A drone image of part of the Angolan Highlands.
Mauro Lourenco
The Angolan Highlands are hydrologically and ecologically important - and the region’s newly mapped peatlands are valuable “carbon sinks”.
Dozens of displaced people gather along the fence of the MONUSCO base in DRC.
Alexis Huguet/AFP via Getty Images
A specific regional protocol could ease the management of internally displaced persons in the region.
Pope Francis in Nairobi, Kenya, during his first papal visit to the African continent in 2015.
Nichole Sobecki/Getty Images
African Catholics are growing in number. They are also reinventing and reinterpreting Christianity.
GettyImages.
Destructive mining in Congo’s protected areas is rampant because it generates money for citizens, officials and armed groups.
YASUYOSHI CHIBA/AFP via Getty Images
The findings suggest that poaching rates are lower where there is strong national governance and levels of local human development are higher.
Kenyan troops fly the flags of the East African Community and Kenya in Goma, eastern DRC.
Augustin Wamenya/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
There are advantages to a regional force overseen by the East African Community – particularly as the bloc is leading new political talks.
A Kenyan judicial nominee to the East African Court of Justice, Charles Nyachae, is sworn in before a summit of regional leaders in Kampala in 2018.
Kenya Presidential Communication Service
The East African Court of Justice has been a keen promoter of the rule of law, democracy and human rights.
Troops drive through Goma in eastern DRC in November 2022.
Augustin Wamenya/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
Consolidating peace efforts across the vast territory has proved difficult for close to three decades. Scholars explain why.
Internally displaced people from the Dinka ethnic group at the Minkamman camp in South Sudan in 2014.
EFE-EPA/Jim Lopez
In 2018, Africa accounted for 70% of the world’s people displaced by armed conflict and human rights abuses.
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Eight countries are projected to be behind 50% of the growth in population over the next three decades. Five are in Africa.
Boureima Hama/AFP via Getty Images
Smuggling in Uganda’s West Nile region is seen as an act of defiance – a way to make ends meet in the face of perceived state neglect.
Men hold up protest signs in front of the coffins of DRC refugees killed in August 2004 in Gatumba, Burundi.
Simon Maina/AFP via Getty Images
Violence in the Democratic Republic of Congo is used to win a place in government, not to overthrow it. And it keeps working.
Microscopic view of the Ebola virus.
jaddingt/Shutterstock
Ebola is a highly transmissible disease but its spread can be prevented through behavioural measures.
Staff from South Sudan’s Health Ministry pose with protective suits during a drill for Ebola preparedness.
Photo by PATRICK MEINHARDT/AFP via Getty Images
When tackling an Ebola outbreak speed is a critical element - every hour counts.
Early marriage has a number of negative effects on the lives of girls and their own children.
Riccardo Mayer/Shutterstock
Though child marriage rates are declining globally, the practice remains worryingly common in some African countries.
Refugees and asylum seekers move through this refugee camp in Musina, South Africa.
Photo credit should read Luca Sola/AFP via Getty Images
Beitbridge and Musina are two border towns in Zimbabwe and South Africa that see many migrants pass through – with different health needs.
People walk on the road near Kibumba, north of Goma, Democratic Republic of Congo, as they flee fighting between Congolese forces and M23 rebels in May 2022.
(AP Photo/Moses Sawasawa)
Canada is connected to the Democratic Republic of Congo through the global economy, international peacekeeping efforts and migration. We must not ignore violence because it’s far away.
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken setting out Washington’s new Africa strategy at the University of Pretoria.
Photo by Andrew Harnik/AP POOL/AFP via Getty Images
The strategy outlined by the US Secretary of State marks a fresh beginning in US-Africa relations.
DRC President Félix Tshisekedi (left) and Rwanda President Paul Kagame in Kigali in 2021.
Habimana Thierry/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
Rwanda believes DRC continues to provide refuge for those behind the 1994 genocide.
Rwandan president Paul Kagame speaks during a governance event in the US.
Paul Marotta/Getty Images
The US has become one of Rwanda’s staunchest defenders.