
The Bad Natives Podcast.
Where Africa meets the world.
The Bad Natives Podcast.
Can Power-Rich Ethiopia Rewrite Old Maps, Is Asia Entering Its Arab Spring, and Will Patriarchy Fail Nigeria?
Ethiopia has flipped the switch on its $5 billion Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD), doubling the country’s power capacity and reigniting tensions with Egypt and Sudan over Nile waters. Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed frames the project as a gateway to regional dominance, even hinting at Ethiopia’s ambitions for Red Sea access—a move that could redraw the Horn of Africa’s power map.
Meanwhile in Nigeria, the suspension of Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan raises urgent questions about patriarchy in African politics. Why are outspoken women still punished, from Abuja to Nairobi, while entrenched political elites like Bola Tinubu consolidate power?
Beyond Africa, Asia feels the tremors of its own political reckoning. In Mongolia, corruption protests rattle the government. In Japan, scandal dogs Prime Minister Fumio Kishida. In Indonesia, fears of democratic backsliding shadow President Joko Widodo’s legacy. And in Nepal, fragile coalitions struggle to hold a country together.
From Addis Ababa to Cairo, Lagos to Jakarta, these stories connect: a world in flux, where water, power, gender, and democracy collide in battles shaping the 21st century.