🌐Weekly News Digest [ January 5 – January 11 ]
That was the first full-fledged week of the new year of 2026, during which rulers forgave those who polluted their land, dismissed those who were managing their oil.
💡Here are the key highlights:
🇧🇼 Botswana
— Botswana Invites Russia to Invest in Its Mining Sector
🇨🇩 DR Congo
— Congolese clergy speaks against the US-DRC agreement.
— The government allows processing units to accept ore from artisanal miners amid protests
🇬🇶 Equatorial Guinea
— Equatorial Guinea moves its capital to a brand new city built on oil revenues
🇬🇭 Ghana
— A Ghanaian prophet predicts the discovery of major onshore oil deposits in Ghana
— Ghana hopes to keep its oil fields viable until 2040
🇲🇱 Mali
— JNIM militants attack a gold mine in southeastern Mali
🇳🇪 Niger
— Niger replaces its oil minister
🇳🇬 Nigeria
— President reshuffles the country's oil sector management
🇸🇩 Sudan
— Sudan’s central bank and Sudanese Mineral Resources Company set up a joint commission to curb illegal gold exports.
🇺🇬 Uganda
— Uganda to start its first oil exports by October, despite environmental concerns
🇿🇲 Zambia
— First report on the toxic pollution caused by a Chinese company designates 160 people as victims
— Zambia is concerned over the safety of its workers in southern DRC
#NewsDigest
➡️ Follow to stay informed - @devilsbelow
🙈 After the ban on accepting organic waste, Bali authorities faced an unexpected consequence: residents began massively burning trash right in their own yards
ℹ️ The decision to restrict organic waste intake was made to accelerate the transition to village-level waste processing systems. Now the island’s largest landfill only accepts non-organic and residual waste. The reason is critical overload: up to 65% of Bali’s waste is organic with high moisture content, leading to methane emissions, unpleasant odors, and rapid overfilling of the site.
🔥 However, in practice, the ban has triggered a wave of uncontrolled waste burning. Lacking sufficient recycling infrastructure, local residents have resorted to the simplest method of disposal – fire.
#rules@BaliNews
🌱 Bali’s main landfill stopped taking organic waste (April 2026) and will fully close by August
👮♀️ Police are monitoring the site, but short-term issues like illegal dumping and river pollution may increase during the transition.
🚮 Tourists: you might notice more trash in some areas – travel responsibly.
#rules@BaliNews
🪧Bali installs signs with rules of behavior on the island
📰 The Department of Tourism of Bali province is concerned about the number of violations of the rules of behavior on the island by tourists. Now it is intensifying the installation of information signs with infographics explaining the rules of behavior on the island – Do's and Don'ts.
📍 The plan is to install these signs at 10 key locations in Kuta, Changgu, Seminyak, Uluwatu, Tanah Lote and Bedugul where the chance of reading the rules will be high.
🤞 This is expected to reduce the number of violations so often committed by foreign tourists.
What Do's should be followed first of all?
@BaliNews
#tourism#rules
👮♂️Governor to take firm and tough action against foreign tourists who behave badly while in Bali
📰 The statements come after an American national was arrested and deported after going on a rampage in a hospital on the island under the influence of drugs.
🇺🇸 The 27-year-old US citizen, known by his initials MM, tested positive for drugs, though was deported from Indonesia without criminal prosecution as ‘no evidence’ was found to charge him with drug possession.
❌ He has been added to the blacklist and will be denied entry to Indonesia in the future.
@BaliNews
#rules#goodnews