Africa
Catholic Church urged to help more as education costs in Africa rise

Across Africa, Catholic schools like the Uganda Martyrs School in Kampala, have long been a pillar of affordable but high-quality education, especially for poor families.
Their appeal remains strong even with competition from other non-governmental investors now eying schools as enterprises for profit.
The growing trend toward privatisation is sparking concern that the Catholic Church may price out the people who need uplifting.
Schools run by the Catholic Church are not usually registered as profit-making entities, but those who run them say they would not be competitive if they operated merely as charities.
They say they face the same maintenance costs as others in the field and offer scholarships to exceptional students.
“A school like this one, it has several cost centres,” Vincent Ssegane, director of studies in charge of examinations at Uganda Martyrs school.
“Look at the wage bill, for the teachers, feeding the students, maintaining these infrastructures, it is enormous. So, I think that one explains that rise and, of course, like you are intimating, the rising cost of living and the hiking prices.”
“The rate of inflation has an impact, great impact on the cost of education because education is a service,” he added.
Tuition at the school was once as high as $800 but has since dropped to about $600 as enrolment doubled to nearly 5,000, according to the school’s deputy headmaster.
Across the region, the Catholic Church has built a reputation as a key provider of formal education in areas often underserved by the state.
Its schools are cherished by families of all means for their values, discipline, and academic success.
Richard Kizito, a metal worker in Kampala whose four children attend Catholic schools, said the emerging risk for traditional Catholic schools is that they will cater only for the rich.
“Formerly we used to not pay fees, especially when I was young,” he recalled, saying he remembered “going for free, receiving books for free, pens and pencils for free”.
But now, parents are being priced out and unable to put their children in Catholic schools, Kizito said.
“It is not because they don’t want, they want, but they cannot afford,” he said speaking about other parents.
“Because of the challenge of fees I cannot manage all the school fees for all my kids,” he added.
Kizito’s sentiment about the schools founded by the Catholic Church, known for their dedication to serving poor communities in Africa, mirrors wider complaints by others.
Many say the Church, as the largest non-governmental investor in education in sub-Saharan Africa, is not doing enough to ease the pressure faced by lots of families.
The growing trend towards privatisation is sparking concerns that it may be drifting from its mission and pricing poorer children out of its schools.
Costs are a main reasons why many children do not complete their schooling, with sub-Saharan Africa having the world’s highest dropout rate.
Africa
New US law targets fentanyl-related copycat drugs driving overdose deaths

US President Donald Trump has signed into law a bill aimed at quelling the fentanyl crisis sweeping America.
The law targets all fentanyl-related drugs, including copycat versions of the potent opioid that evade current US regulations.
Illegal forms of the drug, often made in China, have been driving US overdose deaths for years.
“With this bill, we are officially and permanently classifying all fentanyl related substances as Schedule 1 narcotics, which is actually a very big deal,” Trump said at a signing ceremony at the White House on Wednesday.
“That doesn’t sound like much. It’s a big deal, as they will tell you. Meaning, anyone caught trafficking these illicit poisons will be punished with a mandatory ten year minimum sentence in prison. We’ll be getting the drug dealers, pushers and peddlers off our street and we will not rest until we have ended the drug overdose epidemic. And it’s been getting a little bit better, but it’s horrible. It’s horrible.”
More than 70,000 Americans died of opioid overdose in 2023, according to official statistics. That number has dropped significantly in the last year but as of February 2025, overdose remains the leading cause of death for Americans aged 18-44, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Doctors sometimes prescribe fentanyl for severe pain. The legislation does not affect fentanyl when used for medical purposes.
Africa
South Africa: Eskom targets mainly clean energy sources by 2040

South Africa’s Eskom aims to shift to mainly clean energy sources by 2040, the company said on Wednesday.
The state-owned power utility is currently operating with a predominantly coal-based generation fleet.
Eskom told South African lawmakers it planned to have 32 gigawatts (GW) of renewable energy capacity by 2040, compared to less than 1 GW now.
In the same timeframe, the company wants its coal capacity to shrink from 39 GW to 18 GW.
Eskom generates about 95% of electricity used in South Africa, and is the biggest producer of power on the continent, according to the United States International Trade Administration
But the company has also been criticised for its contribution to air pollution.
In 2021, the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air (CREA) think tank named Eskom the world’s largest emitter of sulfur dioxide (SO2), a toxic gas for humans.
Eskom emits more SO2 than the entire power sector of the European Union and the US combined, CREA’s assessment found.
The South African company told lawmakers that its R400 billion ($22.31 billion) debt burden slowed its investment in renewable energy.
Eskom has been in a unstable financial situation for several years. The firm reported a R55 billion after-tax loss for the 2024 financial year.
To shift towards a greener production, Eskom said it will “repower” older coal-fired power stations slated for closure with newer technologies.
The firm will also have its own renewable energy business unit to implement new projects and partner with private companies.
Africa
France: Prime minister proposes cutting two public holidays to save money in 2026 budget

France’s prime minister proposed on Tuesday to cut two public holidays from the country’s calendar, in an effort to save money in next year’s budget.
François Bayrou targeted Easter Monday which he said has “no religious meaning”, and 8 May, the day marking the Allied victory over the Nazis in World War II.
“The entire nation needs to work more to produce and for the country’s overall activity to be more significant throughout the year, so that France’s situation improves”, Bayrou said in an address to lawmakers.
Bayrou’s proposal is among a raft of spending cuts laid out in a sweeping, and potentially doomed, budget plan.
He argued that removing two state holidays would bring in tax revenues generated from economic activity, contributing to around €44 billion euros in overall savings.
“It means working more to earn less. It means asking us to work for free. When are we going to talk about dividends [for shareholders]?”, said Sophie Binet, the secretary-general of the General Confederation Labour union, on TV channel France 2.
France currently has 11 public holidays per year, slightly below the European Union average of 12,07.
Bayrou’s proposal also drew criticism from opposition parties.
“Bayrou declares a social war”, said Mathilde Panot, the president of the leftist La France Insoumise group at the National Assembly, in a press conference.
“The abolition of two public holidays, as meaningful as Easter Monday and 8 May, is a direct attack on our history, our roots, and the working France”, said far-right National Rally president Jordan Bardella on X.
President Emmanuel Macron tasked Bayrou with crafting a budget that shaves costs to bring down France’s staggering debt and deficit, while also adding billions in new defence spending to face what Macron says are resurgent threats from Russia and beyond.
Among other spending cuts on Tuesday, Bayrou said that a third of civil servants would not be replaced when they retired. He also said France would scale back its subsidies for prescription medicine.
The CGT called for demonstrations in autumn to protest the measures.
With no parliamentary majority, Macron’s centrist grouping must win support from adversaries on the left and right to pass the budget this fall.
Bayrou’s job is precarious, and he could be voted out if he fails to reach compromise on the budget.
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