The link between coffee and anxiety is well established. This time, however, it’s not the caffeine that is making Ugandan farmers nervous, but the government’s plans to take control of the country’s biggest cash crop.
All Protocol Observed Welcome to Issue 184 of The Continent Coup de latte: The trouble Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni is brewing. Get your copy here: https://bit.ly/TheContinent184 image
Malawi doesn’t let displaced foreigners integrate. So the residents of its only refugee camp hold a festival each year to celebrate their cultures together.
Hug it out: Ugandan wrestlers perform at the Nyege Nyege Festival in Jinja, which draws over 10,000 revellers and artists each year – as well as the ire of scandalised religious leaders. Photo: Badru Katumba/AFP image
REVIEW: Could Awa Holmes' Soft Love really be a take on the cross-cultural, strangers-to-lovers trope that actually feels fresh?
Drop begging-bowl diplomacy and stress to richer nations that in a catastrophically hotter world, they will burn along with the rest of us, says Patrick Gathara.
By prioritising peace talks in areas where rebel movements cropped up, the military junta in Niamey may have secured its rule, and saved Nigerien lives.
Mali is not the only African country going hard after global giants. In other lawsuits, Malawi is seeking more than $314-billion from Columbia Gem House, TotalEnergies and Star Agritech.
African negotiators at this year’s UN conference on climate change in Baku, Azerbaijan were blindsided on Monday when a facilitator representing Botswana was replaced by one representing Honduras, without explanation.
People are moving relatively freely through Beitbridge, southern Africa’s busiest border post – just not in the way the African Union intended.