The 2026 PHC Congress is here. The question is simple: Will you be part of redefining the future of primary health care (PHC) in Africa?
This is your moment to connect with leaders shaping PHC policy and build partnerships that extend beyond the Congress ~ @daktari1.
Join us at the @AmrefUniversity in Nairobi, 4–6 March. Registration is closing soon.
Learn more and register now: https://t.co/CSfQAHzjiq
"Who gave NATO the right to execute Gaddafi?"
Libya was the only debt-free nation until NATO’s bombs turned it into a wrecked state.
Putin has been throwing this question in the West’s face for years.
Africa’s most important resource is its people. Yet African nations consistently refuse to invest enough in their citizens.
This has led to a culturally, economically and politically crippling drain of talent to other parts of the world, especially the West.
Not satisfied with the precious minerals beneath its soil, the West also extracts Africa’s best and brightest, and African leaders – for reasons best known to them – continue to do next to nothing about this. But in the domain of sports, one African nation is making a difference. It is choosing to invest in its own infrastructure and incentivise its talented sons and daughters across the African diaspora to come back home.
This is the success story of Morocco’s football revolution.
June 1977: Kenya’s Finance Minister, Mwai Kibaki, announced that despite the collapse of the East African Community, the nation’s economy would still move forward.
The impact was immediate. Transport routes were disrupted, and familiar trade lines went silent.
Truth bombs to the leaders of the West…
“What kind of people will wake up in the morning to go and make weapons to kill people?”
-Joshua Maponga, Zimbabwian author
This is Sabrina Gonzalez Pasterski.
Not a TikTok dance.
Not a reality show.
Just pure, unfiltered brilliance doing impossible things before most of us even pick a major 🤯✈️
The magnificent Karuru Falls located in Nyandarua County, specifically within the Aberdares National Park is the tallest waterfall in Kenya.
It has a height of 273 metres staggered in three tiers. First one is 117m, second 26m and the third is 130m below the viewing point.
The falls is surrounded by tall green indigenous trees, making it one of the most unique in the country. It attracts a good number of visitors both domestic & international as it is home to unique wildlife and vegetation, offering a double treat.
Cooking will never take me to the Olympics, every prime has its pinnacle. This’s my second prime but deep down I am still an athlete and sports ethos are what define my day to day approach to life, work and values.