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African Arguments

  • Debating Ideas
  • Country
    • Central
      • Cameroon
      • Central African Republic
      • Chad
      • Congo-Brazzaville
      • Congo-Kinshasa
      • Equatorial Guinea
      • Gabon
    • East
      • Burundi
      • Comoros
      • Dijbouti
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      • Somaliland
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      • Nigeria
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      • Sierra Leone
      • Togo
  • Climate
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • Society
  • Culture
  • Specials
    • From the fellows
    • Radical Activism in Africa
    • On Food Security & COVID19
    • Think African [Podcast]
    • #EndSARS
    • Into Africa [Podcast]
    • Covid-19
    • Travelling While African
    • From the wit-hole countries…
    • Living in Translation
    • Africa Science Focus [Podcast]
    • Red Sea
    • Beautiful Game
  • About Us – 2026

Country

Home›African Arguments›Category: "Country" (Page 19)
  • In January 2024, women in Figuig, who have been prominent in the biweekly protests against water privatisation, led a women's march.
    ClimateEditor's PicksMoroccoPolitics

    The small oasis town leading the fight against water privatisation

    By Ilhem Rachidi
    February 16, 2024
    For over 100 days, residents of Figuig in Morocco have been protesting plans to allow a private company to manage the delivery of drinking ...
    Read More
  • Dancers entertain passers-by in Gandhi Square, Johannesburg. Credit: South African Tourism.
    My CitySocietySouth AfricaTop story

    The legend of Johannesburg: From Afrophobia to acts of kindness

    By Zukiswa Wanner
    February 15, 2024
    Zukiswa Wanner pays homage to a city where the contradictions of violence and Ubuntu seem more marked than perhaps anywhere else.  Africa’s urban landscape ...
    Read More
  • Elections in CrisisOPINIONSenegalTop story

    Senegal’s democracy is in peril

    By Johnnie Carson and Joseph Sany
    February 13, 2024
    The looming danger of democratic collapse is a challenge to friends of Senegal and democracy to do better. The sudden actions by Senegal’s president ...
    Read More
  • Conflict & CrisisEditor's PicksMaliThe Western Sahel

    Mali: Defiant and alone, will the junta defeat the jihadis?

    By Nalova Akua
    February 13, 2024
    Revolting against the French, expelling a UN force and walking out of ECOWAS, the Assimi Goita junta is taking out its frustrations with the ...
    Read More
  • Editor's PicksNigeriaPolitics

    The silence of the Obidients

    By Maxwell Bone
    February 9, 2024
    With the Tinubu government’s IMF-prescribed shock therapy convulsing the economy almost a year after the botched presidential election they believe cost Peter Obi victory, ...
    Read More
  • Biete Abba Libanos, or the House of Abbot Libanos, has large cracks running down its exterior and one of the metal shelters stretched over it. Credit: Jaclynn Ashly.
    ClimateEditor's PicksEthiopiaSociety

    Rocks in a hard place: Lalibela priests raise fears amid war and weather

    By Jaclynn Ashly
    February 7, 2024
    Cracks are widening along Ethiopia’s ancient rock-hewn churches. Fighting has come perilously close, but rain is the bigger threat.  For the past decade, Father ...
    Read More
  • Mama Kalonda Alphonsine washes cobalt ore. Women are paid the equivalent of $3.75 for cleaning one full sack. Credit: Roy Maconachie.
    ClimateCongo-KinshasaEconomyTop story

    “We miners die a lot”: The lives of cobalt miners in the DRC

    By Roy Maconachie
    February 1, 2024
    Demand for cobalt is skyrocketing. The DRC sits on two thirds of the world’s known supply, yet miners receive virtually none of the profits.   ...
    Read More
  • Climate change has led to loss and damage in Kenya in the form of droughts, floods, and other extreme weather events. Credit: Jervis Sundays/Kenya Red Cross Society.
    ClimateEconomyKenyaTop story

    Why Kenya is hopeful but hesitant about the Loss and Damage Fund

    By Kalonzo Musyoka
    January 31, 2024
    The new fund is a step towards climate justice. But its host and size leave many questions unanswered. In my country, Kenya, climate change ...
    Read More
  • The Angola Highlands water tower is one of the many under-researched natural water towers in Africa. Credit: Cory Richards/National Geographic Okavango Wilderness Project.
    AngolaClimateSouthernTop story

    Africa’s life-sustaining water towers have been overlooked for too long

    By Mauro Lourenço
    January 24, 2024
    International researchers’ focus on ice to define natural water towers leaves Africa’s critical systems off the map, and with little protection. Africa is a ...
    Read More
  • Employees at the Sabi Star lithium mine in Buhera, Zimbabwe. Credit: Bernard Chiketo.
    ClimateEconomyTop storyZimbabwe

    Zimbabwe looks to China to secure place in EV battery supply chain

    By Andrew Mambondiyani
    January 23, 2024
    Chinese companies have invested billions in Zimbabwe’s lithium. Now Harare wants to ensure some processing happens before export. Wonder Mushove stared blankly at plumes ...
    Read More
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