Blue Lines
The scowl on the face of Nigeria’s
Foreign Minister Aminu Bashir Wali
spoke volumes as he emerged from a meeting at the Sheraton hotel
on 29
January. Earlier that day, Nigeria had suffered the indignity of its
internal security failings being scrutinised ...
Blue Lines
The Ebola epidemic in West Africa came as a bolt from the blue, an apparently natural disaster. And yet, as we approach the anniversary of the first diagnoses deep in the bush of Guinea, new facts are emerging about how opportunistic politics and bad gove...
Blue Lines
As shock-waves spread after the murderous attack on staff at the
Paris weekly Charlie Hebdo on
7 January, African security officials are weighing the implications for
their own countries. Given the global coverage earned by the attacks in Paris and on the...
Blue Lines
Big economic and political changes are emerging in Africa after a decade of strong Asian demand for its resources and the highest growth levels since the 1960s. That economic strength has allowed many governments to buy off discontent in the cities withou...
Blue Lines
Those literary gannets and prize committees taken aback by the waves of brilliant African fiction and poetry landing on their desks should look at the raw material served up to writers every day on the continent. It takes nothing away from these writers’ ...
Blue Lines
Suddenly the political action has shifted to Africa's parliaments, as party alliances crack and legislators target the executive authority of presidents. The latest parliamentary fracas, in Nigeria, pitted the opposition All Progressives Congress (APC) ag...
Blue Lines
Last week's street protests in Burkina Faso, which toppled President Blaise Compaoré, recall the Tunisian demonstrations which launched the rebellions across north-east Africa four years ago. There are some clear parallels. Compaoré, like Tunisia's Presid...
Blue Lines
Africa has lost two strong independent voices in the past week: Efua Dorkenoo, the Ghanaian women’s rights activist, and Ali Mazrui, the Kenyan academic and author.
Dorkenoo left her home in Cape Coast and went to work as a nurse in London, where she saw...
Blue Lines
There is a strong sense of apocalypse as the World Bank and International Monetary Fund hold their annual meetings in Washington DC on 10-12 October. Part of that comes from the blunt warnings from Bank President Jim Yong Kim that the future of Africa may...
Blue Lines
Both sides of the corporate coin were on parade this week. Dozens of
bankers and chief executives attended the United Nations Climate Summit
in New York on 23 September, which was a prelude to negotiations in
Paris next year for a new climate treaty to re...