World news
Somali Novelist Headlines Ake Festival
Somali novelist and playwright, Nuruddin Farah, has been announced as the headliner of the sixth edition of the Ake Arts and Book Festival (AABF), themed ‘Fantastical Futures’ happening in Lagos.
The festival had always held in Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital since inception.
Lola Shoneyin’s Book Buzz Foundation, which organises the event that attracts hundreds of Nigerian and foreign participants, had surprised the literati earlier with a brief announcement on its Facebook page announcing the shift from Abeokuta to Lagos.
“After five glorious years in Abeokuta, we are delighted to announce that Aké Arts and Book Festival 2018 will take place in Lagos State. Dates will be announced shortly. We thank you for your love and support over the years,” the statement said.
The change in venue notwithstanding, it will be another good outing as guests and participants converge on Radisson Blu Hotel, Ikeja GRA, Lagos, from October 25 to 28 for the festival Farah is headlining.
Farah, the author of novels including ‘From a Crooked Rib’, ‘A Naked Needle’, ‘Sweet and Sour Milk’, ‘Close Sesame’, ‘Maps’, ‘Sardines’ ‘Gifts’ and ‘Secrets’ married to a British-Nigerian and who previously lived in Nigeria joins the likes of Professor Niyi Osundare, Ghanaian writer, Ama Ata Aidoo and Nobel Laureate, Professor Wole Soyinka, who had headlined the festival in the past.
He will sit in conversation with writer and Executive Editor of THE NEWS/PM News, Kunle Ajibade, in the Life and Time Series of the festival.
Apart from Farah, writers from across the globe who will be attending the festival include Diana Evans, Yejide Kilanko, Noo Saro-Wiwa, Chudi Offodile, Kinna Likimani, Molara Wood, Bayo Olupohunda and Nnedi Okorafor.
Others are Paul Tarfa, Chibundu Onuzo, Supo Shasore, Funmi Oyatogun, Nii Ayikwei-Parkes, Roye Okupe and Nze Sylva among others.
Other staples of the festival Sterling Bank and Annoying Logo, UK are partnering Book Buzz to organise include book chats, panel discussions, art exhibitions, poetry performances, stage play, film screenings, school visit and musical concert, remain intact.
According to the organisers, “Ake Festival will once again host mostly African writers, artists, filmmakers, poets, dancers and thinkers flying in from all over the world to advance our goal of developing, promoting and celebrating creativity on the African continent. As such, the finest of contemporary African literature, music, art, film and theatre will be showcased in over sixty different events.”
The panel discussions featuring new and established writers will focus on identities, race, gender, spirituality, conflict, music as a vehicle for change, recollections of the civil war and Afropolitanism among others.
Lovers of live theatre will enjoy Rotimi Babatunde’s stage adaptation of Shoneyin’s ‘The Secret Lives of Baba Segi’s Wives’ directed by Femi Elufowoju Jr and which had been staged at the festival a couple of years ago.
A selection of 12 short films and full-length films and documentaries will screen during the festival. They include ‘Her Broken Shadow’, ‘Monsoons over the Moon’, ‘Visions’, ‘Awani’, ‘Swallow’, ‘My Mother’s Stew’, ‘Beyond Tolerance’, ‘Call Me By My Name’, ‘Uprooted’ and ‘1745: An Untold Story of Slavery’.
Festival’s musical concert will feature artists from different countries, genres and generations, including Adedeji, Brymo, Tome Letso Sereetsi, Clayrocksu and the Queen of Waka music, Abeni Salawa, who gave fans a good time last year in Abeokuta. Apart from performing in the concert, she will also be part of a panel discussion on ‘Music as a Vehicle for Change’ alongside Sereetsi and Brymo. Dami Ajayi will moderate the session.
One of the new additions to this year’s event is the Memory Room where attendees will be able to step into the past and experience the digital sounds and images that illustrate the history of writing, symbolic communication and oral literature in West Africa and its diaspora. It is in partnership with the British Library.
Seasoned Nigerian and international poets like Nick Makoha, Logan February, Saddiq Dzukogi, Inua Elams, Ishion Hutchinson, Wana Udobang, Nastio Mosquito and Theresa Lola will perform and share from their works at the poetry evening, the closing event of the festival on October 28.
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Headline
Iran’s Late Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei To Be Buried July 9
Iran will begin the funeral proceedings for its late Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on July 4 in Tehran, more than four months after his assassination during US-Israeli airstrikes.
His burial is scheduled for July 9 at the Imam Reza Shrine in Mashhad, one of the holiest sites in Shia Islam.
Khamenei was killed on February 28, 2026, with Iranian authorities confirming his death the following day on March 1.
The funeral has been postponed repeatedly.
Iranian authorities are anticipating attendance of up to 20 million people across ceremonies in multiple cities. A period of national mourning has been declared to accompany the events.
Funeral processions for Khamenei will move through at least three major cities: Tehran, Qom, and Mashhad. Each procession is expected to last at least 24 hours, per Khamenei’s will.
Khamenei served as Supreme Leader for 37 years, having assumed the role in 1989 after Khomeini’s death.
AFP
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World news
Trump Cancels Scheduled Bombings Against Iran
US President Donald Trump on Thursday said he was calling off strikes on Iran and flagged the signing of a possible deal with Tehran after top-level talks.
“Based on the fact that discussions with the Islamic Republic of Iran have been brought to the highest level of Iranian leadership and approved, I have… cancelled the scheduled strikes and bombings against Iran this evening,” Trump said on his Truth Social network.
“Time and place of the signing to be announced shortly,” he added.
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Iran had warned Washington on Thursday that it risked wading into an “endless quagmire” of war and soaring energy prices, after Trump vowed to launch a new round of airstrikes and to seize an island oil terminal.
Iran’s chief negotiator in talks with the Americans, parliamentary speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, issued his stark warning after the two sides exchanged overnight fire and Trump threatened that US forces would hit “VERY HARD TONIGHT”.
“Wrong strategies and impulsive decisions will reset the entire board for the worse, explode energy infrastructure and markets and create an endless quagmire that you will be stuck in for years,” Ghalibaf said.
The war, which began on February 28 with a wave of US-Israeli strikes on Iran, was paused under an April truce, but efforts to hammer out a permanent end to the fighting have since stalled.
US forces have also, since the ceasefire, hit radar arrays and disabled Iranian ships, and Tehran has maintained a chokehold on shipping through the Strait of Hormuz.
“At some point in the not too distant future, we will be taking Kharg Island, and other oil infrastructure points, and assume total control of their Oil and Gas Markets, much like we have with Venezuela,” Trump said, in a post on his own social media platform, referring to a Gulf island that hosts Iran’s biggest oil export terminal.
General Ali Abdollahi, head of the Iranian military’s central headquarters, warned that “if the United States once again seeks to carry out attacks against heroic Iran, it would receive a harsher response than before, and the flames of war, in addition to creating insecurity in the region, will become more widespread and far-reaching”.
The conflict has destabilised oil and gas prices, fuelling inflation and fears of recession in many economies. On Thursday, the World Bank lowered its global growth forecast to its lowest level since the coronavirus pandemic, predicting it would drop to 2.5 percent in 2026, from 2.9 percent last year.
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Headline
Over 1.2 Million People Attend Pope’s Mass In Madrid
More than 1.2 million people filled the streets of Madrid on Sunday for a mass by Pope Leo XIV at which he called for a renewal of the Catholic faith in Spain.
King Felipe VI and Queen Letizia joined throngs of devotees waving Spanish and Vatican flags in Cibeles Square for a service filled with religious symbolism.
In his homily, Pope Leo said Spaniards should not look at religion as “a museum of the past to be visited, but a school of faith from which to draw even today”.
The mass comes on day two of Pope Leo’s seven-day visit to Spain, a traditional Catholic bastion where religious observance has been declining sharply in recent years as in much of western Europe.
A huge logistical and security operation was in place for the event, after which the pope led a traditional procession along a route lined with white and yellow carnations — the Vatican flag colours.
Organisers said there were more than 1.2 million people attending in the square and the surrounding area.
Nico Aldeanueva, 28, who was visiting from Philadelphia in the United States, said the pope was “a very unifying force in a moment where we have division across so many different fronts”.
“We have, it seems like, never-ending conflict and for the time being here you get to hit pause and get to enjoy the moment and feel the faith.”
Ana Milagros, 64, who was waving a Vatican flag, said she thought the US-born pope seemed “approachable” and “very sincere”.
“There is a lot of polarisation and differences in politics, in social matters, in the economy,” she said, adding: “The pope is trying with this visit… to help all of us.”
Later on Sunday, Leo will meet the leading lights of culture, sport and the economy at an arena, with the aim of fostering dialogue between faith and modern civil society.
Around 56 percent of Spaniards identify as Catholic compared to 90 percent in the 1970s, according to a survey last month by the Centre for Sociological Research, an autonomous government body.
On Saturday, 500,000 mostly young attendees congregated with Leo outside Real Madrid’s Bernabeu stadium for a prayer vigil that stretched into the night.
Leo kicked off his visit with pomp and ceremony at a reception in Madrid’s royal palace, where he called for an end to “polarising narratives” and “sterile simplifications”.
The pope also praised Spain, whose left-wing government has sparred with his native United States as well as Israel over wars in the Middle East, for its “active commitment to peace and solidarity among peoples”.
Leo is due to visit Barcelona on Tuesday and Wednesday, where he will notably bless the Sagrada Familia basilica’s recently completed tower, which made it the world’s tallest church.
His trip will end with a focus on migration on Thursday and Friday in the Canary Islands, a key destination for irregular arrivals, with thousands dying in the Atlantic Ocean trying to reach them.
AFP
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