October 2005 in Africa

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This page deals with events that took place from October 2005 in or of interest to the Continent of Africa,


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Other events in October 2005

World - Sci-Tech - Sports

Britain and Ireland - Canada - Hong Kong and Macao - Australia & NZ - India - US

[edit] Deaths

23 Oct: Stella Obasanjo
10 Oct: Milton Obote

[edit] Events

ECOWAS summit
Malawi food crisis
Niger food crisis
Zimbabwe home demolitions

[edit] Holidays

4: Ramadan begins

[edit] Armed conflicts

Second Congo War
Darfur conflict in Sudan
Civil war in Côte d'Ivoire
Conflict in northern Uganda

[edit] elections

Oct 11: Liberian presidential & parliamentary
Nov 8: Liberian presidential & parliamentary, run-off

[edit] 31 October 2005 (Monday)

  • Côte d'Ivoire President Laurent Gbagbo begins a sixth year in office defying opposition calls that he stand down now his elected mandate is up. The elections scheduled on Sunday were cancelled due to instability. Meanwhile, rebels controlling the northern half of the country declare their leader, 33-year-old Guillaume Soro, as the new prime minister. (allAfrica)
  • An official from the Mozambique's Technical Secretariat for Food Security and Nutrition (SETSAN) says that the number of people in need of food aid has almost doubled in the past six months to more than 800,000 in Mozambique due to escalating maize prices and other factors. (allAfrica)

[edit] 24 October 2005 (Monday)

[edit] 23 October 2005 (Sunday)

[edit] 21 October 2005 (Friday)

  • AIDS activists groups, Act Up-Paris lobby group and the African Essential Drug Network (RAME), call on drugs manufacturing company Roche Holding AG to allow generic companies to make the antiviral drug Tamiflu for Africans, as concerns mount over how countries would deal with a potential flu pandemic stemming from bird flu virus H5N1. (Reuters)

[edit] 20 October 2005 (Thursday)

[edit] 18 October 2005 (Tuesday)

[edit] 17 October 2005 (Monday)

  • A United Nations food agency expert said that East Africa as well as the rest of the continent are more vulnerable to bird flu than Europe as the region's lack of preparedness causes concern. Meanwhile, researchers in South Africa said that even though no bird flu of any kind has been detected in Africa, controlling the virus should it occur in the continent's rural hinterlands could prove a difficult task. (Reuters)

[edit] 15 October 2005 (Saturday)

[edit] 14 October 2005 (Friday)

[edit] 13 October 2005 (Thursday)

  • The United Nations is to evacuate some staff from Sudan's West Darfur state because of an increase in violence. U.N. officials said that the violence had hindered aid access to 650,000 refugees in the region. (Reuters)

[edit] 12 October 2005 (Wednesday)

[edit] 11 October 2005 (Tuesday)

[edit] 10 October 2005 (Monday)

  • The city of Brikama in Gambia is plunged into a housing crisis when over two thousand people remained homeless following the demolition of their residential compounds. (allAfrica)

[edit] 8 October 2005 (Saturday)

[edit] 7 October 2005 (Friday)

[edit] 6 October 2005 (Thursday)

  • Gabon announces that the presidential election is to be held on 27 November with security forces voting two days earlier, but opposition denounces the move as a ruse for ballot rigging. (allAfrica)
  • A USD$35 million HIV/AIDS treatment centre opens at Tanzania's Muhimbili National Hospital, the country main referral hospital. The centre has the capacity to process up to 1,000 tests per hour. (allAfrica)
  • Zimbabwe is facing increasing threat of military revolt, as soldiers are increasingly dissatisfied by the government's failure to increase their salaries and by chronic food shortages at their barracks. (allAfrica)

[edit] 4 October 2005 (Tuesday)

  • The Malawi government says that 650,000 people in the country have died due to AIDS in the past two decades. There are now 850,000 orphan children, 50% of these are a result of AIDS. (allAfrica)

[edit] 3 October 2005 (Monday)

[edit] 2 October 2005 (Sunday)

  • Liberian elections, 2005: the Supreme Court of Liberia rules that the National Elections Commission (NEC) had erred by rejecting three candidates on grounds that their registration documents were incomplete. The court says that NEC must provide the disqualified contenders with sufficient time to correct the deficiencies that barred them from being on the ballot. (allAfrica)

[edit] 1 October 2005 (Saturday)

[edit] 30 September 2005 (Friday)

[edit] 26 May 2005

[edit] News collections and sources