While the Constitution promises rights to dignity, education, and food, for millions, these remain aspirations rather than realities for many of the country's young people.
Farmers have to cut on fertilisers and other inputs, raising risks of food shortages. Read more at straitstimes.com. Read more at straitstimes.com.
By Brian Kenety Conflict-driven disruption to fertiliser supply chains in the Middle East is raising the risk of price shocks ...
In 2024, R197m was budgeted for the Department of Basic Education’s implementation of a pilot nutrition programme for early ...
“If the Middle East conflict continues through June, an additional 45 million people could be pushed into acute hunger by price rises,” he warned. “This would take global hunger levels to an all-time ...
Nigerian billionaire Aliko Dangote’s refinery is being flooded with inquiries as African governments scramble to secure fuel supplies after the Iran war disrupted flows.
As Western donors pull back and food insecurity deepens in the landlocked south-eastern African nation, the rise of a UK-registered Islamic charity is exposing both the necessity and the governance ri ...
Writing for HuffPost UK, Lord McConnell of Glenscorrodale says Keir Starmer's government "will be remembered for the wrong reasons".
Countries that were already suffering from conflict are especially feeling pain of rising fuel, food and fertilizer costs ...
The universal fear is the effect the rise in prices is having on fuel, a staple commodity in every one of the countries for ordinary people as well as industries.
Africa attracts record foreign investment as economies show resilience despite aid cuts and rising commodity costs from Middle East conflict.