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Africa

Some African countries are just not viable, says philanthropist

Sudanese billionaire breaks ranks to blame poor economic performance on bad leadership and fragmentation

Inside Africa

Ugandan official: cane dead bodies as example to the living

Monday, 16 November 2009

A Ugandan government official said the bodies of those who die because of drinking a local illicit gin should be caned six times before burial as an example to the living.

Joyce Mulama: Challenges in promoting children's health in Kenya

Monday, 16 November 2009

At age seven, Johnson Mungai, from Chokaa village, in Ruai, a peri-urban settlement on the outskirts of Nairobi, already knows that children are getting a raw deal where their health is concerned.

An ivory carver at work in Guangzhou. Such carvings can reach well over £600 in the city's market

Demand for illegal ivory soars in booming China

Sunday, 15 November 2009

Twenty years after a worldwide ban, there's a new black-market trade in elephant tusks from Africa

Models strut their proudly loud outfits at Swahili Fashion Week in Dar es Salaam

Kangalicious: Let your dress do the talking

Saturday, 14 November 2009

There are two rules to wearing a kanga: it must be colourful, and it must be inscribed with a proverb. Daniel Howden reports on a garment sweeping the globe.

Officials test the lighting at Cape Town's Green Point stadium

Will the lights go out on South Africa's World Cup?

Wednesday, 11 November 2009

Daniel Howden: A race row at the top of the national power company has left it without a leader

Somali pirates in record attack

Tuesday, 10 November 2009

Somali pirates yesterday attacked an oil tanker and fired automatic weapons and rocket-propelled grenades farther out at sea than any previous assault, suggesting that pirate capabilities are growing as they increase activity off East Africa.

Roy Bennett

Tsvangirai ally faces death penalty as trial begins

Tuesday, 10 November 2009

Zimbabwe's Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai's ally Roy Bennett went on trial accused of terrorism yesterday in a case that has stoked tensions in the unity government with President Robert Mugabe.

Simon Mann returned to Britain on Friday after being pardoned and released from prison in Equatorial Guinea

Foreign Office warns Mann to 'keep quiet'

Sunday, 8 November 2009

Powerful people have an interest in the mercenary behind the 'Wonga Coup' keeping his own counsel.

UN attempts to slow the new scramble for Africa

Saturday, 7 November 2009

Alarm over scale of foreign holdings and secretive land deals by wealthy nations

Peter Sharrock with the discovery he made in the forest near Angkor Wat

British 'Indiana Jones' finds missing legs of 900-year-old Buddhist statue

Saturday, 7 November 2009

It sounds like the plot of an Indiana Jones movie: an archaeology professor with little more to go on than a yellowing photograph discovers part of a 900-year-old statue deep in the Cambodian jungle, rewriting history in the process.

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Columnist Comments

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Philip Hensher: Computers have got to learn about grammar

Some of the things we are told in school are just terrible rules

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