Femi Longe and the architecture of African liberation
Op-Ed – Borderless Africa: The Reparations Africa Owes Herself
Reform or retreat? The Catholic church in Africa after Pope Francis
US talks sanctions against Uganda after a harsh anti-gay law – but criminalizing same-sex activities has become a political tactic globally
Being queer in Africa: the state of LGBTIQ+ rights across the continent
Zanu Pf’s elitist, populist factionalism as a national burden for Zimbabwe #CAB3
The Big Thursday Read: CAB3, succession politics and the future of Zimbabwe’s democracy
The proxy presidency: How Kenya was made to serve Washington, Paris, and a private few
What Ongoing US UAP disclosure reveals about the brittleness of power, and why Africa should read it through Utu
“Zvigananda” and Frantz Fanon: Meaning and context in Zimbabwe’s newfound political elitism
Africa Bitcoin Day 2026: Eight cities, ten days, one continental refusal
The Empire’s war, our Mathree fares: Why the cost of living just exploded
Dada means sister
The daughter of Togo and the money they cannot seize
The nine billion dollar tax on love
South Africa approves the use of the Dapivirine vaginal ring for HIV prevention
Obituary: TB Joshua, Nigeria’s controversial Pentecostal titan
Isolation love: The odds are good, but the goods are odd
Childhood sex education reduces risky sexual behaviour: a Nigerian case study
Will Covid-19 vaccines bring life back to normal in 2021?
Africa at the World Cup: 10 teams, local coaches and tactical depth usher in a new era
Interview – From novelist to publisher: Andrew Chatora on building Friesian Publishing
Senegal stripped of title: Afcon ruling is lawful, but it puts Caf’s reputation at risk
Zimbabwean Writer Andrew Chatora launches London literary imprint Friesian Publishing
A Roman emperor grovelling to a Persian king: the message behind a new statue in Tehran
What this TIA Bitcoin series cannot promise you
The money that holds you
The extension they did not want to grant
What 1961 and 2026 have in common
Despite facing brutal repression, the wave of youth-led movements in Nigeria and Kenya that exploded last year have shown remarkable resilience.