Épisodes

  • Burkina Faso's Ibrahim Traore: What's True? What's False?
    May 13 2025

    Why has Burkina Faso's military leader, IBRAHIM TRAORE, garnered such adulation? That's a question for the renowned investigative journalist, DAVID HUNDEYIN who replies that the young captain, he's just 37, symbolises s break from the status quo and offers hop to a youthful continent whose people yearn for a hero.

    Who, or what, is behind the social media tsunami that surrounds CAPTAIN TRAORE? We consider whether the multitude of social media posts extolling his often other-worldly virtues are true or fake. Many of them clearly use images and sound fabricated by AI - like a Beyonce look-alike who weeps as she prays for the protection of her 'king'.

    We wonder whether such fantastical excesses could actually undermine TRAORE. We also question why we hear so few Burkinabe voices on the matter.

    DAVID Suggests the Burkinabe authorities would do well to take a firmer grip of their own narrative. Impressive claims are made about the rule of CAPTAIN TRAORE, like ending all taxation and undertaking extensive road building. But what about the security situation? Reports suggest that government control extends to just a third of the country. The rest, they say, is under the control of various Islamist groups with many people displaced from their villages.

    What is needed, says PATRICK, is robust reporting by independent journalists from inside Burkina Faso to establish the facts. DAVID says objectivity in journalism does not exist - everyone has an interest, a bias.

    And DONU raises the inherent dangers of a cult of personality.

    DAVID suggests that there are limited benefits from democratic systems of government in Africa - economic freedom is what counts most.


    MARTINE DENNIS is Founder and Host of Africa Here and Now

    PATRICK SMITH is Editor of Africa Confidential

    DONU KOGBARA is a journalist and commentator based in Nigeria

    We were talking with DAVID HUNDEYIN, Editor of West Africa Weekly






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    39 min
  • Gaza, Should Africans Care?
    Apr 29 2025

    TITLE: Gaza, Should Africans Care?

    Pro- Palestine Cornell Student Who Fled US Talks to Africa Here & Now




    Tags:Africa, Palestine, Israel, activism, geopolitics, youth, solidarity, African Union, Arab League, liberation


    We explore Africa's historical support for the Palestinian cause with MOMODOU TAAL, the 31-year-old British Gambian graduate student who fled the US before he was deported for his pro-Gaza activism. We recall Nelson Mandela’s 1997 statement that South African freedom would be incomplete without that of the Palestinians and how the near universal solidarity on the continent for their cause has ebbed somewhat.


    Why should a bright, young African jeopardise a first-class education at an elite university because of the suffering of Gazans? MOMODOU is clear: everybody should care about the deaths of tens of thousands of innocent civilians, including thousands of children.


    MOMODOU tells us about the protests on campus calling for the university to divest from companies that are involved in the destruction of Palestine and the lives of its people. His name is noted by the authorities, and he realises that he will become a target for deportation by the incoming Trump administration.


    He is however, helped and supported by his lecturers and members of the faculty including many Jewish students. It is important MOMODOU says, not to conflate Zionism with the Jewish people against whom he has no grudge.


    When his name appears on a list for deportation, MOMODOU he challenges the legality of executive orders – the tool of choice used by the White House. His legal action fails and MOMODOU decides to ‘self-deport’, to flee the United States before he is chucked out.


    “I’ve not been accused of any violence, I’ve not been arrested. The government doesn’t say anything about me, my activity. It says that you created an uncomfortable environment for Jewish students….I find that quite strange because I never go to university thinking I have to be comfortable” he says.


    We ask MOMODOU the fundamental question: why does he think black liberation is inextricably linked to the Palestinian cause? He refers back to Malcolm X and others and their opposition to colonialism. He says: I believe in a world that’s free for everybody. And given what we’ve seen in Palestine and Israel, I don’t think we can ignore what has taken place. I want to create a better world, a world built on justice and I can’t ignore what’s happening in Palestine given what I know has happened to my own ancestor and history.’


    Momodou Taal hosts a podcast, The Malcolm Effect.

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    27 min
  • Uganda's Bobi Wine: Fighting for Democracy
    Apr 13 2025

    I meet Bobi Wine as he visits London. He’s seeking support for his campaign to rid Uganda of what he calls the ‘ brutal rulership’ of President Yoweri Museveni who will have led the country for 40 years in 2026. That’s when Uganda is scheduled to hold its next presidential election.

    Will Bobi run again? ‘Here I am,’ he says, ‘Not that I’m the Alpha and Omega, not that I’m the ultimate. But I’ve said I’m available if I’m required to lead …’

    We look back at what happened at the last general election in 2021 which Bobi and his supporters say they won. ‘We defeated them, but the entire world watched as many of our campaign team was massacred….’

    I ask him how does he keep going after all the beatings, the torture, the house arrest? He replies:

    ‘I’m in a better state than so many of my comrades in the struggle. They get locked up, they get beaten and nobody knows. When I get arrested the whole world knows….So I keep going by looking behind me. I get the least of the oppression and the most of the attention. But my friends that suffer in the dark are not complaining. They keep going”

    What about your wife and 4 kids? Bobi says the whole family has agreed that although their activism is dangerous, it would be even more dangerous to give up.

    What did the recent by-election in Kawempe North, which Bobi’s NUP won, tell him about how the general election is likely to be fought? There was well-publicised violence and claims of rigging.

    2026 will be a protest vote, Bobi says: ‘We know that we will win the vote. But I’m not sure if we will win the count.’

    Bobi reveals that he’s in talks with Dr Kizza Besigye’s Forum for Democratic Change about the possibility of collaborating as well as with other political parties. Dr Besigye’s continued imprisonment, Bobi says, ‘is meant to intimidate all of us’.

    I suggest to Bobi that his popular support could be limited to his own tribe, the Baganda. The majority, if not all, of the Buganda constituencies vote for Bobi. He disagrees ‘ we won in the far west and in parts of the north…my wife comes from Museveni’s tribe…my colleagues come from tribes scattered all over Uganda.’

    Looking ahead to next year’s election, I ask Bobi what’s in his manifesto? What are the issues he’s running on? ‘Corruption is the cancer that’s eating us’ he replies.

    We touch on one of the most controversial issues in Uganda today: human rights particularly as experienced by the LGBQT+ community. A much younger Bobi Wine as a musician had been associated with homophobic lyrics. Today, he has a more nuanced approach to the matter: ‘The west should stop looking at the LGBT rights as the only human rights, otherwise they will provoke Africans and people of the world to start imagining that there’s a hidden agenda. People get killed every day in Uganda and they should all have rights.”

    We end our chat on a rather optimistic note.

    “The future doesn’t have to hold anything for me as an individual. I look at this as all of us. The future is robust. The future is hopeful.’

    #uganda#HEBobiWine#democracy#corruption#humanrights#africa

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    30 min
  • What REALLY happened to Mugabe and could it happen again?
    Apr 4 2025

    We look at recent events in Zimbabwe and the formation of the March 31 movement and ask how significant a threat it presents to President Emmerson Mnangagwa.

    Dr BLESSING-MILES TENDI, a politics professor at Oxford University, is the author of The Overthrow of Robert Mugabe - Gender, Coups, and Diplomats. He takes us through the complex political landscape of Zimbabwe today as well as the historical context of the 2017 coup against Robert Mugabe.

    Dr Tendi highlights the rifts between the elites within the ruling party, the role of the military, and the influence of the 'struggle generation' on current politics.

    He is an expert on coups and Dr Tendi highlights the misconceptions surrounding coups and the challenges of succession planning in Zimbabwe.

    We consider the international responses to the coup, and how Zimbabweans felt about the aftermath.

    Dr Tendi emphasises the importance of understanding the past when considering the future dynamic of civilian and military authorities.

    *We ask when is a coup not a coup? Find out why the international community was reluctant to classify the events of 2017 as a coup.

    *How far did Mugabe's iconic status as a liberating figure influence the way he was handled by the generals?

    • Has President Mnangagwa coup-proofed his administration?
    • Have the tensions within the military been resolved?


    Just some of the questions we grapple with in this episode of Africa Here and Now


    The Overthrow of Robert Mugabe - Gender, Coups and Diplomats by Blessing-Miles Tendi


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    38 min
  • Trump's Golden Opportunity to Africa with Thebe Ikalafeng
    Mar 20 2025


    Marketing guru THEBE IKALAFENG reflects on the current tensions in US-South African relations and suggests that by stopping US aid, President Trump is presenting the continent with a golden opportunity. It's time, Thebe says, for African countries to leverage their resources better and understand their value. The end of western aid should lead to new economic strategies and add urgency to the implementation of measures like the AfCFTA - the agreement that seeks to open borders on the continent and thereby facilitate intra-African trade.

    Home-grown African brands exist, but Thebe's research as the continent's leading branding authority, has found that there's room for them to improve their reach both in Africa and beyond.

    As ever, Thebe says, much depends on the quality of African leadership to take full advantage of this moment. As western aid budgets are slashed, Thebe is optimistic that there will be a new emphasis on self-reliance on the continent. There's evidence of this, he says, already and he believes that mood will spread. The end of aid certainly does not spell the end of Africa, says Africa's top marketer.

    #Thebeikalafeng #africa#amplifyafrica#

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    31 min
  • Muhammad Ali's Boxing Grandson Carrying the Family Legacy
    Mar 14 2025

    Nico Ali Walsh, the grandson of the legendary Muhammad Ali, shares his journey into boxing, the emotional connection with his grandfather, and the challenges he faces in the sport. He discusses the legacy of the Ali family, the expectations placed upon him and how his faith influences him.


    Nico talks openly about the dangers of boxing and details a severe injury he sustained that took months to recover from. He speaks of his determination to become a world champion.


    It was Muhammad Ali, himself struggling with Parkinson's disease who encouraged the young Nico to pursue a professional career in boxing. Ali found it hard to speak so he communicated with his young grandson by squeezing his hand. Nico says he doesn't try to emulate his grandfather's style in the ring - but he appreciates Ali's skills and talent.

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    24 min
  • When Soldiers Came for My Grandpa, Haile Selassie
    Mar 3 2025

    In this EXCLUSIVE interview with the last emperor of Ethiopia's favourite grandson, we learn the detail of HAILE SELASSIE's overthrow by the military in 1974.


    When the soldiers came , PRINCE BE'EDE MARIAM, who lived in the imperial palace, volunteered to stay with his grandpa so he wouldn't be alone. Other members of the family left the country.The teenaged prince paid dearly for that act of loyalty: he was imprisoned for 15 years.


    PRINCE BE'EDE tells us how the emperor did not resist the soldiers. He went with them ' for the good of the country'.


    The coup leader, MENGISTU HAILE MARIAM, was not among the soldiers who came to the palace, we are told. But MENGISTU was very respectful of the emperor, right up until HAILE SELASSIE's murder.


    PRINCE BE'EDE tells us about life with his grandfather - how the emperor was a stickler for discipline and punctuality. The Prince was tutored in the art of debate from an early age and every night Haile Selassie himself would serve the young Prince milk and honey before bed.


    Is PRINCE BE'EDE bitter about the loss of so much of his young life? 'Hatred for me is like a virus,' he replies, ' it attacks yourself rather than anybody else.'












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    26 min
  • Trump Says America First, We Should Say Africa First
    Feb 18 2025


    Amidst the global disruption being wreaked by the Trump administration, a new man takes the helm of the African Union. Expectations are high as the continent faces a complex mix of challenges: an increase in the number of conflicts, the damaging impact of climate change, growing poverty and inequality and the shift in global power dynamics.


    Djiboutian MAHMOUD ALI YOUSSOUF has an overflowing in-tray. We discuss the challenges with the AU's former envoy to Washington, Dr ARIKANA CHIHOMBORI. Anyone who's heard Ambassador Chihombori knows that she doesn't mince her words. And she certainly doesn't hold back as she give us her assessment of what the African Union chairman faces in 2025.


    • She recommends an inventory of what lies BEHIND the problems faced by the continent, the root causes.
    • Ambassador Chihombori blames many of the continent's conflicts on the activities of western multinationals
    • She applauds President Trump's decision to withdraw overseas aid, saying that most of it goes to fund the lavish lifestyles of a few African elites
    • Dr Chihombori showers with praise the juntas of the Sahel for ridding themselves of French neo-colonial influence
    • DONU KOGBARA pushes back and suggests that Africans are perfectly capable of instigating senseless violence themselves without outside influence
    • What would Ambassador Chihombori do if she were head of the AU? She would counter western-inspired narratives by creating a truly pan-African media to arms Africans with facts and the truth.


    Thank goodness for Africa Here and Now - the conversation you've always wanted to have about the continent!



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    35 min