Statement by Bloggers on the Murder of David Kato

“We the undersigned wish to express our deep sadness at the murder of Ugandan human rights defender David Kato on 26th January 2011.  David’s activism  began in the 1980s as an Anti-Apartheid campaigner where he first expressed a strong passion and conviction for freedom and justice which continued throughout his life.   David was a founding member of Sexual Minorities Uganda where he first served as Board member and until his death as Litigation and Advocacy Officer and he was also a  member of Integrity Uganda, a faith-based advocacy organization.

David was a man of vision and courage. One of his major concerns was the growth of religious fundamentalism in Uganda and across the continent and how this would impact on the rights of ordinary citizens including lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgendered / Gender Non-Comforming and Intersex  [LGBTIQ] persons.   Years later his concerns were justified when the Ugandan Anti-Homosexuality Bill backed by religious fundamentalists was outlined in 2009.  David was also an extremely brave man who had been imprisoned and beaten severely because of his sexual orientation and for speaking publicly against the Anti-Homosexuality Bill.

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Clooney in Africa

The media buzz (including blogging, tumbling and retweeting, as well as Facebooking) around Newsweek magazine’s ridiculous cover story of film actor George Clooney (title: “On the ground with a new kind of statesman”) highlight the titilating; i.e. Clooney’s sexual conquests of “way too many chicks”). Too bad, since the piece is really about how Clooney has the access and time to jet off to be a presence in nations that may not need him.

In January alone, he’s balanced the rigours surrounding the Academy Awards, hanging out on Mexican beaches with his Italian model/actress-of-the-moment, and giving face-time to South Sudanese. There he is in Sudan (above), method acting Marlow by the river of his destiny.

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Nastio Mosquito’s ‘African Mind’

The Angolan artist and provocateur Nastio Mosquito’s striking, new, animated film, “My African Mind,” recently described by Frieze magazine’s correspondent “… perhaps the most powerful piece [exhibited at] the [2010 São Paulo] Biennial.” The film “… uses archival footage from the history of Africa, it speaks, with frequent irreverent humour, about the continent’s disasters, conflicts and successes from the beginning of the 20th century to the present. The pace at which the images fly across the screen is exhilarating, even though the content is often disheartening.”

* For Mosquito’s work, see here. (Click on “DZZ Artwork”).

Music Break

Malian rapper Iba One brings a Kora infused Crunk. This guy is on to something. Call it the Mokobe effect?

‘One Day I Will Write About This Place’

Whether it’s the closely observed ecology of married life or the violent acts of criminals operating from afar, Granta 114: Aliens draws into focus one of the most pressing issues of our time: Who do we call outsiders?

Granta’s new issue contains some good reading. There’s South African author Mark Gevisser who writes of five decades of friendship between two gay men who live out their secret lives in a counter-cultural, apartheid-era Johannesburg. Also included is “They Always Come In the Night” by Ethiopia-born Dinaw Mengestu, reporting on a war in Congo managed by exiles in France. And then there is an extract from Binyavanga Wainaina’s forthcoming memoir, “One Day I Will Write About this Place,” in which he recalls losing sight of himself in rural Kenya on a part-time job convincing farmers to grow cotton crops again:

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A’na Afriki

With all this talk of divisions between Africa and the Arab World, it may be useful to take a glance at ongoing attempts to bridge those perceived gaps. Boima traveled to the Gulf recently and wrote this post.

By Boima Tucker
On a visit to the U.A.E. (this past January) I was able to catch an inspirational exhibit of photos called Africa Uploaded, as well as the second installation of the four part series ‘As it is!’ hosted at Dubai’s Mojo Gallery.  The series of art exhibits and workshops curated by Annabelle Nwankwo-Mu’azu, focuses on the works of 21 contemporary artists from Africa and its Diaspora.

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Luanda is Expensive

By Marissa Moorman,
Guest Blogger

This is “The Economist” recently on the Angolan capital:

The Angolan capital calls itself the “New Dubai” and there certainly are similarities with the emirate. Luanda has vast oil wealth. If they could only get visas, which are rarely granted, tourists would flock to its beaches and nearby game parks. Following the opening of a modern airport, flights arrive non-stop from Europe and America. But if prices in Dubai seem inflated, they have nothing on Luanda. Last year Angola’s capital was the most expensive city in the world, according to Mercer, a New York-based consultancy. A bog-standard hotel room costs $400, a non-alcoholic drink in the lobby $10 (though a mere $2 in a supermarket). An underwhelming hotel buffet is $75 and a pizza on the street $25.

Etcetera, etcetera.

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Black and Yellow

Snoop Dogg, T-Pain and even Lil Wayne had their chance, so you know the Naija Boyz had to remix Wiz Khalifa’s “Black and Yellow.” This is “The African Remix.” Get me out of here.

Lived Religions

Too bad The Three Faiths exhibition at the New York Public Library closes this Sunday, February 27. The exhibition covers the development of the three great Abrahamic religions–the variations within the beliefs, the great chasms, and the complementary intertwining between them. It’s big on context and the lived experience of each faith. The library has included the first texts with “footnotes” that extrapolate and explain the how the text “should” be read “correctly”; private devotional books and the intricate bindings and cases used to carry them; and details that illustrate the manner in which translation changed the text and meaning, as the texts traveled with missionaries.
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Bush Radio

Cape Town’s Bush Radio, one of the few stations in South Africa trying very hard to keep it real (and doing a good job at it as well), recently relocated its video archive to a new YouTube-channel. Check up on what the station–situated in the inner city suburb Woodstock–has been up to over the last years here. Like, for example, “how they teach children about radio and media” above.

Or musician Slikour “… telling it how it is”:

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