Reimagining higher education as an engine of economic growthBy Andile ShongweThe proposal highlights that South Africa’s universities and technical and vocational education and training colleges can become productive economic nodes distributed across all provinces
A cruise ship, hantavirus and global PTSDThe memory of the Covid-19 shock shapes how governments and publics react to any new outbreak with even a hint of international spread By Anthony Ohemeng-BoamahA love letter to La ConcordeThe office park in Paarl has character, scale and history that cannot be replicated. Developers have listened to the building and acknowledged its story By Ash MüllerSouth Africa’s parallel State: The cost of letting crime governBecause in the end, the true cost of crime and corruption is not only measured in billions of rand lost. It is measured in a country that could have been built. And wasn’t By Shabodien RoomanayPartner ContentCelebrating 30 years of impact through collaborative effortBy NSTF Is Ngcukaitobi being set up against black empowerment?By Gillian SchutteThe Bar will invoke the cab-rank rule, which generally requires counsel to accept a brief in a field where they practise, even when they dislike the client or cause. Yet the rule allows refusal where conflicts, competence, availability, improper instructions, fee issues or other special circumstances arise Sovereignty, strain and the foreignerBy Andile LungisaThe imperative is not merely to condemn xenophobia but to render it obsolete SA’s Constitution at 30, a shared compactBy Cornelius MonamaThe belief that a constitutional text alone can transform society is as misplaced as the claim that it is the primary barrier to transformation. The Constitution can be a powerful enabling instrument, depending on who wields it Zimbabwe’s patronage web: How oligarchs captured the StateBy Wellington MuzengezaTo sustain this order, ZANU-PF deploys propaganda with ruthless precision, deflecting blame onto sanctions and the opposition while sanctifying corruption as a patriotic duty Blocking NHI undermines transformation agendaBy Khathu MamailaThe reality is that the State is granting subsidies to those who are financially better off. This is what the NHI seeks to do away with. NHI is a common fund that will fund our healthcare needs in both the public and private sector without regard to the economic status of the patient Search on for next WHO chiefBy Nthabiseng Makgana and Patrick KadimaThe candidate, preferably a woman, should be able to navigate hurdles in an ever-changing geopolitical climate and lead reforms urgently SA’s moral, technical high ground upends unipolar narrativeBy Moeketsi MokotongThe “white genocide” narrative works inside this wider machinery. It racialises South Africa’s internal contradictions for foreign consumption. It turns a country struggling with the unresolved consequences of colonialism and apartheid into a supposed persecutor of whites. It erases land theft, labour exploitation, racial capitalism and the real suffering of the African majority. It invites external intervention and commercial leverage through racial fear Rural community energy options amid climate changeBy Sikhululekile Mashingaidze, Farai Makururu and Donald NyarotaFor most households, solar energy is used for lighting, powering radios and charging cellphones but only a few can afford high-capacity systems that enable them to meet household cooking needs Too many questions, just enough truth: Justice as a lifelong pursuitBy Sello HatangThe thread that held the conversation together was clear from the beginning: justice. Not the abstract kind confined to courtrooms and legal textbooks but justice as a lived pursuit. Justice as a lifelong calling. Justice as something that must be wrestled with, not merely referenced “Victory in the Great Patriotic War 1941-1945: 81 years on”By Roman AmbarovVictory Day, May 9, carries deep meaning for millions of Russians. This year marks 81 years since the defeat of Nazi Germany in the Great Patriotic War of 1941 – 1945 – a victory that came at an immense human cost and shaped the modern world. For us, this is not distant history. Nearly 27 […] From summits to substance: Europe’s chance to meet Africa on its termsBy Lena KrauseThe clustering of Africa summits in 2026 is not coincidental. It reflects a continent whose geopolitical and economic weight is growing and whose governments are increasingly confident in setting their own agendas South Africa’s safety net for women and children has holesBy Juanita du PreezThe lived reality for women in South Africa is they get turned away at our police stations. They are told that domestic violence is a family matter. They are sent from one office to another. If they do actually get someone willing to open their case, the case files disappear into delay Load More Latest News Reimagining higher education as an engine of economic growth Somebody call Hasina Parliament probes Stellenbosch University as cracks in system show Madlanga commission hears how 999kg cocaine bust unfolded in Gauteng Universities South Africa sounds alarm on rising campus governance risks A cruise ship, hantavirus and global PTSD The NSFAS crisis: When leadership ignores evidence Celebrating 30 years of impact through collaborative effort New DA KZN leader targets ANC and MKP support 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 }
A love letter to La ConcordeThe office park in Paarl has character, scale and history that cannot be replicated. Developers have listened to the building and acknowledged its story By Ash MüllerSouth Africa’s parallel State: The cost of letting crime governBecause in the end, the true cost of crime and corruption is not only measured in billions of rand lost. It is measured in a country that could have been built. And wasn’t By Shabodien RoomanayPartner ContentCelebrating 30 years of impact through collaborative effortBy NSTF Is Ngcukaitobi being set up against black empowerment?By Gillian SchutteThe Bar will invoke the cab-rank rule, which generally requires counsel to accept a brief in a field where they practise, even when they dislike the client or cause. Yet the rule allows refusal where conflicts, competence, availability, improper instructions, fee issues or other special circumstances arise Sovereignty, strain and the foreignerBy Andile LungisaThe imperative is not merely to condemn xenophobia but to render it obsolete SA’s Constitution at 30, a shared compactBy Cornelius MonamaThe belief that a constitutional text alone can transform society is as misplaced as the claim that it is the primary barrier to transformation. The Constitution can be a powerful enabling instrument, depending on who wields it Zimbabwe’s patronage web: How oligarchs captured the StateBy Wellington MuzengezaTo sustain this order, ZANU-PF deploys propaganda with ruthless precision, deflecting blame onto sanctions and the opposition while sanctifying corruption as a patriotic duty Blocking NHI undermines transformation agendaBy Khathu MamailaThe reality is that the State is granting subsidies to those who are financially better off. This is what the NHI seeks to do away with. NHI is a common fund that will fund our healthcare needs in both the public and private sector without regard to the economic status of the patient Search on for next WHO chiefBy Nthabiseng Makgana and Patrick KadimaThe candidate, preferably a woman, should be able to navigate hurdles in an ever-changing geopolitical climate and lead reforms urgently SA’s moral, technical high ground upends unipolar narrativeBy Moeketsi MokotongThe “white genocide” narrative works inside this wider machinery. It racialises South Africa’s internal contradictions for foreign consumption. It turns a country struggling with the unresolved consequences of colonialism and apartheid into a supposed persecutor of whites. It erases land theft, labour exploitation, racial capitalism and the real suffering of the African majority. It invites external intervention and commercial leverage through racial fear Rural community energy options amid climate changeBy Sikhululekile Mashingaidze, Farai Makururu and Donald NyarotaFor most households, solar energy is used for lighting, powering radios and charging cellphones but only a few can afford high-capacity systems that enable them to meet household cooking needs Too many questions, just enough truth: Justice as a lifelong pursuitBy Sello HatangThe thread that held the conversation together was clear from the beginning: justice. Not the abstract kind confined to courtrooms and legal textbooks but justice as a lived pursuit. Justice as a lifelong calling. Justice as something that must be wrestled with, not merely referenced “Victory in the Great Patriotic War 1941-1945: 81 years on”By Roman AmbarovVictory Day, May 9, carries deep meaning for millions of Russians. This year marks 81 years since the defeat of Nazi Germany in the Great Patriotic War of 1941 – 1945 – a victory that came at an immense human cost and shaped the modern world. For us, this is not distant history. Nearly 27 […] From summits to substance: Europe’s chance to meet Africa on its termsBy Lena KrauseThe clustering of Africa summits in 2026 is not coincidental. It reflects a continent whose geopolitical and economic weight is growing and whose governments are increasingly confident in setting their own agendas South Africa’s safety net for women and children has holesBy Juanita du PreezThe lived reality for women in South Africa is they get turned away at our police stations. They are told that domestic violence is a family matter. They are sent from one office to another. If they do actually get someone willing to open their case, the case files disappear into delay Load More Latest News Reimagining higher education as an engine of economic growth Somebody call Hasina Parliament probes Stellenbosch University as cracks in system show Madlanga commission hears how 999kg cocaine bust unfolded in Gauteng Universities South Africa sounds alarm on rising campus governance risks A cruise ship, hantavirus and global PTSD The NSFAS crisis: When leadership ignores evidence Celebrating 30 years of impact through collaborative effort New DA KZN leader targets ANC and MKP support 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 }
South Africa’s parallel State: The cost of letting crime governBecause in the end, the true cost of crime and corruption is not only measured in billions of rand lost. It is measured in a country that could have been built. And wasn’t By Shabodien RoomanayPartner ContentCelebrating 30 years of impact through collaborative effortBy NSTF
Is Ngcukaitobi being set up against black empowerment?By Gillian SchutteThe Bar will invoke the cab-rank rule, which generally requires counsel to accept a brief in a field where they practise, even when they dislike the client or cause. Yet the rule allows refusal where conflicts, competence, availability, improper instructions, fee issues or other special circumstances arise Sovereignty, strain and the foreignerBy Andile LungisaThe imperative is not merely to condemn xenophobia but to render it obsolete SA’s Constitution at 30, a shared compactBy Cornelius MonamaThe belief that a constitutional text alone can transform society is as misplaced as the claim that it is the primary barrier to transformation. The Constitution can be a powerful enabling instrument, depending on who wields it Zimbabwe’s patronage web: How oligarchs captured the StateBy Wellington MuzengezaTo sustain this order, ZANU-PF deploys propaganda with ruthless precision, deflecting blame onto sanctions and the opposition while sanctifying corruption as a patriotic duty Blocking NHI undermines transformation agendaBy Khathu MamailaThe reality is that the State is granting subsidies to those who are financially better off. This is what the NHI seeks to do away with. NHI is a common fund that will fund our healthcare needs in both the public and private sector without regard to the economic status of the patient Search on for next WHO chiefBy Nthabiseng Makgana and Patrick KadimaThe candidate, preferably a woman, should be able to navigate hurdles in an ever-changing geopolitical climate and lead reforms urgently SA’s moral, technical high ground upends unipolar narrativeBy Moeketsi MokotongThe “white genocide” narrative works inside this wider machinery. It racialises South Africa’s internal contradictions for foreign consumption. It turns a country struggling with the unresolved consequences of colonialism and apartheid into a supposed persecutor of whites. It erases land theft, labour exploitation, racial capitalism and the real suffering of the African majority. It invites external intervention and commercial leverage through racial fear Rural community energy options amid climate changeBy Sikhululekile Mashingaidze, Farai Makururu and Donald NyarotaFor most households, solar energy is used for lighting, powering radios and charging cellphones but only a few can afford high-capacity systems that enable them to meet household cooking needs Too many questions, just enough truth: Justice as a lifelong pursuitBy Sello HatangThe thread that held the conversation together was clear from the beginning: justice. Not the abstract kind confined to courtrooms and legal textbooks but justice as a lived pursuit. Justice as a lifelong calling. Justice as something that must be wrestled with, not merely referenced “Victory in the Great Patriotic War 1941-1945: 81 years on”By Roman AmbarovVictory Day, May 9, carries deep meaning for millions of Russians. This year marks 81 years since the defeat of Nazi Germany in the Great Patriotic War of 1941 – 1945 – a victory that came at an immense human cost and shaped the modern world. For us, this is not distant history. Nearly 27 […] From summits to substance: Europe’s chance to meet Africa on its termsBy Lena KrauseThe clustering of Africa summits in 2026 is not coincidental. It reflects a continent whose geopolitical and economic weight is growing and whose governments are increasingly confident in setting their own agendas South Africa’s safety net for women and children has holesBy Juanita du PreezThe lived reality for women in South Africa is they get turned away at our police stations. They are told that domestic violence is a family matter. They are sent from one office to another. If they do actually get someone willing to open their case, the case files disappear into delay Load More Latest News Reimagining higher education as an engine of economic growth Somebody call Hasina Parliament probes Stellenbosch University as cracks in system show Madlanga commission hears how 999kg cocaine bust unfolded in Gauteng Universities South Africa sounds alarm on rising campus governance risks A cruise ship, hantavirus and global PTSD The NSFAS crisis: When leadership ignores evidence Celebrating 30 years of impact through collaborative effort New DA KZN leader targets ANC and MKP support 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 }
Sovereignty, strain and the foreignerBy Andile LungisaThe imperative is not merely to condemn xenophobia but to render it obsolete SA’s Constitution at 30, a shared compactBy Cornelius MonamaThe belief that a constitutional text alone can transform society is as misplaced as the claim that it is the primary barrier to transformation. The Constitution can be a powerful enabling instrument, depending on who wields it Zimbabwe’s patronage web: How oligarchs captured the StateBy Wellington MuzengezaTo sustain this order, ZANU-PF deploys propaganda with ruthless precision, deflecting blame onto sanctions and the opposition while sanctifying corruption as a patriotic duty Blocking NHI undermines transformation agendaBy Khathu MamailaThe reality is that the State is granting subsidies to those who are financially better off. This is what the NHI seeks to do away with. NHI is a common fund that will fund our healthcare needs in both the public and private sector without regard to the economic status of the patient Search on for next WHO chiefBy Nthabiseng Makgana and Patrick KadimaThe candidate, preferably a woman, should be able to navigate hurdles in an ever-changing geopolitical climate and lead reforms urgently SA’s moral, technical high ground upends unipolar narrativeBy Moeketsi MokotongThe “white genocide” narrative works inside this wider machinery. It racialises South Africa’s internal contradictions for foreign consumption. It turns a country struggling with the unresolved consequences of colonialism and apartheid into a supposed persecutor of whites. It erases land theft, labour exploitation, racial capitalism and the real suffering of the African majority. It invites external intervention and commercial leverage through racial fear Rural community energy options amid climate changeBy Sikhululekile Mashingaidze, Farai Makururu and Donald NyarotaFor most households, solar energy is used for lighting, powering radios and charging cellphones but only a few can afford high-capacity systems that enable them to meet household cooking needs Too many questions, just enough truth: Justice as a lifelong pursuitBy Sello HatangThe thread that held the conversation together was clear from the beginning: justice. Not the abstract kind confined to courtrooms and legal textbooks but justice as a lived pursuit. Justice as a lifelong calling. Justice as something that must be wrestled with, not merely referenced “Victory in the Great Patriotic War 1941-1945: 81 years on”By Roman AmbarovVictory Day, May 9, carries deep meaning for millions of Russians. This year marks 81 years since the defeat of Nazi Germany in the Great Patriotic War of 1941 – 1945 – a victory that came at an immense human cost and shaped the modern world. For us, this is not distant history. Nearly 27 […] From summits to substance: Europe’s chance to meet Africa on its termsBy Lena KrauseThe clustering of Africa summits in 2026 is not coincidental. It reflects a continent whose geopolitical and economic weight is growing and whose governments are increasingly confident in setting their own agendas South Africa’s safety net for women and children has holesBy Juanita du PreezThe lived reality for women in South Africa is they get turned away at our police stations. They are told that domestic violence is a family matter. They are sent from one office to another. If they do actually get someone willing to open their case, the case files disappear into delay Load More Latest News Reimagining higher education as an engine of economic growth Somebody call Hasina Parliament probes Stellenbosch University as cracks in system show Madlanga commission hears how 999kg cocaine bust unfolded in Gauteng Universities South Africa sounds alarm on rising campus governance risks A cruise ship, hantavirus and global PTSD The NSFAS crisis: When leadership ignores evidence Celebrating 30 years of impact through collaborative effort New DA KZN leader targets ANC and MKP support 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 }
SA’s Constitution at 30, a shared compactBy Cornelius MonamaThe belief that a constitutional text alone can transform society is as misplaced as the claim that it is the primary barrier to transformation. The Constitution can be a powerful enabling instrument, depending on who wields it Zimbabwe’s patronage web: How oligarchs captured the StateBy Wellington MuzengezaTo sustain this order, ZANU-PF deploys propaganda with ruthless precision, deflecting blame onto sanctions and the opposition while sanctifying corruption as a patriotic duty Blocking NHI undermines transformation agendaBy Khathu MamailaThe reality is that the State is granting subsidies to those who are financially better off. This is what the NHI seeks to do away with. NHI is a common fund that will fund our healthcare needs in both the public and private sector without regard to the economic status of the patient Search on for next WHO chiefBy Nthabiseng Makgana and Patrick KadimaThe candidate, preferably a woman, should be able to navigate hurdles in an ever-changing geopolitical climate and lead reforms urgently SA’s moral, technical high ground upends unipolar narrativeBy Moeketsi MokotongThe “white genocide” narrative works inside this wider machinery. It racialises South Africa’s internal contradictions for foreign consumption. It turns a country struggling with the unresolved consequences of colonialism and apartheid into a supposed persecutor of whites. It erases land theft, labour exploitation, racial capitalism and the real suffering of the African majority. It invites external intervention and commercial leverage through racial fear Rural community energy options amid climate changeBy Sikhululekile Mashingaidze, Farai Makururu and Donald NyarotaFor most households, solar energy is used for lighting, powering radios and charging cellphones but only a few can afford high-capacity systems that enable them to meet household cooking needs Too many questions, just enough truth: Justice as a lifelong pursuitBy Sello HatangThe thread that held the conversation together was clear from the beginning: justice. Not the abstract kind confined to courtrooms and legal textbooks but justice as a lived pursuit. Justice as a lifelong calling. Justice as something that must be wrestled with, not merely referenced “Victory in the Great Patriotic War 1941-1945: 81 years on”By Roman AmbarovVictory Day, May 9, carries deep meaning for millions of Russians. This year marks 81 years since the defeat of Nazi Germany in the Great Patriotic War of 1941 – 1945 – a victory that came at an immense human cost and shaped the modern world. For us, this is not distant history. Nearly 27 […] From summits to substance: Europe’s chance to meet Africa on its termsBy Lena KrauseThe clustering of Africa summits in 2026 is not coincidental. It reflects a continent whose geopolitical and economic weight is growing and whose governments are increasingly confident in setting their own agendas South Africa’s safety net for women and children has holesBy Juanita du PreezThe lived reality for women in South Africa is they get turned away at our police stations. They are told that domestic violence is a family matter. They are sent from one office to another. If they do actually get someone willing to open their case, the case files disappear into delay Load More Latest News Reimagining higher education as an engine of economic growth Somebody call Hasina Parliament probes Stellenbosch University as cracks in system show Madlanga commission hears how 999kg cocaine bust unfolded in Gauteng Universities South Africa sounds alarm on rising campus governance risks A cruise ship, hantavirus and global PTSD The NSFAS crisis: When leadership ignores evidence Celebrating 30 years of impact through collaborative effort New DA KZN leader targets ANC and MKP support 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 }
Zimbabwe’s patronage web: How oligarchs captured the StateBy Wellington MuzengezaTo sustain this order, ZANU-PF deploys propaganda with ruthless precision, deflecting blame onto sanctions and the opposition while sanctifying corruption as a patriotic duty Blocking NHI undermines transformation agendaBy Khathu MamailaThe reality is that the State is granting subsidies to those who are financially better off. This is what the NHI seeks to do away with. NHI is a common fund that will fund our healthcare needs in both the public and private sector without regard to the economic status of the patient Search on for next WHO chiefBy Nthabiseng Makgana and Patrick KadimaThe candidate, preferably a woman, should be able to navigate hurdles in an ever-changing geopolitical climate and lead reforms urgently SA’s moral, technical high ground upends unipolar narrativeBy Moeketsi MokotongThe “white genocide” narrative works inside this wider machinery. It racialises South Africa’s internal contradictions for foreign consumption. It turns a country struggling with the unresolved consequences of colonialism and apartheid into a supposed persecutor of whites. It erases land theft, labour exploitation, racial capitalism and the real suffering of the African majority. It invites external intervention and commercial leverage through racial fear Rural community energy options amid climate changeBy Sikhululekile Mashingaidze, Farai Makururu and Donald NyarotaFor most households, solar energy is used for lighting, powering radios and charging cellphones but only a few can afford high-capacity systems that enable them to meet household cooking needs Too many questions, just enough truth: Justice as a lifelong pursuitBy Sello HatangThe thread that held the conversation together was clear from the beginning: justice. Not the abstract kind confined to courtrooms and legal textbooks but justice as a lived pursuit. Justice as a lifelong calling. Justice as something that must be wrestled with, not merely referenced “Victory in the Great Patriotic War 1941-1945: 81 years on”By Roman AmbarovVictory Day, May 9, carries deep meaning for millions of Russians. This year marks 81 years since the defeat of Nazi Germany in the Great Patriotic War of 1941 – 1945 – a victory that came at an immense human cost and shaped the modern world. For us, this is not distant history. Nearly 27 […] From summits to substance: Europe’s chance to meet Africa on its termsBy Lena KrauseThe clustering of Africa summits in 2026 is not coincidental. It reflects a continent whose geopolitical and economic weight is growing and whose governments are increasingly confident in setting their own agendas South Africa’s safety net for women and children has holesBy Juanita du PreezThe lived reality for women in South Africa is they get turned away at our police stations. They are told that domestic violence is a family matter. They are sent from one office to another. If they do actually get someone willing to open their case, the case files disappear into delay Load More Latest News Reimagining higher education as an engine of economic growth Somebody call Hasina Parliament probes Stellenbosch University as cracks in system show Madlanga commission hears how 999kg cocaine bust unfolded in Gauteng Universities South Africa sounds alarm on rising campus governance risks A cruise ship, hantavirus and global PTSD The NSFAS crisis: When leadership ignores evidence Celebrating 30 years of impact through collaborative effort New DA KZN leader targets ANC and MKP support 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 }
Blocking NHI undermines transformation agendaBy Khathu MamailaThe reality is that the State is granting subsidies to those who are financially better off. This is what the NHI seeks to do away with. NHI is a common fund that will fund our healthcare needs in both the public and private sector without regard to the economic status of the patient Search on for next WHO chiefBy Nthabiseng Makgana and Patrick KadimaThe candidate, preferably a woman, should be able to navigate hurdles in an ever-changing geopolitical climate and lead reforms urgently SA’s moral, technical high ground upends unipolar narrativeBy Moeketsi MokotongThe “white genocide” narrative works inside this wider machinery. It racialises South Africa’s internal contradictions for foreign consumption. It turns a country struggling with the unresolved consequences of colonialism and apartheid into a supposed persecutor of whites. It erases land theft, labour exploitation, racial capitalism and the real suffering of the African majority. It invites external intervention and commercial leverage through racial fear Rural community energy options amid climate changeBy Sikhululekile Mashingaidze, Farai Makururu and Donald NyarotaFor most households, solar energy is used for lighting, powering radios and charging cellphones but only a few can afford high-capacity systems that enable them to meet household cooking needs Too many questions, just enough truth: Justice as a lifelong pursuitBy Sello HatangThe thread that held the conversation together was clear from the beginning: justice. Not the abstract kind confined to courtrooms and legal textbooks but justice as a lived pursuit. Justice as a lifelong calling. Justice as something that must be wrestled with, not merely referenced “Victory in the Great Patriotic War 1941-1945: 81 years on”By Roman AmbarovVictory Day, May 9, carries deep meaning for millions of Russians. This year marks 81 years since the defeat of Nazi Germany in the Great Patriotic War of 1941 – 1945 – a victory that came at an immense human cost and shaped the modern world. For us, this is not distant history. Nearly 27 […] From summits to substance: Europe’s chance to meet Africa on its termsBy Lena KrauseThe clustering of Africa summits in 2026 is not coincidental. It reflects a continent whose geopolitical and economic weight is growing and whose governments are increasingly confident in setting their own agendas South Africa’s safety net for women and children has holesBy Juanita du PreezThe lived reality for women in South Africa is they get turned away at our police stations. They are told that domestic violence is a family matter. They are sent from one office to another. If they do actually get someone willing to open their case, the case files disappear into delay Load More Latest News Reimagining higher education as an engine of economic growth Somebody call Hasina Parliament probes Stellenbosch University as cracks in system show Madlanga commission hears how 999kg cocaine bust unfolded in Gauteng Universities South Africa sounds alarm on rising campus governance risks A cruise ship, hantavirus and global PTSD The NSFAS crisis: When leadership ignores evidence Celebrating 30 years of impact through collaborative effort New DA KZN leader targets ANC and MKP support 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 }
Search on for next WHO chiefBy Nthabiseng Makgana and Patrick KadimaThe candidate, preferably a woman, should be able to navigate hurdles in an ever-changing geopolitical climate and lead reforms urgently SA’s moral, technical high ground upends unipolar narrativeBy Moeketsi MokotongThe “white genocide” narrative works inside this wider machinery. It racialises South Africa’s internal contradictions for foreign consumption. It turns a country struggling with the unresolved consequences of colonialism and apartheid into a supposed persecutor of whites. It erases land theft, labour exploitation, racial capitalism and the real suffering of the African majority. It invites external intervention and commercial leverage through racial fear Rural community energy options amid climate changeBy Sikhululekile Mashingaidze, Farai Makururu and Donald NyarotaFor most households, solar energy is used for lighting, powering radios and charging cellphones but only a few can afford high-capacity systems that enable them to meet household cooking needs Too many questions, just enough truth: Justice as a lifelong pursuitBy Sello HatangThe thread that held the conversation together was clear from the beginning: justice. Not the abstract kind confined to courtrooms and legal textbooks but justice as a lived pursuit. Justice as a lifelong calling. Justice as something that must be wrestled with, not merely referenced “Victory in the Great Patriotic War 1941-1945: 81 years on”By Roman AmbarovVictory Day, May 9, carries deep meaning for millions of Russians. This year marks 81 years since the defeat of Nazi Germany in the Great Patriotic War of 1941 – 1945 – a victory that came at an immense human cost and shaped the modern world. For us, this is not distant history. Nearly 27 […] From summits to substance: Europe’s chance to meet Africa on its termsBy Lena KrauseThe clustering of Africa summits in 2026 is not coincidental. It reflects a continent whose geopolitical and economic weight is growing and whose governments are increasingly confident in setting their own agendas South Africa’s safety net for women and children has holesBy Juanita du PreezThe lived reality for women in South Africa is they get turned away at our police stations. They are told that domestic violence is a family matter. They are sent from one office to another. If they do actually get someone willing to open their case, the case files disappear into delay Load More Latest News Reimagining higher education as an engine of economic growth Somebody call Hasina Parliament probes Stellenbosch University as cracks in system show Madlanga commission hears how 999kg cocaine bust unfolded in Gauteng Universities South Africa sounds alarm on rising campus governance risks A cruise ship, hantavirus and global PTSD The NSFAS crisis: When leadership ignores evidence Celebrating 30 years of impact through collaborative effort New DA KZN leader targets ANC and MKP support 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 }
SA’s moral, technical high ground upends unipolar narrativeBy Moeketsi MokotongThe “white genocide” narrative works inside this wider machinery. It racialises South Africa’s internal contradictions for foreign consumption. It turns a country struggling with the unresolved consequences of colonialism and apartheid into a supposed persecutor of whites. It erases land theft, labour exploitation, racial capitalism and the real suffering of the African majority. It invites external intervention and commercial leverage through racial fear Rural community energy options amid climate changeBy Sikhululekile Mashingaidze, Farai Makururu and Donald NyarotaFor most households, solar energy is used for lighting, powering radios and charging cellphones but only a few can afford high-capacity systems that enable them to meet household cooking needs Too many questions, just enough truth: Justice as a lifelong pursuitBy Sello HatangThe thread that held the conversation together was clear from the beginning: justice. Not the abstract kind confined to courtrooms and legal textbooks but justice as a lived pursuit. Justice as a lifelong calling. Justice as something that must be wrestled with, not merely referenced “Victory in the Great Patriotic War 1941-1945: 81 years on”By Roman AmbarovVictory Day, May 9, carries deep meaning for millions of Russians. This year marks 81 years since the defeat of Nazi Germany in the Great Patriotic War of 1941 – 1945 – a victory that came at an immense human cost and shaped the modern world. For us, this is not distant history. Nearly 27 […] From summits to substance: Europe’s chance to meet Africa on its termsBy Lena KrauseThe clustering of Africa summits in 2026 is not coincidental. It reflects a continent whose geopolitical and economic weight is growing and whose governments are increasingly confident in setting their own agendas South Africa’s safety net for women and children has holesBy Juanita du PreezThe lived reality for women in South Africa is they get turned away at our police stations. They are told that domestic violence is a family matter. They are sent from one office to another. If they do actually get someone willing to open their case, the case files disappear into delay Load More Latest News Reimagining higher education as an engine of economic growth Somebody call Hasina Parliament probes Stellenbosch University as cracks in system show Madlanga commission hears how 999kg cocaine bust unfolded in Gauteng Universities South Africa sounds alarm on rising campus governance risks A cruise ship, hantavirus and global PTSD The NSFAS crisis: When leadership ignores evidence Celebrating 30 years of impact through collaborative effort New DA KZN leader targets ANC and MKP support 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 }
Rural community energy options amid climate changeBy Sikhululekile Mashingaidze, Farai Makururu and Donald NyarotaFor most households, solar energy is used for lighting, powering radios and charging cellphones but only a few can afford high-capacity systems that enable them to meet household cooking needs Too many questions, just enough truth: Justice as a lifelong pursuitBy Sello HatangThe thread that held the conversation together was clear from the beginning: justice. Not the abstract kind confined to courtrooms and legal textbooks but justice as a lived pursuit. Justice as a lifelong calling. Justice as something that must be wrestled with, not merely referenced “Victory in the Great Patriotic War 1941-1945: 81 years on”By Roman AmbarovVictory Day, May 9, carries deep meaning for millions of Russians. This year marks 81 years since the defeat of Nazi Germany in the Great Patriotic War of 1941 – 1945 – a victory that came at an immense human cost and shaped the modern world. For us, this is not distant history. Nearly 27 […] From summits to substance: Europe’s chance to meet Africa on its termsBy Lena KrauseThe clustering of Africa summits in 2026 is not coincidental. It reflects a continent whose geopolitical and economic weight is growing and whose governments are increasingly confident in setting their own agendas South Africa’s safety net for women and children has holesBy Juanita du PreezThe lived reality for women in South Africa is they get turned away at our police stations. They are told that domestic violence is a family matter. They are sent from one office to another. If they do actually get someone willing to open their case, the case files disappear into delay Load More Latest News Reimagining higher education as an engine of economic growth Somebody call Hasina Parliament probes Stellenbosch University as cracks in system show Madlanga commission hears how 999kg cocaine bust unfolded in Gauteng Universities South Africa sounds alarm on rising campus governance risks A cruise ship, hantavirus and global PTSD The NSFAS crisis: When leadership ignores evidence Celebrating 30 years of impact through collaborative effort New DA KZN leader targets ANC and MKP support 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 }
Too many questions, just enough truth: Justice as a lifelong pursuitBy Sello HatangThe thread that held the conversation together was clear from the beginning: justice. Not the abstract kind confined to courtrooms and legal textbooks but justice as a lived pursuit. Justice as a lifelong calling. Justice as something that must be wrestled with, not merely referenced “Victory in the Great Patriotic War 1941-1945: 81 years on”By Roman AmbarovVictory Day, May 9, carries deep meaning for millions of Russians. This year marks 81 years since the defeat of Nazi Germany in the Great Patriotic War of 1941 – 1945 – a victory that came at an immense human cost and shaped the modern world. For us, this is not distant history. Nearly 27 […] From summits to substance: Europe’s chance to meet Africa on its termsBy Lena KrauseThe clustering of Africa summits in 2026 is not coincidental. It reflects a continent whose geopolitical and economic weight is growing and whose governments are increasingly confident in setting their own agendas South Africa’s safety net for women and children has holesBy Juanita du PreezThe lived reality for women in South Africa is they get turned away at our police stations. They are told that domestic violence is a family matter. They are sent from one office to another. If they do actually get someone willing to open their case, the case files disappear into delay Load More Latest News Reimagining higher education as an engine of economic growth Somebody call Hasina Parliament probes Stellenbosch University as cracks in system show Madlanga commission hears how 999kg cocaine bust unfolded in Gauteng Universities South Africa sounds alarm on rising campus governance risks A cruise ship, hantavirus and global PTSD The NSFAS crisis: When leadership ignores evidence Celebrating 30 years of impact through collaborative effort New DA KZN leader targets ANC and MKP support 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 }
“Victory in the Great Patriotic War 1941-1945: 81 years on”By Roman AmbarovVictory Day, May 9, carries deep meaning for millions of Russians. This year marks 81 years since the defeat of Nazi Germany in the Great Patriotic War of 1941 – 1945 – a victory that came at an immense human cost and shaped the modern world. For us, this is not distant history. Nearly 27 […] From summits to substance: Europe’s chance to meet Africa on its termsBy Lena KrauseThe clustering of Africa summits in 2026 is not coincidental. It reflects a continent whose geopolitical and economic weight is growing and whose governments are increasingly confident in setting their own agendas South Africa’s safety net for women and children has holesBy Juanita du PreezThe lived reality for women in South Africa is they get turned away at our police stations. They are told that domestic violence is a family matter. They are sent from one office to another. If they do actually get someone willing to open their case, the case files disappear into delay Load More Latest News Reimagining higher education as an engine of economic growth Somebody call Hasina Parliament probes Stellenbosch University as cracks in system show Madlanga commission hears how 999kg cocaine bust unfolded in Gauteng Universities South Africa sounds alarm on rising campus governance risks A cruise ship, hantavirus and global PTSD The NSFAS crisis: When leadership ignores evidence Celebrating 30 years of impact through collaborative effort New DA KZN leader targets ANC and MKP support 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 summits to substance: Europe’s chance to meet Africa on its termsBy Lena KrauseThe clustering of Africa summits in 2026 is not coincidental. It reflects a continent whose geopolitical and economic weight is growing and whose governments are increasingly confident in setting their own agendas South Africa’s safety net for women and children has holesBy Juanita du PreezThe lived reality for women in South Africa is they get turned away at our police stations. They are told that domestic violence is a family matter. They are sent from one office to another. If they do actually get someone willing to open their case, the case files disappear into delay Load More Latest News Reimagining higher education as an engine of economic growth Somebody call Hasina Parliament probes Stellenbosch University as cracks in system show Madlanga commission hears how 999kg cocaine bust unfolded in Gauteng Universities South Africa sounds alarm on rising campus governance risks A cruise ship, hantavirus and global PTSD The NSFAS crisis: When leadership ignores evidence Celebrating 30 years of impact through collaborative effort New DA KZN leader targets ANC and MKP support 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 }
South Africa’s safety net for women and children has holesBy Juanita du PreezThe lived reality for women in South Africa is they get turned away at our police stations. They are told that domestic violence is a family matter. They are sent from one office to another. If they do actually get someone willing to open their case, the case files disappear into delay Load More