BBC News with Fiona MacDonald
Gunmen have shot dead at least 13 young people at a party in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico's most violent city. At least 15 others were wounded, among them a nine-year-old child. It's the latest massacre in what is Mexico's most violent city. Here is James Read.
Prosecutors said the attackers arrived at the house party at around midnight on Friday in several cars and opened fire with automatic weapons. Local media showed bodies strewn across the garden, and police found more than 70 bullet casings at the scene. In Ciudad Juarez, such killings have become familiar. The city is a battleground between rival drugs cartels, with about 5,000 murders in the last two years alone.
A stampede among football supporters in Kenya has killed at least seven people as they tried to get into a stadium to watch a match between two of the country's most popular teams. A Red Cross official said six of the fans were killed at the Nyayo National Stadium in Nairobi, and the seventh died later in hospital. Will Ross reports.
Those who died were crushed as the crowd of supporters surged forward to get into the stadium. Dozens of injured were taken to hospitals across the capital. Play was suspended for about 15 minutes and then the match continued. There will no doubt be questions about the organisation of the game. It had been raining heavily prior to the match, which meant many fans struggled to arrive on time. This could have contributed to the last-minute rush to get in.