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Conflict Remains the Dominant Driver of Africas Food Crisis



[ © Africa Center for Strategic Studies ]

 An estimated 82 percent of the record 149 million Africans facing acute food insecurity are in conflict-affected countries underscoring that conflict continues to be the primary driver of Africa’s food crisis. An estimated 149 million Africans are facing acute food insecurity—an increase of 12 million people from a year ago. This equates to a risk category of 3 or higher (Crisis, Emergency, and Catastrophe) on the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) scale of 1 to 5.  

IOM Flash Appeal: Libya-Storm Daniel



[ © International Organization for Migration ]

 Recognizing the urgency of addressing humanitarian needs for all people affected and displaced by Storm Daniel including immediate needs of all vulnerable migrants, IOM is implementing all its operations ensuring respect for human rights and dignity on-the-ground. The Organization is supporting local authorities and is working closely with its partners, complementing and upscaling the relief and response efforts to alleviate the suffering of the affected population.  

Four reasons why organized crime is a human rights issue



[ © Global Initiative Against Organized Crime ]

 Human rights and anti-crime regimes are grounded in two distinct but interconnected legal frameworks. While human rights frameworks aim to protect individuals from the state (and other violators), the legal framework designed to combat organized crime – the UNTOC and its protocols – aims to protect the state from criminal interests.  

Women in multilateral peace operations 2023: what is the state of play?



[ © Stockholm International Peace Research Institute ]

 In the year 2000, United Nations Security Council Resolution 1325 on women and peace and security stressed the link between gender equality and international peace and security. The resolution underscored the importance of the full and equal participation of women in all efforts towards the maintenance and promotion of peace and security, including UN peace operations.  

Illicit trafficking of natural psychotropics from Gabon: special focus on Iboga



[ © Enhancing Africa’s response to transnational organized crime ]

 To provide an updated overview of the illicit trafficking of Tabernanthe iboga (‘Iboga’) from Gabon. According to several sources, criminal networks involved on Iboga illicit harvesting, trafficking, selling and distribution are composed mostly of nationals from Gabon and Cameroon with connections to Europe and North America, facilitating the flow of Iboga to satisfy the global demand.  

The October 7 Hamas attack: An Israeli overreliance on technology?



[ © Middle East Institute ]

 That is one of many questions that have arisen in the days since Hamas’ Oct. 7 incursion into Israel and attacks on Israeli forces and civilians. The absence of early warnings from data collected via sensors, cameras, and surveillance drones along the border’s “smart fence,” as well as the penetration of the Iron Dome missile defense system, has led to a sense that Israel experienced a tragic “high-tech failure.”  

Adressing Iraqs Environmental Challenges: Population Growth



[ © The Washington Institute for Near East Policy ]

 Solving Iraq’s demographic crisis will require immediate and comprehensive action at both the state and individual level. Without these solutions, we risk extensively harming our future generations.  

Reading of the Week: Africas three waves of coups



[ © Institute for Security Studies ]

 There have been three major waves of coups in post-independence Africa. The first, between the 1960s and 1970s, saw the overthrow of liberation leaders whose political visions conflicted with the interests of major colonial powers. The second wave from 1990 to 2001 followed the failure of 1980s African leaders, mostly military, to embrace democracy and meet citizens’ needs. Since 2021, the third wave – in Sudan, Mali, Guinea, Burkina Faso, Niger and Gabon – has differed from those in previous decades.  

Somalia Al-Shabaab Strikes Back at Local Administrators



[ © ACLED ]

 Since August 2022, the Somali federal government has engaged in a counter-insurgency campaign against al-Shabaab. Somali troops achieved some successes, including dislodging the militants from hundreds of locations previously under al-Shabaab’s control in Hirshabelle and Galmudug states in central Somalia. Clan militias and local power brokers provided active support to the counter-insurgency, sharing operational information with the government and giving legitimacy to government forces.  

Marrakech Framework: An African Agenda for Global Financial Architecture



[ © African Center for Economic Transformation ]

 Africa has shown resilience in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic, reduced fiscal space, debt burdens, climate change, and economic headwinds. Over the past decade, we as a continent have continued to reduce poverty and grow the middle class. We are poised to embark on a transformation journey to help us reach our fullest economic potential. Now is the time for Africa to accelerate its evolution as a single market, a valuable player in value chains, and a destination for investment, particularly in the green economy.  

Beyond humanitarian aid: The EUs approach to alleviating food crisis in the Sahel at a time of global insecurity



[ © Istituto Affari Internazionali ]

 The European Union has always devoted strong attention to humanitarian issues in the Sahel, especially as regards the food crisis. Since 2010, the EU has helped more than 100 million people lacking access to sufficient amounts of safe and nutritious food, making it one of the world’s major donors in this area. In the Sahel region, the EU has been the second biggest donor after the United States with 850 million euro of aid, 35 per cent of which was allocated to the food security livelihoods (FSL) sector and 25 per cent to nutrition.  

A lesson for the world: Solange Faladés anticolonial multiracialism



[ © Taylor & Francis Online ]

 Solange Adelola Faladé (1925–2004) was a French-Beninois doctor, anthropologist and psychoanalyst. The first woman Franco-African psychoanalyst in France, she founded her own psychoanalytical society, l’École freudienne, in 1983. The aim of this article is twofold: on the one hand, to introduce Faladé’s life and works, and on the other, to discuss her theory of multiracialism.