October 24, 2025
October 22, 2025
October 17, 2025
Featured Article

Mental Health: An African Taboo

By Kelvin Innocent Msika

Mental health in East Africa remains highly stigmatized and under-addressed, especially among youths. Challenges include cultural taboos, limited resources, and a shortage of professionals. Community-based, culturally aware approaches, individual care, proper record-keeping, and supportive policies are essential. Improving mental health is both a human right and a key driver of socio-economic development and Sustainable Development Goals in the region.

Featured Article

Sudan’s Mental Health Crisis

By Suha AbdelRahman

The ongoing war in Sudan has triggered a severe mental health crisis, worsening pre-existing gaps in the country’s fragile healthcare system. Hospitals and mental health services have collapsed, leaving vulnerable populations, especially women, children, and the elderly, without support. Immediate and sustained local and international action is essential to rebuild services, address trauma, and support Sudan’s most affected populations.

Featured Article

Digital Traps: How Sudan’s War Creates Online Exploitation Risks

By Editor

Since April 2023, Sudan’s war has fueled severe human exploitation. Criminal networks exploit Facebook, WhatsApp, and Telegram to lure people—especially boys—into trafficking, forced labor, or armed recruitment, while women face hidden sexual abuse. Missed warning signs make digital literacy and vigilance essential, alongside frameworks like Sudan’s 2021 anti-trafficking plan.

Featured Article

Feminism and Women’s Reality in East Africa: A Sudanese Perspective

By Albashir Dahab

From Khartoum to Nairobi, Kampala, and Asmara, women face shared struggles against political violence and weak legal protection. Despite harsh contexts, they have devised cross-border forms of resistance, demonstrating that the feminist struggle is a collective project for peace and justice.