
Don’t kill yourself because of suffering
Weekend Music Break, No.104 is just a playlist of ten great songs accompanied by predictably striking visuals from across Africa and its diaspora.
6388 Article(s) by:
Fatima B. Derby is a Ghanaian feminist writer and queer activist.

Weekend Music Break, No.104 is just a playlist of ten great songs accompanied by predictably striking visuals from across Africa and its diaspora.

Today, 30,000 of the 235,000 Ghanaian immigrants to the US call New York City home.

As Western government enforce stricter policing of non-native bodies, who who are the activists who will stop them?

Does the gradual increase in the number of strikes indicate that a new wave of offensive strikes has begun? Or is it just a short-lived revival among a depressing long wave of defensive strikes?

Anticorruption activist, Chuma Nwokolo, reflects on the pervasive nature of official corruption in Nigeria.

Why we should care about the leader of the second largest party in South Africa’s defense of the virtues of colonialism and other Weekend Specials.

President Emmanuel Macron’s apology to Algerians over French colonialism us about presidential elections in France.

France would rather play puppeteer than transparently acknowledge its role in first shaping — and now underhandedly curating — its colonial past.

The Netherlands needs a politics that is about race and class and gender and sexuality – not just about class in a reductionist sense.

One of the most enduring legacies of colonialism is the idea that it is impossible to contemplate a future in which the rest of the world does not resemble Europe.

Southern African whites serve Western interests in Africa, acting as conduits and reinforcing racist propaganda that sustains a colonial worldview about Africans.

Namibia taking Germany to court in a country with its own history of genocide against indigenous peoples, hoping they may honor the U.N. Declaration of Human Rights.

What are the political dynamics that may have led to the adoption of Germany’s ambitious framework to reinvigorate Africa’s development.

The ways in which state elites and the private sector have found ways to swindle the poor.

Debates about Gandhi represents a deeper crisis about belonging, entitlement and exclusion in postcolonial Africa.

The Central African Republic has become shorthand for “failed postcolonial African state,” basically the prototype of a country in permanent crisis.

The unwelcome atmosphere for refugees from Africa in the United States, result in some of them risking their lives to get to neighboring Canada.

The classic film, first premiered in 1991, is making a comeback. Not least: Beyoncé’s visual album ‘Lemonade’ borrows liberally from Julie Dash’s film. Why is the film so influential?

Land, landlessness and the German genocide of Namibians at the turn of the 20th century.
