All articles

  • 6 ways corporate lawsuits kill free speech (and how to fight back!)

    Free speech is a right. So how can a corporation possibly stop you from speaking out? Using a legal tactic called a SLAPP, corporations like the massive Canadian logging company, Resolute Forest Products, are attempting to crack down on free speech by suing their critics into submission.

    Molly Dorozenski 3 min read
  • Wapoga Mutiara Timber Log Yard. © Oka Budhi

    Greenpeace Exposes Logging Company’s Attack on Free Speech in New Report

    Washington, DC, 16 May 2017 -- Greenpeace has published a new report, “Clearcutting Free Speech: How Resolute Forest Products is going to extremes to silence critics of its controversial logging practices”, presenting the implications of logging company Resolute Forest Products massive legal attack on its critics, which aims to redefine activism as criminal activity.

    Greenpeace Africa 2 min read
  • The Urgency of Now: The fate of the lungs of Africa hangs in a balance

    As the plane from Kinshasa, the capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), makes its descent towards Mbandaka airport, the capital of Equateur province, I am impressed by a beautiful canopy of greenery painting the landscape below my window; I was looking at the Congo Basin Forest. A casual observer sees a forest, robust,…

    Nchemty Metimi Ozongashu 4 min read
  • 2017 Annual Report

    In 2017, we laid the groundwork for an environmental movement in Africa. Overall, Greenpeace Africa had a great year and we are looking forward to an even more impactful 2018,…

    ometh
  • Action at Eskom Megawatt Park in Africa. © Shayne Robinson

    10 more steps back for Eskom on the precipice of Molefe’s return

    Johannesburg, 15th May 2017: Reacting to the announcement that Brian Molefe has been reinstated as the Chief Executive Officer of Eskom, a civil society coalition consisting of 350Africa.org, African Climate Reality Project, Greenpeace Africa, The Life After Coal Campaign, Project 90 by 2030 and WWF South Africa had the following to say:

    Greenpeace Africa 1 min read
  • Artisanal Fishermen in Senegal. © Clément  Tardif

    Greenpeace concludes months long ship tour with strong recommendations to West African states.

    Dakar, 4 May 2017 - 11 arrests of vessels fishing illegally have occurred in just three weeks of joint surveillance with local authorities in West African waters. This is out of 13 fishing regulation infractions identified during the two month ‘Hope in West Africa’ ship tour, which also included fisheries monitoring and civil society and…

    Greenpeace Africa 3 min read
  • World Oceans Day in Senegal. © Clément  Tardif

    13 infractions found in just twenty days of fisheries surveillance in West Africa

    Dakar, 4 May 2017 - 11 arrests of vessels fishing illegally have occurred in just three weeks of joint surveillance with local authorities in West African waters. This is out of 13 fishing regulation infractions identified during the two month ‘Hope in West Africa’ ship tour, which also included fisheries monitoring and civil society and…

    Greenpeace Africa 4 min read
  • A Wealth of Life – the beauty of West Africa

    Sailing across  the nutrient rich waters of the West African Atlantic Ocean these past two months, I have been lucky enough to see an incredible array of wildlife. Whales, dolphins…

    Pavel Klinckhamers 3 min read
  • “I saw the plunder of our oceans with my own eyes”

    Four days, four cases of illegal fishing in Sierra Leone

    Ahmed Diame, oceans campaigner 4 min read
  • Local fishermen fishing from traditional canoes, in Sierra Leone waters. © Kate Davison

    Four illegal fishing cases found in Sierra Leone in four days

    Freetown, 20 April 2017 - Four illegal fishing cases have been found during a joint surveillance mission conducted by Greenpeace and Sierra Leone fishery authorities. Two Chinese vessels and one Korean vessel have been arrested for infringements of Sierra Leone fishing legislation, including possessing or using illegal fishing nets on board, no visible marking and…

    Greenpeace Africa 5 min read