Anne Nzouankeu in Minawao, Cameroon, has this report narrated by Moki Edwin Kindzeka.
Nigeria’s women activists were on the frontline in last year's mass protests against police brutality but say they do not always get the same recognition as their male counterparts. From Abuja, reporter Timothy Obiezu looks at the role of Nigerian women activists.
And media access has been closed to over a million IDPs living in official camps. Reporter Henry Wilkins follows a day in the life of one such 'invisible' IDP in this report from Ouagadougou.
Facial recognition technology is playing an increasingly important role in helping law enforcement with criminal investigations, police say. But civil rights advocates are raising the alarm about its power and potential abuse of people’s privacy. VOA’s Julie Taboh has more.
Iranians go to the polls Friday to choose a new president. But with international monitors banned, critics say the election is far from being free or fair – and as Henry Ridgwell reports, public discontent could lead to a low voter turnout.
VOA Pentagon correspondent Carla Babb made a stop on the carrier as the only reporter traveling with the head of the U.S. Central Command.
Franco Puglisi reports from Pretoria, South Africa.
And, as Mohamed Sheikh Nor reports from Mogadishu, Somali officials say Syrian refugees are enriching the host nation culturally and economically.
Linda Gradstein reports for VOA from Jerusalem.
Digital images of fake people--that look real--are being sold online by the thousands. Deana Mitchell explores the issue
Sexual and gender minorities continue to suffer discrimination and harassment around the world. But in Yogyakarta, Indonesia some transgender women are finding solace in religious teachings, as reported by VOA's Rendy Wicaksana.
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