Hell Is Other People
A report from the Central African Republic, where "acts of extraordinary cruelty have become commonplace."
A report from the Central African Republic, where "acts of extraordinary cruelty have become commonplace."
On Nigeria’s citizen vigilantes who’ve banded together to fight Islamist terrorists.
The Nigerian schoolgirls who escaped Boko Haram.
Sarah A. Topol Matter Oct 2014 Permalink
How celebrity-led humanitarian aid exacerbated a crisis.
Alex Perry Newsweek Oct 2014 Permalink
In 1981, Mauritania became the last country on Earth to abolish slavery. The law had little effect; at least 140,000 people are still enslaved today. Their best hope for freedom is an abolitoinist named Biram Dah Abeid.
Alexis Okeowo New Yorker Sep 2014 25min Permalink
The Wall Street firm that bailed out Robert Mugabe.
Cam Simpson, Jesse Westbrook Businessweek Aug 2014 15min Permalink
On PEPFAR, the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, and the experience of covering AIDS in Africa.
Emily Bass Vela Jul 2014 25min Permalink
Following Muammar Qaddafi’s death in 2011, Libya had hundreds of billions of dollars. This is the story of how it was erased.
David Samuels Businessweek Aug 2014 25min Permalink
Barack Obama on Africa, Putin and the gap between what CEOs tell him over lunch and what they tell their lobbyists.
John Micklethwait, Edward Carr The Economist Aug 2014 20min Permalink
Hunting people who hunt elephants.
Joshua Hammer Smithsonian Jul 2014 Permalink
A profile of a doctor fighting Ebola in Uganda.
Blaine Harden New York Times Magazine Feb 2001 30min Permalink
Siblings tend to lions at a Tanzanian animal clinic.
"Eleven years her senior, Derek left America when she was fourteen to study and work in New Zealand, Greenland, and Chad, combing lakes for pale bacterial blooms. Over a decade Diana had collected his letters, filled with descriptions of the origins of rivers, dead fish in the Niantic, elephant calves strung up in abattoirs. And when she finished her sophomore year, he founded the Keren Reserve, a lion research conservatory that commanded a half-million acres at the edge of the Sahel. He had filmed four documentaries for television. Now, he researched emerging atavistic traits in the prides: infighting, cubs abandoned by their mothers."
Nora N. Khan American Literary Review Aug 2010 25min Permalink
How divisions between Nigeria’s Muslim North and Christian South resulted in the birth of terror’s most ruthless movement.
Alex Perry Newsweek Jul 2014 Permalink
Adriaan Vlok, a former apartheid leader, seeks redemption.
Eve Fairbanks The New Republic Jun 2014 20min Permalink
How America is trying to fight terrorism in Africa without doing any of the actual fighting.
Eliza Griswold New York Times Magazine Jun 2014 30min Permalink
“What kind of a person looks upon the world’s largest land animal—a beast that mourns its dead and lives to retirement age and can distinguish the voice of its enemies—and instead of saying ‘Wow!’ says something like ‘Where’s my gun?’”
Wells Tower GQ Jun 2014 Permalink
In northern Nigeria, radical Islamic terrorist group Boko Haram is facing a vigilante backlash from armed teenagers with nothing to lose.
Alex Preston GQ (UK) Feb 2014 25min Permalink
A dispatch from the Central African Republic.
Graeme Wood The New Republic May 2014 25min Permalink
An investigation into allegations that Rwandan President Paul Kagame is assassinating exiled dissidents.
Geoffrey York, Judi Rever The Globe and Mail May 2014 20min Permalink
Investigating the burning of ancient books by rebels in Timbuktu.
Patrick Symmes Outside Apr 2014 25min Permalink
On children accused of sorcery in Congo.
Deni Béchard Foreign Policy Mar 2014 10min Permalink
A mother defends her family lineage against disruption from envious cousins in this 2008 story by National Book Critics Circle award-winner Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie.
"His cousins, during the funeral, took his ivory tusk, claiming that the trappings of titles went to brothers and not to sons. It was when they emptied his barn of yams and led away the adult goats in his pen that she confronted them, shouting, and when they brushed her aside she waited until evening, then walked around the clan singing about their wickedness, the abominations they were heaping on the land by cheating a widow, until the elders asked them to leave her alone. She complained to the Women’s Council, and twenty women went at night to Okafo’s and Okoye’s homes, brandishing pestles, warning them to leave Nwamgba alone. But Nwamgba knew that those grasping cousins would never really stop. She dreamed of killing them. "
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie The New Yorker Jun 2008 25min Permalink
Inside the lucrative — and illegal — business of elephant tusk trafficking.
Damon Tabor Men's Journal Feb 2014 35min Permalink
A mother tries to get herself abducted, first for money, and then for appreciation.
"After all, Tim could not replace me with just any woman he plucked off the streets. He’d have to date first, and then there’d be nannies and maids to pay, restaurant bills, and eHarmony fees. Not to mention the time he’d lose on the endeavor, which, multiplied by his hourly rate, would cost a considerable amount. Viewed in this light, my value was significant. I used to work in marketing and view matters at all levels of illumination."
Lara Markstein Necessary Fiction Jan 2014 10min Permalink
Decades later, U.S.-backed dictator Hissène Habré faces justice.
Michael Bronner Foreign Policy Jan 2014 20min Permalink