
A solidarity fundraiser has been launched to support Mariama Diallo, a young mother who experienced severe medical complications during childbirth on August 6, 2025, at Idrissa Pouye Hospital in Grand Yoff. Since the intervention, Mariama Diallo has been paralyzed and requires continuous medical care, currently provided at Fann Hospital in Dakar. Due to the complexity of her case, medical teams and her family believe that treatment outside the country, specifically in India, is essential for a real improvement in her condition. Medical expenses for care, examinations, physiotherapy, and travel are increasing, making an urgent medical evacuation to India for specialized treatment necessary. Her husband, Mamadou Diallo, is by her side, assisting with daily care and consultations, and has appealed for solidarity to enable her to continue treatment under better conditions. The fundraiser aims to finance this medical evacuation and ongoing specialized care, with organizers emphasizing the urgency of the situation and the need for rapid mobilization.
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This summary was AI-generated from a story originally published by SeneNews.

On Wednesday, April 22, 2026, a large whale was discovered dead on the beach in Guédiawaye. Captain Kabou, a representative of the marine protected areas directorate, stated that the whale measures ten meters in length. According to the specialist, the deceased whale was in an advanced state of putrefaction, and its biological degradation made it impossible to collect organic samples for in-depth analysis.
Must ReadSenegal's 2025 budget projects a dynamic economy with 6.7% growth, a slight acceleration from 2024. State revenues are expected to reach 4,477.1 billion FCFA, an 11.8% increase, indicating strong public resource mobilization. Expenditures are set at 5,864.6 billion FCFA, with a controlled execution rate of 93.9% of forecasts. The budget deficit is projected at 1,387.5 billion FCFA, lower than initial expectations, representing 6.44% of GDP against a target of 7.82%. These figures reflect an improvement in budget management but also confirm that achieving public finance balance remains a significant challenge, as analyzed by Djibril Gueye.
Must ReadThe concept of the "reality of power" is often presented as self-evident in Africa, yet it remains largely unquestioned. Power is understood as the ability to impose one's will within constraints, operating within a complex matrix of historical legacies, structural dependencies, and frustrated aspirations. This raises the question of whether power serves as a tool for transformation or merely for reproduction. In its dominant form, power appears to stabilize existing balances rather than transform them, not due to incompetence, but because it operates within established frameworks. Accessing power often means entering a pre-existing architecture with its own rules, rather than creating new possibilities. This "reality of power" can act as a limitation, explaining policy shifts, justifying retreats, and normalizing silences, thereby reducing the scope of what is considered possible and suggesting that radical change is unrealistic. The true pitfall of power may not be the constraints themselves, but the habit that develops over time. This "reality" is not only objective but also internalized; individuals may enter power with transformative intentions but gradually learn to maintain it without disruption. This adaptation becomes the norm, and compromise emerges as a doctrine. Some political figures, such as Ousmane Sonko, challenge this logic, asserting that there is no inherent "reality of power" that must be accepted, and urging against confusing constraint with inevitability
Must ReadAn individual was brought before the prosecutor on April 20, 2026, by the National Division for Combating Migrant Trafficking and Related Practices DNLT, a unit of the Border Police Directorate DPAF. The charges include human trafficking for sexual exploitation, pimping, incitement to debauchery, criminal association, and operating an unauthorized establishment. The case emerged from an operation by the Rosso Special Police Station, where several women, both Senegalese and foreign nationals, suspected of prostitution at "Le Walo" inn in Rosso-Senegal, were interviewed. The victims confirmed engaging in prostitution at the establishment, stating they were housed by the accused, the owner, in exchange for a daily fee of 16,000 FCFA, which included the ability to host clients on-site. One woman testified that she was recruited in Nigeria and forced into prostitution by an accomplice of the suspect, who demanded repayment of a fictitious three-million FCFA debt for non-existent travel expenses. The owner partially denied the allegations, admitting to managing the inn and collecting the daily fee, but claiming the residents stayed voluntarily. He did acknowledge operating without the required Ministry of Tourism accreditation for a tourist accommodation establishment, though he possessed an alcohol sales license. Following his detention, the suspect was presented to the public prosecutor, and investigations are ongoing to identify and apprehend any accomplices. The national police