More from Africanews | Latest breaking news, daily news and African news from Africa

\t On Friday, internet and international calls were cut off across the West African nation in anticipation of the election results, according to locals and international observers in the capital, Conakry.

\t This was the third time that Conde matched-up against Diallo. Before the election, observers raised concerns that an electoral dispute could reignite ethnic tensions between Guinea's largest ethnic groups.

","ShowFullContent":false,"FactText":null,"FactUrl":null,"RelatedIds":null,"OGImageUrl":null,"OGImageWidth":null,"OGImageHeight":null,"FavIconUrl":null,"FavIconWidth":null,"FavIconHeight":null,"IsLocal":false,"Type":null,"SummaryText":"Electoral authorities in Guinea on Saturday declared President Alpha Conde winner of Sunday's election with 59.49% of the vote, defeating his main rival Cellou Diallo. \n\n\t Some people went to the streets to protest immediately after the announcement. Such demonstrations have occurred for months after the government changed the constitution through a national referendum, allowing Conde to extend his decade in power. \n\n\t Opposition candidate Cellou Diallo received 33.50% of the vote, the electoral commission said. Voter turnout was almost 80%. \n\n\t Political tensions in the West African nation turned violent in recent days after Diallo claimed victory ahead of the official results. Celebrations by his supporters were suppressed when security forces fired tear gas to disperse them. \n\nThey accuse the electoral authorities of rigging the vote for incumbent president Alpha Conde. \n\n\n\t At least nine people have been killed since the election, according to the government. The violence sparked international condemnation by the U.S. and others. \n\n\t ``Today is a sad day for African democracy,'' said Sally Bilaly Sow, a Guinean blogger and activist living abroad. The government should take into account the will of the people who have a desire for change, he said. \n\nICC warning \n\nThe International Criminal Court’s chief prosecutor warned on Friday that warring factions in Guinea could be prosecuted after fighting erupted. \n\n“I wish to repeat this important reminder: anyone who commits, orders, incites, encourages and contributes in any other way to crimes … is liable to prosecution either by the Guinean courts or the ICC,” she said. \n\n#ICC Prosecutor #FatouBensouda: "I wish to repeat this important reminder: anyone who commits, orders, incites, encourages or contributes, in any other way, to the commission of #RomeStatute crimes, is liable to prosecution either by #Guinean courts or by the #ICC."\r\n— Int'l Criminal Court (@IntlCrimCourt) October 23, 2020 \n\n\t On Friday, internet and international calls were cut off across the West African nation in anticipation of the election results, according to locals and international observers in the capital, Conakry. \n\n\t This was the third time that Conde matched-up against Diallo. Before the election, observers raised concerns that an electoral dispute could reignite ethnic tensions between Guinea's largest ethnic groups.","MaxDetailCharacters":300,"ImageUrl":"https://cdn.blackfacts.net/uploads/blackfacts/facts/2020/10/7b5fd92d-4f48-48ca-a3be-d88ebeb47789.jpg","ImageHeight":538,"ImageWidth":1024,"ImageOrientation":"landscape","HasImage":true,"CssClass":"","Layout":"","Rowspan":1,"Colspan":1,"Likes":0,"Shares":0,"ContentSourceId":"42C8FAC1-E2C7-4A09-8CA5-16C843DEC99E","SourceName":"Africanews | Latest breaking news, daily news and African news from Africa","ContentSourceRootUrl":"https://www.africanews.com","ContentSourceIcon":null,"SponsorId":"06DC953B-5D0F-47E0-A5AE-9E69F8B070AA","IsSponsored":true,"SponsorName":"Intellitech","SmallSponsorLogoUrl":"24x24/ice-mobile-350x350-53.png","SponsorUrl":"http://intellitech.net","HasSmallSponsorLogo":true,"EffectiveDate":null,"HasEffectiveDate":false,"MonthAbbrevName":null,"FormattedDate":null,"Year":null,"Month":null,"Day":null,"LastUpdatedDate":"2023-11-25T05:14:39.027","LastUpdatedBy":null,"IsEditable":false,"InsertAd":false,"JSONFactData":"{\"date\":\"2020-10-24T14:17:24Z\"}","JsonExtData":{"date":{"ValueKind":3}},"Html":null,"Css":null,"Script":null,"ScriptHash":null,"Id":175900,"FactUId":"77498CD5-F9E4-4ED7-87E1-E04C6AABBFC0","Slug":"alpha-conde-re-elected-in-vote-dismissed-by-opposition-africanews-0","FactType":"News","VirtualSiteSlug":"blackfacts","Title":"Alpha Conde re-elected in vote dismissed by opposition | Africanews","LocalFactUrl":"/fact/alpha-conde-re-elected-in-vote-dismissed-by-opposition-africanews-0","ResultCount":200,"SearchType":"OmniSearch.RelatedId"},{"FadeSummary":false,"SponsorRedirectUrl":"https://ai.blackfacts.com/redirect/Sponsor/aa57795e-8800-46a7-89eb-a946cfbd4ad8/46631b1e-dda6-42bc-87d9-1abd36b66f8d/https%3A%2F%2Fwww.apexmuseum.org%20","SourceRedirectUrl":"https://ai.blackfacts.com/redirect/ContentSource/76148950-8b3b-4df2-93b1-4463eff65e8a/46631b1e-dda6-42bc-87d9-1abd36b66f8d/https%3A%2F%2Fwww.thesouthafrican.com","DisplayText":"

Eskom and Hawks say they are working to trace all those who illegally sell and buy cut-price prepaid electricity. Strong action promised.

","ShowFullContent":false,"FactText":null,"FactUrl":null,"RelatedIds":null,"OGImageUrl":null,"OGImageWidth":null,"OGImageHeight":null,"FavIconUrl":null,"FavIconWidth":null,"FavIconHeight":null,"IsLocal":false,"Type":null,"SummaryText":"Eskom and Hawks say they are working to trace all those who illegally sell and buy cut-price prepaid electricity. Strong action promised.","MaxDetailCharacters":300,"ImageUrl":"https://cdn.blackfacts.net/uploads/blackfacts/facts/2020/10/382f4c6d-dd6f-4e22-af63-1aee042d41fc.jpg","ImageHeight":791,"ImageWidth":1200,"ImageOrientation":"landscape","HasImage":true,"CssClass":"","Layout":"","Rowspan":1,"Colspan":1,"Likes":0,"Shares":0,"ContentSourceId":"76148950-8B3B-4DF2-93B1-4463EFF65E8A","SourceName":"South African News | Online News | The South African","ContentSourceRootUrl":"https://www.thesouthafrican.com","ContentSourceIcon":null,"SponsorId":"AA57795E-8800-46A7-89EB-A946CFBD4AD8","IsSponsored":true,"SponsorName":"APEX Museum","SmallSponsorLogoUrl":"24x24/apex-logo.jpg","SponsorUrl":"https://www.apexmuseum.org ","HasSmallSponsorLogo":true,"EffectiveDate":null,"HasEffectiveDate":false,"MonthAbbrevName":null,"FormattedDate":null,"Year":null,"Month":null,"Day":null,"LastUpdatedDate":"2023-11-25T05:14:39.027","LastUpdatedBy":null,"IsEditable":false,"InsertAd":false,"JSONFactData":"{\"date\":\"2020-10-24T08:44:57Z\"}","JsonExtData":{"date":{"ValueKind":3}},"Html":null,"Css":null,"Script":null,"ScriptHash":null,"Id":175956,"FactUId":"B073CE43-F44F-432E-9B36-62C4F6CE97E1","Slug":"four-arrests-in-clampdown-on-illegal-electricity-vendors-0","FactType":"News","VirtualSiteSlug":"blackfacts","Title":"Four arrests in clampdown on illegal electricity vendors","LocalFactUrl":"/fact/four-arrests-in-clampdown-on-illegal-electricity-vendors-0","ResultCount":200,"SearchType":"OmniSearch.RelatedId"},{"FadeSummary":false,"SponsorRedirectUrl":"https://ai.blackfacts.com/redirect/Sponsor/0259fe31-15b2-475e-8f78-c20b48d0442b/46631b1e-dda6-42bc-87d9-1abd36b66f8d/https%3A%2F%2Fwww.nababoston.org%2F","SourceRedirectUrl":"https://ai.blackfacts.com/redirect/ContentSource/dccea86a-d09a-4d86-9aab-5dc9f8bc88f7/46631b1e-dda6-42bc-87d9-1abd36b66f8d/https%3A%2F%2Fblackchronicle.com","DisplayText":"

Picture supply: The Motley Idiot. Virtus Funding Companions Inc(NASDAQ:VRTS)Q32020 Earnings NameOct 23, 2020, 10:00 a.m. ET Contents: Ready Remarks Questions and Solutions Name Individuals Ready Remarks: Operator Good morning, my…

","ShowFullContent":false,"FactText":null,"FactUrl":null,"RelatedIds":null,"OGImageUrl":null,"OGImageWidth":null,"OGImageHeight":null,"FavIconUrl":null,"FavIconWidth":null,"FavIconHeight":null,"IsLocal":false,"Type":null,"SummaryText":"Picture supply: The Motley Idiot. Virtus Funding Companions Inc(NASDAQ:VRTS)Q32020 Earnings NameOct 23, 2020, 10:00 a.m. ET Contents: Ready Remarks Questions and Solutions Name Individuals Ready Remarks: Operator Good morning, my…","MaxDetailCharacters":300,"ImageUrl":"https://cdn.blackfacts.net/uploads/blackfacts/facts/2020/10/20d13437-2223-4437-b814-db0c18107830.jpg","ImageHeight":450,"ImageWidth":800,"ImageOrientation":"landscape","HasImage":true,"CssClass":"","Layout":"","Rowspan":1,"Colspan":1,"Likes":0,"Shares":0,"ContentSourceId":"DCCEA86A-D09A-4D86-9AAB-5DC9F8BC88F7","SourceName":"The Black Chronicle","ContentSourceRootUrl":"https://blackchronicle.com","ContentSourceIcon":null,"SponsorId":"0259FE31-15B2-475E-8F78-C20B48D0442B","IsSponsored":true,"SponsorName":"National Association of Black Accountants (NABA) Boston Metropolitan Chapter","SmallSponsorLogoUrl":"24x24/naba-logo.png","SponsorUrl":"https://www.nababoston.org/","HasSmallSponsorLogo":true,"EffectiveDate":null,"HasEffectiveDate":false,"MonthAbbrevName":null,"FormattedDate":null,"Year":null,"Month":null,"Day":null,"LastUpdatedDate":"2023-11-25T05:14:39.027","LastUpdatedBy":null,"IsEditable":false,"InsertAd":false,"JSONFactData":"{\"date\":\"2020-10-23T18:17:57Z\"}","JsonExtData":{"date":{"ValueKind":3}},"Html":null,"Css":null,"Script":null,"ScriptHash":null,"Id":176584,"FactUId":"A670D5C2-CD2C-485E-A5EC-BD7557E11A3A","Slug":"virtus-investment-partners-inc-vrts-q3-2020-earnings-call-transcript-0","FactType":"News","VirtualSiteSlug":"blackfacts","Title":"Virtus Investment Partners Inc (VRTS) Q3 2020 Earnings Call Transcript","LocalFactUrl":"/fact/virtus-investment-partners-inc-vrts-q3-2020-earnings-call-transcript-0","ResultCount":200,"SearchType":"OmniSearch.RelatedId"},{"FadeSummary":true,"SponsorRedirectUrl":null,"SourceRedirectUrl":"https://ai.blackfacts.com/redirect/ContentSource/df687784-fa62-4864-8b12-bf6887adb209/46631b1e-dda6-42bc-87d9-1abd36b66f8d/https%3A%2F%2Fblacknewschannel.com","DisplayText":"

By JOE McDONALD AP Business Writer BEIJING (AP) — Chinese leaders hope Washington will tone down conflicts over trade, technology and security if Joe Biden wins the Nov. 3 presidential election. But any shift is likely to be in style, not substance, as frustration with Beijing increases across the American political spectrum. Both Republican and Democratic lawmakers and their constituents seem disinclined to adopt a softer approach toward China, possibly presaging more strife ahead, regardless of the election's outcome. U.S.-Chinese relations have plunged to their lowest level in decades amid an array of conflicts over the coronavirus pandemic, technology, trade, […]

The post China hopes for change if Biden wins, but little likely appeared first on Black News Channel.

","ShowFullContent":false,"FactText":null,"FactUrl":null,"RelatedIds":null,"OGImageUrl":null,"OGImageWidth":null,"OGImageHeight":null,"FavIconUrl":null,"FavIconWidth":null,"FavIconHeight":null,"IsLocal":false,"Type":null,"SummaryText":"By JOE McDONALD AP Business Writer BEIJING (AP) — Chinese leaders hope Washington will tone down conflicts over trade, technology and security if Joe Biden wins the Nov. 3 presidential election. But any shift is likely to be in style, not substance, as frustration with Beijing increases across the American political spectrum. Both Republican and Democratic lawmakers and their constituents seem disinclined to adopt a softer approach toward China, possibly presaging more strife ahead, regardless of the election's outcome. U.S.-Chinese relations have plunged to their lowest level in decades amid an array of conflicts over the coronavirus pandemic, technology, trade, […]\r\n\nThe post China hopes for change if Biden wins, but little likely appeared first on Black News Channel.\r\n","MaxDetailCharacters":300,"ImageUrl":"https://cdn.blackfacts.net/uploads/blackfacts/facts/2020/10/9dd310d8-0670-4b9d-a634-f9b890b8cd13.jpg","ImageHeight":746,"ImageWidth":1024,"ImageOrientation":"landscape","HasImage":true,"CssClass":"","Layout":"","Rowspan":1,"Colspan":1,"Likes":0,"Shares":0,"ContentSourceId":"DF687784-FA62-4864-8B12-BF6887ADB209","SourceName":"Black News Channel - Black News Channel","ContentSourceRootUrl":"https://blacknewschannel.com","ContentSourceIcon":null,"SponsorId":null,"IsSponsored":false,"SponsorName":null,"SmallSponsorLogoUrl":null,"SponsorUrl":null,"HasSmallSponsorLogo":false,"EffectiveDate":null,"HasEffectiveDate":false,"MonthAbbrevName":null,"FormattedDate":null,"Year":null,"Month":null,"Day":null,"LastUpdatedDate":"2023-11-25T05:14:39.027","LastUpdatedBy":null,"IsEditable":false,"InsertAd":false,"JSONFactData":"{\"date\":\"2020-10-23T18:00:40Z\"}","JsonExtData":{"date":{"ValueKind":3}},"Html":null,"Css":null,"Script":null,"ScriptHash":null,"Id":176442,"FactUId":"26AAF357-F8B5-4580-BC1A-C97074D3B8C9","Slug":"china-hopes-for-change-if-biden-wins-but-little-likely--black-news-channel-0","FactType":"News","VirtualSiteSlug":"blackfacts","Title":"China hopes for change if Biden wins, but little likely - Black News Channel","LocalFactUrl":"/fact/china-hopes-for-change-if-biden-wins-but-little-likely--black-news-channel-0","ResultCount":200,"SearchType":"OmniSearch.RelatedId"},{"FadeSummary":false,"SponsorRedirectUrl":"https://ai.blackfacts.com/redirect/Sponsor/05f41a69-179a-47bc-8508-7c9d7a53954a/46631b1e-dda6-42bc-87d9-1abd36b66f8d/https%3A%2F%2Fwww.maah.org%20","SourceRedirectUrl":"https://ai.blackfacts.com/redirect/ContentSource/f1f9d883-f2c7-4733-93e8-e1ff9049ee1f/46631b1e-dda6-42bc-87d9-1abd36b66f8d/https%3A%2F%2Fwww.nycaribnews.com","DisplayText":"

UN Women is bringing up-to-date information and analysis on how and why gender matters in COVID-19 response.

","ShowFullContent":false,"FactText":null,"FactUrl":null,"RelatedIds":null,"OGImageUrl":null,"OGImageWidth":null,"OGImageHeight":null,"FavIconUrl":null,"FavIconWidth":null,"FavIconHeight":null,"IsLocal":false,"Type":null,"SummaryText":"UN Women is bringing up-to-date information and analysis on how and why gender matters in COVID-19 response.","MaxDetailCharacters":300,"ImageUrl":"https://cdn.blackfacts.net/uploads/blackfacts/facts/2020/10/bfebedf5-4cf0-4a85-9c5f-f866d54bc827.jpg","ImageHeight":265,"ImageWidth":190,"ImageOrientation":"portrait","HasImage":true,"CssClass":"","Layout":"","Rowspan":1,"Colspan":1,"Likes":0,"Shares":0,"ContentSourceId":"F1F9D883-F2C7-4733-93E8-E1FF9049EE1F","SourceName":"The New York Carib News","ContentSourceRootUrl":"https://www.nycaribnews.com","ContentSourceIcon":null,"SponsorId":"05F41A69-179A-47BC-8508-7C9D7A53954A","IsSponsored":true,"SponsorName":"Museum of African American History in Massachusetts","SmallSponsorLogoUrl":"24x24/maah-logo.jpg","SponsorUrl":"https://www.maah.org ","HasSmallSponsorLogo":true,"EffectiveDate":null,"HasEffectiveDate":false,"MonthAbbrevName":null,"FormattedDate":null,"Year":null,"Month":null,"Day":null,"LastUpdatedDate":"2023-11-25T05:14:39.027","LastUpdatedBy":null,"IsEditable":false,"InsertAd":false,"JSONFactData":"{\"date\":\"2020-10-24T14:37:33Z\"}","JsonExtData":{"date":{"ValueKind":3}},"Html":null,"Css":null,"Script":null,"ScriptHash":null,"Id":175724,"FactUId":"143C10E1-E26B-4D22-BEBA-6DC597056711","Slug":"un-women-levels-playing-field-for-women-during-covid-19-new-york-carib-news-0","FactType":"News","VirtualSiteSlug":"blackfacts","Title":"UN Women levels playing field for women during COVID-19 | New York Carib News","LocalFactUrl":"/fact/un-women-levels-playing-field-for-women-during-covid-19-new-york-carib-news-0","ResultCount":200,"SearchType":"OmniSearch.RelatedId"},{"FadeSummary":true,"SponsorRedirectUrl":null,"SourceRedirectUrl":"https://ai.blackfacts.com/redirect/ContentSource/42c8fac1-e2c7-4a09-8ca5-16c843dec99e/46631b1e-dda6-42bc-87d9-1abd36b66f8d/https%3A%2F%2Fwww.africanews.com","DisplayText":"

Whilst the art form of henna may be thousands of years old, just like any fashionable trend it has taken many a stylish twist and turn down the years.

The temporary staining of women’s hands and feet, in elaborate, symmetrical and geometric patterns, has deep roots in the Arabian Peninsula, Indian subcontinent and North Africa.

Its appearance is commonplace at celebratory occasions like weddings, Diwali and Eid.

Traditionally, henna plant leaves were powdered and mixed with water, lemon juice and sugar to make a smooth paste, easily applied to the skin.

However, to prolong the art’s appearance beyond a week, some commercial suppliers took to adding potentially harmful ingredients such as paraphenylenediamine, found in hair dye.

Natural beauty

Natural henna advocate and newly established entrepreneur, Azra Khamissa from the UAE, recently launched her own non-toxic home henna kits.

Filling a commercial gap in the market, she incorporates essential oils, eucalyptus and lavender into her henna powder, to nourish and beautify the skin safely.

“Anything you find, that's been on the shelf for a while, is not fresh. There will always be chemicals in there,” she told Rebecca McLaughlin-Eastham. “So, I wanted to provide people with something they can use at home and mix by themselves.”

Design directive

A chiropractor by day, Khamissa’s henna passion project quickly gained a sizeable following on social media, as she showcased her contemporary, often boundary-pushing motifs on platforms like Instagram .

“The most popular design is the one that I call ‘a glove’,” says Khamissa.“And the design was inspired by the anatomy of the body. It goes all the way through the fingers and all the way around the hand.”

“Beyond that, everybody loves moons, especially for Ramadan and Eid,” she adds. “And girls love floral work.”

Blurred lines

Khamissa’s aim is to blur ethnic and cultural lines associated with henna, making it accessible for all.

Her current muse is a British rapper and activist, for whom she has penned a particularly wild design.

“It would have to be for M.I.A,” she says of the recording artist. “I really want to do a full body leopard print [for her] at some point. Although that might be a bit risqué, in my world. But I think it would just be amazing to try and draw it on someone.”

Brand expansion

Khamissa dyes a customer’s hand with her henna design

Khamissa has ambitions to take her brand beyond the Middle East region in the years ahead. Not least to capitalize on the growing global trend for temporary tattoos, an industry worth more than $827 million last year, according to Market Watch.

“I would love for it to be possible for anyone, at any time, to be able to find a quality henna product,” the young entrepreneur says. “Worldwide, I mean, maybe not so much [only] within the Middle East.”

As Khamissa continues to build her temporary henna tattoo empire one inking at a time, only time will tell whether she’s able to leave a permanent mark on the impermanent

","ShowFullContent":false,"FactText":null,"FactUrl":null,"RelatedIds":null,"OGImageUrl":null,"OGImageWidth":null,"OGImageHeight":null,"FavIconUrl":null,"FavIconWidth":null,"FavIconHeight":null,"IsLocal":false,"Type":null,"SummaryText":"Whilst the art form of henna may be thousands of years old, just like any fashionable trend it has taken many a stylish twist and turn down the years. \n\nThe temporary staining of women’s hands and feet, in elaborate, symmetrical and geometric patterns, has deep roots in the Arabian Peninsula, Indian subcontinent and North Africa. \n\nIts appearance is commonplace at celebratory occasions like weddings, Diwali and Eid. \n\nTraditionally, henna plant leaves were powdered and mixed with water, lemon juice and sugar to make a smooth paste, easily applied to the skin. \n\nHowever, to prolong the art’s appearance beyond a week, some commercial suppliers took to adding potentially harmful ingredients such as paraphenylenediamine, found in hair dye. \n\nNatural beauty \n\nNatural henna advocate and newly established entrepreneur, Azra Khamissa from the UAE, recently launched her own non-toxic home henna kits. \n\nFilling a commercial gap in the market, she incorporates essential oils, eucalyptus and lavender into her henna powder, to nourish and beautify the skin safely. \n\n“Anything you find, that's been on the shelf for a while, is not fresh. There will always be chemicals in there,” she told Rebecca McLaughlin-Eastham. “So, I wanted to provide people with something they can use at home and mix by themselves.” \n\nDesign directive \n\nA chiropractor by day, Khamissa’s henna passion project quickly gained a sizeable following on social media, as she showcased her contemporary, often boundary-pushing motifs on platforms like Instagram . \n\n“The most popular design is the one that I call ‘a glove’,” says Khamissa.“And the design was inspired by the anatomy of the body. It goes all the way through the fingers and all the way around the hand.” \n\n“Beyond that, everybody loves moons, especially for Ramadan and Eid,” she adds. “And girls love floral work.” \n\nBlurred lines \n\nKhamissa’s aim is to blur ethnic and cultural lines associated with henna, making it accessible for all. \n\nHer current muse is a British rapper and activist, for whom she has penned a particularly wild design. \n\n“It would have to be for M.I.A,” she says of the recording artist. “I really want to do a full body leopard print [for her] at some point. Although that might be a bit risqué, in my world. But I think it would just be amazing to try and draw it on someone.” \n\nBrand expansion \n\nKhamissa dyes a customer’s hand with her henna design \n\nKhamissa has ambitions to take her brand beyond the Middle East region in the years ahead. Not least to capitalize on the growing global trend for temporary tattoos, an industry worth more than $827 million last year, according to Market Watch. \n\n“I would love for it to be possible for anyone, at any time, to be able to find a quality henna product,” the young entrepreneur says. “Worldwide, I mean, maybe not so much [only] within the Middle East.” \n\nAs Khamissa continues to build her temporary henna tattoo empire one inking at a time, only time will tell whether she’s able to leave a permanent mark on the impermanent ","MaxDetailCharacters":300,"ImageUrl":"https://cdn.blackfacts.net/uploads/blackfacts/facts/2020/10/d3f74b51-8746-4601-b431-8f2b59053dcc.jpg","ImageHeight":538,"ImageWidth":1024,"ImageOrientation":"landscape","HasImage":true,"CssClass":"","Layout":"","Rowspan":1,"Colspan":1,"Likes":0,"Shares":0,"ContentSourceId":"42C8FAC1-E2C7-4A09-8CA5-16C843DEC99E","SourceName":"Africanews | Latest breaking news, daily news and African news from Africa","ContentSourceRootUrl":"https://www.africanews.com","ContentSourceIcon":null,"SponsorId":null,"IsSponsored":false,"SponsorName":null,"SmallSponsorLogoUrl":null,"SponsorUrl":null,"HasSmallSponsorLogo":false,"EffectiveDate":null,"HasEffectiveDate":false,"MonthAbbrevName":null,"FormattedDate":null,"Year":null,"Month":null,"Day":null,"LastUpdatedDate":"2023-11-25T05:14:39.027","LastUpdatedBy":null,"IsEditable":false,"InsertAd":false,"JSONFactData":"{\"date\":\"2020-10-23T15:45:09Z\"}","JsonExtData":{"date":{"ValueKind":3}},"Html":null,"Css":null,"Script":null,"ScriptHash":null,"Id":176573,"FactUId":"75D9EA4D-A790-4145-8F50-2407E5223C63","Slug":"emirati-henna-artist-launches-natural-henna-brand-amp-rolls-out-risqu-eacute-designs-africanews-0","FactType":"News","VirtualSiteSlug":"blackfacts","Title":"Emirati henna artist launches natural henna brand & rolls out 'risqué' designs | Africanews","LocalFactUrl":"/fact/emirati-henna-artist-launches-natural-henna-brand-amp-rolls-out-risqu-eacute-designs-africanews-0","ResultCount":200,"SearchType":"OmniSearch.RelatedId"}],"virtualSiteSlug":"blackfacts","clientParm":null,"totalItemCount":200,"pageSize":20,"template":"\r\n
\r\n {{#HasImage}}\r\n \r\n
\r\n
\r\n \r\n
\r\n
\r\n
\r\n {{/HasImage}}\r\n \r\n \r\n \r\n {{#IsSponsored}}\r\n \r\n {{/IsSponsored}}\r\n {{#HasEffectiveDate}}\r\n
\r\n
\r\n
{{MonthAbbrevName}}
\r\n
{{Day}}
\r\n
\r\n
{{Year}}
\r\n
\r\n {{/HasEffectiveDate}}\r\n
\r\n ","ajaxUrl":"/api/omnisearch/blackfacts/relatedid/1242906/","initItem":function (item, index) { var opts = this.options, summary = (item.SummaryText || '').substring(0, opts.summaryMaxLength), path = item.FactType === 'News' ? '/news/article/' : '/fact/'; if (summary.length === opts.summaryMaxLength) { var summaryMatch = summary.match(/(^.*\w{2,})\s/); if (summaryMatch) { summary = summaryMatch[1]; } } item.siteFactUrl = 'https://' + opts.siteRoot + path + item.Slug; item.SummaryText = summary; item.fadeText = summary.length > opts.summaryFadeLength; },"columnWidth":"auto","columns":8,"resolutions":[{"maxWidth":2560,"horizontalSpaceBetweenBoxes":10,"verticalSpaceBetweenBoxes":10,"columnWidth":"auto","columns":8},{"maxWidth":2048,"horizontalSpaceBetweenBoxes":10,"verticalSpaceBetweenBoxes":10,"columnWidth":"auto","columns":6},{"maxWidth":1680,"horizontalSpaceBetweenBoxes":10,"verticalSpaceBetweenBoxes":10,"columnWidth":"auto","columns":5},{"maxWidth":1440,"horizontalSpaceBetweenBoxes":10,"verticalSpaceBetweenBoxes":10,"columnWidth":"auto","columns":4},{"maxWidth":1152,"horizontalSpaceBetweenBoxes":10,"verticalSpaceBetweenBoxes":10,"columnWidth":"auto","columns":3},{"maxWidth":800,"horizontalSpaceBetweenBoxes":10,"verticalSpaceBetweenBoxes":10,"columnWidth":"auto","columns":2},{"maxWidth":450,"horizontalSpaceBetweenBoxes":10,"verticalSpaceBetweenBoxes":10,"columnWidth":"auto","columns":1}],"horizontalSpaceBetweenBoxes":10,"verticalSpaceBetweenBoxes":10,"deepLinkingOnPopup":false,"deepLinkingOnFilter":false,"noMoreEntriesWord":"","viewport":"#contents_secondaryView_secondaryfacts"}); var context = {"requestId":"5a51f11f-cfd6-45f9-bff9-ce76d7be0a04","userId":"46631b1e-dda6-42bc-87d9-1abd36b66f8d","deviceId":"f9d47d6d-e419-4a0a-9237-98f7b6e546f1","snapshotInterval":0,"anonymousId":"46631b1e-dda6-42bc-87d9-1abd36b66f8d","user":{"id":"00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000","userName":"","displayName":"","homeSiteSlug":"","firstName":"","lastName":"","sex":"","preferredLocaleId":"","timeZone":"","avatar":"","streetAddress":"","city":"","region":"","country":"","initials":"","IsAuthenticated":false,"roles":[],"appClaims":[],"Name":"","NameClaimType":"http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/ws/2005/05/identity/claims/name","RoleClaimType":"role"},"session":{"sessionId":"3838855D-532E-413A-BF0E-5E5B892AE6A4","deviceId":"F9D47D6D-E419-4A0A-9237-98F7B6E546F1"},"site":{"ApiAccount":"BBDC06F9-FC7A-442C-9A2D-979344C312F1","Palette":"BlackFacts","SiteTypeId":"Root","Theme":"BlackFacts","Active":true,"ApplicationSlug":"blackfacts","ESRBRating":"E","Host":"www.blackfacts.com","Name":"Blackfacts.com","SiteRoot":"www.blackfacts.com","Slug":"blackfacts"},"idpUrl":"https://blackfacts.com","isMobile":false,"modalActive":false,"featureHelp":{},"wakandaAPIUrl":"https://api.blackfacts.com","analyticsApiUrl":"https://ai.blackfacts.com","analyticsApiInitialDelay":10000,"viewData":{"z":{"FactDetail":{"w":[{"w":"117efde2-5f04-4d04-9325-2d4aeed3d014","t":"news"}],"x":0.0,"y":0.0},"RelatedStream":{"w":[{"w":"ef9556fa-9fff-4ff4-ab89-8bc297f3b12f","t":"News"},{"w":"b03901d6-8c41-4fdc-93a9-b252c65cd716","t":"News"},{"w":"b4db8581-113c-4026-b6e9-aba582e5a607","t":"News"},{"w":"afaad967-a212-43df-af09-bfcea83d8eb5","t":"News"},{"w":"234b29b3-ee6f-4232-9557-e9cbdfebc059","t":"News"},{"w":"46162bdf-2acf-405d-974c-50e221955a39","t":"News"},{"w":"5112f5fd-a522-4de8-bec7-f75966d8db3c","t":"News"},{"w":"661acc7d-a0e0-4100-9041-72ff80d541d2","t":"News"},{"w":"950d0d21-2ce2-4d37-9b62-b9a748d7ed63","t":"News"},{"w":"c0831d85-cdee-45f3-85d9-5dfc63c624ad","t":"News"},{"w":"6c045bee-254f-4091-a34b-34bb62638a45","t":"News"},{"w":"9d1597fe-ac45-4a44-92f2-94cfc1ee3b15","t":"News"},{"w":"5ccabefb-d029-4a11-b055-4ec1da3ee5ad","t":"News"},{"w":"bcfaaf7b-168b-4a69-84eb-c951d9a08f23","t":"News"},{"w":"60ee5ae4-ccf7-407a-a005-a62c06c87264","t":"News"},{"w":"8dfd1ebf-4bba-4145-ad1a-b515d36d9c59","t":"News"},{"w":"f28f126e-db74-44be-ae3b-c00731728b89","t":"News"},{"w":"cb0bae74-49d4-4fd0-b5f4-1d29eab0d886","t":"News"},{"w":"479bebe0-3208-4341-b410-f61895d53acb","t":"News"},{"w":"9ebdc179-f0c9-4fe6-93e3-f0d10fef852b","t":"News"},{"w":"fdbd3e93-159f-40ae-8431-c0abfcf298a3","t":"News"},{"w":"7f2f2857-5d9d-4051-aacb-02b8dd13b921","t":"News"},{"w":"2c640940-73a8-404c-8f8f-6c5fd0da21ca","t":"News"},{"w":"bbbb49ac-2574-4fa3-a469-88e20e875ce2","t":"News"},{"w":"77498cd5-f9e4-4ed7-87e1-e04c6aabbfc0","t":"News"},{"w":"b073ce43-f44f-432e-9b36-62c4f6ce97e1","t":"News"},{"w":"a670d5c2-cd2c-485e-a5ec-bd7557e11a3a","t":"News"},{"w":"26aaf357-f8b5-4580-bc1a-c97074d3b8c9","t":"News"},{"w":"143c10e1-e26b-4d22-beba-6dc597056711","t":"News"},{"w":"75d9ea4d-a790-4145-8f50-2407e5223c63","t":"News"}],"x":0.0,"y":0.0},"RightSidebar":{"w":[{"w":"2a7b448d-4cb7-47e9-b1af-c7d29fd9b2f5","t":"Sponsor Ad Widget"},{"w":"18c7ea89-88e6-4054-ad96-855edfdfec7a","t":"Amazon Widget"},{"w":"83c1da22-94bb-4e75-a69d-d14d45aa4ede","t":"Amazon Widget"},{"w":"cb46895d-448b-46a8-aa3d-59d593bc2ac0","t":"Amazon Widget"},{"w":"0059f877-c008-44c0-81c7-5cf1e15dff96","t":"Topic List Widget"},{"w":"97de0fc5-8ebf-4916-8b3a-999c355e37d2","t":"Amazon Widget"},{"w":"31f20814-2716-4d31-bb76-829e666dc576","t":"Channels Widget"},{"w":"6bfab99a-0f7f-469b-bbce-30675e8649b6","t":"Topic List Widget"},{"w":"34d9df1e-b044-42f5-8aab-08ea49ef56f8","t":"Recent Facts Widget"}],"x":0.0,"y":0.0},"Footer":{"w":[{"w":"73ec093d-e455-492f-a791-a3b7bd896d57","t":"Amazon Widget"}],"x":0.0,"y":0.0}},"u":"https://www.blackfacts.com/news/article/equatorial-guinea-china-announce-elevation-of-ties-africanews","q":"5a51f11f-cfd6-45f9-bff9-ce76d7be0a04","i":"46631b1e-dda6-42bc-87d9-1abd36b66f8d","d":"2026-02-19T16:56:20.8751783Z"},"userActions":[],"searches":[],"refreshTokenName":"blackfacts_refresh","refreshTokenDomain":".blackfacts.com","refreshTokenTimeoutMinutes":20160}; //]]>