Tag Archives: South Africa

NEWS FROM AFRICA AND BEYOND (DECEMBER 4, 2023).

Word of the Day: “If you close your eyes to facts, you will learn through accidents.” – African Proverb

Today in history, as the annual dangerous illegal sea migration from Africa to Europe draws to an end this year, a boat carrying African migrants to Europe sinks off Mauritania; 58 of 141 people on board die. Source: https://www.africatodayyesterday.org/days/04-dec

News highlights from Africa and beyond (December 4, 2023).

Continue reading NEWS FROM AFRICA AND BEYOND (DECEMBER 4, 2023).

NEWS FROM AFRICA AND BEYOND (DECEMBER 2, 2023).

Word of the Day: “A closed mouth catches no flies.” – African Proverb

Today in History (December 2, 1929), three women are killed by police during the Women’s War involving thousands of women from the Bende District in Nigeria, staging a march to protest corrupt chiefs who are about to approve direct taxation on women. These women, the “Oloko Trio”: Ikonnia, Nwannedia and Nwugo, were admired for their intellect and they also contributed to preventing violence. In encouraging peace, another leader, Madame Nwanyereuwa, led with protest songs, dances and sit-down occupations. Source: https://www.africatodayyesterday.org/days/02-dec

News from Africa and beyond (December 2, 2023).

Continue reading NEWS FROM AFRICA AND BEYOND (DECEMBER 2, 2023).

NEWS FROM AFRICA AND BEYOND (DECEMBER 1, 2023).

Word of the Day: “Tomorrow belongs to the people who prepare for it today.” – African Proverb

Today in history (December 1, 1963), Ghana triumphs in the African Cup of Nations, marking a significant moment in African football. Hosting the tournament, Ghana won 3-0 against Sudan in the final. This victory symbolized hope and unity for Africa during a time of major political change, inspiring the continent with the spirit of teamwork and determination.

News from Africa and beyond (December 1, 2023).

Continue reading NEWS FROM AFRICA AND BEYOND (DECEMBER 1, 2023).

NEWS FROM AFRICA AND BEYOND (NOVEMBER 30, 2023).

Word of the Day: “When there is no enemy within, the enemy outside cannot hurt you.” – African Proverb

Today in history, the Republic of Dahomey officially changed its name to Benin. This change was a crucial step towards national unity, aimed at eradicating tribal divisions and influences rooted in colonial history. By adopting the politically neutral name ‘Benin’, the nation moved away from the ethnic associations linked to its former name, ‘Dahomey’, which was tied to the country’s largest ethnic group, the Fon.

News from Africa and beyond (November 30, 2023).

Continue reading NEWS FROM AFRICA AND BEYOND (NOVEMBER 30, 2023).

NEWS FROM AFRICA AND BEYOND (NOVEMBER 29, 2023).

Word of the Day: “A single bracelet does not jingle.” – African Proverb

Today in history, we celebrate the birth of John Dramani Mahama, a significant figure in Ghanaian politics. Born on November 29, 1958, Mahama served as the President of Ghana from 2012 to 2017. He was the first Ghanaian President born after the nation’s independence.

News from Africa and beyond (November 29, 2023).

Continue reading NEWS FROM AFRICA AND BEYOND (NOVEMBER 29, 2023).

NEWS FROM AFRICA AND BEYOND (NOVEMBER 28, 2023).

Word of the Day: “Where there is love there is life.” – Maahtma Gangdhi

Today in history, we recall the pirate Blackbeard’s bold seizure of a French ship transporting 455 enslaved Africans. In a brazen act of piracy, he marooned them on a Caribbean island, providing them with three tons of beans for sustenance. Compelling the ship’s crew to remain, Blackbeard commandeered the vessel, claimed it as his flagship, and christened it the Queen Anne’s Revenge.

News from Africa and beyond (November 28, 2023).

Continue reading NEWS FROM AFRICA AND BEYOND (NOVEMBER 28, 2023).

NEWS FROM AFRICA AND BEYOND (NOVEMBER 27, 2023).

Word of the Day: “I think, therefore I am.” – René Descartes

Today in history, we reflect on Ghana’s poignant “Year of the Return” in 2019, marking the 400th anniversary of the arrival of the first enslaved West Africans to America in 1619. On this significant date, Ghana embraced the roots of our shared history by granting citizenship to 125 African Americans, symbolizing a powerful homecoming and a bridge of unity across the diaspora. This gesture of solidarity and recognition resonates as a beacon of healing and reconnection with the roots.

News from Africa and beyond (November 27, 2023).

Continue reading NEWS FROM AFRICA AND BEYOND (NOVEMBER 27, 2023).

NEWS FROM AFRICA AND BEYOND (NOVEMBER 26, 2023).

Word of the Day: “Fall seven times, stand up eight.” – Japanese Proverb

Today in History in Cairo (1954 November 26) marks the completion of the first skyscraper in North Africa. The building is a fusion of contemporary design and traditional Egyptian elements. It reflects the country’s ambition and its embrace of the future, while honoring its rich cultural heritage.

News from Africa and beyond (November 26, 2023).

Continue reading NEWS FROM AFRICA AND BEYOND (NOVEMBER 26, 2023).

NEWS FROM AFRICA AND BEYOND (NOVEMBER 25, 2023).

Word of the Day: “He who asks a question is a fool for five minutes; he who does not ask a question remains a fool forever.” – Chinese Proverb

Today in history, we honor the resilience and courage of the 35 surviving Africans aboard the slave ship La Amistad, who, after a harrowing ordeal and a landmark U.S. Supreme Court case in 1841, were finally declared free. On this day, they triumphantly set sail back to their homeland, marking a significant moment in the journey towards justice and the abolition of slavery.

News from Africa and beyond (November 25, 2023).

Nigeria:

Continue reading NEWS FROM AFRICA AND BEYOND (NOVEMBER 25, 2023).

NEWS FROM AFRICA AND BEYOND (NOVEMBER 23, 2023).

Word of the Day: “You can’t wake a person who is pretending to be asleep.” – Navajo Proverb

Today (November 23) in history, the National Museum of the Democratic Republic of Congo was opened to the public in 2019 by the President of the DRC, Félix Tshisekedi. This was to provide for the conservation of the cultural heritage of DRC scattered over the world especially in Belgium, when they are finally returned to the country.

Continue reading NEWS FROM AFRICA AND BEYOND (NOVEMBER 23, 2023).

News from Africa and beyond (November 21, 2023).

Word of the Day: “When the roots are deep, there is no reason to fear the wind.” – African Proverb

Today (November 21) in history, Robert Mugabe resigned from the office of President of Zimbabwe in 2017.

Nigeria:

1. **MTN Welcome Back: MTN Data Code To Get 1GB For N200, 1000 For 4GB**

   – Summary: MTN introduces a Welcome Back Plan offering affordable data packages to reward loyal customers.

   – [Read more](https://goldennewsng.com/mtn-welcome-back-mtn-data-code-to-get-1gb-for-n200-1000-for-4gb/amp/)

2. **Mohbad’s Mother Pleads With President Tinubu, Nigerians Over His Father’s Stand Against Burial**

Continue reading News from Africa and beyond (November 21, 2023).

LETTER TO THE SON OF MAN Vol.4 by Adeojo Kolawole Adeyemi Hannibal

Dear, Son of Man.

I am excited as ever to get your timely correspondence. It was a timely balm that soothes the strained joints of our daily struggles. More so, it was an insight into a higher mind that proffers pragmatic panacea to our constant societal problems from a distant world, while opening a vista for dialectical discourse on our continued existence as humans and as citizens of a highly soldiered sovereign alliance.

Continue reading LETTER TO THE SON OF MAN Vol.4 by Adeojo Kolawole Adeyemi Hannibal

LETTER FROM THE SON OF MAN. Vol3 by ‘Lakunle Jaiyesimi

Dear Hannibal,

“This is a court of law, young man, not a court of justice”, are words attributed to Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., one of the U.S. Supreme Court’s great Justices (as he then was). They were uttered in response to the argument of a young lawyer who mentioned severally while arguing that his client sought justice before the court.

Again, and in response to your well-articulated exposé on the mob-action against the wellbeing of justice in our dear country, I reiterate the words of Holmes, “This is a court of law, young man, not a Court of Justice”. Continue reading LETTER FROM THE SON OF MAN. Vol3 by ‘Lakunle Jaiyesimi

LETTER TO THE SON OF MAN. Vol3 by Adeojo Kolawole Adeyemi Hannibal

Dear Son of Man,

My conscience bleeds this morning for my country. Not because of the many upheavals, trials and tribulations we face daily, these could be surmounted by the repositioning of the human mind, but because the country completely wallows in indulgence that conveniently metes out justice as a selective, eyes wide opened sword wielder, rather than the blind lady with an impartial sword, ready to give it to anyone, irrespective of status, class or creed, according to the measurements of the scales in her hand. My conscience actually bleeds because I belong to a nation that has lost its soul. The irredeemable path taken by us as a nation had revealed our recidivism and only a soulful diagnosis and conscientious surgery of the root cause can redirect us from this annihilating path that leads to nothing but perdition. Continue reading LETTER TO THE SON OF MAN. Vol3 by Adeojo Kolawole Adeyemi Hannibal

#PAUSIBILITY: WE ARE AFRICANS! by Adebayo Coker

(Editorial note: This was received about a week ago.)

africaaaMy dear people, I must start by congratulating us for the consolidation of democracy. Two weeks ago we had both Gubernatorial and House of Assembly elections. Even though there were pockets of skirmishes, I can submit that we are all determined to make this system work and with time the imbroglio will be dealt with, then our nation will be one of the exemplified democracies in the world.

I could not write my column last week because I was busy coordinating my son’s first birthday. As I moved around town during that period, a thought kept coming to mind: If posters could cry, we all would be flapping our arms and feet through the pool of tears that our nation space would be submerged in. Also if posters could laugh we all would be running with a finger in each ear in a bid to block out the maddening Continue reading #PAUSIBILITY: WE ARE AFRICANS! by Adebayo Coker

DEAR NIGERIANS, IT IS TIME TO ACT by Yemi Czar

Nigeria-RevolutionIt is with much sadness, I believe, that we have, together, watched our country inexorably degenerate into a total fiasco in the over 60 years of its independence. What is more painful and disheartening is the fact that our crops of politicians are those who have not learnt any notable lessons from the country’s past or the current events around the world nor get moved by the tears and agonies of the oppressed Nigerian souls who constitute the majority of the entire Nigerian population. Perhaps, they either don’t read what the papers and social media reveal each day about their misconducts (I want to believe) or they read them aloof while we read a posteriori, or they are just too busy looting every aspect of our economy with the very worst form of predilection for pilfering that they’ve become so deaf to and unmoved by the cries of the oppressed, and thus fail to call to mind the realities of history and current times. Continue reading DEAR NIGERIANS, IT IS TIME TO ACT by Yemi Czar

My plea to the people of Israel: Liberate yourselves by liberating Palestine by Desmond Tutu

desmondThe past weeks have witnessed unprecedented action by members of civil society across the world against the injustice of Israel’s disproportionately brutal response to the firing of missiles from Palestine.

If you add together all the people who gathered over the past weekend to demand justice in Israel and Palestine – in Cape Town, Washington, D.C., New York, New Delhi, London, Dublin and Sydney, and all the other cities – this was arguably the largest active outcry by citizens around a single cause ever in the history of the world.

A quarter of a century ago, I participated in some well-attended demonstrations against apartheid. I never imagined we’d see demonstrations of that size again, but last Saturday’s turnout in Cape Town was as big if not bigger. Participants included young and old, Muslims, Christians, Jews, Hindus, Buddhists, agnostics, atheists, blacks, whites, reds and greens … as one would expect from a vibrant, tolerant, multicultural nation. Continue reading My plea to the people of Israel: Liberate yourselves by liberating Palestine by Desmond Tutu

“NOW THAT BOTHA MUST BE TAKEN SERIOUSLY” by Yemi Czar

bothaI write this piece to quickly draw our critical consciousness to this “infamous”, yet significant, speech of P.W Botha, the erstwhile President of the apartheid South Africa, which a friend drew my attention to in the course of the week (even in the overwhelming ambiance of my grudges against Nigerian leaders, but gratifying reluctance in discussing them), after reading one of his email’s entitled “Now That Botha Must Be Taken Seriously (or whatever that means)!”. For the sake of emphasis, I decided to retain the title.

The reason for bringing up this speech anyway is to enable us have a rethink of the horrifying events that have plagued our nation Nigeria, and by extension Africa – corruption, civil unrests and wars, leadership crisis, kidnappings here and there, consumerism and underdevelopment, and more recently, terrorism – since independence. These horrible events, we must recall, have for a while now been attracting blatant reactions from sensitive and oversensitive people to an extent that even the silence of phlegmatic individuals has become the din that prevents us from hearing ourselves anymore. Therefore, at this critical time, existential questions demand immediate answers as they continue to gaze at us shamefully and a need for us as Blacks to reconsider Botha’s chauvinistic and supposed malign speech. This speech, of course, seems the only formula that couched, thoroughly and fittingly, our rhetoric of confusion, most especially at this moment when our entire socio-political realities continue to draw hoots of derision and despair from us, thus, making us all becoming improvised, nay, accidental social critics of Continue reading “NOW THAT BOTHA MUST BE TAKEN SERIOUSLY” by Yemi Czar

Nelson Mandela dead at 95

credits: CBC News

Anti-apartheid hero, imprisoned for 27 years, later became democratic South Africa’s first president

Nelson Mandela 1918 - 2013: special coverage

Nelson Mandela, one of the greatest leaders of modern times, passed away Thursday at his home in Johannesburg after a prolonged lung infection. He was 95.

South African President Jacob Zuma announced that Mandela, “the founding president of our democratic nation, has departed,” adding that he “passed on peacefully.”

“Our nation has lost its greatest son. Our people have lost a father,” Zuma said.

“Our thoughts are with the millions of people who embraced Mandela as their own and who saw his cause as their cause.… This is the moment of our deepest sorrow.” Continue reading Nelson Mandela dead at 95

Role Models: African first-timers…

In the event that the question is posed “Who constitutes the African first-timers?”, they are the Africans who, in spite of the status quo at their time, belled the cat whether by choice or by chance. By that, we mean Africans who did things that were hitherto considered impossible, too risky or just way above the reach of any African and trust me we have more than enough names that can get mentioned in a single piece as this.

Let’s do ourselves a favour by mentioning some.

Barack-Obama-12782369-2-402

 

BARACK OBAMA This is the first African (African American, as some call him) and 44th President of the United States of America. Born by a Kenyan father, what drove him to the top of the American government must have been internal much more than external. An inner resolve and drive to get to the top. In this vein, quite a number Continue reading Role Models: African first-timers…