Restrictive laws mean that women resort to unsafe means.
jbdodane/Flickr
In Kenya nearly 120,000 women are treated in health facilities each year for complications arising from unsafe abortions
Damning development.
Wikimedia Commons/Mimi Abebayehu
When the Aral Sea dried up, it was called the “world’s worst environmental disaster”. We’re witnessing its equivalent in Africa.
In Kenya, contraceptive use among teens has been consistently low.
Guzel Gashigullina/Shutterstock
Teenage girls in Kenya who fall pregnant either drop out of school or risk unsafe abortions.
Over 47% of women in Kenya have experienced physical or sexual violence by their partner.
Chaiyapong/Shutterstock
A study in Kenya found that the lower men ranked themselves in society, the more violent they were with their intimate partners.
Nigerians have the lowest trust in the country’s media, thanks to widespread misinformation.
EPA/Ahmed Jallanzo
Disinformation in Africa often takes the form of extreme speech inciting violence and spreading racist, misogynous, xenophobic messages.
New toilet blocks in Mathare Valley informal settlement in Nairobi.
Samantha Winter
Women in developing countries are burdened by the lack of access to proper toilets in their homes, communities, schools and public spaces.
In this 2012 photo, grandmother Janet Kitheka, 63, collects her adopted “granddaughter” Lucy, 13, at the end of the school day in the yard of the Hot Courses Primary School, in the village of Nyumbani which caters to children who lost their parents to HIV, and grandparents who lost their children to HIV in Kenya.
(AP Photo/Ben Curtis)
Research shows that Aspirin could reduce the number of HIV infections in women at high risk for HIV, such as Kenyan female sex workers.
Young Muslims protest in 2012 after the killing of a cleric accused of supporting Al-Shabaab.
EPA/Dai Kurokawa
The jihadi initiative remains a loose political force in Kenya. This is dangerous for a few reasons.
The Nile River during sunset in Luxor, Egypt.
EPA-EFE/Khaled Elfiqi
The threat to use force to defend Egypt’s right to water from the Nile has been a common theme through successive governments.
Cellphones are everywhere in Africa - but that doesn’t mean the digital divide is closing.
Legnan Koula/EPA
We don’t have the data in developing countries, and in global statistics to know if the digital divide is being closed.
Supporters of Kenya’s draft constitution attend a “Yes” campaign rally ahead of the 2010 referendum.
EPA/Dai Kurokawa
Weary Kenyans are entitled to wonder if the latest referendum push will be any different from the past two.
Kenya is ill-prepared for the environmental, health and safety impacts that accompany oil production.
Signature Message/Shutterstock
Kenya must address the needs and priorities of the oil sector in regards to environment, health and safety.
Shutterstock
South Africa and Kenya have some valuable lessons for other African countries on how to finance urban infrastructure development.
About 56% of Kenya’s urban population currently lives in a slum.
Shutterstock/John Wollwerth
The rental housing market in Nairobi’s informal settlements offers its tenant households a perverse market outcome of higher prices for lower quality products
Rift Valley fever is a disease passed from mosquitoes to animals then to people.
Shutterstock
Outbreaks of zoonotic diseases call for a collaborative approach to surveillance.
Private companies can provide services - like catering - for inmates.
LightField Studios/Shutterstock
Turning prisons into a market opportunity could open them up to corruption.
Suicide is increasingly recognised as a global health challenge.
Love the Wind/Shutterstock
Young men in Kenya are more at risk of contemplating suicide if they have friends and family who attempted or have gone through with it.
Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta and Chinese President Xi Jinping prior to a bilateral meeting in Beijing, China.
Etienne Oliveau/EPA/Pool
Kenya has a legal framework that protects its citizens from racism but there are challenges with its implementation
An elephant grazing in Kimana Conservancy, Kenya.
As the Maasai people of Kenya seek to expand their agricultural developments, the lives of one of Africa’s greatest creatures are being severely disrupted.
A herd of Masai giraffe towering over zebras in Ruaha National Park, Tanzania.
Provided by author
The number of giraffes in Africa has dropped by 40% over the past 30 years, but the reasons for this remain largely unknown.