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South Africa

Has South Africa Overtaken Nigeria as Africa’s Giant?

Steven Gruzd·July 26, 2025
Nigeria’s silence in the global community contrasts markedly with South Africa’s vibrancy, begging us to ask if Pretoria’s influence has eclipsed Abuja’s regional leadership. Read More...
June/July 2025NigeriaSouth Africa
Football

My Love Affair with the Beautiful Game of Football

Mojolaoluwa Alabi·July 26, 2025
There is no denying the complicated relationship between football and women. Still, the game offers me a sense of home and a reminder that I belong to something bigger than myself. Read More...
June/July 2025Nigeria
Buhari

Muhammadu Buhari and the Politics of Memory

Afolabi Adekaiyaoja·July 26, 2025
Understanding the different responses to Buhari’s death helps us understand his legacy on a divided nation. Read More...
June/July 2025Nigeria
Ekun Omi

Èkún Omi and Femi Bajulaye’s Yoruba Aesthetic Vision

Seyi Lasisi·July 26, 2025
Having premiered at the 2025 Diversity in Cannes Short Film Showcase, Femi Bajulaye’s Èkún Omi presents a cinematic exploration and representation of African migrants’ realities through a deeply conscious Yoruba aesthetic. Read More...
June/July 2025Nigeria
Andréa Ngombet

‘The Republic of the Congo Is Not French, It Is Congolese’ Andréa Ngombet’s First Draft

Andréa Ngombet·July 26, 2025
Congolese writer, Andréa Ngombet, founded the Sassoufit Collective to document human rights violations in the Republic of the Congo: ‘It started as a mobilization against President Sassou Nguesso’s 2015 constitutional change and then evolved into a support structure for local voices. This vocation also aligns with my historian training: to produce, document and archive so that future generations know we resisted and that another Congo was possible.’ Read More...
Congo-BrazzavilleFirst DraftInterviewsJune/July 2025
Books

5 Books That Explain Why Lagos Drives People Crazy

Ijapa O·July 26, 2025
In our latest book recommendation, we have compiled a list of books to read to understand why Lagos drives people crazy. From a book that exposes the racial privilege that marks the city to one that explores its dangerous underground and criminal networks run by the very people who should be protecting the city, these books will make you livid about just how anything is permissible in Lagos! Read More...
June/July 2025Read Something AfricanReading
French

How France Secretly Poisoned the Algerian Sahara

Samia Henni·July 20, 2025
Between 1960 and 1966, the French colonial regime secretly detonated four atmospheric and 13 underground nuclear bombs and conducted tests of nuclear technologies in the Algerian Sahara. This secret atomic programme spread radioactive fallout and caused irreversible contamination across Algeria, the Sahara, Africa and elsewhere. Read More...
AfricaJune/July 2025
Women

How Nigerian Loan Providers Marginalize Women

Anazuo Salihu·July 20, 2025
Young women, like most women in Nigeria, struggle to access credit. Expanding financial equity will require simpler systems, cultural change and support for women to take informed financial risks and build economic power. Read More...
June/July 2025Nigeria
Akpoti-Uduaghan

The Akpoti-Uduaghan Playbook on Resistance Against All Odds

Juliet Nnaji·July 20, 2025
What does it mean to be a Nigerian woman fighting against the establishment? When Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan was suspended for speaking out against sexual harassment, she inadvertently began to create a blueprint for resistance against seemingly insurmountable odds, where refusal itself can be a form of victory. Read More...
June/July 2025Nigeria
Bafut

What Burns in Bafut Is More Than a Place

Achille Tenkiang·July 20, 2025
To Cameroonians, the Bafut Palace is more than a historical landmark; it is the heart of a living culture, where rituals bind the present to the past. Yet today, the palace stands under siege, its legacy threatened by the Anglophone crisis that has engulfed parts of Cameroon. Read More...
CameroonJune/July 2025

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The essential guide to the ideas, trends, people and stories shaping Nigeria and the broader African continent. Subscribe from N5,000/$5.99 monthly.

A Vision for Nigeria’s Queer Future #OnSite⚡️⁠
⁠
David Emeka writes that Necessary Fiction by Eloghosa Osunde isn’t just a novel; it is a world rebuilt from fragments of language, grief, and queer imagination. In Emeka's reading, Ziz, the narrator who challenges fate and English itself, becomes a vessel for resistance. Through Ziz and a circle of artists, Osunde, Emeka writes, crafts a community that feels both fragile and indestructible, one that transforms art into survival and storytelling into sanctuary. He captures the pulse of Osunde’s vision: a Nigeria imagined anew through connection, rebellion, and tenderness. The reviewer also notes how Osunde’s work refuses comfort, instead asking what freedom really costs in love, in money, and in vulnerability.⁠
⁠
Read the full review at the link in bio⁠
________________⁠
📝: David Emeka (@iruomaemeka)⁠
📷: Illustration by Kevwe Ogini (@@dfutureart)/ THE REPUBLIC..⁠
🔍: Peace Yetunde Onafuye (@yetundeandbooks)⁠; Editors.
Calling all photographers! It's time to take your Calling all photographers! It's time to take your shot!What does 'Another Nigeria' look like to you? ATLAS, brought to you by The Republic, in collaboration with LagosPhoto Festival, is inviting photographers to share their vision of 'Another Nigeria'. ⁠
⁠
Win $2,500, media visibility and promotion, professional mentorship and an exhibition spot at the upcoming LagosPhoto Festival.
⁠
Deadline is 24 October 2025. Learn more and submit by clicking this post at the link in our bio.

Make sure you follow @atlasphotos.co for updates and more exciting content in the near future.
Charly Boy Bus Stop and the Politics of Official R Charly Boy Bus Stop and the Politics of Official Renaming #OnSite⚡️⁠
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In July 2025, the Bariga Local Council in Lagos removed the name 'Charly Boy Bus Stop', originally chosen by residents in the 1990s to honour activist and musician Charles Oputa, and renamed it 'Baddo Bus Stop' in tribute to rapper Olamide Adedeji. Dengiyefa Angalapu writes that for 30 years, Charly Boy’s roadside philanthropy: scholarships, drainage repairs, impromptu street concerts, etc., bound his name to the bus stop. Angalapu argues that toponyms like 'Charly Boy Bus Stop' function as Nigeria's grassroots archives, 'living encyclopaedias created by residents, repeated by bus conductors and traders, passed down like family heirlooms.' When you remove these names, the author says, you collapse oral hyperlinks. If a junction is called War Front, an elder explains how soldiers camped there during the Civil War. Remove the name, and that civic lesson vanishes. The question isn't whether governments can officially rename places, it is whether they should erase communal memory in the process. ⁠
⁠
Read the full story by clicking this post at the link in our bio⁠
________________⁠
📝: Dengiyefa Angalapu (@greatdengis)⁠
📷: Photo Illustration by Ezinne Osueke (@ezinne.o.osueke) / THE REPUBLIC. Source Ref: WIKIMEDIA.⁠
🔍: Peace Yetunde Onafuye (@yetundeandbooks), Yusuf Omotayo (@yusufomotayo)⁠; Editors.
Today in 1962, Uganda gained independence from the Today in 1962, Uganda gained independence from the United Kingdom. #RPUBLCHistory⏳⠀⁠
⁠
On 9 October 1962, Uganda gained independence from the United Kingdom. The Ugandan Constitutional Conference, which was held in London in September 1961, was organized to pave the way for Ugandan independence⁠
⁠
Read more about Uganda by clicking this post at the link in our bio.⁠
⁠
Today's history post is brought to you by @annuvahomes. ⁠
________⠀⁠
📝: Adams Adeosun and Ugonna Eronini⁠
📷: 1) 50th Anniversary of Uganda's Independence, Kampala, 9 October 2012. Flickr. ⁠
2) UN General Assembly Addressed by President Amin Dada of Uganda, 1975. UN Photo/Teddy Chen.
‘Who Do We Imagine AI Is Built By and Built For? ‘Who Do We Imagine AI Is Built By and Built For?’ #OnSite⚡️⁠
⁠
‘If an African rural woman were designing AI, what would it look like?’ This is the question Nanjala Nyabola has spent three years answering while developing an African feminist philosophy for regulating digital technology. Her provocation cuts deep: AI is sold to Africa as ‘leapfrogging’, a magic wand that fixes everything, but without African participation or agency. In conversation with The Republic’s Editor-in-Chief Wale Lawal, she unpacks the material realities of AI, how it consumes land, freshwater, and electricity while producing pollution. Through feminist, decolonial frameworks, their conversation centres African lived experiences, exposes how extractive technologies mirror colonial exploitation, highlights unequal burdens on women and marginalized groups, and reimagines tech as a tool for justice rather than domination. ⁠

Read the full story by ordering our latest issue ‘An African Manual for Debugging Empire’ at the link in our bio. It is also available digitally to our paying subscribers. 
________________⁠
📝: Wale Lawal (@wallelawal)⁠
📷: Illustration by Charles Owen (@blvkninjvculture) / THE REPUBLIC.⁠
🔍: Peace Yetunde Onafuye (@yetundeandbooks), Yusuf Omotayo (@yusufomotayo)⁠; Editors.
The Betrayal of Mandela’s Apartheid Liberation M The Betrayal of Mandela’s Apartheid Liberation Movement #OnSite⚡️

Nelson Mandela, in his first month as president of South Africa in 1994, promised a ‘rainbow nation at peace with itself,’ a country where everyone could live with dignity after decades of apartheid’s brutality. But 31 years after liberation, that dream feels elusive. Andile Zulu writes that while political freedom was won, economic liberation was traded away. Zulu asserts that before the African National Congress (ANC) took power in 1994, Mandela had locked South Africa into a neoliberal framework that prioritized corporate interests over the people’s needs. Apartheid died, but capitalism evolved, and the consequences have been devastating for millions. Today’s South Africa tells a brutal story: 43% unemployment, 30 million living in poverty, and a staggering wealth gap where ten per cent of the population owns 85 per cent of the country’s wealth. The promised redistribution never came. Instead, the ANC’s Black Economic Empowerment policies created a new Black elite who, like their apartheid predecessors, exploit and repress Black workers. The Marikana massacre of 2012, where 34 Black miners were killed by police protecting a multinational mining company’s interests, stands as the most tragic symbol of this betrayal. But the fight isn’t over, Zulu writes. The next generation must build coalitions powerful enough to make governments fear disappointing citizens more than disappointing shareholders. True liberation, the author says, requires dismantling economic subjugation, not just political oppression. 

Read the full story here: https://rpublc.com/october-november-2025/nelson-mandela-apartheid/
________________
📝: Andile Zulu (@Shakas_Coconut)
📷: Photo Illustration by Ezinne Osueke (@ezinne.o.osueke) / THE REPUBLIC. Source Ref: WIKIMEDIA. 
🔍: Chidinma Nebolisa (@nmanebolisa_), Yusuf Omotayo (@yusufomotayo)⁠, Wale Lawal (@wallelawal); Editors.
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