+++ DW visits towns freed from the control of jihadist insurgents in northern Mozambique +++ As health workers race to prevent the spread of Ebola in Uganda, we report from the area where the outbreak began +++ Ahead of next year’s elections in Nigeria, young people rally behind Peter Obi, the politician hoping to unseat the political old-guard +++
Ten years after police shot dead 34 striking miners in South Africa, survivors and families are still seeking justice. An all-female news team challenges sexist stereotypes in Somalia.
And how Lesotho became the go-to spot for sub-Saharan skiers.
Alleged state organized violence against the indigenous Batwa community in DRC National Park +++ The first ever war crimes trial at the International Criminal Court relating to the conflict in Sudan's Darfur region +++ A Zimbabwean startup prompted by the pandemic to address the need for fresh grocery supplies +++ Tanzanian Muslims feel the pinch of rising food prices as they mark Ramadan
We take a look at a shady group of mercenaries that have been linked to Russia - and its operations and objectives in Africa +++ After a spike in Cholera cases in Cameroon we visit a hospital that's overrun with patients +++ How COVID-19 has forced some young women in Nigeria into making a desperate choice +++ And it's back to school for a 98-year-old woman in Kenya
Will there be accountability for torture in Uganda? We hear testimony from a Ugandan satirist who alleges he was brutally beaten. And he says, the orders came from the very top.+++ We also meet South Sudanese filmmaker, Akuol de Mabior, whose work is the first film from her country to make it to the Berlin Film Festival.