1. Pet crocs and red carpets: Africa's top shotspublished at 01:45 Greenwich Mean Time 3 March 2023

    A selection of the best photos from across Africa and beyond this week.

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  2. Defeated Nigeria candidates vow legal challengepublished at 20:43 Greenwich Mean Time 2 March 2023

    The second and third-placed candidates say they will go to court over the result of the election.

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  3. Sahel Islamist insurgency: The Mauritanian success?published at 19:18 Greenwich Mean Time 2 March 2023

    Mauritanian President Mohamed ould Ghazouani tells the BBC what's behind his country’s security success.

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  4. Scroll down for Thursday's storiespublished at 17:24 Greenwich Mean Time 2 March 2023

    We're back on Friday morning

    That's all from the BBC Africa Live team until Friday morning, Nairobi time.

    There will be an automated news feed here until then. You can also get the latest from the BBC News website and listen to the Africa Today podcast.

    A reminder of Thursday's wise words:

    Quote Message

    A frog jumps and hops within its reach."

    A Dinka proverb sent by Gil Chagai in Juba, South Sudan.

    Click here to send us your African proverbs.

    And we leave you with this picture of men on a boat in Zanzibar, Tanzania, taken by the photographer Sam Vox.

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  5. US downplays SA-China-Russia military exercisepublished at 17:20 Greenwich Mean Time 2 March 2023

    Emmanuel Igunza
    BBC News, Nairobi

    Naval shipImage source, AFP
    Image caption,

    The military exercise cause a lot of controversy

    The top US commander in Africa has downplayed the recent joint naval exercise by Russia, China and South Africa in the Indian Ocean.

    General Michael Langley said America offered much more valuable security partnerships to African countries but would not force them to pick nations to corporate militarily with.

    Gen Langley described the joint naval exercise as power projection by Russia and China.

    South Africa sent more than 400 troops to the exercise while Russia sent a battleship armed with hypersonic missiles.

    South Africa has denied the training amounted to an endorsement of the war in Ukraine.

    Gen Langley also warned of the growing involvement of Russia’s Wanger Group in conflicts across Africa, saying they were a destabilising force.

    Mercenaries from the group have fought in the Central Africa Republic, Libya and Mali.

    Read more: Why is South Africa's navy joining exercises with Russia and China?

  6. US offers millions to capture DR Congo rebel leaderpublished at 17:16 Greenwich Mean Time 2 March 2023

    Will Ross
    Africa editor, BBC World Service

    The United States is offering a reward of up to $5m (£4.1m) for information that helps capture the leader of a rebel group in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo which has ties to the Islamic State group.

    The US State Department said under the command of Seka Musa Baluku, the Allied Democratic Forces had killed, maimed, raped and abducted civilians including children.

    The ADF leader is originally from Uganda, where the group first carried out attacks in the 1990s.

    In 2021 the US labelled the ADF a terrorist organisation. It is one of dozens of armed groups active in eastern DR Congo.

    Read more: Who are the ADF?

  7. Joy as songbird feared extinct seen in Madagascarpublished at 17:00 Greenwich Mean Time 2 March 2023

    The dusky tetraka is a small bird with a distinctive yellow throat that lives on the ground.

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  8. Macron seeks to renew Africa relationspublished at 16:08 Greenwich Mean Time 2 March 2023

    Will Ross
    Africa editor, BBC World Service

    Emmanuel MacronImage source, AFP
    Image caption,

    In some former French colonies in Africa there is some resentment toward the country

    The French President, Emmanuel Macron, has said his country has no intention of returning to past policies of interfering in Africa.

    He was speaking in Gabon at the start of a visit to four countries on the continent.

    President Macron appeared to be trying to draw a line under his country's experience in Africa by stating that the age of "La Françafrique" was over.

    In its former colonies, there has long been a degree of resentment towards France.

    Successive presidents in Paris have been accused of turning a blind eye to sham elections and embracing autocratic, corrupt leaders to suit France's economic interests on the continent.

    Military leaders who seized power in Mali and Burkina Faso have been tapping into that resentment - cutting ties, expelling French troops and cosying up to Russia.

    But few observers believe Moscow will have a stabilising effect or help stop the spread of jihadist violence in Africa.

  9. ‘As long as you’re black you’re a target’published at 15:26 Greenwich Mean Time 2 March 2023

    Migrants in TunisiaImage source, AFP
    Image caption,

    Tunisia had an estimated 21,000 migrants from sub-Saharan Africa in 2021, according to official figures quoted by a local rights activist

    Black Africans don’t feel safe in Tunisia because they have become a “target” because of their skin colour, a student from sub-Saharan Africa in Tunisia tells the BBC’s Africa Daily programme.

    A woman, who only wanted to be identified as Mary, says that some people’s homes have been “set on fire”, others “beaten up,” and some have received verbal insults.

    There are even taxi drivers who are refusing to drive black Africans, Mary continues.

    Mary says the rise in racism comes after President Kais Saied last week said that illegal migration was a "plot" to cause demographic change in Tunisia, and accused "illegal hordes" of being behind rising crime.

    Dozens of migrants from sub-Saharan Africa have since been detained, as Ivory Coast and Guinea say they are sending specially charted planes to bring back their nationals.

    “It’s like you’re not welcome in your own continent,” Mary continues.

    She says she has some Tunisian friends who have tried to support her, and intends to stay in the country just a few more months to finish her studies.

    Read more about the race row in Tunisia here.

    Or listen to the Africa Daily podcast here

  10. Egypt pyramid hidden corridor seen for first timepublished at 15:02 Greenwich Mean Time 2 March 2023

    An endoscope was used to film inside the 9m-long space, whose purpose is still unknown.

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  11. Ruto and Odinga rail against LGBT court rulingpublished at 14:34 Greenwich Mean Time 2 March 2023

    Ferdinand Omondi
    BBC News, Nairobi

    Kenya protesters with pride flagImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption,

    LGBT Kenyans are now free to form associations but gay sex remains illegal

    Kenya’s President William Ruto and opposition leader Raila Odinga have united in their criticism of last week’s Supreme Court ruling which allows the LGBT community to register lobby groups in Kenya.

    President Ruto has sworn that he will never allow gay marriage in Kenya, which he said "goes against the country’s cultures and religious beliefs".

    It’s the latest and highest-profile attack on the judgement, which many have wrongly suggested gives the LGBT community freedom to get married in Kenya.

    Last Friday, the Supreme Court ruled that the decision of Kenya’s NGO board to decline the registration of the National Gays and Lesbians Human Rights Commission - or any other group with the words gay and lesbian in it, was unconstitutional.

    The court said that denying the group registration purely on the basis of their sexuality was a violation of their constitutional rights to association and freedom from discrimination.

    However since then, there has been outrage from the public, parliament, the religious community, powerful state officers including the speaker of the national assembly, and now the president himself.

    On Wednesday parliament discussed the judgement at length, and many members who spoke wondered why the court had made the judgement to grant freedom of association to what they described as an illegality.

    Kenya’s constitution only provides for marriage between members of the opposite sex, while the penal code punishes sex "against the order of nature" with up to 14 years imprisonment.

    These are the provisions upon which Kenya’s legislators have faulted the judgement.

    On Thursday, Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua said registering a group which fights for the rights of gay people to get married was an attempt to legitimise LGBT actions in Kenya, which was against the country's way of life.

    President Ruto - to cheers from the crowd - suggested there was a campaign by foreigners to introduce "alien practices" in the country, which he swore not to allow in Kenya.

    And opposition leader Mr Odinga has also been quoted as saying that it was not the role of the judiciary to make laws.

    In recent weeks, there has been escalating anti-gay sentiment in Kenya and the region, with hundreds of hostile social media posts drowning out any attempts to balance the discussion.

    On the day of the judgement, Kenyan legislator Peter Kaluma filed an official notice seeking to amend the law to give life imprisonment to people convicted of homosexuality or the promotion of it.

  12. Peter Obi: We will prove we won Nigeria electionpublished at 13:40 Greenwich Mean Time 2 March 2023

    Will Ross
    Africa editor, BBC World Service

    Peter ObiImage source, Reuters
    Image caption,

    Peter Obi has a huge following amongst Nigerian youths

    One of the losing candidates in Nigeria's presidential election, Peter Obi, has reiterated his criticism of the poll.

    He said people had been robbed at the ballot box and pledged to prove through the courts that he had won.

    "We won the election and we will prove it to Nigerians," Mr Obi said at a news conference in Abuja.

    The Labour Party candidate got 25% of the votes -- behind Atiku Abubakar and the winner Bola Tinubu, who got 37%.

    Mr Obi's campaign was especially popular with young Nigerians, many of whom feel let down by the two parties that have dominated the political scene.

    He has urged his supporters to be calm and peaceful and await the court ruling.

  13. Journalists freed as Egypt releases more detaineespublished at 13:23 Greenwich Mean Time 2 March 2023

    BBC Monitoring
    The world through its media

    A member of the Egypt's presidential pardon committee says 33 detainees have been released.

    In a Facebook post on Wednesday, MP Tarek Elawady listed the names of those released which included journalists and activists such as Ziad Abu el-Fadl and Ahmed Mohamed Allam.

    Mr El-Fadl was a member of the unregistered Bread and Freedom democratic party and was arrested in 2019 and faced charges of spreading false news and misusing social media.

    Mr Allam was also imprisoned in 2020 over similar charges.

    On the same day, the privately owned Mada Masr website - which often relays stances critical of the government - reported that the UN human rights committee concluded a two-day session assessing Egypt's commitment to international conventions on political and civil rights.

    The website said the meeting was held for the first time since 2002, noting that it was attended by representatives from the government and local and global rights organisations.

    The committee is set to submit its notes and recommendations to the Egyptian government towards the end of its term on 24 March, Mada Masr added.

    The presidential pardon committee resumed its work in April upon orders of the Egyptian president, who also launched at the same time a "national dialogue" which he said would include all the country's political parties, except for the banned Muslim Brotherhood group.

    Egyptian authorities have since released several opposition members and journalists from prison in successive batches, none of which included known members of the Brotherhood.

  14. Museveni reveals what he told Zelensky on food crisispublished at 12:50 Greenwich Mean Time 2 March 2023

    Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni speaks during a press conference after a meeting with South African President Cyril Ramaphosa (not seen) at the Union Buildings in Pretoria on February 28, 2023.Image source, AFP
    Image caption,

    Uganda has continued to state its neutrality over the war in Ukraine

    President Yoweri Museveni on Wednesday said he recently spoke to his Ukrainian counterpart Volodymyr Zelensky about food security in Africa.

    Mr Museveni was fielding questions from journalists at a press conference at the Uganda-South Africa investment forum in held in Pretoria.

    "Our talks were exploratory... but what I told him was that Uganda has no food problem... but this is not the case with other countries... so still the problem remains," he said during the press conference aired by South Africa's state-run television SABC.

    "But I wanted him to know that there are some African countries which are strong economically."

    The two leaders held a telephone conversation on 22 February in which they talked about the potential for developing bilateral relations.

    Fuel and food prices have skyrocketed around the world since February last year when Russia invaded Ukraine.

    Africa is heavily dependent on grain supplies from the two countries that together account for about 29% of global wheat exports.

    Uganda has continued to state its neutrality over the Ukraine-Russia war.

    A day after Mr Museveni's phone conversation with Mr Zelensky, Uganda abstained during a UN vote that called for Russia to end hostilities in Ukraine and withdraw its forces.

  15. Malawi president's ally quits over graft concernspublished at 11:56 Greenwich Mean Time 2 March 2023

    Peter Jegwa
    Lilongwe, Malawi

    An adviser and key ally of Malawi President Lazarus Chakwera has announced he is stepping down from his two positions due to concerns over corruption in government.

    Maurice Munthali said he was quitting from his two positions as the president's special adviser on peace, reconciliation and national unity and as the spokesman for the governing Malawi Congress Party (MCP).

    In two separate letters, he said he was resigning from the positions after deeply and prayerfully reflecting on his role in a “governance atmosphere marred by persistent corruption allegations and scandals”.

    Mr Chakwera was elected as president in June 2020 promising to fight corruption when his party led an alliance of nine political parties that defeated former president Peter Mutharika.

    His tenure has, however, been tainted by numerous corruption scandals, which have seen several senior officials of his administration, some very close to him, being indicted.

    Mr Munthali accused the MCP of failing to provide “the type of leadership and direction that would meet the hopes of all Malawians for a better life”.

    Early this month, Kamuzu Chibambo, the president of one of the nine parties in the governing alliance also announced his party’s withdrawal from the alliance over allegations of corruption.

    Within days of his resignation, a member of Mr Chakwera's youth wing, Emmanuel Mwanyongo, announced he was leaving the party as well as his role as a board member for the National Youth Council of Malawi.

    Mr Mwanyongo had been seen by many as a rising star in the party.

    President Chakwera has not commented on Wednesday’s resignation, but his party issued a statement in which it said it was “saddened” by the development.

    It added that the former party spokesman should take any evidence he may have to institutions involved in the fight against graft.

  16. Tulsa massacre survivors granted Ghana citizenshippublished at 11:52 Greenwich Mean Time 2 March 2023

    Viola Fletcher and Hughes Van Ellis visited Ghana in 2021 to mark 100 years since the Tulsa massacre.

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  17. Mauritania not inviting Wagner group - presidentpublished at 10:58 Greenwich Mean Time 2 March 2023

    Mohamed Ahmed Ould GhazouaniImage source, AFP

    Mauritanian President Mohamed Ahmed Ould Ghazouani says his government has no plans to invite mercenaries from Russia's Wagner group to help in the fight against Islamist insurgents.

    Countries in the Sahel region, including Mauritania's neighbour Mali, are using fighters from the shadowy private military company to fight a Jihadist insurgency that has left thousands dead.

    "It's simply not the case... we are a sovereign country and will remain so," Mr Ghazouani told the BBC's Caroline Loyer.

    He also denied being approached by the Wagner group, but said he would not judge neighbouring countries with ties to the group.

    "We hope that these partnerships are effective and that if the aims are achieved that it is done with respect to human rights," he said.

    A map of Mauritania and Mali
  18. West Africans to leave Tunisia after race rowpublished at 10:04 Greenwich Mean Time 2 March 2023

    President Saied was condemned for his comments about illegal migrants from sub-Saharan Africa.

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  19. Ugandan leader defends move to shut UN rights officepublished at 09:43 Greenwich Mean Time 2 March 2023

    BBC Monitoring
    The world through its media

    Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni speaks during a press conference after a meeting with South African President Cyril Ramaphosa (not seen) at the Union Buildings in Pretoria on February 28, 2023.Image source, AFP
    Image caption,

    The Ugandan president says the UN rights office is not necessary in the country

    Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni has defended his government's decision to terminate the operations of the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) in the country.

    He was responding to a journalist questioning Uganda's decision to close OHCHR operations, during a press conference at the Uganda-South Africa investment forum in Pretoria on Wednesday.

    "This is because we have Ugandan Human Rights Commission which is mandated by the constitution. So having others which are not part of our constitution system is first of all unnecessary, but also diversionary," Mr Museveni said during conference aired by South Africa's state-run television SABC.

    "Instead of going to report to where action can be taken, they go to the UN. What can UN do in Uganda? They don't have the powers of enforcement," he added

    On 3 February, Uganda's foreign ministry announced that the government would not renew the mandate of the OCHCR, which was set to expire at the end of March.

    In a letter to the OHCHR head office, the ministry stated that Uganda had developed the capacity to monitor, promote and protect human rights without external support.

    Rights activists and campaigners have condemned Uganda's decision to shut down the UN office, describing it as "shameful".

    Critics view the move as a reflection of the government's response to the increasing scrutiny over abuses such as torture, forced disappearances, abductions, detentions without trial and re-arrests of persons legally released by the courts.

  20. Turbulence injures passengers on flight to Mauritiuspublished at 08:59 Greenwich Mean Time 2 March 2023

    Yasine Mohabuth
    Port Louis, Mauritius

    Condor airplaneImage source, Getty Images

    At least 17 passengers have been injured, two of them seriously, after a Condor Airlines flight from Frankfurt, Germany, to Mauritius was hit by severe turbulence.

    The plane was caught in the severe turbulence while flying near Madagascar, two hours before its scheduled landing in Mauritius.

    Footage of the plane's interior showed damages.

    There were 270 passengers on board Flight DE 2314 during the incident on Thursday, according to Mauritius police.

    It managed to make an emergency landing at Mauritius international airport at around 06:40 local time (02:40GMT), police said.

    An emergency team evacuated the injured passengers to the nearest hospital.

    “According to initial information, the incident occurred in mid-flight near Madagascar," said Inspector Shiva Coothen of the Mauritius police press office.

    “The authorities are waiting for the captain's report to establish the circumstances surrounding this incident,” he added.

    Mauritius was last week hit by Cyclone Freddy that saw flights grounded. Much of the southern Africa region has been experiencing heavy rains in recent weeks.