
Frontiers of dystopia
Cameroon claims to be a democracy. Then why are even moderates like Maurice Kamto in jail?
6384 Article(s) by:
Sheila Adufutse is a feminist activist and trained as a project manager.

Cameroon claims to be a democracy. Then why are even moderates like Maurice Kamto in jail?

If in India there has been an investment in myth of Mohandas Gandhi as a non-racial icon, in South Africa Gandhi also has his defenders.

Combating Zionism requires a vision that pays no credence to ethno-nationalism. As the world reconsiders the one-state solution, South Africa should lead the way.

If Rwandan support for the RPF and Kagame is so universal and genuine, why the murder, frequent arrest, torture and imprisonment of opposition politicians and investigative journalists?

Rapper Jovi has inducted himself into a club of Cameroonian artists who have embraced their own truths in the face of adversity.

The popular myth holds that most South African major resistance leaders come from its coastal regions. That’s not been the case since the mid-1970s.

Omar al Bashir has fallen in Khartoum. Beyond regime change—managed by the military—there’s a deeper economic crisis.

The post-independence fates of Zimbabwean student activists who fought the Rhodesian regime.

Judi Rever’s account of the Rwandan genocide and its aftermath challenges the official narrative.

The international body governing track and field announced that the longest distance race to be held will be the 3000 meters. We know who will benefit least from this change.

Patrice Lumumba became a martyr of African independence. But what are Lumumba’s “political afterlives” nearly sixty years later?

The emphasis on identity and difference act to temper the radical potential of South Africa’s youth. They need an education on class politics.

On writers, empathy and (black) solidarity politics.

The films of Robert Van Lierop and Margaret Dickson chronicled anti-imperial struggles in Mozambique.

The late Senegalese director Djibril Diop Mambety once said his films are not based on premeditation or planning.

The mass of people in North Africa are still a force to be reckoned with and the region is still far away from a return to authoritarian stagnation.

Everyday Lagos and Lagosians fill the pages of Leye Adenle’s thrillers, but fail to fill some holes in the plots.

The new comedy ‘Matwetwe’ hits all the right chords to tell a story about the current place and time of South African youth.

News of a potential cure for HIV shouldn’t lead us to complacency. There are 37m people in the world with HIV, nearly half who can’t access treatment.

Religious authorities in Senegal are organizing protests against a popular TV series. The outrage could be related to the challenges the series provokes of the “proper” place of women in society.