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Africa: Communities and Civil Society Across Africa Stage Protests Against TotalEnergies Operations

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Africa – 25th August 2025  – Activists, CSOs and frontline communities across the continent came together under the umbrella body, KickTotalOutOfAfrica, and engaged in a coordinated protest dubbed Africa Week of Action from August 18-24, demanding French oil giant TotalEnergies stop its operations, pay reparations to affected communities, and make way for a just and community-centered energy transition.
The Africa Week of Action saw events in more than 10 countries, including Uganda, Tanzania, South Africa, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Kenya, Zimbabwe, Nigeria, Togo, Benin, and Senegal. Protests, creative resistance, community townhalls, and people’s tribunals put fossil colonialism on trial and advanced a clear call: Total must pay up and get out .
In South Africa, hundreds marched from Standard Bank’s HQ to TotalEnergies’ offices in Johannesburg. According to Zaki Mamdoo, Coordinator of the StopEACOP Campaign, “Banks like Standard Bank are not neutral. By financing projects like the East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP) in East Africa and the Mozambique LNG fields, they are complicit in the destruction, displacement, and violence inflicted on African communities. This unholy marriage between finance capital and fossil capital places a boot on Africa’s neck and must be challenged.”
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In Togo, over 1000 people came together to show TotalEnergies the “Red Card” at a football tournament aimed at raising community awareness around the company’s destructive business model. Esso Pedessi, community organiser with NGO Jeunes Verts, said this was a timely intervention. “TotalEnergies sponsors AFCON and splashes its name across football to buy legitimacy and cover up its crimes. But no amount of greenwashing or sportswashing can hide the displacement, pollution, and violence it fuels across Africa. That is why we used football as a tool of resistance, to reclaim the game, raise political awareness, and show Total the red card. Football, like Africa, belongs to the people, not to polluters.”
And in Zimbabwe, creatives and youth activists led a creative resistance teach-in hosted by Magamba Network. The event used art, poetry, music and performance as tools to inspire and advance the political imagination. Trust Chikodzo, Climate Justice Network Coordinator at the Magamba Network, explained that “Creative actions help us move hearts in a political landscape so often devoid of rationality. By using art, we can tell our own African story against fossil fuels in a way that people can feel and be moved to act against neo-colonialism. Art allows us to cut through the lies of corporations like TotalEnergies and to speak truth in ways that mobilise, educate, and inspire.”
TotalEnergies celebrated 100 years of existence last year, yet frontline communities in Africa don’t share in that celebration because of the devastation the operations of Total have left in their wake. But communities are not taking this lying down. In South Africa, a  court has nullified  a permit issued to Total for gas exploration in Cape Town after concerned communities went to court.
The communities in Africa are not only taking to court but also organising on the streets and in workshops and using different tools, including art, until TotalEnergies can no longer continue with business as usual. In Benin for instance, the communities used street art, including music and street painting, to stand in solidarity with communities in Uganda and Tanzania opposing the controversial EACOP project.
And in Tanzania, CSOs led by the Organisation for Community Engagement (OCE), Green Conservers (GC) and GreenFaith Tanzania organised a football march in Chapulwa village, Nzega District, where youth affected by the EACOP project came together to play football as a symbolic gesture to “Kick Total Out of Africa” at the EACOP pipeline site.
In the Democratic Republic of Congo, 30 cyclists staged a protest ride in Kinshasa. TotalEnergies is among several transnational corporations interested in the sale of DRC oil blocks. They too joined in calling for the French oil giant to stop their operations, pay up and get out.
The offline actions were amplified online with incredible solidarity from across the continent, culminating in an online tribunal on Friday that attracted 80-140 guests who joined the live session to witness and stand in solidarity with the communities demanding Total pay up and get out.
The online tribunal was followed by an actual tribunal on Saturday, the 23rd, in Uganda, where EACOP-Affected Communities joined together with oil-affected communities and held a tribunal in Kyakaboga, attracting more than 250 villagers for a community tribunal against TotalEnergies.
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TotalEnergies is drilling for oil in Murchison Falls National Park, Uganda’s oldest, largest, and most pristine national park. The drilling has created  human animal conflict  as wild animals, including Elephants, run from their homes into neighbouring villages, destroying farms.
TotalEnergies’ century of existence is nothing to celebrate in Africa. For communities, it has meant biodiversity loss, poisoned rivers, displacement, militarisation and deepened poverty.
Concluding the week-long mobilization, interfaith leaders, youth, and community members led by the Laudato Si’ movement Africa gathered in Nairobi on Sunday for a prayer vigil at the Holy Family Basilica that was livestreamed across the region. The event featured testimonies from affected communities and symbolic acts calling on TotalEnergies and African governments to transition toward community-owned renewable energy projects.
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Africa: Updated WHO Manuals Released to Help Countries Strengthen Foodborne Disease Surveillance and Response

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Timely detection and effective response to foodborne diseases are essential to protect public health and prevent local events from escalating into wider emergencies. To support countries in strengthening these capacities, the World Health Organization has released updated editions of its full set of manuals on strengthening surveillance of and response to foodborne diseases.
The updated manuals provide practical, structured guidance for building, assessing, and strengthening national foodborne disease surveillance and response systems. Together, they form a coherent package that supports countries at different stages of development, from establishing foundational surveillance functions to advancing integrated surveillance across the food chain.
A coherent framework for strengthening national systems
The manuals introduce a three-stage framework that guides countries in developing surveillance and response systems that are fit for purpose, sustainable, and aligned with international expectations. The framework supports progressive system strengthening, starting with core detection and response capacities and advancing toward the integration of data across public health, food safety, laboratory, animal health, and environmental sectors.
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Across all stages, the manuals emphasize clear roles and responsibilities, multisectoral collaboration, and the use of surveillance data to inform timely risk assessment, response, and prevention activities.
Practical guidance for action
Each manual includes practical tools that national authorities can use to assess current capacities, identify gaps, and plan priority actions. These include self-assessment instruments, decision trees, templates, field investigation tools, and case studies drawn from real-world experience.
The updated editions place greater emphasis on equity, data use, and the linkage between foodborne disease surveillance and food contamination monitoring. They also reflect emerging priorities, including the growing influence of climate and environmental factors on foodborne risks and the need for adaptable surveillance systems that can respond to changing contexts.
Supporting data-driven decision-making
Stronger surveillance and response systems improve the quality, timeliness, and use of data for public health decision making, supporting earlier detection of events, more reliable risk assessments, effective outbreak investigations, and the translation of evidence into prevention and control measures.
The updated manuals are designed to work alongside existing World Health Organization guidance on specific tools and approaches for foodborne disease surveillance and response, including whole genome sequencing as a tool to strengthen foodborne disease surveillance and response. Such tools can add value at different points along the surveillance pathway, particularly as systems mature. The manuals emphasize that advanced methods are most effective when built on strong foundational capacities, and provide the system-level framework within which countries can consider, adopt, and sustainably integrate approaches such as genomic sequencing in line with their context, priorities, and readiness.
For countries working to strengthen their foodborne disease surveillance systems, the updated manuals provide tools to develop a practical roadmap for action, supporting national efforts to reduce the burden of foodborne diseases and protect population health.
“These updated manuals reflect the strong collaboration, collective work, and shared expertise of members of the WHO Alliance for Food Safety and partners across sectors. They provide countries with practical guidance to strengthen foodborne disease surveillance and response, support integrated approaches across the food chain, and translate data into timely action to better protect public health.”
Dr Intisar Salim Al-Gharibi, Director, Risk Assessment and Food Crisis Management
Food Safety and Quality Centre, Oman
Co-Chair, Working Group on Foodborne Disease Surveillance Integration, WHO Alliance for Food Safety
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“Addressing foodborne diseases is critical for protecting public health, and these updated manuals provide guidance to countries to strengthen core capacities for foodborne disease surveillance and response required under the International Health Regulations and aligned with the WHO Global Strategy for Food Safety.”
Mr Yahya Kandeh, Technical Officer, Food Safety
Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, Ethiopia
Co-Chair, Working Group on Foodborne Disease Surveillance Integration, WHO Alliance for Food Safety
Read all the manuals on strengthening surveillance of and response to foodborne diseases here:
Read the original article on WHO.
AllAfrica publishes around 400 reports a day from more than 120 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.
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Africa: Morocco Beat Nigeria On Penalties to Set Up Senegal Final At Cup of Nations

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Morocco beat Nigeria in a penalty shootout on Wednesday night in Rabat to advance to the final of the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations.
A game dominated by the hosts from the outset ended 0-0 after the regulation 90 minutes and 30 minutes of extra-time.
Morocco goalkeeper Yassine Bounou saved shootout strikes from Samuel Chukwueze and Bruno Onyemaechi to furnish Youssef En-Nesyri with the chance to send a national team into a Cup of Nations final for the first time since 2004.
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The 28-year-old Fenerbahce striker swept home confidently past the Nigeria goalkeeper Stanley Nwabali and wheeled away before he was submerged by a pile of gleeful teammates.
The Moroccans entered the game on the back of a 23-match unbeaten streak which had taken them to the top of the African rankings.
Nigeria, containing two former African footballers of the year in the shapes of Victor Osimhen and Ademola Lookman, had been the most prolific team of the competition notching up 14 goals in their five games en route to the semi-final in Rabat.
But from the moment referee Dan Laryea blew the whistle, that dynamic duo and the rest of their accomplices were second best.
The passing that had scythed through the likes of Tunisia, Mozambique and Algeria was absent or wayward.
Akor Adams, so vibrant in previous games down the right wing was unable to link up consistently with the roving Lookman or Osimhen’s darts into space.
Starved of possession and angles reduced, the Nigerians sunk into listlessness or clumsiness on the ball.
Egypt dethrone Côte d’Ivoire to reach semis at the Africa Cup of Nations
On a rare sortie forward after 14 minutes, Lookman forced Bounou to beat away a shot.
But it was brief interlude in the Nigerian drama of pain.
The Moroccans kept them under the cosh but failed to inflict the killer blow.
Ayoub El Kaabi could not wrap his foot around a knockdown into the penalty area after 28 minutes to get his shot away.
Brahim Diaz’s curler skimmed past the post and Abdessamad Ezzalzouli twice tested Nwabali.
The pattern remained the same throughout the second-half: Moroccan domination without incision.
In the last four minutes of extra-time, Nigeria slowed the game down seemingly happy to be still alive after so much time spent chasing shadows.
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Following the two fluffed shots, their campaign ended to the delight of the mostly Moroccan fans in the 66,000 crowd at the Stade Prince Moulay Abdellah.
On Sunday night at the same venue, Achraf Hakimi will attempt to become the first Morocco skipper to lift the Africa Cup of Nations trophy since 1976.
His side will face Senegal who beat Egypt 1-0 in the first semi-final in Tangier.
Sadio Mané scored the only goal of the game in the 78th minute to terminate Egypt’s attempt to brandish a record-extending eighth continental crown.
Read or Listen to this story on the RFI website.
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Africa: Kenya Begin Preps for First-Ever Africa Futsal Cup Qualification

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NAIROBI — The national futsal team have commenced training for the Africa Cup of Nations qualifier tie against Namibia.
The 14-member squad reported to camp at the Kasarani Indoor Arena under the keen eye of head coach James Omondi.
Kenya play the southern Africans in the opening round of the qualifiers, with the first leg set for February 3-4, before the return tie, three days later.
Should they edge past Namibia, the home boys face Libya in the next round, with the chance to become among seven countries to join hosts Morocco at the continental competition.
Kenya have never qualified for the continental showpiece before but will be buoyed by their five-star performance at last year’s Asian Futsal Cup in Sri Lanka.
Final Squad
Mike Ochieng, Samwel Owiti, Anas Hamad, Shaban Mark, Kevin Omondi, Gift Mumo, Kelvin Odongo, Patrick Kaiser, Mohammed Hassan, Tony Kegode, Salim Abdullahi, Muthoni Newton, Lewis Ng’ang’a, Isaac Omweri,
Technical Bench
James Omondi (Head Coach), Joseph Mbugi (Assistant Coach), Patrick Nyale (Goalkeeper Trainer), Alfonce Onyango (Kit Manager), Evanson Ngugi ( Team Physio), Bruce Juma (Team Doctor), Suleiman Ngotho (Strength and Conditioning Coach),
Read the original article on Capital FM.
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