
6432 Article(s) by:
Miguna Miguna
Miguna Miguna is a Kenyan activist and lawyer.


The Primitive Tribe
A satire on particularly British, and wider European, attitudes towards refugees fleeing war and climate disaster.

No exoticism, no promos, just the music
The Hipsters Don’t Dance “Top World Carnival Tunes” for May 2015.

Punished for being African
In the past year, Robtel Neajai Pailey has seen her Liberian passport scrutinized more intently than ever before.

Peace deployed as a weapon in Angola
In the Angolan government and its security forces’ violent relationship with its citizenry, they deploy the discourse of peace as a weapon.

Swaziland’s Bushfire
The Southern African country, Swaziland, is an absolute monarchy characterized by widespread oppression. It also hosts the Bushfire Music Festival.

Rhodes Must Fall in the West too
The Rhodes Must Fall movement is starting a much-needed conversation about the institutional roots of racism at universities in the West. Hopefully that conversation will lead to solutions.

Why would you only watch Canada at Canada’s World Cup?
Time of the pathetic hero

In Praise of Defeat
The only safe thing to talk about in Eritrea, is football. Even the President watches football and is a public Arsenal fan.

The Veneers of Freedom
Why were Kenyans tweeting #52YearsofSufferinginNEP on this year’s Independence Day?

Angolan ‘justice’ in a Portuguese slave house
The irony and the absurdity that the case against journalist Rafael Marques — an opponent of state corruption in Angola — is being heard in a former slave house.

Decolonizing the University
What to do with the universities South Africa inherited from the violences of Apartheid.

Africa is a Radio: Episode #11

The African Champions League Final
The Juventus team of Ghana’s Kwadwo Asamoah, Italy’s Angelo Ogbonna and the French pair Patrice Evra and Paul Pogba.

Weekend Music Break No.76

Are corrupt Africans really ruining FIFA?
Of course football administrators in predominantly white countries that aren’t Africa have no interest at all in “looking after” their families.

Was the German composer Beethoven, African?
There’s even an album to advance this argument: “Beethoven Was African: Polyrhythmic Piano Sonatas.”

The type of genuine player the world needs to look to
Africa’s representatives at the 2015 Women’s World Cup are Cameroon, Cote d’Ivoire and Nigeria. The latter’s chances depends a lot on Asisat Oshoala’s form.

What would a Hillary Clinton win mean for Africa?
Ever more extraction and exploitation, nicely packaged in the optimistic promise of sustainability, ‘good business climates’, partnership, democracy and ‘change’.