<b>Niren Tolsi</b> is not sad that this year’s National Arts Festival is drawing to a close.
Away from the tree-lined avenues of Rhodes University and the middle-class town centre, unemployment in the townships stands at between 70% and 80%.
<i>Niren Tolsi</i> speaks to National Arts Festival committee chairman Jay Pather about this year’s festival’s shortcomings and successes.
At the National Arts festival, the blur of deadlines, interviews, shows and discussions leaves little time for considerate reflection.
In Grahamstown the Madeline cake tastes like red wine and cigarettes. But a student past that began in 1994 jars with the present.
The frontline of journalism is a dangerous trench, where putting one’s health and sobriety on the line is an occupational hazard.
Provincial and regional party leadership structures of the ANC in KwaZulu-Natal are facing revolt, writes <b>Niren Tolsi</b>.
At this year’s National Arts Festival, a young director tackles a history that spans generations.
The ANC in KwaZulu-Natal on Wednesday morning announced the replacement of two beleaguered leaders in strife-torn Msunduzi.
A year after hosting the 2010 Fifa World Cup South African taxpayers are still shelling out money for stadiums.