Africa mourns Jesse Jackson, a global change agentBy Marlan PadayacheeA gregarious man with a mission, a complex personality, hard-nosed politician, he strode from the pulpits of politics to the precipice of the Oval Office, paving the way along Pennsylvania Avenue for Barack Obama
Leaving is never easy but look at us nowNot long ago, it was unthinkable that the leader of the DA would ever walk up the steps to the Union Buildings By John SteenhuisenChampioning a visa-free AfricaThe liberalisation loosens the colonial grip on African life. It allows states to maintain sovereignty while refusing to let colonial lines dictate connectivity By Dennis MuliloThe Sona love letter to SA’s agric sectorWe are working to expand the sector and ensure we provide high-quality products to new markets. It remains key that the sector’s “knowledge infrastructure” is up to date and, importantly, that new entrant farmers are supported By Wandile SihloboPartner ContentAnalysts weigh Sona’s delivery challengeBy Hasina Kathrada Land as Mother: The sacred politics of foodBy Philile NtuliRebuilding a just system recognises that enduring solutions might lie in combining modern tools with older ethical frameworks grounded in reciprocity and collective responsibility State inaction normalises water povertyBy Lucas LedwabaIn Limpopo’s villages, being waterless has become so normalised that people seem to have accepted that this is just how life should be — spending hours a day queuing to fill a 200 litre drum Social media fuels defamation casesBy John MakateWhen someone is defamed, particularly online, speed matters Climate disasters: Time to return to basicsBy Zweli MkhizeIt is critical that municipalities prioritise the routine maintenance and upgrading of stormwater systems, bridges, roads and essential services SA’s anti-corruption needle stalledBy Karam Jeet SinghOver a decade after the Glenister judgments, it remains an indictment of the so-called post-state capture moment that we are not further along as a country in settling the institutional architecture required to reverse endemic corruption Three million jobs is political rhetoric until Ramaphosa’s government fixes what it brokeBy Lorato TshenkengIn his 2026 State of the Nation Address (Sona), President Cyril Ramaphosa said: “If every small and medium-sized business in South Africa could employ one additional person, we would create three million new jobs.” On its own, the maths seems to add up until you reckon with the fact that slogans do not hire people. […] When young people hear Sona, we hear echo of promisesBy Ekta SomeraFor many, Sona feels less like a turning point and more like a reminder of how far removed political speeches are from daily life Peace in the ruins: South Africa, the African Union and the end of diplomatic illusionBy Zeenat AdamWars unfold in full view of the world with little consequence for the powerful and overwhelming punishment for the weak. To describe this order as functional requires a suspension of reality. The system is not reforming. It is decomposing Foot-in-Mouth Disease: How Lesufi’s populist politics costs ANC in GautengBy Muzi ZuluLesufi’s remark about resorting to hotel showers during water shortages was not an isolated lapse of judgment but a revealing window into this broader political environment Action needed beyond political statementsBy Vuslat BayogluFor reindustrialisation to take off, statements by politicians must be turned into practical, measurable policy steps. How the US government sabotaged the genocide convention orders against IsraelBy Sam HusseiniSouth Africa can move to get more emergency orders from the International Court of Justice. The UN General Assembly’s Uniting for Peace power can overcome the US government’s veto and obstruction Beyond the noise: A sober and rigorous assessment of criticism of the SonaBy Cornelius MonamaBeyond the noise: A sober and rigorous assessment of criticism of the Sona Load More Latest News Can Kagiso Rabada reclaim his spark? Generations in conversation: Tandazani Dhlakama curates across time Hormone-disrupting chemicals found in South African sanitary pads and pantyliners, study finds Warren Maroon named emerging artist of the year Analysts weigh Sona’s delivery challenge Top investigative photojournalist closes the case on Castle Lite’s claim Queen of comedy in the Mother City Africa mourns Jesse Jackson, a global change agent Leaving is never easy but look at us now 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 }
Championing a visa-free AfricaThe liberalisation loosens the colonial grip on African life. It allows states to maintain sovereignty while refusing to let colonial lines dictate connectivity By Dennis MuliloThe Sona love letter to SA’s agric sectorWe are working to expand the sector and ensure we provide high-quality products to new markets. It remains key that the sector’s “knowledge infrastructure” is up to date and, importantly, that new entrant farmers are supported By Wandile SihloboPartner ContentAnalysts weigh Sona’s delivery challengeBy Hasina Kathrada Land as Mother: The sacred politics of foodBy Philile NtuliRebuilding a just system recognises that enduring solutions might lie in combining modern tools with older ethical frameworks grounded in reciprocity and collective responsibility State inaction normalises water povertyBy Lucas LedwabaIn Limpopo’s villages, being waterless has become so normalised that people seem to have accepted that this is just how life should be — spending hours a day queuing to fill a 200 litre drum Social media fuels defamation casesBy John MakateWhen someone is defamed, particularly online, speed matters Climate disasters: Time to return to basicsBy Zweli MkhizeIt is critical that municipalities prioritise the routine maintenance and upgrading of stormwater systems, bridges, roads and essential services SA’s anti-corruption needle stalledBy Karam Jeet SinghOver a decade after the Glenister judgments, it remains an indictment of the so-called post-state capture moment that we are not further along as a country in settling the institutional architecture required to reverse endemic corruption Three million jobs is political rhetoric until Ramaphosa’s government fixes what it brokeBy Lorato TshenkengIn his 2026 State of the Nation Address (Sona), President Cyril Ramaphosa said: “If every small and medium-sized business in South Africa could employ one additional person, we would create three million new jobs.” On its own, the maths seems to add up until you reckon with the fact that slogans do not hire people. […] When young people hear Sona, we hear echo of promisesBy Ekta SomeraFor many, Sona feels less like a turning point and more like a reminder of how far removed political speeches are from daily life Peace in the ruins: South Africa, the African Union and the end of diplomatic illusionBy Zeenat AdamWars unfold in full view of the world with little consequence for the powerful and overwhelming punishment for the weak. To describe this order as functional requires a suspension of reality. The system is not reforming. It is decomposing Foot-in-Mouth Disease: How Lesufi’s populist politics costs ANC in GautengBy Muzi ZuluLesufi’s remark about resorting to hotel showers during water shortages was not an isolated lapse of judgment but a revealing window into this broader political environment Action needed beyond political statementsBy Vuslat BayogluFor reindustrialisation to take off, statements by politicians must be turned into practical, measurable policy steps. How the US government sabotaged the genocide convention orders against IsraelBy Sam HusseiniSouth Africa can move to get more emergency orders from the International Court of Justice. The UN General Assembly’s Uniting for Peace power can overcome the US government’s veto and obstruction Beyond the noise: A sober and rigorous assessment of criticism of the SonaBy Cornelius MonamaBeyond the noise: A sober and rigorous assessment of criticism of the Sona Load More Latest News Can Kagiso Rabada reclaim his spark? Generations in conversation: Tandazani Dhlakama curates across time Hormone-disrupting chemicals found in South African sanitary pads and pantyliners, study finds Warren Maroon named emerging artist of the year Analysts weigh Sona’s delivery challenge Top investigative photojournalist closes the case on Castle Lite’s claim Queen of comedy in the Mother City Africa mourns Jesse Jackson, a global change agent Leaving is never easy but look at us now 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 }
The Sona love letter to SA’s agric sectorWe are working to expand the sector and ensure we provide high-quality products to new markets. It remains key that the sector’s “knowledge infrastructure” is up to date and, importantly, that new entrant farmers are supported By Wandile SihloboPartner ContentAnalysts weigh Sona’s delivery challengeBy Hasina Kathrada
Land as Mother: The sacred politics of foodBy Philile NtuliRebuilding a just system recognises that enduring solutions might lie in combining modern tools with older ethical frameworks grounded in reciprocity and collective responsibility State inaction normalises water povertyBy Lucas LedwabaIn Limpopo’s villages, being waterless has become so normalised that people seem to have accepted that this is just how life should be — spending hours a day queuing to fill a 200 litre drum Social media fuels defamation casesBy John MakateWhen someone is defamed, particularly online, speed matters Climate disasters: Time to return to basicsBy Zweli MkhizeIt is critical that municipalities prioritise the routine maintenance and upgrading of stormwater systems, bridges, roads and essential services SA’s anti-corruption needle stalledBy Karam Jeet SinghOver a decade after the Glenister judgments, it remains an indictment of the so-called post-state capture moment that we are not further along as a country in settling the institutional architecture required to reverse endemic corruption Three million jobs is political rhetoric until Ramaphosa’s government fixes what it brokeBy Lorato TshenkengIn his 2026 State of the Nation Address (Sona), President Cyril Ramaphosa said: “If every small and medium-sized business in South Africa could employ one additional person, we would create three million new jobs.” On its own, the maths seems to add up until you reckon with the fact that slogans do not hire people. […] When young people hear Sona, we hear echo of promisesBy Ekta SomeraFor many, Sona feels less like a turning point and more like a reminder of how far removed political speeches are from daily life Peace in the ruins: South Africa, the African Union and the end of diplomatic illusionBy Zeenat AdamWars unfold in full view of the world with little consequence for the powerful and overwhelming punishment for the weak. To describe this order as functional requires a suspension of reality. The system is not reforming. It is decomposing Foot-in-Mouth Disease: How Lesufi’s populist politics costs ANC in GautengBy Muzi ZuluLesufi’s remark about resorting to hotel showers during water shortages was not an isolated lapse of judgment but a revealing window into this broader political environment Action needed beyond political statementsBy Vuslat BayogluFor reindustrialisation to take off, statements by politicians must be turned into practical, measurable policy steps. How the US government sabotaged the genocide convention orders against IsraelBy Sam HusseiniSouth Africa can move to get more emergency orders from the International Court of Justice. The UN General Assembly’s Uniting for Peace power can overcome the US government’s veto and obstruction Beyond the noise: A sober and rigorous assessment of criticism of the SonaBy Cornelius MonamaBeyond the noise: A sober and rigorous assessment of criticism of the Sona Load More Latest News Can Kagiso Rabada reclaim his spark? Generations in conversation: Tandazani Dhlakama curates across time Hormone-disrupting chemicals found in South African sanitary pads and pantyliners, study finds Warren Maroon named emerging artist of the year Analysts weigh Sona’s delivery challenge Top investigative photojournalist closes the case on Castle Lite’s claim Queen of comedy in the Mother City Africa mourns Jesse Jackson, a global change agent Leaving is never easy but look at us now 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 }
State inaction normalises water povertyBy Lucas LedwabaIn Limpopo’s villages, being waterless has become so normalised that people seem to have accepted that this is just how life should be — spending hours a day queuing to fill a 200 litre drum Social media fuels defamation casesBy John MakateWhen someone is defamed, particularly online, speed matters Climate disasters: Time to return to basicsBy Zweli MkhizeIt is critical that municipalities prioritise the routine maintenance and upgrading of stormwater systems, bridges, roads and essential services SA’s anti-corruption needle stalledBy Karam Jeet SinghOver a decade after the Glenister judgments, it remains an indictment of the so-called post-state capture moment that we are not further along as a country in settling the institutional architecture required to reverse endemic corruption Three million jobs is political rhetoric until Ramaphosa’s government fixes what it brokeBy Lorato TshenkengIn his 2026 State of the Nation Address (Sona), President Cyril Ramaphosa said: “If every small and medium-sized business in South Africa could employ one additional person, we would create three million new jobs.” On its own, the maths seems to add up until you reckon with the fact that slogans do not hire people. […] When young people hear Sona, we hear echo of promisesBy Ekta SomeraFor many, Sona feels less like a turning point and more like a reminder of how far removed political speeches are from daily life Peace in the ruins: South Africa, the African Union and the end of diplomatic illusionBy Zeenat AdamWars unfold in full view of the world with little consequence for the powerful and overwhelming punishment for the weak. To describe this order as functional requires a suspension of reality. The system is not reforming. It is decomposing Foot-in-Mouth Disease: How Lesufi’s populist politics costs ANC in GautengBy Muzi ZuluLesufi’s remark about resorting to hotel showers during water shortages was not an isolated lapse of judgment but a revealing window into this broader political environment Action needed beyond political statementsBy Vuslat BayogluFor reindustrialisation to take off, statements by politicians must be turned into practical, measurable policy steps. How the US government sabotaged the genocide convention orders against IsraelBy Sam HusseiniSouth Africa can move to get more emergency orders from the International Court of Justice. The UN General Assembly’s Uniting for Peace power can overcome the US government’s veto and obstruction Beyond the noise: A sober and rigorous assessment of criticism of the SonaBy Cornelius MonamaBeyond the noise: A sober and rigorous assessment of criticism of the Sona Load More Latest News Can Kagiso Rabada reclaim his spark? Generations in conversation: Tandazani Dhlakama curates across time Hormone-disrupting chemicals found in South African sanitary pads and pantyliners, study finds Warren Maroon named emerging artist of the year Analysts weigh Sona’s delivery challenge Top investigative photojournalist closes the case on Castle Lite’s claim Queen of comedy in the Mother City Africa mourns Jesse Jackson, a global change agent Leaving is never easy but look at us now 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 }
Social media fuels defamation casesBy John MakateWhen someone is defamed, particularly online, speed matters Climate disasters: Time to return to basicsBy Zweli MkhizeIt is critical that municipalities prioritise the routine maintenance and upgrading of stormwater systems, bridges, roads and essential services SA’s anti-corruption needle stalledBy Karam Jeet SinghOver a decade after the Glenister judgments, it remains an indictment of the so-called post-state capture moment that we are not further along as a country in settling the institutional architecture required to reverse endemic corruption Three million jobs is political rhetoric until Ramaphosa’s government fixes what it brokeBy Lorato TshenkengIn his 2026 State of the Nation Address (Sona), President Cyril Ramaphosa said: “If every small and medium-sized business in South Africa could employ one additional person, we would create three million new jobs.” On its own, the maths seems to add up until you reckon with the fact that slogans do not hire people. […] When young people hear Sona, we hear echo of promisesBy Ekta SomeraFor many, Sona feels less like a turning point and more like a reminder of how far removed political speeches are from daily life Peace in the ruins: South Africa, the African Union and the end of diplomatic illusionBy Zeenat AdamWars unfold in full view of the world with little consequence for the powerful and overwhelming punishment for the weak. To describe this order as functional requires a suspension of reality. The system is not reforming. It is decomposing Foot-in-Mouth Disease: How Lesufi’s populist politics costs ANC in GautengBy Muzi ZuluLesufi’s remark about resorting to hotel showers during water shortages was not an isolated lapse of judgment but a revealing window into this broader political environment Action needed beyond political statementsBy Vuslat BayogluFor reindustrialisation to take off, statements by politicians must be turned into practical, measurable policy steps. How the US government sabotaged the genocide convention orders against IsraelBy Sam HusseiniSouth Africa can move to get more emergency orders from the International Court of Justice. The UN General Assembly’s Uniting for Peace power can overcome the US government’s veto and obstruction Beyond the noise: A sober and rigorous assessment of criticism of the SonaBy Cornelius MonamaBeyond the noise: A sober and rigorous assessment of criticism of the Sona Load More Latest News Can Kagiso Rabada reclaim his spark? Generations in conversation: Tandazani Dhlakama curates across time Hormone-disrupting chemicals found in South African sanitary pads and pantyliners, study finds Warren Maroon named emerging artist of the year Analysts weigh Sona’s delivery challenge Top investigative photojournalist closes the case on Castle Lite’s claim Queen of comedy in the Mother City Africa mourns Jesse Jackson, a global change agent Leaving is never easy but look at us now 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 }
Climate disasters: Time to return to basicsBy Zweli MkhizeIt is critical that municipalities prioritise the routine maintenance and upgrading of stormwater systems, bridges, roads and essential services SA’s anti-corruption needle stalledBy Karam Jeet SinghOver a decade after the Glenister judgments, it remains an indictment of the so-called post-state capture moment that we are not further along as a country in settling the institutional architecture required to reverse endemic corruption Three million jobs is political rhetoric until Ramaphosa’s government fixes what it brokeBy Lorato TshenkengIn his 2026 State of the Nation Address (Sona), President Cyril Ramaphosa said: “If every small and medium-sized business in South Africa could employ one additional person, we would create three million new jobs.” On its own, the maths seems to add up until you reckon with the fact that slogans do not hire people. […] When young people hear Sona, we hear echo of promisesBy Ekta SomeraFor many, Sona feels less like a turning point and more like a reminder of how far removed political speeches are from daily life Peace in the ruins: South Africa, the African Union and the end of diplomatic illusionBy Zeenat AdamWars unfold in full view of the world with little consequence for the powerful and overwhelming punishment for the weak. To describe this order as functional requires a suspension of reality. The system is not reforming. It is decomposing Foot-in-Mouth Disease: How Lesufi’s populist politics costs ANC in GautengBy Muzi ZuluLesufi’s remark about resorting to hotel showers during water shortages was not an isolated lapse of judgment but a revealing window into this broader political environment Action needed beyond political statementsBy Vuslat BayogluFor reindustrialisation to take off, statements by politicians must be turned into practical, measurable policy steps. How the US government sabotaged the genocide convention orders against IsraelBy Sam HusseiniSouth Africa can move to get more emergency orders from the International Court of Justice. The UN General Assembly’s Uniting for Peace power can overcome the US government’s veto and obstruction Beyond the noise: A sober and rigorous assessment of criticism of the SonaBy Cornelius MonamaBeyond the noise: A sober and rigorous assessment of criticism of the Sona Load More Latest News Can Kagiso Rabada reclaim his spark? Generations in conversation: Tandazani Dhlakama curates across time Hormone-disrupting chemicals found in South African sanitary pads and pantyliners, study finds Warren Maroon named emerging artist of the year Analysts weigh Sona’s delivery challenge Top investigative photojournalist closes the case on Castle Lite’s claim Queen of comedy in the Mother City Africa mourns Jesse Jackson, a global change agent Leaving is never easy but look at us now 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 anti-corruption needle stalledBy Karam Jeet SinghOver a decade after the Glenister judgments, it remains an indictment of the so-called post-state capture moment that we are not further along as a country in settling the institutional architecture required to reverse endemic corruption Three million jobs is political rhetoric until Ramaphosa’s government fixes what it brokeBy Lorato TshenkengIn his 2026 State of the Nation Address (Sona), President Cyril Ramaphosa said: “If every small and medium-sized business in South Africa could employ one additional person, we would create three million new jobs.” On its own, the maths seems to add up until you reckon with the fact that slogans do not hire people. […] When young people hear Sona, we hear echo of promisesBy Ekta SomeraFor many, Sona feels less like a turning point and more like a reminder of how far removed political speeches are from daily life Peace in the ruins: South Africa, the African Union and the end of diplomatic illusionBy Zeenat AdamWars unfold in full view of the world with little consequence for the powerful and overwhelming punishment for the weak. To describe this order as functional requires a suspension of reality. The system is not reforming. It is decomposing Foot-in-Mouth Disease: How Lesufi’s populist politics costs ANC in GautengBy Muzi ZuluLesufi’s remark about resorting to hotel showers during water shortages was not an isolated lapse of judgment but a revealing window into this broader political environment Action needed beyond political statementsBy Vuslat BayogluFor reindustrialisation to take off, statements by politicians must be turned into practical, measurable policy steps. How the US government sabotaged the genocide convention orders against IsraelBy Sam HusseiniSouth Africa can move to get more emergency orders from the International Court of Justice. The UN General Assembly’s Uniting for Peace power can overcome the US government’s veto and obstruction Beyond the noise: A sober and rigorous assessment of criticism of the SonaBy Cornelius MonamaBeyond the noise: A sober and rigorous assessment of criticism of the Sona Load More Latest News Can Kagiso Rabada reclaim his spark? Generations in conversation: Tandazani Dhlakama curates across time Hormone-disrupting chemicals found in South African sanitary pads and pantyliners, study finds Warren Maroon named emerging artist of the year Analysts weigh Sona’s delivery challenge Top investigative photojournalist closes the case on Castle Lite’s claim Queen of comedy in the Mother City Africa mourns Jesse Jackson, a global change agent Leaving is never easy but look at us now 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 }
Three million jobs is political rhetoric until Ramaphosa’s government fixes what it brokeBy Lorato TshenkengIn his 2026 State of the Nation Address (Sona), President Cyril Ramaphosa said: “If every small and medium-sized business in South Africa could employ one additional person, we would create three million new jobs.” On its own, the maths seems to add up until you reckon with the fact that slogans do not hire people. […] When young people hear Sona, we hear echo of promisesBy Ekta SomeraFor many, Sona feels less like a turning point and more like a reminder of how far removed political speeches are from daily life Peace in the ruins: South Africa, the African Union and the end of diplomatic illusionBy Zeenat AdamWars unfold in full view of the world with little consequence for the powerful and overwhelming punishment for the weak. To describe this order as functional requires a suspension of reality. The system is not reforming. It is decomposing Foot-in-Mouth Disease: How Lesufi’s populist politics costs ANC in GautengBy Muzi ZuluLesufi’s remark about resorting to hotel showers during water shortages was not an isolated lapse of judgment but a revealing window into this broader political environment Action needed beyond political statementsBy Vuslat BayogluFor reindustrialisation to take off, statements by politicians must be turned into practical, measurable policy steps. How the US government sabotaged the genocide convention orders against IsraelBy Sam HusseiniSouth Africa can move to get more emergency orders from the International Court of Justice. The UN General Assembly’s Uniting for Peace power can overcome the US government’s veto and obstruction Beyond the noise: A sober and rigorous assessment of criticism of the SonaBy Cornelius MonamaBeyond the noise: A sober and rigorous assessment of criticism of the Sona Load More Latest News Can Kagiso Rabada reclaim his spark? Generations in conversation: Tandazani Dhlakama curates across time Hormone-disrupting chemicals found in South African sanitary pads and pantyliners, study finds Warren Maroon named emerging artist of the year Analysts weigh Sona’s delivery challenge Top investigative photojournalist closes the case on Castle Lite’s claim Queen of comedy in the Mother City Africa mourns Jesse Jackson, a global change agent Leaving is never easy but look at us now 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 }
When young people hear Sona, we hear echo of promisesBy Ekta SomeraFor many, Sona feels less like a turning point and more like a reminder of how far removed political speeches are from daily life Peace in the ruins: South Africa, the African Union and the end of diplomatic illusionBy Zeenat AdamWars unfold in full view of the world with little consequence for the powerful and overwhelming punishment for the weak. To describe this order as functional requires a suspension of reality. The system is not reforming. It is decomposing Foot-in-Mouth Disease: How Lesufi’s populist politics costs ANC in GautengBy Muzi ZuluLesufi’s remark about resorting to hotel showers during water shortages was not an isolated lapse of judgment but a revealing window into this broader political environment Action needed beyond political statementsBy Vuslat BayogluFor reindustrialisation to take off, statements by politicians must be turned into practical, measurable policy steps. How the US government sabotaged the genocide convention orders against IsraelBy Sam HusseiniSouth Africa can move to get more emergency orders from the International Court of Justice. The UN General Assembly’s Uniting for Peace power can overcome the US government’s veto and obstruction Beyond the noise: A sober and rigorous assessment of criticism of the SonaBy Cornelius MonamaBeyond the noise: A sober and rigorous assessment of criticism of the Sona Load More Latest News Can Kagiso Rabada reclaim his spark? Generations in conversation: Tandazani Dhlakama curates across time Hormone-disrupting chemicals found in South African sanitary pads and pantyliners, study finds Warren Maroon named emerging artist of the year Analysts weigh Sona’s delivery challenge Top investigative photojournalist closes the case on Castle Lite’s claim Queen of comedy in the Mother City Africa mourns Jesse Jackson, a global change agent Leaving is never easy but look at us now 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 }
Peace in the ruins: South Africa, the African Union and the end of diplomatic illusionBy Zeenat AdamWars unfold in full view of the world with little consequence for the powerful and overwhelming punishment for the weak. To describe this order as functional requires a suspension of reality. The system is not reforming. It is decomposing Foot-in-Mouth Disease: How Lesufi’s populist politics costs ANC in GautengBy Muzi ZuluLesufi’s remark about resorting to hotel showers during water shortages was not an isolated lapse of judgment but a revealing window into this broader political environment Action needed beyond political statementsBy Vuslat BayogluFor reindustrialisation to take off, statements by politicians must be turned into practical, measurable policy steps. How the US government sabotaged the genocide convention orders against IsraelBy Sam HusseiniSouth Africa can move to get more emergency orders from the International Court of Justice. The UN General Assembly’s Uniting for Peace power can overcome the US government’s veto and obstruction Beyond the noise: A sober and rigorous assessment of criticism of the SonaBy Cornelius MonamaBeyond the noise: A sober and rigorous assessment of criticism of the Sona Load More Latest News Can Kagiso Rabada reclaim his spark? Generations in conversation: Tandazani Dhlakama curates across time Hormone-disrupting chemicals found in South African sanitary pads and pantyliners, study finds Warren Maroon named emerging artist of the year Analysts weigh Sona’s delivery challenge Top investigative photojournalist closes the case on Castle Lite’s claim Queen of comedy in the Mother City Africa mourns Jesse Jackson, a global change agent Leaving is never easy but look at us now 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 }
Foot-in-Mouth Disease: How Lesufi’s populist politics costs ANC in GautengBy Muzi ZuluLesufi’s remark about resorting to hotel showers during water shortages was not an isolated lapse of judgment but a revealing window into this broader political environment Action needed beyond political statementsBy Vuslat BayogluFor reindustrialisation to take off, statements by politicians must be turned into practical, measurable policy steps. How the US government sabotaged the genocide convention orders against IsraelBy Sam HusseiniSouth Africa can move to get more emergency orders from the International Court of Justice. The UN General Assembly’s Uniting for Peace power can overcome the US government’s veto and obstruction Beyond the noise: A sober and rigorous assessment of criticism of the SonaBy Cornelius MonamaBeyond the noise: A sober and rigorous assessment of criticism of the Sona Load More Latest News Can Kagiso Rabada reclaim his spark? Generations in conversation: Tandazani Dhlakama curates across time Hormone-disrupting chemicals found in South African sanitary pads and pantyliners, study finds Warren Maroon named emerging artist of the year Analysts weigh Sona’s delivery challenge Top investigative photojournalist closes the case on Castle Lite’s claim Queen of comedy in the Mother City Africa mourns Jesse Jackson, a global change agent Leaving is never easy but look at us now 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 }
Action needed beyond political statementsBy Vuslat BayogluFor reindustrialisation to take off, statements by politicians must be turned into practical, measurable policy steps. How the US government sabotaged the genocide convention orders against IsraelBy Sam HusseiniSouth Africa can move to get more emergency orders from the International Court of Justice. The UN General Assembly’s Uniting for Peace power can overcome the US government’s veto and obstruction Beyond the noise: A sober and rigorous assessment of criticism of the SonaBy Cornelius MonamaBeyond the noise: A sober and rigorous assessment of criticism of the Sona Load More Latest News Can Kagiso Rabada reclaim his spark? Generations in conversation: Tandazani Dhlakama curates across time Hormone-disrupting chemicals found in South African sanitary pads and pantyliners, study finds Warren Maroon named emerging artist of the year Analysts weigh Sona’s delivery challenge Top investigative photojournalist closes the case on Castle Lite’s claim Queen of comedy in the Mother City Africa mourns Jesse Jackson, a global change agent Leaving is never easy but look at us now 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 }
How the US government sabotaged the genocide convention orders against IsraelBy Sam HusseiniSouth Africa can move to get more emergency orders from the International Court of Justice. The UN General Assembly’s Uniting for Peace power can overcome the US government’s veto and obstruction Beyond the noise: A sober and rigorous assessment of criticism of the SonaBy Cornelius MonamaBeyond the noise: A sober and rigorous assessment of criticism of the Sona Load More Latest News Can Kagiso Rabada reclaim his spark? Generations in conversation: Tandazani Dhlakama curates across time Hormone-disrupting chemicals found in South African sanitary pads and pantyliners, study finds Warren Maroon named emerging artist of the year Analysts weigh Sona’s delivery challenge Top investigative photojournalist closes the case on Castle Lite’s claim Queen of comedy in the Mother City Africa mourns Jesse Jackson, a global change agent Leaving is never easy but look at us now 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 }
Beyond the noise: A sober and rigorous assessment of criticism of the SonaBy Cornelius MonamaBeyond the noise: A sober and rigorous assessment of criticism of the Sona Load More