832 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
    • 4.9 • 153 Ratings

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.

    Thirty years later, have black and white South Africans forgiven each other?

    Thirty years later, have black and white South Africans forgiven each other?

    “If I have my money, I have my assets, I have my farms, my houses, my cars, I have everything I need, I don’t need to be friendly with any white person” – Sandile Swana, former freedom fighter.
    In 1948, the National Party came into power in South Africa and introduced apartheid, a system that segregated society along racial lines. Black people were not allowed to share toilets, beaches, theatres and other public facilities with their white counterparts.
    In the decades that followed, the black majority rose up against the system and engaged in various political campaigns. Many activists - including Nelson Mandela, Robert Sobukwe, Walter Sisulu and Ahmed Kathrada - were incarcerated, while others fled to neighbouring countries. But after years of pressure on the National Party government, which included sanctions and international sports boycotts, apartheid collapsed. On the 27th of April 1994, the nation voted in its first democratic election.
    So 30 years since independence, our presenter Mpho Lakaje sits down with two people who were on either side of the political divide: former freedom fighter Sandie Swana and apartheid-era policeman Lourens Groenewald.
    So have black and white South Africans truly forgiven each other since those ugly days?

    • 19 min
    30 years on, have black South Africans got economic justice?

    30 years on, have black South Africans got economic justice?

    “It feels like a black man deserves the worst. The poor are getting poorer while the rich are getting richer. I don’t know how things will change” – Alexandra resident, Vusi Mbeye.

    On the 27th of April 1994, millions of South Africans voted in their country’s very first democratic election. During white minority rule, black people were not allowed to vote.
    Nelson Mandela’s African National Congress won that election and then introduced policies like Affirmative Action and Black Economic Empowerment. In addition, many black students received financial aid from the government and private companies, to further their university or college studies. All these measures were meant to correct the economic injustices of the past.

    But 30 years after the fall of apartheid, have black South Africans experienced meaningful economic freedom?
    Africa Daily presenter Mpho Lakaje, who is himself a black South African, sits down with two men who were both born in Alexandra township: street vendor Vusi Mbeye and Theo Baloyi, a wealthy businessman. He also visits political analyst Khaya Sithole.

    • 19 min
    Will Togo's political rollercoaster reach a resolution?

    Will Togo's political rollercoaster reach a resolution?

    Togo's President Faure Gnassingbé's proposal to change the constitution has ignited a fierce debate in the country. Some say it's a power grab disguised as reform, while others insist it's a step towards a more democratic future.
    The reforms aim to switch Togo from a presidential to a parliamentary system, but critics worry it will only prolong the Gnassingbé family's rule. Helping to keep him in power until 2031 and potentially beyond. President Gnassingbé came to power in 2005 after the death of his father, who had been president since 1967.
    Protests have been banned and elections postponed- they are now set to take place on Monday 29th April. It’s all led to heightened tension and concerns about the country's political future.
    Africa Daily’s Mpho Lakaje spoke to the BBC’s Nicolas Negoce about the future of politics in Togo.

    • 17 min
    What is the Nigerian government doing to tackle insecurity?

    What is the Nigerian government doing to tackle insecurity?

    Earlier this month we marked the 10th anniversary of the kidnapping of the Chibok girls.
    It was one of the first mass kidnappings of children witnessed in Nigeria. In 2014, 276 girls were abducted from their school by militants from Chibok, a town in the country’s north east.
    Over the past 10 years, mass abductions and kidnappings have become a common occurrence in Nigeria.
    So what is the government doing to get a handle on security?
    In today’s Africa Daily, Alan Kasujja speaks to Mohammed Idris, Nigeria’s Minister of Information and National Orientation.

    • 15 min
    100 Influential Africans – how is Ibrahima Cheikh Diong trying to shape Africa?

    100 Influential Africans – how is Ibrahima Cheikh Diong trying to shape Africa?

    “Development is all about leadership. You can get all the resources in the world, you can get all the best human capital… but if the leadership is not there you can’t make the best of the resources you have and eventually move your country forward.”
    Ibrahima Cheikh Diong is UN-Assistant Secretary General and Director General of the African Union specialized agency “the African Risk Capacity Group” or ARC, which works with governments to help them deal with climate related disasters.
    But in a varied career, he’s also been a member of the Senegalese government and worked for the World Bank, as a senior banker and in management consultancy. And he even speaks Mandarin as well as French and English thanks to his student days in China.
    But he says if he had to best describe himself he’d say he was ‘an African who cares about Africa and wants to make a difference in Africa’.
    This is Alan’s second conversation with people included – like himself – in New African Magazine’s 100 Influential Africans list for this year.

    • 21 min
    Are new banknotes the ‘golden answer’ for Zimbabwe’s currency woes?

    Are new banknotes the ‘golden answer’ for Zimbabwe’s currency woes?

    You’ve gone to the grocery store and bought your week’s supplies… so can you imagine receiving your change in sweets, chocolates and other small items?
    That’s the situation in Zimbabwe where a shortage of US dollars – and a plummeting Zimbabwean dollar – has now led the government to introduce a new currency pegged to gold.
    The Zimbabwean dollar has already lost three quarters of its value this year.
    But will this latest move work any better than other attempts by the government to stabilise the economy in the past?

    • 16 min

Customer Reviews

4.9 out of 5
153 Ratings

153 Ratings

Ada Mbaise ,

Excellent!

The hosts are well researched and the guests are inspiring… (well most of them). The contrast between private citizen guests and most of the political guests/government representatives (in terms of social awareness, service orientation and emotional intelligence), is stunning.

Icaresca ,

Great informative podcast

I learn so much in bitesized pieces and Alan K. is an absolute joy to listen to. I wish I could have him over for dinner.

muthembwa ,

Paul in the USA

You show is extremely informative and I have learned a lot
Keep it going

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