• April 11, 2026

Cameroon sugarcane strike turns violent over wages

Over 150 hectares of sugarcane fields have been destroyed in Cameroon due to violent clashes between workers at the Société Sucrière du Cameroun (SOSUCAM) and police. The unrest, which erupted earlier …

FIFA suspends Congolese Football Federation

FIFA has announced the immediate suspension of the Congolese Football Federation (FECOFOOT), following escalating tensions between the Ministry of Sports and the football body. The dispute, which has been ongoing for …

Judge halts Trump’s effort to dismantle USAID

A federal judge has delivered a major blow to President Donald Trump and his ally, billionaire Elon Musk, halting plans to pull thousands of staffers from the U.S. Agency for International …

Sudanese women’s activist Amira Osman Hamed has won a Front Line Defenders Award for Human Rights Defenders at Risk, the organisation announced Friday.

Ms Hamed, an engineer in her 40s, who has been a long-time activist for women’s rights in Sudan, was first arrested in 2002 for wearing trousers, and again in 2013 for refusing to cover her hair.

At the time, a law prohibited women in Sudan from uncovering their hair or wearing trousers in public.

This law, which “turns Sudanese women from victims into criminals”, according to Ms Hamed, was finally repealed in 2019 after the army removed President Omar al-Bashir.

More recently, Ms Hamed was arrested in January this year before being released a week later for speaking out against military rule after General Abdel Fattah al-Burhane’s putsch in October 2021.

Relatives of Ms Hamed told Africanewsguru.com at the end of January that “30 armed and masked men” broke into her house in Khartoum in the middle of the night, “and took her to an unknown destination”.

Amira Osmane Hamed “never turned away from her mission and continued to actively participate in peaceful demonstrations”, said in a statement by the NGO Front Line Defenders, which awarded the activist.

The scheme has awarded human rights defenders since 2005.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *