
Salah in isolation
Distanced at club level, and scrutinized at home, there is no player with more to prove at this African Cup of Nations than Mohamed Salah.

Distanced at club level, and scrutinized at home, there is no player with more to prove at this African Cup of Nations than Mohamed Salah.

Bafana Bafana’s resurgence has been forged where South African football always lives—between brilliance and the bizarre.

An African Cup of Nations at home for red hot Morocco is a chance to put past trauma aside and charge on to the world stage.

This year, instead of taking a publishing break, we will be covering the African Cup of Nations. To transition, we consider why football still matters in an era of enclosure, mediated presence, and thinning publics.

A dispatch from Benin City tells the unfinished story of the Museum of West African Art.

The scandal around Ezra Olubi has exposed the contradictions of Nigeria’s middle-class, online feminism.

In his latest exhibition, Khanya Zibaya charts the psychic and spatial terrain of a city where homelessness, decay, and human resilience sit uneasily together.

At the UN’s annual Western Sahara debate, everyone gets heard except the Sahrawis themselves.

The dispute over Benin City’s museum project shows that returning stolen art does not settle the question of ownership.

Somalis have answered Trump’s latest racist tirade not with outrage but with a tidal wave of trolling.

From Actonville to global stages, Pops Mohamed blended tradition, futurism, and faith—leaving behind a musical archive as luminous as the spirit he carried.

From IMF history to astrophysics, Nairobi’s Drunken Lectures turn casual drinkers into an engaged public.