Celia Hatton
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
A string of victims across the US stretching from coast to coast.
The amount of victims in such a short time was unbelievable.
Real people losing real money by the criminals, the ghosts.
The anger, the frustration, the fear.
From the BBC World Service, this is Cyberhack Evilcore.
The story of a cybercrime case that stretches from small-town America to the back streets of Moscow.
Listen now.
Search for Cyberhack wherever you get your BBC podcasts.
A peace deal's been signed between Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo.
The ceremony in Washington was presided over by the U.S.
President Donald Trump, whose administration helped broker the agreement.
This could mark a turning point for the two African countries, which have been at odds for decades.
Tensions spiked earlier this year when the armed rebel group, the M23, believed to be backed by Rwanda, seized Goma, a city in the DRC.
But at the signing, Rwandan President Paul Kagame and DRC President Felix Chizikedi sounded cautiously hopeful the fighting would stop.
The deal, negotiated by the Trump administration, includes economic incentives for both Rwanda and the DRC, and plans for U.S.
companies to mine some of the DRC's valuable minerals.
But will it secure a lasting peace?
A question for our Africa correspondent, Shingai Nyoka.
Many people who have been following this conflict for over the last 30 years agree that it is an important step.
The United Nations, for example, has said that it's an opportunity to turn the page.