
Algeria’s bloodless coup
President Abdelaziz Bouteflika’s latest attempt to buy time and the way ahead for the three week-long popular uprising against his and the military’s rule.
6420 Article(s) by:
Nathan Chiume is an Africa analyst and consultant.

President Abdelaziz Bouteflika’s latest attempt to buy time and the way ahead for the three week-long popular uprising against his and the military’s rule.

The 1973 dystopian apocalyptic French novel that inspires today’s violent white, rightwing populism.

Following a series of racist attacks on African students in India, an African student in India wrote this.

Hiplife artist Sarkodie has proposed that what Ghana needs is a dictatorship. This is not inconsistent with his politics, rooted in promoting male success and a patriarchal vision of liberation.

How the highly profitable rural-based sugar industry failed the people of Swaziland and enriched the King and multinational corporations.

The wild metaphors, stark imagery, and boundary-pushing hyperbole in Nana Kwame Agyei-Brenyah writing.

If what has been happening in Algeria since February 22, 2019, may not be a revolution, it very much looks like it.

In a break with previous administrations, Ethiopia’s new Prime Minister has declared that he favors free market capitalism as his preferred economic model.

Med Hondo (1936-2019) was Morgan Freeman and Eddie Murphy in French. His first film premiered at Cannes in 1970. And in 1979 he wrote a manifesto: “What is the cinema for us?”

The moral drama of the Israeli occupation plays out at a South African school.

Ousmane Sonko is 44 years old. He finished third in Senegal’s March 2019 presidential election, energizing young voters.

Ed Pavlic’s new novel follows two lovers trading Chicago for Mombasa.

An US congressional delegation to Eritrea—the first in 14 years—which included Ilhan Omar, got little attention in mainstream media. Why?

I have the privilege to fight, argue or board a plane when I feel like I’ve had enough. The vast majority of women on the continent do not have that option.

Ozier Muhammad captures, for black American audiences, the expressive possibilities of Africa’s liberation struggles.

Economies are broken everywhere, but while the rest of the world considers the radical, South Africa resigns itself to the rational.

Once upon a time, South Sudanese exiles in Khartoum—inspired by, among others, Charles Dickens and Malcolm X—had a radical vision for their new country.

France no longer has an excuse to hold on to Senegal’s cultural heritage. Senegal has a place for it.

A radical feature on South Africa’s literary calendar, Abantu celebrates black intellectual labor, and resists the tropes that marginalizes it.

Update from Algiers on the protests against President Abdelaziz Bouteflika’s plans to run for a fifth term in office.