Qatar Emphasizes Importance of Sustained Technical Assistance to Help Human Rights in Somalia

Source: Government of Qatar

Geneva, October 02, 2025

The State of Qatar has underlined the importance of sustained technical assistance to enhance Somalia’s human rights capacities and enable it to fulfill its national and international obligations in line with its priorities.

This statement was delivered by Jassim Ibrahim Al Malki, Third Secretary at the Department of Human Rights, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, during the interactive dialogue with the Independent Expert on Somalia. The session was held under Item 10 of the 60th session of the Human Rights Council in Geneva.

Al Malki said that Somalia faces multiple challenges affecting its stability, security, and economic growth, noting that this calls for the solidarity of the international community and the fulfillment of its responsibilities in supporting Somali national processes.

He explained that political reforms are a pivotal pillar in the state-building process, particularly the completion of constitutional amendments, the rebuilding of its institutions, ensuring the rule of law, and the protection and promotion of human rights.

He emphasized that the inclusiveness of this process requires the involvement of all Somali parties, thus strengthening legitimacy and establishing solutions based on national consensus.

He added that on the humanitarian front, Somalia continues to face the effects of drought, food shortages, and internal displacement, necessitating a coordinated international response that links urgent support with development strategies that enhance communities’ resilience and reduce dependence on emergency aid.

Al Malki affirmed that the State of Qatar will continue to provide its humanitarian, relief, and development support, bilaterally and through effective partnerships with the United Nations, reaffirming its unwavering commitment to supporting Somalia in building a strong and stable state.

Secretary-General of Qatar’s Foreign Ministry Meets Algerian Foreign Minister

Source: Government of Qatar

Algeria – October 2, 2025

HE Dr. Ahmed bin Hassan Al Hammadi, Secretary-General of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the State of Qatar, met today in Algeria with H.E. Mr. Ahmed Attaf, Minister of Foreign Affairs and the National Community Abroad of the People’s Democratic Republic of Algeria.

The meeting reviewed bilateral relations between the two countries and ways to strengthen and expand cooperation, in addition to discussing a number of issues of mutual interest.

Director of the Diplomatic Institute Meets Kuwait’s Assistant Foreign Minister for Saud Al-Nasser Al-Sabah Diplomatic Institute Affairs

Source: Government of Qatar

Doha – October 2, 2025

HE Dr. Abdulaziz bin Mohammed Al-Horr, Director of the Diplomatic Institute, met with HE Mr. Nasser Subaih Al-Subaih, Assistant Foreign Minister for the Saud Al-Nasser Al-Sabah Diplomatic Institute Affairs of the State of Kuwait.

The meeting discussed avenues of cooperation and the exchange of expertise, particularly in the field of diplomatic training.

Safety tips for SASSA beneficiaries

Source: Government of South Africa

Friday, October 3, 2025

The South African Police Service (SAPS) has urged the public to exercise caution and remain vigilant during times of payout.

This is to ensure the personal safety and property of South African Social Security Agency (SASSA) grant recipients. 

In order to stay safe when accessing your SASSA grant, the following safety tips are recommended:

  • Keep your personal and payment information confidential.
  • Protect your SASSA card and PIN at all times.
  • Be cautious of strangers around ATMs.
  • Be aware of your payment dates and consider waiting a few days after the scheduled date to avoid large crowds at payment points.
  • Be wary of unsolicited calls or messages asking for your personal details or card information.
  • Be alert and aware of your surroundings before and after using an ATM.
  • Avoid using ATMs with blank screens or those located in poorly lit or secluded areas.
  • Consider going with a friend and or a family member when collecting cash.
  • Be suspicious of strangers who offer help or claim there’s a problem with the ATM.
  • Security personnel stationed at ATMs are there to deter criminal activity and are not authorised to assist with transactions.

SAPS encourages the public to report any suspicious activity or criminal incidents by calling the Crime Stop number at 08600 10111, the SASSA grant and fraud hotline 0800 601 or via the MySAPS App. – SAnews.gov.za

G20 Social Summit registrations now open for November 2025

Source: Government of South Africa

G20 Social Summit registrations now open for November 2025

Registrations are now open for the Group of 20 (G20) Social Summit, which will be held from 18 – 20 November 2025 at the Birchwood Hotel and OR Tambo Conference Centre in Ekurhuleni, Gauteng.

This Social Summit, organised under South Africa’s G20 Presidency, aims to provide an inclusive platform that amplifies the voices of civil society, grassroots organisations, and local communities.

The Department of International Relations and Cooperation (DIRCO) has stated that the Social Summit – aligned with the G20 Presidency theme of: ‘Solidarity, Equality, Sustainability’ – will bring together both formal and informal networks. 

These include youth groups, women’s organisations, individuals with disabilities, faith-based organisations, community forums, and other grassroots structures. The aim is to engage directly with global issues that impact daily life.

“Government calls on informal groups and community movements across South Africa, the African continent and globally to register and take part in this historic people’s summit.

“It is vital that global commitments are grounded in the lived experiences of communities,” DIRCO said.

During a media briefing in August regarding the implementation of South Africa’s foreign policy, DIRCO Minister Ronald Lamola announced that preparations for the G20 Social Summit were in progress. 

He said the department aims to broaden its outreach efforts to communities beyond the 13 G20 Engagement Groups. This involves inviting civil society organisations, think tanks and academic institutions from across the globe to participate, ensuring that the lived experiences of ordinary people contribute to shaping G20 outcomes.

The G20 Social Summit serves as the main platform for incorporating civil society voices into the G20 decision-making process. 

Its goal is to promote global solidarity, advance inclusive development, and produce a Leaders’ Declaration that reflects the aspirations and experiences of all citizens, particularly the most vulnerable among them.

Building on Brazil’s 2024 innovation of institutionalising civil society input into the G20, President Cyril Ramaphosa committed that South Africa would not only continue but also expand the Social Summit. 

Conceived as a people-centred platform, the summit will elevate issues of social development, equity, and inclusion to the same level of urgency as macroeconomic and financial concerns.

Interested parties are invited to register on the official G20 website at https://forms.office.com/r/tjdH1jBhxp by 24 October 2025. For more information, please email socialsummit@dirco.gov.za. – SAnews.gov.za

Gabisile

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Africa urged to strengthen health financing models

Source: Government of South Africa

Africa urged to strengthen health financing models

Minister of Finance Enoch Godongwana has called on the continent to strengthen the resilience of its health financing whilst strategically weaning off external financing that has become less reliable.

“We must ensure that health financing is sustainable, not just for a single financial year but for generations to come. This means strengthening our own domestic resource mobilisation and finding innovative ways of financing our health sectors,” Godongwana said on Thursday in Johannesburg. 

He was addressing the African Union (AU) Commission’s 8th Session of the Specialised Technical Committee (STC) on Finance, Monetary Affairs, Economic Planning and Integration. 

The STC brought together Ministers of Finance, Monetary Affairs, Economic Planning and Integration, as well as Health Ministers, central bank governors, senior policymakers, experts, and development partners to deliberate on strategies to close Africa’s health financing gap while responding to emerging global economic shifts.

“Coordination between the finance and the health sector has never been more important due to experiences from the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Our continent’s health sector is facing a phalanx of multiple crises. It is underfunded, overstretched and faces a distressing decline in Official Development Assistance (ODA). 

“This challenge adds on the existing increase in our debt-service obligations and diminished fiscal space to make available for domestic health spending,” the Minister said.

He encouraged the continent to explore a range of solutions, including increasing budgetary allocations, and committing to increasing the share of national budgets dedicated to health, in line with the Abuja Declaration. 

“There is a need to explore innovative fiscal policies to increase revenue, through targeted taxes on products harmful to health, such as tobacco and alcohol and improve the efficiency and transparency of our public financial management to make sure that every resource allocated for health is used effectively. 

“Our private sector should not be left behind. We should create an enabling environment for both our public and private sectors to join hands and unlock investment and explore publicprivate partnerships across the healthcare infrastructure value chain,” the Minister said.

He pointed out that the continent’s health financing gap is an issue of global inequality.

Through South Africa’s Group Twenty (G20) Presidency, government is using the platform to support a new global compact on health financing, a model that is proactive and not crisis driven and is solidarity based.

“We are pushing for reforms to the global financial architecture to make it more equitable and representative. A key priority of our G20 Presidency is addressing the unsustainable debt burdens that destroy developing economies and prevent developing economies from investing in critical public services, including healthcare.

“We are proactively promoting a global framework to combat illicit financial flows and to ensure a fair and just international tax system. This will unlock billions of dollars in revenue that are currently lost to our economies, and funds that could be reinvested in our health systems in strengthening primary healthcare, and in building a resilient health workforce,” Godongwana said.

He stressed that the continent must urgently stabilise its economies by strengthening domestic markets, bolstering institutions and accountability, and protecting the vulnerable.

“Whilst it is true that the world economy is undergoing fundamental changes as demographic shifts and technological advancements reconfigure global markets, this moment too is a transitory one. There are new opportunities for change and growth on the African continent. A new thumping pulse in our veins, if you will.

“The energy transition and new technologies, including artificial intelligence, create new prospects for development and global economic interaction. The prospect of a multipolar world presents the African continent with opportunities to break free from old modes of development and trade,” the Minister said.

With new investments and new sources of investment finance emerging, he said there are opportunities to draw upon new spaces for pragmatic policy experimentation and autonomous development.

“New forms of multilateral cooperation and new partnerships for development are being forged, quite literally as we speak. Africa holds the keys to the solutions for the challenges the world faces. Africa’s youth are striving for development across the continent, demanding change. 

“The continent’s critical minerals, renewable energy advantages, agricultural land, and biological resources make it a central pillar of tomorrow’s healthier world, and an indispensable partner in achieving it,” the Minister said.

He said a new and reimagined developmental approach is required that restores confidence in the promise of development as an empowering partnership. 

“Africa can again be the flywheel around which a new vibrancy can emerge. This calls for new principles of global co-operation, more effective global finance for investment and economic transformation in Africa. 

“The old development models will no longer work, and the era of aid is largely over. I agree entirely, African countries must now approach development through the lens of sharper investment discipline,” Godongwana said. – SAnews.gov.za

nosihle

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African Development Bank Group approves USD 500,000 grant to support Uganda’s emergency flood and landslide response

Source: APO

The Board of Directors of the African Development Bank Group (www.AfDB.org) has approved a grant of $500,000 from its Special Relief Fund to support Uganda’s Relief Emergency Response Project.

The financing will provide urgent assistance to communities severely affected by floods and landslides in the Bulambuli, Kasese and Ntoroko districts, including the provision of family-size tents to an estimated 1,500 internally displaced persons (IDPs). The goal is to improve living conditions in camps where thousands have sought shelter since the disasters.

From 17-19 August 2025, heavy rains in the Mount Elgon subregion in eastern Uganda flooded the mountainous Bulambuli, Sironko and Mbale districts and triggered landslides in the neighobring Namisindwa district.

Local authorities reported 5 deaths, 50 injuries, and an estimated 2,000 homes damaged or destroyed, with 5,000 displaced and 15,000 impacted in total. In recent years, extreme weather events have displaced families, destroyed infrastructure and disrupted livelihoods across the country’s Rwenzori and Elgon regions, where these districts are located.

“Beyond emergency relief, the project is an investment in dignity, safety, and recovery,” said Mercuria Assefaw, the Bank Group’s Division Manager for Water Security and Sanitation. “Providing decent temporary housing will not only address a priority shelter need and improve living conditions for displaced families, it will also stimulate the local economy through procurement and logistics.”

The Office of the Prime Minister of Uganda will implement the project through the Department of Relief, Disaster Preparedness and Management. By prioritising rapid procurement and efficient delivery, the project will create opportunities for local suppliers and service providers, contributing to the wider recovery of flood-affected communities.

Activities will be completed within six months, ensuring timely relief for those in urgent need of shelter. With this support, the Bank will strengthen Uganda’s humanitarian response and contribute to rebuilding community resilience.

Assefaw added, “This grant reflects the Bank’s solidarity with Uganda. By providing immediate relief, we aim to restore hope and stability as communities continue their journey of recovery.”

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of African Development Bank Group (AfDB).

Media contact:
Christin Roby
Communication and External Relations Department 
email:  media@afdb.org

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Smarter Mobility Africa Conference Opens with Visionary Access Gauteng 2050 Keynote

Source: APO

The Smarter Mobility Africa conference at the Sandton Convention Centre in Johannesburg began with an impactful keynote session on the Access Gauteng 2050 stage. This opening address set the tone for innovative strategies aimed at transforming Gauteng’s transport infrastructure, aligning with goals for sustainable development and economic growth.  

Tshepo Kgobe, CEO of the Gautrain Management Agency (GMA) and interim CEO for the Transport Authority Gauteng (TAG), delivered the keynote speech. He emphasised the critical importance of a functional mobility system in economic advancement. “Transport is fundamental to our economic ambitions,” Kgobe stated. “By enhancing connectivity, Gauteng can achieve a growth rate of 4.5%, driving job creation and tackling our socio-economic challenges.”  

Highlighting the region’s potential, the conference noted that Gauteng’s growth rate currently surpasses national averages. With strategic enhancements, the province can significantly contribute to national economic objectives. “We envision a transport system that not only supports growth but also embraces sustainability,” Kgobe added. “Our initiatives are designed to connect people, places, and opportunities seamlessly.”  

Professor Mfanelo Ntsobi, Interim Board Chairperson of TAG, echoed the sentiment, stating, “Collaboration is vital. Public and private sectors must unite to build a resilient transport system that anticipates future demands.”  

Core insights from the keynote underscored the importance of investing in smart infrastructure and prioritising sustainable transport options, such as electric and hybrid vehicles. The session also highlighted the role of public-private partnerships in driving innovation and ensuring successful implementation of these initiatives.  

Additionally, Kgobe remarked on the necessity of forward-thinking policies and digital solutions to enhance transport efficiency. “We must explore all avenues, including smart grid technologies, to create a transport ecosystem that is both efficient and sustainable,” he said.  

The event concluded with strategic recommendations for stakeholders, encouraging the adoption of digital solutions to enhance transport efficiency. These actionable insights provide a roadmap for industry leaders aiming to implement sustainable transport solutions.  

Smarter Mobility Africa is hosted 01-02 October 2025  
Sandton Convention Centre, Johannesburg  

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of VUKA Group.

Contact:
t: +27 21 700 3500 
f: +27 21 700 3501 
e: info@wearevuka.com
w: www.WeAreVUKA.com  

For media enquiries:  
Timothy Adrigwe  
Timothy.Adrigwe@wearevuka.com     
https://apo-opa.co/4nsDCxP

About VUKA Group:
VUKA Group connects people and organisations to information and each other, across Africa’s energy, mining, infrastructure, mobility, green economy and technology sectors through innovative events, content, and strategic networking. By integrating industry introductions, curated events, and digital engagement, the group empowers businesses to navigate complex markets, forge valuable connections, and drive sustainable success.  

Venture partners to The Global Trust Project, Founders of WomenIN empowerment platform and leaders of NPO, Go Green Africa. The VUKA Group’s diverse portfolio acts to contribute to its purpose of ‘Connecting Africa to the World’s Best, to Influence Sustainable Progress’  

Discover more at https://WeAreVUKA.com/ 

About SMA:
After 6 editions Smarter Mobility Africa has established itself as a meeting place for inspired and purpose driven transport professionals.  

A Movement With A Purpose:
African cities face significant challenges today and in the coming decades due to rapid population growth and large-scale industrialisation. Many people lack access to safe, reliable, and affordable mobility, impacting how we move people and goods.  

This situation has clear negative consequences for economic development, public health, job opportunities, and the environment. We refer to this as the ‘Old Urban Era.’ The human, environmental, and economic impacts of this era are profound, fuelling our passion to help cities across Africa transition to the ‘New Urban Era’ through smarter mobility solutions.  

We are dedicated to uniting every element of the mobility industry to tackle these challenges head-on, creating an environment where social, environmental, and economic opportunities are exponentially amplified.  

Learn more at: https://apo-opa.co/4nsDCxP

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Home Affairs official convicted of fraud

Source: Government of South Africa

Friday, October 3, 2025

A former Home Affairs employee has been convicted of fraud by the Calvinia Magistrate’s Court on Wednesday, following a series of offences linked to fraud.

Dawn Celeste Pieterson (45) was found guilty on all nine counts of fraud and two counts of contravening Section 31 (1) (d) of Birth and Death Registration Act 51 of 1992.

The offences were committed between February 2019 and September 2022 when Pieterson was employed at the Department of Home Affairs based in Calvinia.

As part of her duties, she had access to the national population register.  

According to the South African Police Service, Pieterson fraudulently took out funeral cover policies from reputable insurance companies and nominated herself as a beneficiary. 

“To benefit, she manipulated the national population register by falsely issuing BI-1663 forms (notice of death form) to reflect the fictitious death of the victims. The system registered the affected persons as deceased, resulting in a plethora of problems in the victims’ day to day lives,” the police said.

The case has been postponed to 26 January 2026 for sentencing.

Acting Provincial Head of the Hawks, Brigadier Prince Mashimbye, commended the great effort of the investigation and prosecution team for their work in securing the conviction. – SAnews.gov.za

Madlanga Commission budget ‘properly managed’ – Justice Minister Kubayi

Source: Government of South Africa

The Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development, Mmamoloko Kubayi, has moved to assure South Africans that budgetary matters relating to the Madlanga Commission have been properly managed and communicated with no formal concerns about the budget raised with the department.

This after some media reported that the commission’s former Chief Evidence Leader, Advocate Terry Motau SC, has raised some concerns about the commission’s budget.

The commission had announced Motau’s exit earlier this week.
READ | Madlanga Commission appoints Adv Chaskalson SC as chief evidence leader

“Advocate Motau has suggested that budgetary issues and his fears of budgetary shortfalls influenced his decision to resign from the Commission.

“The Minister wishes to place on record that budgetary matters relating to the Commission have been properly managed and communicated, and at no point were formal concerns about the budget raised with the Department.

“The Minister further notes that Advocate Motau was directly involved in the process of determining the fee structure for himself and his junior counsel,” the department said in a statement.

The commission’s R147.9 million budget is allocated as follows:
•    Compensation of employees including commissioners, evidence leaders, investigators, researchers and secretariat staff – R10.898 million
•    Goods and services including communication and Information and communications technology (ICT), consultants, legal services and travel and subsistence – R100.744 million
•    Payments for capital services for secure ICT infrastructure including computers, servers and associated systems – R36.258 million
“The Commission continues to operate from the Brigitte Mabandla Justice College, a state-owned facility, at no additional cost to the fiscus. For security reasons, detailed security-related expenditure will only be made public in the Commission’s final report.

“The Minister reaffirms her commitment to transparency, accountability, and to ensuring that the Commission is adequately resourced to fulfil its important mandate. The Minister further encourages Advocate Motau to provide clarity to the public on the reasons for his decision to resign, rather than placing undue liability on the Department in so far as the budget is concerned,” the department concluded.

Commission hearings are expected to resume on 13 October. – SAnews.gov.za