6427 Article(s) by:
Nathan Chiume
Nathan Chiume is an Africa analyst and consultant.

Is DJ Lewis’s “Stop Ebola” his “Grippe Aviaire” pt. 2?

5 Questions for a Filmmaker: Jahmil Qubeka
The filmmaker considers himself to be a filmmaker who happens to be African: He is driven by the art of storytelling; so his context is African but his film language is global.
The fruit of gender equality
It turns out the majority of Burkinabé favor progressive change on gender rights.

LagosPhoto is Five Years Old

Africa is a Radio: Episode #6

Like a bad joke
Israel’s arms exports to African countries has more than doubled in the last four years: African countries spent $223m on Israeli arms in 2013 compared to $107m in 2012.

Why I am afraid of Ebola
I am afraid of Ebola because it is an enemy of critical and balanced thinking about Africa, about disease, about our common humanity.

What’s the matter with … Stellenbosch University
Legacies of colonialism and apartheid are etched into social dynamics of the town in the way its inhabitants occupy public space. The same goes for the university.

Germany has its own “Sinterklaas Scandal”
Why is it so difficult to understand when we Africans say that it’s offensive?

5 Questions for a Filmmaker–Moussa Sene Absa

Let’s talk about ethnicity and nationalism in Ethiopia
Politics in and about Ethiopia has become so heavily “ethnicized” that we have a difficult time distinguishing between ideology and identity.

Niçoise with sweet potatoes
Differences can be harmonious and allow people to come together despite their background and roots.

Angola’s Forgotten Massacre
Lara Pawson’s book about the complex and violent events on and after the 27th of May, 1977: the date of a supposed coup d’etat in Luanda, Angola.
A museum in the middle of the street

Who profits from the production of blackface?
The Dutch state and its economy are profiting generously from their annual blackface partay.

Akon’s “giant Ebola air bubble”
That story about Akon, the Senegalese-American R&B singer, performing in an air bubble to thousands of screaming Congolese in Goma, because he doesn’t want to get Ebola is false

Kampala Gets an Art Biennale
The need to move the art discussion away from Darwinian interests in gorillas to the concern for new audiences for contemporary art in Africa.

The rebirth of a literary dream
The story of Ba re e ne re, now probably Lesotho’s premier literary festival as told by those involved from its start in tragic events.
