Author: BBC News

  • Rhino deaths drop in South Africa

    Rhino deaths drop in South Africa

    Authorities in South Africa say the number of rhinos killed for their horns has decreased in the first six months of the year following efforts to tackle poaching.

    The environment ministry said 231 of the country’s rhinos were killed for their horns between January and June – that’s 28 fewer than in the same period last year.

    Joint efforts by South Africa’s law enforcement agencies, customs officials and private security have led to some convictions for poachers, says the environment ministry.

    But South Africa, Botswana and Namibia still struggle to stop well-armed poaching gangs from killing the endangered animals whose horns are still so prized in China and Vietnam.

  • ‘Euphoria’ star Angus Cloud dead at 25

    ‘Euphoria’ star Angus Cloud dead at 25

    Angus Cloud, who starred on HBO hit series Euphoria, has died aged 25.

    Cloud, who played drug dealer Fezco “Fez” O’Neill on the teen drama, died on Monday at his family home in Oakland, California, said a publicist.

    “It is with the heaviest heart that we had to say goodbye to an incredible human today,” said a statement from Cloud’s family.

    Cloud buried his father last week, according to family, and was in a “battle with mental health”.

    “The only comfort we have is knowing Angus is now reunited with his dad, who was his best friend,” the statement read.

    “We hope that his passing can be a reminder to others that they are not alone and should not fight this on their own in silence.”

    The cause of death has not been given.

    Two weeks ago, Cloud posted a photo of his father on Instagram and wrote: “miss u breh.”

    A source close to Cloud’s family told Entertainment Tonight that Cloud “had been battling severe suicidal thoughts” after he returned from Ireland where he had buried his father.

    Cloud was staying with family, ET reported, “as he tried to work through overcoming grief”.

    “We are incredibly saddened to learn of the passing of Angus Cloud. He was immensely talented and a beloved part of the HBO and Euphoria family,” HBO said in a statement.

    “We extend our deepest condolences to his friends and family during this difficult time.”

    Cloud had minor acting credits in two films, North Hollywood and The Line. He had also appeared in music videos for artists including Becky G, Karol G and Juice WRLD.

    But his career really took off after he won the part of Fez, a high school drug dealer in Euphoria.

    The role turned Cloud into a breakout star, according to the Hollywood Reporter, and his character was expanded in the second season.

    According to a 2019 interview with GQ, Cloud had no real aspirations to become a star, or even an actor.

    He used to work at a chicken and waffle joint, according to the magazine, and one day was unexpectedly stopped by an agent from a casting company.

    “I was confused and I didn’t want to give her my phone number,” Cloud told GQ. “I thought it was a scam.”

    After first airing in June 2019, Euphoria quickly became a hit and by 2022 was the most tweeted-about TV show of the decade in the US.

    The main character, played by Zendaya, is a 17-year-old who struggles with drug abuse, seen on screen taking the deadly opioid fentanyl and injecting morphine.

    In 2022, Cloud defended accusations during an interview with TMZ that the show glorified drug use.

    His Euphoria co-star, Javon “Wanna” Walton, known in the show as Cloud’s adoptive brother, Ashtray, wrote on Instagram about Cloud’s death: “Rest easy brother.”

    On X, formerly known as Twitter, California congresswoman Barbara Lee lamented the loss of “Oakland’s own”.

    “His immense talent touched the lives of countless people. His work & legacy will forever live on and make Oakland proud,” she posted.

    Actress Kerry Washington also posted on the platform: “You will be deeply missed. Rest in power.”

  • Madonna feels “lucky to be alive” after health scare

    Madonna feels “lucky to be alive” after health scare

    Madonna has thanked her family and friends for their support after she was hospitalised with a serious bacterial infection last month.

    The singer shared an update on social media saying she was lucky to be alive after her time in intensive care (ICU).

    “When the chips were down my children really showed up for me. It made all the difference,” she said.

    The 64-year-old had previously said she was “on the road to recovery” after spending several days in the ICU.

    She was due to begin a seven-month world tour in the coming weeks, but had to postpone it.

    “Love from family and friends is the best medicine. One month out of the hospital and I can reflect,” the pop star said on Instagram on Sunday.

    “As a mother you can really get caught up in the needs of your children and the seemingly endless giving. But when the chips were down my children really showed up for me. I saw a side to them I had never seen before.”

    Madonna went on to thank her friends for their “love and support” in the post, which features a photo of her hugging her son David and another posing beside her daughter Lourdes.

    She also shared an image of her holding a Polaroid photograph which she revealed was taken by Andy Warhol of Keith Haring wearing a jacket with Michael Jackson’s face painted on it.

    She described the three artists as a “perfect triangle of brilliance” who “touched so many lives including my own”.

    ‘Fortunate’

    The singer thanked her manager Guy Oseary for the present, adding: “I sobbed when I opened this gift because I realised how lucky I am to be alive.

    “And how fortunate I am to have known these people and so many others who are also gone.”

    The post concluded: “And thank you to all my angels who protected me and let me stay to finish doing my work!”

    In a previous statement earlier this month, Madonna said her plan was to reschedule her forthcoming North American concerts and begin her Celebration Tour in the UK in October.

    She had been due to start the greatest hits tour in Canada on 15 July. The European leg is scheduled to begin with four nights at London’s O2 Arena from 14 October.

    In announcing the tour back in January, she told fans: “I am excited to explore as many songs as possible in hopes to give my fans the show they have been waiting for.”

    It was due to be her 12th tour, marking 40 years of involvement in the music industry.

    American magazine Forbes lists her as the 45th richest self-made woman in the US with an estimated wealth of $580m (KSh. 82.2B) and says she has earned an estimated KSh. 170B from tours.

  • Netflix touts $900k AI jobs amid Hollywood strikes

    Netflix touts $900k AI jobs amid Hollywood strikes

    Netflix has triggered an angry response from striking Hollywood actors and writers after posting a job advert for an artificial intelligence (AI) expert.

    The new position would join its Machine Learning Platform team, which drives the Netflix algorithm helping viewers pick new programmes to watch.

    It pays up to $900,000 (£700,000) per year, fuelling further outrage.

    Hollywood unions are striking over concerns about how AI affects the entertainment industry and pay.

    The job listing, which was first reported by The Intercept on Tuesday, is one of several listed on the Netflix job page that calls for applicants with experience in machine learning (ML) and AI.

    It is unclear from the expansive job advert whether the role will advise on content – the TV programmes and films that Netflix chooses to invest in.

    Another open listing for a product manager on the Machine Learning Platform team says the future employee will “collect feedback and understand user needs” and ultimately helping with investment decisions.

    The description appears to suggest that the role will include using AI to assess funding needs for different programmes.

    This is a key concern of the union representing actors, Sag-Aftra, which has spoken of its fears that algorithms have too much power.

    Sag-Aftra’s Fran Drescher told Time magazine the singular success of any film or television programme is now much less important than when broadcast television was dominant.

    “Algorithms dictate how many episodes a season needs to be before you reach a plateau of new subscribers and how many seasons a series needs to be on,” she claimed.

    “That reduces the amount of episodes per season to between six and 10, and it reduces the amount of seasons to three or four. You can’t live on that.

    “We’re being systematically squeezed out of our livelihood by a business model that was foisted upon us, that has created a myriad of problems for everyone up and down the ladder.”

    The writers’ guild, WGA, has proposed a system that regulates the use of AI in the writing process and prevents it being used as source material.

    Netflix declined to comment about the job listings, but has previously said AI will not replace the creative process.

    “The best stories are original, insightful and often come from people’s own experiences,” Netflix has said.

    The news of the most recent AI-based job listing was condemned by some striking actors, who must earn $26,470 before being eligible for health insurance benefits.

    “So $900k/yr per soldier in their godless AI army when that amount of earnings could qualify thirty-five actors and their families for Sag-Aftra health insurance is just ghoulish,” actor Rob Delaney, told The Intercept.

    Javier Grillo-Marxuach, who is best known for the series Lost, accused Netflix of “pleading poverty while recruiting VERY (more than I’ve ever made in a year BY FAR) well-paid generals for your soulless army of silicon plagiarists”.

    Earlier this week, Netflix announced the launch of a new app – My Netflix – which the company calls “a one-stop shop tailored to you with easy shortcuts to help you choose what you want to watch”.

  • Mozambique bans fishing activities in three lakes

    Mozambique bans fishing activities in three lakes

    A fishing ban has been introduced at three lakes in Northern Mozambique after the discovery of an outbreak of a suspected fungal disease affecting fish.

    Fishing ban has been imposed at the lakes Chiuta, Chirua and Amaramba in Mozambique. The lakes are known to straddle the border with Malawi.

    The fish retrieved from these lakes were found to have red spots on their bodies. Which was identified as an indication of an outbreak of epizootic ulcerative syndrome, also known as red spotted disease.

    Some of the fish that had been sent to a laboratory in the capital, led to the disease being confirmed.

    The authorities in Mecanhelas district have sought to calm fears.

    “Although the subject is under investigation, we guarantee that the syndrome does not affect humans as long as the fish is boiled well,” said Armando Maulana, the district`s director of economic activities, .

    Ministry of fisheries further advised that the fish from endemic area to be cooked whether with or without red spots.

    According to the UN`s Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO), the disease has the potential to financially decimate those who rely on fishing for income.

    Communities around the lakes, which are fairly large, depend on fishing and the move is likely to affect many Mozambican and Malawian fishermen.

    The FAO stated that the infected fish should not be thrown back to open waters and should instead be disposed of properly by means of burying or burning.

  • Niger`s soldiers announce coup on national TV

    Niger`s soldiers announce coup on national TV

    Soldiers in Niger have announced a coup on national TV saying they had dissolved the constitution, suspended all institutions and closed the nation`s borders.

    Niger president Mohammed Bazoum, who was democratically elected in 2021, has been held by troops from the presidential guard since early Wednesday. Bazoum, is recognized as a key ally of French and other Western Nations in the fight against Islamic militancy in West Africa.

    Bazoum was promised Washington`s “unwavering support” in a call from US secretary of state Antonio Blinken. UN secretary General Antonio Guterres also stated that he had spoken to the president and offered the UN`s full support.

    Niger`s neighboring countries, Mali and Burkina Faso, have experienced coups triggered by jihadist uprisings in recent years. Both countries` new military leaders have fallen out with France, the former colonial ruler of Niger.

    In the TV announcement on Wednesday, Col Maj Amadou Abdromane, alongside nine other uniformed soldiers behind him said, “We, the defence and security forces have decided to put an end to the regime you know.”

    After the soldier`s TV announcement, Blinken called for the release of President Bazoum. He told a news conference in New Zealand that “what it clearly constitutes is an effort to seize power by force and to disrupt the constitution.”

    In neighbouring Mali, heavily armed Russian Wagner mercenaries are helping the military regime to fight jihadist insurgents.

    Niger`s unrest comes on top of existing western anxiety about Wagner operations and the Sahel region`s instability.

    The West African economic bloc ECOWAS says it “condemns in the strongest terms the attempt to seize power by force” in Niger.

    Niger is currently grappling with two Islamist insurgencies: one in the south-west, swept from Mali in 2015, and the second in south-east, involving jihadists based in north-eastern Nigeria. Militant groups allied to both al-Qaeda and Islamic states are active in the country.

    There have been four coups in Niger since independence from France in 1960, as well as numerous coups` attempts.

     

     

     

  • Fed raises interest rates to highest in 22 years

    Fed raises interest rates to highest in 22 years

    The US central bank has raised interest rates to the highest level in 22 years as it fights to stabilise prices in the world’s largest economy.

    The decision lifted the Federal Reserve’s influential benchmark rate to a range of 5.25% to 5.5%.

    It marked the eleventh increase since early 2022, when the Fed started raising borrowing costs to try to cool the economy and ease price inflation.

    The Fed offered few firm clues as to what it might do next.

    “We’re going to be going meeting by meeting,” bank chairman Jerome Powell said at a press conference following the announcement.

    “It is certainly possible that we would raise the funds rate again at the September meeting if the data warranted,” he said. “And I would also say it’s possible that we would choose to hold steady.”

    Wednesday’s decision came ahead of central bank meetings in Europe and Japan.

    In the UK, where inflation was 7.9%, the Bank of England is widely expected to raise its key rate at its next meeting on 3 August from the current 5%.

    In the US, some analysts said the Fed had done enough.

    Inflation in the US was 3% in June. That was down from a peak of more than 9% last year, when prices were rising at the fastest pace in four decades.

    “We think they’re at a point where the Fed funds rate is restrictive enough to slow the economy, slow activity and allow inflation to trend lower,” said Kathy Bostjancic, chief economist at insurance firm, Nationwide Mutual, adding that she did not expect to see further hikes this year.

    The Fed has already brought interest rates up from near zero less than 18 months ago, putting to an end an era of low-cost borrowing that started during the financial crisis.

    The moves have hit the public in the form of more expensive loans for homes, business expansions and other activity.

    In theory, that should reduce borrowing demand and encourage saving, eventually cooling the economy and making it harder for firms to raise prices.

    But the economy in the US has held up better than many expected so far – especially in the labour market, where jobs continue to be added at a robust pace and wages are rising.

    Mr Powell said he expected the job market would have to weaken further and growth slow more before the Fed could be confident its job was done.

    “It’s not that we’re aiming to raise unemployment but we have to be honest about the historical record,” he said.

    While acknowledging progress, he also noted that so-called core inflation – which does not include food and energy prices – remained more than double the Fed’s 2% inflation target.

    Andrew Patterson, senior economist at Vanguard, said the Fed was worried about declaring victory prematurely, mindful of mistakes made in the 1960s and 1970s, when bank leaders embraced signs that inflation was easing only to see the problem flare up again.

    “They had a positive inflation report this past month but … they’re going to want to see more of that going forward before they’re comfortable,” he said. “They’re not going to take anything off the table or pin themselves into a corner.”

    David Henry, investment manager at Quilter Cheviot, said the Bank of England and European Central Bank were “much further behind” than the US on controlling inflation, which could lead to a “bifurcation” or division in policy among developed economies.

    “They would love to have luxury that the Fed has in declaring the job nearly done, but instead talk is of rates of 6%, if not more,” he said.

    He added: “There is a chance the US begins talking about rate cuts before the BoE has had a chance to pause and assess the impact of its actions, and this would have a significant impact on stock and bond prices on both sides of the Atlantic.”

  • Sinéad O’Connor dies aged 56

    Sinéad O’Connor dies aged 56

    A documentary about the singer is set to be released on Saturday.

    Irish singer and activist Sinéad O’Connor has died at the age of 56.

    Her family announced the news “with great sadness”, saying “her family and friends are devastated”. The cause of death has not been made public.

    She was best known for her single “Nothing Compares 2 U”, released in 1990, which reached number one and brought her worldwide fame.

    Taoiseach (Irish PM) Leo Varadkar said her music “was loved around the world and her talent was unmatched”.

    Irish President Michael D Higgins praised O’Connor’s “authenticity” as well as her “beautiful, unique voice”.

    “What Ireland has lost at such a relatively young age is one of our greatest and most gifted composers, songwriters and performers of recent decades, one who had a unique talent and extraordinary connection with her audience, all of whom held such love and warmth for her,” he said.

    Belfast filmmaker Kathryn Ferguson, one of the last few people to speak to O’Connor before her death, said she was “devastated” by the news.

    Ferguson had been working on a documentary film about O’Connor, titled Nothing Compares, which is set to be released this Saturday.

    “Our film really, for me, it was a love letter to Sinéad. It was made over many, many years,” she told BBC Radio 4’s Front Row. “And made because of the impact she’d had on me as a young girl growing up in Ireland.

    “She is one of the most radical, incredible musicians that we’ve had. And we were very, very lucky to have had her.”

    Social media was also flooded with tributes to the singer after her death was announced on Wednesday evening.

    Singer Alison Moyet said O’Connor had an “astounding presence” and a voice that “cracked stone with force by increment”.

    “As beautiful as any girl around & never traded on that card. I loved that about her. Iconoclast.”

    Irish comedian Dara O’Briain said of her death: “That’s just very sad news. Poor thing. I hope she realised how much love there was for her.”

    Musician Tim Burgess of the Charlatans said: “Sinead was the true embodiment of a punk spirit. She did not compromise and that made her life more of a struggle. Hoping that she has found peace.”

    Irish author Marian Keyes described O’Connor’s death as “heartbreaking”.

    “How she suffered. Poor, poor Sinéad. Rest in peace, you amazing, brave, beautiful, unique wonder.”

    Read More.

  • Actor Kevin Spacey cleared of all charges of sexual assault in UK

    Actor Kevin Spacey cleared of all charges of sexual assault in UK

    Oscar-winning actor Kevin Spacey has been found not guilty of nine sexual offences at London’s Southwark Crown Court. The jury returned with their verdict on Wednesday evening.

    According to the BBC, the Hollywood star, who turns 64 today, cried in the dock as the verdicts were read out. 

    Spacey had been charged with sex offences that allegedly took place between 2004 and 2013, during which time Spacey served as artistic director at the Old Vic theatre in the British capital.

    He pled not guilty to all of the charges.

    Speaking afterwards, he said he was “enormously grateful” to the jury for having taken the time to examine all of the evidence and facts carefully before they reached their decision. 

    “I am humbled by the outcome today,” he added.

    During the trial, prosecutors had told the jury the star had left the four complainants feeling “small, diminished and worthless.”

    Spacey denied using his power as an A-lister to get people into bed, and described the allegations as a “stab in the back.”

    The complainants, now in their 30s and 40s, will remain anonymous for the rest of their lives under British law.

  • Mali PM denies US sanctions imposed over Wagner

    Mali PM denies US sanctions imposed over Wagner

    Malian Prime Minister Choguel Kokalla Maiga has denounced US sanctions on the Defence minister, air force chief of staff and his deputy terming the move as a distraction.

    “The sanctions against our valiant officers, Defence Minister Col Sadio Camara, Gen Alou Boi Diarra, Col Adama Bagayoko, have no objectives other than to distract the Malian people. Nothing will distract us from the work of rebuilding Mali,” Maiga said.

    The US Treasury imposed sanctions on the three for “facilitating” the expansion of Russian`s Wagner Group in Mali.

    Wagner troops have been accused of committing atrocities alongside the Malian army in their fight against jihadists, with the US claiming that civilian casualties had more than tripled since their deployment in late 2021.

    The prime minister of Mali is the only senior official in the military government to have commented on the sanctions.

    The measured Malian response so far contrasts with the rhetoric and accusations of plots to destabilize the ruling junta delivered by government spokesman Col Abdoulaye Maiga in previous diplomatic rows, notably with France and UN.