How leaders handle this sensitive topic is seen as a barometer for future relations between the two countries
August 7 is Kenya’s 9/11, the day of the worst terrorist attack in the country's history. On this day twenty years ago, a truck bomb destroyed the U.S. embassy in Nairobi, killing 213 people, most of them Kenyans. A simultaneous attack on the U.S. embassy in Tanzania that same morning killed 11 more. In Nairobi, hundreds gathered Tuesday to remember those who were killed and injured. Mohammed Yusuf reports.
Twin al-Qaida bombings in 1998 in Kenya and Tanzania killed 224 people and injured nearly 5,000
South Sudanese leaders have once again agreed to end the war and work towards peace
Another rhinoceros has died from drinking salty water at a new sanctuary in a national park
Al-Shabab attackers briefly took over part of a Lower Juba military camp
It's been more than five weeks since a new case of the viral disease was identified in the DRC
A Kenyan government spokesman has promised to take action, but also addressed his fellow countrymen's work ethic
SPLM-IO says power-sharing deal discussed in Uganda ignored needed radical reforms
Officials say blaze began in timber yard before spreading to other parts of market, including nearby apartments
Eight countries join forces for better railroads and highways to speed the movement of goods and people
Meeting part of effort to find peaceful solutions to regional conflicts
A group of unemployed doctors have filed a lawsuit against the move, arguing that as citizens, they should have been hired first
Incident was a reaction to rape of three girls Friday at school; Kenyan police are investigating, and parliament is getting involved
Critics of project believe it will pollute environment, damage marine ecosystem
Rwanda, which receives $80 million in UK aid each year, is under fire for its latest $40 million tourism promotion campaign
Since 2013, the Kenyatta administration has been hit a series of corruption scandals, leading the president to declare corruption a national security threat in 2015
Security agencies maintain that keeping records of people's movements will help them keep peace and security
If passed, President Nkurunziza could stay in office until 2034
Burundians are reluctant to talk about the referendum in public for fear of reprisals, but many say the vote does nothing to improve their daily lives
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