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In Cote d’Ivoire, President Laurent Gbagbo’s gamble to hold elections did not work out as planned.  You guessed it he was supposed to win easily. After all it’s his (and his party’s) government and it is his country and he’ll run it as he pleases. If you remember he postponed it for at least a decade. When the final results for a second round of voting came in last week, Gbagbo’s main rival, Alassane Ouattara (a northerner, Muslim and former prime minister) had won by a clear majority. Instead Gbagbo’s allies on the national electoral campaign held back results (one pro-Gbagbo commissioner tore up results showing Ouattara winning live on state TV),  banned foreign broadcasters (as an Ivorian living in New York City remarked to a friend, ‘These guys think it is still the 20th century when they could block news”) and by Saturday night Gbagbo–backed by the military of course–had himself sworn in and so did Ouattara. Now there’s confusion amongst the populace and tempers are fraying in Abidjan. With Thabo Mbeki called in to mediate expect a coalition government where the loser remains president and the winner as prime minister. I have seen this before.) There are only so many ways to tell Gbagbo–ironically a historian by training–that he must go. Ivorian reggae singer Tiken Ja Fakoly (recorded live in Paris) says it better: “Mr President, quit the power.”

Further Reading

Repoliticizing a generation

Thirty-eight years after Thomas Sankara’s assassination, the struggle for justice and self-determination endures—from stalled archives and unfulfilled verdicts to new calls for pan-African renewal and a 21st-century anti-imperialist front.

Drip is temporary

The apparel brand Drip was meant to prove that South Africa’s townships could inspire global style. Instead, it revealed how easily black success stories are consumed and undone by the contradictions of neoliberal aspiration.

Energy for whom?

Behind the fanfare of the Africa Climate Summit, the East African Crude Oil Pipeline shows how neocolonial extraction still drives Africa’s energy future.

The sound of revolt

On his third album, Afro-Portuguese artist Scúru Fitchádu fuses ancestral wisdom with urban revolt, turning memory and militancy into a soundtrack for resistance.

O som da revolta

No seu terceiro álbum, o artista afro-português Scúru Fitchádu funde a sabedoria ancestral com a revolta urbana, transformando memória e militância em uma trilha sonora para a resistência.

Biya forever

As Cameroon nears its presidential elections, a disintegrated opposition paves the way for the world’s oldest leader to claim a fresh mandate.

From Cornell to conscience

Hounded out of the United States for his pro-Palestine activism, Momodou Taal insists that the struggle is global, drawing strength from Malcolm X, faith, and solidarity across borders.