A selection of news films, creative documentaries and factual content directed and produced by Melanie Cura Daball.
A group of performers re-enter and reclaim iconic cultural spaces across England to break their silence.
25 years after the Rwandan Genocide, perpetrators and survivors work through their trauma together.
Richie (12) faces daily crime and violence as local gangs and corrupt politicians compete for power and money in Kenya's rubbish business.
It's happened again. 19-year-old Brian is dead, executed by the police, without a charge, without trial. And he is not the only one.
In the south of Somalia, life has come back to the city of Kismayo. But many women returnees find "home" is not what it was promised to be.
In 1930, British colonisers evicted Kenyans from their fertile lands, murdering and enslaving entire families. Now, survivors are suing the UK.
Reinventing elements of tradition, up-and-coming designer Katungulu Mwenda sets out to break into the international fashion market.
In Korogocho, a slum once notorious for violence and sexual assault, elderly women have taken fighting back into their own hands - literally.
Mary Muthui has suffered horrific violence because she chooses to love a woman. But giving up her fight for equal love is not an option.
In Shangilia skate park, where kids find more than just a place to skate, Nairobi's youth dreams of competitive skateboarding.
Ready for school? Kids explain Brexit: A class of 10 and 11-year-old kids explain the issues dominating the Brexit referendum
Meet two young protestors who took to the streets against their parents' will during the Sudanese uprising.
25 years after the Rwandan Genocide, the children of victims and perpetrators alike still grapple with the horrors of the past while hoping for a peaceful future.
They have participated in the unforgivable, but the Somali government has chosen to grant amnesty to those defecting from the terror group al-Shabaab.
The inhabitants of Dadaab refugee camp in Kenya, one of the largest in the world fear they have been forgotten by the international community.