
Blood on the chair
Platon, the New Yorker staff photographer got many of the world’s leaders to sit for portraits. A number of African leaders obliged.
6266 Articles by:
Miguna Miguna is a Kenyan activist and lawyer.
Platon, the New Yorker staff photographer got many of the world’s leaders to sit for portraits. A number of African leaders obliged.
The historian John Edwin Mason’s photographs of Cape Town’s New Year’s Carnival.
Recently advertising and the movies in the West have have been hard on Nigerians. Even when they mean well.
Since it is Friday, I might as well put up a few music videos.
Manic Street Preachers pay homage to the greatest American of the first half of the twentieth century, Paul Robeson. The music video by Nigerian Andrew Dosunmu is a tribute too.
The fantasy that local people – small businesspeople, informal traders, especially black people – will make money or get jobs during the 2010 World Cup.
What does it mean when a Tanzanian rapper joins a cypher on BET, the US entertainment TV channel on its biggest night – during prime time – and rhymes in Swahili.
What is it about Congolese men who dress up in tropical weather like they’re on a catwalk in Paris sometime in late Fall?
The Wall Street Journal has an interesting news piece on the growing migration by Portuguese workers to Angola.
Don’t expect “Invictus” to break from the “rainbow nation” narrative despite that symbolism’s sell buy date having long expired.
A TV news anchor confuses Jesse Jackson with Al Sharpton. Then blames the teleprompter. This is journalism.
The curious appeal of a band of celebrity Afrikaner musicians engaging with a quite easily defined past and present.
Mo Ibrahim can’t find a suitable candidate for the good governance award he hands out to the best former African leader once a year.
Botswana’s been governed by the same party since independence in 1966. There’s no crisis of democracy in Botswana.
A busy week means a lot of stuff gets the speed blog treatment. Among others, the African country that gets the worst treatment in US media.
This story of Harvard political scientist, Robert Rotberg, and Sudanese billionaire, Mo Ibrahim, falling out, is quite something.