Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed minutes before an explosion.
EPA-EFE/STR
The grenade attack shows that opponents are threatened by Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s progress.
Cameroon’s President Paul Biya has been in charge for nearly 40 years. His people want change.
REUTERS/LINTAO ZHANG
Some human rights activists worry that Cameroon could be the site of Africa’s next civil war.
Members of Nigeria’s All Progressives Congress party protest the 2015 elections. More trouble is likely ahead of the 2019 elections.
EPA/Tife Owolabi
Nigeria is far from ready to hold a credible ballot in 2019.
There are still lingering questions hanging over Ethiopia’s Premier Abiy Ahmed.
EPA-EFE/Stringer
Ethiopia has taken time and listened to the new prime minister. Now he needs to convert his vision into concrete policies
One of the refugee camps in Dadaab, northern Kenya, where more than 300,000 call home.
EPA/Boris Roessler
Kenya may never close Dadaab, but it has good reasons for wishing to do so
Can Mexico become a ‘loving republic’ built on forgiveness rather than punishment?
Shutterstock/Nalidsa
Mexico’s presidential front-runner wants to end violence in Mexico by pardoning drug traffickers and corrupt officials. Some 235,000 people have died in the country’s 11-year cartel war.
Protesters occupy a national highway in the Western Cape.
EPA/Nic Bothma
Governing parties and officials need to take note of the frustration being expressed by ordinary South Africans.
The funeral of Renamo leader, Afonso Dhlakama.
EPA-EFE/Ricardo Franco
The death of Mozambican opposition leader Alfonso Dhlakama could affect the progress made to end hostilities in the country.
Pastoralists on a dry plain in central Mali, one of the seven Sahel countries hit by a wave of deadly attacks.
EPA/Nic Bothma
A big rise in armed attacks in the Sahel - and the intensity of the attacks in recent years - is now seen as a major source of concern.
Drought conditions can foster conflict but this is rare.
Shutterstock
It is misguided to blame armed conflict and violence on climate change alone.
The opportunity of getting an education is key to reintegration.
UNMISS/Flickr
For the thousands of children who have left armed groups, education is crucial to their reintegration.
President of Uganda Yoweri Museveni refuses to relinquish power.
EPA/Stringer
Not all African leaders are willing to be swept by the democratic reforms of the early 2000s.
Bolivia’s Evo Morales and Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro are both classic Latin American strongmen. But that’s where the similarities end.
David Mercado/Reuters
Bolivia’s populist leader has been in office for 12 years. He’s a thorn in the US’s side and an ally of the late Hugo Chávez. Now he’s running for a fourth term. But that doesn’t make him a dictator.
A memorial to the victims of the 1994 Rwanda genocide in Kigali.
EPA/Ahmed Jallanzo
The genocide memory in Rwanda is diverse and dynamic.
Families clashed with security forces outside the police station in Valencia, Venezuela, where nearly 70 prisoners died in a March 28 fire.
AP Photo/Juan Carlos Hernandez
After a fire killed 66 inmates at a Venezuelan jail in March, news stories portrayed the country’s prisons as lawless. The real backstory of this deadly riot is more complex — and maybe a bit scarier.
Progressive values won in Costa Rica – for now, at least.
AP Photo/Arnulfo Franco
Nearly 40 percent of voters in Costa Rica supported an anti-gay evangelical for president. Maybe progressive Costa Rica is more like its troubled neighboring countries than it once seemed.
Multiple court sanctions against the powerful Pakistani politician Nawaz Sharif have spurred protests both for and against the ousted prime minister.
Faisal Mahmood/Reuters
It’s election season in Pakistan, and the Supreme Court is at war with the ruling party. Many Pakistanis wonder whether the nation’s top judge is cleaning up government or staging a judicial coup.
Shipping vessels seen off the Djibouti port in the Gulf of Aden.
EPA/Mazen Mahdi
A deal brokered by Ethiopia to develop the port at Berbera will have a ripple effect across the Horn of Africa.
US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson in Addis Ababa during his African tour.
EPA-EFE
The US secretary of state’s visit to five African countries didn’t have much to offer by way of investments and commerce.
US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson.
EPA-EFE/Andre Pain
The US Secretary of State’s mission to Africa will produce few benefits for the continent or for US-Africa relations.