Tag Archives: Norway

My Cape Town: Matthew Sterne 

Matthew Sterne, a tour guide, storyteller, and travel writer, has dedicated his life to celebrating and sharing his deep love for Cape Town. Through his engaging walking tours, he brings the city’s past and present to life, connecting visitors to the people and places that make the Mother City exceptional. 

As the founder of Natural Wanders and a proud Sea Point resident, Matthew spent his early twenties on what he affectionately calls a “gap decade,” collecting stories and passport stamps from around the world. He worked for a pub crawl in Amsterdam, an ice cream factory in Norway, and even as a door-to-door lightbulb exchanger in Melbourne. Along the way, he volunteered at a turtle sanctuary in Nicaragua, joined a camel safari in India, and contributed to a newspaper in Colombia. When he eventually returned home, his work as a travel writer took him across South Africa, which ultimately led him into tour guiding. “What I love about being a tour guide in Cape Town is that the city is even more fascinating than it is beautiful. It is full of characters, legends, and these icons,” he says. Here’s how he spends his ideal day in Cape Town. 

“Secret” beach at Maiden’s Cove  

If you’re looking for a beach that’s off the beaten track but offers stunning views, Matthew is happy to share details about his favourite “secret spot” at Maiden’s Cove near Camps Bay. Park your car by the picnic area and take a walk down the path. The beach is a short stroll from Maiden’s Cove tidal pool. As Matthew describes it, “It’s one of the best secret swimming spots in Cape Town!” Just a quick note: there are no lifeguards on duty, so swimming is at your own risk. 

Location: Victoria Road, Camps Bay
Price: Free 

Signal Hill View Point 

For one of the most breathtaking panoramic viewpoints in Cape Town, drive along Signal Hill Road towards the Kramat of Sheikh Mohamed Hassen Ghaibie Shah. Parking is available at the Kramat or at the Lion’s Head parking area. From the Kramat car park, follow the trail towards Lion’s Head, but when you reach the signpost, turn left to reach the lookout.  

Matthew says: “I love this viewpoint because you can see all the major landmarks in the city: Robben Island, Sea Point, Devil’s Peak, the City Bowl, the Harbour, Table Mountain, and Lion’s Head.” There are benches available, making it a great spot for a picnic. Remember to carry water and sun protection, as it can get quite hot. 

Location: Signal Hill
Price: Free 

The Rooftop Bar, Trade Boutique Hotel 

Sip your favourite cocktail while taking in sweeping views of Cape Town’s inner city from The Rooftop Bar, situated at the Trade Boutique Hotel on Shortmarket Street. For cocktail enthusiasts, the menu offers a creative and refreshing range. Wine lovers can sample a variety of cultivars and blends that showcase the unique terroirs of the Cape Winelands. Day visitors are welcome to relax by the pool — towels are provided — as long as you purchase from the bar. “I’ve been to almost every cocktail bar in the city, and this place is one of my favourites,” Matthew says. “The views are incredible, I love being on the rooftop, and the drinks are top class too.” 

Location: 55 Shortmarket St, Cape Town City Centre
Price: From R100 for cocktails
Websitethetradehotel.co.za/rooftop-bar  

Ganesh   

Ganesh, formerly known as Café Ganesh, is where you’ll find Matthew when he’s searching for a lekker meal. This iconic spot is where the best of Obs gather — from artists and students to locals and travellers, all united by the mouthwatering Thai-inspired menu and a lively events calendar. The menu may be seasonal and small, but every dish is full of flavour.  

“The food is amazing and extremely affordable. They host music events throughout the week.”  

Location: 38 Trill Road, Observatory
Price: From R50
Websitewww.instagram.com/ganesh_capetown 

 

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The post My Cape Town: Matthew Sterne  appeared first on Cape Town Tourism.

Global press freedom at all-time low according to RSF

Press freedom around the world is under greater threat than ever before, according to the latest report from Reporters Without Borders (RSF). For the first time in history, its World Press Freedom Index classifies the global state of press freedom as “difficult”.

Europe is home to the most press freedom in the world according to Reporters Without Borders’ annual press freedom ranking — though Southern and Eastern Europe represent some of the continent’s weak spots.

The top 15 countries were all in Europe, with Norway scoring the highest, followed by Estonia, the Netherlands, Sweden, Finland and Denmark.

In the Middle East, dozens of reporters have been killed during Israel’s military assault in Gaza, the organization said.

Palestine has become the world’s most dangerous state for journalists amid Israel’s war on Gaza, with dozens of reporters likely killed specifically due to their work, a media freedom watchdog has said.

The United States fell two places to 57. President Donald Trump’s administration is bringing about a “troubling deterioration” through funding cuts to public media and foreign aid, RSF added.

Source: Africanews

ICJ begins hearings on Israel’s humanitarian obligations in Gaza, West Bank

A Palestinian diplomat told the United Nations’ top court on Monday that Israel is killing and displacing civilians and targeting aid workers in Gaza, in a case that Israel criticized as part of its “systematic persecution and delegitimization.”

Israel denies deliberately targeting civilians and aid staff as part of its war with Hamas and did not attend the hearing at the International Court of Justice.

In The Hague, Palestinian Ambassador to the Netherlands Ammar Hijazi accused Israel of breaching international law in the occupied territories.

“Israel is starving, killing and displacing Palestinians while also targeting and blocking humanitarian organizations trying to save their lives,” he told the court.

The hearings are focussed on a request last year from the U.N. General Assembly, which asked the court to weigh in on Israel’s legal responsibilities after the country blocked the U.N. agency for Palestinian refugees from operating on its territory.

In a resolution sponsored by Norway, the General Assembly requested an advisory opinion, a non-binding but legally important decision from the court, on Israel’s obligations in the occupied territories to “ensure and facilitate the unhindered provision of urgently needed supplies essential to the survival of the Palestinian civilian population?”

Hearings opened as the humanitarian aid system in Gaza is nearing collapse. Israel has blocked the entry of food, fuel, medicine and other humanitarian supplies since March 2. It renewed its bombardment on March 18, breaking a ceasefire, and seized large parts of the territory, saying it aims to push Hamas to release more hostages. Despite the stepped-up Israeli pressure, ceasefire efforts remain deadlocked.

The World Food Program said last week its food stocks in the Gaza Strip have run out, ending a main source of sustenance for hundreds of thousands of Palestinians as many families are struggling to feed their children.

What will happen in the court?

The United Nations was the first to address the court on Monday, followed by Palestinian representatives. In total, 40 states and four international organizations are scheduled to participate.

The United States, which voted against the U.N. resolution, is scheduled to speak on Wednesday.

The court will likely take months to rule. But experts say the decision, though not legally binding, could profoundly impact international jurisprudence, international aid to Israel and public opinion.

“Advisory opinions provide clarity,” Juliette McIntyre, an expert on international law at the University of South Australia, told The Associated Press. Governments rely on them in international negotiations and the outcome could be used to pressure Israel into easing restrictions on aid.

Whether any ruling will have an effect on Israel, however, is unclear. Israel has long accused the United Nations of being unfairly biased against it and has ignored a 2004 advisory ruling by the ICJ that found its West Bank separation barrier illegal.

While Israel was not in court, Foreign Minister Gideon Saar hit back at the case.

“I accuse UNRWA, I accuse the U.N., I accuse the secretary-general and I accuse all those that weaponized international law and its institutions in order to deprive the most attacked country in the world, Israel, of its most basic right to defend itself,” he told a news conference in Jerusalem.

On Tuesday, South Africa, a staunch critic of Israel, will present its arguments. In hearings last year in a separate case at the court, the country accused Israel of committing genocide against the Palestinians in Gaza — a charge Israel denies. Those proceedings are still underway.

Israel’s troubled relations with UNRWA

Israel’s ban on the agency, known as UNRWA, which provides aid to Gaza, came into effect in January. The organization has faced increased criticism from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his far-right allies, who claim the group is deeply infiltrated by Hamas. UNRWA rejects that claim.

On Monday, Amir Weissbrod, a Foreign Ministry official, presented Israel’s case against UNRWA. He accused it of failing to act before the war against evidence that Hamas had used its facilities, including by digging tunnels underneath them. The official said UNRWA employed 1,400 Palestinians with militant ties. Israel says some of those employees also took part in Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023, attacks and Weissbrod said at least three of those employees still worked for the U.N. The presentation included videos, documents and pictures of the alleged employees.

The Oct. 7, 2023, attack in southern Israel killed about 1,200 people and set off the war in Gaza. UNRWA said it fired nine staffers after an internal U.N. investigation concluded that they could have been involved, although the evidence was not authenticated and corroborated.

The Israeli ban doesn’t apply directly to Gaza. But it controls all entry to the territory, and its ban on UNRWA from operating inside Israel greatly limits the agency’s ability to function. Israeli officials say they are looking for alternative ways to deliver aid to Gaza that would cut out the United Nations.

UNRWA was established by the U.N. General Assembly in 1949 to provide relief for Palestinians who fled or were expelled from their homes in what is now Israel during the war surrounding Israel’s creation the previous year until there is a political solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

The agency has been providing aid and services — including health and education — to some 2.5 million Palestinians in Gaza, the occupied West Bank and east Jerusalem, as well as 3 million more in Syria, Jordan and Lebanon.

Israel’s air and ground war has killed over 51,000 Palestinians, mostly women and children, according to the Gaza Health Ministry, which does not say how many of the dead were civilians or combatants. Israel says it has killed around 20,000 militants, without providing evidence.

Source: Africanews

ICJ begins hearings on Israel’s humanitarian obligations in Palestinian territories

The United Nations’ International Court of Justice opened public hearings on Monday about Israel’s obligations to “ensure and facilitate” humanitarian aid into Palestinian territories.  

The five days of hearings respond to a request made in December 2024 by the UN General Assembly, after Israel blocked the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, from operating on its territory. 

In a resolution sponsored by Norway, the General Assembly requested an advisory opinion, a non-binding but legally important decision from the court, regarding Israel’s legal obligations. 

Lawyers from more than 40 countries claim that Israel’s decision breaches the UN Charter. 

Speaking on Monday morning, Palestinian representative to the Netherlands Ammar Hijazi told the ICJ that Israel was using aid blockage as “a weapon of war.” 

Ardi Imseis, a professor of international law at Queen’s University who spoke “on behalf of the state of Palestine and the Palestinian people”, told the court that UNRWA possessed “experience, expertise and all-important community trust”, making it “absolutely vital.”  

The UN agency said it reached 2 million people with food assistance in Gaza during the ceasefire that began on 19 January and was broken when Israel resumed its bombardments on 18 March.

Israel claims that Hamas has infiltrated UNRWA, an allegation that has been contested. 

“Israel decided not to take part in this circus. It is another attempt to politicise and abuse the legal process in order to persecute Israel. The goal is to deprive Israel of its most basic right to defend itself”, said Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar, speaking from Jerusalem as the hearings opened in The Hague. “This case is part of a systematic persecution and delegitimisation of Israel.” 

The ICJ has already issued several rulings demanding that Israel let aid enter Gaza.  

In July 2024, the court also ruled that Israel’s occupation of Palestinian territories was unlawful. 

The new ICJ hearings open as the humanitarian aid system in Gaza is nearing collapse. Israel has blocked the entry of food, fuel, medicine and other humanitarian supplies into Gaza since 2 March.

Source: Africanews

Fully-integrated browser AI, Aria, is now available to millions of Opera Mini users in Africa, without extra data costs

  • Opera Mini, with over 100M users worldwide, now offers AI integration in its browser
  • According to Opera surveys*, 89% of Nigerians and 80% of South Africans are interested to try an AI tool integrated in the browser 
  • Opera Mini now provides all its smartphone users its own free built-in browser AI, Aria, including AI chat, Ask Aria and image generation, responding to the demand of 86% of Nigerians and 78% of South Africans to use AI from a trusted brand 
  • 59% of Nigerians and 80% of South Africans say data is too expensive, so Opera offers its users free data packages in Nigeria and South Africa to allow people to browse more, and Aria is a part of that offer*** 
  • As a response to high data costs in Nigeria and South Africa, Aria is available within Free Data offerings, so users will minimize their data usage when exploring AI 

OSLO, Norway, 16 April, 2025 -/African Media Agency(AMA)/- Opera is adding its free browser AI, Aria, to Opera Mini, its popular Android-based browser with millions of users in Africa. This update brings powerful AI capabilities, such as up-to-date information from the web, research assistance, content summarization, and image generation directly into the browser at no additional cost. 

“AI is rapidly becoming an integral part of the daily internet experience, and we’re seeing a great interest in AI solutions among Africans, so bringing Aria to Opera Mini is a natural addition to our most-downloaded browser. With the integration of our built-in AI, Aria, we’re excited to

explore how AI can further enhance the feature set our users across Africa can rely on every day,” said Jørgen Arnesen, EVP Mobile at Opera. 

Opera Mini is known and appreciated for numerous unique features – from live football scores to the built-in digital wallet MiniPay, and now – also Aria. 

Addressing data costs – a priority for users across Africa

While internet access is becoming increasingly more available on the continent, nearly 60% of people in Africa still don’t have web access. Moreover, the cost of the internet is disproportionately high compared to income or GDP per capita in Sub-Saharan Africa. According to Opera surveys from March 2025, 59% of Nigerians and 80% of South Africans said data is too expensive, and more than half (55% Nigerians and 69% South Africans) reported regularly running out of data before the end of the month: data consumption remains a key concern. 

For years, Opera Mini has played a key role in enabling internet access across the region. Opera Mini’s turbo data-saving mode can reduce data usage by up to 90% compared to other major browsers. For the past three years, Opera has saved Nigerians an equivalent of $27M (60M GB) and South Africans an equivalent of $10M (6M GB) in data through this unique data compression technology. The free data campaigns**, active since 2020, allow Opera Mini users across Nigeria, South Africa, Ghana, Tanzania, Ethiopia, Kenya to benefit from up to 3GB each month for free, which can be used for anything, including interacting with Aria. Since 2022, Opera has invested millions of dollars in free data campaigns, bridging the digital divide and ensuring information access.

With Aria integrated into Opera Mini, users get the benefits of an advanced AI tool without sacrificing precious data. Aria is optimized for minimal data consumption and is included within Opera’s free daily data bundles — making it an ideal solution for the 46% of Nigerians and 69% of South Africans who said they would use AI tools only if they didn’t add to data usage. 

Aria – Opera’s native built-in AI

Aria browser AI integrates into Opera’s browsers on both desktop and mobile to enable an accessible chat-based interface to AI. It enhances user interaction through information retrieval, text or code generation, image generation and understanding. Aria is powered by Opera’s own Composer AI engine, which utilizes both OpenAI and Google AI technologies to provide the most relevant answers, and it integrates image generation through Google’s Imagen3 fast model. With today’s update, Aria is now available across all Opera browsers. For the 47% of Nigerians and 24% of South Africans surveyed who already use AI tools several times a day, and for the 67% of Nigerians and 59% of South Africans who rely on AI for academic purposes, Aria within Opera Mini offers a way to make those experiences even more accessible and fully affordable, as it’s free. There are more exciting and unique features coming to Opera Mini soon – and some of those are being built for football fans across Africa! 

To use Aria in Opera Mini, download or update via Google Play Store.

Distributed by African Media Agency (AMA) on behalf of Opera.

About Opera Mini 

Launched in 2005, Opera Mini is a small, fast, and powerful browser. It comes with unique features such as Data Compression, Offline File Sharing, and a built-in ad-blocker. Today, Opera Mini has been downloaded over 1 billion times on the Google Play Store by people who chose it over the pre-installed browsers on Android mobile devices. Opera Mini has a 4.6-star rating on Google Play and has been reviewed by more than eight million people worldwide.

Source : African Media Agency (AMA)

European Leaders Palestinian Statehood, Trump’s Florida Case, Hospital Cyberattack

The leaders of Ireland, Spain and Norway announce their countries will recognize Palestinian statehood and the Israeli foreign minister says he’s recalling the country’s ambassadors for consultations in response. Lawyers for former President Donald Trump and two co-defendants are in court in Florida today asking a federal judge to dismiss the charges against their clients. And a ransomware attack on a major health care system continues to affect hospitals and patients two weeks after it happened.

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Today’s episode of Up First was edited by John Helton, Russell Lewis, Diane Webber, Alice Woelfle and Lisa Thomson. It was produced by Ziad Buchh, Ben Abrams and Nina Kravinsky. We get engineering support from Stacey Abbott. And our technical director is Zac Coleman.

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International community condemns political violence in Malawi

International community condemns political violence in Malawi

BLANTYRE-(MaraviPost)—With only two months remaining before the country goes to fresh presidential election, international development partners to Malawi have expressed worry over cases of political violence.

They have since called upon all political actors to unite and exercise restraint.

In a joint statement by the UK, the European Union, Norway and the United States of America, the development partners say they are shocked by the recent acts of violence apparently fueled by political motives, and are deeply saddened by the injury entailed.

“It is especially important at this time that all political actors should stand united in the defence of human rights and Rule of Law, and against any acts of violence, incitement of violence or hate speech.

“We support those calling for restraint and hope all cases of violence are investigated comprehensively and transparently in line with the laws of Malawi, so that those responsible can be brought to justice,” reads the statement.

The stand by the international community comes just few days after UTM monitors were severely beaten by the ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) youth wing, popularly known as cadets.

On Monday, UTM office was also set ablaze by suspected DPP thugs resulting in the death of two people: mother and son.

Malawians will go to polls on July 2, following a Constitutional Court ruling of February 3 which nullified the 2019 presidential poll.