Category Archives: P

African Hip Pop Music

Hip hop started as a music and culture trend in New York in the 1970s. It’s a product of inner city life and has historically been the voice of black inner city youth. But it has deep Jamaican and African roots, apparent in the rawness of its beats and the rhythm of its lyrics. VOA’s Paul Ndiho has more.

Mali’s Bozo Fishing Village

We take you to Mali where ancient fishing traditions of Mali’s Bozo people are under threat from overfishing in the inner Niger Delta. VOA’s Paul Ndiho has the story

Man Eaters of Tsavo

A Conversation with Gibson Shiraku – Man Eaters of Tsavo Foundation

A Conversation With Gibson Shiraku- Man Eaters Of Tsavo Foundation from Paul on Vimeo.

Burundi Deporting Foreign Nationals

Rights activists in Burundi have criticised the government for deporting hundreds of foreign nationals rounded up in the suburbs of Bujumbura, but the authorities say the police are only trying to curb crime.For two weeks now, the police have been checking the IDs of people in different suburbs of Bujumbura. Those found without ID cards are sent to a stadium in Bujumbura where their countries of origin are determined through questioning.
Burundians found without ID cards are fined 2,000 francs (US$1.6) and sent back home, but foreign nationals are immediately escorted to the border. Paul Ndiho Has more.

Chinua Achebe’s "Things Fall Apart"

It’s been over 50 years since Nigeria’s Chinua Achebe, hailed as the father of modern African writing, penned the legendary novel ‘Things Fall Apart’ in 1958. The novel was Achebe’s first and sold over 10 million copies. Nigerian novelist Chinua Achebe is a fine stylish and an astute social critic, is one of the best-known African writers in the world and his novels are often assigned in university courses. His works explore the impact of European culture on African society. Paul Ndiho has more

Chinua Achebe’s “Things Fall Apart”

It’s been over 50 years since Nigeria’s Chinua Achebe, hailed as the father of modern African writing, penned the legendary novel ‘Things Fall Apart’ in 1958. The novel was Achebe’s first and sold over 10 million copies. Nigerian novelist Chinua Achebe is a fine stylish and an astute social critic, is one of the best-known African writers in the world and his novels are often assigned in university courses. His works explore the impact of European culture on African society. Paul Ndiho has more

President Obama’s Relatives in Kenya

President Obama’s Kenyan relatives are busy managing a kind of international stardom conferred upon them by their famous, if distant, relative.
In a short span of time, the routines of their lives have been replaced by the trappings and oddities of global fame: crowds, bodyguards, tabloid stories and the varied, at times mystical, expectations of an awe-struck public. I interacted with the Obama’s briefly and here is what they make of President Obama.

Barack Hussein Obama Becomes 44th U.S President

Barack Obama has become the 44th President of the United States, taking the oath of office on the steps of the U.S. Capitol before a crowd of more than one million people who had gathered in frigid temperatures to see the first African American become president. Immediately after President Obama took the oath of office, a military color guard fired off a 21-gun salute as an enormous and diverse crowd cheered, waved American flags and chanted the new president’s name.

Obama’s Inauguration Jan 20, 2009

The inauguration of Barack Obama has a special significance for Africans. They expect the joy they will feel in celebrating Obama’s swearing-in ceremony to exceed even the elation they felt in celebrating his Election Night victory in November. I spent some time today at the Washington Mall and here is more…

Women are Born or Sold into Slavery in Niger

Born or sold into slavery. It’s a brutal reality for hundreds of thousands of African women. But in Niger, one woman’s groundbreaking legal battle has triumphed, and a West African court recently found Niger’s government guilty of failing to protect a woman from slavery. Paul Ndiho has more

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