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9 November 2014

Explosions end meeting of UN envoy, Libyan premier


Cairo - A series of nearby explosions prematurely ended a meeting between Libya's prime minister and the United Nations top envoy to the country, though no one was wounded.

Samir Ghattas, spokesperson for the UN mission in Libya, said it was not clear whether the explosions on Sunday were targeting the meeting between UN envoy Bernardino Leon and Prime Minister Abdullah al-Thinni in the eastern city of Bayda.

Leon, who had planned to travel to other cities on his visit, left immediately after the blasts for the airport.

Sudan army denies Darfur mass rape report


Khartoum - The Sudanese army on Sunday said a media report that its troops had carried out a mass rape in the war-torn western region of Darfur was "unjustified and unreasonable".

The denial came days after the military refused peacekeepers access to Tabit in North Darfur state, where they were travelling to investigate the alleged rape of 200 women and girls.

Army spokesperson Colonel Al-Sawarmy Khaled Saad told reporters mass rape "cannot be committed by any Sudanese institutions, military or otherwise".

8 November 2014

Burkina army declines to join transition talks


Ouagadougou - Burkina Faso's army declined to join talks with the opposition and civilian groups on a transition government Saturday, while ousted leader Blaise Compaore blamed the military and his political opponents of jointly plotting his overthrow.

Representatives of political parties and civil society groups met in the capital Ouagadougou to hammer out a handover plan, after Compaore fled following a mass uprising against his bid to revise the constitution and extend his 27-year rule.

The army's power grab in the landlocked west African country has attracted international condemnation and threats of sanctions from the African Union unless it hands over power within two weeks.

US Deputy Assistant Secretary for African Affairs Bisa Williams reiterated calls for a democratic transition after talks Saturday with the army-named leader Lieutenant-Colonel Isaac Zida in the capital Ouagadougou.

Kidnapped Ukrainian doctors freed in Libya


Kiev - Two Ukrainian doctors kidnapped in Libya have been freed," Ukrainian Foreign Minister Pavlo Klimkin said on Saturday.

"After huge efforts, the two Ukrainian doctors kidnapped in September in Libya have been freed. They are in a safe place," Klimkin said on his Twitter account.

A foreign ministry spokesperson said he had no more information.

In late September, Libyan authorities said that a Ukrainian doctor and his wife had been kidnapped in the eastern city of Benghazi, a stronghold of Islamist militias.

Ebola fight starting to pay off – WHO


Freetown - The deadliest Ebola outbreak ever is finally slowing in Liberia, the worst-hit country, but still wreaking havoc in two neighbouring west African states amid warnings of thousands of unreported deaths.

As the initially lacklustre global response to the crisis centred in Liberia and adjoining Sierra Leone and Guinea gathered some pace following repeated and impassioned appeals from top UN officials and world leaders, the good news from Liberia was tempered by warnings that the global toll is likely vastly underestimated.

The outbreak is officially thought to have claimed 4 960 lives and infected 13 042 people, according to the latest data issued by the World Health Organisation. But that could be the tip of the iceberg, an official at the UN health agency said.