Washington/Nairobi - Richard Phillips, the American captain dramatically rescued from pirates on Sunday, arrived in the Kenyan port of Mombasa Thursday aboard a US Navy destroyer escorting a second US freighter attacked by pirates.
Phillips is captain of the Maersk Alabama, whose crew repelled an attempted pirate hijacking. The captain was held hostage for five days on a lifeboat.
He was freed Sunday when five US Navy snipers killed the three pirates holding him.
Nairobi - Kenya's coalition government, formed to bring an end to the post-election violence that ripped the county apart in early 2008, was Thursday locked in talks aimed at preventing an increasingly fragile alliance falling apart.
Prime Minister Raila Odinga, of the Orange Democratic Movement, on Wednesday said members of his party would boycott cabinet meetings.
The ODM feels is is being sidelined by President Mwai Kibaki's Party of National Unity. Odinga's party walked out of earlier talks with the PNU.
Nairobi - Hundreds of thousands of civilians in the Democratic Republic of Congo are still displaced and suffering abuse and hunger as a result of an operation targeting Hutu militia, the British arm of Oxfam said Tuesday.
Rwandan and Congolese troops joined forces in January to target the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR) - an armed group created by Hutu militia who took part in Rwanda's 1994 genocide.
Nairobi - Kenya's Justice Minister Martha Karua resigned on Monday, citing frustrations over the pace of reforms.
Karua was angry that President Mwai Kibaki appointed seven judges without informing her.
She said her position was now untenable and that she was being prevented from reforming the judicial system.
The resignation comes as Kenya's grand coalition - which was formed last March to end violence brought about by dispute election - looks on the verge of falling apart.
Nairobi/Abuja - Nigeria's government is mulling an amnesty for rebels agitating for independence in the country's delta region.
The rebel groups have greatly reduced the West African country's oil output with their frequent attacks on oil pipelines and kidnapping of foreign workers.
The proposed amnesty, which was discussed by President Umaru Musa Yar'Adua with members of his People's Democratic Party, is one idea for bringing the rebels back into mainstream society.
Nairobi - Authorities in Kenya plan to offer around 2.5 million orphaned children a "normal" life, by removing them out of institutions and placing them with relatives, reports said Wednesday.
The government was working on a programme aimed at eliminating the need for children to grow up in orphanages by linking the orphans and their relatives, The Standard newspaper said.