
To Live and Die with Ebola in Liberia
The idea that this has been a crisis only of the country’s health care systems is wrong. This has also been a crisis of governance.
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Miguna Miguna is a Kenyan activist and lawyer.
The idea that this has been a crisis only of the country’s health care systems is wrong. This has also been a crisis of governance.
Why are affected West African states so spectacularly ill-prepared to deal with Ebola?
T.B. Joshua proffers a version of American tele-evangelism’s empty promises to African masses, as nationalism and liberation politics lose their shine.
The Sudanese film, “Beats of the Antonov,” explores the connections between the bombs of oppression and the resilience of culture.
The inaugural winner of the Caine Prize for short fiction opines on the useless rivalry between Kenyans and Nigerians about who has won more Caine Prizes.
Scotland’s independence fight as inspiration to Africans like Zanzibaris, who want to break from Tanzania.
To repeat: The Economist magazine has had a “Slavery Problem” since 1843.
And why is the London Review of Books giving Johnson, a rightwing South African liberal, a regular platform to espouse his rantings?
The South African struggle suggests that sports boycotts are effective at forcing change. For white South Africans (and their apologists), sporting isolation was a bitter pill to swallow.
in places like Lagos where the healthcare system is inadequate and health workers constantly on strike, people rely on prayer.
Her nudity wakes us up, either in protest or solidarity to the fact that everything is not okay in South Africa.
Mainstream media (and therefore, the majority of the population) in Colombia believe that racism is just a problem of a “few bad apples.”