-
Five share PGA lead logjam with wild final day in store
-
Decision time at full-throttle Eurovision final
-
McIlroy charges into the hunt for epic major comeback win
-
Iran confirms squad heading to Turkey for World Cup preparation
-
Bolivian police clash with protesters blocking roads
-
Eurovision final kicks off with Viennese grandeur
-
Svitolina sees off Gauff to win Italian Open, Sinner in men's title showdown
-
Alonso set for appointment as Chelsea manager: reports
-
Spanish star Javier Bardem says 'narrative changing' on Gaza
-
Gujarat miss out on top spot as Kolkata stay alive in IPL
-
Charging McIlroy grabs share of the PGA lead
-
Rwanda genocide suspect Kabuga dead: court
-
No beer for City stars despite FA Cup win, says Guardiola
-
Modi oversees semi-conductor deal on Dutch trip
-
Americans 'should demonstrate like the French,' says Woody Harrelson
-
Vienna abuzz for Eurovision final
-
McFarlane eyes 'massive' Spurs clash after FA Cup final defeat
-
Scuffles from Europe to NYC as Swatch sale descends into chaos
-
Bielle-Biarrey helps Bordeaux-Begles avoid Top 14 slip-up before Champions Cup final
-
Man City still dream of Premier League glory after FA Cup win: Silva
-
Hearts broken as O'Neill summons Celtic's champion spirit
-
'Dance all night': Harry Styles kicks off World Tour in Amsterdam
-
Kane hits hat-trick, St. Pauli relegated from Bundesliga
-
Semenyo's magic moment fires Man City to FA Cup final win over Chelsea
-
Football back on war-battered pitches in Sudan capital
-
Opposition Latvian lawmaker tapped to form interim government
-
Kane hits hat-trick, St. Pauli are relegated from Bundesliga
-
Modi oversees semiconductor deal on Dutch trip
-
UK's ex-health minister Streeting says will run to replace PM Keir Starmer
-
Israel could wean itself off US defence aid, but not yet
-
Narvaez racks up second stage win at Giro d'Italia
-
Kim, Rose and Kirk charge into PGA hunt as McIlroy starts his third round
-
Whale that was rescued after stranded in Germany found dead in Denmark
-
Star Julianne Moore hates 'guns and explosions', warns women are losing out
-
No vaccine for latest Ebola outbreak, DRC warns as as toll hits 80
-
Sinner completes Medvedev win and passage into Italian Open final
-
Boycott over Israel takes some glitz off Eurovision final
-
Nicolas Maduro, locked in US prison, fades from Venezuelan life
-
Tens of thousands turn out for UK far-right rally, counter demo
-
Hollywood star Julianne Moore warns women are being pushed back
-
Litton's rearguard ton propels Bangladesh to 278 in Pakistan Test
-
Duplantis wins in Shanghai, fails to beat record as Warholm stunned
-
Alex Marquez edges out Acosta in Catalan MotoGP sprint
-
Maldives rescue diver dies in search for missing Italians
-
Trump, Nigeria claim killing of IS second-in-command
-
Israel strikes south Lebanon day after ceasefire extension
-
Mercedes Benz mulls diversification into defence
-
UK police brace far-right rally and counter demonstration
-
Israel says Hamas armed wing chief killed in Gaza strike
-
Cantona on the couch: footballer explores 'demons' in raw new film
Artists try to make Cameroon sing a different tune
In the hustle and bustle of Yaounde, Quartier Mozart is a unique artists' refuge, which its creator hopes will free Cameroonians from the "self-censorship" they say is fuelled by the political status quo.
The lower level of the industrial-looking loft is sometimes a cinema or a concert hall. At other times it is a restaurant with bric-a-brac decoration.
Furniture is made from pallets and film posters cover the walls. A laundry basket acts as a lampshade and iron staircases cut through the soaring height of the ceiling.
One morning in December, Landry Mbassi, a well-known local art critic, plunged this corner of the centre in darkness for the day's film club.
The screening was intended to be intimate -- and for good reason.
The subject matter is "highly sensitive", he joked as he introduced the session to the dozen or so artists, performers and other regulars gathered in the gloom.
On the bill were two previously censored Cameroonian films: "Um Nyobe, Unite Nationale" ("Un Nyobe, National Unity") by Nabe Daone, the first episode of a documentary series about Ruben Um Nyobe, a key Cameroonian independence figure.
The second was "Le President" ("The President"), a 2013 fictional film by Quartier Mozart's owner Jean-Pierre Bekolo, whose strangely close-to-reality plot has created controversy.
It paints a picture of an African president who has clung to power for 42 years -- just like Cameroon's actual President Paul Biya.
- Self-censorship -
"Cinema allows you to go where it's impossible to go in reality," the director told the small admiring audience via a microphone.
The 58-year-old filmmaker is convinced that cinema must "allow things to change".
He named the space "Quartier Mozart" in reference to his first film, which the Harvard University archive that mounted a retrospective of his work called "a comedy with a burlesque and fickle accent" and "social satire".
Bekolo even went so far as to imagine his own local currency, the "Quartier Doll'Art", to be used "exclusively for art, culture and artists".
The smallest denomination would be a 10 million note to "give the impression to the person who holds it of being rich", he said with a smile.
"As I don't like Cameroon as it is... I created this space to have a Cameroon that I love and to attract people who are going to make me want to love this country," he added.
The authoritarian government of Biya is regularly accused of corruption, bad governance and silencing dissent.
"Self-censorship has taken over to the point where the system no longer has to exercise it," said Bekolo, who said he created the Quartier Mozart centre in 2019 as a "place of awakening and awareness".
- Choose to stay -
For artists, choosing to stay in the country can be interpreted as "a form of resistance", Bekolo argued.
The filmmaker, who said he "gained nothing from Cameroon", lived for many years overseas and said he came back to the country of his birth even if it meant "living less well or having fewer resources", so as not to be among those "who gave everything to the West".
His vision is shared by the art critic Mbassi, who sees in Quartier Mozart "a place where ideas converge, where it's possible to express a free, neutral and avant-garde voice".
Such a cultural initiative is "rare" in Yaounde, the political capital of the country where "artistic dynamics are slowing down", he added.
For Xzafrane, a rapper and Quartier Mozart regular, "it's up to art and culture to reconnect Cameroonians" to their "deep DNA".
Through his music, the artist calls on his compatriots, whose daily lives are undermined by poverty, unemployment and injustice, to "think collectively".
He directly calls out Biya in several songs, among them "Rentre a la maison president" ("Come Home President"), released in 2024 during the ailing head of state's long period of absence from the country.
Biya, who turned 92 on Thursday and is the world's oldest serving head of state, could yet run for an eighth term of office at upcoming elections in October, potentially extending his four-decade rule.
Another of Xzafrane's songs is simply titled "Degagez" ("Get Out").
The rapper admitted that he knows the risk of such bluntness but said he was "more afraid for the future of his country than for his own life".
D.Moore--AMWN