SOCIETY
SENEGAL – Fatou Sall, the premature departure of a social “soul”

Terrible pain is the news that embraces, since 18 December 2024, the Senegalese and diaspora associative world. Fatou Aïssata Sall, the president of the association Sene Asso, left abruptly during a solidarity tour in Dakar. She was only 36. She didn’t leave just like that. It is among the poor children, in the nursery, in the Koranic schools that his soul went to join the stars. A tragic irony for the one that embodied the discreet but persistent light of social engagement.
Fatou Sall, a kindness without borders
Fatou Sall did not belong to these mediatized benefactors who burst the screen and whose charity was giving in show. Living in Paris since her childhood, she never stopped – a painful past – building bridges between France and Senegal. She had only one motto, “help without waiting back”, and this creed animated her passion. She gave joy to the poor, the forgotten, the migrants wandering in Paris. They were her protégés. Paris, she knew her; since Paris had seen her grow up. Yet, Senegal was not a nostalgia for her. She founded Sene Asso in 2016 to help Senegalese students who have recently arrived in France. The association is expanding and addressing Senegalese social and humanitarian issues. Since 2019, it has initiated the Sene Asso Solidarity Tour to mobilize funds to support childcare facilities, schools and religious centres.
Women, as we see more
After working in the tourism sector for 20 years, Fatou Sall had successfully retrained. She was the director of purchasing and supplier relations at a furniture company in France since 2022. Despite all this workload, she managed to reconcile personal life, professional activities and associations. Always simple. Always wearing a frank smile and in that smile, perceived the concern she had for others, putting her own difficulties down. And, being at the head of Sene Asso, it was not the solicitations that were lacking. Ndiaga Fall, one of her close associates, said, “She was very helpful and dedicated. We truly salute his spirit of solidarity.” It is rare to see the whole chain of love that unfolds around Fatou Sall.
Modesty and dedication, a model of female leadership
Fatou Sall was not afraid of fighting. She was from all the associative fronts. However, and this may seem paradoxical was a woman who asserts herself, she had this modest restraint. Never a word higher than the other. His management spirit as president of the association Sene Asso shines his soul encircled. To her friends and family, she often confided: “The main challenge is to reconcile personal, professional and community life. But thanks to my personality and experience, managing Sene Asso is quite easy.” His four-year working partner, Aladji Gora Pene, sums up their collaboration in two words: “Respect and admiration” and He testifies: “Fatou was methodical, organized, rigorous. She has made us all Fatou ready to advise, guide and make the best decisions. It takes a lot of money to become a major player in the Franco-Senegalese solidarity. And, Fatou Sall had it. Unquestionably.
True commitment, an enduring legacy
This sudden departure is a silent earthquake. A gap that will be difficult to fill. This death, no one saw it coming, since the last post on Facebook is just a few days ago. And yet, somewhere, she sensed it. She has taken care to leave behind recommendations, plans for the future of Sene Asso, like a soldier who, on his way to the front, is preparing his family for his doom. Sene Asso promises to continue the actions initiated by its president. Fatou Sall never sought the light. And when her moment came, she knew how to slip away. She left a legacy, and a way of practicing associative life. A link and phone number have also been set up to help the family through this ordeal. The spirit of solidarity advocated by Fatou Sall still shines. Now she rests in the cemetery of Yoff in Senegal.
EDUCATION
CAMEROON – 7 million children deprived of birth certificates, a national issue

In Cameroon, about 7 million children, including more than 1.5 million in school, do not have a birth certificate. The absence of this essential document for access to education, health and other public services, particularly affects rural areas and the regions of the Far North, Northwest and Southwest. The subject was discussed during the 3rd International Economic Days of Municipalities (JEICOM), held from June 2 to 4, 2025, at the Palais des Congrès in Yaoundé.
A deplorable situation at the moment when Cameroon is celebrating the 5th edition of Children’s Day under the theme “Child-sensitive budgeting and planning: a strategic lever for the promotion and protection of children’s rights”.
Faced with the constant problem of establishing birth certificates in Cameroon, the government, through the National Civil Registry Office (BUNEC), collaborates with partners such as UNICEF or the World Bank in order to provide an effective response to the phenomenon.
In this dynamic, the Bunec provides the town halls with tools to ensure a “compliant and reliable registration of births”. It also supports them in the modernization of the civil status system, including the digitization of registers. UNICEF has enabled some town halls to strengthen their human resources capacities and develop innovative strategies.
Several initiatives were launched, notably the national forum on universal birth registration, organized in April 2024, which brought together mayors, civil status officials, and partners to discuss solutions to the problem.
SOCIETY
IVORY COAST – Five dead in a violent mutiny at the Bouake prison

A violent mutiny broke out this Tuesday, June 3, 2025, at the Maison Pénale de Bouaké in Ivory Coast. While the Prison Administration was conducting a routine search within the establishment, it encountered hostility from the inmates of Building E. According to the prosecutor’s statement, they “were attacking them with the help of clubs, machetes and other blunt objects.” To clear themselves, the agents were forced to carry out warning shots in order to cover their retreat.
Unfortunately, this incident led to a heavy toll: “the death of five (05) detainees is to be deplored. Twenty-nine (29) injured, including six (06) prison officers and twenty-three (23) detainees, were also recorded,” said the public prosecutor. He specifies that the injured were taken care of and a coroner was requested for findings of use in such circumstances.
The rapid intervention of the forces of the Gendarmerie and the National Police allowed to limit the violence and restore order. The search operation then continued without further incidents. She led to the discovery of “several blocks of cannabis, platelets of Tramadol tablets, eighteen (18) mobile phones, including eight (08) smartphones, three (03) grenades, knives etc… strictly prohibited in detention.
The prosecutor recalled that previous excavations had already led to the discovery of bladed weapons
ENVIRONMENT
NIGERIA – More than 200 dead in deadly floods in Mokwa

More than 200 people were found dead after the sudden floods that hit the Central West of Nigeria on Thursday, May 29, 2025, announced the humanitarian coordinator of the state of Niger in a new report, Tuesday, June 3. Hundreds of victims are still missing.
The balance sheet is getting heavier. Trapped by sudden floods in west-central Niger, many people were still missing on Tuesday 3 June. The humanitarian coordinator of Niger state said that the death toll now exceeds 200, while hundreds of people are still missing.
“We have more than 200 bodies,” Ahmad Suleiman told Channels Television. “No one can say at the moment how many deaths there are in the state of Niger because we are still looking for other bodies,” he added.
The research continues
“We continue to search but sincerely, we cannot be sure of anything,” he added. Many victims were counted in Mokwa, the most affected agglomeration and a neighborhood of which was wiped out within hours Thursday by flood waters from the Niger River. Since then, volunteers and rescue teams have been combing the area under an overwhelming heat, sometimes finding bodies up to 10 kilometers away.
The coordinator’s announcement comes after the official toll remained stuck at 150 deaths, although some residents deplore the loss of more than a dozen family members.
Fifteen of the 36 states in Nigeria had been placed on flood alert a few days before the disaster. Climate change amplifies extreme weather events in Nigeria but for the people of Mokwa, the tragedy is also linked to human failures. In Mokwa, muddy waters swept away hundreds of houses in the town, including the lack of maintenance of the nozzles designed to evacuate floodwaters, which were clogged with debris on the day of the flood.
The death toll could exceed the 321 deaths from the floods that occurred in 34 of Nigeria’s 36 states in 2024. The Nigerian government claims to have provided aid, but on the spot, the inhabitants feel left to themselves and several families said they had received nothing.
Source: la-croix.com/ Photo credit: TV5
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