Connect with us

Africa

Infant Death in Gambia Exposes the Brutal Reality of FGM

The death of a one-month-old girl in The Gambia has reignited alarm over the persistence of female genital mutilation (FGM) in the country, despite years of advocacy and a legal ban in place since 2015.

Police confirmed the infant was circumcised in the western town of Wellingara before being rushed to Bundung Maternal and Child Prosperity Clinic, where she was pronounced dead on arrival. Two women alleged to have carried out the procedure are now in custody as investigations continue.

FGM has been outlawed in The Gambia for nearly a decade, with offenders facing up to three years in prison, or life if the victim dies. Yet the practice remains widespread. UNICEF estimates that 73% of Gambian women and girls aged 15 to 49 have undergone FGM, with Amnesty International noting that most are cut before the age of six.

Women’s rights organisations in the country have condemned the latest death. The Edward Francis Small Centre for Rights and Justice urged the government to step up awareness campaigns and apply the law more rigorously. Women in Leadership and Liberation (WILL) was more scathing, accusing authorities of “failing to protect children” and warning: “Culture cannot be an excuse, tradition cannot serve as a shield; this is violence, plain and straightforward.”

The tragedy highlights a wider struggle. Globally, more than 200 million women and girls have been subjected to FGM across 31 countries, according to the UN Population Fund. While prevalence is declining in some regions, the practice remains deeply entrenched in others. In Djibouti, Guinea and Somalia, the majority of women aged 15 to 49 are still forced to undergo it, perpetuated by entrenched cultural pressures.

Health experts stress that FGM has no medical benefit and can cause lifelong physical and psychological harm. In The Gambia, the consequences proved immediate and fatal.

Activists argue that laws alone are insufficient. “The Wellingara case shows that FGM is not a relic of the past—it is a current public health and human rights crisis,” said one women’s rights advocate. “Without political will, community education, and international solidarity, more girls will continue to die.”

By Caleb Koyo-

From Nairobi

Africa

Africa at COP30 in Belém, Brazil: Leading the Fight or Left Behind Again?

AUK Media-@Editor

Ministers and high-ranking officials from nearly 200 countries have gathered in the Amazonian city of Belém, Brazil, for COP30, which Brazil has described as “the COP of implementation.” The focus this year is on turning commitments into action — and for Africa, this represents both an urgent challenge and a historic opportunity.

Despite contributing the least to global greenhouse gas emissions, Africa remains one of the most vulnerable regions to the devastating impacts of climate change. Rising temperatures, erratic rainfall patterns, and increasingly frequent extreme weather events are already undermining the continent’s economies, damaging infrastructure, displacing communities, and threatening livelihoods.

Yet, in the face of this existential threat, Africa has the potential to lead the way toward a more sustainable and resilient future. The Second Africa Climate Summit, held in Ethiopia in September, underscored the continent’s growing leadership in climate action. It highlighted African-led solutions, new financial commitments, and strategies for green growth and resilience — with priorities including a just energy transition, nature-based solutions, food and water security, and community empowerment.

Building on this momentum, Africa’s delegation to COP30 should focus on three interlinked priorities: climate finance, climate adaptation, and sustainable development. Experts and organizations stress that access to adequate climate finance is essential if Africa is to meet its climate and development goals.

The African Development Bank (AfDB) estimates that the continent will require between $1.3 trillion and $1.6 trillion in climate finance between 2020 and 2030 to achieve its targets under the Paris Agreement and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). As such, COP30 must deliver a concrete roadmap for mobilising and equitably distributing resources to support Africa’s climate action.

As Patricia Espinosa, former Executive Secretary of the UNFCCC, aptly noted, “climate finance is about saving lives and reducing suffering.” For Africa, ensuring that this COP truly becomes the COP of implementation means turning pledges into tangible progress — and proving that climate justice begins with real investment in those who bear the greatest burden.

Continue Reading

Africa

Raila Odinga-Loved or Loathed, His Impact is Undeniable.

🇰🇪 Raila Odinga (1945–2025)
Loved or loathed, his impact is undeniable.
A freedom fighter to some, a polarising power broker to others — Raila Odinga reshaped Kenya’s politics and challenged the system till his last breath.

🕊️ A legacy that will be debated for generations.

#RailaOdinga #Kenya #Africa #Politics #Democracy

Continue Reading

Africa

Kenya’s Long Goodbye to Raila Odinga — The Man Who Never Gave Up the Fight

By Caleb Koyo, AUK Media- Nairobi

Kenya is in mourning after the death of Raila Amolo Odinga, the former prime minister and enduring opposition leader whose name defined Kenyan politics for more than four decades.

The 80-year-old died on Wednesday in India, where he was receiving medical treatment. According to reports, Odinga suffered a cardiac arrest while out for a morning walk. His passing has plunged Kenya into grief — and uncertainty about the nation’s political future.

A Nation Falls Silent

Nairobi moved with its usual restless energy on Tuesday. But by Wednesday morning, when the news broke, the city fell still. Markets slowed, offices froze mid-routine, and the streets filled with crowds desperate to confirm what few could believe.

President William Ruto declared seven days of national mourning and ordered flags flown at half-mast. “Kenya has lost a statesman, a patriot, and one of Africa’s greatest sons,” Ruto said in a national address.

 

Farewell to “Baba”

By Friday, Nyayo National Stadium was a sea of emotion. Tens of thousands of mourners waved Kenyan flags, raised portraits of Odinga, and held green branches — a symbol of mourning among the Luo, his people. The casket, draped in the national flag, was borne through a military procession as chants of “Raila usilale, bado mapambano!” (“Raila, don’t sleep, the struggle continues”) rippled through the crowd.

Security was tight. Three people had died the day before during the public viewing of Odinga’s body at Parliament. Police and soldiers patrolled the stands as dignitaries from across the region — including the presidents of Somalia and Ethiopia — joined Kenyans in paying their final respects.

In a poignant moment, President Ruto led mourners in singing Odinga’s favourite song, “Jamaican Farewell.”

Odinga’s widow, Ida Odinga, called for peace and reflection. “Raila hated dishonesty,” she said. “He hated greed — the greed that has eaten away at the fabric of our society.”

Former president Uhuru Kenyatta, once Odinga’s fiercest rival and later his political ally, spoke warmly of their long relationship. “We would talk, laugh, and argue — but we never lost respect for each other,” he said.

Bishop David Kodia, who presided over the service, described Odinga as “a man who never used political power or money to intimidate people.”

 

A Final Journey Home

Before the funeral, Odinga’s body lay in state at Parliament, where MPs and dignitaries paid their respects. On Saturday, it was flown to Kisumu, his lakeside stronghold, and then taken to Bondo, Siaya County — his birthplace — where he will be buried at his family home. True to his wishes, Odinga asked to be buried within 72 hours of his death.

The End of an Era

Odinga was more than a politician; he was an institution. As the founding leader of the Orange Democratic Movement (ODM), he ran for president five times — and lost each contest, often amid controversy. Yet his relentless campaigns for democracy, constitutional reform, and national dialogue shaped Kenya’s political identity.

Analysts now warn that his absence leaves a dangerous vacuum. “ODM without Raila will find it difficult to remain coherent,” said one Nairobi-based analyst. “He was not just a leader — he was the glue.”

His death also marks the close of one of Africa’s longest political rivalries — between the Odinga and Kenyatta dynasties, stretching back to the independence era of Jaramogi Oginga Odinga and Jomo Kenyatta.

 

The Uncertain Road Ahead

For President Ruto, Odinga’s passing is both a relief and a risk. He has lost his loudest critic — but also a figure who, through sheer credibility, kept opposition anger from boiling over.

Observers caution that without Odinga’s unifying influence, the opposition could become fragmented — and perhaps more radical. The country’s restless Gen Z activists, who recently led anti-tax protests, may not heed the same calls for patience that Odinga once offered.

A Legacy That Endures

He lost the presidency five times but won something larger — a moral authority few leaders ever achieve. Odinga’s courage, his defiance, and his insistence that Kenya belonged to all its citizens changed the course of its democracy.

As the sun sets over Nairobi, green branches flutter from balconies and car windows — a quiet, living salute to the man millions called Baba.

Raila Odinga is gone. But his struggle, his ideas, and his name will remain etched in Kenya’s story — a reminder that democracy is not a moment, but a lifelong fight.

Continue Reading