Africa is not a country; each country has different extradition policies. Also, even if you'd asked about a specific country, without knowing specific details (not least of which would be what crime you were charged with) it would be hard to answer.
Yes. If those charges are serious enough, such as being accused of homicide or organized crime, you can be also extradited into the US.
yes
Yes, and the perpetrator can be extradited back to the US for trial, conviction and possibly, execution.
Technically, no: in theory, the Mexican Government should have captured him and extradited him into the U.S. However, Mexico was in the middle of its Mexican Revolution (1910 - 1921) and couldn't capture Villa, nor could it respond to such territorial transgression.
Yes, especially if you are facing serious charges such as manslaughter or armed robbery.
There are NO U.S. states or possessions from which you cannot be extradited.
All states and US possessions honor each other's requests for extradition.
Whether or not a person should be extradited is not a matter of established law in any US state, meaning, there are no states that do not statutorially disallow extradition. Whether or not an individual should be extradited (returned to another jurisdition) is decided by the judge who presides over the extradition hearing.
Mexico is south of the US. consequently the US is north of Mexico
Yes you will see a judge before your extradited.
Yes you can; it is usually enough to have an arrest warrant issued to be extradited.
No. The US is north of Mexico.