Operation Basadi engages Eastern Cape communities

Source: Government of South Africa

Empowering communities to stay safe throughout the Festive Season was among the key aspects of an Operation Basadi (women) carried out by the South African Police Service (SAPS).

“Basadi” means women in several local languages.

Wednesday’s awareness campaign that took place in Tembisa in the Eastern Cape on Wednesday, saw women from various SAPS units, supported by partners from different law enforcement agencies, the Community Police Forum (CPF), Youth Crime Prevention Committee, Spiritual Crime Prevention, and the Women’s Network, continue to stand united. 

“This initiative combines operational and proactive measures aimed at protecting, serving, educating, and empowering communities to stay safe throughout the festive season,” said the police.

The SAPS further added that community members came out in their numbers to participate in the campaign and stakeholders delivered messages of support on gender-based violence and femicide (GBVF), substance abuse, and teenage pregnancy, equipping the community with vital information.

The second phase of the day involved a door-to-door campaign in the same locality, during which pamphlets were distributed and community concerns were documented. 
“Residents highlighted several pressing issues, including: high levels of GBVF and substance abuse, poverty and the abuse of elderly citizens, whose social grants are often misused by family members and loan sharks.”

All cases and concerns raised were referred to the relevant departments for further intervention.

Earlier this month, Operation Basadi activities were also conducted in Sterkspruit where role players continued their outreach around the local mall and taxi rank, engaging directly with community members and raising awareness on safety and crime prevention.
Joe Gqabi District Commissioner, Major General Lindelwa Vellem, acknowledged and commended the combined efforts of all stakeholders during the Safer Festive Season operations. She emphasised that Operation Basadi is not only about law enforcement, but also about building strong partnerships with communities.

“We want our communities to know that the SAPS is here – ready, present, and committed. We call on our communities to take our hand and stand with us as we work together to ensure a safe and secure Festive Season,” she said.-SAnews.gov.za

Impact of G20 Social Summit will ‘last a lifetime’, says Ntshavheni

Source: Government of South Africa

A bold vision for an inclusive global future has been cemented at the G20 Social Summit — a vision designed not just for the moment, but for future generations to come.

As the summit drew to a close on Thursday, Minister in the Presidency and summit co-convenor, Khumbudzo Ntshavheni, revealed the monumental effort behind the scenes, with over 100 preparatory meetings dedicated to forging consensus for the G20 Social Legacy programmes and the summit declaration.

“The deliberations at the preparatory meetings sought to build consensus around five thematic areas: digital inclusion and equitable transformation; trade resilience and inclusive value chains; inclusive climate justice and just transition and energy democracy; a just and sustainable finance and international finance architecture, and building momentum for the SDGs [Sustainable Development Goals] and Agenda 2063.

“The engagement groups worked very hard to get to where we are and also to agree on a continued partnership in the implementation of the legacy programmes for the future of this beautiful country and the continent,” Ntshavheni said. 

The seven legacy programmes announced at the summit are:

  • The Pan-African sovereign wealth fund initiative.
  • The public-private health accelerator.
  • Empower youth and communities through inclusive, sustainable social infrastructure and opportunity pathways.
  • Accelerator for digitally enabled MSME [Micro, Small, and Medium Enterprises] finance and trade for women and youth.
  • The Timbuktu creatives hub.
  • Digitally enabled higher education systems aligned with Africa’s development goals.
  • Securing the next decade of impact to guarantee the future of adolescent girls and young women in Africa.

An inclusive presidency

Throughout its G20 Presidency, South Africa has sought to include groups from all corners of society to participate and contribute to the G20 programmes. 

“Your due pronouncement, Mr President [Cyril Ramaphosa], that declared that South Africa’s G20 Presidency is an African presidency, which the whole African continent must partake in and benefit from, was fulfilled through the work of the engagements and as part of the G20 Social.

“When we started South Africa’s G20 Presidency… you also instructed us to be inclusive and we have done exactly that, as we accommodated additional engagement groups and the general public through the GCIS [Government Communication and Information System] outreach activities and all their inputs are included in the declaration,” she said.

Furthermore, Ntshavheni said South Africa’s G20 Presidency and Social Summit are not just a diplomatic exercise but a strategically expanded initiative infused with a distinctive “African flair”. 

“Although we are continuing on the innovation of Brazil, who introduced the G20 Social, South Africa expanded on the innovation to include an African flair with participation of traditional leaders and the Khoi-San indigenous people. 

“South Africa also expanded the engagement groups from 14 in Brazil to 22 participating at this Social Summit. South Africa also took it another step further by introducing legacy projects that will ensure that the impact of the G20 Social Summit South Africa on the African continent will last a lifetime,” Ntshaveni said. – SAnews.gov.za

Address by President Cyril Ramaphosa at the G20 Social Summit, Birchwood Conference Centre, Ekurhuleni

Source: President of South Africa –

Programme Director, Minister Khumbudzo Ntshavheni;
Former Deputy President of South Africa, Dr Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka;
Minister of Human Rights of the Federative Republic of Brazil, Ms Macaé Evaristo;
Ministers, Deputy Ministers and Members of Parliament;
Delegates from the G20 member states;
Representatives of international organisations;
Co-Convenors of the Social Summit and Sherpas of the G20;
Members of the diplomatic corps;
Heads of delegation;
Representatives of religious and traditional leadership;
Delegates;
Guests;
Friends; 
 
Good morning. 
 
Sanibonani. Dumelang. Avuxeni. Goeie môre. Molweni. Ndi Matsheloni. Lotjhani. 
 
I greet you all in some of South Africa’s beautiful languages. 
 
One of these greetings, Sanibonani, is in the Zulu language. It literally means, ‘we see each other’. 
 
We are acknowledging the personhood, value and dignity of the one we are greeting. We are affirming the cherished principle of Ubuntu: I am because we are. 
 
This is the spirit in which this G20 Social Summit is being held.
 
Seventy years ago, in 1955, two seminal events took place that would be pivotal in defining human relations in our country and across the world. 
 
The first was the Asian-African Conference in Indonesia, also known as the Bandung Conference. 
 
At the time, a wave of independence was reshaping Africa and Asia. This conference has been described as the moment the Global South began to speak for itself.
 
The delegates to the Bandung Conference made a commitment to advancing peace and equality, to solidarity, and to economic and political cooperation rooted in mutual respect. 
 
The second seminal event of 1955 was the Conference of the People here in Johannesburg, in a place called Kliptown. 
 
It was the height of apartheid rule. Repression was rife. 
 
It was at the Congress of the People that South Africans of all races, all faiths and all creeds gathered to adopt the Freedom Charter, which would be the forerunner to South Africa’s democratic constitution. 
 
The Freedom Charter boldly declares that ‘There shall be Peace and Friendship’, and that this shall be secured by upholding the equal rights, opportunities and status of all. 
 
History too will record this year as a milestone for global cooperation. 
 
We affirm the historic nature not only of the first summit of the G20 to take place on African soil, but also of this Social Summit, a gathering of peoples from across the world.
 
We meet at a time of great uncertainty. 
 
Political polarisation, global poverty, conflict and war, and the growing impact of climate change are threatening global development.
 
Inequality in wealth distribution, imbalances in international development financing, and disparities in access to financial resources are holding back our ability to meet the aspirations of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. 
 
As a continent, we are in tandem striving to realise the aspirations of the African Union’s Agenda 2063: The Africa we Want. 
 
This is the second G20 Social Summit to take place since the concept was inaugurated by the Brazilian Presidency last year.
 
The breadth of representation and the depth of engagement is most impressive. 
 
It is here, in this room, where we lay the groundwork for global action on the G20 priorities. 
 
We know that global action will be credible because it is informed by the voices of the people. 
 
South Africa’s G20 Presidency has been premised on ensuring the interests of developing economy countries are elevated on the G20 agenda. 
 
We have sought to address poverty, inequality and underdevelopment. 
 
We have worked to strengthen and reform the international financial architecture, to democratise the systems of global governance, and to promote the right of all nations to development, equality and dignity. 
 
We have used our G20 Presidency to reiterate the call for the world’s leading economies to invest in sustainable development and in the conservation of the planet for future generations. 
 
But for the decisions taken at the upcoming G20 Leaders’ Summit to stand tall, to grow, to have credibility and legitimacy, they have to be nourished by strong roots. 
 
These roots are our civil society and community organisations, women’s organisations, youth formations, academia and think-tanks, business, labour and other grassroots formations. 
 
We are fortunate to have secured the full and meaningful participation of all the formations in this Summit, including Women20, Youth20, Business20, Civil20, Labour20, Parliament20, Media20 and others. 
 
There has been broad and far-reaching consultation over the last year. 
 
There have been dialogues on issues as diverse as digital inclusion, equitable transformation and climate justice.
 
There have been discussions on just and sustainable finance, on media freedom, on strengthening democracy, and the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals. 
 
Delegates to this Summit have recognised the need to build resilience and inclusive value chains to protect vulnerable countries from increased volatility in global trade. 
 
The Social Summit has reaffirmed the importance of an inclusive transition to a low-carbon, climate resilient economy that is guided by those most affected.
 
Delegates are calling on the G20 Leaders’ Summit to demonstrate leadership in scaling up global water investment for the benefit of all. 
 
The G20 Social Summit has sought to ensure that global leadership protects society’s most vulnerable. 
 
Today is World Children’s Day, when we commemorate the adoption of the Convention on the Rights of the Child. 
 
This was the first global UN convention ratified by the newly democratic South Africa. 
 
This Social Summit has called for more resources to be devoted to eliminating child poverty and hunger and to ensure that children are protected. 
 
The progressive deliberations at this Social Summit have culminated in calls for greater political commitment to advancing young people’s access to opportunities.
 
It has called for the health and wellbeing of women and children to be prioritised and for greater representation of women in all facets of society. 
 
As South Africa, we have lent our support to the Global Leaders Network for Women’s, Children’s and Adolescents’ Health. 
 
As the Global Leaders Network, we are deeply concerned by the effects of the withdrawal of overseas development assistance on initiatives supporting health service delivery and health systems.
 
We are committed to work together to mobilise global health financing so that the most vulnerable are not further deprived of their rights to care. 
 
It was the great African revolutionary Thomas Sankara who said there is no true social revolution without the liberation of women. 
 
He said: “May my eyes never see, and my feet never take me to a society where half the people are held in silence.” 
 
We cannot build societies rooted in equality unless those societies uphold the rights of women and girls.
 
Sustainable societies are those that recognise, value and compensate the labour and economic contribution of women.
 
No society can thrive for as long as gender-based violence and femicide continues and the agency of women is denied. 
 
The violence perpetrated by men against women erodes the social fabric of nations. 
 
It imposes a heavy burden that constrains development and weakens inclusive growth. 
 
Men and boys are critical partners in transforming harmful norms and advancing gender justice.
 
They must be actively involved in challenging inherited attitudes, power imbalances and social structures that normalise violence and silence survivors. 
 
Here in South Africa, we have declared gender-based violence and femicide (GBVF) a national crisis. 
 
We have agreed, among all social partners, that we need to take extraordinary and concerted action – using every means at our disposal – to end this crisis. 
 
The collective perspectives that have been expressed at this Summit on all these issues and more will enable governments and decision-makers to better understand people’s practical, lived experiences. 
 
They will be able to better understand what works and what doesn’t – and to better understand what must change. 
 
Collectively, the members of the G20 represent 85 percent of global GDP, 75 percent of global trade and two-thirds of the global population. 
 
For the G20 to fully live up to its mission of promoting international financial stability and deepening global economic cooperation there should be no unwritten rules about those who feast and those who must settle for scraps. 
 
It cannot be that a country’s geographical location or income or army determines who has a voice and who is spoken down to. 
 
In choosing the theme for our G20 Presidency, South Africa sought to advance a vision of meaningful, credible global cooperation. 
 
It is our expectation that this Social Summit will be remembered for being far more than a marketplace of ideas. 
 
Just as the Bandung Conference elevated the voice of the Global South and just as the Conference of the People harnessed global solidarity against apartheid, this year’s G20 Social Summit must be remembered for having given practical meaning to global solidarity. 
 
Thank you to all who have been part of making this Summit a success. 
 
We commend the delegates from various civil society organisations present here for shaping the agenda and direction of the G20 Social Summit. 
 
These efforts will foster ongoing cooperation between governments and civil society in advancing sustainable global development. 
 
For millennia, our forebears were guided by the sun by day and the stars by night. 
 
They relied on nature to show them the way as they traversed the ancient trading routes of Timbuktu, as they navigated the mighty Congo River, and as they made their way across the vast expanses of the Kalahari. 
 
Today, we are counting on this Social Summit to guide the G20. 
 
We are relying on this Social Summit to be the reliable, trustworthy compass that ensures the G20 agenda takes the needs and aspirations of all the countries and all the peoples of the world into account. 
 
It is our collective wish that this Social Summit will guide us along the path of solidarity, equality and sustainability. 
 
No matter the headwinds, no matter the geopolitical shifts, no matter the challenges, we will keep our eyes fixed on the horizon of progress and shared prosperity. 
 
We will set a new course for the world, and we will create a new future for its people.
 
I thank you.

Democratic institutions can deliver again – Gaborone Democracy Lab charts pathway for citizen-centred renewal of African democracies

Source: APO

The inaugural Gaborone Democracy Lab, jointly hosted by the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung (FES) Botswana and Afrobarometer (www.Afrobarometer.org), has launched a continent-wide dialogue on how democratic institutions can be renewed to deliver dignity, inclusion, and social justice for all citizens.

Held under the banner “Democratic Institutions Must Deliver Again,” the two-day gathering brought together 50 policy makers, activists, and experts from across more than 20 African countries. The lab’s discussions focused on three key pathways for building democratic institutions that work for people – pathways recognised as critical not only for Botswana, but for Southern Africa and the wider continent.

  1. Strengthening local-level decision making

Participants emphasised the need for citizens to be directly involved in political decisions at the community level. Decentralised and participatory structures were identified as essential for rebuilding public trust, improving accountability, and ensuring that public services respond to real needs. This shift mirrors growing demands for meaningful local governance across Africa.

  1. Channelling “Gen Z” activism into organised participation

With Africa’s youth driving protest movements and civic action from Cape Town to Nairobi, the lab explored how this energy can be transformed into structured engagement. Delegates highlighted the need for leadership pathways, long-term organising, and political inclusion to ensure young people shape – rather than sit outside – democratic institutions.

  1. Embedding ubuntu in democratic reform

With its principles of solidarity, dignity, and collective responsibility, ubuntu emerged as a powerful, culturally grounded framework for reshaping African governance. Participants underscored its relevance to the continent as countries seek people-centred systems that reduce inequality and strengthen social cohesion.

The Vice President of the Republic of Botswana Hon. Ndaba Gaolathe emphasised the importance of building citizen-centred institutions and systems that outlast today’s leaders. “If democracy is to mean anything,” he said, “it must endure beyond applause. It must survive beyond the headlines. It must live in the daily experience of justice and dignity.”

A defining feature of the Gaborone Democracy Lab is its unique format. Unlike traditional conferences, it brings together policy makers, youth leaders, trade unions, civil society, academics, data experts, and political actors in one experimental space. This “democracy laboratory” encourages creativity, cross-sector collaboration, and consensus building, offering a model that could inspire democratic innovation across the continent.

Afrobarometer’s Surveys Director Boniface Dulani noted that while trust in institutions may be declining, citizens across Africa remain committed to democracy and continue to demand accountability and inclusion.

Henrik Maihack, Head of FES Africa, stressed the importance of global cooperation among democratic actors to counter rising threats and build more resilient institutions.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Afrobarometer.

For more information, please contact:
Asafika Mpako
Communications coordinator for Southern Africa
Telephone: +27 83 979 8299
Email: ampako@afrobarometer.org 

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About the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung:
The Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung (FES) is Germany’s oldest political foundation, promoting social democracy and international cooperation in more than 100 countries. For over half a century, FES has been a cornerstone of Botswana’s democratic development. Invited by President Sir Seretse Khama in the early 1970s, FES officially opened its Gaborone office in 1973. Since then, FES has served as a partner, working with the pillars of democracy: the marginalised, workers, youth, and women.

Building on this legacy, the FES Botswana office has been officially designated as the FES Democracy Hub Africa in 2025 – the central focal point for Africa-wide initiatives on youth political engagement, party dialogue, and democratic development.

Visit us online at: https://Botswana.FES.de/

About Afrobarometer:
Afrobarometer (AB) is a trusted source of high-quality data and analysis on what Africans are thinking. With an unmatched track record of 430,000+ interviews in 45 countries, representing the views of more than 75% of the African population, AB is leading the charge to bridge the continent’s data gap. AB data inform many global indices, such as the Ibrahim Index of African Governance, Transparency International’s Global Corruption Barometer, and the World Bank’s Worldwide Governance Indicators. The data are also used for country risk analyses and by credit rating and forecasting agencies such as the Economist Intelligence Unit. All AB data sets are publicly available on the website (www.Afrobarometer.org) and may be analysed free of charge using AB’s online data analysis tool (https://apo-opa.co/48nEhLI).

Visit us online at: www.Afrobarometer.org

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Secretary-General of Ministry of Foreign Affairs Meets Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Kazakhstan

Source: Government of Qatar

Astana | November 20, 2025

HE Secretary-General of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs Dr. Ahmed bin Hassan Al Hammadi met on Thursday in Astana with HE Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Kazakhstan Yermek Kosherbayev.
During the meeting, cooperation relations between the two countries and ways to support and strengthen them were reviewed, in addition to a number of topics of common interest.
The meeting was attended by HE Ambassador of the State of Qatar to the Republic of Kazakhstan Abdullah bin Hussein Al Jaber, HE Director of the Asian Affairs Department at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs Al Johara bint Yousef Al Obaidan Fakhro, and the accompanying delegation.

Qatar Affirms that Israeli Occupation Constitutes Blatant Violation of Principles of International Law, the UN Charter, and Relevant Resolutions

Source: Government of Qatar

Doha | November 20, 2025

The State of Qatar affirmed that the decades-long Israeli occupation constitutes a blatant violation of the principles of international law, the UN Charter, and relevant UN resolutions. It also reiterated its welcome of the advisory opinion issued by the International Court of Justice in July 2024, which was adopted by the UN General Assembly in Dec. 2024.
This came in the statement delivered by Second Secretary of the Permanent Mission of the State of Qatar to the United Nations Sheikh Jassim bin Abdulaziz Al-Thani, before the Fourth Committee of the UN General Assembly during its 80th session under item (50) on the Report of the Special Committee to Investigate Israeli Practices Affecting the Human Rights of the Palestinian People and Other Arabs of the Occupied Territories, at the United Nations headquarters in New York.
Sheikh Jassim bin Abdulaziz Al-Thani noted that the Court affirmed that Israel is obligated to end its unlawful presence in the occupied Palestinian territory and East Jerusalem, and clarified that the West Bank, East Jerusalem, and Gaza constitute a single territorial unit whose unity, continuity, integrity, and respect must be preserved.
He added that the reports submitted to the General Assembly under this item document Israels ongoing actions in the occupied Palestinian and Arab territories that violate international law and infringe upon the rights of the Palestinian people and other Arab populations under occupation, including settlement expansion, forced displacement, confiscation of civilian property, home demolitions, and other practices that violate international humanitarian law and international human rights law.
He further noted Qatars condemnation of settlers storming of the courtyards of Al-Aqsa Mosque and the attack on the Hajjeh Hamida Mosque in the Palestinian village of Kifl Hares last week, considering both acts blatant violations of international law and relevant UN resolutions.
He noted that, as part of the State of Qatars intensive efforts to spare the blood of the Palestinian people, alleviate their humanitarian suffering, and secure the release of prisoners and detainees, Qatar has continued over the past two years of the Israeli war on the Gaza Strip its mediation efforts in partnership with the Arab Republic of Egypt and the United States of America. He affirmed that despite challenges and obstacles, Qatar succeeded in achieving tangible progress in reaching humanitarian truces that helped ease part of the suffering by enabling the delivery of humanitarian aid to the Palestinian people and facilitating the release of prisoners and hostages.
He pointed out that Qatari efforts, jointly with the Arab Republic of Egypt, the Republic of Turkiye, and the United States, recently succeeded in reaching a ceasefire agreement signed on Oct. 13 in the Egyptian city of Sharm El-Sheikh, aimed at ending the bloodshed and humanitarian suffering in the Gaza Strip.
He stressed that the only guarantee for achieving sustainable peace in the region is reaching a just and comprehensive solution to the Palestinian issue in accordance with international legitimacy resolutions, as well as the New York Declaration on the Peaceful Settlement of the Question of Palestine and the Implementation of the Two-State solution.
The conference, held last July under the chairmanship of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and the French Republic, was adopted by the UN General Assembly on Sept. 12. Such a solution would restore the inalienable rights of the Palestinian people, foremost among them the right to self-determination, return, and the establishment of their independent, sovereign state on the 1967 borders with East Jerusalem as its capital.

South Africa congratulates Iraq on successful parliamentary elections

Source: Government of South Africa

Thursday, November 20, 2025

The Department of International Relations and Cooperation (DIRCO) has, on behalf of the South African government and its citizens, congratulated Iraq on the successful conclusion of its parliamentary elections held on 11 November 2025.

Reports indicate that a coalition led by Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani, won the parliamentary election. 

According to Al Jazeera, the Independent High Electoral Commission reported that al-Sudani’s Reconstruction and Change coalition received 1.3 million votes, approximately 370 000 more than the closest competitor.

DIRCO believes that these elections reflect the dedication of the Iraqi people to uphold democratic governance and ensure national stability.

“South Africa looks forward to the formation of a new government in Iraq and reaffirms its commitment to deepening bilateral cooperation in the political, economic, as well as various sectoral spheres of engagement. 

“We also remain committed to collaborating with Iraq on matters related to global governance as well as promoting shared goals in pursuit of global and regional peace, security and development.

“We wish Iraq every success and will continue building and strengthening our bilateral partnership to advance the mutual interests of our two nations,” the department added. – SAnews.gov.za

TikTok, en partenariat avec AfricTivistes, renforce ses liens avec les parties prenantes lors de son Sommet sur la Sécurité en Afrique de l’Ouest à Dakar, façonnant les politiques et la sécurité en ligne dans la région

Source: Africa Press Organisation – French

Hier, TikTok (www.TikTok.com), en partenariat avec AfricTivistes, a organisé son tout premier Sommet sur la Sécurité en Afrique de l’Ouest à Dakar, au Sénégal, réunissant des représentants de haut niveau des gouvernements, des experts en politiques publiques, des ONG, des régulateurs, des médias et des leaders de l’industrie provenant de divers pays d’Afrique de l’Ouest et de la région du Sahel.

Des délégués du Nigeria, du Sénégal, du Mali, de la Côte d’Ivoire, du Burkina Faso, du Tchad et même d’Éthiopie ont assisté à l’événement afin de consolider des collaborations visant à renforcer la protection des utilisateurs et à améliorer les cadres de modération de contenu adaptés aux défis régionaux.

Ce sommet marque un moment clé dans les efforts de TikTok en matière de sécurité dans la région et dans son engagement à maintenir des normes mondiales de sécurité à travers l’Afrique subsaharienne (SSA). En accueillant ces discussions essentielles, TikTok a réaffirmé son profond engagement à promouvoir un écosystème numérique sûr et responsable. La rencontre a créé un espace collaboratif où les experts ont pu aborder de façon conjointe les défis liés à la sécurité en ligne, partager des perspectives locales et discuter des stratégies pour renforcer les structures de sécurité dans le cadre de l’initiative #SaferTogether de TikTok.

La responsable du programme Outreach & Partnerships pour lAfrique subsaharienne chez TikTok, Duduzile Mkhize, a souligné l’engagement de la plateforme à améliorer la sécurité des utilisateurs en recueillant les idées et retours des parties prenantes.

« Bien qu’ayant une étendue globale, chacune de nos actions quotidiennes conserve un ancrage résolument local », a insisté Mkhize.

 « Le dialogue au sein de ce sommet est d’une valeur inestimable, car ce nest qu’à travers le partage dinformations et la collaboration avec les décideurs et partenaires locaux dAfrique de lOuest que nous pouvons éviter un environnement numérique fragmenté et vulnérable. Une action synergique nous permettra de poursuivre nos efforts pour offrir à notre communauté un espace sûr où découvrir, créer et se connecter de manière responsable.

L’une de ces partenaires essentielles est Aisha Dabo, activiste sénégalaise pour la démocratie et les droits humains, et membre du Conseil consultatif pour la sécurité de TikTok en Afrique subsaharienne (SSA SAC). Spécialiste du numérique avec plus de 20 ans d’expérience, Dabo milite pour une citoyenneté numérique active comme moyen de promouvoir un environnement en ligne sécurisé à travers le continent, notamment via l’organisation qu’elle a cofondée, AfricTivistes. Évoquant son rôle au sein du Conseil consultatif de TikTok et l’importance de l’expertise locale, Dabo a déclaré :

 « Jai pu constater de mes propres yeux limpact tangible des connaissances locales sur l’élaboration de politiques globales. Ce sommet représente un moment important pour mettre en lumière des solutions africaines aux défis numériques et garantir que nos besoins et perspectives régionales uniques soient au cœur des discussions sur la sécurité, afin de soutenir un internet libre, inclusif et sécurisé dans toute lAfrique. »

 Afrique de lOuest en chiffres : suppressions de contenus

Dans son dernier Community Guidelines Enforcement Report, TikTok a démontré la force combinée de sa technologie de modération automatisée et de ses équipes humaines expertes, qui travaillent ensemble pour détecter et supprimer rapidement les contenus nuisibles avant qu’ils n’atteignent les utilisateurs.

Depuis janvier 2024, TikTok a supprimé plus de 34 millions de vidéos en Afrique de lOuest pour violations de ses politiques, couvrant différents types d’infractions. Les capacités de modération de la plateforme s’améliorent continuellement, avec 8,3 millions de suppressions au deuxième trimestre 2025, soit une augmentation remarquable de 132 % par rapport au premier trimestre 2024. Cette progression démontre la capacité de la plateforme à adapter à grande échelle ses politiques et ses méthodes de détection, alors que la base d’utilisateurs dans la région est en pleine expansion.

À noter : la proportion de vidéos violant les règles représente en moyenne 0,6 % de lensemble des contenus publiés dans la région. L’investissement de TikTok dans la technologie garantit une modération proactive : 87 % des suppressions ont été réalisées via des systèmes automatisés avant que tout signalement utilisateur ne soit effectué.

En mars 2025, TikTok a également détecté et démantelé des opérations dinfluence clandestines ciblant les discours politiques en Afrique de l’Ouest et en France.

Ce réseau, opérant depuis le Togo et composé de 129 comptes, créait des profils inauthentiques visant à saper les politiques étrangères de la France en Afrique de l’Ouest.

Au Sénégal, la plateforme a supprimé plus de 2,5 millions de vidéos entre le premier trimestre 2024 et le deuxième trimestre 2025. Plus de 16 000 sessions TikTok LIVE ont été interrompues au cours de la même période.

Taux mondial de suppression au deuxième trimestre 2025

Au cours du deuxième trimestre 2025 :

  • 189 millions de vidéos ont été supprimées dans le monde (0,7 % de tout le contenu publié)
  • 99,1 % de ces suppressions ont été détectées de manière proactive
  • 94,4 % ont été retirées en moins de 24 heures
  • 163,9 millions  ont été supprimées automatiquement par des systèmes dIA
  • 76 991 660 comptes fake ont été supprimés
  • 25 904 708 comptes suspectés dappartenir à des utilisateurs de moins de 13 ans ont été retirés

En combinant technologies avancées de modération automatisée et expertise de milliers de professionnels de la sécurité, TikTok garantit une élimination rapide et cohérente des contenus violant ses règles.

Cette approche est essentielle pour limiter les effets néfastes de la désinformation, des discours de haine et d’autres contenus préjudiciables.

TikTok LIVE : renforcer la sécurité en temps réel

Pour la première fois, TikTok partage des données concernant l’application de ses directives de monétisation pour TikTok LIVE.

Ces directives permettent de récompenser les créateurs diffusant un contenu sûr, authentique et de qualité, tout en empêchant les diffusions qui ne respectent pas ces règles.

Au deuxième trimestre 2025, TikTok a pris des mesures — avertissements et démonétisation — concernant :

  • 2 321 813 sessions LIVE
  • 1 040 356 créateurs LIVE

Les avertissements visent à éduquer les créateurs lorsque leur contenu risque de violer les politiques de monétisation, leur donnant l’occasion d’ajuster leur comportement.

Apportant son soutien au sommet et à ses priorités, (Nom du représentant gouvernemental et son rôle), (Nom du département), Sénégal, a déclaré :

 « Nous saluons les résultats du Sommet sur la Sécurité de TikTok à Dakar. Ce forum collaboratif est essentiel pour doter nos gouvernements des outils nécessaires afin d’équilibrer innovation numérique et protection indispensable de nos citoyens. Lengagement partagé en faveur de la sécurité et de la transparence, exprimé ici, établit un précédent solide pour les futures politiques numériques dans la région. »

Pour plus d’informations sur les politiques et initiatives de sécurité de TikTok, visitez notre Centre de Sécurité.

Distribué par APO Group pour TikTok.

Contact medias :
Keagile Makgoba
Keagile.m@tiktok.com

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TikTok in partnership with AfricTivistes Strengthens Ties with Stakeholders at Summit in Dakar, shaping policy and online safety for the region

Source: APO – Report:

Yesterday, TikTok (www.TikTok.com), in partnership with AfricTivistes hosted its first West Africa Safety Summit in Dakar, Senegal, bringing together senior government officials, policy experts, NGO’s, regulators, media and industry leaders from varying West African nations and Sahel region. Delegates from Nigeria, Senegal, Mali, Côte d’Ivoire, Burkina Faso, Chad and even Ethiopia attended the Summit to collaborate on strengthening user safety and content moderation specific to the region’s challenges.

TikTok’s Outreach and Partnerships Manager for Sub-Saharan Africa, Duduzile Mkhize, emphasised the platform’s commitment to enhancing user security by gathering stakeholder insights and ideas.

“While global, we remain hyper-local in our every day efforts,” Mkhize stressed. “The dialogue at this Summit is invaluable because only through insights sharing and collaboration with policymakers and local partners across West Africa can we prevent a fragmented and insecure digital environment. United action can help us drive continued efforts for a safe space for our community to discover, create, and connect responsibly.”

One such pivotal partner is Senegal’s very own Aisha Dabo, a member of TikTok’s Sub-Saharan Africa Safety Advisory Council (SSA SAC). As a digital specialist with more than 20 years of experience, Dabo advocates for active digital citizenship as a means for building a secure online environment across the continent through the organisation she co-founded, AfricTivistes. Reflecting on her influence on the TikTok Safety Advisory Council and local expertise, Dabo said:

“I’ve seen firsthand how local knowledge can shape global policy in meaningful ways. This summit is an opportunity to highlight African-led solutions to digital challenges and ensure that our regional realities and perspectives are central to global safety discussions. It’s about building an open, inclusive and secure internet—one that truly reflects the diversity and resilience of our continent.”

West Africa in Numbers: Content Removals

In its latest Community Guidelines Enforcement Report (https://apo-opa.co/4r8GfHp), TikTok demonstrated the combined strength of its automated moderation technology and expert human teams, which work closely to swiftly detect and remove harmful content before users are impacted.

Since January 2024, TikTok has removed more than 34 million videos across Benin, Burkina Faso, Cape Verde, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Côte d’Ivoire, Liberia, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra Leone. This proportion of violative videos averages 0.6% of all content published across the region. In TikTok’s latest report, covering April to June 2025 (Q22025), removals alone totalled 8.3 million. TikTok’s investment in technology ensures proactive moderation, where 87% of all removals during this period were made through automated detection systems.

In March 2025, TikTok proactively identified and disrupted covert Influence operations (https://apo-opa.co/4ie94hw) with accounts targeting political discourse in West Africa and France. This network operated from Togo, consisting of 129 accounts. The individuals behind this network created inauthentic accounts in order to undermine France’s foreign policies in West Africa.

In Senegal specifically, the platform has removed over 2.5 million videos between Q1 2024 and Q2 2025, highlighting its dedicated local enforcement efforts. Over 16,000 TikTok LIVE sessions were interrupted in the same period.

Global Removal Rate for Second Quarter of 2025

In the second quarter of 2025, over 189 million videos were removed worldwide, representing just 0.7% of all content uploaded. 99.1% of these removals were detected proactively, 94.4% were taken down within 24 hours, and 163.9 million videos were automatically removed by AI-driven moderation systems. To help protect TikTok’s integrity, in this quarter, the platform has removed 76,991,660 fake accounts, along with the additional 25,904,708 accounts that were suspected to be under the age of 13.

By integrating advanced automated moderation technologies with the expertise of thousands of trust and safety professionals, TikTok enables faster and consistent removal of content that violates its Community Guidelines (https://apo-opa.co/4r9L2rT). This approach is vital in mitigating the damaging effects of misinformation, hate speech, and other violative content material on the platform.

TikTok LIVE : Strengthening Real-Time Safety

For the first time, we’re sharing data related to our actions to enforce our LIVE monetization guidelines. These guidelines help reward creators who stream safe, authentic, and high-quality content, while preventing streams that go against these guidelines. In the second quarter of 2025, we took action, including warnings and demonetization, on 2,321,813 LIVE sessions and 1,040,356 LIVE creators for violating our LIVE monetization guidelines. Warnings serve as an opportunity to educate creators when their content may breach LIVE monetisation policies (https://apo-opa.co/4rbze8u), allowing them to make necessary changes.

For more information on TikTok’s safety policies and initiatives, visit our Safety Centre (https://apo-opa.co/480Arbz).

– on behalf of TikTok.

Media Contact:
Keagile Makgoba
Keagile.m@tiktok.com

Media files

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Nzimande hails Prof Motaung’s legacy, calls for ethical and people-centred science

Source: Government of South Africa

In a heartfelt tribute, Minister of Science, Technology and Innovation, Professor Blade Nzimande, called on scientists to always put humanity at the heart of their work – a principle that defined the life and legacy of Professor Keolebogile Shirley Motaung.

“This means that our scientists and researchers must uphold the principle that scientific knowledge must be used responsibly and ethically,” he said on Wednesday. 

The Minister delivered a speech at the memorial service in Pretoria for Motaung, who passed away last week.

Motaung served as the Chair of the Female Academic Leaders Fellowship at the Financial Research and Entrepreneurship Foundation – Nelson Mandela University Research Chair in Entrepreneurship and Financial Inclusion, where she led transformative research that connected innovation, commercialisation, and entrepreneurship.

She was the founder and CEO of Global Health Biotech, which is best known for developing La-Africa Soother – a plant-based anti-inflammatory ointment made from indigenous medicinal plants. 

The ointment effectively relieves muscle and joint aches, offering athletes and women a natural alternative for anti-inflammatory relief.

“The first lesson we learn from Prof Motaung’s life is the need for our scientists and researchers to always remember the question: what problem does my knowledge seek to solve?”

He told mourners that one of the driving forces behind Motaung’s founding of Global Health Biotech was to address graduate unemployment, a mission she advanced by making her PhD students shareholders in the company.

“She did not just identify the problem or lament about it. She ventured to find a solution. Not the professional lamenters who are forever complaining and never provide any solutions.”

Even though she had risen to the highest levels possible and had earned a variety of national and international honours, the Minister said Motaung made time to mentor thousands of young, black, and female scientists and entrepreneurs. 

Nzimande also remembered Motaung for her commitment to placing indigenous knowledge at the centre of research and development.

“We also learn that research must be responsive to the lived reality of ordinary people. This means that the research that is produced by our public research institutions must be deliberate about addressing our immediate development challenges as a country.”

Nzimande took the time to urge all public research institutions to concern themselves with proactively finding sustainable solutions for such issues as poverty, inequality, unemployment, gender-based violence, energy security, the deleterious impact of climate change and the growing problem of cancer in South Africa. 

In addition, the Minister said Motaung’s life demonstrates that not only can black people and in particular black women, do science, but they are more than capable of breaking new ground in the various fields of science. 

“We are also paying tribute to someone who was driven by a deep commitment to change the lives of the young people of our country through education, science, and entrepreneurship.”

Nzimande believes that the best tribute to Motaung would empower marginalised young girls and boys to pursue their dreams of becoming scientists, academics, and entrepreneurs.

“On behalf of our President, His Excellency President Cyril Ramaphosa, I wish to convey our deepest condolences as government to the children and family of Prof Motaung and also express our country’s gratitude to her for her selfless service to our country and its people.” – SAnews.gov.za