22/03/2024

La Courneuve in morning, after police killing

 

Hundreds march in Paris suburb after youth killed in police chase


Bobigny (France) (AFP) – Several hundred marched peacefully in a Paris suburb Thursday to demand justice for a teenager killed last week in a collision with a police car.



The death of Wanys R. has sparked tensions in the town of La Courneuve near major venues for this summer's Paris Olympics.

Police on March 13 chased a moped that the 18-year-old was driving in the nearby town of Aubervilliers after it said he refused to comply with a traffic stop.

A video widely shared online showed a police car striking his scooter, killing him and injuring his passenger.

Police and the investigation so far say it was an accident, but his family have accused them of "voluntarily" hitting the scooter.

His older brother, who did not wish to give his name, spoke to the press on the steps of the La Courneuve townhall.

"My little brother was killed by the police. They decided to take his life unfairly," he said, his face covered with a black face mask and sunglasses.

"We are only seeking justice. No violence, no excess," he said, before the march set off.

Seventeen-year-old Taif went to the same school as Wanys R.

"The police have made it normal to kill people like him, young people," she said, not wishing to give her full name.

On Sunday evening, people fired a barrage of fireworks at the La Courneuve police station, according to footage posted on social media. Police said the attackers also threw stones and Molotov cocktails.

Police responded with sting-ball grenades, teargas and flash-ball projectiles, it said. The police station suffered no damaged.

La Courneuve is located in Paris's northern suburbs, in the Seine-Saint-Denis department that hosts Olympic venues including the flagship Stade de France stadium.

In June, a video of a police officer shooting dead 17-year-old Nahel M. triggered nights of riots in the Paris suburbs and other deprived areas.

The policeman who fired the fatal shot has been charged with voluntary homicide.

Senegal: Former PMs, outsiders and one woman among contenders in Sunday's vote


My latest for RFI > Read online here

 

Following a hurried two weeks of campaigning, Senegal's delayed presidential election is set for this Sunday – with more than 7 million people registered to vote for a record 20 then 17 candidates.




Voters will head out to more than 16,000 polling stations across the West African country and its diaspora. Ballots will be counted after voting ends at 6pm. 

Vote tallies will be sent to the Constitutional Council, and then the National Election Commission will announce provisional results by the evening or early Monday morning.

Majority and opposition

Election coverage has highlighted polarisation between two main camps – the first led by the former prime minister Amadou Ba.

Born in Dakar in 1961, Ba studied in Paris and the US and returned to Senegal to work in higher administration. Named economy minister by President Macky Sall in 2013, the wealthy individual was prime minister until the campaign was launched earlier this month.

The second dominant camp is a coalition brought together by Ousmane Sonko – former mayor of Ziguinchor in Casamance – and his official candidate, Bassirou Diomaye Faye.

Seventeen other candidates have also been running, two leaving the race in recent weeks.

Habib Sy and Cheikh Tidiane Dieye have been defending Bassirou's programme, with the latter even abandoning the race on Wednesday to support Faye fully. Sy did the same on Thursday.

Fifteen other are now left in the race.

Among these other candidates, more than three were previously in charge of a government, many close to the former prime minister. Only one candidate is a woman.

Observers believe that Senegal is heading towards a second round, as it will be hard for any contenders to achieve 51 percent on 24 March.

Three former prime ministers 

Veteran politician Idrissa Seck, 64, served as prime minister from 2002 to 2004 in the Senegalese Democratic Party under former President Abdoulaye Wade.

He was sacked over embezzlement allegations in 2005 and spent some months in jail before his case was dismissed.

In 2006, he founded his own party and challenged Wade in 2007, finishing second. He ran again in 2012 but did not make it to the second round.

He placed second in the 2019 presidential race with 21 percent of the vote, after which his Rewmi party joined the ruling United in Hope (BBY) coalition with Sall. He served as head of the Economic, Social and Environmental Council from November 2020 until April 2023.

Aly Ngouille Ndiaye, 59, is a former close ally of Sall and was a top BBY member.

He left the coalition, resigned as minister and launched his own bid after Ba was selected as the BBY candidate.

Ndiaye is the mayor of Linguere, a town in north Senegal. A civil engineer and former bank executive, he served as energy and interior minister before taking over the agriculture portfolio.

Mahammed Boun Abdallah Dionne, 64, was Sall's third prime minister from 2014 to 2019. He was seen as one of the frontrunners in the race to succeed Sall within the BBY coalition.

An early supporter and ally of Sall before he became president, Dionne held several positions during Sall's two terms in office, including chief of staff at the president's office.

He announced his candidacy in September 2023 and launched his own coalition days after Sall selected Ba as the candidate for the ruling coalition.

Former Dakar mayor 

Sall, 68, served as mayor of Dakar from 2009 to 2018.

Unrelated to President Sall, he is, on the contrary, one of his chief political rivals.

Arrested in March 2017 on suspicion of stealing about $3 million in public funds, he was sentenced to five years in 2018, preventing him from contesting the February 2019 presidential election.

Sall pardoned him in September that year, opening the way for him to run again in an election.

According to analysts, he stands a high chance among voters who want to get rid of the current majority but have no faith in Sonko's opposition coalition. 

One woman only

Entrepreneur and political newcomer Anta Babacar Ngom, 39, launched the Alternative for the Next Generation of Citizens political movement in August 2023.

Daughter of the founding president of Sedima, a leading poultry production group in the West and Central Africa region which operates Senegal's Kentucky Fried Chicken franchises, Ngom was, until recently, executive director of the company.

At least one outsider

Papa Djibril Fall is also running in the presidential election for the first time as an independent candidate.

Originally from Thiadiaye, a journalist and communications consultant, he graduated from the leading journalism school of Dakar, the Center for the Study of Information Sciences and Techniques, in 2014.

He has worked as a former columnist on 2sTV and Radio TFM, then was elected member of The National Assembly during the parliamentary elections of July 2022 in Senegal.

(with newswires)


My latest for RFI > Read online here



20/03/2024

Senegal presidential election: Last week before the polls!


My latest article for RFI:


SENEGAL ELECTIONS

Senegal's opposition hopes promise of new national currency will win votes

The economy is expected to prove a key issue in Senegal's upcoming presidential election. With campaigning for the 24 March polls in full swing, the opposition coalition says replacing the colonial-era CFA franc with a national currency would be the best way to tackle inequality and boost employment.


The opposition coalition launched its campaign platform on 10 March with a promise to create a new national currency.

Leading opponent Bassirou Diomaye Faye, a key figure in the protests that followed the postponement of the February polls by President Macky Sall, is seen as a strong contender among the 19 candidates for the presidency. 

In his 84-page election platform, Faye says Senegal needs to take back control of its economy.

"Convinced that full independence cannot be achieved without controlling the economy, livestock management, fisheries, and agriculture, we are fully committed to achieving food, digital, fiscal, energy and scientific sovereignty," he writes.

Colonial tools

The idea of a new currency is popular among some people in Senegal, who think that the CFA franc, the shared currency inherited from French colonial rule, isn't helping an underdeveloped economy.

The CFA franc was created as an alternative to the dollar and is used in 14 countries in Central and Western Africa.

Development economist Ndongo Samba Sylla told RFI that Senegal would be "better off if it had its own currency system, not one that was designed to serve colonial and external interests".

"All the countries using the CFA franc are still poor," he says.

Gabon, Equatorial Guinea and the Republic of Congo in particular "should be very rich, like Dubai", because of their vast resources, he claims.

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Read the whole article here: https://www.rfi.fr/en/africa/20240316-senegal-opposition-hopes-promise-of-new-national-currency-will-win-votes



15/03/2024

'Acts of Creation' Exhibition at Arnolfini, Bristol - March 2024

 



#art and #womanhood / #motherhood at @arnolfiniarts #Arnolfini #Exhibition curated by #HettieJudah / #bristol


Acts of Creation: On Art and Motherhood

09 March - 26 May 2024, 11:00 - 18:00
Free entry, donations always welcome and much appreciated.



Launching in March 2024 at Arnolfini, Hayward Gallery Touring’s major group exhibition Acts of Creation: On Art and Motherhood will plunge into the joys and heartaches, mess, myths and mishaps of motherhood through over 100 artworks, from the feminist avant-garde to the present day.

While the Madonna and Child is one of the great subjects of European art, we rarely see art about motherhood as a lived experience, in all its complexity. Acts of Creation: On Art and Motherhood will address this blind spot in art history, asserting the artist mother as an important – if rarely visible – cultural figure.

Featuring the work of more than sixty modern and contemporary artists, this exhibition will approach motherhood as a creative enterprise, albeit one at times tempered by ambivalence, exhaustion or grief. Acts of Creation will explore lived experience of motherhood, offering a complex account that engages with contemporary concerns about gender, caregiving and reproductive rights.

The exhibition will address diverse experiences of motherhood across three themes: Creation, which looks at conception, pregnancy, birth and nursing; Maintenance which explores motherhood and caregiving in the day-to-day; and Loss, which touches on miscarriage and involuntary childlessness, as well as reproductive rights. The heart of the exhibition is a series of revelatory self-portraits – a celebration of the artist as mother. 

Featuring painting, photography, sculpture, sound and film, artists in the exhibition include: Felicity Allen; Janine Antoni; Cassie Arnold; Bobby Baker; Elina Brotherus; Liesel Burisch; Cathy Cade; Lea Cetera; Jai Chuhan; Eileen Cooper; Renee Cox; Dorothy Cross; Rineke Dijkstra; Natalie Djurberg and Hans Berg; Leni Dothan; Marlene Dumas; Catherine Elwes; Tracey Emin; Jessa Fairbrother; Feministo; Fenix; Maeve Gilmore; Anna Grevenitis; Camille Henrot; Susan Hiller; Ghislaine Howard; Elsa James; Chantal Joffe; Claudette Johnson; Mary Kelly; Liss LaFleur; Tala Madani; Sally Mann; MATERNAL FANTASIES; Mother Art; Wangechi Mutu; Ishbel Myerscough; Everlyn Nicodemus; Catherine Opie; Fani Parali; Celia Paul; Cathie Pilkington; Laure Prouvost; Paula Rego; Su Richardson; Sister Seven; Monica Sjöö; Annegret Soltau; Tabitha Soren; Heather Spears; Nancy Spero; Hannah Starkey; Emma Talbot; Mierle Laderman Ukeles; VALIE EXPORT; Christine Voge; Del LaGrace Volcano; Barbara Walker; Caroline Walker; Carrie Mae Weems; Nancy Willis; Hermione Wiltshire; Hermione Wiltshire and Clare Bottomley; Carmen Winant; Daphne Wright; Billie Zangewa.

Some of the artworks in Acts of Creation: On Art and Motherhood address important issues surrounding women’s health and wellbeing including: Nudity, childbirth, (in)fertility, miscarriage, abortion, loss, domestic abuse, adoption, sterilisation and obstetric violence.




Senegal's economic policy in focus ahead of elections • RFI English

 

How can Senegal's economy move away from its colonial past? This is at the heart of the campaign ahead of the 24 March poll. 

The opposition coalition says replacing the colonial-era CFA franc with a national currency would be the best way to tackle inequality and boost employment. 

RFI's Melissa Chemam spoke to development economist and author Ndongo Samba Sylla about this:





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More soon in my article here:

https://www.rfi.fr/en/author/melissa-chemam/




09/03/2024

Friche La Belle de Mai, Marseille honours French overseas artists

 

'Un champ d'îles'

La Friche La Belle de Mai

Marseille

Spring 2024


Insight 


Raphaël Barontini 






Morgan Fache 



Kenny Dunkan




Young people hit hard by Senegal's economic and political crises • RFI English

 

As youth attempt to flee Senegal because of economic and now political hardship, charities and educators are attempting to support them at home with training that fits their needs.

My latest report from Dakar:



07/03/2024

Senegal should be able to vote before the end of March

 

6pm update:

Senegal court confirms 24 March poll, ending weeks of uncertainty


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Senegal’s president reschedules election to 24 March


Senegal's President Macky Sall has scheduled the delayed presidential election for 24 March, the government said, after the country's top court ruled that the proposal to hold the vote after his mandate expires on 2 April was unconstitutional. 


Read my latest article on RFI's website:


Senegal sets March date for delayed presidential polls, but confusion prevails

https://www.rfi.fr/en/africa/20240307-senegal-sets-march-date-for-delayed-presidential-polls-but-confusion-prevails




(more soon)

06/03/2024

Haiti on the verge of collapse

 

Africa-led mission to Haiti 'urgently needed', according to the UN


UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has expressed alarm at the "rapidly deteriorating security situation" in Haiti and called for more funding for the planned international police mission to be led by Kenya.


By: Melissa Chemam with RFI


Haiti's capital was largely shut down Monday with residents only venturing out for essentials as authorities imposed a state of emergency and a curfew after a weekend attack on a prison freed thousands of inmates.

As the latest crisis deepened, Prime Minister Ariel Henry was expected to return to the country after a trip to Kenya.

The mission – initially approved in October by the UN Security Council for one year – had envisioned Kenyan police on the offensive with their Haitian counterparts, who are outnumbered and outgunned by gang members.

The UN says the deployment of this international mission is "urgent".

Arnaud Royer is the Representative in Haiti for the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), led by Volker Turk. 

No other option

Royer told RFI that Turk has been calling for any form of international support for Haiti for the past two years.

"Similar calls come from the local population too. Because there is no other option. The gang violence is now concentrated in the capital, Port-au-Prince, a city of 4 to 5 million inhabitants. It has become one of the most acutely violent situations in an urban environment in the world."

Last year 5,000 homicides were reported in Haiti,  according to a UN report published last month.

"People get killed by bullets even inside their homes in Port-au-Prince," Royer says.

"Others live in makeshift camps for displaced people. And there is zero boot on the ground, nobody to protect civilians. You can argue that the mission is too small or problematic, but it is absolutely urgent to bring it to Haiti, and to be more serious about the arms embargo." 

Five contributors, two African

The upsurge in violence over the weekend came on the heels of a visit by Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry to Kenya on Friday, to sign a "reciprocal" agreement for the mission with Kenya's leader President William Ruto.

Ruto said he and Henry had "discussed the next steps to enable the fast-tracking of the deployment", but it was not immediately clear whether the agreement would counter a Nairobi court ruling in January that branded the deployment "illegal".


"I take this opportunity to reiterate Kenya's commitment to contribute to the success of this multinational mission. We believe this is a historic duty because peace in Haiti is good for the world as a whole," Ruto said in a statement.

Ruto said last year that he was ready to provide up to 1,000 personnel, an offer welcomed by the United States and other nations that had ruled out putting their own forces on the ground.

Five countries have told the United Nations of their intent to join the Kenya-led mission: the Bahamas, Bangladesh, Barbados, Benin and Chad.

Unpopular decision

Opposition politician Ekuru Aukot, who filed the petition against Kenyan troop deployment, told French news agency AFP on Friday that he would lodge a case "for contempt of court”.

"William Ruto does not care about the rule of law or the constitution of this country," he said. "We will question the validity of this secretive agreement," he added.

In Haiti, many citizens have described the idea of any new foreign mission as "imperialism".

Others point out that "the Kenyan police have a long history of abuse and violations," as Martin Mavenjina of the Kenya Human Rights Commission told RFI recently.

In the face of criticism, Ruto had described the Kenyan undertaking as a "mission for humanity", in step with its long record of contributing to peacekeeping missions abroad.

Haiti, one of the world's poorest nations, has been in turmoil for years, and the 2021 assassination of President Jovenel Moise plunged the country further into chaos.

No elections have taken place since 2016 and the presidency remains vacant.

Protesters have demanded Henry's resignation in line with a political deal that required Haiti to hold polls and for him to cede power to newly elected officials by February of this year.



01/03/2024

Saint Levant - 'Deira' - ft. MC Abdul

 

Thanks Lilia, for posting this. 

Such a fan of MC Abdul already. A great featuring, a powerful song




“Deira” written and performed by Saint Levant & Khalil Cherradi Guitar by Hakim Rouidi; violin by Moez Bouali; keys by Buddy Caderni; percussion by Mehdi Ryan; backing vocals by Zeyne