
-
US consumer inflation heats up but unlikely to deter rate cut
-
ECB holds rates as France crisis looms over meeting
-
DR Congo survivors of IS-linked massacre say army, govt let them down
-
Robot dogs, flying cars: five takeaways from the Munich auto show
-
President seeks end to crisis engulfing Nepal
-
World Cup quarter-final against New Zealand is 'biggest game' for Springbok women
-
Chelsea face 74 charges over alleged breaches of agent rules
-
Poland calls emergency UN meeting over drone raid blamed on Russia
-
Stocks up before US inflation, ECB rate call
-
Police hunt shooter who killed Trump ally Charlie Kirk
-
China penalises popular app Xiaohongshu over content
-
'Double standards' over Israel sports participation: Spanish minister
-
Starmer sacks Mandelson as UK ambassador to US over Epstein links
-
'Why not?' Europeans warming up to Chinese electric cars
-
Philippines protests China nature reserve plan for Scarborough Shoal
-
Mexico, under US pressure, mulls 50% tariff on Chinese cars
-
Most markets rise as US producer price data stokes rate cut bets
-
Process 'underway' to release S. Koreans detained in US raid
-
Manhunt underway for shooter who killed Trump ally Charlie Kirk
-
French lawmakers urge social media ban for under-15s
-
China-US talks mark a 'small step' towards Xi meeting Trump
-
Schmidt demands 'start-to finish' Wallabies performance against Pumas
-
'Threat to democracy': World reacts to killing of Trump ally Kirk
-
Australia Davis Cup captain Hewitt to appeal ban, hits out at timing
-
North Korea's Kim Ju Ae 'likely successor': Seoul
-
Finnish phone ban brings focus, and chatter, back to school
-
Nepal ex-chief justice tipped to lead political transition
-
China says imposed punishment on Xiaohongshu over content
-
Britain's Baxter Dury swaps 'ponderous' indie for dance music
-
Wallabies throw rookie Edmed into Argentina cauldron
-
Israel intercepts missile fired from Yemen after deadly Sanaa strikes
-
France political crisis looms over ECB meeting
-
Against the tide: Filipinos battle rising sea on sinking island
-
Silent for 800 years, medieval organ sings again in Jerusalem
-
Canoe-kayak champion Fox out of worlds after kidney surgery
-
DuPlantis excited to be back in Tokyo after 'apocalyptic' Olympics
-
Bolt backs Jamaicans to trump Lyles in world 100m
-
Hong Kong LGBTQ rights setback takes emotional toll
-
'Extremely quick' wing Carter handed All Blacks debut against Springboks
-
French lawmakers urge 'digital curfew' for teens
-
Markets mostly up as US producer price data stokes rate cut bets
-
Heat risks force world marathons and race walks to start earlier
-
S. Korea says 'bewildering' immigration raid could chill investment
-
Australian authorities investigate influencer over croc wrestling
-
After protests oust PM, Nepal stares into political void
-
Soured rivalry: India v Pakistan as 'brothers' clash for world gold
-
Trump blasts 'radical left' after killing of influencer Charlie Kirk
-
'Minimalist' Ralph Lauren designs kick off New York Fashion Week
-
'Exciting' wing Carter handed All Blacks debut against Springboks
-
2-1: First not-guilty vote in Bolsonaro coup trial, two to go

Senegalese cinemas pay tribute to Sembene on 100th anniversary
The lights fade and the screen lights up, transporting Senegalese cinemagoers back in time to the world of Ousmane Sembene, who would have been 100 this year.
To celebrate, Dakar movie theatres are showing some of the best-known works by the father of African film, including "The Money Order", "The Outsiders", "Camp de Thiaroye" and "Black Girl".
Sembene, who died in 2007 at the age of 84, is celebrated for championing social and political issues throughout his career as a writer and filmmaker.
"He showed the way to an entire generation of artists," said Senegalese film critic Baba Diop, arguing that Sembene had enabled African cinema to take the place it deserved.
Thanks to Sembene's team, scores of photos of the director have been rediscovered, pipe in mouth or peering in deep concentration through the lens of his camera.
The African cinema archive fund ASM is now digitalising these old negatives and is due to exhibit them in Burkina Faso, France and Italy.
- 'African chutzpah -
"He wanted to make films with Africans for Africans. For me, he is the epitome of African chutzpah," said the fund's coordinator Katlyn Liliou.
The previously unseen photos feature in a new book on Sembene published this year, alongside interviews with his family and colleagues.
"Ousmane Sembene: the Founding Father" paints a portrait of the activist and his legacy, a man who inspired a generation of filmmakers, writers and artists.
"He was in the army, he was a builder, a docker, a trade unionist, a writer and a film director. That's perseverance," the artist Cheikh Ndiaye told AFP.
Ndiaye's current exhibition in Dakar includes paintings of the capital's former cinemas, where people came not just to be entertained but to learn what social and political justice meant and how to get it.
Its title, "Evening class", is a nod to Sembene, who saw films as a way of passing on knowledge in the African oral tradition.
- Unnoticed? -
Like Ndiaye, Clarence Thomas Delgado, a friend and senior assistant to Sembene, remembers his boss as a fervent advocate of social justice and human dignity.
"He wanted to criticise a long list of things in each of his films. I told him to choose," Delgado grinned.
Colleagues remember Sembene as funny and hard-working, and a taskmaster on set.
"Either you were up to the job or you got thrown out," said Makhete Diallo, another of his assistants.
Despite Sembene's national and international renown, friends and family alike complain that successive Senegalese governments have failed to afford him the recognition he deserves.
There is no statue to the filmmaker in his home country and no streets are named after him.
"How come the 100th anniversary of the birth... is going unnoticed?" said political commentator Alioune Tine.
"Sembene is our Victor Hugo, our Godard," he said.
J.Williams--AMWN