against women wearing the hijab.
It suggests a major property developer is refusing to sell holiday properties to families with women wearing the Islamic veil.
An undercover reporter seeking to buy property from a prominent developer, La Vista, was turned down six times when he said his wife wore the hijab.
But when he went to the office alone he was told there were properties available immediately.
La Vista did not respond to the BBC’s requests for comment.
The investigation also found venues that refuse entry to women wearing the veil.
The Egyptian constitution bans discrimination based on sex, religion, race or class.
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Macron urges ties with Algeria beyond 'painful' past
BBC World Service
Copyright: AFPFrench President Emmanuel Macron has said during a visit to Algeria that the two countries should move beyond their painful shared history and look to the future.
At a joint news conference with his Algerian counterpart Abdelmadjid Tebboune, Mr Macron announced that a joint Franco-Algerian commission of historians would be set up to study archives on French colonial rule in Algeria.
This would include the bitter eight-year war that led to Algerian independence 60 years ago.
Relations between the two countries have been fraught for decades.
During his three-day trip, Mr Macron is also keen to secure access to Algeria's huge stocks of untapped oil and gas, as Europe faces shortages because of Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
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Germany to return hundreds of Nigerian Benin Bronzes
Copyright: AFPImage caption: In July Germany handed over two Benin Bronzes Germany has signed an agreement to transfer ownership of 512 Benin Bronzes, hailed as the largest return of cultural artefacts looted from the continent in the 19th Century.
The agreement was signed between the Foundation of Prussian Cultural Heritage (SPK) and Nigeria's National Commission for Museums and Monuments (NCMM).
The first objects will be returned to Nigeria this year from the Ethnological Museum in Berlin, according to a statement by the foundation.
"Around a third of the objects transferred will remain in Berlin on loan for an initial period of ten years and will be exhibited in the Humboldt Forum," it added.
The Benin Bronzes consist of thousands of metal sculptures and ivory carvings seized from the West African kingdom of Benin - in what is today Edo State in southern Nigeria - by a British military force in 1897.
Most ended up in European museums after being sold by businessmen and dealers.
In April 2021, the German government said it wanted to give back hundreds of Benin Bronzes.
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By Tiffanie Turnbull
BBC News, Sydney