Giraffes at Lake Nakuru National Park in Kenya.
Xinhua via Getty Images
Giraffes show remarkable genetic differences between populations.
Members of the Sudanese Armed Forces on Aug. 14, 2023.
AFP via Getty Images
Tehran is supplying weapons to the Sudanese Armed Forces as they fight a paramilitary group for control of the nation.
Fighting between the army and paramilitaries has seen Sudan descend into civil war.
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With both sides in Sudan’s civil war accused of recruiting Islamist militiamen, terrorist groups look set to capitalize on a power vacuum.
Somalia’s president Hassan Sheikh Mohamud with Turkey’s president Recep Tayyip Erdogan in March 2024.
Mustafa Kamaci/Anadolu via Getty Images
All states have limited security capabilities and they generally prioritise them close to home. where it matters.
A Somali soldier controls the crowd at a protest in the capital Mogadishu on Jan.3, 2024.
AP Photo/Farah Abdi Warsameh
Somalia has demanded that a memorandum of understanding – which would see Ethiopia gain access to the Red Sea via a Somaliland port – be ripped up.
The COVID pandemic set pupils back, but the problems in Ethiopia’s education system have deep roots.
Minasse Wondimu Hailu/Anadolu Agency
The shockingly poor exam results indicate underlying structural issues that extend far beyond the realm of individual student performance.
Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed arrives in Beijing on Oct. 16, 2023.
Ken Ishii/Getty Images
Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed claims his landlocked country has a right to demand maritime access to a Red Sea port from its neighbors in the Horn of Africa − Somalia, Eritrea and Djibouti.
The Blue Nile river passes through the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam.
Eduardo Soteras/AFP via Getty Images
Hundreds of rivers are shared between two or more countries – this could be a source of cooperation or conflict.
A procession in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
J. Countess/Getty Images
Musicians established themselves in the US, where they continued to practice their cultural life, which flourished.
The raging conflict in Khartoum could negatively affect trade flows through Port Sudan to the rest of the world.
Getty Images
Sudan’s current conflict will have economic, social and political ripple effects across a number of countries
Jordanians being evacuated from Sudan amid fighting between two factions.
AP Photo/Raad Adayleh
Sudan’s location and natural resources have attracted international partners keen to benefit either geopolitically or economically.
A young herder grazes cattle on dwindling pasture in the drylands of Kenya.
Tony Karumba/AFP via Getty Images
Instead of the deluge of external interventions, ways must be found to build resilience from below, drawing on local practices and networks.
Riccardo Mayer / Shutterstock
It is not the drought that causes disease outbreak, but instead the way society deals with dry conditions.
Participants during the closing ceremony of the UN Climate Summit COP27. Photo by Christophe Gateau/picture alliance.
from www,gettyimages.com
African leaders must take radical actions to strengthen the continent’s voice and participation in future events.
A herder grazes cattle alongside wildlife in Samburu, Kenya.
Tony Karumba/AFP via Getty Images
Conservation that places less emphasis on who may or may not use a piece of land could result in better outcomes for people and wildlife.
Harvepino / shutterstock
High intensity rain has actually increased, which is topping up underground water stores.
A woman at a camp for those displaced by drought in Baidoa, Somalia, in September 2022.
Ed Ram/Getty Images
States with more capacity, more political inclusion and that make good use of foreign aid tend to see better outcomes.
Experts are warning that millions of people are at risk as a famine hits Somalia.
Mehmet ali poyraz/Shutterstock
The looming Somalian famine might be the first in a string of back-to-back catastrophes, says an expert.
As climate change accelerates, Farmers’ vulnerability to drought will depend on his choice of varieties and cropping practices.
Raphael Belmin
As droughts intensify, how can we increase crop production in a sustainable way? This is a multidimensional scientific and societal challenge to ensure future food security.
A damaged tank on the road north of Mekelle, the capital of Tigray, in February 2021.
Eduardo Soteras/AFP via Getty Images
The African Union needs to launch a credible, robust mediation process with mutually accepted mediators.