The city of Uvira, in the South Kivu province, study site for new research on cholera.
MONUSCO Photos / Flickr
In the fight against cholera, new research in the DRC suggests that the rehabilitation of water networks would be more sustainable than other interventions whose effectiveness is debatable.
Some male gorillas regularly hold, play and groom infants.
Frank Cornelissen/Shutterstock
Male gorillas who spend more time with infants are expected to sire about 5 times more babies.
Voters during the DRC’s last elections in Kinshasa.
Dai Kurokawa/EPA
It’s been an eventful year for the Democratic Republic of Congo as the country prepares for elections.
BBC/Forgiving Earth Ltd/Des Willie
The BBC drama about Rwanda tackles post-genocide events in a way few dramas or documentaries have done before.
The Yazidis – targeted by Islamic State.
EPA-EFE/Gailan Haji
There is an urgent need for a binding convention for the prohibition of violence against women.
A new short drug treatment for tuberculosis, called BPaMZ, is showing promise in trials.
(The National Center for Tuberculosis and Lung Disease (Georgia) on behalf of TB Alliance)
We cannot end TB with century-old technologies and poor quality care. It is time to reinvent the way we are managing TB, and overcome our collective failures of the imagination.
Mountain and lowland gorillas are vulnerable to malaria.
Zoos Victoria
Malaria can be transmitted from humans to gorillas, with devastating effects.
Yazidi children hold pictures of Nadia Murad, one of two winners of the 2018 Nobel Peace Prize, in Duhok, Iraq, Oct. 5, 2018.
REUTERS/Ari Jalal
With the 2018 Nobel Peace Prize awarded to two leaders who fight against sexual violence as a tool of war, we looked into our archive to find stories about those efforts across the globe.
Ebola vaccination team member administering Ebola vaccine in Beni, North Kivu, DRC.
UNICEF/MARK NAFTALIN HANDOUT
The Democratic Republic of the Congo has been hit with another Ebola outbreak. This may be the test case for how to deal with future outbreaks.
Congolese women march to government offices in the Bunia, Eastern DRC to mark International Women’s Day.
Stephen Morrison/EPA
Women in the DRC are much more than victims of violence and coming together to effect change.
Chased from mining sites, rebels simply try to control roads in the DRC.
Peer Schouten
The DRC’s roads are a crucial space where conflict, illegal taxation, and conflict financing entangle.
Anti-Joseph Kabila protesters left five people dead and scores injured in Kinshasa.
Robert Carrubba/EPA-EFE
Emmanuel Shadary is President Joseph Kabila’s preferred presidential candidate meaning that Kabila could remain in power if not in office.
A global survey claims South Africans don’t trust their police.
EPA/Nic Bothma
The Law and Order Index says South Africans feel less secure than people in Yemen, the DRC and Libya, countries all affected by violent conflict.
Voting in the presidential run-off elections in Mali, recently.
EPA/Tanya Bindra
In Africa, biased media coverage is one of the reasons voters have little faith in credible elections.
Jean-Pierre Bemba wants to be president of the DRC.
Herwig Vergult/EPA
Jean-Pierre Bemba is a man with a past. Once accused of crimes against humanity, he is now making a play for the DRC’s presidency.
Jean-Pierre Bemba Gombo (right) in the ICC courtroom during his trial in 2016.
EPA/Michael Kooren
Sexual violence, a staple of war, has long been absent from international criminal law’s charge sheets.
President Kabila’s time in government has shown an inability to bring together the various ethnic groups.
EPA/Michael Kappeler
African leaders need to acknowledge the gravity of the Congo crisis and apply pressure on Kabila.
The head of the UN mission in Congo William Swing (second left) in 2003.
EPA PHOTO/Marco Longari
The UN promotes local ownership in peace building, which is difficult to achieve.
Morocco’s World Cup squad training in St.Petersburg, Russia.
Anatoly Maltsev/EPA
The football world cup offers a useful chance to consider the apparent division between North and sub-Saharan Africa.
Egenie told her story for her father whom she describes as her friend and mentor.
Author supplied
Wider access to technology has increased possibilities to share stories via digital means.