
Mauled by an old lion
How Robert Mugabe, Zimbabwe’s Life President since 1980, bested CNN’s Christiane Amampour.
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Miguna Miguna is a Kenyan activist and lawyer.

How Robert Mugabe, Zimbabwe’s Life President since 1980, bested CNN’s Christiane Amampour.

This is another Weekend Special post: compiling news and links we didn’t have time to focus on in the last week.

It’s no accident that so many South Africans watch and support English Premier League football teams.

The mixing of popular protest and music in protests over electricity cuts in Senegal.

So as usual, a bunch of links—new as well as ones—that have piled up in my bookmarks folder. It’s Weekend Special.

Surely Jesse Jackson did some basic research on Laurent Gbagbo’s rightwing identity politics before accepting an invitation from his supporters?

That time Nigeria’s government objected to a commercial for SONY’s PS3 video game console.

Who are the real victims of crime and violence in South Africa?

What was Johannesburg newspaper, The Star, hoping to achieve with this dehumanizing image?

This book explores love, that stuff most Western journalists rarely write about when they write about Africa.

The victim politics peddled on blogs by a section of expatriate white South Africans–often with positive results for them.

The mass support for Caster Semenya among South Africans is paradoxical: of a country deeply divided, yet at certain moments strangely united around a common cause.

Slovo was a key leader of the armed and exiled resistance against Apartheid and one of the most visible white face of that movement, even after apartheid.

Business magazine, Forbes, made a list of “The 100 Most Official Women”: The top African on the list is the United Nations’ top human rights official, Navi Pillay, from South Africa.

Anyone could have told mainstream Western media that Jacob Zuma would follow conventional rightwing economic policies. Why are they acting surprised?

The Cape Town group, Prophets of da City, should get credit for kickstarting South African hip hop. They were also politically righteous.

In 1971, Carlos Santana went to play in Ghana at a massive independence day concert. It felt like being at home.

‘District 9’ comments on contemporary politics about domination, race and immigration, especially in South Africa.

A comic book, published by an imprint of DC Comics, is set during the Ugandan Civil War.

Hip hop artists from Senegal, to Morocco, to Angola, to the United States perform for Burundian political activist, Alexis Sinduhije.