Wednesday, May 20, 2026

African Pygmies: Ancient forest tribes fighting for survival today

 

An image of a small forest‑dwelling family in a Central African rain-forest.
An image of a small forestdwelling family in a Central African rain-forest.


The Pygmy peoples of Central Africa, for thousands of years, have lived deep within the vast rain-forests of the Congo Basin, forming some of the world’s oldest continuous huntergatherer cultures.


The term Pygmy, derived from the Greek word meaning the length of a fist, historically referred to their short stature, but today it represents a diverse group of indigenous communities whose identities are rooted in forest life, spiritual traditions, and ancestral knowledge.


Among the most wellknown groups are the Mbuti of the Democratic Republic of Congo, the Baka of Cameroon, and the Twa of Rwanda, Burundi, and Uganda. Genetic studies suggest that Pygmy populations diverged from other African groups tens of thousands of years ago, making them among the continent’s most ancient lineages.


Their languages, often linked to Bantu-speaking neighbors, carry unique tonal patterns and oral histories that trace back millennia. Early references to Pygmy peoples appear in ancient Egyptian records and in the writings of classical historians such as Herodotus and Strabo, who described forestdwelling communities of unusually small stature living along the equatorial belt.

 

You may also like to read: The untold story that shaped Africa: Power, resistance, and survival


Traditionally, Pygmy societies are seminomadic, moving through the forest in small family bands in search of seasonal fruits, honey, medicinal plants, and game. Hunting is done with bows, arrows, nets, and ingenious traps designed specifically for forest animals.


Their huts, constructed from branches, leaves, and grass, are built quickly and abandoned as the group moves on. Women play a central role in gathering, food preparation, and even constructing shelters, reflecting the matrifocal elements of their social structure.


Despite their deep ecological knowledge, Pygmy communities face increasing threats. Logging companies, mining operations, and agricultural expansion have destroyed large portions of their ancestral forests. As trees fall, so do the foundations of their culture, spirituality, and survival.


Many Pygmy groups have been forcibly displaced, pushed to the edges of towns where they face discrimination, poverty, and exploitation. In some regions, they are denied citizenship rights, access to healthcare, and education, leaving them vulnerable to abuse.


Armed conflict in Central Africa has further endangered these communities. During periods of war, Pygmy groups have been targeted, recruited, or displaced by militias. Humanrights organizations have documented cases of violence, forced labor, and cultural erasure.


As their forest shrinks and modern pressures intensify, their traditional way of life becomes increasingly fragile. Yet, despite these challenges, Pygmy communities continue to demonstrate remarkable resilience. Their music, especially the polyphonic singing of the Mbuti and Baka, is recognized globally for its complexity and beauty.


Their ecological knowledge is invaluable to conservationists seeking sustainable ways to protect the Congo Basin, one of the world’s most important carbon sinks. International advocacy groups are now working to secure land rights, preserve cultural heritage, and ensure that Pygmy voices are included in national policies affecting their future.


The story of Africa’s Pygmy peoples is not only one of ancient origins but also of modern struggle. They remain isolated neighbors in a rapidly changing world, guardians of a forest that is disappearing around them, yet determined to preserve their identity, dignity, and ancestral home.

 

Tuesday, May 19, 2026

LinkedIn is not a gold mine people imagine

 

An image of a professional looking at a laptop screen showing a LinkedIn warning message about leaving the platform, symbolizing restricted traffic flow.

An image of a professional looking at a laptop screen showing a LinkedIn warning message about leaving the platform, symbolizing restricted traffic flow.

 

Many professionals, for years, believed that joining LinkedIn is like discovering a gold mine for business growth, networking, and visibility. The platform markets itself as the world’s largest professional community, a place where opportunities flow and where your content can reach decision-makers across industries.


However, behind this polished image lies a structural problem that most users never talk about: LinkedIn is designed to keep readers inside the platform, not to send traffic to your website, blog, or business. 


It is like you are confined to a prison whereby the only room for entertainment has no television set. Since you can't cross over to another place, you need to stay there. This is not an accident. It is a deliberate design strategy.


The moment you post an article excerpt with a link to your website; LinkedIn immediately replaces your original URL with its own shortened version. 

 

At first glance, this seems harmless. However, the real issue appears when a reader clicks that link. Instead of smoothly opening your article, LinkedIn displays a warning message:

 

“You are leaving LinkedIn to visit a site we don’t know or trust.” For many users, this message triggers fear, hesitation, and doubt. In fact, it discourages about 90% of potential readers from clicking through. 


The result is simple: LinkedIn has become one of the weakest platforms for generating external traffic, even for users who have published hundreds of excerpts of full educating articles.


Your content may receive likes, comments, and impressions, but very few people actually leave LinkedIn to read the full story. The platform benefits from your content, your time, and your engagement, but your website receives almost nothing in return. This raises an important question:


If LinkedIn truly supports professional growth, why discourages users from visiting external websites? The answer lies in platform economics. LinkedIn, like all major social networks, thrives on user retention. 


The longer people stay on the platform, the more ads they see, the more data LinkedIn collects, and the more valuable the platform becomes to advertisers.


Allowing users to freely leave the platform would weaken this ecosystem. So LinkedIn uses subtle friction, warning messages, link replacements, and algorithmic suppression, to keep users inside its walls.


However, this approach comes at a cost. It undermines the very professionals LinkedIn claims to empower. Writers, journalists, entrepreneurs, and creators depend on external traffic to grow their businesses. When LinkedIn blocks that flow, it weakens the value of the platform for those who rely on visibility beyond the LinkedIn feed.


If LinkedIn truly wants to support professionals, here are four improvements the platform should consider:

 

1. Remove the fearbased warning message 

Instead of alarming users, LinkedIn could simply open external links in a new tab, like most platforms do. Trust professionals to decide where they want to go.

 

2. Improve the algorithm to support external content 

LinkedIn currently suppresses posts with external links. A fairer system would allow creators to share their work without penalty.

 

3. Introduce a “Trusted Publisher” badge 

Verified authors, journalists, and businesses could be exempt from link warnings, improving credibility and traffic flow.

 

4. Provide analytics for outbound clicks 

Creators deserve to know how many people visit their websites. Transparency builds trust.

 

LinkedIn has the potential to be a truly powerful platform for global professionals. However, to achieve that, it must stop treating external websites as threats and start recognizing them as extensions of the professional ecosystem. 

 

Until then, the belief that LinkedIn is a gold mine for business growth will remain a myth, one that benefits the platform far more than the users who keep it alive.

Sierra Leone’s Kush drug crisis: A growing national tragedy unfolding

 

An image of a distressed young man sitting alone near a rundown urban street in Freetown, symbolizing the human impact of the Kush drug crisis in Sierra Leone.
An image of a distressed young man sitting alone near a rundown urban street in Freetown, symbolizing the human impact of the Kush drug crisis in Sierra Leone.

 

Sierra Leone is confronting one of the most devastating social crises in its modern history: the rapid spread of Kush, a cheap, highly addictive synthetic drug that is destroying the lives of young people across the country.


What began as a quiet, underground substance has now exploded into a national emergency, overwhelming families, communities, and the already fragile healthcare system.


The crisis is so severe that it has become impossible to walk through parts of Freetown, Makeni, Bo, or Kenema without seeing young men collapsed on sidewalks, trembling in corners, or wandering aimlessly in a daze.


Sierra Leoneans everywhere, at home and abroad, are watching in fear as an entire generation slips away. Kush is not a single substance but a dangerous cocktail of chemicals, often mixed with opioids, sedatives, and even toxic industrial materials.


Its exact composition changes from batch to batch, making it unpredictable and deadly. Hospitals report cases of severe organ damage, respiratory failure, and sudden death. Some users have collapsed and died within minutes of smoking it.


Others suffer long-term neurological damage, leaving them unable to speak, walk, or recognize their own families. Parents describe the agony of watching their once-promising children become unrecognizable shadows of themselves.


You may also like to read: Building the future of war affected children in Sierra Leone


The economic roots of the crisis run deep. With unemployment high and opportunities scarce, many young people turn to Kush as an escape from hopelessness. Dealers exploit this vulnerability, selling the drug cheaply and aggressively. Meanwhile, critics argue that the government’s response has been slow and inconsistent.


While small-time dealers and users are frequently arrested, the major suppliers, the real architects of the crisis, remain untouched. This has fueled public anger and suspicion, with many Sierra Leoneans demanding a more transparent and forceful crackdown on the networks behind the drug’s distribution.


The social consequences are equally alarming. Families are being torn apart as parents struggle to manage addicted children who become violent, unpredictable, or mentally unstable. Communities report rising theft, street violence, and homelessness linked to Kush addiction. Schools are losing students.


Workplaces are losing young labor. The nation is losing its future. Religious leaders, civil society groups, and activists have launched awareness campaigns, but the scale of the crisis requires far more than community effort. It demands a coordinated national strategy, one that addresses not only law enforcement but also rehabilitation, mental health support, and economic opportunity.


Yet amid the despair, there are stories of resilience. Some former users, after surviving near-death experiences, now speak publicly about the dangers of Kush, hoping to save others. Local NGOs are opening small rehabilitation centers, though they remain underfunded and overwhelmed.


Sierra Leoneans in the diaspora are raising their voices, calling for urgent international support to help the country confront this growing catastrophe. The Kush epidemic is more than a drug problem, it is a human tragedy unfolding in real time. It threatens the stability, health, and future of Sierra Leone.


The world must pay attention, and the government must act decisively. Every day lost is another life lost. And for a nation that has already endured war, disease, and political turmoil, this crisis is a painful reminder that the fight for a better future is far from over.