African News Review

Adesoji Iginla with Milton Allimadi & Aya Fubara Eneli, Esq.

For long the story of the hunt has glorified the hunters, now the lions have decided to reframe the narrative. Africa talks back.With African News Review, you can expect engaging discussions and thought-provoking insights into📌 The Scramble for Africa :Unraveling the European Colonial Divide 📌 African Leaders Who shaped History : Stories of Courage and Vision📌 Pan Africanism : ideologies and Impact on Unity and Identity 📌 Decolonisation and the Birth of African Nations📌 The Cold War in Africa: Proxy Battles and their Aftermath 📌 Contemporary Africa : Navigating Challenges and Embracing Opportunities.📌 Books on Africa and African on the continent and the Diaspora.Come with me and Let’s begin

  1. May 31

    EP 4 Pope Apologises for Slavery | Cuba War Threat | Africa's Last Colony | Senegal's Crisis Explained | African News Review 🌍

    This week on African News Review, Adesoji Iginla with Aya Fubara Eneli Esq, cut through the headlines and reframe four major stories from an Afrocentric point of view.  This episode covers a wide range of global and African issues, including the historical role of the Catholic Church in slavery, the ongoing conflict over Western Sahara, US-Cuba relations, and the importance of understanding history beyond headlines.  The hosts emphasise the need for critical awareness and responsible decision-making in geopolitics and resource control. 🕊️ STORY 1 — POPE LEO XIV APOLOGISES FOR SLAVERY  Pope Leo XIV has issued the Catholic Church's most explicit apology yet for its role in legitimising the transatlantic slave trade — including the 1452 and 1455 papal bulls that gave European kings legal authority to enslave Africans. Ghana called it an "act of moral courage." But is an apology enough? We ask: where are the reparations, and why did it take 571 years? ⚖️ STORY 2 — RAÚL CASTRO INDICTED: IS CUBA NEXT?  The US Department of Justice has indicted 94-year-old former Cuban President Raúl Castro for the 1996 shooting down of two civilian planes. With the USS Nimitz in the Caribbean and Trump saying "Cuba is next," we analyse the Monroe Doctrine playbook — and ask what Africa should make of a superpower that indicts foreign leaders to justify military intervention. Plus: Cuba's forgotten role in Angola's liberation from apartheid. 🏜️ STORY 3 — WESTERN SAHARA: AFRICA'S LAST COLONY  Ryanair is selling flights to "your Moroccan adventure" in Dakhla — a city in Western Sahara, a territory the UN still classifies as a non-self-governing territory under occupation. We expose Morocco's tourism strategy as a tool of territorial normalisation, unpack the Green March of 1975, and ask why the African Union's formal recognition of the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic is being quietly undermined by African states opening consulates in occupied territory. 🔥 STORY 4 — SENEGAL'S REVOLUTION IN CRISIS  Ousmane Sonko — jailed, persecuted, and barred from the 2024 election — is now Speaker of the National Assembly, just days after being sacked as Prime Minister by his own former ally, President Bassirou Diomaye Faye. The split is really about one question: does Senegal submit to the IMF, or chart a sovereign economic path? We connect this to Burkina Faso, Mali, the CFA franc, and the structural ceiling on African economic sovereignty. 🎙️ African News Review is a weekly podcast reframing the narrative from an Afrocentric point of view. We go beyond the headlines to give African and diaspora audiences the context, history, and analysis that mainstream media leaves out.  Takeaways * The Catholic Church's role in legitimising slavery * The Western Sahara conflict and colonial legacy * US-Cuba relations and historical indictments * Media narratives and African liberation stories * The impact of global policies on Africa and the Caribbean Chapters 00:00 Introduction and Greetings 01:39 Global Health Concerns: The Ebola Outbreak 05:09 Afrophobia and the Ghanaian Response 06:13 Papal Apology: The Catholic Church and Slavery 19:34 U.S.-Cuba Relations: Historical Context and Current Events 26:32 Political Manoeuvring and Cuba's Role 28:15 Media Narratives and Historical Context 32:08 Defining Terrorism and Its Implications 35:46 Impact of Sanctions on Cuba 37:35 US Intervention and Global Consequences 45:11 Tourism and Colonial Legacies 51:54 The Call for Equitable International Law 55:37 The Complex History of Western Sahara 56:36 Political Dynamics in Senegal 01:01:30 The Rise of Usman Sonko 01:06:53 The Future of Senegalese Politics 01:09:00 The Danger of Personal Rivalries in Politics 01:12:22 Reflections on History and Education Send us Fan Mail Support the show Africa is not a story of victims. It is a story of resistance, resilience and reclamation. That is the story we tell here — every single week. African News Review Subscribe. Share. Stay informed. Stay sovereign.

    1h 22m
  2. May 24

    EP 3 Africa's Crisis Season - Ebola | Fuel Protests | Fake Refugees | Sudan's Proxy War Exposed | African News Review

    🌍 AFRICAN NEWS REVIEW | Weekly Afrocentric Analysis Four major stories. One week. Zero filter. This week, Adesoji Iginla, alongside Comrade Milton Allimadi and Aya Fubara Eneli Esq., cut through the Western media frame on four stories dominating Africa's news cycle and ask the questions no one else is. This episode features a comprehensive discussion on global and African political issues, including Nigeria's kidnapping crisis, US foreign policy, African economic struggles, and international conflicts.  The Panel analyse the impact of neocolonialism, leadership failures, and the need for African unity and self-reliance. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 🦠 STORY 1 — EBOLA IN THE DRC & UGANDA  Marco Rubio blames the WHO for being "a little late" on Ebola while the US dismantles its own public health infrastructure and cuts $13M from programs that historically served as early warning  networks in the DRC. We unpack the Bundibugyo strain vaccine gap, why Ituri Province keeps producing outbreaks, and who really dropped the ball. ⛽ STORY 2 — AFRICA'S FUEL CRISIS Deadly protests in Kenya, a halted capital in Mozambique, and Malawi is selling its gold reserves to buy diesel. A war Africa didn't start between the US, Israel and Iran is choking the Strait of Hormuz and making fuel unaffordable for millions. We ask the structural question Western media won't: why is a continent that produces 8% of the world's oil still a net fuel importer? 🛂 STORY 3 — WHITE SOUTH AFRICANS AS "REFUGEES"  The US is spending $100 million to fast-track 17,500 white South Africans as refugees — while blocking Afghans, Sudanese, and Congolese fleeing documented genocides. We fact-check the "white genocide" myth with South Africa's own crime data, and ask: what is this programme really for? ⚔️ STORY 4 — SUDAN'S IMPOSSIBLE WAR  Three years in. 33.7 million people need aid. Confirmed famine. The FT reports on Islamist militias in the SAF, but buries the UAE's documented role in arming the RSF with weapons disguised as  humanitarian aid. We trace the RSF back to the Janjaweed, and ask why the world's worst humanitarian crisis receives a fraction of the coverage given to conflicts in the Global North.  Takeaways *Nigeria's kidnapping crisis and government silence *US foreign policy and international hypocrisy *Africa's economic struggles and IMF/World Bank influence *Sudan conflict and regional geopolitics *Global health crises and African leadership *Fuel crisis and energy infrastructure in Africa Chapters 00:00 Introduction and Panellist Introductions 00:59 Kidnapping Crisis in Nigeria 04:21 International Political Dynamics: Cuba and Iran 08:09 Tragic Events in the UK and Ireland 11:43 WHO's Response to Ebola and Criticism of US Policies 25:42 Fuel Crisis and Protests Across Africa 36:11 Global Economic Challenges and Africa's Response 39:13 Debt, Dependency, and the Need for Solutions 42:04 Youth Activism and Political Change in Africa 44:49 Refugee Policies and Racial Dynamics 49:53 The Complexities of Sudan's Conflict 01:00:50 The Future of Africa: Hope Amidst Challenges Send us Fan Mail Support the show Africa is not a story of victims. It is a story of resistance, resilience and reclamation. That is the story we tell here — every single week. African News Review Subscribe. Share. Stay informed. Stay sovereign.

    1h 12m
  3. May 17

    EP 2 Africa For The Taking? | African News Review

    Africa is not asking anymore. Four stories. One conversation. All Afrocentric. This week on African News Review, Adesoji Iginla, alongside Milton Allimadi and Aya Fubara Eneli, break down four stories reshaping the continent's narrative — and ask the questions mainstream media won't. No colonial lens. No saviour complex. Just Africa, on its own terms. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ STORY 1 — FRANCE'S $27BN AFRICA RESET: NAIROBI SUMMIT Macron arrives in English-speaking Kenya with a $27 billion pledge covering energy, AI, agriculture and the maritime economy. We ask: is this a genuine reset or a rebranding of Françafrique? What does the Sahel's rejection of France really mean — and what does Kenya gain by hosting? STORY 2 — RAMAPHOSA IMPEACHMENT: PHALA PHALA REVIVED South Africa's Constitutional Court has restarted the Phala Phala impeachment process. Ramaphosa says he will not resign. With the ANC no longer holding a parliamentary majority, can South Africa's institutions hold the line — and what does this moment reveal about accountability across the continent? STORY 3 — THE MAP THAT LIED: TOGO CHALLENGES MERCATOR AT THE UN Greenland appears almost as large as Africa on the world's most widely used map. Africa is 14 times larger. Togo — with African Union backing — is taking a formal proposal to the UN General Assembly in September to replace the Mercator projection. We go deeper on how a distorted map shapes investment decisions, diplomatic weight, and how the world perceives Africa's economic potential. STORY 4 — CYNTHIA SHANGE 1949–2026: SHE RAISED HER FIST The first Black South African woman to compete at Miss World walked into the Royal Albert Hall in December 1972 and raised her fist in a Black Power salute — representing a country called "Africa South" that did not exist. We honour her life, her five decades on South African screens, and ask what it means to assert your humanity on a stage designed to erase you. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━  Key  Takeaways *US immigration laws and their impact on rights *France's influence and neocolonial tactics in Africa *Africa's representation in global maps and perception *South Africa's political crisis and Ramaphosa's impeachment *African leaders' strategies and resistance against neo-colonialism Chapters 00:00 Introduction to African News Review 01:05 Current Events and Rights Assaults 04:19 International Relations and Global Power Dynamics 10:29 Public Health Concerns: Ebola Outbreak 12:28 Neocolonialism and African Leadership 13:22 France's New Approach to Africa 22:59 Historical Context of French Colonialism 24:20 Cyril Ramaphosa's Impeachment Dilemma 34:31 The Implications of Leadership in South Africa 40:04 Togo's Map Controversy and African Representation 48:11 Cynthia Shange: A Symbol of Resistance Send us Fan Mail Support the show Africa is not a story of victims. It is a story of resistance, resilience and reclamation. That is the story we tell here — every single week. African News Review Subscribe. Share. Stay informed. Stay sovereign.

    52 min
  4. May 10

    EP 1 Zimbabwe's Stolen Farms | Uganda's Silenced NGOs | Kenya Past Haunts | African News Review

    Zimbabwe returns stolen farms. Kenya's roses feed sheep. Mali's Tuareg are called terrorists. Uganda silences dissent. One question: who actually pays? This week on African News Review, join Adesoji Iginla and Aya Fubara Eneli Esq., reframing four of the biggest stories on the continent from an Afrocentric lens that mainstream media refuses to hold. This episode covers critical issues in African geopolitics, land reforms, and the influence of colonial legacy, featuring expert insights on Zimbabwe's land return, Mali's separatist movements, and Kenya's economic reliance on flowers and tea. 🌍 STORY 1 — Zimbabwe's $146 million farm compensation: Is paying European investors with colonial-era land claims justice, or just debt restructuring dressed as reparations? We ask who is really being compensated — and why Black Zimbabwean farmers are still waiting.  🌹 STORY 2 — Kenya's roses are being fed to sheep, and its tea is rotting in Mombasa port. Donald Trump bombed Iran. Kenya had no vote, no seat at the table, no warning. Its farmers are now paying the price. We ask: who compensates Africa when the West goes to war?  ⚔️ STORY 3 — Mali's Tuareg-led FLA launched the largest offensive since 2012 alongside al-Qaeda-linked JNIM fighters. Are they terrorists or separatists? We go back to the French colonial borders that created this crisis — and the junta that broke the peace deal.  🚫 STORY 4 — Uganda's Protection of Sovereignty Bill threatens 20 years in prison for promoting "foreign interests." Civil society calls it a coup against the people. We ask: Is this authoritarianism — or is foreign-funded civil society a genuine problem for sovereignty? And who gets to decide?   Takeaways *Zimbabwe's land return and compensation process *Mali Tuareg separatist movement and Al-Qaeda links *Kenya's reliance on flower and tea exports and colonial legacy *The impact of colonial borders and resource control in Africa *External influence and neo-colonialism in African politics Chapters 00:00 Introduction and Overview of Current Events 02:17 Zimbabwe's Land Reform and Colonial Legacy 04:57 The Impact of Colonialism on Land Ownership 08:03 Economic Implications of Land Redistribution 10:51 Mali's Tuareg Separatist Movement and Al-Qaeda 13:47 The Role of External Forces in African Conflicts 16:24 The Human Cost of Conflict and Women's Perspectives 25:06 The Origins of Al-Qaeda 26:39 Colonial Legacy and African Borders 29:52 The Impact of Colonialism on Modern Africa 32:09 Challenges of Regional Cooperation in Africa 35:29 Kenya's Economic Struggles and Colonial History 43:08 The Consequences of Colonial Agricultural Practices 52:16 Uganda's New Bill and the Threat to Dissent Send us Fan Mail Support the show Africa is not a story of victims. It is a story of resistance, resilience and reclamation. That is the story we tell here — every single week. African News Review Subscribe. Share. Stay informed. Stay sovereign.

    56 min
  5. May 4

    EP 12 South Africa Burns | Congo's Minerals | Rwanda's Wars | African News Review

    Four stories. One pattern. Africa's resources, institutions and people are being fought over — and African voices are being left out of the conversation. This week on African News Review, join Adesoji Iginla, Milton Allimadi, and Aya Fubara Eneli as they go deep on the stories shaping the continent — and reframe them from an Afrocentric point of view. This episode covers global political dynamics, African leadership, and the influence of international organisations. Key topics include the US and UAE's involvement in Congo, South Africa's xenophobia issues, and Africa's bid for a UN Security Council seat. 🔴 STORY 1 — SOUTH AFRICA XENOPHOBIA Hundreds marched through Pretoria demanding that migrants leave South Africa. Ghana and Nigeria told their citizens to close shops and stay indoors. But South Africa was liberated by Africa. So why is it now marching against Africa, and who benefits from redirecting Black working-class anger toward fellow Africans instead of structural inequality? 🔴 STORY 2 — MACKY SALL & THE UN Former Senegalese President Macky Sall wants to be the next UN Secretary-General — and he's the only African in the race. But his own government won't endorse him. Under his watch, dozens of protesters were killed. Is Africa's best shot at the world's top diplomatic job the right shot? We ask the hard questions Western media won't. 🔴 STORY 3 — CONGO'S MINING GUARD The DRC is creating a 20,000-strong armed Mining Guard — funded by the US and UAE — to protect critical minerals including cobalt, coltan and lithium. From Leopold's Force Publique to today, armed forces in Congo have always protected extraction. The question is: for whom? We connect the dots between Silicon Valley, the green energy transition, M23, and Congolese lives. 🔴 STORY 4 — THE NBA & RWANDA US sanctions on Rwanda's military just forced an RDF-owned basketball team out of the Basketball Africa League. But Paul Kagame has been attending NBA All-Star Games, delivering keynote speeches at NBA events, and his former cabinet minister now runs NBA Africa. We ask: who really controls African basketball — and what does Rwanda's sport-washing strategy tell us about power on the continent? Takeaways *The US and UAE's influence in Congo's resource sector *South Africa's xenophobic marches and government response *Africa's bid for a seat on the UN Security Council *Impact of international sanctions on Rwanda and Kagame *Historical context of African liberation movements Chapters 00:00 Introduction and Context of the Discussion 02:30 Impact of War and Economic Consequences 05:18 Celebrating Educational Achievements and Challenges 07:54 Media Influence and Public Perception 10:30 Xenophobia and Its Roots in South Africa 16:11 Historical Context and Pan-African Solidarity 19:04 The Role of African Governments and Institutions 20:57 Macky Sall's Bid for UN Secretary General 27:16 The Future of the UN and African Representation 32:55 Congo's New Mining Guard: A Double-Edged Sword 37:44 Sovereignty vs. Foreign Control in Resource Management 41:45 The Role of the Military in Protecting Resources 45:20 Sports and Politics: The NBA's Controversial Ties to Rwanda Send us Fan Mail Support the show Africa is not a story of victims. It is a story of resistance, resilience and reclamation. That is the story we tell here — every single week. African News Review Subscribe. Share. Stay informed. Stay sovereign.

    1h 7m
  6. Apr 26

    EP 11 Malema Jailed? | Afghans Sent to Congo | UK Army's Kenyan Children | African News Review

    This week on African News Review, Adesoji Iginla is joined by Comrade Milton Allimadi and Aya Fubara Eneli Esq. as they reframe four major stories on Africa in the Western Media. Where we go beyond the headlines  🔴 Pope Leo XIV in Angola — Why is the first American pope's historic African tour being covered primarily as a Trump PR crisis? We unpack what the Muxima shrine really represents, the colonial history of Catholicism in Angola, and Leo's unspoken ancestral connection to slavery. ⚖️ Julius Malema sentenced to five years — The EFF leader's gun conviction was brought by AfriForum, a lobby group rooted in apartheid-era Afrikaner nationalism, and amplified at the White House by Donald Trump. Is this the rule of law — or the continuation of apartheid by legal means? 🌍 Afghan refugees to the Democratic Republic of Congo — The US wants to send 1,100 Afghan military allies — including 400 children — to one of the world's worst active war zones. We expose the critical minerals deal behind this decision and ask: why does Africa keep being treated as a dumping ground? 🧬 UK soldiers' secret children in Kenya — A landmark DNA investigation has confirmed 12 cases of children fathered and abandoned by British soldiers near BATUK in Nanyuki. But behind the paternity cases lies a 60-year record of murder, environmental destruction, and legal impunity that the BBC barely touched.  Takeaways *US political security incident involving a gunman at a high-profile event *Accountability of British soldiers in Kenya with DNA-confirmed paternity cases *Colonial history's influence on current African conflicts and social issues *South Africa's political landscape and Malema's jail sentence *Pope Francis' visit to Angola and the media's focus on Trump *Historical resistance leaders Queen Nzinga and Kimpa Vita *Western media's portrayal of Africa and the influence of colonial narratives *The ongoing struggle for justice, sovereignty, and accountability in Africa Chapters 00:00 Introduction to African News Review 01:55 Incident at the Correspondence Dinner 09:32 UK Political Turmoil and Accountability 12:22 British Soldiers and Kenyan Children 23:01 Pope Leo's Visit to Africa and Historical Context 30:27 The Catholic Church's Role in Africa 32:57 Accountability and the Church's Impact 37:13 U.S. Refugee Policy and Africa's Burden 42:45 Historical Patterns of Displacement 47:18 Political Consequences of Leadership in South Africa Send us Fan Mail Support the show Africa is not a story of victims. It is a story of resistance, resilience and reclamation. That is the story we tell here — every single week. African News Review Subscribe. Share. Stay informed. Stay sovereign.

    1h 2m
  7. Apr 19

    EP 10 Africa Is Being Looted in Broad Daylight | Sudan | Zambia | Kemi Seba | African News Review

    Africa is at the centre of the world's most urgent geopolitical battles in 2026, and mainstream media keeps getting the story wrong. This week on African News Review, Adesoji Iginla is joined, as usual, by Comrade Milton Allimadi and Aya Fubara Eneli Esq., as we go deep into FOUR major stories reshaping the continent, reframing each from an Afrocentric point of view. 🔴 STORY 1 — SUDAN'S WAR ENTERS YEAR FOUR Sudan's civil war between the Sudan Armed Forces (SAF) and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) has killed 150,000 people and displaced 13 million. But the real story the Financial Times missed? The gold economy fuelling the RSF, the UAE's documented role, why Berlin — not Addis Ababa — keeps hosting peace conferences, and what Kwame Nkrumah warned us about, exactly this kind of external interference. 🟡 STORY 2 — KEMI SEBA ARRESTED IN SOUTH AFRICA Pan-Africanist activist Kemi Seba was arrested in a Pretoria shopping centre, wanted in Benin for "inciting rebellion" after a failed December coup. But is this about justice — or about silencing one of francophone Africa's loudest anti-colonial voices? We examine Françafrique, the CFA franc, and why calling someone a "Russian propagandist" has become the West's favourite way to dismiss African political agency. 🟠 STORY 3 — ZAMBIA'S HIV TREATMENT FOR COPPER DEAL Over 1.3 million Zambians living with HIV are being used as leverage. The Trump administration reportedly wants Zambia's copper and cobalt — and is threatening to cut PEPFAR funding to get it. We connect PEPFAR's untold history, the 25-year biological data demand, the Tuskegee legacy, and Walter Rodney's framework to what is happening right now. 🟢 STORY 4 — SOUTH AFRICA SENDS AN APARTHEID-ERA MINISTER TO WASHINGTON President Ramaphosa has appointed Roelf Meyer — a white Afrikaner who served in the last apartheid government — as South Africa's new ambassador to Trump's America. Is this diplomatic genius or the exhaustion of Mandela's reconciliation politics? Takeaways *African sovereignty and leadership *Sudan conflict and regional implications *South Africa's political landscape and diplomacy *External influence and resource control in Africa *Solutions for African unity and independence Chapters 00:00 Introduction to African News Review 01:02 Tragedy in the Community: The Fairfax Case 06:28 Mental Health and Violence Against Women 12:25 The Sudan Conflict: Regional Implications 16:40 Geopolitical Dynamics in Sudan 25:54 South Africa's Political Landscape: A Controversial Appointment 33:33 Economic Liberation vs. Status Quo 35:24 Political Dynamics in South Africa 37:34 Kemi Sabah: Arrest and Implications 43:56 Zambia's Dilemma: Health Aid vs. Resource Extraction Send us Fan Mail Support the show Africa is not a story of victims. It is a story of resistance, resilience and reclamation. That is the story we tell here — every single week. African News Review Subscribe. Share. Stay informed. Stay sovereign.

    1h 1m
  8. Apr 12

    EP 9 Africa's Wealth, Europe's Rules, What Reparations? | African News Review 🌍

    In this episode of African News Review, Adesoji Iginla is joined by Comrade Milton Allimadi and Aya Fubara Eneli Esq to break down four major stories reshaping Africa's relationship with the world in 2026 and exposing the single thread connecting all of them: who controls African wealth, African land, and African sovereignty. 🔴 STORY 1 — REPARATIONS VS. REFORM UK Reform UK has threatened to ban visas for nations demanding reparations from Britain for slavery. Commonwealth leaders are pushing back. We ask: Is this a policy — or a punishment? And what does the UK's own slave Compensation history reveal who really owes whom? 🟡 STORY 2 — BURKINA FASO: "FORGET DEMOCRACY" Ibrahim Traore has dissolved all political parties and told the world democracy is "not for us." We go beyond the headline to ask the harder question: when Western-backed democracy failed to protect Burkinabé civilians from jihadist violence, what alternative did the world offer?  And what does the tripling of civilian deaths under Traore's rule tell us about the cost of this experiment? 🟢 STORY 3 — KENYA'S $62 BILLION RARE EARTH BID Kenya has opened competitive bidding for the Mrima Hill rare earths deposit — one of the most valuable mineral sites in Africa. The US, China, and Australia are circling. Kenya says it wants in-country processing. We examine whether "beneficiation" is enforceable — or just another promise — and ask why nobody is talking about the Digo community whose sacred forest sits on the deposit. 🔵 STORY 4 — THE EU WANTS BACK INTO THE SAHEL After being expelled from Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger alongside France, the EU is rebranding its Africa strategy — calling itself a "non-transactional partner" that doesn't abuse resources. We interrogate that claim against the EU's own Economic Partnership Agreements, CFA franc history, and the revelation that France is internally blocking EU Sahel funding to protect its own comeback chances. Chapters 00:00 Introduction to African News Review 01:14 Local News and Community Engagement 03:45 Recognition and Responsibility in Activism 04:24 International Relations and Peace Negotiations 07:55 The Role of African Leaders in Global Politics 09:14 Uganda's Political Landscape and Leadership 10:59 Reparations and Historical Accountability 11:30 The Impact of Colonialism on Democracy 21:07 Burkina Faso's Shift Away from Democracy 25:44 Defining Democracy in the African Context 33:08 Strategic Responses to Jihadist Threats 33:37 Historical Context of African Governance 34:16 Colonial Legacies and Modern Governance Challenges 36:05 Kenya's Rare Earth Resource Race 38:07 Environmental and Economic Considerations in Mining 40:54 The Scramble for Africa: A Modern Perspective 47:12 Geopolitical Dynamics in the Sahel Region 50:57 Security and Sovereignty in Africa 55:34 Reimagining African Futures Through Unity 57:33 The Importance of Sovereignty and Leverage Send us Fan Mail Support the show Africa is not a story of victims. It is a story of resistance, resilience and reclamation. That is the story we tell here — every single week. African News Review Subscribe. Share. Stay informed. Stay sovereign.

    1h 1m

Ratings & Reviews

5
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About

For long the story of the hunt has glorified the hunters, now the lions have decided to reframe the narrative. Africa talks back.With African News Review, you can expect engaging discussions and thought-provoking insights into📌 The Scramble for Africa :Unraveling the European Colonial Divide 📌 African Leaders Who shaped History : Stories of Courage and Vision📌 Pan Africanism : ideologies and Impact on Unity and Identity 📌 Decolonisation and the Birth of African Nations📌 The Cold War in Africa: Proxy Battles and their Aftermath 📌 Contemporary Africa : Navigating Challenges and Embracing Opportunities.📌 Books on Africa and African on the continent and the Diaspora.Come with me and Let’s begin

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