Bantu Gazette

Bantu Gazette
  • Energy & Trade
  • Finance
  • Health
  • Politics & Economy
  • Technology
  • Environment
  • Feature
  • Opinion
  • Changemakers
  • Tourism & Culture
  • Sports
  • Magazine
Menu
  • Black Frame Studio
  • Magazine

Ballots and Diversity: Electoral Power in a Changing Africa

How Africa’s diverse electorates can use the power of the vote to demand accountability, reject division, and shape a more unified future

Ballots and Diversity: Electoral Power in a Changing Africa
Vitalis Manjongby Vitalis Manjong
September 23, 2025
Reading Time: 5 mins read

Ballots and Diversity: Electoral Power in a Changing Africa

How Africa’s diverse electorates can use the power of the vote to demand accountability, reject division, and shape a more unified future

Ballots and Diversity: Electoral Power in a Changing Africa
Ballots and Diversity: Electoral Power in a Changing Africa
Vitalis Manjongby Vitalis Manjong
December 7, 2025
Reading Time: 5 mins read

Africa has often found itself in the headlines for the wrong reasons during and after elections, with disputed results, post-election violence, and democratic backsliding that undermine the continent’s progress.

In 2007, Kenya teetered on the edge of chaos as ethnic politics turned neighbor against neighbor. Sadly, this was not an isolated incident. From West to East, the continent’s diversity, often seen as a strength, has often been twisted into a tool for ideological battles, ethnic mobilization, vote buying and clientelism.

As countries like Cameroon, Ivory Coast, the Central African Republic, Malawi, Seychelles, and Tanzania go to the polls before the end of 2025, the stakes could not be higher. The ballot box remains one of the most powerful tools Africans have to shape their future. How that power is used or misused will determine whether elections become a bridge to unity or a trigger for division.

Diversity has long been manipulated as a divide-and-rule tactic. Citizens must understand the real power of a single vote and how it can be used to reward good leadership and punish bad governance.

Elections Sit at the Heart of Democracy

Elections give people the chance to choose leaders who will make decisions and policies on their behalf. For citizens to choose leaders who are accountable, they need to be well-informed. They must ask whether their lives have improved and understand what each candidate stands for.

In much of Africa, however, politics is still shaped more by ethnicity and tribal loyalty than by ideas and policies. Ethnic identity offers an easy shortcut for voters, and politicians know how to exploit it.

Take Cameroon. The Anglophone crisis in the Northwest and Southwest regions has laid bare the divide between French- and English-speaking communities, deepening political grievances along ethnic lines.

Tribalism has also been used as a tool of exclusion, with opposition leader Maurice Kamto often sidelined. As the October 2025 election approaches, the contest is being framed less as a clash of visions and more as a showdown between Paul Biya’s Bulu group, in power since 1982, and Kamto’s Bamileke community.

This pattern repeats itself across the continent. In Kenya, politics has long revolved around the rivalry between Luos and Kikuyus. In Rwanda and Burundi, the Tutsi-Hutu divide has left deep scars. In Sudan and beyond, tensions between Arabs and Black Africans continue to fuel unrest. These divisions have been manipulated not only to sow discord but also to shape voting behavior.

Do Africa’s younger generations understand the power of one vote? Africa is changing, with young people increasingly educated and globally connected. Still, one core truth defines democracy. Each citizen has a single vote. The question is not whether you have that vote but how you choose to use it.

That single vote can be cast in many ways. You can give it to a candidate simply because they share your tribe or religion. You can sell it for cash, a bag of rice, a can of sardines, or the promise of a government job. Or, more meaningfully, you can cast it as a judgment based on what leaders have delivered and what they promise for the future.

Across much of Africa, voting has too often been reduced to ethnicity, patronage, and personal gain. Rather than using the ballot box to hold leaders accountable, many citizens fall back on identity politics or short-term benefits. The result is predictable: leaders win without presenting coherent manifestos or credible policies. Citizens then find it difficult to hold them accountable because their votes were never anchored in ideas to begin with.

Reclaiming the Vote Through Accountability and Action

History offers a clear reminder. In Kenya, it took opposition parties nearly a decade to unite against Daniel arap Moi’s entrenched regime. Why? Because party leaders focused on protecting tribal interests instead of rallying around a common political program. That failure allowed the government to exploit divisions and weaken the opposition, prolonging authoritarian rule. Without clear manifestos and shared platforms, opposition politics became a scramble for ethnic loyalty rather than a contest of ideas.

This is where the true power of a single vote comes in. When citizens read manifestos, demand clarity on policies, and vote based on vision rather than identity, they create the conditions for accountability. A vote grounded in policy forces leaders to serve the nation, not just their tribe or their patrons.

Africa’s rising generation has the education, the tools, and the civic awareness to make this shift. The question is whether they will use their votes to demand change or continue to surrender them to the old cycles of ethnicity and clientelism.

A single vote may seem small, but when cast wisely, it becomes the foundation of democratic accountability. The future of African democracy rests on meaningful elections and voters who choose progress over patronage.

We must begin to treat our vote as a powerful weapon, one that can reward good leadership and punish bad governance. When leaders act in their own interests or fail to deliver on their promises, citizens must be prepared to hold them accountable. However, this can only happen if voters have access to policy information, which is typically found in manifestos.

Every election year, we must assess the state of the nation and ask: Did our leaders deliver? Did they stop the war? Did they provide the free education they promised? Did they improve healthcare or infrastructure? Is my economic situation better? If it’s a first-time candidate, we must judge them by their education, work history, and character.

Ultimately, we must employ both prospective and retrospective judgment to select candidates who will serve the country with vision and reject those who rely on identity politics and clientelism.

We live in an era where information is readily available at our fingertips. No leader or party can hide their record. In a continent as diverse and vibrant as ours, our votes must not be traded for loyalty or tribe, but cast for those who deliver water, build roads, grow the economy, protect our security, and keep the lights on.

Leaders who stoke division weaken the very foundation of our future. Every election is our chance to reward courage and punish failure, to choose unity over division, progress over stagnation. As Ellen Johnson Sirleaf once said, “Ethnicity should enrich us; it should make us a unique people in our diversity and not be used to divide us.”

 


Vitalis Manjong


Vitalis Manjong
is a governance and policy expert who holds master’s degrees in international relations from Hacettepe University in Turkey and in governance, development, and public policy from the University of Sussex in England. He serves as executive director of SINEM Afrique Medical and has facilitated numerous workshops on governance, civic engagement, and entrepreneurship. His research focuses on policy and governance in post-conflict settings.

Get the inside Story

Stay informed on the stories shaping Africa’s future. Get breaking news, in-depth analysis, opinions and exclusive insights from across the continent delivered to your inbox, free and unfiltered.


Get in touch for more:
Felix Tih
Editorial Director, Bantu Gazette
WhatsApp
LinkedIn
X (Twitter)
Instagram

Related Posts

Ghana Battles to Save Cocoa Industry as Production Falls to 20-Year Low
Perspectives

Ghana, Côte d’Ivoire Deepen Cocoa Price Coordination to Shield Farmers from Market Swings

June 25, 2026
Intra-African Trade Holds the Key to Fertilizer Access Across the Continent
Agriculture & Trade

Intra-African Trade Holds the Key to Fertilizer Access Across the Continent

June 27, 2026
Africa’s Fertilizer Dependence is an Industrial Problem with Industrial Solutions
Agriculture & Trade

Africa’s Fertilizer Dependence is an Industrial Problem with Industrial Solutions

June 18, 2026
Bantu Gazette
Perspectives

Africa Is Speaking for Itself

May 29, 2026
African Capital Must Lead Before Foreign Investment Will Follow
Perspectives

African Capital Must Lead Before Foreign Investment Will Follow

June 15, 2026
As Africa Asserts Resource Sovereignty, Europe Responds with Fortified Borders
Perspectives

As Africa Asserts Resource Sovereignty, Europe Responds with Fortified Borders

April 7, 2026

Most Recent

Kenya Opens Government Debt Market to Global Investors Through Clearstream Link
Finance

Kenya Opens Government Debt Market to Global Investors Through Clearstream Link

by Waceke Nganga
June 27, 2026
0

The link will allow foreign investors to buy and hold Kenyan Treasury securities without opening local custody accounts, potentially increasing...

Read moreDetails
Gender Equality Progress Hinges on Implementation, Not New Policies, Experts Warn

Gender Equality Progress Hinges on Implementation, Not New Policies, Experts Warn

June 26, 2026
East Africa Moves to Deepen Cross-Border Financial Integration

East Africa Moves to Deepen Cross-Border Financial Integration

June 26, 2026
Ghana Battles to Save Cocoa Industry as Production Falls to 20-Year Low

Ghana, Côte d’Ivoire Deepen Cocoa Price Coordination to Shield Farmers from Market Swings

June 25, 2026
Intra-African Trade Holds the Key to Fertilizer Access Across the Continent

Intra-African Trade Holds the Key to Fertilizer Access Across the Continent

June 27, 2026
Côte d’Ivoire Calls for Building a Citizen-Friendly Public Service

Côte d’Ivoire Calls for Building a Citizen-Friendly Public Service

June 25, 2026
Kenyan Fintech WapiPay Secures Canadian License in North American Push

Kenyan Fintech WapiPay Secures Canadian License in North American Push

June 22, 2026
Kenya Opens Government Debt Market to Global Investors Through Clearstream Link
Finance

Kenya Opens Government Debt Market to Global Investors Through Clearstream Link

by Waceke Nganga
Reading Time: 2 mins read
June 27, 2026
0

The link will allow foreign investors to buy and hold Kenyan Treasury securities without opening local custody accounts, potentially increasing...

Read moreDetails
Gender Equality Progress Hinges on Implementation, Not New Policies, Experts Warn
Changemakers

Gender Equality Progress Hinges on Implementation, Not New Policies, Experts Warn

by Felix Tih
Reading Time: 3 mins read
June 26, 2026
0

Gender equality advocates have called on African governments to shift their focus from developing new gender policies to effectively implementing...

Read moreDetails
East Africa Moves to Deepen Cross-Border Financial Integration
Finance

East Africa Moves to Deepen Cross-Border Financial Integration

by Amani Mwakalebela
Reading Time: 2 mins read
June 26, 2026
0

African Development Fund backs regional initiative with $9 million grant to strengthen capital markets and payment systems across nine countries

Read moreDetails

Ballots and Diversity: Electoral Power in a Changing Africa

How Africa’s diverse electorates can use the power of the vote to demand accountability, reject division, and shape a more unified future

Ballots and Diversity: Electoral Power in a Changing Africa

Africa has often found itself in the headlines for the wrong reasons during and after elections, with disputed results, post-election violence, and democratic backsliding that undermine the continent’s progress.

In 2007, Kenya teetered on the edge of chaos as ethnic politics turned neighbor against neighbor. Sadly, this was not an isolated incident. From West to East, the continent’s diversity, often seen as a strength, has often been twisted into a tool for ideological battles, ethnic mobilization, vote buying and clientelism.

As countries like Cameroon, Ivory Coast, the Central African Republic, Malawi, Seychelles, and Tanzania go to the polls before the end of 2025, the stakes could not be higher. The ballot box remains one of the most powerful tools Africans have to shape their future. How that power is used or misused will determine whether elections become a bridge to unity or a trigger for division.

Diversity has long been manipulated as a divide-and-rule tactic. Citizens must understand the real power of a single vote and how it can be used to reward good leadership and punish bad governance.

Elections Sit at the Heart of Democracy

Elections give people the chance to choose leaders who will make decisions and policies on their behalf. For citizens to choose leaders who are accountable, they need to be well-informed. They must ask whether their lives have improved and understand what each candidate stands for.

In much of Africa, however, politics is still shaped more by ethnicity and tribal loyalty than by ideas and policies. Ethnic identity offers an easy shortcut for voters, and politicians know how to exploit it.

Take Cameroon. The Anglophone crisis in the Northwest and Southwest regions has laid bare the divide between French- and English-speaking communities, deepening political grievances along ethnic lines.

Tribalism has also been used as a tool of exclusion, with opposition leader Maurice Kamto often sidelined. As the October 2025 election approaches, the contest is being framed less as a clash of visions and more as a showdown between Paul Biya’s Bulu group, in power since 1982, and Kamto’s Bamileke community.

This pattern repeats itself across the continent. In Kenya, politics has long revolved around the rivalry between Luos and Kikuyus. In Rwanda and Burundi, the Tutsi-Hutu divide has left deep scars. In Sudan and beyond, tensions between Arabs and Black Africans continue to fuel unrest. These divisions have been manipulated not only to sow discord but also to shape voting behavior.

Do Africa’s younger generations understand the power of one vote? Africa is changing, with young people increasingly educated and globally connected. Still, one core truth defines democracy. Each citizen has a single vote. The question is not whether you have that vote but how you choose to use it.

That single vote can be cast in many ways. You can give it to a candidate simply because they share your tribe or religion. You can sell it for cash, a bag of rice, a can of sardines, or the promise of a government job. Or, more meaningfully, you can cast it as a judgment based on what leaders have delivered and what they promise for the future.

Across much of Africa, voting has too often been reduced to ethnicity, patronage, and personal gain. Rather than using the ballot box to hold leaders accountable, many citizens fall back on identity politics or short-term benefits. The result is predictable: leaders win without presenting coherent manifestos or credible policies. Citizens then find it difficult to hold them accountable because their votes were never anchored in ideas to begin with.

Reclaiming the Vote Through Accountability and Action

History offers a clear reminder. In Kenya, it took opposition parties nearly a decade to unite against Daniel arap Moi’s entrenched regime. Why? Because party leaders focused on protecting tribal interests instead of rallying around a common political program. That failure allowed the government to exploit divisions and weaken the opposition, prolonging authoritarian rule. Without clear manifestos and shared platforms, opposition politics became a scramble for ethnic loyalty rather than a contest of ideas.

This is where the true power of a single vote comes in. When citizens read manifestos, demand clarity on policies, and vote based on vision rather than identity, they create the conditions for accountability. A vote grounded in policy forces leaders to serve the nation, not just their tribe or their patrons.

Africa’s rising generation has the education, the tools, and the civic awareness to make this shift. The question is whether they will use their votes to demand change or continue to surrender them to the old cycles of ethnicity and clientelism.

A single vote may seem small, but when cast wisely, it becomes the foundation of democratic accountability. The future of African democracy rests on meaningful elections and voters who choose progress over patronage.

We must begin to treat our vote as a powerful weapon, one that can reward good leadership and punish bad governance. When leaders act in their own interests or fail to deliver on their promises, citizens must be prepared to hold them accountable. However, this can only happen if voters have access to policy information, which is typically found in manifestos.

Every election year, we must assess the state of the nation and ask: Did our leaders deliver? Did they stop the war? Did they provide the free education they promised? Did they improve healthcare or infrastructure? Is my economic situation better? If it’s a first-time candidate, we must judge them by their education, work history, and character.

Ultimately, we must employ both prospective and retrospective judgment to select candidates who will serve the country with vision and reject those who rely on identity politics and clientelism.

We live in an era where information is readily available at our fingertips. No leader or party can hide their record. In a continent as diverse and vibrant as ours, our votes must not be traded for loyalty or tribe, but cast for those who deliver water, build roads, grow the economy, protect our security, and keep the lights on.

Leaders who stoke division weaken the very foundation of our future. Every election is our chance to reward courage and punish failure, to choose unity over division, progress over stagnation. As Ellen Johnson Sirleaf once said, “Ethnicity should enrich us; it should make us a unique people in our diversity and not be used to divide us.”

 


Vitalis Manjong


Vitalis Manjong
is a governance and policy expert who holds master’s degrees in international relations from Hacettepe University in Turkey and in governance, development, and public policy from the University of Sussex in England. He serves as executive director of SINEM Afrique Medical and has facilitated numerous workshops on governance, civic engagement, and entrepreneurship. His research focuses on policy and governance in post-conflict settings.

Ballots and Diversity: Electoral Power in a Changing Africa

How Africa’s diverse electorates can use the power of the vote to demand accountability, reject division, and shape a more unified future

Ballots and Diversity: Electoral Power in a Changing Africa
Vitalis Manjongby Vitalis Manjong
September 23, 2025

Africa has often found itself in the headlines for the wrong reasons during and after elections, with disputed results, post-election violence, and democratic backsliding that undermine the continent’s progress.

In 2007, Kenya teetered on the edge of chaos as ethnic politics turned neighbor against neighbor. Sadly, this was not an isolated incident. From West to East, the continent’s diversity, often seen as a strength, has often been twisted into a tool for ideological battles, ethnic mobilization, vote buying and clientelism.

As countries like Cameroon, Ivory Coast, the Central African Republic, Malawi, Seychelles, and Tanzania go to the polls before the end of 2025, the stakes could not be higher. The ballot box remains one of the most powerful tools Africans have to shape their future. How that power is used or misused will determine whether elections become a bridge to unity or a trigger for division.

Diversity has long been manipulated as a divide-and-rule tactic. Citizens must understand the real power of a single vote and how it can be used to reward good leadership and punish bad governance.

Elections Sit at the Heart of Democracy

Elections give people the chance to choose leaders who will make decisions and policies on their behalf. For citizens to choose leaders who are accountable, they need to be well-informed. They must ask whether their lives have improved and understand what each candidate stands for.

In much of Africa, however, politics is still shaped more by ethnicity and tribal loyalty than by ideas and policies. Ethnic identity offers an easy shortcut for voters, and politicians know how to exploit it.

Take Cameroon. The Anglophone crisis in the Northwest and Southwest regions has laid bare the divide between French- and English-speaking communities, deepening political grievances along ethnic lines.

Tribalism has also been used as a tool of exclusion, with opposition leader Maurice Kamto often sidelined. As the October 2025 election approaches, the contest is being framed less as a clash of visions and more as a showdown between Paul Biya’s Bulu group, in power since 1982, and Kamto’s Bamileke community.

This pattern repeats itself across the continent. In Kenya, politics has long revolved around the rivalry between Luos and Kikuyus. In Rwanda and Burundi, the Tutsi-Hutu divide has left deep scars. In Sudan and beyond, tensions between Arabs and Black Africans continue to fuel unrest. These divisions have been manipulated not only to sow discord but also to shape voting behavior.

Do Africa’s younger generations understand the power of one vote? Africa is changing, with young people increasingly educated and globally connected. Still, one core truth defines democracy. Each citizen has a single vote. The question is not whether you have that vote but how you choose to use it.

That single vote can be cast in many ways. You can give it to a candidate simply because they share your tribe or religion. You can sell it for cash, a bag of rice, a can of sardines, or the promise of a government job. Or, more meaningfully, you can cast it as a judgment based on what leaders have delivered and what they promise for the future.

Across much of Africa, voting has too often been reduced to ethnicity, patronage, and personal gain. Rather than using the ballot box to hold leaders accountable, many citizens fall back on identity politics or short-term benefits. The result is predictable: leaders win without presenting coherent manifestos or credible policies. Citizens then find it difficult to hold them accountable because their votes were never anchored in ideas to begin with.

Reclaiming the Vote Through Accountability and Action

History offers a clear reminder. In Kenya, it took opposition parties nearly a decade to unite against Daniel arap Moi’s entrenched regime. Why? Because party leaders focused on protecting tribal interests instead of rallying around a common political program. That failure allowed the government to exploit divisions and weaken the opposition, prolonging authoritarian rule. Without clear manifestos and shared platforms, opposition politics became a scramble for ethnic loyalty rather than a contest of ideas.

This is where the true power of a single vote comes in. When citizens read manifestos, demand clarity on policies, and vote based on vision rather than identity, they create the conditions for accountability. A vote grounded in policy forces leaders to serve the nation, not just their tribe or their patrons.

Africa’s rising generation has the education, the tools, and the civic awareness to make this shift. The question is whether they will use their votes to demand change or continue to surrender them to the old cycles of ethnicity and clientelism.

A single vote may seem small, but when cast wisely, it becomes the foundation of democratic accountability. The future of African democracy rests on meaningful elections and voters who choose progress over patronage.

We must begin to treat our vote as a powerful weapon, one that can reward good leadership and punish bad governance. When leaders act in their own interests or fail to deliver on their promises, citizens must be prepared to hold them accountable. However, this can only happen if voters have access to policy information, which is typically found in manifestos.

Every election year, we must assess the state of the nation and ask: Did our leaders deliver? Did they stop the war? Did they provide the free education they promised? Did they improve healthcare or infrastructure? Is my economic situation better? If it’s a first-time candidate, we must judge them by their education, work history, and character.

Ultimately, we must employ both prospective and retrospective judgment to select candidates who will serve the country with vision and reject those who rely on identity politics and clientelism.

We live in an era where information is readily available at our fingertips. No leader or party can hide their record. In a continent as diverse and vibrant as ours, our votes must not be traded for loyalty or tribe, but cast for those who deliver water, build roads, grow the economy, protect our security, and keep the lights on.

Leaders who stoke division weaken the very foundation of our future. Every election is our chance to reward courage and punish failure, to choose unity over division, progress over stagnation. As Ellen Johnson Sirleaf once said, “Ethnicity should enrich us; it should make us a unique people in our diversity and not be used to divide us.”

 


Vitalis Manjong


Vitalis Manjong
is a governance and policy expert who holds master’s degrees in international relations from Hacettepe University in Turkey and in governance, development, and public policy from the University of Sussex in England. He serves as executive director of SINEM Afrique Medical and has facilitated numerous workshops on governance, civic engagement, and entrepreneurship. His research focuses on policy and governance in post-conflict settings.

Get the inside Story

Stay informed on the stories shaping Africa’s future. Get breaking news, in-depth analysis, opinions and exclusive insights from across the continent delivered to your inbox, free and unfiltered.


Get in touch for more:
Felix Tih
Editorial Director, Bantu Gazette
WhatsApp
LinkedIn
X (Twitter)
Instagram

Related Posts

Ghana Battles to Save Cocoa Industry as Production Falls to 20-Year Low

Ghana, Côte d’Ivoire Deepen Cocoa Price Coordination to Shield Farmers from Market Swings

by Felix Tih
June 25, 2026
0

...

Intra-African Trade Holds the Key to Fertilizer Access Across the Continent

Intra-African Trade Holds the Key to Fertilizer Access Across the Continent

by Monica Brown
June 25, 2026
0

...

Africa’s Fertilizer Dependence is an Industrial Problem with Industrial Solutions

Africa’s Fertilizer Dependence is an Industrial Problem with Industrial Solutions

by Monica Brown
June 15, 2026
0

...

Bantu Gazette

Africa Is Speaking for Itself

by Felix Tih
May 25, 2026
0

...

African Capital Must Lead Before Foreign Investment Will Follow

African Capital Must Lead Before Foreign Investment Will Follow

by Felix Tih
May 8, 2026
0

...

As Africa Asserts Resource Sovereignty, Europe Responds with Fortified Borders

As Africa Asserts Resource Sovereignty, Europe Responds with Fortified Borders

by Monica Brown
April 6, 2026
0

...

Kenya Opens Government Debt Market to Global Investors Through Clearstream Link
Finance

Kenya Opens Government Debt Market to Global Investors Through Clearstream Link

by Waceke Nganga
Reading Time: 2 mins read
June 27, 2026
0

The link will allow foreign investors to buy and hold Kenyan Treasury securities without opening local custody accounts, potentially increasing...

Read moreDetails
Gender Equality Progress Hinges on Implementation, Not New Policies, Experts Warn

Gender Equality Progress Hinges on Implementation, Not New Policies, Experts Warn

by Felix Tih
June 26, 2026
0

Gender equality advocates have called on African governments to shift their focus from developing new gender policies to effectively implementing...

East Africa Moves to Deepen Cross-Border Financial Integration

East Africa Moves to Deepen Cross-Border Financial Integration

by Amani Mwakalebela
June 26, 2026
0

African Development Fund backs regional initiative with $9 million grant to strengthen capital markets and payment systems across nine countries

Ghana Battles to Save Cocoa Industry as Production Falls to 20-Year Low

Ghana, Côte d’Ivoire Deepen Cocoa Price Coordination to Shield Farmers from Market Swings

by Felix Tih
June 25, 2026
0

Ghana and Côte d'Ivoire are deepening coordination on cocoa pricing as the world's two largest producers seek to cushion farmers...

Intra-African Trade Holds the Key to Fertilizer Access Across the Continent

Intra-African Trade Holds the Key to Fertilizer Access Across the Continent

by Monica Brown
June 25, 2026
0

Africa's fertilizer strategy depends on regulatory alignment, efficient trade and integrated markets that connect production with farmers across the continent

Next Post
Nigeria Revokes 1,200 Mineral Licenses to Improve Efficiency

Nigeria Revokes 1,200 Mineral Licenses to Improve Efficiency

Africa’s Think Tanks Step Up to Bridge Policy and Action

Africa's Think Tanks Step Up to Bridge Policy and Action

Cheering Crowds Reflect Rwanda’s Spirit at Cycling Worlds

Cheering Crowds Reflect Rwanda’s Spirit at Cycling Worlds

Botswana’s Boko Pushes for Stronger Intra-African Trade

Botswana’s Boko Pushes for Stronger Intra-African Trade

Bantu Gazette is a pioneering news platform that champions Africa's development, culture, and heritage. We spotlight the continent's successes, address its challenges, and provide insightful coverage of events that shape its future.

Bantu Gazette is a pioneering news platform that champions Africa's development, culture, and heritage. We spotlight the continent's successes, address its challenges, and provide insightful coverage of events that shape its future.

Our Platforms

  • Bantu Magazine
  • Bantu Brief
  • Black Frame Studio

Our Services

  • Bantu Agency
  • Advertise
  • Partnerships

Our Services

  • Editorial Director
  • Opportunities
  • Contact

Bantu Gazette is a pioneering news platform that champions Africa's development, culture, and heritage. We spotlight the continent's successes, address its challenges, and provide insightful coverage of events that shape its future.

Our Platforms

  • Bantu Magazine
  • Bantu Brief
  • Black Frame Studio

Our Services

  • Bantu Agency
  • Advertise
  • Partnerships

Our Services

  • Editorial Director
  • Opportunities
  • Contact
Bantu Gazette
  • Energy & Trade
  • Finance
  • Health
  • Politics & Economy
  • Technology
  • Environment
  • Feature
  • Opinion
  • Changemakers
  • Tourism & Culture
  • Magazine