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Northern Communities Face Retaliatory Surge Following U.S. Strikes on Terrorist Cells

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Reporting by BusinessDay indicates a sharp rise in attacks across northern Nigeria following recent United States-backed airstrikes targeting Islamic State-linked militants in Sokoto State. Between late December 2025 and the first days of 2026, at least 47 deaths and 35 abductions have been documented.

The violence has spread across Adamawa, Zamfara, and Kebbi states, with local leaders reporting nighttime raids on vulnerable villages. Despite the tactical success of the airstrikes, the immediate aftermath has seen bandit groups and Boko Haram remnants intensify their operations against civilian targets.

The Cable confirmed these developments, reporting that ‘attacks intensify across northern Nigeria after U.S. strikes’ as insurgents regroup. In response, the Defence Headquarters issued a warning to civilians, stating: ‘We do not expect civilians to pick up or keep such materials,’ referring to unexploded ordnance found at strike sites.

Echotitbits take: While international military support provides a technological edge, it often triggers ‘asymmetric’ retaliation. The Nigerian military must pivot from strike-based operations to ground-level community protection to prevent these ‘revenge’ cycles from displacing more thousands.

Source: Chosun — https://www.chosun.com/english/world-en/2025/12/27/PNB7UGLHP5AQVEOKNB6ZTUFITE/
Chosun January 3, 2026

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CBN Forecasts 4.49% GDP Growth for 2026 Amid Lower Inflation Targets

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According to The Nation, the Central Bank of Nigeria has projected an optimistic economic outlook for 2026, forecasting a 4.49% growth in Gross Domestic Product. The apex bank also anticipates that inflation will ease significantly, aiming for an average of 12.94% by the end of the year.

The projections are based on the expected stabilization of the foreign exchange market and an increase in domestic oil production. The CBN believes that the ‘painful but necessary’ reforms of the past two years are finally yielding a foundation for sustainable non-oil sector expansion.

This optimism is shared by the World Bank, which recently gave a ‘positive verdict on Nigeria’s economic growth trajectory,’ citing three years of unbroken growth. Furthermore, The Guardian reported that AI integration in the financial sector will ‘revolutionize risk pricing and personalized liquidity management,’ further supporting the CBN’s modernization goals.

Echotitbits take: Achieving sub-13% inflation from the highs of 2024–2025 is an ambitious target. Watch for the CBN to maintain high interest rates well into mid-2026 to ensure this disinflationary trend isn’t disrupted by election-cycle spending or supply shocks.

Source: The Guardian — https://guardian.ng/business-services/cbn-projects-4-49-growth-lower-inflation-in-2026-outlook/
The Guardian January 3, 2026

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Naira Opens 2026 With Strong Gains as Reform Confidence Grows

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Figures cited by Daily Post show that the Nigerian Naira began the 2026 trading year on a positive note, appreciating to N1,430.84 against the U.S. dollar in the official market. This represents a 0.34% gain compared to the closing rate of N1,435.75 recorded on December 31, 2025.

The currency’s performance is being linked to renewed investor confidence following the Central Bank of Nigeria’s (CBN) aggressive monetary tightening and structural reforms in the foreign exchange market. Market analysts suggest that the stability seen in the opening days of the year could signal a less volatile period for the local currency.

In its first trading assessment of the year, BusinessDay noted that the ‘Naira extends rally in first trading day of 2026,’ as supply liquidity showed signs of improvement. Meanwhile, The Nation reported that the apex bank is betting on ‘structural changes in oil, tax, and foreign exchange markets to sustain growth and disinflation’ throughout the fiscal year.

Echotitbits take: This early gain is a psychological victory for the CBN’s ‘orthodox’ monetary policy. If the bank can maintain this trajectory without depleting reserves too quickly, we may see a gradual convergence between the official and parallel market rates by the second quarter.

Source: Nigeria Housing Market — https://www.nigeriahousingmarket.com/news/naira-outlook-2026-analysts-project-stronger-fx-stability-as-fundamentals-improve
Nigeria Housing Market January 3, 2026

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Alexa News Network CEO urges empathy-driven storytelling and resilience in 2026

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Alexa News Network CEO urges empathy-driven storytelling and resilience in 2026

In a New Year message carried via Africa Newsroom, Alexa News Network founder Jokpeme Joseph Omode urged audiences to approach 2026 with resilience and empathy, while reaffirming commitments around inclusive, credible reporting.

The statement positions journalism as social glue—storytelling that informs, bridges divides, and maintains relevance “across borders,” particularly in a crowded digital news landscape.

It also doubles as a brand signal: credibility and consistency are competitive advantages when attention is fragmented and trust is contested.

Alexa.ng published the same message, including the line “embrace resilience” and “empathy” to bridge divides. Africa24TV also reproduced the statement and echoed the same appeal about empathy and shared prosperity, repeating “bridge divides” as a central theme.

Echotitbits take:
Messaging is easy—standards are hard. Watch whether Alexa backs this with verifiable beat expertise, corrections culture, and original reporting that earns citations from other credible outlets.

Source: Africa24 — January 2, 2026  —

Jokpeme Joseph Omode, Founder and Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Alexa News Network Limited, Ushers in 2026 with a Message of Resilience and Empathy

Africa24 2026-01-02

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AIPS says sport can rebuild culture and connection as the world enters 2026 amid instability

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AIPS says sport can rebuild culture and connection as the world enters 2026 amid instability

In a New Year message shared via Africa Newsroom, the International Sports Press Association (AIPS) argued that sport can help restore cultural meeting points and social bonds—especially for young people—if conflict trends reverse.

The commentary frames 2026 against a backdrop of geopolitical tension, while insisting sport’s cultural role can re-create shared spaces where communities reconnect beyond politics.

It also challenges sports media and institutions to treat sport as civic infrastructure—something that can support dialogue, identity and cohesion, not only entertainment.

A second publication of the message repeats the framing “Our year 2026” and the emphasis on sport’s cultural power. AIPS’ official release materials similarly underline the role of sport in sustaining “culture and connection” across societies.

Echotitbits take:
Sport is one of the last mass rituals that can unify across class and politics. Watch whether investment flows into grassroots programmes—schools, community leagues, youth tournaments—rather than only elite spectacles.

Source: Africa24 — January 2, 2026 — https://africa24tv.com/our-year-2026-between-war-drums-and-the-hope-of-a-sport-that-rediscovers-culture
Africa24 2026-01-02

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Merck Foundation and São Tomé First Lady align on healthcare capacity building and infertility stigma campaigns

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Merck Foundation and São Tomé First Lady align on healthcare capacity building and infertility stigma campaigns

In a release distributed via APO Group and published on Africa Newsroom, Merck Foundation said its CEO and the First Lady of São Tomé & Príncipe discussed joint programmes to strengthen healthcare capacity and tackle infertility stigma.

The conversation was framed around training, advocacy, and media engagement—using high-level convenings to keep reproductive health, maternal health, and systems strengthening on the policy radar.

The real-world impact depends on implementation: scholarships delivered, training cohorts completed, and hospitals or institutions integrating the newly built capacity.

Merck Foundation’s official announcement said the goal is to “strengthen healthcare” and expand training impact, while a republished report highlighted efforts to “break infertility stigma” through advocacy and community engagement.

Echotitbits take:
Stigma is often more damaging than the condition itself—because it delays care and drives misinformation. Watch for multilingual public campaigns, local clinician training, and integration into national reproductive health programming.

Source: Zawya — January 2, 2026 — https://www.zawya.com/en/press-release/africa-press-releases/merck-foundation-chief-executive-officer-ceo-and-sao-tome-principe-first-lady-discussed-their-joint-programs-xc03fgus

Zawya 2026-01-02

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Eritrea’s workers’ confederation reviews 2025 performance and sets a 2026 action plan

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Eritrea’s workers’ confederation reviews 2025 performance and sets a 2026 action plan

Figures shared via Shabait and republished through Africa Newsroom indicate Eritrea’s National Confederation of Eritrean Workers (NCEW) held an executive meeting to assess 2025 activities and outline a 2026 plan.

The update says discussions covered labour relations, external relations, administration and finance, human resources development, and programmes focused on women and youth workers.

Labour bodies can be early indicators of policy emphasis—especially around productivity, training, dispute resolution, and workforce mobilisation across sectors.

Shabait said the committee held “extensive discussions” on the plan and priority areas. A Ministry-linked post echoed the same focus areas, including “human resources development” and organisational strengthening.

Echotitbits take:
The key is whether targets become measurable. Watch for published benchmarks—training numbers, dispute-resolution metrics, sector programmes, and any link to national productivity or employment campaigns.

Source: Shabait — January 2, 2026 — https://shabait.com/amp/2026/01/02/ncew-meeting-on-action-plan-for-2026/
Shabait 2026-01-02

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Liberia advances domestication of amended International Health Regulations with multisector roadmap

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Liberia advances domestication of amended International Health Regulations with multisector roadmap

As reported in a WHO update carried via Africa Newsroom, Liberia convened a multisector workshop to drive domestication of the amended International Health Regulations (IHR), aligning national systems with updated global health-security rules.

The report says the process produced an implementation roadmap and included senior-level commitment, aimed at strengthening coordination, surveillance, and response readiness for cross-border threats.

Domestication is where global standards become national practice—through legislation, procedures, budgets, and accountability across ministries and agencies.

WHO AFRO noted the workshop ended with the signing of a “national declaration” supporting implementation. Liberia’s NPHIL also described the step as “significant” for enhancing health security and preparedness.

Echotitbits take:
The credibility test is capacity. Watch for budget lines, training cycles, labs and surveillance upgrades, and real simulation exercises—those are the signals that domestication becomes real readiness.

Source: afro.who — January 2, 2026 — https://www.afro.who.int/countries/liberia/news/liberia-advances-implementation-amended-international-health-regulations

World Health Organization (WHO) 2026-01-02

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South Africa joins global condolences after deadly fire in Crans-Montana, Switzerland

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South Africa joins global condolences after deadly fire in Crans-Montana, Switzerland

In a message distributed via Africa Newsroom, President Cyril Ramaphosa expressed condolences to Switzerland following a deadly fire in Crans-Montana during New Year’s period.

The statement frames the tragedy as a shared human loss, aligning South Africa with other international voices supporting grieving families and the Swiss public.

Such incidents often trigger wider scrutiny around venue compliance, crowd control, evacuation planning, and enforcement—issues that resonate far beyond Europe.

The Presidency’s statement includes the line “stand in solidarity” with Switzerland. The Financial Times, reporting on the investigation, cited officials pointing to sparklers and described it as a catastrophe with “40 deaths” and significant injuries.

Echotitbits take:
Large-scale fires are rarely “just accidents”—they expose enforcement gaps. Watch the investigation’s final findings and whether Switzerland tightens public-event safety standards in ways other countries adopt.

Source: Africa24tv — January 2, 2026 — https://africa24tv.com/south-africa-president-ramaphosa-expresses-condolences-following-tragic-fire-in-the-swiss-alps
Africa24tv 2026-01-02

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Ramaphosa appoints new leadership for South Africa’s Presidential Climate Commission (2026–2030)

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Ramaphosa appoints new leadership for South Africa’s Presidential Climate Commission (2026–2030)

According to a statement carried via Africa Newsroom, South Africa’s President Cyril Ramaphosa has appointed leadership and members of the Presidential Climate Commission (PCC) for the 2026–2030 term.

The PCC sits at the centre of high-stakes policy trade-offs—how to cut emissions while protecting jobs, ensuring energy security, and maintaining industrial competitiveness.

Leadership choices here often shape which transition priorities move fastest: just-transition financing, sector pathways, and the pace of regulatory implementation.

The Presidency’s official release confirms the appointment set and is dated “Friday, 2 January 2026.” SABC News also reported the development, stating Ramaphosa “has appointed” a new slate of climate commissioners.

Echotitbits take:
South Africa’s climate governance signals often ripple across Africa’s energy debates. Watch the first 90 days: priority workstreams, how labour and industry respond, and whether financing commitments match the ambition of the policy language.

Source: The Presidency — January 2, 2026 — https://www.thepresidency.gov.za/president-ramaphosa-appoints-new-leadership-presidential-climate-commission
The Presidency 2026-01-02

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