African Arguments

Main Menu

  • Debating Ideas
  • Country
    • Central
      • Cameroon
      • Central African Republic
      • Chad
      • Congo-Brazzaville
      • Congo-Kinshasa
      • Equatorial Guinea
      • Gabon
    • East
      • Burundi
      • Comoros
      • Dijbouti
      • Eritrea
      • Ethiopia
      • Kenya
      • Rwanda
      • Seychelles
      • Somalia
      • Somaliland
      • South Sudan
      • Sudan
      • Tanzania
      • Uganda
      • Red Sea
    • North
      • Algeria
      • Egypt
      • Libya
      • Morocco
      • Tunisia
      • Western Sahara
    • Southern
      • Angola
      • Botswana
      • eSwatini
      • Lesotho
      • Madagascar
      • Malawi
      • Mauritius
      • Mozambique
      • Namibia
      • South Africa
      • Zambia
      • Zimbabwe
    • West
      • Benin
      • Burkina Faso
      • Cape Verde
      • Côte d’Ivoire
      • The Gambia
      • Ghana
      • Guinea
      • Guinea Bissau
      • Liberia
      • Mali
      • Mauritania
      • Niger
      • Nigeria
      • São Tomé and Príncipe
      • Senegal
      • 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

logo

African Arguments

  • Debating Ideas
  • Country
    • Central
      • Cameroon
      • Central African Republic
      • Chad
      • Congo-Brazzaville
      • Congo-Kinshasa
      • Equatorial Guinea
      • Gabon
    • East
      • Burundi
      • Comoros
      • Dijbouti
      • Eritrea
      • Ethiopia
      • Kenya
      • Rwanda
      • Seychelles
      • Somalia
      • Somaliland
      • South Sudan
      • Sudan
      • Tanzania
      • Uganda
      • Red Sea
    • North
      • Algeria
      • Egypt
      • Libya
      • Morocco
      • Tunisia
      • Western Sahara
    • Southern
      • Angola
      • Botswana
      • eSwatini
      • Lesotho
      • Madagascar
      • Malawi
      • Mauritius
      • Mozambique
      • Namibia
      • South Africa
      • Zambia
      • Zimbabwe
    • West
      • Benin
      • Burkina Faso
      • Cape Verde
      • Côte d’Ivoire
      • The Gambia
      • Ghana
      • Guinea
      • Guinea Bissau
      • Liberia
      • Mali
      • Mauritania
      • Niger
      • Nigeria
      • São Tomé and Príncipe
      • Senegal
      • 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

African Arguments

Home›Category: "African Arguments" (Page 42)
  • Andreas (right) with his colleagues in conservation in the Tofola Hill Wildlife Sanctuary, Cameroon.
    CameroonClimateEditor's PicksPolitics

    Meet Cameroon’s undercover conservationists

    By Shuimo Trust
    May 17, 2023
    When the Anglophone war broke out, state rangers left, militias set up camp in forests, and thousands sought refuge in areas of critical biodiversity. ...
    Read More
  • CultureEditor's PicksNamibiaSociety

    Drag Night Namibia: “What we are doing here today is massive”

    By Chris de Beer-Procter
    May 16, 2023
    Amid momentous legal victories and disappointing let-downs, Namibia’s queer community and activists celebrate a radical joy. It’s Drag Night in Namibia and The Loft ...
    Read More
  • East Nile Hospital, Khartoum. It was bombed on 14 May allegedly by the SAF who believed it to have been a converted RSF barracks. Photo courtesy: 'Sudan Armed Forces' on Facebook.
    Conflict & CrisisCRISIS IN SUDANTop story

    Sudan: As the generals fight, who’s playing chess with the old Islamists?

    By Fathi Osman
    May 15, 2023
    The clash between Burhan and Hemedti was inevitable. In the mediation scramble, nobody can afford to side with Bashir’s Islamists. At 10 am on ...
    Read More
  • African Politics NowOPINIONTop story

    Presidential term limits and the power of precedent

    By Aaron Sampson
    May 15, 2023
    Incumbents’ appetites for third-term runs may be waning, but they still carry hugely disruptive political legacies. Democracy activists in Senegal and Mozambique are sounding ...
    Read More
  • PoliticsSenegalTop story

    Gatsa-Gatsa: Ousmane Sonko and Senegal’s politics of retaliation

    By Bamba Ndiaye
    May 15, 2023
    Sonko’s legal problems, which appear engineered to frustrate his presidential bid, could well push the country back into the street.  On May 8, 2023, ...
    Read More
  • Former PM, Alain Guillaume Bunyoni. Courtesy: By RTNB Burundi - La société croud1 ne remplit pas les normes exigées par la BRB (A.G.Bunyoni) image fixe de 00:50 seconds (www.youtube.com), CC BY 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=102421448
    BurundiPoliticsTop story

    Burundi: “The president has crossed the Rubicon – there’s no turning back”

    By Lorraine Josiane Manishatse
    May 11, 2023
    In the wake of the arrest and detention of former PM Alain Guillaume Bunyoni, political observers weigh the consequences. There was some surprise when ...
    Read More
  • Spying a port through the trees in Cabo Delgado, Mozambique, the site of one of Africa's biggest oil and gas projects. Credit: Sigrid Ekman.
    ClimateEditor's PicksMozambiquePolitics

    The return to Cabo Delgado: Gas, war, and the emergence of Total Land

    By João Feijó
    May 9, 2023
    While TotalEnergies remains coy about restarting the $20bn gas project, Mozambicans are coming home in the conspicuous absence of the state. In recent months, ...
    Read More
  • diamond-mine-open-pit-botswana-156807675-scaled.jpg
    BotswanaEconomyMININGRebuttal

    Botswana has always driven a hard bargain with De Beers

    By Jorich Loubser
    May 9, 2023
    Botswana is not following a trend of African state negotiating more aggressively with corporations. It has long set this trend. This article is a ...
    Read More
  • Protestors in Khartoum celebrating the fall of Omar al-Bashir, July 2019. Courtesy: Prachatai
    Conflict & CrisisSudanTop story

    Sudan: Revolutionary reflections, amid a raging war

    By Robert Kluijver
    May 5, 2023
    If the popular revolution of 2019 was badly undermined by its rejection of representative politics, how can it be revived? The current fighting between ...
    Read More
  • When the government removed some fuel subsidies in 2012, it prompted huge protests across Nigeria. Credit: Kolawole Oreoluwa.
    ClimateEconomyNigeria

    How (and why) Nigeria should remove its fuel subsidy

    By Stephen Onyeiwu
    May 5, 2023
    Nigeria spends a quarter of its budget on a regressive fuel subsidy. Removing it and distributing the savings can help the poorest. Nigerians are ...
    Read More
1 … 40 41 42 43 44 … 428

Recent Posts

  • Redefining ‘Free and Fair’: Ethiopia’s Election and Electoral Legitimacy
  • Can Sudan’s Dried Meat Delicacy Escape the Suitcase and Conquer New Markets?
  • Africa’s AI Governance Gap: Why National Strategies Must Move Beyond Adoption to Execution
  • The Untold Story of the Battle of Adowa: How Anti-imperialism can be rebuilt from the ground up
  • African Multilateralism from a Vision to a Reality: Lessons from the Most Hostile Continent on Earth

Brought to you by


олимп казино официальный сайт
most bet
baji live login
https://revista-online.info

Creative Commons

pokerdom
Creative Commons Licence
Articles on African Arguments are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
топ 10 казино
паріматч
pinup
casibom giris
© Copyright African Arguments 2026
By continuing to browse this site, you agree to our use of cookies.
Translate »