Hawaii governor signs bill to protect student journalists

This sto­ry, plus Meta to give aca­d­e­mics and jour­nal­ists infor­ma­tion on polit­i­cal ad tar­get­ing, Fox to move into lifestyle con­tent and more, all in today’s media head­lines. Top Sto­ries May 23, 2022 May 23, 2022 May 24, 2022 Press & Gov­ern­ment May 23, 2022 Tele­vi­sion News May 23, 2022 Media Busi­ness May 23, 2022 May 23, 2022 Social Media May 23, 2022 International…

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Somalia’s Newly Elected President Assumes Office

https://gdb.voanews.com/031a0000-0aff-0242-beb1-08da3d0be71c_w800_h450.jpg Mogadishu, Soma­lia —  Has­san Sheikh Mohamud offi­cial­ly took office in the Horn of Africa coun­try after a han­dover cer­e­mo­ny in Mogadishu. A week ago, Mohamud won the pres­i­den­cy after an intense elec­tion, defeat­ing Mohamed Abdul­lahi Mohamed, known as Far­ma­jo, in a third round of vot­ing. Has­san Sheikh Mohamud becomes the first ex-pres­i­­dent in Somalia…

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“I was embarrassed to use my African name” — BBC Africa

Edu­ca­tion in Africa is based on post-colo­­nial cur­ricu­lums whose con­tent taught lit­tle and often skewed African his­to­ry and cul­ture and its place in the world. We went to the Chil­dren in Free­dom School in Kenya to find out how their Afro­cen­tric approach dif­fers from the norm, and how the par­ents and stu­dents have embraced it. Produced,…

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German Chancellor Scholz Kicks off Africa Trip in Senegal

dakar, sene­gal — 
Ger­man Chan­cel­lor Olaf Scholz said his coun­try is inter­est­ed in a major gas exploita­tion project in Sene­gal as he began a three-nation vis­it to Africa on Sun­day that also is focused on the geopo­lit­i­cal con­se­quences of the war in Ukraine.
Sene­gal is believed to have sig­nif­i­cant deposits of nat­ur­al gas along its bor­der with Mau­ri­ta­nia at a time when Ger­many and oth­er Euro­pean coun­tries are try­ing to reduce their depen­dence on import­ing Russ­ian gas.
“We have begun exchanges and we will con­tin­ue our efforts at the lev­el of experts because it is our wish to achieve progress,” Scholz said at a joint news brief­ing with Sene­galese Pres­i­dent Macky Sall.
The gas project off the coast of Sene­gal is being led by BP, and the first bar­rels are not expect­ed until next year.
This week’s trip marks Scholz’s first to Africa since becom­ing chan­cel­lor near­ly six months ago. Two of the coun­tries he is vis­it­ing — Sene­gal and South Africa — have been invit­ed to attend the Group of 7 sum­mit in Ger­many at the end of June.
Par­tic­i­pants there will try to find a com­mon posi­tion toward Rus­sia, which was kicked out of the then-Group of Eight fol­low­ing its 2014 seizure of Crimea from Ukraine.
Lead­ers at the G‑7 sum­mit also will be address­ing the threat of cli­mate change. Sev­er­al G‑7 coun­tries, includ­ing Ger­many and the Unit­ed States, signed a ‘just ener­gy tran­si­tion part­ner­ship’ with South Africa last year to help the coun­try wean itself off heav­i­ly pol­lut­ing coal.
A sim­i­lar agree­ment is in the works with Sene­gal, where Ger­many has sup­port­ed the con­struc­tion of a solar farm.
Ger­man offi­cials also said Scholz will make a stop in Niger, a coun­try that like its neigh­bors has long been bat­tling Islam­ic extremists.
Ear­li­er this month, the Ger­man gov­ern­ment backed a plan to move hun­dreds of its sol­diers to Niger from neigh­bor­ing Mali. The devel­op­ment comes amid a deep­en­ing polit­i­cal cri­sis in Mali that prompt­ed for­mer colo­nial pow­er France to announce it was with­draw­ing its troops after nine years of help­ing Mali bat­tle insurgents.
Ger­many offi­cials say their deci­sion also was moti­vat­ed by con­cerns that Malian forces receiv­ing EU train­ing could coop­er­ate with Russ­ian mer­ce­nar­ies now oper­at­ing in the country.
Ger­many, though, will increase its par­tic­i­pa­tion in a U.N. peace­keep­ing mis­sion in Mali, pro­vid­ing up to 1,400 sol­diers. The Cabinet’s deci­sions still need to be approved by parliament.
Niger is also a major tran­sit hub for ille­gal migra­tion to Europe. Peo­ple from across West Africa con­nect with smug­glers there to make the jour­ney north­ward to attempt the dan­ger­ous trip across the Mediter­ranean Sea.

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How currency sanctions on Russia could disrupt trade with Africa

https://www.brookings.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/shutterstock_1042017103_small.jpg?w=272 Intro­duc­tion Finan­cial sanc­tions tend to hurt both the sanc­tioned and the sanc­tion­er, but they also threat­en to hurt coun­tries that are finan­cial­ly inter­linked with the sanc­tioned coun­try. Recent sanc­tions levied on Rus­sia by the Unit­ed States and the Euro­pean Union in response to Russia’s inva­sion of Ukraine are dis­rupt­ing glob­al trade and finan­cial networks…

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African leaders to attend 2022 World Economic Forum in Davos — CGTN

FILE PHOTO: A man sil­hou­ettes in front of the logo of the World Eco­nom­ic Forum in Davos, Switzer­land, Sun­day, Jan. 19, 2020. (Photo/Markus Schreiber,file)

FILE PHOTO: A man sil­hou­ettes in front of the logo of the World Eco­nom­ic Forum in Davos, Switzer­land, Sun­day, Jan. 19, 2020. (Photo/Markus Schreiber,file)

African pres­i­dents are expect­ed join the world’s polit­i­cal and busi­ness elite in Davos, Switzer­land, for the World Eco­nom­ic Forum’s Annu­al Meet­ing that starts today and is expect­ed to run until May 26.The 2022 meet­ing is the first in-per­son meet­ing since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic.Happening under the theme of His­to­ry at a Turn­ing Point: Gov­ern­ment Poli­cies and Busi­ness Strate­gies, the meet­ing will have 200 ses­sions attend­ed by more than 2,500 lead­ers and experts.Some of the African lead­ers that have con­firmed atten­dance include Malawi Pres­i­dent Lazarus Chak­w­era, Zim­bab­we Pres­i­dent Emmer­son Mnan­gag­wa, Namib­ia Pres­i­dent Hage Gein­gob and Rwan­da Pres­i­dent Paul Kagame.The Forum is expect­ed to place focus on the ongo­ing con­flict in Ukraine.The 2022 forum will also have pan­els on a host of oth­er issues, includ­ing cli­mate change, ris­ing ener­gy prices, glob­al sup­ply chain prob­lems, gen­der inequal­i­ty and poverty.

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DHS pauses controversial Disinformation Governance Board

This sto­ry, plus Meta cre­ates new glob­al media part­ner­ships team, Chris Wal­lace to lead new show on CNN Sun­day line­up and more, all in today’s media head­lines. Top Sto­ries May 18, 2022 May 19, 2022 May 18, 2022 Local News May 18, 2022 Social Media May 18, 2022 May 18, 2022 Press & Gov­ern­ment May 18, 2022 May 18, 2022 About Mis­in­for­ma­tion May…

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Report: Global Pandemic Increased Poverty in Africa

https://gdb.voanews.com/031a0000-0aff-0242–6b3b-08da378750ed_cx0_cy7_cw0_w800_h450.jpg Nairo­bi —  The glob­al pan­dem­ic has pushed more than 55 mil­lion Africans into extreme pover­ty and reversed two decades of hard work in pover­ty reduc­tion on the con­ti­nent. The Eco­nom­ic Report on Africa for 2021 blamed the grow­ing pover­ty on job loss­es, reduced income and the inabil­i­ty of house­holds to man­age the risks In a…

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Democracy Is Not a Commodity

https://foreignpolicy.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/Caracas-Venezuela-Motorcycle-GettyImages-1240573435.jpg As the West imposed wide-rang­ing sanc­tions on Rus­sia in response to Russ­ian Pres­i­dent Vladimir Putin’s war in Ukraine, reports emerged that the Unit­ed States might con­cur­rent­ly lift sanc­tions on the regime of anoth­er bru­tal dic­ta­tor: Venezue­lan Pres­i­dent Nicolás Maduro. A sur­prise vis­it by a U.S. del­e­ga­tion to Cara­cas, Venezuela’s cap­i­tal, in March prompt­ed immediate…

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