[Al Jazeera] Burkina Faso coup leaders agreed to return to their barracks and said they would restore the deposed president to power, signing a deal with the army that apparently defuses a tense standoff sparked by last week's coup.
[Thomson Reuters Foundation] Bradford, England -Two young Eritreans, recent arrivals in northern England after paying smugglers thousands of dollars to take them across the Sahara desert, Mediterranean Sea and English channel, are hoping the British government will let them stay.
[Nation] The fate of Form Four and Standard Eight national examinations remained unclear yesterday after the two teachers' unions said they would not allow teachers to supervise them.
[News24Wire] Zimbabwe says it will fight the sale of its property in Cape Town after it was auctioned on Monday to compensate white farmers evicted from their land.
[News24Wire] The mother of the 25-year-old man who was set alight in Etwatwa, Daveyton in an apparent mob justice attack says she is scared for him to return home as she has been taunted by the community.
[Daily Trust] The United Nation International Children's Emergency Fund (UNICEF), says about forty percent of Nigeria children aged between 6-11 years do not attend any primary school in the country.