TARIF: Choosing Between an iPhone 15 and Your Family

The Africa Review in Five highlights African current affairs from a Christian perspective. Listen and subscribe through Youtube, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify.

Today is Tuesday, October 3rd, A.D. 2023. This is The Africa Review in Five, written by Yamikani Katunga and presented by Paul Schlehlein

Choosing Between an iPhone 15 and Your Family

In our world of ever-developing devices and novel announcements, this time of the year has come to be coined as ‘Tech-tember and Tech-tober.’ Annually in September the biggest and most successful company in the world, Apple Inc.–which has surpassed a market cap of $3 Trillion– attracts global attention with the fanfare that covers the release of their latest phone. 

With the hype bubbling around the brand-new iPhone 15, MyBroadband, a top African blog, reported the cost in terms of the average worker’s salary. According to their research, a South African employee must save 27 days’ pay to afford the lowest-priced iPhone 15. With South Africa being the third-highest peak of the African economy in terms of GDP, one can only imagine comparative challenges in countries like Malawi, Zambia, and Senegal which are less than a tenth of the size of South Africa’s economy.

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TARIF: National Leaders and Lifelong Terms – Senegal’s Macky Sall

The Africa Review in Five highlights African current affairs from a Christian perspective. Listen and subscribe through Youtube, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify.

Today is Tuesday, July 11th, A.D. 2023. This is The Africa Review in Five, written by David de Bruyn and presented by Yamikani Katunga

Macky Sall not running for third term as president

The president of Senegal, Macky Sall, has announced he will not seek a third term as president. Senegal’s constitution was changed during Sall’s first term, to ensure that no

president could serve for longer than two terms. Even though Sall’s recent tenure has been marred by unrest and the jailing of an opposition leader, his decision to step down after two terms is to be commended. Senegal is respected as a relatively peaceful and stable country within the turmoil of West Africa, where military coups and power grabs are not unknown. 

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