
What happened to Mbuyisa Makhubo?
A youth activist that came to prominence in the 1976 student uprising in South Africa has been missing since 1978.
6393 Article(s) by:
Golda Gatsey is a freelance writer and customer relationship manager.

A youth activist that came to prominence in the 1976 student uprising in South Africa has been missing since 1978.

Netta Kornberg watches movie trailers, so you don’t have to. This edition: ‘Mr. Pip,’ ‘Captain Phillips’ and ’12 Years A Slave.’

It is not often that analysts of diametrically opposed ideological tastes in South Africa agree, except about Julius Malema.

The news that a major studio is bankrolling a film about the Brazilian Pele, contender for greatest player of all time.

An open letter to the New Yorker over its approving coverage of mercenary-activity-for-humanitarian-intervention, despite its record of failure in Central Africa.

The decision by Spain’s national football team to go play a football friendly in its former colony, Equatorial Guinea, has spotlighted how the latter country is run.

The website of the international edition of the The New York Times website debuted two dozen new “international” columnists this week. One of them is an AIAC contributor.

Eqatorial Guinea in West Africa was a Spanish colony. Few Spanish football fans know where it is or how the rulers continue the violent politics inherited from Spain.


A resort in South Africa’s Free State province offers guests accommodation in “a Basotho village and a shantytown.” Who comes up with this offensive stuff?



Journalists are still keen to prod the soft spot of their readers’ insecurities around mental illness, with the fear mongering undertone of ‘it could happen to you.’

How Nito Alves has become the symbol of a slowly emerging movement that has shaken the Angolan government’s narrative of post-conflict stability.

How much of Equatorial Guinean’s tax money did the Obiangs pay to the Spanish FA for a meaningless match between its national teams?

For his CNN food travel show, Bourdain picks black Gauteng rather than pretend-European Cape Town and the Western Cape.

The World Bank and IMF have waged a sustained assault on African public services over several decades, and have never been called to account for the profound and lasting damage they have done.

Mmusi Maimane, despite his apparent reputation in opposition circles as a “man of the people,” appears to possess a rather limited political imagination.

Ghanaian-American filmmaker Akosua Adoma Owusu wants to foster a new wave of Ghanaian experimental filmmakers.