South Africans deserve a rigorous examination of all the candidates and substantial reasons why Ngcobo’s successor was chosen. Democracy demands it.
Replay. We in Africa are stuck on replay. Again thousands of people, mainly children, are dying of starvation in the Horn of Africa.
As absurd as Malema’s averments sound, however, crucial questions of law and media ethics are in play here.
Jonathan Shapiro has been asked to stop drawing President Jacob Zuma with a shower head sticking out of his head.
South Africans can be forgiven for wanting heroes, the <i>Mail & Guardian</i> weighs in.
Another week, another education study that suggests how the country’s largest teacher union cripples the wellbeing of South Africa’s learners.
For two years, the <i>Guardian</i>, has been chipping away at a media ethics scandal emanating from Rupert Murdoch’s Sunday tabloid.
Zwelinzima Vavi is right: Cosatu’s increasingly vocal opposition to the Protection of Information Bill was enormously important.
You get the leaders you deserve, according to an old bit of political wisdom. At present, we are in danger of getting the leaders our leaders deserve.
Trade union pension and provident funds control billions of rands, the oversight of which is too often carried out by a small network.