Or, the brazen grift of Troy Onyango, founder and editor of the literary site Lolwe.
Read MoreThere lies a hope that more Nigerians, having observed women at the fore of the EndSARS protests against police brutality, will begin to appreciate their leadership capabilities.
Read MoreIf the nation continues on its current, sclerotic trajectory, 60 years from today generations of children will learn to yell “Up NEPA!” like the ones before them.
Read MoreThe African Girls Can Code Initiative, a four-year programme aimed at teens and young women interested in tech, seeks to address Africa's gender gap in the digital industry and prepare women for the fourth industrial revolution.
Read MoreThree Bastwana food bloggers on finding comfort and fortune in Setswana cuisine during lockdown.
Read MoreA school in western Uganda offers hope to children residing at the settlement, providing meals to four hundred students in kindergarten through seventh grade and helping cover the cost of housing for those in boarding school.
Read MoreWhile details of the October 20 shooting in Lagos remain unclear, what's evident is that it follows a long, disturbing pattern of human rights abuses committed by the Nigerian government against unarmed civilians, one that dates back many decades.
Read More“The government is next. We’re coming for them soon if they don’t stop this nonsense.”
Protesters demand end to police malfeasance and brutality in Nigeria.
Read MoreOluwaseun Ayodeji Osowobi on the goals of her social enterprise, hindrances imposed by Nigeria's justice system, and her dream of creating a violent-free world for women, children and men.
Read More