

Continue reading “Meet Gilbert Mulamba: The Congolese musician who records with US luminaries”
By Elaine Pofeldt
Continue reading “Memphis’s Goal: To Grow Revenue At Minority-Owned Firms By $50M In Five Years”
Continue reading “The Ethiopian Pharmacists Association in Diaspora inaugurated in Washington DC.”
By Aminata Sy
Continue reading “Philadelphia’s many African students need culturally inclusive education “
Paul Kagame spent the past two decades helping Rwanda overcome a 1994 genocide against the minority ethnic Tutsis that left an estimated 800,000 to 1 million people dead.
Kagame, the president of Rwanda, has embraced social media, eased the cost and hassle for international businesses to invest in the African nation, and looked to South Korea as a model for lifting his nation’s fortunes.
According to his critics, Kagame is yet another African strongman draped in more public relations-friendly clothing who forcefully and violently silences his political opponents.
His sharpest critics include Paul Rusesabagina, of “Hotel Rwanda” fame, who lives in the United States and who told The Washington Post in 2016 he was living outside his home country because he feared for his safety.
What does any of this have to do with Charlotte? Glad you asked. Kagame spent the weekend here, attending the NBA All-Star Game — Rwanda is likely to have one of 12 teams in the newly announced startup league in 2020 that includes significant backing from the NBA — before making a pitch to local business leaders on Monday at The Ballantyne Resort. (NBA Commissioner Adam Silver visited Kagame last year in Rwanda.)
Kagame came at the invitation and urging of Andy Agaba, a native of Uganda and Harvard graduate who runs a nonprofit here that, according to its website, is a Christian economic development organization.
Continue reading “Ghana Earning Its Stars And Stripes Through Tourism”
Continue reading “United States invests $40 million in Ethiopia’s health sector”
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Continue reading “Michael R. Pompeo salutes Gambia on National Day”
Continue reading “Group in New York awards grant to help American and African students interact”
Continue reading “Meet J.S Ondara: The next big musical export from Kenya to the world”
Continue reading “After 20 year sojourn in America, kenyan band, Jabali Afrika, returns home”
An opinion piece by Herman J. Cohen former Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs (1989-1993), U.S. ambassador to Senegal and The Gambia (1977-1980), a National Security Council member (1987-1989) and a 38-year veteran of the Foreign Service.
President Trump likes to overturn his predecessor’s initiatives, but so far the US-Africa relationship has been defined by policy continuity—a rare bipartisan bright spot among domestic and foreign turmoil. Yet there are clouds on the horizon. Public statements by senior American officials, including President Trump himself, foreshadow potentially troubling moves which threaten to undermine decades of mutually beneficial relations.
The first half of President Trump’s term has been good news for Africa. His first Senate-confirmed Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs, Tibor Nagy, is an expert diplomat and the right man for the job. Work continues apace at President Obama’s two signature programs, Power Africa and Feed the Future; at George W. Bush’s Millennium Challenge Corporation, and at PEPFAR, the hugely successful U.S. initiative to fight HIV/AIDS. Every year, more African nations are taking advantage of unilateral free-trade privileges under the African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA).
The military’s U.S. Africa Command continues to provide assistance and advisors to nations fighting Islamist terrorism and other threats to regional stability. These programs are working. But there are a few indications that the Trump administration could pull the rug out from underneath.
Continue reading “TRUMP MAY BE ABOUT TO UNDERMINE OBAMA’S AFRICA POLICY |”
Three new exhibitions and over a dozen programs will take place from February through May
Continue reading “PhilAesthetic: AAMP celebrates the African Diaspora in Philadelphia”
Continue reading “Pan African Festival Connects African Diaspora Through the Arts”
Continue reading “NBA and FIBA announce plan to launch professional basketball league in Africa”
By BUKOLA IDOWU
Continue reading “Nigerian diaspora remitted $25 billion home in 2018”
Continue reading “Interviews form basis of new play about the legacy of Sudan in Iowa City”
Continue reading “Los Angelese FC forward Latif Blessing gives back to his Ghanaian village”
Continue reading “Bridging the gap: Africa’s science landscape and the African diaspora”