According to the Kenyan woman, she has prayed to God for a man for a long time but he only brings either married or already engaged men her way, so she has decided to take her destiny into her own hands.
The lady who identifies herself as @WamboWangechi on Twitter disclosed she misses having a man by her side. A few years back I used to ignore men a lot. Now I am missing to have one of my own and get married, the problem is that when you pray to God, He has also changed nowadays. He gives you those who have already been taken, she tweeted.
nd Alieu Sahid Tunkara
BONG MINES, Liberia and LUNSAR, Sierra Leone – In 2012, Frienkeen Tyler, of Bong Town in the Fuamah District of Bong County was feeling good about his future. Employed as a security guard by China Union, the Chinese mining company, he received a steady salary. His three children attended the company’s tuition-free school and received medical benefits.
But in 2015, Tyler, 35, and his family were plunged back into poverty and uncertainty when China Union shut down operations as the price for global iron ore plunged from US$155 a ton in 2013 to US$53 a ton by 2014.
Now, without a job, Tyler finds it difficult to feedhis family, let alone send his children to school.
The ceremony was attended by guests most of whom came riding on bicycles.
The popular female Sierra Leonean cyclist, Isata Sama Mondeh tied the knot with her lover over the weekend.
Both the bride and the groom rode on bicycles to and from the ceremony, according to reports.
Their friends too took a cue from them and opted for bicycles instead of conventional motor vehicles.
The wedding was reportedly well attended by a number of cyclists in Sierra Leone, making the event super beautiful. Female cyclist’s beautiful wedding full of bicycles; no car
It is further reported that the bride, Isata Sama Mondeh is Sierra Leone’s current fastest female cyclist and also the first female bicycle mechanic in the West African country.
Joaquin M. Sendolo and Alieu Sahid Tonkara
NIMBA, Liberia & LUNSAR, SIERRA LEONE – In December 2019, conflict broke out between an international mining company and the leadership of three forest-dwelling communities of Nimba County in north eastern Liberia. The communities accused the company of illegal entry into the 2,169-acre mountainous forestland. The company, Solway Mining Incorporated, expressed surprise. Liberia’s Ministry of Mines and Energy had issuedit, a license to explore for iron ore in the two forests, which border the East Nimba Nature Reserve and area leased to ArcelorMittal, the global steel giant and Liberia’s largest mining concession.
The dispute illustrates the ongoing battles communities, extractives companies and governments are having over the right to profit from forests and mineral resources across the Mano River region. Countries rebuilding from civil war have found themselves with weak institutions and conflicting laws that are causing conflict