Africa’s Tech Scene: Drones Deliver, Uber Innovates, Entrepreneurs Repatriate
December 13, 2016 5 min. read

Africa is becoming a hotbed for technology, shifting again the conventional wisdom on the continent and redefining its business environment and politics.

Read more
Remember Rwanda when Discussing Syria and Iraq
September 30, 2015 4 min. read

Rwanda will always be remembered as a genocide that came from the failure of the international community to act.

Read more
A Clash of Civilizations in the Central African Republic? (Part 1 of 2)
May 22, 2014 4 min. read

As the fighting continues in the Central African Republic, many of those following the crisis are portraying it as primarily a clash between the country’s Muslim minority and Christian militiamen, which to date has resulted in the deaths of over 2,000 people since December and the displacement of nearly a quarter of the country’s population […]

Read more
A Muslim Call to Partition the CAR
May 12, 2014 6 min. read

While the world focuses on the calls for partition by pro-Russian citizens in the south and east of Ukraine, similar calls from a small African nation are drawing less attention — despite horrific human rights abuses occurring on its territory. In what the U.N. human rights body and Amnesty International have called “ethnic-religious cleansing” between the […]

Read more
Will It Work This Time?
December 19, 2013 4 min. read

This is something rare. Knowledge of a rapidly deteriorating situation in Africa and a somewhat timely, actual action by those in the world with the power to intervene. The situation is in the Central African Republic. And that intervening is the first step to stabilizing the slaughter and – hopefully – stopping another genocide from […]

Read more
With M23 on the run, DRC has golden opportunity for peace
November 5, 2013 5 min. read

Mouvement du 23-Mars (M23) rebels fled their stronghold in Bunaguna, a small town in the North Kivu province of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) on the border with Uganda, the rebel movement’s political leader, Bertrand Bisimwa, called for a ceasefire to end all hostilities. While fighting is ongoing, as Congolese government troops (FARDC) continue to […]

Read more
The Day the Terminator Walked into the Embassy
March 20, 2013 4 min. read

After nearly two decades of conflict, the Democratic Republic of the Congo makes a regular appearance in international news. The most recent chapter of the story is the conflict between the Congolese government and the M23 rebel group which started in April 2012. The back and forth fighting since then displaced more than 300,000 people […]

Read more
The Congo and Why Obama Should Repudiate Clinton Policies
March 20, 2013 18 min. read

by S.N. Sangmpam One item that dominated American politics after President Obama’s re-election was the opposition by Republican Senators John McCain and Lindsey Graham to Susan Rice, the U.S. Ambassador to the U.N., as Obama’s presumptive nominee for Secretary of State.  They opposed her on the ground that she misled the public about the attack […]

Read more
Regional Peace to Settle Violence in the DRC Shows Progress? Not so Fast
February 28, 2013 7 min. read

On Sunday, February 24, 2013, a regional peace accord was agreed upon in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, by 11 African nations from both the Great Lakes region and Southern Africa in an attempt to finally end two decades of conflict that have plagued most sections of the war-riddled country, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), particularly its mineral-rich eastern provinces. Appropriately labeled […]

Read more
A “So-Mali” Solution?
February 26, 2013 5 min. read

    With the French military intervention in Mali shifting to a more sustained action, the reality of the long, hard slog in the Mali region has triggered inevitable questions by diplomats, policy planners and many others as to what defines success – and what comes next?  Most mouthed answer: “Somalia.”  That’s correct.  The place […]

Read more
Name changes, killing continues
December 28, 2012 6 min. read

It was Zaire then. As I sat along the shore of Lake Tanganyika in Bujumbura, Burundi,   I marveled at the moment. Baby hippos splashed playfully in the water as their adults looked carefully from across the way. The sun set with purples and yellows and pinks, in rays shooting up to the sky in sharp […]

Read more
Peace in the DRC Not Feasible until Tensions between Tutsis and Hutus are Resolved
December 21, 2012 5 min. read

As peace talks commenced almost a week ago in Kampala, Uganda, the prospects of a lasting agreement between the rebel group M23 and the central government in Kinshasa seemed more of a ‘pipe dream’ then an actuality. The Democratic Republic of Congo has been down this road a multitude of times in the last 15 years with […]

Read more

Popular from Press