The junta belt
What’s fueling the military takeovers sweeping across West and Central Africa?
What’s fueling the military takeovers sweeping across West and Central Africa?
Peru’s leftist president, Pedro Castillo, was impeached and arrested last month, triggering nation-wide protests. This week on the AIAC podcast we discuss what comes next for the divided nation.
September's coup is Burkina Faso's second of the year, and its another one with popular support. Why did it happen?
A jihadist insurrection has claimed 40% of Burkina Faso’s national territory. The response by military-political elites has been to add to the instability and crisis by fomenting coups.
The best support that the Sudanese revolution can get from international allies is for them to reject and fight their own governments’ efforts to force a government of killers on Sudan for the second time.
In November 2017, Robert Mugabe was toppled in a coup. Amid this epochal change, life—and cricket—simply went on for Zimbabweans, who are still in search of a better future.
Fashion creates spectacle. What can we learn from the images from Guinea's recent coup d’état?
Here's a selection of articles that go the extra mile and poke holes in the narrow frame of the "Malian crisis."
Is this Egypt’s second revolution, a military coup, or an agglomeration of both (“Democratic Coup”, anyone)? And then there's the media noise.
Mali's interim Prime Minister is forced out by soldiers. What that means for Mali’s political future is anyone’s guess, but it doesn’t look good.
Tuareg musicians Tinariwen, on tour in Europe these days, spent some time in Belgium this weekend.
A few things are worth saying about the mutiny and the coup that rocked Bamako over the last few days.
Here’s video of the coup announcement in Mali. Ridiculous. The screen is dark at first —