
6426 Article(s) by:
Nathan Chiume
Nathan Chiume is an Africa analyst and consultant.


The stranger among you
How does one ask the black church to offer hospitality after a white, racist stranger made the historic inner sanctum of the black community the space of death?

Blood dripping from his head
A painful, violent story of migration captured in the song “Lagos” – for our series “Liner Notes,” in which musicians talk about making music.

Buika is the best

The US nostalgia for racist regimes in Africa
The terrorist Dylan Roof is by no means the first white American to find common cause with racist colonial regimes in Africa.

A certain kind of Black
A meditation on Haiti and Charleston. Being Black, these days, means living in constant state of siege.

Is Africa really rising? No.
The rhetoric around “Africa rising” is giving us a false sense of comfort and distracting us from the real work that needs to happen.

Freedom, youth and remembrance
In the documentary “Remembered Futures” the filmmakers interrogate the ways South Africans understand their own history and how this affects their futures.

Haiti and the Dominican Republic
The Dominican state and the country’s elites make up a history of conflict with Haiti to justify the periodic deportation of Haitians in the Dominican Republic.

It’s about more than Mexico
How about giving US presidential aspirant, Donald Trump, some reading material on what the United States has brought to Latin America.
Hillbrow invasion with @YoungstaCPT

What’s the word? Sister/woman have you heard from Manenberg?

Badvertising and the Soweto Uprising
The worst crime of a new ad “celebrating” the martyrs of 1976 is the message does not accord with the realities of young black South Africans.

Bashir’s last trip outside of Sudan
Should the South African government have arrested Sudan’s President Omar al Bashir?

Weekend Music Break No.77

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.