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Development And Democracy Debate Ahead Of Ethiopia Vote

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Addis Ababa, Ethiopia - If Ethiopians ever possessed a strong desire to express their political views through the ballot, that sentiment seems to have dwindled in the run-up to national elections on May 24.

One 28-year-old student, who requested anonymity fearing reprisals, shrugged at the thought of the upcoming vote.

"To say we have elections, there have to be real alternatives," he said. "This election is just so we can tell Western governments we are a democratic country," the finance and accounting master's degree student told Al Jazeera at Addis Ababa University's Siddist Kilo campus.

Such views are not uncommon among the electorate and opposition members in the capital, many of whom have dismissed the upcoming vote as a formality.

The results of the 2010 election left the opposition with a single seat in the 547-seat parliament, and afterwards the EU said Ethiopia's electoral process failed to create "a level playing field for political parties".

It wasn't always this way.

In 2005, the then high-school student took part in political rallies in support of the Oromo National Congress Party running under one of the main opposition coalitions, the United Ethiopian Democratic Front.

Back then, he said, the opposition was strong and united, and people thought supporting it would bear fruit.

In the election that year - preceded by a relatively open political climate - the opposition surprised the ruling Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) by taking 31 percent of parliamentary seats.

However, the aftermath of the vote was marked by mass arrests of student protesters and opposition leaders.

The student told Al Jazeera he was detained for months, a fate he shared with thousands of students who took to the streets.

The country's controversial 2009 anti-terrorism proclamation has been criticised for its broad application to journalists and opposition members in the run-up to this year's vote, including six "Zone9"bloggers currently on trial for terrorism-related charges.

Registration complaints

According to Ethiopia's National Electoral Board, 47 parties and 5,819 candidates are contesting the ballot for the national parliament and the regional councils.

The ruling party has fielded 501 candidates for the 547-seat parliament, followed by the Ethiopia Federal Democratic Union Form (MEDREK) and the Blue Party with 270 and 139 candidates, respectively.

Opposition members complain that navigating the political landscape ahead of the election has proven difficult.

"We are more consolidated and better positioned compared to previous elections, but the space is more closed," Professor Beyene Petros, chair of the centre-left MEDREK, told Al Jazeera.

Both MEDREK and the Blue Party have also cited difficulties registering candidates.

The Blue Party's chairman said more than half of the party's 380 registered candidates were removed from the party list in February on administrative grounds.

"This is politically motivated to hinder Blue Party activities. The electoral board is not independent," Yilkal Getent told Al Jazeera.

The cancellation of candidates, Getent said, has thwarted the party's ability to mobilise voters through ongoing political debates aired on state media, as time allocations are determined based on the number of candidates.

The Blue Party considers itself centre-right and wants to appeal to the country's young electorate, but government officials dismiss it as a far-right movement.

The government also accused the Blue Party of inciting violence last month at a government-organised rally in Addis Ababa following the killing of Ethiopian migrants in Libya by ISIL - allegations the party's leaders dismissed.

'Dilute the vote'

Despite the large number of parties registered, the opposition alleges many are allied with the ruling party.

"No more than two to three parties are real opposition parties. The others don't run to win, their role is to dilute the vote for the opposition," Merera Gudina, associate professor of political science at Addis Ababa University and a leading opposition figure, told Al Jazeera.

Some also criticised the voter registration process that ended in February, allegedly covering more than 80 percent of the eligible electorate.

Selam Gebrehiwot, a 19-year-old philosophy student, said the government is pressuring voters by tying registration to government services.

"The officials came to my house to give me the registration card although I didn't ask for it. I was scared, so I took the card."

The deputy chairman of the National Election Board, Addisu Gebreigzabhier, denied such allegations.

"We are just doing civic education," Gebreigzabhier said. "The high voter registration is a result of the electorate's desire to exercise their democratic rights."

The pre-election process, he added, has been professionally run according to the country's electoral laws and has been "to the satisfaction of all parties".

Development first, democracy later

Yohannis Getachew, a 32-year-old taxi driver in Addis Ababa, has been following the ongoing political debates on the radio. He said the opposition has failed to present a convincing alternative.

"At least the government is building roads and railways. I think that's good. I don't know what the opposition would do," said Getachew.

The ruling party's growth and transformation plan has resulted in double-digit economic growth over the past five years.

Government officials often cite EPRDF's economic track record as its main source of voter support.

"It's very difficult for any party to come up with an idea that can match an 11 percent growth rate," said Ganenu Asefa, a political adviser at the Government Office for Communication Affairs.

Opposition parties, however, say that growth has benefited only a small elite aligned with the ruling party.

"The so-called growth agenda has been impressing the foreigners, not the citizens," Professor Gudina, whose Oromo Federalist Congress party runs under MEDREK's ticket, told Al Jazeera.

"Development without democracy is very difficult to sustain," he added.

The government Growth and Transformation Plan (GTP) - characterised by state intervention in the economy as well as massive public investments in infrastructure - aims to turn Ethiopia into a middle-income country by 2025.

International institutions have largely praised the EPRDF's growth agenda.

"The targets they set in the GTP were very ambitious, and even if they achieve 75 percent of those targets, it will be a tremendous achievement for a country coming from such a low base," said the World Bank's country director for Ethiopia, Guang Z Chen.

Chen said in order to sustain strong growth going forward, the government will need to make policy adjustments so as to stimulate the industrial sector, which currently contributes only 12 percent to the GDP.

With urbanisation advancing at twice the rate of overall population growth, job creation for Ethiopia's idle urban youth is another priority. Analysts say although the government has recognised the need for structural reform, corruption and insufficient technical capacity could hamper its ability to manage the process.

By Simona Foltyn, follow him on Twitter: @simonafoltyn

MI Finally Finds A Wife At Abakaliki #StarMusicTrek

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Fresh from telling his fans on twitter to trek from Lagos to Abakaliki to watch him perform, rap star MI Abaga has hit the headlines again after finding a new wife for himself while performing at Abakaliki Star Music Trek which held at Abakaliki Township Stadium on Saturday, May 9, 2015.

In the course of his performance, MI told the crowd to allow him bring a girl onstage who has been staring at him for a long time. The excited crowd replied, "yes" to his request. He brought the lady up on stage and the crowd couldn't help but scream at the top of their voices as MI sang a love song to the lady, kissed her hand, hugged her and finally declare her as his new wife.

See more photos and watch the video below:




Tarek Osman On The Cost Of Migrant Smuggling

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The lives of thousands of migrants are at risk as unprecedented numbers try to make the sea crossing from North Africa to Europe.

Thousands are choosing to make the dangerous journey across the Mediterranean, fleeing from conflict, persecution and poverty at home. But they are often paying a high price.

It is a business as well as a human tragedy. It is estimated that the human trafficking industry as a whole produces almost $26bn a year, and smuggling is part of that.

So what is the cost of migrant smuggling? And who benefits? What is the European Union doing to address the migrant crisis?

Tarek Osman, from the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, joins Counting the Cost to discuss the business of migrant smuggling.

Click here to watch the video.

By Al Jazeera

South Africa Opposition Party Elects First Black Leader

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South Africa's main opposition party, the Democratic Alliance, has elected Mmusi Maimane as its new leader to succeed Helen Zille.

Maimane, 34, becomes the first black leader of the party.

The part-time pastor is expected to the challenge the African Nation Congress (ANC) which has governed the country since the end of apartheid in 1994.

Zille, a white woman, announced last month she was leaving after leading the party for the last eight years.

South Africa remains deeply divided racially, with most blacks preferring to vote for the ANC.

"Black South African people are scared of being led by a white person. But I don't think it will actually make a difference." Zintle Mabongo, a resident of Port Elizabeth where party delegates elected the new leader, told Al Jazeera.

By Al Jazeera

Rivers APC Lambasts Deputy Gov. Ikuru, Declares Him A Judas

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• Exonerates Gov. Amaechi

The Rivers State Chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC) has branded Deputy Governor Tele Ikuru the modern Judas who is willing to sell his master for material gain. The party in a statement issued Sunday afternoon in Port Harcourt by the State Chairman, Dr. Davies Ibiamu Ikanya, lambasted Engr. Tele Ikuru for his unprovoked attack on Governor Chibuike Amaechi, a man who picked him from the gutter and made him whom he has become politically.

“We read with shock the description of Governor Amaechi as ‘irresponsible’ by Engr. Tele Ikuru during his ill-fated press conference in Port Harcourt few days ago, which he addressed in his new capacity as the Chairman of the Transition Committee set up by Chief Nyesome Wike, the INEC-declared Governor of Rivers State. It is sad that after serving as Amaechi’s Deputy for over seven years, Ikuru, who several times in the past described Gov. Amaechi as the Hero of Rivers Politics and the best political exponent from the State, is suddenly singing a different tune. This is the height of ingratitude and paints Ikuru in his true colours as a Judas who is ever ready to sell his master for mundane gain,” Rivers APC said.

The party described Ikuru’s attack on Amaechi as unwarranted, saying: “Amaechi’s love for Ikuru is legendary. He chose him as his Deputy despite Ikuru having teamed up with Sir Celestine Omehia and others to frustrate Amaechi’s governorship ambition during the ill-fated PDP Primaries of 2007. With God’s intervention the Supreme Court in its wisdom revalidated Amaechi’s mandate as the authentic PDP guber candidate, thus making him the Governor.

“In 2011, against the advice of many well-meaning Rivers people, Amaechi went ahead to again select Ikuru as his running mate as he successfully sought re-election. It is also instructive that Governor Amaechi has refrained from either speaking ill of Engr. Ikuru or engineering his removal as Deputy Governor despite his defection from APC to the opposition PDP shortly before the 2015 elections. For Ikuru to now have the effrontery to describe his benefactor, a fellow who loves him with all his heart and who on various occasions left the running of Rivers State in his care, as a disgraceful leader does not only show him as an ingrate of the highest order but also indicates that Engr. Ikuru may need to subject himself to psychiatric tests.”

Rivers APC said while it is understandable for Ikuru to be tempted to engage in excesses in view of Wike’s promise to appoint him as the Secretary to State Government (SSG), he should tread with caution, especially as the declaration of Wike as Governor would soon be reversed by the Election Petition Tribunal.

The party congratulated the gubernatorial candidates of KOWA party, Mr. Kemka Elenwo; All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA), Mr. Charles Harry; Social Democratic Party (SDP), Mr. Minaibim Harry; and Labour Party (LP), Prince Tonye Princewill, for joining APC’s governorship candidate, Dr. Dakuku Peterside, to challenge Wike’s purported election at the Election Petition Tribunal.

“With the evidences adduced by all these great Rivers State leaders, we are confident that bloodthirsty desperados who believe that they can seize the governorship seat by hook or crook will soon be put to shame and showed the exit door by the Tribunal,” Rivers APC stated.

South Sudan's Forgotten Crisis | Video

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The civil war in South Sudan has already killed tens of thousands of people and displaced more than a million. Now, another 100,000 people have been forced to leave their homes as fighting between rebels and government forces resumes.

Aid agencies have been forced to evacuate their international staff.

The warring factions have so far failed to reach a peace deal to end the war which started in late 2013.

So what's next? And is the world’s newest country being forgotten?

Presenter: Richelle Carey

Guests

Ateny Wek Ateny, spokesperson for South Sudan’s presidency.

Jens Pedersen, humanitarian adviser to Doctors Without Borders.

Mike Lewis, expert on weapons in South Sudan and a former member of the UN panel of experts on Sudan.

Click here to watch the Inside Story.

By Al Jazeera

Chidi Mokeme Buys His Wife A N20 Million Range Rover On Mothers' Day

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Veteran Nollywood actor and businessman, Chidi Mokeme has spent big to acquire for his wife, Jean Olumba Mokeme, a 2014 Range Rover Super Charged SUV for her birthday and Mothers' Day, May 10, 2015.

The car is valued at $102,000 (N20, 303,100) and was presented to the actor's wife by himself before taking to his Instagram account to shower praises and accolades on her.

In his words, "You, My Love, are two divine gifts in one. The gift that I want and the gift that I’m supposed to be with. A true gift from above. How Blessed can one man be? Today I honor you for all that you have given, all that you have done, all that you are. On this Special day, I hope this token on wheels will remind you just how SuperCharged a wife and mum you are! #PushPresent #RangeRover #SuperCharged #HappyMothersDay #Gift #SuperChargedWife #SuperChargedWife #TravelInStyle #LoveYouForever #TheJ"

In another post with a picture of the automobile, he wrote, "You may be treated like the maid, You may be treated like the gardener, You may be treated like the Day Care, You may be treated like the Chauffeur, You may be treated like many things, But One Thing is for sure, YOU WILL ALWAYS BE LOVED! All that I have, All that I am, All that I hope to be, will be incomplete without YOU! So this is for all the times that I forgot to say THANK YOU! You and our prince deserve to ride in Style! #PushPresent #SuperCharged #Wife #Mum #Boo #OtherHalf #RideOrDie #LoveYouForeverAndADay."

The couple, who got married in 2012, welcomed a baby boy recently and the actor is still quite excited about the new addition to his family.

Jonathan: I Hope Patience Will Not Divorce Me

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President Goodluck Jonathan has expressed fear and uncertainty as to what becomes of his marriage to Dame Patience due to his acceptance of defeat at the just concluded presidential poll.

Vanguard reports that the president said this on Sunday, while ruminating aloud on the next phase of his life during a thanksgiving and farewell service in his honour at the Cathedral Church of the Advent Life-Camp, Gwarinpa, Abuja.

The president who will be handing over to the president elect, General Muhammadu Buhari, come May 29 used as an example, the former South African Apartheid leader, F.W de Klerk whose wife divorced him for ending minority rule in South Africa.

He said: “I believe there are reasons for everything. Some hard decisions have their own cost. That I have ran the government this way that stabilized certain things, the electoral process and other things that brought stability into this country. They were very costly decisions which I must be ready to pay for.

“Some people come to me and say this or that person, is he not your friend? Is it not your government that this person benefited from? But this is what the person is saying. But I used to say, worse statements will come. If you take certain decisions, you should know that those close to you will even abandon you at some point. And I tell them that more of my so-called friends will disappear. When F.W de Klerk took the decision to abolish minority rule in RSA, even his wife divorced him. I hope my wife will not divorce me. But that is the only decision that has made RSA to still remain a global player. If we still had minority rule there, by this time, nobody will be talking about RSA.

“If you take certain decisions, it might be good for the generality of the people but it might affect people differently. So for ministers and aides who served with me, I sympathize with them, they will be persecuted. And they must be ready for that persecution” he said.

President Jonathan however made it known that although some of his ministers did not like the fact that he conceded defeat, he is however grateful that “the ordinary people appreciate what we did.” He further thanked God Almighty and Nigerians  as a whole for giving him the opportunity to serve them at various levels.

“Very few of those in my age brackets have been that lucky. All through my education were on government scholarships. I have not suffered lack, not because I’m hard-working but by God’s grace.

“When I look at the whole picture of my life up to when I became the president of this country. I say that if soldiers and police officers that have not received 0.5 per cent of the benefits that I have received from the state can lay their lives for this country, I should do anything in the interest of Nigeria including paying the supreme price.

“As long as live, I will continue to do my best for the state because the state has helped me as a person. “I have to thank Nigerians especially, my state for giving me the opportunity to serve as deputy governor, and the whole country gave me the opportunity to serve as Vice President and then President, first was to complete the tenure of the late president and later serve as president from which I am exiting now as a very happy and fulfilled man”.

Actress Angela Okorie Crowned The Queen, Defeats Mercy Johnson, Omotola & Genevieve Nnaji

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Wow she's so cute. The picture was taken on her way to the airport recently. Can anyone see how beautiful this wonderful actress is?

Somaliland: Risking Torture For A Better Life Abroad

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Hargeisa, Somaliland - Outside his two bedroom house made of tin in the heart of Hargeisa, capital of the breakaway Somaliland region, Kosar Dhool cuts an exhausted figure burdened with events far heavier than his slim frame can bear.

The father of five has been receiving phone calls from his son, Hamza, who has been captured and held for ransom by human smugglers in an unknown location in Libya.

"He called to say they are going to take out his kidneys and sell them for money if I don't pay the $2,100 ransom," Dhool told Al Jazeera, sitting on a plastic chair under a tree that barely provided shade from the boiling midday sun.

Hamza, 18, is a bright high school student with much promise ahead of him. He is well-liked in his neighbourhood and everyone here is in a state of shock at his capture.

For the past two years, Dhool had been working extra shifts to save up enough money to send Hamza to university in the hope he would then be able to help the family support his younger siblings.

"He was my best hope, very intelligent," Dhool said, rubbing sweat from his receding greying hairline, as four of his other children sat around him.

"I still don't know what got to him to risk his life."

Departure of a beloved son

Two months ago, Dhool paid $4,000 to human traffickers in Sudan, who had also held Hamza for ransom. He received calls and was forced to listen to the cries of his son being tortured every morning until he paid up.

"I have no words to describe how I felt. Only a parent can imagine how listening to your son getting tortured feels."

Dhool, who works as a security guard, asked Hamza to return home. But Hamza had other plans and his father's pleas fell on deaf ears. Hamza continued on to Libya hoping this time luck would be on his side.

He was planning to cross the Mediterranean Sea to reach Europe on one of the overcrowded smuggling boats, where rough seas have claimed the lives of thousands of African migrants in recent years.

Hamza never made it to the vessel, however. For the second time he fell into the hands of kidnappers, and the painful ordeal of being held captive and tortured was repeated.

Receiving ransom calls and listening to the cries of his son are the norm every morning, Dhool said.

Risking life to escape poverty

Hamza is not the only one to try his luck attempting to reach Europe's shores. Dozens are missing from his neighbourhood in Hargeisa.

The risk of kidnapping and torture doesn't sway young people from attempting to cross the harsh Sahara desert and inhospitable Mediterranean Sea.

 Almost everyone in this city knows someone or has heard of someone who attempted the arduous journey.

Many say there is no choice. Unemployment is sky-high among young people who make up more than 70 percent of the population in Somalia.

Of those, 67 percent under the age of 29 are currently unemployed, according to the UN, one of the highest jobless rates in the world.

Eid Mohamed Diriye has tried to go abroad twice and is in the process of trying again.

As most youth are penniless, smugglers don't ask for any money until they reach the Sahara desert.

In the desert, far away from the authorities, the smugglers turn the migrants into a commodity that changes hands many times between smugglers and kidnappers, who hold them captive and release them only after ransoms in thousands of dollars are paid.

In late 2007, Diriye - who looks younger than his 23 years - left Somaliland and headed for Saudi Arabia. He was arrested, jailed for more than six months, and deported back.

A month ago he was caught in Ethiopia attempting to reach Italy through the Mediterranean Sea, and was recently deported.

Now, he sits waiting for a call signalling the start of his next journey. "I have nothing here. I have tried many times to get a job. I don't know where my next meal will come from," Diriye told Al Jazeera.

"I know the dangers, but there is nothing for me here. It is better I try my chance somewhere else."

Route to torture and death

With Yemen in turmoil and too dangerous, and thousands fleeing to Somalia, the only direction left to travel to the Mediterranean is through the Sahara desert, though thousands perish along the route.

Those who know the path well say no human being should ever consider it.

Abdirahman Mohamed Nuur once owned a small kiosk in Hargeisa. He was not among the well-off in the city but had enough to live on. Seeking to earn more, he sold the kiosk to finance a trip abroad.

He nearly died trying to reach a more prosperous life on more than one occasion, he said. Twice he fell into the hands of ruthless smugglers who tortured him.

"They are butchers who trade in destroying human souls. They are not human beings. They are worse than anything that walks on this Earth," Nuur told Al Jazeera, recalling a lucky escape from his captors who tried to shoot him.

"My mum paid a $7,000 ransom. They held me in Libya for a month-and-half," Nuur recalled. "Every morning I prayed for death ... to end my suffering."

Many of his companions were not so lucky. Women were raped and left on the streets when they became pregnant.

Others were killed in cold blood in front of other migrants as a message.

"Some were shot dead by smugglers so they could prove they were serious and would kill anyone whose family did not pay up. Others were killed by militia men who thought they were mercenaries who fought in the Libya war for Gaddafi," Nuur said.

"I buried four with my own hands."

In Somaliland, billboards warning about the dangers of migration can be seen in all border towns.

Now back in his home country, Nuur, 27, doesn't need such reminders. The three years he spent in Libya were the worst in his life, he said.

He is trying to restart his life and put behind the nightmare of the failed attempt to get to Italy behind him.

"I just got married. My wife is pregnant and there is no better place than home," Nuur said.

By Hamza Mohamed, follow him on Twitter: @Hamza_Africa

Belgium Suspends Financial Aid For Burundi Elections

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Belgium said it has suspended aid for elections in Burundi following violent clashes between security forces and protesters against President Pierre Nkurunziza's bid for a third term.

Belgium, the biggest bilateral backer of Burundi's voting process, has also halted support for a police mission in the country, international development minister Alexander De Croo said in a statement on Monday.

"De Croo believes that in the current circumstances the payment of the remaining tranche of two million euros [$2.2m] must be suspended," with two million euros of an overall budget of four million having already been paid out, the statement said.

It cited the fact that the EU's electoral mission in Burundi had said last week that "conditions for free elections have not been met at the moment".

In addition, Belgium said its involvement in a police cooperation mission with Burundi, which also involves the Netherlands, "must be temporarily suspended".

At least 19 people have died in Burundi since Nkurunziza announced his intention to run for a third term in elections due next month, sparking weeks of angry demonstrations.

More than 50,000 Burundians have fled to neighbouring countries fearing violence, according to the UN refugee agency.

By Al Jazeera

Creating The Kingdom Of North Sudan

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On June 16, 2014 - the seventh birthday of his only daughter - Jeremiah Heaton, a farmer in the US state of Virginia, planted a blue flag bearing a golden crown and four stars into the desert sands of northeast Africa.

The Kingdom of North Sudan had been established, he soon declared on Facebook, and he was its monarch.

Earlier that year, Heaton had told his daughter Emily she could become a princess and, not wanting to disappoint her, he began researching the plausibility of his promise.

He soon stumbled across Bir Tawil - 2,060 square kilometres of supposedly unclaimed land on the border between Egypt and Sudan. It wasn't long before he was on a plane to Cairo, flag in tow.

Heaton had not expected many people to notice his declaration of independence. But his exploits went viral.

Reaction ranged from deadpan - "man plants flag on unclaimed African land so daughter can be its princess", headlined TIME's website - to playful: "I guess you could call this a game of thrones,"crowed CNN's Don Lemon.

Few people, however, appeared to take the claim too seriously. Yet nearly a year on, Heaton - together with an assembled team - is doggedly pursuing his dream.

He has applied to the United Nations for observer entity status and appointed ambassadors in Europe in the hope of gaining recognition there. His kingdom recognised Liberland, another recently self-declared micronation between Croatia and Serbia.

Heaton has reportedly agreed to a deal for Walt Disney Studios and Morgan Spurlock, who produced the show Supersize Me, to make a movie titled The Princess of North Sudan.

First crowd-funded nation

Meanwhile, he has formulated wildly ambitious plans for the kingdom: the creation of a state-of-the-art agricultural research centre (ARC) - which he characterises as a modern-day Noah's Ark - to solve world hunger.

He is compiling a database of more than 1,000 scientists he wants to house there eventually to advance water conservation and agricultural science methods.

On May 12, 2015, Heaton will launch the next stage in his endeavours intended to accelerate his serious intent - an online fundraising campaign aiming to net as much as $45m. He estimates the project will ultimately take at least $2bn to get off the ground.

"The Kingdom of North Sudan will be the world's first crowd-funded nation," Heaton told Al Jazeera recently.

"Every dollar that will be made from this campaign will directly benefit the improvements of how we grow food here on Earth."

"People can take great pride in knowing that they're part of funding the world's newest nation," he added. "And our goals for that nation are to do things differently."

Heaton is offering a range of incentives for donations: from honorary titles of nobility ($25) and your face on any eventual national currency ($50,000), to naming rights for any future international airport ($1.5m) and capital city ($1.75m).

Other inducements range from the banal - a city street named after you ($1,000) - to the bizarre: "tormenting" Heaton to 48 hours of continuous Justin Bieber music in a public forum in New York City later this year ($2,500).

Heaton said he hopes these early contributions will prove the credibility of the project and attract bigger donors.

"We could've sold thousands and thousands of honorary titles of nobility and simply pocketed the money," Heaton said. "[But] we're interested in … improving the world that we live in."

Colonial legacy

Bir Tawil - which means "deep well" in Arabic - is a slice of land just south of the border between Egypt and Sudan that runs primarily in a straight line along the 22nd parallel. Its fate appears ensnared in that of the nearby Hala'ib Triangle, a larger, more strategic territory by the Red Sea contested by the two countries.

In 1899, British rulers produced a map that gave Bir Tawil to then Anglo-Egyptian Sudan and the Hala'ib Triangle to Egypt. But in 1902, it produced another map with the opposite designations.

Historical maps matter in the Middle East, explained Noam Leshem, a lecturer in political geography at Durham University.

If Heaton succeeds in his extravagant plans, it will be thanks to this colonial "cartographic flip-flop", he said.

Egypt recognises the 1899 map, which gives it the more prised Hala'ib Triangle. Sudan uses the later map giving it the territory. Neither, therefore, appears to want Bir Tawil.

"But that doesn't mean it's completely without claim," said Leshem, who noted tribes also frequent the area. "Its sovereign status is ambiguous but to argue it's unwanted, that's a big difference."

Leshem said he plans to visit Bir Tawil in September as part of a research project, and will be seeking permission from Egyptian authorities - not Jeremiah Heaton. Ironically, Heaton confirmed he himself sought permission from Cairo to make the journey to declare his new kingdom.

Other experts on the region also refute the notion the territory is unclaimed and are sceptical of Heaton's fledgling project.

"My initial suspicion is that it was a scam or a joke - a kingdom?" said Professor Paul Nugent, a former director of African Studies at the University of Edinburgh.

"But there's no way either Egypt or Sudan would let it happen."

The embassies of both Egypt and Sudan in Washington DC acknowledged, but did not respond to, repeated requests for comment.

Occupying land

Heaton said the measures he has taken so far - declaring sovereignty; forging diplomacy - are in accordance with international law and his forthcoming fundraising will facilitate further progress.

"The next step that's required by law is to occupy the land," he said. "And we've not been able to do that because the conditions that exist in north Sudan are so tough."

He added he has heard no objections from Egypt or Sudan and believes they will recognise the potential for employment, infrastructure and other regional benefits.

Alex de Waal, a research professor in law and diplomacy at Tufts University and one of the foremost experts on Sudan, said Heaton's chances are very remote.

"The moment he starts doing anything that looks remotely serious, they would [act]," he said of Cairo and Khartoum.

The academic sat in on meetings between Sudan and breakaway South Sudan in recent years and said negotiators "wouldn't give an inch - literally".

"They just didn't want any hint of making a compromise that might set a precedent for something," he added.

De Waal also noted distrust between Cairo and Khartoum had grown since Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi came to power. A year ago, Egypt held military drills on and across the Sudan border, "which was just a way of sending a signal to Khartoum - don't mess with us", he said.

Heaton bristles at such arguments. "That's where your academics are wrong and they don't understand the situation," he said.

"I have not claimed any Sudanese land. I have not claimed any Egyptian land. The record is very clear that this land belongs to no one."

Hostile environment

If the legal obstacles are overcome, Mother Nature could still prove formidable.

Heaton asserts an accessible water table beneath Bir Tawil is fed by Lake Nasser, a man-made reservoir on the Nile River, straddling southern Egypt and northern Sudan.

He insists his kingdom wouldn't put excessive strain on this resource.

But Mark Giordano, director of Science, Technology and International Affairs at Georgetown's School of Foreign Service, cautioned that any attempts to access treaty-controlled water from the River Nile would be a non-starter with neighbours.

"When you talk about water in the Nile basin, it's really sensitive," he said.

Giordano said any water beneath the surface of Bir Tawil would actually almost certainly be fossil groundwater, "which means once you use it, that's the end of it".

He also pointed to existing agricultural research complexes that are thriving without the need to create a new country to house them.

CGIAR - formerly the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research - is a global partnership of organisations engaged in research for a food secure future.

"I don't see that finding the harshest place on Earth and seeing if you can grow something there is a good way to address hunger," he added.

 "It seems to have all the strikes against it, which may explain why nobody bothered to claim this piece of territory for some time."

Heaton said he is looking at any and every comparable enterprises for best practice and that his kingdom, free of politics, would be built entirely around the ARC.

"You have to go to the farthest extremes sometimes to develop those answers that you look for," he said.

Some of Heaton's critics concede he could progress with scaled-back ambitions.

"If it's a case of coming and saying I have some resources, I'd like to develop this area in a way that's consistent with your sovereignty ... then they might look on it differently," said de Waal.

Despite the long odds and seemingly insurmountable challenges, Heaton remains energised and optimistic, darting to Europe last week to meet his volunteer ambassadors.

He compares his endeavours to the efforts of entrepreneur Elon Musk and electric cars.

"Any visionary," he noted, "is always greeted with scepticism."

By Joe Jackson

This Can Only Happen When You Are Really In Love | Photo

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You can't fake this. The love between Alicia Keys and husband Swizz Beatz is awesome.

Emmanuel Adebayor Reveals More About His Brother's Theft

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In a follow-up to 'part one' of a statement he released on Facebook last week - where he claimed Rotimi had stolen 21 mobile phones from a French football academy he had got him a place in - Togolese footballer, Sheyi Emmanuel Adebayor (SEA), has delivered on his promise that there was much more to come.

The 31-year-old Tottenham Hotspur forward has now posted 'part 2' of the revelation, this time focusing on his younger brother who he says repeatedly stole from him.

Read the story below;

Here is another part of the story I have kept inside since. Today I feel the constant need to let it out. If I share my stories, it is because I believe every story comes with a lesson. And the lesson is for anyone that is reading this. This is about a brother who keeps saying today that I am not a good support for our family. His name is Rotimi Adebayor. At the age of 13, he did something very bad. He and I know what he did. Because of that our parents had to send him to a village far from the big city.

When I started to be successful in football and I went to Togo for vacation; at that time one of my mother’s friend came from the village to visit us. As she explained how Rotimi was suffering in the village, I immediately asked them to bring him back into the city. As soon as he came back, I made sure I put him in school. For me that is normal.

In 2002, I went to play the AFCON in Mali and I had the huge privilege to swap my shirt with Marc-Vivien Foé. May his soul rest in peace. When I got back to Togo, I put that shirt in a secure place. My brother found a way to steal that shirt and sold it.

When I moved from Metz to Monaco, we reached an advanced stage in the Champions League and we played against Real Madrid. It was one of most beautiful day of my life because I was lucky enough to get a signed shirt from the football legend Zinedine Zidane. As I brought that shirt back to Togo, my brother still found a way to steal that shirt and sold it.

When I was in Metz, I was earning about €15,000 a month. I wanted to get something unique for my mom to thank her for all she did for me. I wanted to make her happy. So I decided to take an amount worth 3 months of my wages and I bought her a Cartier neckless for about €45,000. Rotimi and his friends Akim(@Yam Freedom) and Tao (@Sao Tao Oyawole) made a plan and stole that precious neckless. They sold it for about €800. When my mom and I found out, my mother asked me not to bother because he is the younger brother. Despite the situation, I would like to take this same occasion to wish all the mothers out there a Happy Mother’s Day!

In my house, I have a storage room where I keep some of my belongings when I travel back to Europe. I am the only one with that key but my brother managed to get a master key that was able to open every single door in the house. He frequently stole drinks and other items from that room.

After all this we kept saying “blood is thicker than water” and we moved on. Therefore, I decided to take him where I started my football in France. I brought him to a great football academy in France. You already know how this story ended. He stole cellphones from many of his teammates and they sacked him from the football academy. By the way, after I published the first story about him, he called me to say that he did not steal exactly 21 phones. He claimed that the number was lower than that. Still...Is that acceptable? He also added that I should be happy that he stole drinks and other items from my storage room. I asked him why and he replied: "Because I am your brother".

Jacques Songo’o who is now a retired Cameroonian footballer also had his son in the academy and he was a good friend of Rotimi. Let me add that he was part of my development as a footballer and he always gave me good advices. I was in Togo on my days off when Songo’ocalled me; he sounded very angry. He explained to me how my brother stole his son’s PSP. When I asked my brother why he did that, he argued that he forgot it in his bag. How can you forget someone else’s device in your bag and travel with it from France to Togo? Since that day, my relationship with Songo'o changed and he has become pretty distant with me and my family.

I was still in Monaco when I decided to collect all football boots from my teammates so I could give them to people in Africa. I had a huge bag full of shoes. I brought that bag to Togo. A few days after when I decided to give the boots out to the people in need, I noticed the bag full of boots disappeared. Later on, I found out that my brother was the one who stole the bag and went to sell the shoes in Hedzranawoé (famous public market in Togo).

One day, my mom called me early in the morning when I was still in bed. She told me that Rotimi has gotten a Visa to go to Dubai so he can play football out there. He had to leave that day with his friend Kodjovi (@Denilson de Souza) who was in the same situation. It was either they went that day or the Visa would be suspended. I asked one of my guys at the time (@Agui Mozino) to go find tickets for my brother and his friend. We could not find any economy class ticket on that day so I had to get them both first class tickets. After all, it was an opportunity for him to make his own career in Dubai. Only 4days later, Rotimi went back home. He explained how the lifestyle in Dubai was not made for him. He said he wasn’t free to do what he wanted to do because it is a strictly Muslim place. He couldn't drink, party as much as he wanted or kiss girls in public.

The part 3 is coming out soon and it will be about the man that calls himself the father of the family @Kola Adebayor A.K.A Lion of Judah. 


Emmanuel Adebayor's brother, Rotimi Adebayor, has since responded, begging the former Arsenal and Manchester City striker for forgiveness.

"I'm so sorry for everything that I've done wrong... I want to beg, forgive me," Rotimi Adebayor told BBC.

"I want him [Emmanuel] to try and be with us again. To sit like a family, do things together. I pray to God that moment is coming soon.

"People are laughing at us, but they will see us and they will cry... God's time is the best, I wish my brother good luck."

Burundians Unite Against President's Power Play

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Bujumbura, Burundi - Sylvana Ntibariyumwe lives in the Musaga neighbourhood southeast of the capital where protesters have intensified efforts to stop President Pierre Nkurunziza from running for a third - and, they claim, unconstitutional - term in next month's presidential elections.

"I will be out on the street with the protesters every day until the president gives up on running for a third term," said 73-year-old Ntibariyumwe.

While those marching with placards - and in some cases Molotov cocktails - around the suburbs are mostly younger than 40 years old, this is a multiethnic and multigenerational movement. It is Ntibariyumwe's generation of dissidents in their 70s and 80s who know what is really at stake.

Peace in Burundi is nascent and fragile. In 2005, it emerged from a protracted civil war that pitted Tutsis against Hutus to claim 300,000 lives and displace one-fifth of the population for over 10 years.

The framework for the country's fragile peace was written in the Arusha Peace and Reconciliation Agreement, signed in 2000, which states the president, "shall be elected for a term of five years, renewable only once. No one may serve more than two presidential terms".

Scars of violence

"The Arusha agreement was the safeguard of democracy in our country, the seal of stability," recalled 62-year-old Athanase Sinzumunsi.

He watched the march standing in a pressed beige shirt and chino trousers as protesters passed by, blowing whistles and banging on makeshift drums.

Sinzumunsi is also committed to protesting in Musaga every day, "although just on the edges", he said, admitting he doesn't "have the strength for more than that".

The small wooden kiosks that sell essential goods in Musaga are boarded up.

The mirrored windows of the betting shop have been shattered, smashed by either stones, bullets or whatever else is brought about by the chaos that ensues when hundreds of people are tear-gassed or fired upon by high-pressure water cannon.

Here and there, Kalashnikov rounds - that the police deny having fired on protesters - pock-marked the walls.

There is nothing to eat, complained Ntibariyumwe.

The markets have closed and the usually clogged city centre four kilometres away becomes a ghost town when the protests peak.

History lessons

Ntibariyumwe wore a green patterned gown with a bodice, full skirt and sleeves, and a yellowing diamanté and pearl pendant strung around her long neck. Leaning on a single crutch, she surveyed Musaga's main thoroughfare now strewn with rocks and the blackened metal guts of burned tyres.

 She hadn't seen any tension between Burundi's majority Hutu and minority Tutsi communities until the 1970s, she recalled, taking a seat on a tree stump.

Her parents were farmers on a lush rolling hillside in Mbuye, part of Muramvya province in west-central Burundi.

It was the creation of political parties prior to independence that brought about the dawn of violence.

In 1972, post-independence power struggles culminated in the massacre of 120,000 Hutus at the hands of government forces and their supporters, following a Hutu-led uprising in the south.

Ntibariyumwe's family survived unscathed, save for their cattle, which were slaughtered and eaten by the fighters.

The conflict, she recalled, largely affected those plotting to overthrow the Tutsi regime.

The next conflict was different however. It began in 1993, by which point her family, having lost their cows, had moved to the outskirts of Bujumbura.

"Almost all of my family was killed," Ntibariyumwe said, counting the dead on her fingers, showing no emotion.

"Four brothers, six sisters, and then all the children of my brothers and sisters - I couldn't tell you how many of them died."

Her greatest fear for the present was the current crisis would turn, like others before it, into a targeted killing spree by the regime seeking to quell demonstrators.

"We are afraid that everyone who is against the third term will find their names on a kill list," said Ntibariyumwe.

Police state

Witnesses have alleged that during the first week of protests, police visited houses at night to beat and kill civilians.

University students, who claim police combed their campus for dissidents, have taken up residence outside the US embassy in fear of their lives.

"If you don't affiliate with the ruling party, you are arrested, tortured, jailed," said 28-year-old Willy Nisinbere, a student at the Institute for Applied Pedagogy. "Most of the students don't accept what is propagated by the ruling party."

The government, meanwhile, has ordered demonstrators off the streets.

"The protesters and organisers of this insurrection must immediately and unconditionally stop this insurrection that handicaps the life of Burundi and its people," the National Security Council said in a statement.

Outside the Commissant Municipal de Police, which houses a jail in downtown Bujumbura, about 30 people huddle under the umbrella of a tree waiting for news of loved ones who have disappeared.

Francoise Buvatabwa's son, a law student, was arrested at his university dormitory on suspicion of having taken part in the protests. She was allowed into the jail to identify her son, but only through a glass wall - without communication, she said, tears welling in her eyes.

Different kind of conflict

President Nkurunziza had joined the Hutu rebellion in 1994, rising through the ranks and becoming a commander, which launched his career among the top ranks of the transitional government following the peace deal.

When in 2005 he became president, many of his former comrades in arms were incorporated into the security forces of the new government, while others were decommissioned.

Ntibariyumwe's fears that targeted killings will recur is specifically related to this group, known as the Imbonerakure, or "those that see far" in the national Kirundi language.

Technically, they are the youth wing of the president's ruling party. But the term Imbonerakure has come to encompass both political supporters of the president and decommissioned fighters from the civil war who had fought with Nkurunziza when he was still a rebel leader.

One such Imbonerakure is 38-year-old Sunga. He lost his brother and brother-in-law in the fighting, and left the rebellion after seven years. By that time the rebellion was struggling. Supply chains had been cut off, fighters had run out of ammunition, medicine and food.

"Some of us remember what we went through and want revenge," he said.

Taking up arms

A few hours earlier, on his way home in Musaga, Sunga was beaten by a group of young men opposed to the president's third term.

"I was beaten by a child," he said, visibly angered. "If I need to reconcile this by taking up a weapon, I will."

Divisions, however, are appearing on many fronts.

The army, a professional and disciplined outfit adored by protesters, is reportedly split between those who support the third term and those who do not.

There are rumours the typically loyal police are questioning the actions of the president.

Meanwhile, the population is retreating into enclaves. Fear of reprisals on both sides is causing thousands to flee, while others live under a self-imposed blockade.

Given how hard Burundians have worked to overcome ethnic divisions in the last decade, Ntibariyumwe said she thinks "there is no similarity whatsoever between the two conflicts of the past and this conflict today".

"They were both about ethnicity, about one group going after the other," she said.

"This time, every ethnic group is together in fighting the third mandate. We are a unified enemy of the government. Whether Tutsi or Hutu, we are together."

Former ambassador and minister of health, Dr Joseph Nindorera, 85, never marched in protest, even in his youth. But he is following the crisis closely and agreed with Ntibariyumwe.

"There are no longer any problems with ethnicity, it's just a fight for power," he said, explaining that power comes with substantial, illicit, monetary rewards.

"Here, generally speaking, no one leaves power in an orderly manner."

Reporting for this story was supported by Humanity United.

By Jessica Hatcher

Separatists Blamed For Deadly Mali Attack

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At least eight Malian soldiers have been killed and 10 others injured in an attack by armed separatists near the northern town of Timbuktu, sources say.

The sources said on Monday that fighters from the West African nation's main Tuareg-led rebel alliance ambushed an army convoy.

"During an ambush of the Malian army by the rebel Coordination of Azawad Movements (CMA) between Timbuktu and Goundam on Monday morning, eight Malian soldiers were killed and several wounded," an official from a charity in the area said.

The source said two Malian army vehicles had also been set on fire while the attackers lost one of their vehicles.

The Malian army refused to comment officially but a military source linked to reinforcements sent to the scene confirmed the information.

"We have eight dead and 10 wounded, and soldiers who are missing for the time being," the source said, adding that it was not yet clear if the CMA had sustained casualties.

A Timbuktu-based military source from MINUSMA, the United Nations peacekeeping mission in Mali, told AFP news agency the rebels had waited in four vehicles for the troops, who were due to take over a patrol.

"This is a carefully prepared ambush," the source said.

A CMA leader told AFP the rebel movement had "ambushed the Malian military" and that "the death toll was not yet known".

By Al Jazeera

It Will Never Be Easy – Charly Boy Writes Open Letter To Buhari

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Area Fada, Charly Boy has written an open letter to Muhammadu Buhari, expressing his hopes for Nigeria's future when the president-elect assumes office come May 29.

Read it below;

Oga GMB,

How far? I trust you have been getting enough rest and getting ready for the mother of all battles in your life. You know how hard and how long you have fought for this and now that you have it, we can’t wait to see how our lives will change!

You must understand that our expectations are high, but you can't blame us too much. By faith or design, you have become a symbol of renaissance for a nation that has been battered by mismanagement and unprecedented corruption. Kai! Odiegwu!

Many of us were sold on your Change Campaign, tired of the usual statuesque and many more just wanted a better life for ourselves and our loved ones. All eyes are on you, I trust you know that by now. This Change should demonstrate to us possibilities, hope again for the youths of this country and a channeling back to those core values which we hold sacred. Anything less will be same of the same. Shey you get?

Fact from fiction, truth from rhetoric, I know that it is foolhardy to expect that one individual alone can by himself/herself bring about this Change we desperately need and earnestly desire.

However, inasmuch as you need to raise a viable team to work with, using the formula of zoning won't cut it. My earnest advice to you is to choose officers and men strictly on merit and not necessarily what geopolitical zone they come from. Remember, this same zoning formula has been used at different times in this country, and each time, it has failed. The issue of zoning coming up now again is a reminder of times in the past that we desperately want to forget. Same of the same?

I would want to believe that you have come to heal and fix the rot.

It will never be easy because of the wolves and sharks amongst us who benefit big time from the corruption, the poverty, the confusion and hopelessness they inflict on Nigerians.

So afterMay 29th, as you put on your boxing gloves and crank your whip, we will be watching with bathed breath to see not only the will to fight this battle but the sincerity and strategies to lead us on the path of true healing for our broken Nation. Biko.

Oga me, e don set oooooo.

Much Respect,

Na me.
AreaFada, Charlyboy

US Withdraws Nomination Of Ambassador To Somalia

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US President Barack Obama has withdrawn the nomination of the US' first ambassador to Somalia in 24 years, the White House has said.

The administration confirmed on Monday that Katherine Dhanani, a long-time diplomat with deep experience in African affairs, has turned down the nomination for personal reasons.

"She is withdrawing for personal reasons," an administration official told AFP news agency.

Dhanani had appeared before the Senate in March to seek confirmation in the post. President Obama nominated her for the post in February, the first since 1991.

"Decades of conflict, famine, and oppression led many to label Somalia a 'failed state'. Today, Somalis are proving those pessimists wrong," she told a panel.

Abukar Arman, a former Somalia special envoy to the US and a foreign policy analyst, told Al Jazeera that he believed the decision to withdraw the ambassador's nomination might be more of a political decision.

"It would be too reckless from the Obama administration’s point of view to open a full-fledged embassy and assign an American ambassador to operate out of Mogadishu knowing that the frontrunner of the Democratic Party [Hillary Clinton] has the Benghazi tragedy hovering over her head," Arman said.

"Democrats would consider such adventure as a risky business."

Although the US never formally severed ties, the embassy in Mogadishu was closed in 1991 as Somalia descended into chaos amid a bloody power struggle among brutal clan chiefs.

Dark history

The darkest chapter in ties came in 1993 when the bodies of US soldiers were dragged through the streets of Mogadishu by a mob after fighters loyal to Mohamed Farah Aideed, who was on the US' wanted list, shot down two Black Hawk helicopters.

Thousands of Somalis and 18 American soldiers died in the ensuing battle between fighters loyal to Aideed and US soldiers.

The Somali government that finally took power in August 2012 was the first to be given global recognition since the regime of dictator Siad Barre fell in 1991. The US recognised the new government in January 2013.

By Al Jazeera

Boko Haram Always Knew When The Military Was Coming – Survivor

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According to Zahra Umoru, a teenager among the women and children rescued from the Sambisa forest, Boko Haram insurgents were able to delay the rescue of their victims based on the information they had on the itinerary of the military.

Speaking at Malkohi, one of the camps for Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) in Yola, Adamawa state, Umoru said the insurgents kept moving captives from one place to the other.

"When they captured us, we were taken to a house in Gwoza. When they heard soldiers were in Madagali, they took us to Peta where we lived under trees," Umoru, who was captured in November told TheCable.

"We don't know how Boko Haram gets its information, but they always know when the soldiers are coming. If there's something like that, they just tell us to pack our things and run.

"The night we left Gwoza, we just finished cooking, but we were not allowed to eat the food; we were just packed and left."

Some other girls in the camp confirmed that they were moved from one village to another, one bush to the other, town to town, based on the movement of the military.

Kanye West Becomes Doctor Of Philosophy

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Rapper Kanye West received an honorary PhD yesterday (May 11), from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (SAIC) for his "transformative, genre-defying work."

In his acceptance speech, the now Dr. Kanye West described what the honor means to him.

"This honor is gonna make your lives easier," he said. "Two reasons: You don't have to defend me as much and I'm going to make all of our lives easier. And it's these Floyd Mayweather belts that are needed to prove what I've been saying my entire life. Whether it's the cosign of Paul McCartney grabbing me and saying, 'It's okay he doesn't bite white people.' Or The New York Times cover. Or the Time 'Most Influential' cover. And now, a doctorate at the Art Institute of Chicago."

"When I was giving a lecture at Oxford," he continued, "I brought up this school because when I went on that mission to create in other spaces -- apparel, film, performance -- it would have been easier if I could have said I had a degree at the Art Institute of Chicago!"

The 37-year-old Chicago native dropped out of university to pursue music, and even named his debut album 'The College Dropout' to acknowledge the fact.

Kim Kardashian, who is currently in Brazil on business, took to social media to congratulate her husband. She wrote: "Dr. Kanye West!!!!!!! I'm so proud of you baby & I know your mom would be so proud too!!!!"



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