Middle East conflict reaches SA’s doorstepBy Marlan PadayacheePresident Cyril Ramaphosa has urged South Africans in Israel to cross the land border into Jordan — one of the few remaining safe exit routes
An elite detached from daily strugglesWhen workers marched and criticised the macroeconomic direction under Minister Trevor Manuel, it was never about personalities. It was about policy. It was about defending jobs, state capacity and redistribution By Zwelinzima VaviChina rewires Malawi’s economic lifelineChina’s latest $43 million grant commitment signals a deliberate, strategic repositioning that Western donors and regional partners should not underestimate By Collins MtikaFlags at half‐mast as Durban remembers giantsThe prestigious Mount Edgecombe Estate, home to one of South Africa’s iconic golf courses, honoured long-standing resident, former club captain and high‐handicap golfer Kiruban Dhanpal Naidoo By Marlan PadayacheePartner ContentStability is not the destination. It is the foundation.By Standard Bank Billions alloted but few resultsBy Nancy DusaniDespite significant allocations to health and education, hospitals remain overwhelmed and schools struggle Post-diagnosis: Towards a just food systemBy Philile NtuliThe South African Human Rights Commission inquiry into food systems arrives at a critical juncture, offering a rare opportunity for a turning point, where no stomach goes to bed hungry or wakes up uncertain of their next meal Grief allowed, grants us room to healBy Sello HatangThere is a way we find refuge from mourning. We distract ourselves. We move cities. We change jobs. We scroll endlessly. We convince ourselves that strength means silence. But strength is not the absence of tears. Strength is the courage to feel Local polls call for decorum and fair debateBy Lonwabo Patrick KulatiPoliticians’ conduct in parliament, media and public forums shapes not only the tone of electioneering but also the very fabric of democratic trust and social cohesion Digitisation not panacea for varsity spaceBy Mlamuli HlatshwayoAny talk about scaling up digitalisation of higher education as a solution to the large demand for access to the university must fiercely confront the structural challenges that are deeply concerning Protecting black pensions is not “anti-black”By David MasondoThose who weaponise race to escape accountability betray the very people they claim to champion From the US-led rules-based order to multipolar international lawBy Dan SteinbockRecently, Canada’s PM Mark Carney declared the end of the rules-based order. It was an outstanding speech. Yet, US unilateralism first soared in the 1980s. The rest of the West complied as long as it was beneficial. Today, it no longer is Barbie Kyagulanyi Ordeal: How love is animating the struggle for meaningful democracy and good GovernanceBy Robert KigongoBarbie Kyagulanyi’s ordeal reveals how love can become a powerful, non-violent force driving resistance, courage and conviction in Uganda’s struggle for meaningful democracy and good governance Malawi’s media ‘crisis’ is bigger than the newsroomBy Collins MtikaA blistering courtroom critique of journalists reveals not just professional failings but the deeper economic and institutional fragility undermining democratic accountability in Malawi Leveraging AI to achieve peace, justice, good governanceBy Arthur MutambaraCorruption undermines public trust and hinders social and economic development. AI can combat corruption by increasing transparency, identifying suspicious activities and monitoring financial transactions for illicit practices Modernising mining: Cybersecurity must be central, not optionalBy Billy PetzerAt the 2026 Mining Indaba in Cape Town, the emphasis was on digitalisation and technological advancement of the industry. However, the industry recognises that cybersecurity can no longer continue to remain the unaddressed elephant in the room Crime is increasingly detected online but policing remains offlineBy Lesedi Senamele MatlalaBeing digitally present is a form of accountability: it signals that the station is not hiding behind central bureaucracy when communities are scared. It also enhances investigative capacity, as communities already share leads online, including images, videos, vehicle descriptions and patterns of movement Load More Latest News How Amapiano’s first lady is defining her own lane Where ancestors walk Middle East conflict reaches SA’s doorstep Mideast war: Treasury rallies to cushion blow Calls for Xhakaza’s head in Ekurhuleni An elite detached from daily struggles A long road to recognition Lobbying for Motsepe’s ANC leadership in full swing Bold. African. Unapologetic. Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
China rewires Malawi’s economic lifelineChina’s latest $43 million grant commitment signals a deliberate, strategic repositioning that Western donors and regional partners should not underestimate By Collins MtikaFlags at half‐mast as Durban remembers giantsThe prestigious Mount Edgecombe Estate, home to one of South Africa’s iconic golf courses, honoured long-standing resident, former club captain and high‐handicap golfer Kiruban Dhanpal Naidoo By Marlan PadayacheePartner ContentStability is not the destination. It is the foundation.By Standard Bank Billions alloted but few resultsBy Nancy DusaniDespite significant allocations to health and education, hospitals remain overwhelmed and schools struggle Post-diagnosis: Towards a just food systemBy Philile NtuliThe South African Human Rights Commission inquiry into food systems arrives at a critical juncture, offering a rare opportunity for a turning point, where no stomach goes to bed hungry or wakes up uncertain of their next meal Grief allowed, grants us room to healBy Sello HatangThere is a way we find refuge from mourning. We distract ourselves. We move cities. We change jobs. We scroll endlessly. We convince ourselves that strength means silence. But strength is not the absence of tears. Strength is the courage to feel Local polls call for decorum and fair debateBy Lonwabo Patrick KulatiPoliticians’ conduct in parliament, media and public forums shapes not only the tone of electioneering but also the very fabric of democratic trust and social cohesion Digitisation not panacea for varsity spaceBy Mlamuli HlatshwayoAny talk about scaling up digitalisation of higher education as a solution to the large demand for access to the university must fiercely confront the structural challenges that are deeply concerning Protecting black pensions is not “anti-black”By David MasondoThose who weaponise race to escape accountability betray the very people they claim to champion From the US-led rules-based order to multipolar international lawBy Dan SteinbockRecently, Canada’s PM Mark Carney declared the end of the rules-based order. It was an outstanding speech. Yet, US unilateralism first soared in the 1980s. The rest of the West complied as long as it was beneficial. Today, it no longer is Barbie Kyagulanyi Ordeal: How love is animating the struggle for meaningful democracy and good GovernanceBy Robert KigongoBarbie Kyagulanyi’s ordeal reveals how love can become a powerful, non-violent force driving resistance, courage and conviction in Uganda’s struggle for meaningful democracy and good governance Malawi’s media ‘crisis’ is bigger than the newsroomBy Collins MtikaA blistering courtroom critique of journalists reveals not just professional failings but the deeper economic and institutional fragility undermining democratic accountability in Malawi Leveraging AI to achieve peace, justice, good governanceBy Arthur MutambaraCorruption undermines public trust and hinders social and economic development. AI can combat corruption by increasing transparency, identifying suspicious activities and monitoring financial transactions for illicit practices Modernising mining: Cybersecurity must be central, not optionalBy Billy PetzerAt the 2026 Mining Indaba in Cape Town, the emphasis was on digitalisation and technological advancement of the industry. However, the industry recognises that cybersecurity can no longer continue to remain the unaddressed elephant in the room Crime is increasingly detected online but policing remains offlineBy Lesedi Senamele MatlalaBeing digitally present is a form of accountability: it signals that the station is not hiding behind central bureaucracy when communities are scared. It also enhances investigative capacity, as communities already share leads online, including images, videos, vehicle descriptions and patterns of movement Load More Latest News How Amapiano’s first lady is defining her own lane Where ancestors walk Middle East conflict reaches SA’s doorstep Mideast war: Treasury rallies to cushion blow Calls for Xhakaza’s head in Ekurhuleni An elite detached from daily struggles A long road to recognition Lobbying for Motsepe’s ANC leadership in full swing Bold. African. Unapologetic. Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
Flags at half‐mast as Durban remembers giantsThe prestigious Mount Edgecombe Estate, home to one of South Africa’s iconic golf courses, honoured long-standing resident, former club captain and high‐handicap golfer Kiruban Dhanpal Naidoo By Marlan PadayacheePartner ContentStability is not the destination. It is the foundation.By Standard Bank
Billions alloted but few resultsBy Nancy DusaniDespite significant allocations to health and education, hospitals remain overwhelmed and schools struggle Post-diagnosis: Towards a just food systemBy Philile NtuliThe South African Human Rights Commission inquiry into food systems arrives at a critical juncture, offering a rare opportunity for a turning point, where no stomach goes to bed hungry or wakes up uncertain of their next meal Grief allowed, grants us room to healBy Sello HatangThere is a way we find refuge from mourning. We distract ourselves. We move cities. We change jobs. We scroll endlessly. We convince ourselves that strength means silence. But strength is not the absence of tears. Strength is the courage to feel Local polls call for decorum and fair debateBy Lonwabo Patrick KulatiPoliticians’ conduct in parliament, media and public forums shapes not only the tone of electioneering but also the very fabric of democratic trust and social cohesion Digitisation not panacea for varsity spaceBy Mlamuli HlatshwayoAny talk about scaling up digitalisation of higher education as a solution to the large demand for access to the university must fiercely confront the structural challenges that are deeply concerning Protecting black pensions is not “anti-black”By David MasondoThose who weaponise race to escape accountability betray the very people they claim to champion From the US-led rules-based order to multipolar international lawBy Dan SteinbockRecently, Canada’s PM Mark Carney declared the end of the rules-based order. It was an outstanding speech. Yet, US unilateralism first soared in the 1980s. The rest of the West complied as long as it was beneficial. Today, it no longer is Barbie Kyagulanyi Ordeal: How love is animating the struggle for meaningful democracy and good GovernanceBy Robert KigongoBarbie Kyagulanyi’s ordeal reveals how love can become a powerful, non-violent force driving resistance, courage and conviction in Uganda’s struggle for meaningful democracy and good governance Malawi’s media ‘crisis’ is bigger than the newsroomBy Collins MtikaA blistering courtroom critique of journalists reveals not just professional failings but the deeper economic and institutional fragility undermining democratic accountability in Malawi Leveraging AI to achieve peace, justice, good governanceBy Arthur MutambaraCorruption undermines public trust and hinders social and economic development. AI can combat corruption by increasing transparency, identifying suspicious activities and monitoring financial transactions for illicit practices Modernising mining: Cybersecurity must be central, not optionalBy Billy PetzerAt the 2026 Mining Indaba in Cape Town, the emphasis was on digitalisation and technological advancement of the industry. However, the industry recognises that cybersecurity can no longer continue to remain the unaddressed elephant in the room Crime is increasingly detected online but policing remains offlineBy Lesedi Senamele MatlalaBeing digitally present is a form of accountability: it signals that the station is not hiding behind central bureaucracy when communities are scared. It also enhances investigative capacity, as communities already share leads online, including images, videos, vehicle descriptions and patterns of movement Load More Latest News How Amapiano’s first lady is defining her own lane Where ancestors walk Middle East conflict reaches SA’s doorstep Mideast war: Treasury rallies to cushion blow Calls for Xhakaza’s head in Ekurhuleni An elite detached from daily struggles A long road to recognition Lobbying for Motsepe’s ANC leadership in full swing Bold. African. Unapologetic. Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
Post-diagnosis: Towards a just food systemBy Philile NtuliThe South African Human Rights Commission inquiry into food systems arrives at a critical juncture, offering a rare opportunity for a turning point, where no stomach goes to bed hungry or wakes up uncertain of their next meal Grief allowed, grants us room to healBy Sello HatangThere is a way we find refuge from mourning. We distract ourselves. We move cities. We change jobs. We scroll endlessly. We convince ourselves that strength means silence. But strength is not the absence of tears. Strength is the courage to feel Local polls call for decorum and fair debateBy Lonwabo Patrick KulatiPoliticians’ conduct in parliament, media and public forums shapes not only the tone of electioneering but also the very fabric of democratic trust and social cohesion Digitisation not panacea for varsity spaceBy Mlamuli HlatshwayoAny talk about scaling up digitalisation of higher education as a solution to the large demand for access to the university must fiercely confront the structural challenges that are deeply concerning Protecting black pensions is not “anti-black”By David MasondoThose who weaponise race to escape accountability betray the very people they claim to champion From the US-led rules-based order to multipolar international lawBy Dan SteinbockRecently, Canada’s PM Mark Carney declared the end of the rules-based order. It was an outstanding speech. Yet, US unilateralism first soared in the 1980s. The rest of the West complied as long as it was beneficial. Today, it no longer is Barbie Kyagulanyi Ordeal: How love is animating the struggle for meaningful democracy and good GovernanceBy Robert KigongoBarbie Kyagulanyi’s ordeal reveals how love can become a powerful, non-violent force driving resistance, courage and conviction in Uganda’s struggle for meaningful democracy and good governance Malawi’s media ‘crisis’ is bigger than the newsroomBy Collins MtikaA blistering courtroom critique of journalists reveals not just professional failings but the deeper economic and institutional fragility undermining democratic accountability in Malawi Leveraging AI to achieve peace, justice, good governanceBy Arthur MutambaraCorruption undermines public trust and hinders social and economic development. AI can combat corruption by increasing transparency, identifying suspicious activities and monitoring financial transactions for illicit practices Modernising mining: Cybersecurity must be central, not optionalBy Billy PetzerAt the 2026 Mining Indaba in Cape Town, the emphasis was on digitalisation and technological advancement of the industry. However, the industry recognises that cybersecurity can no longer continue to remain the unaddressed elephant in the room Crime is increasingly detected online but policing remains offlineBy Lesedi Senamele MatlalaBeing digitally present is a form of accountability: it signals that the station is not hiding behind central bureaucracy when communities are scared. It also enhances investigative capacity, as communities already share leads online, including images, videos, vehicle descriptions and patterns of movement Load More Latest News How Amapiano’s first lady is defining her own lane Where ancestors walk Middle East conflict reaches SA’s doorstep Mideast war: Treasury rallies to cushion blow Calls for Xhakaza’s head in Ekurhuleni An elite detached from daily struggles A long road to recognition Lobbying for Motsepe’s ANC leadership in full swing Bold. African. Unapologetic. Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
Grief allowed, grants us room to healBy Sello HatangThere is a way we find refuge from mourning. We distract ourselves. We move cities. We change jobs. We scroll endlessly. We convince ourselves that strength means silence. But strength is not the absence of tears. Strength is the courage to feel Local polls call for decorum and fair debateBy Lonwabo Patrick KulatiPoliticians’ conduct in parliament, media and public forums shapes not only the tone of electioneering but also the very fabric of democratic trust and social cohesion Digitisation not panacea for varsity spaceBy Mlamuli HlatshwayoAny talk about scaling up digitalisation of higher education as a solution to the large demand for access to the university must fiercely confront the structural challenges that are deeply concerning Protecting black pensions is not “anti-black”By David MasondoThose who weaponise race to escape accountability betray the very people they claim to champion From the US-led rules-based order to multipolar international lawBy Dan SteinbockRecently, Canada’s PM Mark Carney declared the end of the rules-based order. It was an outstanding speech. Yet, US unilateralism first soared in the 1980s. The rest of the West complied as long as it was beneficial. Today, it no longer is Barbie Kyagulanyi Ordeal: How love is animating the struggle for meaningful democracy and good GovernanceBy Robert KigongoBarbie Kyagulanyi’s ordeal reveals how love can become a powerful, non-violent force driving resistance, courage and conviction in Uganda’s struggle for meaningful democracy and good governance Malawi’s media ‘crisis’ is bigger than the newsroomBy Collins MtikaA blistering courtroom critique of journalists reveals not just professional failings but the deeper economic and institutional fragility undermining democratic accountability in Malawi Leveraging AI to achieve peace, justice, good governanceBy Arthur MutambaraCorruption undermines public trust and hinders social and economic development. AI can combat corruption by increasing transparency, identifying suspicious activities and monitoring financial transactions for illicit practices Modernising mining: Cybersecurity must be central, not optionalBy Billy PetzerAt the 2026 Mining Indaba in Cape Town, the emphasis was on digitalisation and technological advancement of the industry. However, the industry recognises that cybersecurity can no longer continue to remain the unaddressed elephant in the room Crime is increasingly detected online but policing remains offlineBy Lesedi Senamele MatlalaBeing digitally present is a form of accountability: it signals that the station is not hiding behind central bureaucracy when communities are scared. It also enhances investigative capacity, as communities already share leads online, including images, videos, vehicle descriptions and patterns of movement Load More Latest News How Amapiano’s first lady is defining her own lane Where ancestors walk Middle East conflict reaches SA’s doorstep Mideast war: Treasury rallies to cushion blow Calls for Xhakaza’s head in Ekurhuleni An elite detached from daily struggles A long road to recognition Lobbying for Motsepe’s ANC leadership in full swing Bold. African. Unapologetic. Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
Local polls call for decorum and fair debateBy Lonwabo Patrick KulatiPoliticians’ conduct in parliament, media and public forums shapes not only the tone of electioneering but also the very fabric of democratic trust and social cohesion Digitisation not panacea for varsity spaceBy Mlamuli HlatshwayoAny talk about scaling up digitalisation of higher education as a solution to the large demand for access to the university must fiercely confront the structural challenges that are deeply concerning Protecting black pensions is not “anti-black”By David MasondoThose who weaponise race to escape accountability betray the very people they claim to champion From the US-led rules-based order to multipolar international lawBy Dan SteinbockRecently, Canada’s PM Mark Carney declared the end of the rules-based order. It was an outstanding speech. Yet, US unilateralism first soared in the 1980s. The rest of the West complied as long as it was beneficial. Today, it no longer is Barbie Kyagulanyi Ordeal: How love is animating the struggle for meaningful democracy and good GovernanceBy Robert KigongoBarbie Kyagulanyi’s ordeal reveals how love can become a powerful, non-violent force driving resistance, courage and conviction in Uganda’s struggle for meaningful democracy and good governance Malawi’s media ‘crisis’ is bigger than the newsroomBy Collins MtikaA blistering courtroom critique of journalists reveals not just professional failings but the deeper economic and institutional fragility undermining democratic accountability in Malawi Leveraging AI to achieve peace, justice, good governanceBy Arthur MutambaraCorruption undermines public trust and hinders social and economic development. AI can combat corruption by increasing transparency, identifying suspicious activities and monitoring financial transactions for illicit practices Modernising mining: Cybersecurity must be central, not optionalBy Billy PetzerAt the 2026 Mining Indaba in Cape Town, the emphasis was on digitalisation and technological advancement of the industry. However, the industry recognises that cybersecurity can no longer continue to remain the unaddressed elephant in the room Crime is increasingly detected online but policing remains offlineBy Lesedi Senamele MatlalaBeing digitally present is a form of accountability: it signals that the station is not hiding behind central bureaucracy when communities are scared. It also enhances investigative capacity, as communities already share leads online, including images, videos, vehicle descriptions and patterns of movement Load More Latest News How Amapiano’s first lady is defining her own lane Where ancestors walk Middle East conflict reaches SA’s doorstep Mideast war: Treasury rallies to cushion blow Calls for Xhakaza’s head in Ekurhuleni An elite detached from daily struggles A long road to recognition Lobbying for Motsepe’s ANC leadership in full swing Bold. African. Unapologetic. Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
Digitisation not panacea for varsity spaceBy Mlamuli HlatshwayoAny talk about scaling up digitalisation of higher education as a solution to the large demand for access to the university must fiercely confront the structural challenges that are deeply concerning Protecting black pensions is not “anti-black”By David MasondoThose who weaponise race to escape accountability betray the very people they claim to champion From the US-led rules-based order to multipolar international lawBy Dan SteinbockRecently, Canada’s PM Mark Carney declared the end of the rules-based order. It was an outstanding speech. Yet, US unilateralism first soared in the 1980s. The rest of the West complied as long as it was beneficial. Today, it no longer is Barbie Kyagulanyi Ordeal: How love is animating the struggle for meaningful democracy and good GovernanceBy Robert KigongoBarbie Kyagulanyi’s ordeal reveals how love can become a powerful, non-violent force driving resistance, courage and conviction in Uganda’s struggle for meaningful democracy and good governance Malawi’s media ‘crisis’ is bigger than the newsroomBy Collins MtikaA blistering courtroom critique of journalists reveals not just professional failings but the deeper economic and institutional fragility undermining democratic accountability in Malawi Leveraging AI to achieve peace, justice, good governanceBy Arthur MutambaraCorruption undermines public trust and hinders social and economic development. AI can combat corruption by increasing transparency, identifying suspicious activities and monitoring financial transactions for illicit practices Modernising mining: Cybersecurity must be central, not optionalBy Billy PetzerAt the 2026 Mining Indaba in Cape Town, the emphasis was on digitalisation and technological advancement of the industry. However, the industry recognises that cybersecurity can no longer continue to remain the unaddressed elephant in the room Crime is increasingly detected online but policing remains offlineBy Lesedi Senamele MatlalaBeing digitally present is a form of accountability: it signals that the station is not hiding behind central bureaucracy when communities are scared. It also enhances investigative capacity, as communities already share leads online, including images, videos, vehicle descriptions and patterns of movement Load More Latest News How Amapiano’s first lady is defining her own lane Where ancestors walk Middle East conflict reaches SA’s doorstep Mideast war: Treasury rallies to cushion blow Calls for Xhakaza’s head in Ekurhuleni An elite detached from daily struggles A long road to recognition Lobbying for Motsepe’s ANC leadership in full swing Bold. African. Unapologetic. Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
Protecting black pensions is not “anti-black”By David MasondoThose who weaponise race to escape accountability betray the very people they claim to champion From the US-led rules-based order to multipolar international lawBy Dan SteinbockRecently, Canada’s PM Mark Carney declared the end of the rules-based order. It was an outstanding speech. Yet, US unilateralism first soared in the 1980s. The rest of the West complied as long as it was beneficial. Today, it no longer is Barbie Kyagulanyi Ordeal: How love is animating the struggle for meaningful democracy and good GovernanceBy Robert KigongoBarbie Kyagulanyi’s ordeal reveals how love can become a powerful, non-violent force driving resistance, courage and conviction in Uganda’s struggle for meaningful democracy and good governance Malawi’s media ‘crisis’ is bigger than the newsroomBy Collins MtikaA blistering courtroom critique of journalists reveals not just professional failings but the deeper economic and institutional fragility undermining democratic accountability in Malawi Leveraging AI to achieve peace, justice, good governanceBy Arthur MutambaraCorruption undermines public trust and hinders social and economic development. AI can combat corruption by increasing transparency, identifying suspicious activities and monitoring financial transactions for illicit practices Modernising mining: Cybersecurity must be central, not optionalBy Billy PetzerAt the 2026 Mining Indaba in Cape Town, the emphasis was on digitalisation and technological advancement of the industry. However, the industry recognises that cybersecurity can no longer continue to remain the unaddressed elephant in the room Crime is increasingly detected online but policing remains offlineBy Lesedi Senamele MatlalaBeing digitally present is a form of accountability: it signals that the station is not hiding behind central bureaucracy when communities are scared. It also enhances investigative capacity, as communities already share leads online, including images, videos, vehicle descriptions and patterns of movement Load More Latest News How Amapiano’s first lady is defining her own lane Where ancestors walk Middle East conflict reaches SA’s doorstep Mideast war: Treasury rallies to cushion blow Calls for Xhakaza’s head in Ekurhuleni An elite detached from daily struggles A long road to recognition Lobbying for Motsepe’s ANC leadership in full swing Bold. African. Unapologetic. Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
From the US-led rules-based order to multipolar international lawBy Dan SteinbockRecently, Canada’s PM Mark Carney declared the end of the rules-based order. It was an outstanding speech. Yet, US unilateralism first soared in the 1980s. The rest of the West complied as long as it was beneficial. Today, it no longer is Barbie Kyagulanyi Ordeal: How love is animating the struggle for meaningful democracy and good GovernanceBy Robert KigongoBarbie Kyagulanyi’s ordeal reveals how love can become a powerful, non-violent force driving resistance, courage and conviction in Uganda’s struggle for meaningful democracy and good governance Malawi’s media ‘crisis’ is bigger than the newsroomBy Collins MtikaA blistering courtroom critique of journalists reveals not just professional failings but the deeper economic and institutional fragility undermining democratic accountability in Malawi Leveraging AI to achieve peace, justice, good governanceBy Arthur MutambaraCorruption undermines public trust and hinders social and economic development. AI can combat corruption by increasing transparency, identifying suspicious activities and monitoring financial transactions for illicit practices Modernising mining: Cybersecurity must be central, not optionalBy Billy PetzerAt the 2026 Mining Indaba in Cape Town, the emphasis was on digitalisation and technological advancement of the industry. However, the industry recognises that cybersecurity can no longer continue to remain the unaddressed elephant in the room Crime is increasingly detected online but policing remains offlineBy Lesedi Senamele MatlalaBeing digitally present is a form of accountability: it signals that the station is not hiding behind central bureaucracy when communities are scared. It also enhances investigative capacity, as communities already share leads online, including images, videos, vehicle descriptions and patterns of movement Load More Latest News How Amapiano’s first lady is defining her own lane Where ancestors walk Middle East conflict reaches SA’s doorstep Mideast war: Treasury rallies to cushion blow Calls for Xhakaza’s head in Ekurhuleni An elite detached from daily struggles A long road to recognition Lobbying for Motsepe’s ANC leadership in full swing Bold. African. Unapologetic. Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
Barbie Kyagulanyi Ordeal: How love is animating the struggle for meaningful democracy and good GovernanceBy Robert KigongoBarbie Kyagulanyi’s ordeal reveals how love can become a powerful, non-violent force driving resistance, courage and conviction in Uganda’s struggle for meaningful democracy and good governance Malawi’s media ‘crisis’ is bigger than the newsroomBy Collins MtikaA blistering courtroom critique of journalists reveals not just professional failings but the deeper economic and institutional fragility undermining democratic accountability in Malawi Leveraging AI to achieve peace, justice, good governanceBy Arthur MutambaraCorruption undermines public trust and hinders social and economic development. AI can combat corruption by increasing transparency, identifying suspicious activities and monitoring financial transactions for illicit practices Modernising mining: Cybersecurity must be central, not optionalBy Billy PetzerAt the 2026 Mining Indaba in Cape Town, the emphasis was on digitalisation and technological advancement of the industry. However, the industry recognises that cybersecurity can no longer continue to remain the unaddressed elephant in the room Crime is increasingly detected online but policing remains offlineBy Lesedi Senamele MatlalaBeing digitally present is a form of accountability: it signals that the station is not hiding behind central bureaucracy when communities are scared. It also enhances investigative capacity, as communities already share leads online, including images, videos, vehicle descriptions and patterns of movement Load More Latest News How Amapiano’s first lady is defining her own lane Where ancestors walk Middle East conflict reaches SA’s doorstep Mideast war: Treasury rallies to cushion blow Calls for Xhakaza’s head in Ekurhuleni An elite detached from daily struggles A long road to recognition Lobbying for Motsepe’s ANC leadership in full swing Bold. African. Unapologetic. Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
Malawi’s media ‘crisis’ is bigger than the newsroomBy Collins MtikaA blistering courtroom critique of journalists reveals not just professional failings but the deeper economic and institutional fragility undermining democratic accountability in Malawi Leveraging AI to achieve peace, justice, good governanceBy Arthur MutambaraCorruption undermines public trust and hinders social and economic development. AI can combat corruption by increasing transparency, identifying suspicious activities and monitoring financial transactions for illicit practices Modernising mining: Cybersecurity must be central, not optionalBy Billy PetzerAt the 2026 Mining Indaba in Cape Town, the emphasis was on digitalisation and technological advancement of the industry. However, the industry recognises that cybersecurity can no longer continue to remain the unaddressed elephant in the room Crime is increasingly detected online but policing remains offlineBy Lesedi Senamele MatlalaBeing digitally present is a form of accountability: it signals that the station is not hiding behind central bureaucracy when communities are scared. It also enhances investigative capacity, as communities already share leads online, including images, videos, vehicle descriptions and patterns of movement Load More Latest News How Amapiano’s first lady is defining her own lane Where ancestors walk Middle East conflict reaches SA’s doorstep Mideast war: Treasury rallies to cushion blow Calls for Xhakaza’s head in Ekurhuleni An elite detached from daily struggles A long road to recognition Lobbying for Motsepe’s ANC leadership in full swing Bold. African. Unapologetic. Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
Leveraging AI to achieve peace, justice, good governanceBy Arthur MutambaraCorruption undermines public trust and hinders social and economic development. AI can combat corruption by increasing transparency, identifying suspicious activities and monitoring financial transactions for illicit practices Modernising mining: Cybersecurity must be central, not optionalBy Billy PetzerAt the 2026 Mining Indaba in Cape Town, the emphasis was on digitalisation and technological advancement of the industry. However, the industry recognises that cybersecurity can no longer continue to remain the unaddressed elephant in the room Crime is increasingly detected online but policing remains offlineBy Lesedi Senamele MatlalaBeing digitally present is a form of accountability: it signals that the station is not hiding behind central bureaucracy when communities are scared. It also enhances investigative capacity, as communities already share leads online, including images, videos, vehicle descriptions and patterns of movement Load More Latest News How Amapiano’s first lady is defining her own lane Where ancestors walk Middle East conflict reaches SA’s doorstep Mideast war: Treasury rallies to cushion blow Calls for Xhakaza’s head in Ekurhuleni An elite detached from daily struggles A long road to recognition Lobbying for Motsepe’s ANC leadership in full swing Bold. African. Unapologetic. Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
Modernising mining: Cybersecurity must be central, not optionalBy Billy PetzerAt the 2026 Mining Indaba in Cape Town, the emphasis was on digitalisation and technological advancement of the industry. However, the industry recognises that cybersecurity can no longer continue to remain the unaddressed elephant in the room Crime is increasingly detected online but policing remains offlineBy Lesedi Senamele MatlalaBeing digitally present is a form of accountability: it signals that the station is not hiding behind central bureaucracy when communities are scared. It also enhances investigative capacity, as communities already share leads online, including images, videos, vehicle descriptions and patterns of movement Load More Latest News How Amapiano’s first lady is defining her own lane Where ancestors walk Middle East conflict reaches SA’s doorstep Mideast war: Treasury rallies to cushion blow Calls for Xhakaza’s head in Ekurhuleni An elite detached from daily struggles A long road to recognition Lobbying for Motsepe’s ANC leadership in full swing Bold. African. Unapologetic. Login Register Remember me Forgot Password? Sign in Register Free Account Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email. Email Reset Link body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
Crime is increasingly detected online but policing remains offlineBy Lesedi Senamele MatlalaBeing digitally present is a form of accountability: it signals that the station is not hiding behind central bureaucracy when communities are scared. It also enhances investigative capacity, as communities already share leads online, including images, videos, vehicle descriptions and patterns of movement Load More