856 episodes

One question to wake up to every weekday morning. One story from Africa, for Africa. Alan Kasujja takes a deep dive into the news shaping the continent. Ready by early morning, five days a week, Monday to Friday.

Africa Daily BBC World Service

    • News

One question to wake up to every weekday morning. One story from Africa, for Africa. Alan Kasujja takes a deep dive into the news shaping the continent. Ready by early morning, five days a week, Monday to Friday.

    What are the main challenges for Somali women musicians?

    What are the main challenges for Somali women musicians?

    “Especially the woman, they cannot sing. They cannot go in front of the people and then sing and say ‘I am an artist’. It’s shameful.”
    Today Alan enjoys a treat on the podcast: singer and activist Sahra Halgan came in to the Africa Daily studios in Broadcasting House along with her fellow musicians percussionist, Aymeric Krol, and guitarist, Maël Salètes, and they performed some of their music live for him.
    Sahra has lived quite a life… She was a nurse during the Somali civil war in the 1980s before fleeing to France in the 1990s. But after years of building up her singing career abroad, she returned to her home city of Hargeisa in the self-declared republic of Somaliland in 2015 and founded its first cultural and music centre. The name of that club is Hiddo Dhawr - which means ‘promote or keep culture’ – which is also the name of her latest album, out this month.
    Opening a club wasn’t without challenges; there is disapproval of musicians – especially female ones – from many sectors of Somali society. And even at the age of 55, Sahra's mother is still hoping that one day she’ll get a proper job!

    • 13 min
    How did a Kenyan Maasai woman make history in Northern Ireland?

    How did a Kenyan Maasai woman make history in Northern Ireland?

    "When I came to Northern Ireland, when I was walking on the streets of Derry, I could hardly see a black person. At that time, I think there were only three Kenyans, with me being the fourth person."
    Lilian Seenoi-Barr is about to make history by becoming Northern Ireland's first black mayor. Ms Seenoi-Barr was selected by the SDLP party to become the next first citizen of Derry City and Strabane District Council but despite the support she received, she has also faced some backlash and racist abuse.
    She was born in Kenya and left in 2010 to start a new life in Northern Ireland. She proudly comes from the Maasai tribe but since moving to Derry, she has been focused on building community and support for other immigrants.
    Africa Daily's Alan Kasujja spoke to her about her journey and why she decided to become a politician.

    Presenter: Alan Kasujja. Guest: Lilian Seenoi-Barr.

    • 20 min
    Are South Africans ready for Wednesday’s national election?

    Are South Africans ready for Wednesday’s national election?

    Are South Africans ready for Wednesday’s national election?

    “Since hearing that political parties will be launching their election manifestos, I decided to attend these events. I wanted to hear for myself which president would address our needs as college students. It’s my first time voting” – Thembeka Dliwako, South African voter

    In today’s podcast, Mpho Lakaje sits down with 21-year-old Thembeka Dliwako, who will be voting for the very first time in her life.

    In her country, she’s popularly known as “Nomarally”, loosely translated as, “The lady of the rallies”.

    That’s because, in recent months she’s been doing something rather unusual.

    She’s been traveling to different parts of the country, attending the political rallies of various parties, wanting to hear for herself what leaders have to offer.

    Mpho also visits Johannesburg attorney, Oatlhotse Thupayatlase who voted for the first time back in 1994, in an election that marked the end of apartheid.

    Is he still as excited about casting his ballot as he was 30 years ago?

    Approximately 27 million South Africans are eligible to vote in the watershed general election on Wednesday.

    • 17 min
    How is a Kenyan school using bamboo to fight landfill air pollution?

    How is a Kenyan school using bamboo to fight landfill air pollution?

    For years, teachers and students at the Dandora Secondary School in Kenya’s capital Nairobi have complained of respiratory illnesses. They say they are caused by the toxic fumes given off by East Africa's largest dump site, the Dandora landfill, which is next to the school.
    Despite being declared full in 1996, the landfill continues to receive approximately 2,000 tonnes of waste each day.
    But now the head teacher of the school has decided to tackle the issue, and with students has been planting bamboo in order to combat the air pollution.
    Africa Daily’s Alan Kasujja spoke to school Principal Eutychus Maina who initiated this innovative solution when he fell ill soon after joining the school.

    • 13 min
    Why have plans for a mass wedding sparked controversy in Nigeria?

    Why have plans for a mass wedding sparked controversy in Nigeria?

    “Without the public outcry, the mass marriage would have gone on as planned.”
    There’s been a lot of debate, claim and counter-claim in Nigeria this week over a proposed mass wedding of 100 couples in Niger state in the north of the country.
    Concerns were raised that some of the girls involved were under the legal age for marriage, and a petition was quickly launched. The Women's Affairs Minister, Uju Kennedy-Ohanenye filed a court injunction to stop the ceremony. She’s since said that the wedding can go ahead but only after an investigation has taken place – and has offered the girls scholarships as well as gifts including sewing machines and rice. She said the girls would be closely monitored in their new homes after their marriages.

    Child marriages are common in the predominantly Muslim north, where poverty is higher than in the largely Christian south.
    Alan Kasujja unpicks the controversy – and asks what it tells us about the marriage of young people in Nigeria.
    Presenter: Alan Kasujja.
    Guests: BBC reporter, Azeezat Olaoluwa and gender and child advocate, Ayotomiwa Ayodele.
    Updated 24th May to reflect Minister Uju Kennedy-Ohanenye’s latest statement.

    • 16 min
    Why has the US invited Kenya’s President Ruto on a state visit?

    Why has the US invited Kenya’s President Ruto on a state visit?

    Kenyan President William Ruto is on a state visit to the US, the first by an African leader since Ghana’s John Kufour in 2008 and only the 6th state visit Biden has hosted since taking office in 2020
    A state visit is the highest level of international visit, and its purpose is to confirm the good relationship between the countries concerned.
    For President Ruto it's a significant display of his emergence as leading voice for Africa - particularly in the eyes of the West.
    But some observers say that Washington is now playing catch up to Russia and China - which have both grown in influence on the continent in recent years - as well as newer entrants like Turkey, India, and Saudi Arabia.
    In this episode of Africa Daily podcast, Alan Kasujja talks to Ambassador Martin Kimani, an international affairs expert and former Permanent Representative of Kenya to the United Nations.

    • 17 min

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