
Renouncing the Rhino
My beef with rhinos is more of a beef with white South Africa as a whole, who are all for saving rhinos but largely silent about inequality, poverty and institutional racism.
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Rita Nketiah is a feminist researcher, writer and activist living in Accra, Ghana.

My beef with rhinos is more of a beef with white South Africa as a whole, who are all for saving rhinos but largely silent about inequality, poverty and institutional racism.

Here’s on lesson from Ghana’s 2012 election: Not only is Akufo-Addo the Ghanaian Mitt Romney, but the NPP are the Republicans of Ghana

Euro-American media just can’t do right by Nafissatou Diallo, the Guinean hotel worker who accused a prominent French politician Dominique Strauss-Kahn of sexual assault in a New York City hotel. Even though she effectively won the case.

Mali’s interim Prime Minister is forced out by soldiers. What that means for Mali’s political future is anyone’s guess, but it doesn’t look good.


A black photographer who moved to South Africa from the US, explores the transcontinental dialogue between black middle class people the world over.

What are we to do, as consumers, if Fairtrade is little more than a marketing gimmick? Should we avoid products marked with its logo? Are we being conned?

Most media reports of “political murders” in KwaZulu-Natal in South Africa don’t situate them in their larger historical context.

Sbujwa is a South African dance described as a dance that requires every muscle in your body to work in order to complete the moves.

Foreign journalists would do well to get their heads around Mali’s crisis, because all signs are that it will be around for a while.

The online retrospective, “Literary Sudans,” is intended to highlight the two Sudans as sites of literature and culture.

Most of the same issues and personalities that featured in the 2008 elections dominate in the 2012 elections.

An interview with Abdellah Karroum is the artistic director of the Biennale Regard Benin 2012, which premise is “Inventing the World: the Artist as Citizen.”


The United States’ star mercenary, Erik Prince of Blackwater, protects Chinese investment around the African continent.

It might not be Dakar or Nairobi, but Gaborone certainly does not look empty.