News

Sub-Saharan Africa currently has the highest infant mortality rate in the world, with 27 babies out of every 1,000 live births dying in their first month. As the climate warms, pregnant women in the ...
The IMF’s new study estimates neutral interest rates in 11 Sub-Saharan African economies, revealing wide divergences but an ...
In sub-Saharan African youths diagnosed with type 1 diabetes, 65 per cent do not have antibodies or genetic risks associated ...
Dean Adansi, Chief Executive Officer of Ghana International Bank (GHIB), has unveiled a financing blueprint aimed at breaking ...
Butterfly Network, Inc. ("Butterfly", "the Company") (NYSE: BFLY), a digital health company transforming care with handheld, ...
With Shell, Eni, Azule, TotalEnergies and Murphy Oil among those expected to start drilling key frontier exploration wells ...
Despite the promise of ramped-up productivity, automation should "augment rather than displace" workers, unions said.
The West African Institute for Financial and Economic Management (WAIFEM) has cautioned that weak financial report writing ...
Sophos, Phishield announce first-of-its-kind cyber security, insurance partnership for sub-Saharan AfricaIssued by SophosJohannesburg, 22 Aug 2025 Pieter Nel, Sales Director – SADC for Sophos in South ...
A DNA analysis of two people who lived in Britain in the seventh century reveals they had recent African ancestry.
Sub-Saharan Africa's economic growth is expected to slow this year, dragged down by slumps in heavyweights South Africa, Nigeria and Angola, the World Bank said on Wednesday.
In 2022, digitization will continue to transform lives in sub-Saharan Africa, from economics to the political landscape. Across the region, electronic voting and electronic transmission of results ...