Wednesday, October 8, 2025
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African spelling bee championships conclude in Kampala

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Ethiopia’s David Busha came 2nd in Senior Category

The African Spelling Bee Championships 2023 (ASB23) recently came to a thrilling conclusion in Kampala, Uganda, showcasing the linguistic prowess and intellectual acumen of participants from across the continent. The event, which brought together 11 countries, has left an indelible mark as a celebration of linguistic excellence and cultural exchange.
Speaking on behalf of the host country, Aaron Kirunda, Director of Uganda’s Spelling Bee said: “It is always such a heart warming experience hosting the future of Africa. The African Spelling Bee brings together the brightest children on the continent and interacting with them gives me so much hope for this continent.”
In the Senior Category, the competition was fierce, with spellers demonstrating extraordinary command over their lexicons.
The final standings for the ASB23 Senior Category are as follows:
1st – Praises Esere Minabowa (Nigeria)
2nd – David Busha (Ethiopia)
3rd – Tashinga Chereni (Zimbabwe)
These exceptional spellers not only represented their nations with pride but also showcased the diversity and richness of the African linguistic landscape.
In the Junior Category, young wordsmiths captivated the audience with their impressive spelling abilities.
The Junior Category winners for ASB23 are:
Joint 1st – Lesedi Seemane (South Africa) & Agaba Austin Jordan (Uganda)
3rd – Claudia Jean Madhombiro (Zimbabwe)
The shared victory in the Junior Category emphasises the close competition and camaraderie that unfolded on the ASB23 stage, fostering connections among the next generation of African spellers.
The Team Category was equally thrilling, with national teams competing fiercely for top honours.
The Team Category results are as follows:
1st Place – Uganda
Joint 2nd Place – South Africa & Nigeria
The organising committee expresses its gratitude to the participants, sponsors, and the host city of Kampala for making ASB23 a resounding success. As the curtains close on this edition of the African Spelling Bee Championships, the organisers look forward to building on this momentum and continuing to inspire a new generation of wordsmiths across the continent.
The 7th edition of the African Spelling Bee will be hosted by Abuja, Nigeria in December 2024.

Ethiopia present for the BRICS+ Fashion Summit

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The world of fashion witnessed a remarkable gathering as the BRICS+ Fashion Summit brought together industry professionals from Europe, Asia, the Middle East, Latin America, Africa, South-Eastern Asia, and the CIS. Held from November 28 to December 2, the Summit in Moscow, became the point of convergence for fashion and diverse cultures, paving the way for a more inclusive and interconnected industry. Notable highlights of the Summit include:
The summit’s extensive Business Program featured over 40 sessions with more than 200 speakers from different parts of the world. They delved into crucial industry topics such as collaboration, entrepreneurship, and innovation. Over 60 delegations from different countries took part in the Summit and Ethiopia was one of them. Such esteemed speakers as Genet Kebede, CEO and Creative Director of Paradise Fashion participated in the session Art collaboration for fashion brands. Image strategy, attracting new audiences or searching for new meanings?
The B2B showroom was a professional venue for fostering new connections between buyers, designers, and industry experts. This expansive space hosted 130 brands and designers from Argentina, Russia, India, Egypt, Turkey, South Africa among others, attracting buyers from China, India, Mexico, Russia and other countries. Ethiopia was presented in the showroom by KUNJINA.
Fashion Shows
The true highlights of the summit were the Fashion Shows, where designers could showcase their collections to the international audience. The lineup of Fashion Shows was nothing short of impressive, boasting renowned names such as David Tlale from South Africa, SADAELS from Argentina, Arzu Kaprol from Turkey, 陳宇CHNNYU from China, Lucas Leão from Brazil, FDCI presents: riteshkumar, KHANIJO, Naushad Ali, and Shruti Sancheti from India. This diverse array of designers provided an unparalleled platform for cultural exchange and celebrated the rich tapestry of global fashion. Ethiopia was represented by KUNJINA.
Kunjina Tesfaye, who established her brand in Ethiopia in 2017, is now going global. Her collections are a reflection of her personal experiences and carry a powerful message ‘Get closer to yourself’. Under the brand name KUNJINA, Tesfaye believes that feminine silhouettes that accentuate body shapes go great with industrial-style suits. Kunjina Tesfaye is a virtuoso when it comes to cuts. She prefers asymmetry and architectonics, and she has a fondness for pastel shades. The new collection embraces suits with waist tightened by belts, open shoulder dresses, and neat elegant jumpsuits with different textures, but in sand-colored tones.
The BRICS+ Fashion Summit was attended by 205 guests from 62 countries, including Azerbaijan, Argentina, Armenia, Bangladesh, Bahrain, Belarus, Botswana, Brazil, Brunei, Burundi, Vietnam, Ghana, Guyana, Guatemala, Georgia, Egypt, Zimbabwe, India, Indonesia, Jordan, Iraq, Iran, Spain, Italy, Kazakhstan, Cameroon, Canada, Kenya, China, Colombia, Costa Rica, Côte d’Ivoire, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Malaysia, Mexico, Morocco, Namibia, Nigeria, Netherlands, UAE, Pakistan, Paraguay, Peru, Saudi Arabia, Senegal, Serbia, Tajikistan, Thailand, Tanzania, Tunisia, Turkey, Uganda, UK, Uzbekistan, Philippines, Sri Lanka, Ecuador, Ethiopia, South Africa and South Korea.

Urgent Call for a Solidarity Fund to Support Africa’s Sustainable Transitions

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It is time for Africa to turn a new development page and for the global community to support it

By: Ojijo Odhiambo & Odera Outa.
This year’s UN General Assembly was a moment to, hopefully, put Africa back on track to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by 2030.
Heads of State and Government in attendance spelt out their national commitments to SDGs transformation, including strategies for reducing poverty and inequality, as well as options necessary in decarbonising their energy systems and transforming their food systems-among other urgent imperatives.
The leaders were also expected to hammer a new global development financing deal, dubbed the SDGs stimulus, worth some $500 billion annually.
This year’s assembly, coming at the mid-way point of the implementation of the sustainable development agenda, was also meant to take stock of the progress made in implementing the SDGs amidst some of the most complex and pressing development challenges to face humankind.
The COVID 19 pandemic, the debilitating effects of climate change and the Russia-Ukraine war, have all negatively affected economic growth, increased vulnerability and pushed millions of people in Africa into even more perilous poverty.
The inescapable reality of these times is that unless there is a change of course, Africa will miss most of the SDG targets.
Africa’s debt crisis
The region continues to experience sluggish economic growth and rising debt.
According to the World Bank, growth in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) slowed steadily from 4.1% in 2021 to 3.6% in 2022 and is expected to slow down even further to 3.1% this year. This level of growth is insufficient to reduce extreme poverty or even boost shared prosperity as envisaged in the SDGs clarion call.
At the same time, over the past few decades, Africa’s debt has increased four times the rate of economic growth in dollar terms, reaching a staggering $1.8 trillion in 2022.
Sluggish growth, together with rising debt and development financing deficit are perhaps the biggest impediments to the achievement of the SDGs in Africa.
According to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation Development (OECD), to achieve the SDGs by 2030, Africa needs an additional $194 billion or 40 per cent of the proposed financial stimulus, per annum. This is the equivalent of 7% of the region’s gross domestic product, or 34 percent of the region’s 2021 total investments.
In as far as climate change is concerned, it is to be noted that Africa which contributes less than 8% of greenhouse gases emissions continues to bear a disproportionate share of the debilitating effects of climate change.
These are experienced in the form of extreme weather conditions such as cyclones, droughts and floods; desertification and natural resources degradation; destruction of basic national infrastructure and other impacts. The result is the growing poverty and inequality; social tensions; insecurity and, in extreme cases, political instability.
To date, the Paris Agreement, remains largely unfunded. More worryingly, the limited climate financing available is concentrated in the developed world on reduction and, or prevention of emissions, otherwise known as mitigation in climate change parlance.
This is opposed to the stark need to help African countries change their agricultural production systems, conserve forests and natural habitats and adopt climate smart technologies, otherwise known as adaptation.
Between 2019 and 2020, donors made an annual climate finance commitment, (not to be mistaken for disbursement), of $11.4 billion for adaptation measures in Africa against the annual financing needs of $52.7 billion, leading to a financing gap of some $41.3 billion per year.
Africa needs a Solidarity Fund
Africa is, evidently, at a sustainable developmental crossroads.
For the region to change its development trajectory and make meaningful progress towards the SDGs targets by 2030, an important consideration should be the establishment of a simplified, flexible and quick disbursing Solidarity Fund for sustainability transitions.
Through such a fund, the global community of nations, individuals, private sector institutions and philanthropies could stand in solidarity with the region by pooling resources for the singular aim of helping Africa to transition, expeditiously, to a sustainable development pathway.
Sustainability transitions in this context refers to an African context-specific, nationally led and resilient non-linear shift from one dynamic development equilibrium to another dynamic, and yet a more sustainable, one fuelled primarily by adequate financing.
In the lead up to this year’s General Assembly, with support from the United Nations Development Programme, many African countries were able to refine their national SDGs priorities and commitments using machine learning technology.
This was done through the application of the Integrated SDGs Insights tool. In the process, they have evolved context-specific, ambitious and transformative agenda with parsimonious set of priority targets bearing the most linkages and highest potential for impact across sectors and hence accelerating progress towards the SDGs.
These national priority targets or those derived from other national consultative processes for that matter are, naturally, strong candidates for the African Solidarity Fund for sustainability transitions.
The results of the re-prioritisation and refinement of national SDGs priorities using the Integrated SDGs Insights tool are as diverse as the African countries. They cover the entire width and breadth of the goals spread across the economic, social and environmental sectors.
In accessing the fund, each African country would have the leeway to apply its share of the fund to address the development priorities which have the greatest synergies and least trade-offs across sectors.
Indeed, there can be no simplistic prescriptions, but rather, a wide menu of nationally defined policy options for the application of the fund.
However, there must be strong governance structures and accountability mechanisms as well as a focus on results in the application of the fund.
It is conceivable that the necessary governance and accountability mechanisms, founded on and given priority by national technical and financial audit institutions could also be embedded in the quadrennial SDGs summit or even the annual High Level Political Forum.
The Solidarity Fund should, however, not be viewed as a replacement for the global financial stimulus discussed at the gathering of world leaders, but rather, as a complementary fast-track mechanism through which African countries can be supported to revert to the SDG trajectory by implementing their SDGs priorities.
Yet, another important aspect of the fund would be the opportunity to bridge the ever-present gap between policy promises, country-specific priorities and their implementation.
It is time for Africa to turn a new development page and walk a different development path. It is time for the global community to pull together, in solidarity with Africa.

Ojijo Odhiambo is the UNDP Economic Advisor for Zimbabwe, while Odera Outa is Professor of Interdisciplinary Studies at the Technical University of Kenya.

Letesenbet Gidey Won 2023 International Fair Play Award

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Ethiopia’s world 10,000m silver medallist Letesenbet Gidey has been named winner of the International Fair Play Award as part of the World Athletics Awards 2023.
Following nominations from fans, members of the International Fair Play Committee (CIFP) and World Athletics formed a jury to decide on a shortlist of fair play moments. Fans were then asked to vote via World Athletics’ social media platforms for the moment that they felt best exemplified fair play.
Gidey’s fair play moment occurred at the World Athletics Championships Budapest 23. After securing silver in the women’s 10,000m, Gidey went back to comfort Netherlands’ Sifan Hassan after Hassan’s dramatic fall on the home straight.
Gidey was presented with her award during a virtual meeting with Sunil Sabharwal, CIFP Secretary General and World Athletics Executive Board Member.
“I am really honoured and pleased to present you with this year’s special fair play trophy,” said Sabharwal. “Congratulations once again for your wonderful achievements this year, both on the track but also beyond that, helping your fellow athletes.”
“When Sifan fell, my heart was broken. I know the feeling of falling,” said Gidey. “When people are happy, I’m happy. I feel sad when they’re sad.
“I am happy to receive the Fair Play Award 2023. Thank you.”
The CIFP was established 60 years ago to promote the principles of fair play in sport: fair competition, respect, friendship, team spirit, equality and sport without doping. It honours those who respect the written and unwritten rules of sport, which include integrity, solidarity, tolerance, care, excellence and joy, and who set an example for others, on and off the field. The CIFP’s first collaboration with World Athletics dates back to the 2003 World Athletics Championships in Paris. Eleven awards have been handed out since then.