Rwanda bill passage draws election dividing linepublished at 08:52 British Summer Time 23 April
Ministers believe the novel deportation scheme is worth a try, but Labour plans to get rid of it.
Read MoreMinisters believe the novel deportation scheme is worth a try, but Labour plans to get rid of it.
Read MoreAbubakar Salim set up his own studio to tell a personal tale of grief inspired by his Kenyan heritage.
Read MoreHow the country's former president is thwarting attempts to bar him from contesting the polls.
Read MoreThe Rwanda bill has finally been approved - but planes won't be taking off imminently.
Read MoreRwanda is gearing up to welcome deported asylum seekers now the landmark UK bill has passed.
Read MoreThe creatures shed light on how new viruses might spread from animals to humans, researchers say.
Read MoreWe're back on Wednesday morning
That's all from the BBC Africa Live team for now. To keep up with news from the continent, visit the BBC Africa webpage.
And if audio is your thing, have a listen to the BBC's Focus on Africa and Africa Daily podcasts.
A reminder of Monday's wise words:
Quote MessageThe earliest cow to the creek drinks clean water."
A Luyana/Lozi proverb sent by Mulako Sianga in Kitwe, Zambia
Click here to send us your African proverbs.
And we leave you with this photo of jockey Michael Fundiand after winning the Lord Macmillan Trophy in Kenya on the gelding Assured:
Will Ross & Natasha Booty
BBC News
Scientists say they have found evidence that changes in animal behaviour caused by damage to forests can lead to wildlife and humans being exposed to dangerous viruses.
A study led by Stirling and Wisconsin-Madison Universities focused on a forest in western Uganda where palm trees have become extinct as a result of people using them to dry tobacco leaves.
Scientists filmed chimpanzees and antelope finding an alternative source of minerals in bat excrement.
But tests found this contained several viruses including one related to the virus that caused the Covid-19 pandemic.
"About a quarter the 27 viruses we identified were viruses of mammals - the rest were viruses of insects and other invertebrates," Prof Tony Goldberg told the BBC.
"All 27 viruses were new to science, so we don't know what effects they might have on humans or other animals. But one virus stood out because is was a relative of a virus everyone knows: SARS coronavirus 2."
Researchers hope their findings could help understand and prevent the onset of outbreaks, epidemics and pandemics including coronaviruses and possibly Ebola.
Jose Tembe
BBC News, Maputo
A group of 100 workers at a ruby mine have blocked the entrance to the gem-washing facilities, forcing work to come to a halt.
The ruby mine is owned by a company called Fura and is located in Montepeuz in northern Mozambique. The people who work there are employed by a logistics firm called Reef.
The workers say their employer owes them more than $265,000 (£215,000) in unpaid wages over the past three months.
But a Reef management representative says they have already tried to negotiate the debt with Fura to no avail. Fura has not yet commented on the claims.
Large-scale ruby mining began in Mozambique around 14 years ago.
Elettra Neysmith
BBC World Service News
The UK's lower house of parliament is again debating the government's flagship bill which seeks to send some asylum seekers to Rwanda.
The bill has been repeatedly blocked and amended since January.
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has pledged that one-way flights will begin setting off for Rwanda in July.
He said he was determined that the latest part of the policy would finally be approved in parliament later.
The plan is designed to deter the record number of migrants arriving from France in small boats but it's been beset by legal challenges.
Polls suggest majority support for the policy but critics say it's morally wrong and expensive.
Chris Ewokor & Will Ross
BBC News
A counter-terrorism summit is under way in the Nigerian capital, Abuja, aimed at improving West Africa's response to the threat from Islamist militant groups.
Nigeria’s National Security Adviser, who organised the two-day event, said it aimed to focus on finding African-led solutions to the insecurity.
In recent years jihadist groups have increased their attacks across the Sahel region despite the presence of thousands of international troops.
Three countries worst affected by the violence - Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger - have not sent officials to the summit.
They are all under military rule following coups - a situation which has strained relations with other nations in the region.
Kenya is bringing in a ban on people using plastic bags to dispose of their organic waste, burnishing the country's status as a global leader in the fight against plastic pollution.
It comes seven years after the East African nation banned single-use plastic bags.
The country's environmental agency says residents and local authorities now have three months to prepare for the changes before they will be enforced.
News of the changes were widely circulated to the public on Monday, external but, according to the statement sent out, they had first been issued on 8 April.
Will Ross
Africa editor, BBC World Service
There are reports from Mali that at least 100 civilians are being held by suspected jihadists after being kidnapped last week.
Local residents told the AFP news agency that they were travelling in three buses when the attackers forced them to drive in the direction of a forest between Bandiagara and Bankass.
Six days on, there has been no sign of the dozens of hostages.
This area of Mali's Mopti region has seen frequent attacks by Islamist fighters.
Following several recent attacks in the area, people are getting increasingly frustrated.
Civil society organisations in Bandiagara have been staging protests denouncing the fact that many people have been displaced and calling for a military camp to be set up to protect the local communities.
Following a coup in 2021, Mali's military rulers ordered thousands of international troops to pull out leaving the country even more fragile.
Jihadist attacks began in northern Mali more than a decade ago and have spread to the centre of the country as well as neighbouring Burkina Faso and Niger.
This prompted military coups in all three nations.
Mining giant Anglo American said on Monday, external that it would oppose any appeals by a group of Zambian women and children who are suing it for alleged mass lead poisoning.
The Johannesburg High Court had on Friday allowed the claimants to appeal against an earlier ruling that threw out their class action lawsuit against Anglo American South Africa (AASA).
The lawsuit claims that more than 140,000 people may have been poisoned, over generations, by exposure to toxins from a lead mine in Zambia's Kabwe district, where AASA was a shareholder from 1925 to 1974.
Anglo American said "it has every sympathy for the situation in Kabwe, but is not responsible for it".
A joint statement by Mbuyisa Moleele Attorneys and Leigh Day, the law firms representing the claimants, said the ruling was a "crucial step towards achieving justice" for the women and children.
The Johannesburg High Court judge Justice Leonie Wendell said that there were "compelling reasons to grant the appeal" and that the appeal had "reasonable prospects of success", the lawyers said in a statement on Monday, external.
They added that the claimants had "clear" evidence to support their allegations.
"From the early 1970s children were already falling ill and dying of lead poisoning, and a high proportion of them were suffering from massive blood lead levels."
The case is now expected to go to South Africa's Supreme Court of Appeal later this year.
A continental football game in Algeria is called off after a dispute over a shirt featuring an extended map of Morocco.
Read MoreChristina Shusho, one of East Africa's most popular gospel musicians, has caused a stir in Kenya after she released a teaser of her new song titled Zakayo.
In Swahili, Shusho sings, "There was a man named Zakayo, the chief of tax collectors and a wealthy man. He sought to see what kind of person Jesus was..."
Some people in Kenya, where the Tanzanian singer has a mass following, playfully speculated that the song could be about Kenya's President William Ruto.
Some Kenyans mockingly refer to him as Zakayo - Swahili for the biblical figure Zacchaeus, who is portrayed in the Bible s a greedy tax collector who climbed a tree to see Jesus.
Mr Ruto earned the Zakayo nickname because he has introduced a raft of new taxes, and raised old ones, since he being elected president in August 2022. It has made him unpopular with many Kenyans who believe he has betrayed his campaign promise to champion the interests of "hustlers" - those who struggle financially.
The uMkhonto we Sizwe (MK) party takes its name and logo from the now-disbanded ANC armed wing.
Read MoreYasine Mohabuth
Port Louis, Mauritius
Mauritius has been struck by heavy rains and severe flooding, causing major inundation across the island nation.
As a result of the adverse weather conditions, all schools will remain closed.
Both public and private sector employees have been advised not to report to work on Monday. Work-from-home is encouraged, except for essential and emergency services, which will remain operational.
The capital, Port Louis, as well as regions such as the West, Southwest, and even the Northwest, have been significantly affected.
The Port Louis waterfront has been submerged, with several vehicles trapped in the floodwaters.
An accident on a highway in Port Louis resulted in the loss of life of a motorcyclist who died on the spot.
The most intense rainfall was recorded in Albion, in the west of the country, with 302mm of rain in just 15 hours from 04:00 to 19:00 local time on Sunday.
A two-storey house collapsed in Tranquebar, Port Louis, due to the rains, but all eight members of the family were able to escape the house without injuries and find refuge with a neighbour.
Wedaeli Chibelushi
BBC News
Some of South Africa's biggest names have deviated from their professions to model a new collection from leading designer Thebe Magugu.
Magugu's latest capsule collection explores lobola, a centuries-old marriage tradition practised across southern Africa. As part of the custom, the groom's family present money, cows or both to the bride's family as a gesture of his willingness to marry her.
The payment of lobola is a sign of the man's commitment to take care of his wife and is seen as a symbolic act, rather than a purchase.
Illustrations of lobola ceremonies feature on Magugu's new garments.
When it came to showcasing the collection, Magugu called upon high-profile figures from various sectors in South Africa, including Ama Qamata, an actress in Netflix's Blood and Water, footballer Miguel Timm, veteran actor Dr John Kani and former public protector Prof Thuli Madonsela.
Magugu, who is based in Johannesburg, told British Vogue, external: "I’ve reached out to some of the most extraordinary individuals in my country, whom I’m fortunate enough to call my friends, to help bring this vision to life, and I’m deeply grateful for their involvement."
Magugu's lobola collection is the third installment of his "Heritage" collection, which aims to spotlight various aspects of South African culture.
The designer gained international recognition in 2019 when he won the prestigious Louis Vuitton Moët Hennessy Prize (LVMH) prize. Since then, Magugu has presented at Paris and London Fashion Week and collaborated with the likes of Adidas and Dior.
Read more:
Mansur Abubakar
BBC News
Authorities have confirmed the death of a father, his son and one other person in a pit latrine accident which happened on Sunday in the northern state of Kano.
Mallam Danjuma Bilack, 60, accidentally dropped his phone into the toilet while he was using it, according to Fire Service Spokesman Saminu Yusuf.
When he then went inside to retrieve the phone he "got stuck inside", then his son, 35-year old Ibrahim Danjuma "got in to help his father and they both got stuck inside".
"A resident of the area Aminu T Gaye also went in to help the father and son but got stuck with them inside too," the first service spokesman adds.
Mr Yusuf said they got an emergency call but by the time they brought the three men out they were all unconscious, then were later confirmed dead by the hospital.
Millions of people across Nigeria still rely on pit latrines to defecate due to the lack of proper excreta disposal system.