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CHABOTA claims Third Mr. Zambia Victory

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By Chansa Kunda

NELSON CHABOTA has been crowned winner of the 2024 Mr. Zambia body building contest for the third consecutive year.

CHABOTA, who comes from Kabwata Gym, beat ten other competitors to the title while WILLIAM SICHONE finished runners up.

In the Women’s Bikini contest, 33 year-old mother of three ROSEMARY MWAPE was crowned Mrs. Zambia.

MWAPE, who comes from Matero gym, easily showcased her way to the top as her body form was twice better than that of her other competitor.

Others who stormed their way to the victory in the muscle contest are Police Officer OJON SIMUSOKWE who won the Mr. Novice while KENNY PHIRI was named Mr. Physique for the year 2024.

And in another added category, SUSAN MUDENDA was crowned Sport’s Model for the year.

And Speaking to ZNBC Sports News in an interview after his triumph, CHABOTA said this year’s competition was tightly contested as he was given a run for his money.

He, however, disclosed that should he earn a Professional Card in 2025, he will not re-contest or defend his title as the target is to start taking part in various major global events like Mr. Olympia.

And ROSEMARY MWAPE called for more women to take interest in the Sport as the turnout was low in the category.

Meanwhile, Winner of Mr. Novice, SIMUSOKWE said being crowned Champion was a dream come true after trying for many years.

And Acting Zambia Bodybuilding and Fitness Federation -ZBBF- President FREDRICK SIMUNGUZYE said the Zed Nationals body building competition was a success despite facing numerous challenges.

The post CHABOTA claims Third Mr. Zambia Victory appeared first on ZNBC-Just for you.

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FAZ Pledges Full Support for Copper Princesses Ahead of FIFA U-17 Women’s World Cup

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By Mwamba Makonde

FAZ General Secretary, Reuben Kamanga, says the association is committed to ensuring that the Copper Princesses are adequately prepared for the FIFA Under-17 Women’s World Cup.

Kamanga has commended the players and the technical bench for their hard work and determination in securing qualification for the global showpiece.

He noted that the team performed exceptionally well in the qualifiers, and FAZ is confident that the girls will represent the country with pride.

Kamanga was speaking in Lusaka as he welcomed the Under-17 girls’ team from Lomé, Togo, where they played against Benin in the final round of the World Cup qualifiers.

Meanwhile, team captain, Mercy Chipasula, says the players have now shifted their focus to preparing for the World Cup.

Chipasula emphasized that a strong performance at the tournament would be the best way to repay Zambians and the government for the support given to the team.

She further stated that early preparations will be key to achieving a successful campaign at the World Cup.

The post FAZ Pledges Full Support for Copper Princesses Ahead of FIFA U-17 Women’s World Cup appeared first on ZNBC-Just for you.

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Africa: AI and Data Policy in Africa – A Call for Sovereign Innovation

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As we celebrate Africa Month, I feel an urgent sense of responsibility to voice what too many policymakers still overlook: Africa’s future cannot be copy-pasted from global AI narratives. Artificial Intelligence is not just a tool of automation — it is a force reshaping power, identity, economy, and ethics. And yet, Africa remains on the margins of this transformation.
While the current AI governance ecosystem is expanding rapidly, it is overwhelmingly shaped by institutions and ideologies from the Global North — North America, Europe, and parts of Asia. These frameworks reflect the sociopolitical concerns, economic priorities, and philosophical values of their creators. Meanwhile, Africa — despite being a fast-digitizing continent — has not yet produced a convincing, unified AI governance narrative rooted in our values, our social contexts, and our sustainable development ambitions.
Africa’s AI Paradox: Data-Rich, Power-Poor
We are rich in data but poor in agency. From mobile penetration and fintech innovations to climate sensors and genomics, African nations are generating enormous datasets. Yet over 80% of this infrastructure depends on foreign platforms (Research ICT Africa, 2023). Our data is extracted, processed, and monetized elsewhere. The result? Algorithmic systems trained on non-African realities leading to biased outcomes that are culturally insensitive or even harmful.
We are not simply importing software; we are importing systems of logic, values, and control. Whether it’s facial recognition that misidentifies Black faces or automated loan approvals that silently exclude women and youth — these issues are not hypothetical. They are happening now, quietly, algorithmically.
The Strategic Risks of Ethical Exclusion
Without governance frameworks grounded in our realities, Africa risks becoming a passive consumer of AI innovations rather than an active, sovereign co-creator. We must confront the asymmetry of power in AI development, or the fourth industrial revolution will deepen the global inequalities created by the first three.
Let us not forget: AI is value-laden. It reflects the philosophies and politics of those who design and regulate it. If we continue relying on imported models without critique or contextualization, Africa will face AI systems that undermine our autonomy, erode our cultures, and widen the digital divide.
Responsible AI for the SDGs: Urgency, Not Option
The promise of AI for sustainable development is real. AI is already helping diagnose rare diseases, predict droughts, and optimize agricultural productivity across parts of Africa. But this potential comes with high stakes.
According to Vinuesa et al. (2020), AI can enable 134 of the 169 SDG targets, but it can also inhibit 59 of them — particularly in areas like inequality, privacy, and ethical oversight. In Africa, these risks are magnified by weak regulatory environments, infrastructure gaps, and limited local capacity.
This is why I argue for a paradigm shift: we need a  responsible African AI governance framework  that embeds our communal values, anticipates ethical risks, and empowers citizens — especially women and marginalized groups — to shape our AI future.
The Ubuntu Principle: An African Ethical Framework
Ubuntu, our philosophy of shared humanity — “I am because we are” — must guide how we design, deploy, and regulate AI. This means promoting transparency, collective good, inclusivity, and justice in digital systems. Our approach must center on:
From Fragmentation to Coordination: The Governance Gap
Africa’s AI policy landscape is fragmented and underdeveloped. As of 2024, only a handful of countries — Mauritius, Egypt, Tunisia, South Africa — have published national AI strategies. Many others lack basic legal frameworks for data protection, ethical AI, or digital rights.
Yet we have models to draw from. The African Union’s Digital Transformation Strategy (2020–2030) is a solid start, but implementation lags. We need to build on this momentum by creating a  Continental Charter on AI and Data Sovereignty , with five core pillars:

  1. Data Ownership & Protection : Africans must own their data, with rights to consent, transparency, and redress.
  2. Ethical AI Guidelines : Built on human rights and Ubuntu, to inform public procurement and private sector innovation.
  3. Public AI Infrastructure : Investments in open-source platforms and data commons to prevent monopolies.
  4. Regional AI Councils : To oversee strategy, funding, and cross-border coordination.
  5. AI Education for All : From primary schools to universities, we must embed AI literacy across generations.

Tunisia to South Africa: Seeds of Sovereign Innovation
As a Tunisian, I have witnessed how our nation — despite resource limitations — is stepping into the AI conversation with vision and urgency. We are developing ethical frameworks, piloting AI tools in healthcare and agriculture, and engaging with international networks. Similarly, South Africa, Kenya, and Ghana are building civic tech ecosystems and AI regulatory sandboxes.
But these scattered efforts are not enough. Africa needs a continental coalition, built not only on shared technological goals, but on  sovereign innovation  — innovation that is culturally grounded, socially just, and democratically governed.
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The Time Is Now: A Continental Wake-Up Call
Africa must transition from being a testing ground for unregulated technologies to becoming the architect of its own AI future. This requires reclaiming control over our data, developing inclusive AI governance frameworks, and driving innovation that reflects our unique contexts and values.
The path forward is not about rejection of global technologies but rather thoughtful adaptation and sovereign innovation—creating AI systems that are rooted in dignity, equity, and collective resilience. By prioritizing African values, needs, and aspirations in our approach to AI, we can ensure these powerful technologies serve as tools for inclusive development rather than instruments of new forms of dependency.
Let 2025 mark the year Africa shifts decisively from passive technological adoption to sovereign digital innovation—charting a course that other emerging regions might follow.
This is not only about technology. It is about power, dignity, and destiny.
📢  Let’s build an Africa where Artificial Intelligence becomes African Intelligence — born from our resilience, shaped by our ethics, and driven by the dreams of our people.
Maha Jouini is an AI Policy Expert and advocate for ethical and inclusive technology.  
AllAfrica publishes around 500 reports a day from more than 110 news organizations and over 500 other institutions and individuals, representing a diversity of positions on every topic. We publish news and views ranging from vigorous opponents of governments to government publications and spokespersons. Publishers named above each report are responsible for their own content, which AllAfrica does not have the legal right to edit or correct.
Articles and commentaries that identify allAfrica.com as the publisher are produced or commissioned by AllAfrica. To address comments or complaints, please Contact us.
AllAfrica is a voice of, by and about Africa – aggregating, producing and distributing 500 news and information items daily from over 110 African news organizations and our own reporters to an African and global public. We operate from Cape Town, Dakar, Abuja, Johannesburg, Nairobi and Washington DC.
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Africa: All of Africa Today – May 21, 2025

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Commercial Diplomacy Now ‘Core Focus of U.S. Engagement with Africa’
The Trump administration is adopting a new commercial diplomacy strategy for sub-Saharan Africa, the acting head of the Africa Bureau at the U.S. State Department, Ambassador Troy Fitrell, said in a briefing on Tuesday. Under the new policy, U.S. ambassadors in the region are tasked to “go out and find commercial opportunities” and “to find opportunities to advocate for American companies.” The envoys are also charged with identifying market reforms “needed to enhance the business environment” and engaging with governments on implementation. Fitrell hoped the new U.S. policy would attract private sector actors and “galvanise local economies”.
Liberia’s Health Sector ‘On The Brink’ – Report
A report by the international development agency ActionAid paints a dire picture of the country’s health sector, noting that 97 percent of workers earn wages too low to cover basic living expenses. The report, the “Human Cost of Public Sector Cuts in Africa,” assesses the state of health in Liberia and five other African nations. Most health workers surveyed in Liberia earn between U.S.$100 and $150 per month, “with no recent wage adjustments”, while inflation continues to rise. The situation has been made worse by the withdrawal of significant donor funding, the report states. It blames “restrictive fiscal policies” imposed by the International Monetary Fund for worsening the crisis.
Former DR Congo Prime Minister Sentenced to Hard Labour for Corruption
Former Democratic Republic of Congo Prime Minister Augustin Matata Ponyo was sentenced to ten years of forced labour for embezzling around $245 million of public funds, alongside Deogratias Mutombo, the former governor of the central bank, who received a five-year sentence. Ponyo ‘s lawyer said the ruling was “unfair and politically motivated”. The embezzled funds went to the Bukanga-Lonzo Agro-Industrial Park, a major agricultural project that addresses chronic food shortages.  Matata served as prime minister from 2012 to 2016 and now heads the country’s Leadership and Governance for Development party (LGD). Ponyo was the finance minister from 2010 to 2012 and received praise from the International Monetary Fund for stabilising the country’s economy at that time. The case has stretched over almost four years since the country’s Inspectorate General of Finance reported the theft from the Bukanga-Lonzo Agro-Industrial Park in 2020.
Former Rwandan First Lady Spared Trial in 1994 Genocide Case
Agathe Habyarimana, the 82-year-old widow of former Rwandan President Juvénal Habyarimana, avoided trial in France after investigating magistrates found insufficient evidence to charge her with complicity in the 1994 genocide. The former First Lady, who fled Rwanda with French assistance after her husband’s assassination triggered the mass killings, was under investigation after a complaint by a victims’ group. A French investigation into her alleged role began in 2008, and she was questioned as an “assisted witness”, a legal status between a witness and a suspect. French prosecutors argued she was part of the Hutu power circle that orchestrated the genocide, but the court ruled there was no “serious and consistent evidence” linking her to the atrocities. While the case could soon be dismissed, French anti-terror prosecutors appealed the decision, and a hearing date was set. Her lawyer welcomed the ruling and called for a swift end to the case.
University of Zimbabwe Replaces Striking Staff Amid Pay Dispute
The University of Zimbabwe (UZ) announced it would replace striking lecturers with part-time staff earning just US$5.50 per hour, of which 40% – equivalent to US$2.20 – would be paid in local currency and subject to income tax. The replacement process had already begun, with some part-time lecturers receiving employment letters. UZ lecturers had been on strike for about a month, demanding better pay and working conditions. According to the university, the pay rate included all teaching-related duties, such as preparation, marking, and setting examinations. The striking lecturers had watched their salaries collapse from a peak of US$3,000 to a meagre US$250.
Freelance Photojournalist Sheikho Killed in Sudan Drone Attack
The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) called for an investigation into the May 18 killing of Sudanese freelance photojournalist Al-Shykh Al-Samany Saadaldyn Mousa Abdulla, known as “Sheikho,” who died in a suspected Rapid Support Forces (RSF) drone strike while covering an event organized by the pro-Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) Sudan Shield Forces in central eastern Sudan. The drone attack in the Al-Butna area also killed at least 7 soldiers from the Sudan Shield Forces and injured 14 others. Since the war erupted between the SAF and the RSF in April 2023, at least 12 other journalists and media workers have been killed in the country.
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Namibian President’s Inaugural Regional Trips Spark Debate
President Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah’s first international official trips since taking office have drawn mixed reactions from international relations experts and political analysts. Some praised her reaffirmation of Namibia’s regional foreign policy, while others question the real impact of such symbolic gestures. Nandi-Ndaitwah’s working tour included Angola, Botswana and Zambia, and aimed to deepen bilateral ties and push forward economic cooperation through joint infrastructure projects, trade facilitation and regional integration. Foreign policy analyst Marius Kudumo said the symbolic and strategic nature of the president’s first international engagements sends a clear message about her commitment to southern Africa, while political analyst Ndumba Kamwanyah said that the president’s diplomatic engagements are aimed at maintaining and possibly redefining Namibia’s foreign policy. Kamwanyah argued that while the rhetoric around economic cooperation and infrastructure development is welcome, it is not backed by a strong record of implementation.
AllAfrica publishes around 500 reports a day from more than 110 news organizations and over 500 other institutions and individuals, representing a diversity of positions on every topic. We publish news and views ranging from vigorous opponents of governments to government publications and spokespersons. Publishers named above each report are responsible for their own content, which AllAfrica does not have the legal right to edit or correct.
Articles and commentaries that identify allAfrica.com as the publisher are produced or commissioned by AllAfrica. To address comments or complaints, please Contact us.
AllAfrica is a voice of, by and about Africa – aggregating, producing and distributing 500 news and information items daily from over 110 African news organizations and our own reporters to an African and global public. We operate from Cape Town, Dakar, Abuja, Johannesburg, Nairobi and Washington DC.
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