Foreign News
11 Newborn Babies Die in Senegal Hospital Fire
Senegal President Macky Sall said the fire was in the maternity department of the hospital.
Eleven newborn babies have died in a hospital fire in the western city of Tivaouane in Senegal, the country’s president has said.
The fire at Mame Abdou Aziz Sy Dabakh Hospital was in the maternity department, President Macky Sall tweeted.
Initial reports suggest the fire was caused by a short circuit, according to Senegalese politicians.
Three babies were saved from the fire, said the city’s mayor, Demba Diop Sy.
The fire spread very quickly and emergency services were still at the scene, Mr Sy told local media.
The hospital had been newly inaugurated, according to AFP, citing local media reports.
“To their mothers and their families, I express my deepest sympathy,” President Sall wrote in a tweet.
“This situation is very unfortunate and extremely painful,” Health Minister Abdoulaye Diouf Sarr said from Geneva, where he was attending a World Health Organization meeting.
He said an investigation was under way and he would be cutting his trip short to return to Senegal immediately.
The incident has sparked a wave of indignation on social media over the state of the country’s healthcare provision.
Opposition MP Mamadou Lamine Diallo criticised the government, tweeting: “More babies burned in a public hospital… This is unacceptable|.
Rights group Amnesty International has urged the government to create an “independent commission of inquiry to determine responsibility and punish the culprits, no matter the level they are at in the state apparatus,” country director Seydi Gassama said in a tweet.
Amnesty called for all of Senegal’s neo-natal wards to be inspected after a similar incident occurred in the northern town of Linguère last year.
Four newborn babies were killed there after a fire broke out at a hospital’s maternity ward. At the time, the mayor said there was an electrical fault in the air conditioning unit of the maternity ward.
Wednesday’s tragedy also follows a national outcry over the death of a woman in labour, Astou Sokhna, who died while reportedly begging for a Caesarean during her 20-hour labour ordeal. Her unborn child also died.
Foreign News
Over Hundred Children killed in Gaza since Ceasefire, Says UNICEF
The U.N. children’s agency on yesterday said over 100 children have been killed in Gaza since the October ceasefire, including victims of drone and quadcopter attacks.
UNICEF spokesperson James Elder said at a UN briefing in Gaza that “more than 100 children have been killed in Gaza since the ceasefire of early October.
“Survival remains conditional, whilst the bombings and the shootings have slowed, have reduced during the ceasefire, they have not stopped.
”He said that nearly all the deaths of the 60 boys and 40 girls were from military attacks including air strikes, drone strikes, tank shelling, gunfire and quadcopters and a few were from war remnants that exploded.
The tally is likely an underestimate since it is only based on deaths for which sufficient information was available, he said.
Foreign News
Ugandan President, Museveni, Seeks 7th Term after Four Decades in Power
When Yoweri Museveni seized power in Uganda in 1986, he said “the problem of Africa in general and Uganda in particular is not the people but leaders who want to overstay in power.”
The 81-year-old president and former rebel is seeking a seventh term in office on Thursday after nearly four decades leading the East African nation, the vast majority of whose citizens have never known any other leader.
Museveni came to power on a wave of optimism after leading insurgencies against autocratic governments.
That goodwill was soon squandered amid allegations of graft and authoritarianism.
“Corruption has been central to his rule from the beginning,” Kristof Titeca, a professor at the University of Antwerp, said.
Museveni has acknowledged that some government officials have engaged in corrupt practices but says all those who have been caught have been prosecuted.
The canny political strategist has also cultivated foreign allies by embracing the security priorities of Western powers, deploying peacekeepers to hotspots such as Somalia and South Sudan and welcoming huge numbers of refugees to Uganda.
In his own country, his record has been mixed.
His government won praise for tackling the AIDS epidemic and for beating back the Lord’s Resistance Army rebel group that brutalised Ugandans for nearly 20 years.
But widespread corruption hollowed out state services and just one in four Ugandan children entering primary school makes it to secondary school, according to the United Nations children’s agency, UNICEF, while well-paid jobs remain largely out of reach for many.
There, he founded a militant movement that eventually helped force out President Idi Amin, with Milton Obote taking over as Uganda’s leader in 1980.
Obote was toppled in a coup in 1985.
The following year, the military wing of Museveni’s National Resistance Movement overthrew Tito Okello, who had become president.
“This is not a mere change of guard,” Museveni said at his swearing-in. “This is a fundamental change in the politics of our government.”
His efforts to attract foreign investment, establish order and raise the standard of living were initially applauded by the West.
But as Uganda’s economy picked up, so did public anger over corruption.
Under a privatisation programme, dozens of state enterprises were sold to Museveni’s relatives and cronies at fire-sale prices, according to parliamentary reports which said some of the proceeds were embezzled.
Kizza Besigye, Museveni’s doctor during his years in the bush, fell out with him, accusing him of presiding over corruption and rights abuses.
Museveni has won all six presidential elections he has contested, including four against Besigye, who was arrested in 2024 and faces treason charges.
In 2005, parliament scrapped presidential term limits, a move critics said was aimed at letting him keep power for life.
Museveni’s election opponents rejected election results over alleged irregularities, but the authorities denied the allegations and police cracked down on demonstrations by opposition supporters.
Museveni dismissed criticism from Western powers, saying in 2006: “If the international community has lost confidence in us, then that is a compliment because they are habitually wrong.”
He also sought to cultivate ties with other countries, including China, Russia, Iran and the United Arab Emirates, to reduce Uganda’s dependence on the West.
The discovery of substantial oil deposits buoyed his status, leading to agreements with energy giants TotalEnergies and CNOOC to build an export pipeline.
Muzeveni’s main rival in Thursday’s presidential election is Boni Wine, a 43-year-old pop star.
Political analysts say that while victory for Museveni is all but certain, the road ahead is clouded by uncertainty, with the president starting to show signs of frailty.
“The big question looming over the election is the question of succession,” university professor Titeca said, reflecting on the rapid rise of Muhoozi Kainerugaba, Museveni’s son and Uganda’s military chief.
Uganda’s opposition has accused Museveni of fast-tracking Kainerugaba’s military career to prepare him to eventually succeed him, even with the 51-year-old frequently taking to X to make inflammatory remarks, while veteran politicians who once fought alongside Museveni in the bush have been sidelined.
The election outcome could determine Museveni’s next move, with a poor showing potentially prompting him to promote other party members and deflect criticism of an outright dynastic succession, said former newspaper editor Charles Onyango-Obbo.
“This is less about the results that will be announced, and more about the mood on the ground,” Onyango-Obbo added, saying that a handover could be some years away.
“Museveni is more frail now, but he is a workaholic… he will not leave even if he needs to use a walking stick,” he said.
Foreign News
Over 20 Ethiopian Migrants Kill in ‘Horrific’ Road Crash
At least 22 migrants have been killed and 65 others injured after a lorry they were travelling in overturned in Ethiopia’s north-eastern Afar region, authorities said.
About 85 Ethiopian migrants were travelling along the eastern migration route when the lorry overturned in the town of Semera on Tuesday morning, a senior Afar official Mohammed Ali Biedo said in a statement.
Their final destination was unclear but the route typically runs from Ethiopia through Djibouti, across the Red Sea to Yemen, and onward to Saudi Arabia and other Middle Eastern countries.
Yemen is a major pathway for migrants from the Horn of Africa travelling to Gulf States in search of work.
Biedo said that 30 of the injured are in a critical condition.
“The accident occurred when a lorry transporting migrants, misled by illegal brokers and unaware of the dangers of their journey, overturned,” Biedo said in the statement.
The Afar regional government said it was “doing all the necessary life saving operations” on the injured migrants following the “horrific” accident.
It cautioned Ethiopians, particularly the youth, against the dangers of human trafficking driven by false promises.
“We will ensure that the law enforcement work will continue with the concerned authorities to prevent such tragic events from repeating,” the regional government added.
The International Organization for Migration (IOM) describes the journey from the Horn of Africa – composed of Somalia, Djibouti, Ethiopia and Eritrea – to Yemen as “one of the busiest and most perilous mixed migration routes”.
Despite the risks, more than 60,000 migrants arrived in Yemen in 2024 alone, many ultimately bound for Saudi Arabia, according to IOM.

