Rasna Warah

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Born1962 (age 6364)
Died
Kenya
CitizenshipKenyan
EducationBSc psychology and women's studies, Master's degree in Communication
MRasna Warah
Detail of self-portrait photograph
Born1962 (age 6364)
Died
Kenya
CitizenshipKenyan
EducationBSc psychology and women's studies, Master's degree in Communication
Alma materSuffolk University Malmö University
OccupationsAuthor, writer, editor

Rasna Warah (1962 – 11 January 2025) was a Kenyan writer, journalist and author whose work included UNsilenced: Unmasking the United Nations’ Culture of Cover-Ups, Corruption and Impunity, Yesterday it was Asians, today it is Somalis, Tomorrow it could be You, and War Crimes: how warlords, politicians, foreign governments and aid agencies conspired to create a failed state in Somalia.[1][2][3][4][5][6]

Warah was born in Nairobi in 1962, and went to a boarding school in Naini Tal in northern India.[1] She had a bachelor's degree in psychology and women's studies from Suffolk University in Boston, United States, where she spent 5 years and a master's in communication for development from Malmö University in Sweden.[7] She also spent a year living in London, England, where she found "the weather and the coldness of the people are quite alienating".[1]

Career

She worked an editor at the United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN-Habitat).[8]

Warah wrote weekly article for The Daily Nation for 12-year, The Elephant for years and carried out numerous writing gigs for Debunk Media, the Mail and Guardian, The Guardian, Africa Is A Country, and The EastAfrican.[7][8][9][10]

Death

Rasna Warah died of cancer on 11 January 2025 in Kenya.[3][11]

In tributes following her death, Warah was widely praised for her incisive and principled writing, her sustained critique of political power and corruption, and her long-standing commitment to social justice issues, including feminism, environmental concerns, and economic inequality in Africa. She was also recognised for mentoring younger writers and for consistently using journalism and essay writing to amplify marginalised voices and promote public accountability.[3][12][13]

Selected publications

See also

References

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