Emmanuel Akinwotu Emmanuel Akinwotu is an international correspondent for NPR.
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Emmanuel Akinwotu

Terna Iwar
Headshot of Emmanuel Akinwotu
Terna Iwar

Emmanuel Akinwotu

International Correspondent, Lagos, Nigeria

Emmanuel Akinwotu is an international correspondent for NPR. He joined NPR in 2022 from The Guardian, where he was West Africa correspondent.

He has reported in Africa since 2016, covering a wide range of prominent and under-reported stories, from the war in Sudan that has torn through the country and sparked one of the worst humanitarian crises and an exodus of refugees to neighboring countries, to the rise of military takeovers in West and Central Africa. He has covered the growing international dominance of African music, interviewing music stars from Angelique Kidjo to Tems and Davido, as well as the rise of the drill rap scene in Ghana, partly inspired by similar movements in Chicago, New York and London. He has reported on the growing flight of young people from Nigeria in search of a better life abroad, and from coastal towns in Senegal, covering the toll that widespread migration to Europe has on families left behind. In 2020, he reported from major protests in Nigeria against police brutality that, despite being violently suppressed, were a galvanizing moment for many young people seeking change.

Before The Guardian, he worked as a correspondent for Agence France-Presse news, working on misinformation and then as a general reporter on Nigeria, Ghana, Benin and Togo. Previous to that, he was a freelance reporter for The New York Times and other media. In 2018 he co-led a NYT investigation into how scores of Shia Muslim protesters were killed near the Nigerian capital, Abuja, by a special military unit directly answerable to Nigeria's president.

He is a once proud and now fairly tortured fan of Manchester United and the Philadelphia 76ers. He was born in London and moved to Lagos in 2016, in reverse to the move his parents made when they left Nigeria for the U.K. in the 1980s. Emmanuel notes his dad has gone from concern about the merits of this decision, to taking full credit for it.

Story Archive

Saturday

South Africa's African National Congress loses absolute majority for the first time

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Saturday

Bruce Onobrakpeya, a towering figure in modernism, in his home/studio in Lagos, Nigeria. At 91, he has his first Smithsonian solo show. Manny Jefferson/for NPR hide caption

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Pioneering Nigerian artist Bruce Onobrakpeya opens an exhibition at the Smithsonian

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Thursday

Revered postcolonial Nigerian artist Bruce Onobrakpeya opens Smithsonian exhibition

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Friday

The issue of sextortion was on the agenda when the FBI director traveled to Nigeria

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Thursday

Pioneering Nigerian artist Bruce Onobrakpeya opens an exhibition at the Smithsonian

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Saturday

African National Congress (ANC) polling agents set up a tent decorated with party paraphernalia outside a polling station in Umlazi on May 29, during South Africa's general election. Zinyange Auntony/AFP via Getty Images

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Zinyange Auntony/AFP via Getty Images

Wednesday

SOUTH AFRICA election day

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South Africa's ruling party has a lot riding on national election

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Tuesday

The impact of migration and xenophobia in South Africa's elections

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Monday

South Africa’s ruling party faces its greatest challenge yet in upcoming elections

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Sunday

Nelson Mandela's party is poised to lose their absolute majority in South Africa

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Saturday

Tuesday

Ex-South African President Zuma is banned by a court from running for Parliament

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Thursday

Sudan crisis: Escalating violence in al-Fasher is causing grave fears

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Friday

What lies ahead for the presidential election in Chad

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Friday

Tunde Onakoya, a Nigerian chess champion and child education advocate, plays a chess game in Times Square, Friday, April 19, 2024, in New York Yuki Iwamura/AP hide caption

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Yuki Iwamura/AP

This Nigerian chess master aims to raise money by playing the longest continuous game

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Thursday

An empty room is pictured in a concrete house in Matam, Senegal. Many families don't have electricity nor the means to own a fan or air conditioning to help quell the intense heat at night, temperatures can stay around 35 degree Celsius throughout the night. John Wessels/AFP via Getty Images hide caption

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John Wessels/AFP via Getty Images

Tuesday

Monday

One year after civil war erupted in Sudan, millions of people are in dire need of aid

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Sunday

Smoke is seen rising from Khartoum's skyline, Sudan, Sunday, April 16, 2023. The Sudanese military and a powerful paramilitary group have been battling for control of the chaos-stricken nation. Marwan Ali/AP hide caption

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Marwan Ali/AP

Sudan's civil war and displacement through the eyes of a poet

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Tuesday

A shattered father recounts his kidnapping and the struggle to negotiate with the kidnappers for the release of his children. Terna Iwar for NPR hide caption

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Terna Iwar for NPR

For one Nigerian family, freedom after a kidnapping hasn't ended their terror

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