In Sudan, “freedom for my mum”
In Sudan, the numbers of women political prisoners are rising, largely because the numbers of women
In Sudan, the numbers of women political prisoners are rising, largely because the numbers of women
Meron Estefanos Meron speaks to us about her ongoing work with Eritrean refugees and migrants, many who live in Israel.
From the director and singer-actors of the 2005 film U-Carmen eKhayelitsha comes a new “opera” film.
Israel to African nations: take our asylum seekers and we will give you arms.
A couple of weeks ago Hamid Dabashi’s article “Can Non-Europeans Think?” was making the usual hype motions on
The online retrospective, “Literary Sudans," is intended to highlight the two Sudans as sites of literature and culture.
Number 3 in our series of short descriptions of ten new African films to watch out for.
The women of Sudan have had enough. On the evening of June 16, 2012, women dormitory
Guest Post by Anonymous* If you follow current headlines, you may have noticed a seemingly new
A film about a Sudanese migrant to America explores a general fact of contemporary existence.
In 1969, Gadalla Gubara and his friends, Ousmane Sembene, Timité Bassori and Mustapha Alassane came up with an idea: FESPACO.
On July 6 2011, the world’s diplomatic elite flocked to one of the globe’s most underdeveloped
The fortunes of Sudan and Equatorial Guinea at AFCON 2012. The latter especially, a squad cobbled together by naturalizing players from Brazil and Spain.
Omar al-Bashir has a bigger problem than the ICC: Ordinary citizens, including the middle classes, taking to the streets against the effects of austerity on their lives.
Recent demonstrations in Sudan’s capital Khartoum over road conditions and traffic signals have led some observers
Another one of those videos I was forwarded over the break. It’s become something of a
Sudan's vast diaspora in the Gulf reflected in media available via satellite in Dubai.
Bangs, the Australian rapper of Sudanese descent, who has made mediocrity into an art form, makes
More than a year later these lines–written by journalist Eamon Kircher-Allen as part of the reaction
Omar Al Bashir has long been the focus of Save Darfur and the Enough Project. But how many of those targeted by their campaigns, could recognize Sudan's president.