On this edition of Africa 54, Malawi ramps up its effort to protect residents with albinism by distributing personal security alarms; Kenya police say armed assailants kill three people and injured two others in the country’s Lamu county, The situation outside U.S. embassy in Baghdad much calmer after Iranian-backed para-military groups protests for two days; Guinea-Bissau’s names former Prime Minister Umaro Sissoko Embalo president.
A54 Business: Leila Fourie, the CEO of the Johannesburg Stock Exchange, expresses optimism about the success of South Africa’s investment drive to encourage financing in the country. In an interview with VOA's Peter Clottey, Fourie talked about the growth opportunities in her country for U.S. investors and what the government in Pretoria is doing to improve state-owned companies such as energy giant Eskom.