Tag Archives: Gaddafi

Africa Re-Union Debuts at FNB Art Joburg: Africa Turns the Map, the Table and the Story

JOHANNESBURG, South Africa, 9 September 2025/African Media Agency (AMA)/- The Africa Re-Union, a landmark artistic initiative, is to be unveiled at the FNB Art Joburg, transforming the fair into a stage of reclamation and imagination, where art became manifesto and memory became movement. It reverses the context of the infamous 1884 Berlin Conference — where Africa was carved and divided without consent — by restoring the continent as author of its own story and architect of its own destiny.

Conceived and co-created by pan-African thinker and founder of Brand Africa, Thebe Ikalafeng, realised on canvas by South African artist Mark Modimola, and anchored in history by Professor Kwesi DLS Prah, the Africa Re-Union is not simply an artwork but a provocative declaration to reimagine the African story and history.

The monumental 3m x 2m canvas inverts Africa—literally and philosophically—using the

Equal Earth projection to restore the continent’s true scale and dignity. Rendered without

borders, it corrects centuries of cartographic distortion that made Africa appear small, coinciding with Africa No Filter, Speak Up Africa and the African Union’s recent call to rectify the misrepresentation of Africa in global maps. The work amplifies the broader Correct the Map campaign, a movement that challenges outdated cartography and calls for equal-area maps that restore Africa’s true size, scale, and significance in the world, and Brand Africa’s broader mission to contribute to the AU 2063 agenda for an integrated, peaceful, and prosperous Africa.

At the heart of the work stands a round table — because here there is no hierarchy, every voice matters equally. Seated are some of the diverse and impactful voices that have shaped Africa’s past and are re-imagining its future: Ghana’s founding president Kwame Nkrumah, Kenyan environmental advocate Wangari Maathai, South Africa’s Nelson Mandela, the frontline independence leaders Julius Nyerere and Kenneth Kaunda, host of hte founding of the OAU, Haile Selassie, Cabo Verde and Guinea Bissau’s Amílcar Cabral, Senegalese thought leaders Léopold Senghor and Cheikh Anta Diop, proponent of the United States of Africa, Muammar Gaddafi, Nigerian writer, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, youth activist Zulaikha Patel, the diaspora W.E.B. Du Bois, Dambisa Moyo and freed slave Sojourner Truth, South African sanusis, South African singer, Mirriam Makeba, the first artist to address the United Nations in 1963, cultural activist and sanusi, Credo Mutwa, pan-African advocate for a brand-led renaissance and convenor, Thebe Ikalafeng, and advocate of the African renaissance, former South African president, Thabo Mbeki. Their presence affirms that Africa’s story has always had authors—even when unrecognised. It’s a gathering of the diaspora, the enslaved whose voices were stolen, the revolutionaries and artists, the freedom fighters and feminists, writers, sanusis, and youth across the private and public sectors and the civil service. Together, they embody the unfinished conversation of Africa’s identity, memory and destiny.

One chair is left empty at the table. It is the most important seat of all — a call to action. It belongs to the unborn child who will inherit this Africa, the ancestor whose spirit still hovers, the diaspora longing to remain rooted, and every African alive today who must rise, sit, and take their rightful place at the table of history. The empty chair is not absence; it is invitation.

In a symbolic act of permanence, the original canvas will not be sold. Ikalafeng has instead gifted it to the UNISA Art Gallery, ensuring the work lives where Africa’s future is being studied and shaped. At the largest university on the continent, Africa Re-Union will be preserved not as a commodity, but as a covenant — a manifesto for generations to come. Only 2063 signed limited reproductions will be made available to ensure the conversation goes far. The number is a reminder of the AU agenda 2063 for an integrated, peaceful and prosperous Africa.

“The Africa Re-Union is not a return to the 1884 Berlin Conference table, but the setting of our own table: equal, sovereign, and unapologetically African. It is both remembrance and declaration: Africa is whole again. This time, no one will define us but us,” says Thebe Ikalafeng, Conceptual Author and Chief Curator of the Africa Re-Union.

“For me, Africa Re-Union is about shifting the canvas of our imagination. It’s to challenge how we see ourselves and how the world sees us; not as fragmented, diminished, or peripheral, but as whole, central and sovereign. This work is both a mirror and a map, and reflects our past, but points us toward a future we must author ourselves,” says Mark Modimola, Visual Artist of the Africa Re-Union.

“Johannesburg has always been a city of convergence, where Africa meets the world. To host the Africa Re-Union at FNB Art Joburg affirms our city’s role as a crucible of ideas, creativity and cultural leadership. This is more than an artwork — it is a call to re-centre Africa in history and in the future,” said Vuyisile Mshudulu, Director of Arts, Culture and Heritage for the City of Johannesburg.

“Correcting the map is about more than geography. It’s about dignity. The way Africa is represented shapes how the world sees us, and how we see ourselves. The Africa Re-Union is a bold and creative way of reclaiming that story, insisting that Africa is seen in its true scale, power and possibility,” said Moky Makura, Executive Director of Africa No Filter.

The Africa Re-Union was unveiled at the 18th FNB Joburg Art Fair opening night, in a live performance led by celebrated actor Aubrey Poo and acclaimed poet Napo Mashiane, with costumes designed by award-winning wardrobe stylist, Sheli Masondo. The performance re-imagines the infamous 1884 Berlin Conference, but this time with African agency, voice, and vision at the table.

The Africa Re-Union, part of the broader Correct the Map campaign, a movement that challenges outdated cartography and calls for equal-area maps that restore Africa’s true size, scale and significance in the world launched in partnership with the Johannesburg Art Gallery (JAG) and Africa No Filter, and supported by Brand South Africa, comes at a historic moment. At a time when Africa No Filter, Speak Up Africa and the African Union have called for the world to redress centuries of distorted representations of Africa’s size in global maps, and as the continent prepares to host its first-ever G20 Summit in 2025, the initiative is a milestone in Africa’s growing agency on the international stage.

The Africa Re-Union is a timely reminder that Africa’s voice, creativity and unity are central to creating a Better Africa for a Better World.

Distributed by African Media Agency on behalf of Africa Re-Union

MEDIA CONTACT: 

South Africa

Maria McCloy

(+27) 082 340 0262

mccloypr@gmail.com

International

Eloine Barry

(+255) 07 49 012 888 

eloine.barry@amediaagency.com

UK

Moky Makura

(+44 7939 485160)

moky@africanofilter.org

Thebe Ikalafeng

(+27 82 447 9130)

thebe@brand.africa

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Libya: UN announces “truce committee” as ceasefire holds after violence clashes in Tripoli

Relative quiet has returned to Libya’s capital Tripoli, after violent clashes between rival militia groups caused chaos in the city last week. 

Fighting erupted on 12 May following the killing of Abdel Ghani al-Kikli, the commander of the Stability Support Authority (SSA), one of the most powerful militias in the country.

Al-Kikli, also known as “Gheniwa”, had been accused of war crimes and human rights violations by Amnesty International. He was reportedly killed in a facility run by rival group 444 Brigade.

The clashes that ensued were some of Tripoli’s heaviest in years and killed at least 8 civilians, according to the United Nations.  

The Libyan government announced a ceasefire on 14 May. In a statement on Sunday, the UN Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL) said a “truce committee” had been established to protect civilians and ensure the permanence of the ceasefire. 

Libya has known little stability since the 2011 uprising that plunged the country into civil war and resulted in the death of longtime autocrat Muammar Gaddafi

Eastern Libya is run by a Tobruk-based government under the de facto leadership of military chief Khalifa Haftar, who commands the Libyan National Army.

Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibah leads the Government of National Unity which controls the west of the country and has been recognised by the UN Security Council since 2021. 

Disagreements between rival factions have prevented the organisation of elections, and Dbeibah has remained in power since then. 

Hundreds of protesters gathered in Tripoli on 16 May to demand the removal of Dbeibah and his government, and to call for elections.  

Demonstrators have accused Dbeibah of failing to restore stability and of being complicit in the growing power of armed groups. At least three ministers resigned following these calls. 

Prime Minister Dbeibah has since promised to eliminate militias and corruption in the country. 

“We will not spare anyone who continues to engage in corruption or extortion. Our goal is to create a Libya free of militias and corruption”, he said in a televised speech on Saturday.

Source: Africanews

Libya: Presidential bid of Gaddafi’s son sparks controversy

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The presidential bid of the son of former Libyan leader, Muamar Gaddafi has sparked controversy in the North African nation.

Saif al-Islam Gaddafi has announced he is running for president in next month’s elections.

The election commission said on Sunday that Seif al-Islam completed “all the required legal conditions”.

Seif al-Islam Gaddafi “submitted… his candidacy for the presidential election to the High National Electoral Commission office in the city of Sebha,” it said in a statement.

This will be Libya’s first ever direct presidential election, with a first round slatted for December 24.

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This election would mark the end of a process launched last year by the United Nations to try and bring an end to years of violence in Libya since the 2011 revolt.

Pictures showing Seif al-Islam dressed in a traditional bedouin robe and headdress were released by the election commission. He was then issued with a voter registration card for the southern Sebha district.

Saif Gaddafi

Libya has already opened registration for candidates in presidential and parliamentary polls.

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Seif al-Islam who has a PhD from the London School of Economics was considered a reformer while his father was alive and in charge of the country.

But amid the 2011 protests in Libya, his status as a reformer collapsed when he backed his father’s reaction towards the protesters.

When his father was killed Saif al-Islam Gaddafi was held for six years. He received a death sentence but was later overturned.

He is still wanted on war crimes charges by the International Criminal Court.

On Monday though Libya’s military prosecutor said Mr Gaddafi’s presidential bid should be put on hold until his alleged crimes are fully investigated.

In July this year Seif al-Islam told The New York Times that he was planning a political comeback to “restore the lost unity” of Libya after a decade of chaos.

“I’ve been away from the Libyan people for 10 years. You need to come back slowly, slowly. Like a striptease. You need to play with their minds a little,” the paper quoted him as saying.

Source: Africafeeds.com

Source: Africa Feeds

Libya: Gaddafi’s son released from prison

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The third son of the former Libyan leader, Muammar Gaddafi, has been released from jail in the capital Tripoli.

He has been in prison since 2014 when he was arrested and put on trial after fleeing the when his father was toppled in 2011.

Sa’adi Gaddafi was commander of Libya’s Special Forces. He fled to Niger when his father was overthrown and killed.

He was then extradited back to Libya, put on trial where he was found not guilty of a series of crimes including murder.

Libya’s Government of National Unity said in a statement that the release of Gaddafi would help national reconciliation.

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Shortly after his release, Mr Gaddafi though boarded a private jet and flew to Istanbul.

In 2018 a Libyan appeals court though cleared Mr. Gaddafi of charges of murdering a footballer before Libya’s 2011 uprising.

Saadi Gaddafi under his father had a career as a footballer in Libya and Italy.

Libya has been torn apart after the overthrow of Muammar Gaddafi with two factions controlling the country.

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There have been violence and instability in parts of the country with efforts to restore peace still ongoing.

Libya: Nigerian man set on fire at Tripoli factory

Source: Africafeeds.com

Source: Africa Feeds