Tanzania’s wildlife gamble risks future pandemics
With poaching on the rise thanks to the pandemic, Tanzania has alarmed conservationists further by legalising bushmeat markets, writes Zachary Ochieng.
With poaching on the rise thanks to the pandemic, Tanzania has alarmed conservationists further by legalising bushmeat markets, writes Zachary Ochieng.
The latest Africa news, including Mauritius’s feud with the UK, Guinea’s election fallout and the Hague trial of an ex-CAR rebel leader.
Mass arrests, killings and an internet blackout overshadowed Uganda’s presidential poll. But, as Zachary Ochieng reports, the opposition hasn’t given up the fight yet.
After Donald Trump recognised Morocco’s claims over the disputed region, Andrea Dijkstra looks at what the future holds for Africa’s ‘last colony’.
While the West seems to have abandoned many of its basic democratic principles during the Covid-19 pandemic, in Africa governments have been voted out of office, lockdowns overthrown – and people have been taking to the streets in defence of civil rights. NewsAfrica examines whether 2020 marks a turning point for the continent – or yet another false dawn.
As President Trump warns that Ethiopia’s new dam could lead to war with Egypt, NewsAfrica asks whether Addis should be as scared as it seems to be.
As Botswana’s former leader Ian Khama announces plans to sue the state over corruption and terrorism claims, NewsAfrica Magazine asks what lies behind President Masisi’s feud with his predecessor.
Malawi’s new government announces possible changes to anti-sodomy legislation, including allowing gay couples to marry.
A round-up of the latest news from the African continent, including Mozambique’s war on terror, the Israel-Sudan peace deal, and Uganda’s troubled elections.
Sinesipho Tom reports from Cape Town on the alarming rise in anti-female violence that swept lockdown South Africa.
Campaigning for Kenya’s 2022 presidential poll has already begun – and there are fears that the rifts that led to the 2007-08 electoral violence are resurfacing.
The mysterious deaths of some of Liberia’s most high-profile financial professionals in October have gripped the tiny nation of less than six million people.