1. Sudanese woman jailed for kissing manpublished at 17:57 Greenwich Mean Time 15 December 2022

    She was initially sentenced to death by stoning for adultery, prompting an international outcry.

    Read More
  2. 'Morocco run will raise African World Cup ambitions'published at 17:42 Greenwich Mean Time 15 December 2022

    Morocco's historic World Cup semi-final run will inspire African teams to target reaching the final in future, says Sunday Oliseh.

    Read More
  3. Scroll down for Thursday's storiespublished at 17:42 Greenwich Mean Time 15 December 2022

    We're back on Friday

    That's all from the BBC Africa Live team for now but we'll be back on Friday morning Nairobi time.

    In the meantime there will be an automated service, but you can check the news by going to the Africa pages of the BBC News website or listening to our Africa Today podcast.

    A reminder of our African proverb of the day:

    Quote Message

    Even the best dancer leaves the floor."

    A Luganda proverb sent by Denis Luyima in Kampala, Uganda

    Click here to send us your African proverbs.

    And we leave you with this picture of children in Mombasa, Kenya, enjoying some karate at the 10th Mombasa Open Tong-IL Moo-Doo International Martial Arts Championship.

    Children doing karateImage source, AFP
  4. Palace signed off on possible SA move - Prince Harrypublished at 17:41 Greenwich Mean Time 15 December 2022

    Prince Harry and MeghanImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Prince Harry and Meghan's Netflix docuseries has received mixed reviews

    In the Duke and Duchess of Sussex's much anticipated second part of their docuseries on Netflix, Prince Harry says Buckingham Palace signed off on him and Meghan "moving to South Africa".

    "It was very much an internal document and it was leaked to The Times newspaper then that whole plan was then scrapped," he said.

    The headline in The Times on 20 October 2019, external states: "Harry and Meghan ‘need a break’ - and would love to move to Africa."

    The article goes on: "The royal and his wife find public life almost unbearable and yearn to set up home somewhere like Cape Town."

    Earlier that year, the couple had carried out a 10-day tour in southern Africa, including a visit to Cape Town, with four-month-old son Archie.

    Africa featured a few times in their docuseries, with Prince Harry talking about his love for the continent as a home away from home.

  5. President Biden endorses Africa joining G20 permanentlypublished at 17:15 Greenwich Mean Time 15 December 2022

    Joe BidenImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Joe Biden said Africa deserves a seat at the table, according to a report

    US President, Joe Biden, has announced that he supports the African Union joining the G20 club of nations permanently.

    "Africa belongs to the table in every room where challenges are being discussed and in every institution where discussions are taking place,” a France24 journalist quotes the president as saying., external

    This took place during the US-Africa summit taking place in Washington DC, which is seen as an American effort to re-assert its influence in Africa to counter Chinese involvement.

    In the days leading up to the summit there have been reports the president would make such overtures, as a member of the National Security Council, Judd Devermont said "we need more African voices in international conversations that concern the global economy, democracy and governance, climate change, health and security".

    Currently, out of the countries who have a permanent seat in the G20, none are African.

    Other topics discussed at the summit, which concludes on Thursday, included investment, trade and energy, among others.

    You can read more about it here.

  6. Nigerian tech company introduces menstrual leavepublished at 16:17 Greenwich Mean Time 15 December 2022

    Priya Sippy
    BBC News

    TamponsImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Countries like Japan, Zambia and others offer menstrual leave

    Nigerian tech company, Klasha, has brought in a new policy which will allow its employees to take time off when they are on their period.

    It is reported that they are the first tech company in Nigeria to introduce a menstrual leave policy of this kind. Klasha has said the policy will initially provide five days off a year but that could be subject to change as they evaluate its effectiveness once implemented.

    CEO, Jess Anuna, said in a statement: “At Klasha, we understand that we must make room for women’s biological needs as a part of everyday business. Rather than leave the subject as an unspoken taboo, we want to build a culture of trust, truth, and acceptance.“

    On their website, they state that 60% of their employees are female.

    The move has been applauded by some on social media, but it has also sparked debate about how the policy will work in practice.

    This X post cannot be displayed in your browser. Please enable Javascript or try a different browser.View original content on X
    The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.
    Skip X post

    Allow X content?

    This article contains content provided by X. We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as they may be using cookies and other technologies. You may want to read X’s cookie policy, external and privacy policy, external before accepting. To view this content choose ‘accept and continue’.

    The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.
    End of X post
    This X post cannot be displayed in your browser. Please enable Javascript or try a different browser.View original content on X
    The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.
    Skip X post 2

    Allow X content?

    This article contains content provided by X. We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as they may be using cookies and other technologies. You may want to read X’s cookie policy, external and privacy policy, external before accepting. To view this content choose ‘accept and continue’.

    The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.
    End of X post 2

    Zambia is currently the only country in Africa that grants menstrual leave - allowing a day off per month. Other counties that offer flexible working for periods include Japan, Indonesia and South Korea.

    A study, external in 2019 found that period pain was linked to nearly nine days of lost productivity for a woman in a year.

    Founded in 2018, Klasha is a Nigerian e-commerce company which operates in six African countries. They currently have offices in San Francisco and Lagos.

  7. Uganda child soldier loses war crimes appealpublished at 15:21 Greenwich Mean Time 15 December 2022

    Will Ross
    Africa editor, BBC World Service

    Dominic OngwenImage source, AFP

    The International Criminal Court (ICC) has rejected an appeal against the conviction and 25-year sentence for a Ugandan former child soldier who became a feared rebel commander.

    Dominic Ongwen was found guilty last year of crimes against humanity and war crimes committed by the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) in Northern Uganda between 2002 and 2005.

    He was abducted by the LRA at the age of nine and was forced to fight as a child soldier.

    One judge wanted the length of sentence to be reconsidered due to fact that Ongwen was a victim as well as a perpetrator of the conflict.

    However the majority of judges upheld the sentence. The leader of the LRA rebel group, Joseph Kony, is still at large.

  8. Morocco protest about World Cup semi-final refereepublished at 15:17 Greenwich Mean Time 15 December 2022

    Morocco's football federation protests to Fifa about refereeing decisions in Wednesday's World Cup semi-final loss to France.

    Read More
  9. Zambia forced to ration power supplypublished at 14:31 Greenwich Mean Time 15 December 2022

    Shingai Nyoka
    BBC News, Harare

    An aerial view shows the Kariba Dam and the Kariba lake which is the main source of electricity for Zambia and ZimbabweImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    Water levels have dropped to critical levels at Lake Kariba

    A large drop in the water levels at Lake Kariba, the key supply for Zambia's hydro-electric power plants, has forced the country to begin rationing power supply.

    Last week Zimbabwe, which shares the lake with Zambia, began implementing 18-hour outages.

    Lake Kariba is the biggest source of power for both countries but Zimbabwe has already used up its annual water allocation to produce power and was eating into Zambia’s share.

    Zambia is now restricted to producing 800MW of power and Zimbabwe 300MW daily.

    Water levels have dropped to critical levels at Kariba due to successive droughts with low rainfall and excessive use of water for power generation.

    Domestic consumers have begun experiencing power outages of up to six hours every day and Zambian authorities say the rationing is to avoid a completed shutdown of its power stations.

    Zambia has said it will continue to export power despite the rationing.

    The power allocations will be reviewed in January, as seasonal rainfall is expected to start filling up the lake.

    Read more: Zimbabwe power outages hit businesses and families

  10. Cholera outbreak in Goma results in deaths and rising casespublished at 13:46 Greenwich Mean Time 15 December 2022

    Rhoda Odhiambo
    BBC West Africa correspondent, Lagos

    Map of Democratic Republic of Congo with North Kivu region highlighted and the cities of Kinshasa and Goma pointed
    Image caption,

    There have been 600 cases reported so far in the North Kivu region

    A cholera outbreak has been declared in Goma, capital of the North Kivu province in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

    North Kivu's governor, Lt-Gen Constant Ndima says most of the cases have been reported in temporary camps sheltering internally displaced people affected by the on-going war.

    “A lot of patients who are suffering from diarrhoea, loss of fluids and some of them are vomiting.” Lt Ndima told journalists on Wednesday evening.

    The governor says more than 600 cases and four deaths have been reported. However, non–governmental organisations offering support to the victims say the numbers are higher than official figures.

    Those living in the camps have complained about the lack of food, shelter, latrines, and showers – optimal conditions for cholera to spread.

    Cholera is usually caught by eating or drinking contaminated food or water and is closely linked to poor sanitation. The disease often causes acute diarrhoea and can kill within hours, if untreated.

    Since the end of October, tens of thousands of people fleeing fighting with the M23 group have joined those already settled for months in sites for displaced people in Nyiragongo territory, a few kilometres north of Goma.

    Without proper sanitation and access to clean safe water, cases could rise.

    In October this year, the World Health Organization suspended the two-dose cholera vaccine in favour of a single one, due to a supply shortage. This type of protection is however limited.

  11. Nigerian sheikh sentenced to death for blasphemypublished at 13:06 Greenwich Mean Time 15 December 2022

    Ishaq Khalid
    BBC News, Abuja

    Sheikh Abduljabar Nasir Kabara
    Image caption,

    Sheikh Abduljabar Nasir Kabara can appeal against the death sentence

    A Sharia court in the northern Nigerian state of Kano has sentenced a prominent Islamic cleric to death by hanging, after finding him guilty of blasphemy against the Prophet Muhammad as well as incitement in some of his preaching, although he denies the charges.

    Sheikh Abduljabar Nasir Kabara has been detained by the authorities since July last year after being accused of spreading lies against the Prophet - charges which he denied.

    The trial has been closely followed by Nigerians. Kano is among a dozen states in northern Nigeria where Sharia is practised alongside the country’s secular law.

    The 52-year-old scholar is from the Qadiriyya sect. He has a sizeable number of followers mainly in Kano state.

    His father was the leader of the sect in West Africa until his death in 1996.

    Sheikh Abduljabar has the right to appeal against the judgement.

    Death sentences in Nigeria are rarely carried out. Instead, convicted people are usually kept in prisons indefinitely.

  12. Libyan probe into Lockerbie suspect handover to USpublished at 12:13 Greenwich Mean Time 15 December 2022

    It is claimed that Abu Agila Masud was abducted from his home before being transferred to the US.

    Read More
  13. Rwanda president slaps down US pressure over Rusesabaginapublished at 12:02 Greenwich Mean Time 15 December 2022

    Samba Cyuzuzo
    BBC Great Lakes

    KagameImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    President Kagame is currently at the US-Africa summit in Washington

    Rwandan President Paul Kagame has said nobody is going “to bully us" when it comes to internal Rwandan affairs, in response to the US request to release government critic Paul Rusesabagina.

    During a discussion on African issues hosted by news website Semafor on the sidelines of the US-Africa Summit in Washington, Mr Kagame was asked if the US’s Antony Blinken advocacy on Mr Rusesabagina was "helping or hurting" his case.

    Mr Kagame said that “somebody in America” wanted the case to be “nullified” because “this person is a celebrity”.

    Last year, Mr Rusesabagina and 20 other people were found guilty on terrorism charges.

    “If we let him free, how about these other 20 who pointed him as even being their leader?” President Kagame asked.

    “We have made it clear, there isn’t anybody going to come from anywhere to bully us into something to do with our lives - you can maybe make an invasion and overrun the country,” he added sarcastically.

    Mr Rusesabagina, 68, was depicted as a hero in a Hollywood movie on the Rwandan genocide.

    He was sentenced to 25 years in jail after being tricked into boarding a private jet from Dubai to Rwanda's capital Kigali, thinking he was heading to Bujumbura in Burundi.

    Mr Rusesabagina's family has called the trial a sham, saying he was taken to Rwanda, from exile, by force.

    The US has stated that Mr Rusesabagina is being “wrongfully detained” in Rwanda.

    You can read more about Paul Rusesabagina here.

  14. Focus on women in US-Africa partnershippublished at 11:10 Greenwich Mean Time 15 December 2022

    Kenyan womanImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    The White House specifically says it wants to invest in Kenyan and South African women's development

    There is a focus on empowering women at the US-African Leaders Summit which concludes on Thursday.

    In a published document, external outlining a partnership between the two regions, a project called Accelerating Women’s Empowerment in Energy was announced.

    It will initially invest $1m (£810,000) "to help secure women’s economic futures through green jobs, with a focus on Kenya and South Africa," the White House says.

    "The program will provide grants to local organizations to address barriers to women’s entry, promotion, and retention in the clean energy sector and increase women’s participation in the clean energy workforce," a statement from Washington continued.

    Dozens of leaders from the continent are currently in Washington for the event - the first such hosted in eight years.

    The summit is seen as a US attempt to re-assert its influence in Africa to counter Chinese involvement.

    You can read more about it here.

  15. More bodies found after deadly DR Congo floodspublished at 10:20 Greenwich Mean Time 15 December 2022

    Emery Makumeno
    BBC News, Kinshasa

    Landslide in Kinshasa

    Rescue workers have found 11 more bodies of people killed following floods on Tuesday night in the capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo, Kinshasa.

    The bodies were found in the northern Mont-Ngafula district of the city where many houses are built on hillside areas that suffered landslides.

    The floods have been termed the worst in years witnessed in the city.

    Nearly 30,000 households have been affected, with 280 homes swept away by the landslides.

    President Félix Tshisekedi is due to return to the country on Thursday from Washington after shortening his participation at the USA-Africa Summit.

    The official death toll is 120 but non-governmental groups say more than 140 people died.

    The damage to infrastructure is significant, with the majority of residents in the capital experiencing water and electricity outages.

    Officials on Tuesday ordered the demolition of buildings standing on unstable locations and those putting pressures on the drainage system.

  16. Museveni posts wrong Rwenzori Mountains photo on Twitterpublished at 09:01 Greenwich Mean Time 15 December 2022

    Peter Mwai
    BBC Reality Check

    Uganda's President Yoweri Museveni has come under online criticism after his official Twitter account posted a misleading image of Rwenzori Mountains in an attempt to show the beauty of the mountain.

    The Rwenzori are a range of mountains which includes Africa's third highest peak Mt Margherita. It is among Unesco's world heritage sites.

    Instead of showing the Ugandan mountains, the image President Museveni shared shows Mt Sefton - which is found in the Aoraki Mount Cook National Park in New Zealand.

    This X post cannot be displayed in your browser. Please enable Javascript or try a different browser.View original content on X
    The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.
    Skip X post

    Allow X content?

    This article contains content provided by X. We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as they may be using cookies and other technologies. You may want to read X’s cookie policy, external and privacy policy, external before accepting. To view this content choose ‘accept and continue’.

    The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.
    End of X post

    In the post accompanying the image, Mr Museveni said he had “continued to highlight the unique beauty of Uganda, the marvel of Rwenzori and the good high-altitude climate” during his visit to the UK and the US.

    “That is why you find permanent snow on the Equator,” he said.

    Online users were quick to call him out with some urging him to delete the post.

    This X post cannot be displayed in your browser. Please enable Javascript or try a different browser.View original content on X
    The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.
    Skip X post 2

    Allow X content?

    This article contains content provided by X. We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as they may be using cookies and other technologies. You may want to read X’s cookie policy, external and privacy policy, external before accepting. To view this content choose ‘accept and continue’.

    The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.
    End of X post 2
    This X post cannot be displayed in your browser. Please enable Javascript or try a different browser.View original content on X
    The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.
    Skip X post 3

    Allow X content?

    This article contains content provided by X. We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as they may be using cookies and other technologies. You may want to read X’s cookie policy, external and privacy policy, external before accepting. To view this content choose ‘accept and continue’.

    The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.
    End of X post 3

    There were others who insisted that was a correct picture of Mt Rwenzori, claiming it was turning up when they searched for the image online.

    “To prove this is Mt Rwenzori, I consulted uncle Google. Plus remember I’m a neighbour to this Mt. Yes it snows & I grew up seeing this. Thx for marketing Ug Excellency,” one posted, external.

    But the reason why this was happening was because other sites have previously erroneously used the image to show Mt Rwenzori.

    Some online users made light of the post saying perhaps it was Mr Museveni’s “announcement of an impending colonization of the [New Zealand] mountain and henceforth it shall be called Rwenzori V.2”.

    More on this topic:

  17. DR Congo leader calls for US pressure on Rwandapublished at 08:28 Greenwich Mean Time 15 December 2022

    Samba Cyuzuzo
    BBC Great Lakes

    DR Congo Felix Tshisekedi and US President Joe BidenImage source, DR Congo presidency/Twitter

    The Democratic Republic of Congo's President Felix Tshisekedi has asked US President Joe Biden to “put pressure on Rwanda in order to stop its support to the M23 rebels".

    The two presidents spoke at a bilateral meeting during the ongoing US-Africa summit in Washington.

    The US has previously called on Rwanda to stop its support to the M23 - while Kigali has continuously denied links with the rebels.

    Speaking at an African exchange forum on the side-lines of the summit, Rwanda's President Kagame said "there isn’t anybody, who is going to come from anywhere to bully us into something to do with our lives".

    In the US, the presidents of Burundi, Kenya, Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda and Angola met to discuss the eastern DR Congo security situation - which Mr Tshisekedi didn’t attend.

    The presidents met “to review” the implementation of Luanda and Nairobi agreements – meetings that have taken resolutions on the conflict, the Rwandan presidency reports.

    It came as the M23 rebels held their first press conference in Bunagana town in eastern DR Congo which they have controlled since June

    They denied killings in Kishishe and Bambo. The UN forces in DR Congo has said more than 130 people were killed by the rebels in the two areas on 29 and 30 November.

    In the Wednesday evening presser, the rebels criticised the UN forces' statement as “lacking facts”.

    The rebels presented "government army soldiers, and Rwandan FDLR rebels" who they said were captured on the battlefield.

    The UN says that more than 400,000 people have fled their homes since fighting between M23 and the army resumed in March.

    A relative calm has been observed since the end of last week.

  18. Overcrowded Liberian prison turns away new inmatespublished at 07:19 Greenwich Mean Time 15 December 2022

    Jonathan Paye-Layleh
    BBC News, Monrovia

    Monrovia Central PrisonImage source, Jonathan Paye-Layleh
    Image caption,

    The prison holds convicted murderers - pictured here in January 2022

    Liberia's largest prison, the Monrovia Central Prison, has begun turning away new inmates due to overcrowding and fears of disease outbreak, the justice ministry and prison officials have said.

    Justice Minister Frank Musa Dean told the BBC that those being denied admission at the facility were inmates accused of minor offences.

    “Where no damage was done or nobody was wounded, people arrested on minor charges are to instead be returned to communities and kept under the watch of community leaders," Mr Dean said.

    It follows local media reports that prison guards were refusing to admit new inmates as part of an ongoing strike over a delay of salaries. Prison officials have denied the claim.

    The prison was built to hold around 300 inmates when the population of Monrovia was about 300,000. It now holds over 1,600 inmates in a city of about 1.5 million people.

    Inmates at the facility include convicted murderers and armed robbers.

    “Of course when there is an increase in population, correspondingly there’s an increase in crime rate,” Mr Dean said. “And there’s a challenge.”

    Engineers from the ministry of public works are working on a blueprint to construct additional wings of the prison that will take up to 1,000 inmates, according to the justice minister.

    More on this story:

  19. 'They will hunt and make fire' - the race reflecting a way of lifepublished at 06:39 Greenwich Mean Time 15 December 2022

    Runners must forage for food and make their own fires to keep warm in a new ultra-marathon in the Tanzanian bushlands.

    Read More
  20. Nigeria releases new banknotes into circulationpublished at 06:31 Greenwich Mean Time 15 December 2022

    Ishaq Khalid
    BBC News, Abuja

    Samples of the new Nigerian currency are displayed at the presidential villa in Abuja, Nigeria November 23, 2022.Image source, Reuters
    Image caption,

    The country’s 200, 500 and 1000 naira banknotes have been redesigned

    Nigeria will on Thursday introduce into circulation its new currency in the first such redesign in 20 years.

    The authorities say the measure is meant to address insecurity, tackle counterfeiting and force excess cash back into the banking system.

    Nigeria’s central bank had said more than 80% of the money in circulation was being hoarded by individuals.

    It has urged people to take their old naira notes to commercial banks for replacement.

    A 31 January deadline has been set by which Nigerians have to trade-in the old banknotes.

    Many Nigerians say the government should have focused more on other measures to tackle soaring inflation in Africa’s largest economy instead of redesigning the banknotes.

    The policy is likely to hit politicians who might be planning to use cash to bribe voters in Nigeria’s elections - a common campaign strategy in the country. The elections are due in February.

    The release of the new notes comes barely three weeks before another change comes into effect - the limiting of cash withdrawals from banks to $225 (£182) a week for individuals and $1,200 (£970) for corporate bodies.