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Panel 54 Podcast
Panel 54 Podcast
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Panel 54 is where Africa tells its own story. From Lagos to Lamu, Cape Town to Cairo, hosts Waweru Njoroge (Kenya) and Ndu Okoh (Kenya/Nigeria) explore the people, power, and politics shaping the continent. Each episode delivers sharp, evidence-first conversations with leaders, activists, athletes, and cultural voices. From sports and identity to security, media, new foreign influence, youth movements, sovereignty, and Africa’s place in a multipolar world, Panel 54 offers a global perspective through an African lens.
30 Episodes
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What happens when climate change becomes a hidden driver of conflict and war across Africa?
In this episode, Waweru Njoroge and Ndu Okoh speak with Ferdinand Omondi, Communications and Story Manager for Anglophone Africa at Greenpeace Africa and an investigative journalist covering environmental and resource issues across the continent from BBC, KTN, NTV, on how drought, land degradation, and water scarcity are fuelling instability from Kenya and the Horn of Africa to the Sahel and West Africa.
From pastoral conflicts in northern Kenya to displacement crises in Sudan, the conversation explores how environmental and climate stress is becoming an unseen security threat.
Tensions over water resources, including the dispute between Egypt and Ethiopia over the Nile and the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam, illustrate how climate pressure and infrastructure projects can escalate into geopolitical confrontation.
Omondi also warns that weak governance and corruption are enabling destructive extraction while communities bear the costs. As global demand surges for cobalt, lithium, and other critical minerals, Africa faces the risks of a new scramble driven by external powers, including China’s expanding role in destructive mining and infrastructure across the continent.
A hard-hitting conversation on climate security, resource politics, foreign influence, and Africa’s fight to control its future.
Panel 54 — A global perspective through an African lens. Lagos to Lamu. Cape Town to Cairo.
This is Panel 54, a global perspective through an African lens.
▶️ Subscribe : https://linktr.ee/panel54pod
📩 Contact: hello@panel54pod.com
🎙 Recorded in Nairobi, Kenya
🎧 Produced by Commex Africa and E & C Talent
What happens when Africa stops waiting for capital and starts negotiating over the resources the world needs most?
In this episode of Panel 54, Waweru Njoroge and Ndu Okoh sit down with Maureen Farrell, Vice President for Global Partnerships at Valar Frontiers , a U.S.-based strategy and risk firm working across Africa, and also a former senior U.S. defense official for African affairs.
Drawing on decades of experience across the continent, Farrell describes a growing sense of African agency as governments assert themselves in conversations about investment, infrastructure, and strategic minerals.
From the legacy of M-Pesa to the global demand for lithium, cobalt, and rare earth elements, Africa is moving from the margins to the centre of supply chains powering the energy transition and advanced technologies.
The conversation explores how capital flows, mining, and security partnerships intersect in a multipolar world, and why investors and governments alike are increasingly viewing Africa not as a risk to manage but as a strategic partner to engage.
A sharp discussion about resources, power, and Africa’s place in the global economy.
Lagos to Lamu. Cape Town to Cairo. This is Panel 54, a global perspective through an African lens.
📩 Contact: hello@panel54pod.com
🎙 Recorded in Nairobi, Kenya
🎧 Produced by Commex Africa and E & C Talent
What happens when elections become rituals and power refuses to leave the room?
In this episode of Panel 54, Waweru Njoroge and Ndu Okoh sit down with Prof. Nic Cheeseman, one of the world's leading scholars on African democracy, based at the University of Birmingham and the mind behind Democracy in Africa.
Cheeseman brings three decades of research across the continent to a conversation that cuts through the noise of election cycles, youth frustration, and geopolitical manoeuvring. The discussion moves from why authoritarian leaders still hold elections they intend to rig, to the mechanics of political legitimacy that no amount of money can buy at the ballot box.
They examine the growing crisis in the Horn of Africa, where Sudan's conflict has displaced fourteen million people while the international community looks elsewhere. From managed instability in Ethiopia to the erosion of democratic norms in Tanzania and Uganda, the conversation interrogates why some conflicts persist not despite global attention but because of its absence.
At the heart of the episode is an uncomfortable truth. Democracy across much of Africa has not failed because it was tried and found wanting, but because it was captured, manipulated, and never genuinely delivered. Africa's frustrated youth are not rejecting democratic values, they are rejecting systems that promised representation and delivered extraction.
The conversation closes with a note of cautious optimism. From Uganda, Gambia, Zambia to Nigeria, citizens have stood together in numbers that made manipulation futile. The question is whether political elites will meet that energy with reform or repression.
A sharp, nuanced conversation about power, legitimacy, and who really benefits when the ballots are counted.
Lagos to Lamu. Cape Town to Cairo. This is Panel 54, a global perspective through an African lens.
📩 Contact: hello@panel54pod.com
🎙 Recorded in Nairobi, Kenya
🎧 Produced by Commex Africa and E & C Talent
What does conflict actually look like up close, long before headlines catch up?In this episode of Panel 54, Waweru Njoroge and Ndu Okoh sit down with Frederick Grounds, a former Lieutenant Colonel in the British Army with over three decades of service, much of it spent training and working alongside African armed forces across the continent.
Now based in Nairobi, Grounds offers a rare practitioner’s view of what happens when diplomacy fails and violence becomes inevitable.
The conversation moves from Sudan’s humanitarian collapse to Africa's role in multinational military exercises, unpacking how wars begin quietly, how language shifts before bullets fly, and why civilians carry the deepest scars long after fighting ends.They examine Africa’s growing security footprint in a crowded geopolitical landscape.
From US and UK partnerships to China’s military base in Djibouti and Russia’s expanding presence in the Sahel, the discussion interrogates where collaboration strengthens African capacity and where it risks eroding sovereignty and accountability.At the heart of the episode is a sobering insight. Military power can stabilise fragile systems, but it can also replace political legitimacy rather than protect it. Africa’s challenge is not a lack of partners, but the ability to enforce limits, read the room, and say no when sovereignty is at stake.
A grounded, unsentimental conversation about force, diplomacy, and the thin line between security and control.
Lagos to Lamu. Cape Town to Cairo.This is Panel 54, a global perspective through an African lens.
📩 Contact: hello@panel54pod.com
🎙 Recorded in Nairobi, Kenya
🎧 Produced by Commex Africa and E & C Talent
Africa is no longer peripheral to global power. It is central to it. The problem is that influence does not always translate into control.In this episode of Panel 54, Waweru Njoroge and Ndu Okoh are joined by Prof. Peter Kagwanja, one of East Africa’s most influential geopolitical thinkers, to examine how power is exercised, defended, and contested across the continent.
The conversation moves through Uganda’s role as a regional security anchor, Kenya’s strategic alignment with Western partners, and Nigeria’s struggle to convert size and influence into coherent foreign policy leverage. Kagwanja also reflects on Sudan’s collapse into militarised politics and Somalia’s long entanglement with foreign security interests as cautionary tales of what happens when force overtakes governance.
China’s expanding footprint across infrastructure, finance, and diplomacy is interrogated alongside Western security partnerships, exposing how external actors operate comfortably within Africa’s governance gaps.
The discussion shows how counterterrorism cooperation and military aid can stabilise regimes while others are quietly eroding democratic accountability.At the centre of the episode is a hard truth. Africa’s challenge is not a lack of partners, but a lack of strategy, institutional restraint, and political courage.
In a rapidly shifting multipolar world, the continent risks remaining reactive unless it defines its own interests with clarity and discipline.
This is a sober conversation about China, the West, regional security, and the price Africa pays when power goes unchecked.
Lagos to Lamu. Cape Town to Cairo.A global perspective through an African lens.
📩 Contact: hello@panel54pod.com
🎙 Recorded in Nairobi, Kenya
🎧 Produced by Commex Africa and E & C Talent
In Part One of Panel 54’s end-of-year special, Waweru Njoroge and Ndu Okoh sit down with some of Africa’s most influential editors to interrogate a hard question: who controls Africa’s story at a moment of global upheaval?
Joining the conversation are Theophilus Yardy from Ghana, Tsepiso Makwetla from South Africa, James Muyanwa from Zambia, and James Mbugua from Kenya. The editors unpack collapsing trust in legacy media, the rise of social platforms as primary news sources, and the economic pressures hollowing out African newsrooms.
They reflect on underreported security crises, democratic erosion, and the shrinking space for accountability across the continent. The discussion also confronts foreign influence and sovereignty, including China’s expanding footprint, and asks whether Africa is drifting into a new form of economic and political recolonisation. In a rapidly changing multipolar world, the editors debate why Africa still lacks a real seat at the global table and what it will take to move from being an arena of competition to an actor with agency.
A candid, unsparing wrap up conversation about media, power, and Africa’s place in the world in 2025
Lagos to Lamu. Cape Town to Cairo. This is Panel 54, a global perspective through an African lens.
📩 Let’s talk: hello@panel54pod.com
Subscribe: https://linktr.ee/panel54pod
🎙 Recorded on location in Nairobi, Kenya
🎧 Produced by Commex Africa and E & C Talent
Japan and Africa meet at a critical moment in a changing world. One is navigating demographic pressure, technological transition and a complex security environment. The other is rising in strategic importance as the global order shifts toward multipolarity.
In this episode of Panel 54, hosts Waweru Njoroge and Ndu Okoh sit down with His Excellency Ambassador Hiroshi Matsuura, Japan’s Ambassador to Kenya, to explore the future of Japan Africa relations beyond aid and assistance.
The conversation traces Japan’s six decade partnership with Kenya and the continent, from early development cooperation to today’s focus on industrialisation, technology transfer and human capital. Ambassador Matsuura reflects on Kenya’s transformation over the last twenty five years, the role of trust in long term diplomacy, and why Japan sees Africa as a partner in solving global challenges rather than a recipient of charity.
They unpack trade imbalances, Japanese investment in manufacturing, geothermal energy at Olkaria, climate resilience, innovation hubs, and the growing importance of AI and digital technologies. The discussion also widens to geopolitics, examining Japan’s position in a multipolar world, its alliance with the United States, the Indo Pacific framework, and how Africa can use shifting alliances to pursue strategic autonomy.
From samurai bonds and development finance to cultural exchange, values and legacy, this episode asks a central question. Can Japan and Africa build a generational partnership that moves from infrastructure to innovation and from aid to agency?
Lagos to Lamu. Cape Town to Cairo. A global perspective through an African lens.
📩 Let’s talk: hello@panel54pod.com
🎙 Recorded on location in Nairobi, Kenya
🎧 Produced by Commex Africa and E & C Talent
Poaching networks, shrinking habitats, foreign market demand and political neglect are reshaping conservation across the region. And rangers are paying the highest price. In this episode of Panel 54, veteran ranger Michael Lenaimado joins Waweru Njoroge and Ndu Okoh to break down what’s really happening on the front lines.
He exposes how organised poaching networks operate, why demand in China for rhino horn and pangolin scales continues to drive killings, and how weak policy and blocked wildlife corridors are pushing entire ecosystems to the brink. Michael also reveals the human cost: armed confrontations, poor equipment, low pay, no insurance, and communities losing crops, livestock and livelihoods with little compensation.
This is a story about survival, sovereignty and the people carrying the weight of conservation — told by a ranger who has lived it.
Lagos to Lamu. Cape Town to Cairo. A global perspective through an African lens.
📩 Let’s talk: hello@panel54pod.com
Subscribe: https://linktr.ee/panel54pod
🎙 Recorded in Nairobi, Kenya
🎧 Produced by Commex Africa and E & C Talent
After twenty-one episodes across politics, diplomacy, security, mining, protests, soft power and geopolitics, Ndu Okoh and Waweru Njoroge step away from the guest chair and turn the lens on themselves.In this special introspective episode of Panel 54, the hosts reflect on the conversations that shaped the season: interviewing former President Kufuor in Accra, unpacking debt and foreign influence, confronting Africa’s security dilemmas, exploring culture and soft diplomacy, and navigating the realities of protest movements and leadership across the continent.
They revisit the moments that challenged them, surprised them and stayed with them long after the cameras were off, from heavy episodes on conflict and sovereignty to lighter ones on CHAN, sports and African identity. The discussion opens up the unseen side of producing a pan-African show: last-minute cancellations, geopolitics affecting bookings, and the constant battle to hold space for real African perspectives in a noisy global landscape.
Ndu and Waweru also confront some hard questions from the season:Who are Africa’s next leaders? Can Gen Z sustain political pressure beyond protest? Is the continent facing a new wave of recolonisation through debt and dependency, including China’s expanding role? And what will it take for Africans to reclaim agency over their resources, their governance and their future?
They close by imagining what comes next for Panel 54, the guests they still want, the places they hope to travel, and the stories that must be told as Africa finds its voice in a shifting world.
Lagos to Lamu. Cape Town to Cairo.
A global perspective through an African lens.
📩 Let’s talk: hello@panel54pod.com
Subscribe: https://linktr.ee/panel54pod
🎙 Recorded on location in Nairobi, Kenya
🎧 Produced by Commex Africa and E & C Talent
West Africa’s gold is enriching the world — but devastating the people who live closest to it. Illegal mining has become an environmental catastrophe, a political flashpoint and a lucrative gateway for foreign interests. And at the centre of it all is the uncomfortable truth: exploitation thrives when governance fails.
In this episode of Panel 54, Seth Bokpe, one of Ghana’s leading investigative journalists, joins Waweru Njoroge and Ndu Okoh to expose how illegal mining has reshaped Ghana and the wider region. From Chinese-backed operations to local political collaborators, Seth breaks down how corruption, weak regulation and foreign demand for gold have created a perfect storm.The conversation digs into destroyed forest reserves, polluted rivers, armed protection networks, and the staggering human cost borne by rural communities.
Seth reveals how illegal mining fuels organised crime across West Africa, from Zamfara to the Sahel, feeding instability while governments look away. He also tackles one of the hardest questions: Are Chinese companies to blame — or the local leaders enabling them? And what would real accountability and environmental justice look like if African governments had the courage to act?.
This is a story about sovereignty, exploitation and the battle for Africa’s most valuable resources — told by a journalist who has risked everything to expose the truth.
Lagos to Lamu. Cape Town to Cairo.A global perspective through an African lens.
📩 Let’s talk: hello@panel54pod.com
Subscribe https://linktr.ee/panel54pod
🎙 Recorded on location in Accra, Ghana
🎧 Produced by Commex Africa and E & C Talent
Wars without victory, alliances without trust, and peace that profits the few. The Horn of Africa remains one of the most strategic yet unstable regions in the world, and understanding why means following the money. In this episode of Panel 54, Prof. Hassan Khannaje, Director of the Horn International Institute for Strategic Studies, joins Waweru Njoroge and Ndu Okoh to unpack the business of chaos — how instability has become a system, not a symptom.
The conversation explores how foreign powers, regional elites, and institutional weakness have turned conflict into profit, from Sudan’s gold trade to foreign bases in Djibouti. Prof. Khannaje breaks down how peacebuilding has been reduced to process over progress, and why Africa must reclaim control of its own peace agenda.
From Somalia’s endless donor dependency to the geopolitics of the Red Sea, this episode examines how governance, greed, and global interest intersect to keep the continent in perpetual crisis.
Like, Subscribe and follow : https://linktr.ee/panel54pod
📩 Let’s talk: hello@panel54pod.com
🎙 Recorded on location in NBI KENYA
🎧 Produced by Commex Africa and E & C Talent
Africa’s influence on the world isn’t just political or economic; it’s cultural. From music and fashion to film and festivals, soft power is becoming the new diplomacy.
In this nineteenth episode of Panel 54, Ted Kwaka, cultural envoy and former Consul General for Kenya in Los Angeles, joins Waweru Njoroge and Ndu Okoh to explore how Africa can use its creative industries to shape global perception, strengthen identity, and build influence abroad.The conversation unpacks the power of cultural diplomacy, the lessons Africa can draw from the US and UK, and why storytelling, art, and entertainment may be just as strategic as foreign policy.
From Hollywood to Riverwood, from Afrobeats to diplomacy, they examine how Africa can turn culture into capital and soft power into real global leverage.
Lagos to Lamu. Cape Town to Cairo, a global perspective through an African lens.
Like, Subscribe and follow : https://linktr.ee/panel54pod
📩 Let’s talk: hello@panel54pod.com
🎙 Recorded on location in NBI KENYA
🎧 Produced by Commex Africa and E & C Talent
Africa’s debt crisis is no longer just about economics — it’s about power, sovereignty, and the politics of influence.
In this episode of Panel 54, economist Kevin Kigima Ng’ang’a joins Waweru Njoroge and Ndu Okoh to unpack China’s “debt trap” and what it really means for the continent’s independence and future growth.
From Zambia’s default to Kenya’s SGR repayments, Kevin separates myth from reality — showing how Chinese loans, often commercial and asset-backed, differ from Western debt tied to governance and politics. The conversation explores how borrowing, negotiation, and leadership choices shape Africa’s ability to grow without surrendering control.
Can Africa use debt as a tool for progress instead of dependence? Can it play East and West in a multipolar world while protecting its sovereignty?
Lagos to Lamu. Cape Town to Cairo. A global perspective through an African lens.
In Episode 17 of Panel 54, hosts Waweru Njoroge and Ndu Okoh sit down with Retired KAF Colonel, Seth Shava and former CIA Station Chief, Ralph Goff to unpack how artificial intelligence and drone warfare are reshaping security, sovereignty, and the future of conflict.
The conversation explores the new face of war, where drones, data, and algorithms are as powerful as armies. From the battlefields of Ukraine to the skies over Sudan, from intelligence operations to information warfare, the guests reveal how technology has redrawn the rules of engagement.
Drawing from decades of military and intelligence experience, Colonel Shava and Goff break down how AI-driven systems, autonomous weapons, and surveillance technology are transforming global power and what that means for Africa’s own defence and diplomacy.
They discuss the race for air dominance, the rise of private military tech firms, and the ethical limits of machines making life and death decisions. The episode asks whether Africa is ready for the next frontier, a world where wars are fought with code, not just soldiers.
Lagos to Lamu. Cape Town to Cairo. This is Panel 54, a global perspective through an African lens.
In Episode 16 of Panel 54, hosts Waweru Njoroge and Ndu Okoh sit down with veteran Kenyan diplomat, Tom Amolo and former Ambassador to Germany and US, to unpack Africa’s missing seat at the world’s top table.
The conversation explores how diplomacy became one of Africa’s quiet strengths yet lost its strategic edge. From Kenya’s evolving foreign policy to Nigeria’s regional ambitions, from South Africa’s moral authority to the larger influence of smaller nations like Qatar and Norway, Ambassador Amolo examines why Africa wields moral capital but struggles to turn it into real global power.
Drawing from his years of service in Washington , Berlin, Nigeria , Amolo reflects on how Western nations use diplomacy, soft power, and institutional strength to project stability and influence.
He argues that Africa’s future partnerships must be built on shared values of accountability, transparency, and long-term planning rather than dependency or aid. Amolo calls for diplomacy grounded in continuity, strategy, and clear national purpose to help Africa take its rightful place in the world.
Lagos to Lamu. Cape Town to Cairo.
This is Panel 54, a global perspective through an African lens.
In Episode 15 of Panel 54, Stella Agara a Governance and Youth Development Specialist joins Waweru Njoroge and Ndu Okoh to unpack a continent at a crossroads, where young Africans are pushing back against corruption, foreign influence, and the quiet capture of democracy.
From Kenya’s Gen Z protests to Malawi’s ballot revolution, from China’s growing economic footprint to the shadow of global interests shaping local politics, Stella breaks down how governance, debt, and dependency collide with a new generation unwilling to be silent. The discussion digs into accountability, leadership, and what it means to demand sovereignty in a world still trying to tell Africa how to run its affairs. It is bold, uncomfortable, and necessary — a conversation about power, ownership, and the courage to choose a different future.
📩 Let’s talk: hello@panel54pod.com
Artificial Intelligence is no longer science fiction , it’s already reshaping how we learn, heal, farm, and tell stories. In this episode of Panel 54, Somoina Kimojino, Kenyan media and radio veteran, steps in to host while Waweru Njoroge and Ndu Okoh are on assignment. She sits down with Charles Murito, Google’s Regional Director for Sub-Saharan Africa, Government Affairs & Public Policy, and Interim Country Director, to explore what AI means for Africa.
From healthcare gaps to personalised education, food security to digital infrastructure, Murito shows how AI can drive transformation, but also warns of risks around security, jobs, and data. Together, they unpack Africa’s readiness: policy frameworks, connectivity, and the urgent need to skill the next generation.
The conversation asks: will Africa simply consume imported AI, or can it localise, innovate, and lead in the multipolar digital future?If this dialogue shifts how you think about AI’s role on the continent, don’t forget to like, share, and subscribe for more perspectives told through an African lens.
Lagos to Lamu. Cape Town to Cairo. This is Panel 54.
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Panel54 podcast https://linktr.ee/panel54pod
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Africa fuels the world with cobalt, cocoa, oil, and gold , yet still carries over $1.1 trillion in external debt. In this episode of Panel 54, hosts Waweru Njoroge and Ndu Okoh sit with Edgar Wamalwa, a strategic consultant and project finance expert with over three decades in banking and infrastructure, to unpack Africa’s paradox of plenty.
From Kenya’s ballooning public debt to the DRC’s cobalt wealth and South Africa’s models of industrial financing, the conversation dives into dependency, leadership, and the short-termism holding the continent back. Wamalwa challenges the “begging bowl” mindset, weighs whether Africa can rewrite global economic rules, and asks if Africapitalism private-sector driven, inclusive growth can chart a sustainable path out of debt.
Like, Subcribe and follow Panel54 poddcast https://linktr.ee/panel54pod
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In this episode of Panel 54, hosts Waweru Njoroge and Ndu Okoh sit down with journalist Tom Mukhwana and author Babior Newton to tackle one of the biggest questions of our time: who gets to tell Africa’s story?
We dive deep into the media and power dynamics that shape the global narrative, asking the tough questions: Why do conflicts in Sudan and the DRC go largely ignored while Ukraine and Gaza dominate headlines? How do foreign powers like China influence African sovereignty through mining deals and arms shipments?
Can African writers and journalists reclaim their voice amidst global media biases and publishing barriers?
From censorship and geopolitics to cultural critique and economic power plays, we explore the fight to control Africa's narrative. This isn't just a conversation—it's a critical reframing of how the world sees the continent.
Tune in to discover how we can reclaim our story before others write it for us.
China in Africa: Progress or Plunder?
They call it development. hosts Waweru Njoroge and Ndu Okoh sit down with Jerotich Seii — humanitarian, social justice advocate, and active citizen to rip open the myth of China’s “partnership” with Africa.
From ports in Djibouti to debt-laden railways in Nairobi, Jerotich asks what no leader will: are we selling our sovereignty for shiny infrastructure, letting forests fall for freight corridors, and locking future generations into chains disguised as contracts?
This is not just about bricks and steel. It’s about power, identity, and the dangerous new scramble for Africa — one where the price tag is hidden, but the damage is permanent.
Lagos to Lamu. Cape Town to Cairo. This is Panel 54, a global perspective through an African lens.
📩 Let’s talk: hello@panel54pod.com
🎙 Recorded on location in NBI
🎧 Produced by Commex Africa and E & C Talent
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