Source: Aswat Masriya
Egypt's National Council for Women will start a training program to enhance women's political participation in the country's upcoming parliamentary elections.

Source:  Ghana News Agency
A book that seeks to pave the way for fertile answers in stories of struggles, victories and convictions was on Thursday launched in Accra.

Source: The Guardian
PATRIARCHY, the practice of male authority and control, has always been blamed for the continuing denigration women suffer in African societies. At its best, patriarchy seeks to take away women’s voices and render them of little value than their male counterparts, with the attendant effect that women’s rights are usually denied them.

Source: Businessweek
Women have gained little ground in political leadership around the world, with men still in about 80 percent of key elected and appointed positions, according to the World Economic Forum’s annual Global Gender Gap Report.

Source: Open Society Initiative for Southern Africa
Over recent years, the Festival has provided an unprecedented opportunity for organisations and networks of young women to convene and share strategies and critical information about young women's lives across southern Africa - and to do so in a space that's safe.

Source: World Food Programme
School officials in South Sudan say a monthly take-home food ration from the World Food Programme (WFP) has helped to reduce the number of female students dropping out of school.

Source: Bikyamasr
Two top Muslim Brotherhood officials are being investigated by Egypt’s Attorney General Abdel-Meguid Mahmoud over their role in allegedly inciting President Mohamed Morsi supporters to attack female protesters around Tahrir Square last Friday.

Source: TrustLaw
African member states of the United Nations have submitted a draft resolution on ending female genital mutilation (FGM) to the U.N. General Assembly, in what campaigners have hailed as a landmark step to end a practice that has been inflicted on up to 140 million women and girls.

Source: farmlandgrab.org
Clarisse Kimbi barely ekes out a living from a tiny parcel of land in Kom village in the North West Region of Cameroon. Today, the mother of six finds it hard to put food on the table for herself and her children. But five years ago she, her husband and children were considered well-off.

Source: Farm Radio Weekly
Wearing her finest bead jewellery in her ears, on her arms and about her neck, Raheli Philipo Kilaye is excited to share what she has learned at adult school. With a big smile, she puts her right index finger to her thumb and begins to count in English: “One, two, three.” She continues by unfolding her fingers: “Four, five, six, seven …” until she reaches 20.

Source: The Niles
Mahasin Ali and her sister run an outdoor cafe in the Sudanese city of Omdurman in Khartoum state. It is a makeshift affair, a few plastic chairs circling Ali who sits on a low stool, preparing tea, coffee and pastries for her customers.

Source: The Bostwana Gazette
Gender protocols signed by African countries are said to be hardly ever implemented. Botswana is one of the countries that lag behind in respect of gender equality and in signing and implementing gender protocols.

Source: Deutsche Welle
A clause in Tunisia's draft constitution has sparked uproar and concerns that women's rights are under threat. Some Tunisian women are fighting back.

Source: IRIN
Two South African women may have helped unlock the key to a vaccine to rid the world of one its deadliest epidemics, according to new research released by South African HIV experts.

Source: South African Government News Agency
Kenya's Minister of Gender, Children and Social Development Naomi Shaban has praised South Africa's success in tackling HIV and bringing down its mother-to-child infection rate.

Source: IPS
In a major endorsement for investment in women – the bulk of food growers in the developing world – United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said food security could not be achieved without women, and that the world’s hungry also needed leaders to prioritise actions.

Source: Lesotho Times
“Is it true that the bravery of Asante is no more? I cannot believe it. It cannot be!  I must say this: if you, the men of Asante, will not go forward, then we will.

Source: The Daily Observer
The executive director of Action Aid International The Gambia (AAITG), has emphasised that early and forced marriage limits a girl's opportunity to go to school or benefit from alternatives or vocational education.

Source: Analyst Liberia via AllAfrica
It has been some time since elaborate welcome ceremonies were organized in honor of President Sirleaf from a foreign visit. Liberian presidents, including the incumbent, have a tradition of arriving from abroad to lavish welcome back home programs organized by partisans, supporters and even the Government as a show of support or victory over domestic detractors.

Source: Tanzania Daily News
THE government is committed to removing barriers to trade and intends to support women initiatives in the establishment, formalization and growth of their business.

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