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Why no international outcry over Boko Haram killings in Nigeria?

Why no international outcry over Boko Haram killings in Nigeria?

France, Syria, Somalia, Nigeria: all countries where people have been killed by extremists. But do we view all victims equally or see every attack as equally significant?

Just a few weeks before the latest attacks by Islamist terror group Boko Haram, German politician Frank Heinrich, a member of Chancellor Merkel's Christian Democratic Party, travelled through Nigeria. He spoke with Christians and Muslims and met with politicians as well as with relatives of the kidnapped Chibok girls. His visit left a lasting impression, Heinrich said in an interview with DW, adding that he was shocked to see how people in Germany are generally aware of terror in Iraq but are poorly informed about the situation in Nigeria.
Heinrich is a member of the German parliament's Committee on Human Rights and Humanitarian Aid. On his trip to Nigeria he saw villages deserted after Boko Haram attacks. And although last week's massacre in the town of Baga is said to have been the worst in months, such atrocities are barely mentioned by German news outlets. One reason why Baga attracted so little interest is that it came so soon after the murders in Paris, Heinrich said. He finds it regrettable that Germany shows so little interest in Africa.

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5 challenges for Africa and Europe in 2015

Both the European Union and African Union face a threshold year where key international deals need to be struck at four major summits on financing for development, sustainable development goals, climate change and trade for development. Are global leaders ready to reach wide-ranging agreements for the post-2015 world?
The European Year for Development coincides with the culmination of the post-2015 debate, but not by coincidence. The new EU Commission, led by Jean-Claude Juncker, must get off to a running start. Now, more than ever, Europe’s problems need global solutions and global problems need European action.
Can the African Union speak with one voice and work to make the SDGs a useful stepping stone for its own ambitious Agenda 2063? What are the top five challenges for Europe and Africa in 2015?

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Introducing afrileaks: Africa’s new whistleblowing platform

afriLeaks, a new site designed to connect whistle-blowers with investigative journalists in Africa, went live yesterday. Made in partnership with Italy’s Hermes Centre for Transparency and Digital Human Rights, and the Africa Centre of Network Journalism, the site hopes to address corruptions and abuses on the continent and train a new generation of African investigative journalists. Leaked documents are submitted anonymously to the site and are then appointed to a journalist from one of the 19 associated African news organisations, who will pursue and verify the claims. It is, like WikiLeaks, a secure online space to leak sensitive information, however leaked documents will not be published but rather act as impetus to further journalistic investigation.

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