
Don’t believe the hype
South Africa’s media, already lacking any serious labor reporting, have no interest in fairly reporting the strike by mine workers.
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Paul Milchik is a pseudonym for the author of this piece. His name has been changed due to his status as an international student in the US during the second Trump administration, in a context where foreign students have been targeted for detention and deportation as a result of expressing pro-Palestinian views.

South Africa’s media, already lacking any serious labor reporting, have no interest in fairly reporting the strike by mine workers.

The illustrators Fuzzy Slipperz and Skubalisto and the photographer Mooki Mooks on being an artist in present-day South Africa.

Workers in the Western Cape’s wine district describe a place where bosses engage in a reign of force and aggression, and where workers are “afraid to die too soon.”

Peter Clarke, who passed away on April 13, 2014, was an elder statesman of South Africa’s arts community.

Long before Boko Haram, talk of holy war in what became Nigeria was everywhere.

American style democracy will only throw up more more leaders like Goodluck Jonathan.

For many white French, and including African immigrants in France, watching movies like ‘Phone Swap,’ ‘Tango with Me,’ ‘Last Flight to Abuja’ and ‘Maami,’ is an eye-opener.

An extract from Mahmood Mamdani’s seminal study, ‘When Victims Become Killers: Colonialism, Nativism, and the Genocide in Rwanda.”

The second in a series of four posts to commemorate James Baldwin’s 90th birthday.

Why you’ve got to love the way the South African tabloid newspaper Daily Sun reported Caster Semenya’s marriage to her girlfriend

This practice in some media of making white people who live in mostly black inner city Johannesburg, out as special. No.


The first in a series of four posts to commemorate what would have been James Baldwin’s 90th birthday.

Lawyer and writer Elnathan John interviewed U.S. photographer Glenna Gordon. Listen.

For those who want Nigeria to balkanize, try being a small, ineffectual African country.

In neoliberal global capitalism, anything can be monetized, even the criminal exploits of a marginal schizophrenic.

Erykah Badu’s online defense of her visit to autocratic Swaziland exposed her lack of knowledge about the continent.