25/01/2026

Exposition : "Ange, Franklin et moi : fragment d’une guerre coloniale inachevée"

 

Exposition : "Ange, Franklin et moi : fragment d’une guerre coloniale inachevée"


Travail exceptionnel de l’artiste Chloe Malanda - présenté samedi soir, 24 janvier 2026, en vernissage à 60 AdaDa à Saint-Denis




L'art visuel de Chloé est inspiré, nourri et traversé par son enfance en République du Congo, ou Congo Brazzaville, ancienne colonie française d'Afrique centrale, frontalière du Cameroun et de la République démocratique du Congo (ou RD Congo, anviennement Zaïre).

Elle y a vécu deux guerres dans les années 1990s, et l'abandon, après le départ de ses parents pour la France... 

"À travers différents langages, Chloé convoque le concept de dignité sous le prisme de l’histoire, du traumatisme, de la mémoire, du corps, de l’esprit et des puissances invisibles."

Le titre de l'exposition est inspiré par Ange Bidie Diawara, un officier et homme politique congolais (Congo-Brazzaville), né à Sibiti en 1941 et décédé en avril 1973, premier vice-président du Conseil national de la révolution, mis en place le 4 août 1968, et oncle de l'artiste.

Les conflits subi par Chloé et ses grands-parents ont opposé des révolutionnaires (souvent inspiré par Ange) à Denis Sassou-Nguesso, né en 1943 à Edou,  militaire et homme d'État congolais, Président de la République populaire du Congo de 1979 à 1992, et actuel président de la République du Congo depuis 1997, après avoir renversé le président élu Pascal Lissouba dans les premiers mois de la guerre civile du Congo-Brazzaville, ancienne colonie française.

En effet, de juillet 1993 à 1994, Brazzaville et une grande partie du pays est le théâtre d'une guerre civile larvée opposant les partisans du président d'alors, Pascal Lissouba, les partisans de Denis Sassou Nguesso et les ceux de Bernard Kolélas, dirigeant du principal mouvement d'opposition et maire de Brazzaville...

Le conflit aurait provoqué la mort de deux mille personnes et entraîné le déplacement à l'intérieur du pays de cent mille personnes. En 1995, il s'apaise avec l'intégration dans le gouvernement de quatre membres de l'opposition. La violence et d'autres conflits résurgents ont malheureusement perduré.

L'exposition reflète surtout les émotions de l'enfant dans la guerre, sa colère, ses souffrances, et ses quêtes identitaires, également animée par une lutte politique anti-colonialiste et panafricaniste.
















Le vernissage a offert l'occasion d'entendre une conversation entre Chloé et la journaliste Adiaratou Diarrassouba, suivie d'une performance 'krump' par Kéné, suivies d'un DJ set de DJ YLN.









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Sur l'histoire du Congo Brazzaville...






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@ 60 AdaDa, 60 rue Gabriel Péri, 93200 Saint-Denis : https://www.pop-plainecommune.com/quefaire/evenements/tout-lagenda/exposition-chloe-malanda-saint-denis-fr-6187677/ Jusqu'au 31 janvier 2026


Iraqi filmmaker Hasan Hadi: My interview on his film 'The President's Cake'

 


Here is the recording of my conversation with the Iraqi filmmaker Hasan Hadi, on his film 'The President's Cake', shown in Cannes and shortlisted for the Oscars, a first for Iraq. 

He opens up about the film, rooted in childhood memories, local stories, and authentic experiences in Iraq:




24/01/2026

A look up at African elections in 2026



African elections 2026: Polls to expect, between lack of change and uncertainty


After tense general elections in Uganda in January, Presidential elections are to take place in DR Congo in March then in Benin and in Djibouti in April. But other polls are also scheduled all over the continent, from Libya to Zambia, including Ethiopia in June, The Gambia and South Sudan in December, some facing many points of uncertainty. I look at what's at stake. 


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Africa’s 2026 elections will unfold against the backdrop of a few complex voting results in 2025. Persistent concerns around political inclusion, institutional independence, and civic space were indeed highlighted by electoral outcomes in Cameroon, Tanzania, Guinea Bissau, and Côte d’Ivoire.

Uganda's general elections only confirmed these worries, with President Yoweri Museveni winning a seventh term, through severe repression against all forms of opposition.


Scheduled polls


All year long, election days are already on the calendar for many parts of Africa, from the West to the South West.


Congo (Brazzaville) – Presidential Election (on March 22, 2026)

Politics in the Republic of the Congo has been dominated by President Denis Sassou Nguesso since 1979, when he first became president. And he has been the continuous head of state again since 1997.

In between, he was the leader of the party in power, thus governing for over four decades across two periods.

His nomination by the ruling Congolese Labour Party (PCT) for another term reinforces his dominance and leaves very little hope for change.


Benin – Presidential Election (12 April 2026)

Beninese citizens voted in January to choose their local representatives and parliamentarians, following a revised electoral calendar that ensures that all polls now take place in a single year. But people are still waiting for final results, and wary after an attempted coup last year against President Patrice Talon.

The incumbent has already said will not run in April, so two candidates are set to contest: Economy Minister Romuald Wadagni, chosen by the presidential coalition, and Paul Hounkpè, who will stand for the Cauris Forces for an Emerging Benin, known as the FCBE.

While Benin was once regarded as a regional democratic model, the past few years have raised concerns over the lack of political inclusion and restrictive electoral reforms.

Major opposition parties were barred from contesting, and the election also comes against a backdrop of the multiple coups in the West Africa region, which put the Ecowas regional powers on alert.


Ethiopia – General Elections (1 June 2026)

Ethiopia has been going through stark international conflicts since Abiy Ahmed Ali became Prime Minister in 2018 and the leader of the Prosperity Party since 2019. The wars in Tigray and Amhara regions have profoundly destabilised the equilibrium between the different groups forming the federation.

"The country’s political context remains shaped by post-conflict recovery efforts, regional tensions, and debates over federal governance," according to the African Elections Project, established by the platform Penplusbytes in 2008 to increase elections knowledge. 

Electoral readiness varies significantly across regions, and observers have regularly denounced political repression, rigging and other exclusionary tactics.

The electoral campaign also comes as fears of a reignated conflict with neighbouring Eritrea are growing.


Zambia – General Election (13 August 2026)

President Hakainde Hichilema faces a 2026 vote that will test his incumbency amid economic pressures and shifting political alliances.

As Zambia is considered one of the region’s more competitive democracies, electoral integrity is relatively strong, but voter decisions might depend on economic performance, youth employment, and service delivery.

Despite a fragmented opposition and the advantage of incumbency, his chances of a second term will depend largely on public perceptions of governance.

Critics argue that Hichilema is seeking to bolster his electoral prospects by signing a law expanding parliamentary seats from 167 to 280, including allocations for women, youth, and candidates with disabilities.

 

Uncertainty


Other polls are scheduled for later in the year, in The Gambia on 5 December 2026 for a Presidential Election and in South Sudan – for general elections in December 2026.

A few others elections are also scheduled for 2026 in Africa, but dates remain unconfirmed:

-in Djibouti, where a presidential election is supposed to take place in April 2026, but the date remains unknown;

-in Libya, where general elections are set for April too, but, facing tremendous obstacles after years of civil war, they seem "very unlikely" experts told me;

- in Somalia, with a presidential election on the line for June 2026;

-and in Morocco, where the parliamentary elections should take place September 2026, but their date remains uncertain.

The autonomous region of Somaliland is also due to hold parliamentary and municipal elections this year. The territory recently saw its luck change when it was recognised as an independent state for the first time, by Israel in December, inducing strong worries throughout the region and beyond.

Some of the smallest countries of the continent, including the island nations of Cabo Verde and São Tomé and Príncipe, are also going to the polls.

What is sure, as Joseph Siegle and Hany Wahila wrote for the Africa Centre for Strategic Studies, is that "many of the African countries going to the polls in 2026 face fundamental democratic tests of crafting effective checks on the executive to enable power sharing and popular representation."  



23/01/2026

US threats

 




Sliding Towards Authoritarianism?

The administration of US President Donald Trump has embraced a wide range of authoritarian tactics, policies, and actions that undermine human rights protections and many of the key pillars of US democracy.

These actions ultimately threaten basic universal freedoms and rights of everyone in the United States and many across the world. 

On January 20, to mark the first anniversary of Trump’s second inauguration, Human Rights Watch published a collection of its research and analysis over the last year to illustrate key elements of the administration’s attack on rights.

Among these are: 

  • Targeting marginalized communities
  • Undermining access to information
  • Punishing critics and chilling dissent
  • Unlawful and abusive use of force

The works also serves to highlight and help identify where action is needed to defend rights under siege.

>> Read our reporting in a new special feature




19/01/2026

Stop 'appeasing' bully Trump, Amnesty chief tells Europe

 

Stop 'appeasing' bully Trump, Amnesty chief tells Europe


The leader of global rights group Amnesty International urged European countries Monday to stop "appeasing" US President Donald Trump and resist him and other "bullies" who she said were intent on destroying the rules-based order in place since World War II.


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"We need much more resistance," Amnesty secretary general Agnes Callamard told AFP in an interview on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

"Europe's credibility is at stake."

Her comments came as Trump doubled down on his threats to take over Greenland "one way or the other", insisting such a move is necessary for world security, prompting European countries to close ranks against his designs on the vast Danish territory.

German and French leaders denounced as "blackmail" Trump's weekend threats to wield new tariffs against countries which oppose his plans for the Arctic island, suggesting Europe was preparing trade countermeasures.

But German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, who was due to meet Trump in Davos on Wednesday, also stressed that Europe was eager to "avoid any escalation" in the dispute.

'Say no'

Callamard urged governments to show more "courage" and to "say no".

"Stop thinking you can make deals with bullies, stop thinking you can agree to the rules of the predators and not become yourself a victim of them."

The Amnesty chief highlighted that the US bid to seize Greenland was only the latest indication that the world is facing the "destruction of the rules-based order".

She lamented that global and regional "superpowers" seemed "intent on destroying what has been established after World War II, dedicated to finding common rules to our common problems".

Since Trump's return to the White House a year ago, he has taken "a range of decisions that have led to the demise of many rules around the world", while Russia was destroying the system "through its aggression in Ukraine", she said.

European powers have been treading a thin line over Ukraine in recent months, relying on Washington to try to help settle the conflict but resisting terms too favourable to Moscow.

The post-WWII order "is also being destroyed by Israel that has completely ignored international law in its genocide of Palestinians in Gaza," she added.

Amnesty and other rights groups have repeatedly accused Israel of carrying out a genocide against Palestinians in Gaza, a term vehemently rejected by the Israeli government.

Callamard stressed that the rules-based order was established in response to "a global war that had killed millions of people, as a response to extermination camps that had killed six million Jews, as a response to authoritarianism that had led to the most daunting global repression the world over".

'Abyss'

"The fact that it is now being destroyed without any plan B, just for the sake of destroying the rules, should send shivers to all of us," she said, warning that the only alternative to the rules-based system was "falling down into an abyss".

"That's what we need to prevent."

The Davos gathering this year is taking place under the tagline "A Spirit of Dialogue", but Callamard warned "there is no evidence of dialogue" currently among the world's decision-makers.

"There is evidence of bullying. There is evidence of destruction. There is evidence of countries using their military power, their economic power, to force others into agreeing to their one-sided deals."

Such tactics had for the past 12 months been met with European "appeasement".

"We have sought to appease the bully, the predator living in Washington," she said.

"Where has this led us? To more and more attacks, to more and more threats."

Callamard, who is French, recalled that the European project was not just about economics, but also about values, humanity and the rule of law.

"I'm hoping that our leaders will recall that... history and see in the current challenges a way of re-insisting on the European project and demanding human rights protection for the sake of humanity," she said.

"That demands stopping the appeasement politics, (which) simply is not working".

"Please stop it. Resist. Resist."


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January newsletter

 


Let's fight the orange man with some Bobi Wine inspiration

Venezuela, Nigeria, Greenland, Iran, Sudan, DRC, Somaliland, Uganda... 2026's world is already shaking. More than ever. But could it lead to positive change?



New post on Substack:


Let's fight the orange man with some Bobi Wine inspiration

Venezuela, Nigeria, Greenland, Iran, Sudan, DRC, Somaliland, Uganda... 2026's world is already shaking. More than ever. But could it lead to positive change?

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18/01/2026

The greatest birthday weekend

 

 I don't like winter, but I keep remembering my January birthday in Kenya, in the southern hemisphere, full summer, sunshine and Ethiopian food, hoping I'll be that lucky again...

But if the sun and the warmth won't come to me, I'll try to create a little spark of them...




Thanks friends for coming to my birthday lunch! 




 Feeling grateful! 



16/01/2026

Uganda: Bobi Wine under house arrest, President Museveni leads vote count

 


Bobi Wine under house arrest in Uganda as President Museveni leads vote count


First results have just been shared this Friday morning in Kampala, showing that Veteran President Yoweri Museveni holds a commanding lead. His main challenger, Bobi Wine, is second, but also under effective house arrest, according to his party. All analysts and observers expected swift results with such an outcome, and more repression of the opposition.



Photo: Reuters



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Melissa Chemam
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The 81-year-old President, who has been ruling Uganda since he seized power in 1986, is looking for what his party calls a decisive victory. 

The first results were announced by the electoral commission early this Friday morning after Thursday's elections and show Museveni with at least 76 percent of the vote based on tallies from nearly half of polling stations.

Wine trailed with 19.85 percent, with the remaining vote split among six other candidates.

Wine, whose legal name is Robert Kyagulanyi, had called on his supporters on Thursday to protest, though there has been no sign of demonstrations so far.

The final results of the presidential and parliamentary elections are due by 2am GMT on Saturday.


House arrest

"The military and police have surrounded the residence of President Kyagulanyi Ssentamu Robert, effectively placing him and his wife under house arrest," his party, the National Unity Platform wrote on X late Thursday.

"Security officers have unlawfully jumped over the perimeter fence and are now erecting tents within his compound," it added.

The popular music star-turned-politician has emerged as the main opponent to Museveni in recent years, and had run in the last election in 2021. 

He alleged massive fraud during these general elections, which were held under an internet blackout, following a campaign marred by violence.

Museveni had told reporters after casting his ballot that he expected to win with 80 percent of the vote "if there's no cheating".

He has repeatedly been accused of "brutal repression" of the opposition in the run-up to the vote, by national and international NGOs, including Amnesty International, and his government imposed an internet blackout earlier this week.


Succession worries

Election day on Thursday was marred by significant technical problems. The biometric machines used to confirm voters' identities malfunctioned notably, including when Museveni himself voted, and some ballot papers were undelivered for several hours in many areas.

There was also a heavy security presence across the country on election day.

Analysts view the election as a foregone conclusion since Museveni, an 81-year-old former guerrilla fighter, has total control over the state and security apparatus and has ruthlessly crushed any challenger during his four-decade rule.

African affairs expert Jeffrey Smith, of the pro-democracy think tank Vanguard Africa told me that this outcome was to be expected and that the main worries for Ugandans now are further repression in an ageing aitocratic regime and Museveni's succession.

If the results are confirmed, Museveni will start a seventh term in office, and he already said on multiple occasion that he wished his own son, military chief Muhoozi Kainerugaba, to become his successor.

The United Nations rights office said last week that the elections were taking place in an environment marked by "widespread repression and intimidation" against the opposition.

 

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Uganda: First preliminary results...

 

Resuters writes:

Uganda's President Museveni takes commanding lead in early election results


  • Incumbent Museveni credited with 76% of vote so far
  • Wine reportedly under house arrest, police deny knowledge
  • UN cites widespread repression during campaign

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Veteran Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni held a commanding lead in early election results announced on Friday, while the party of his main challenger, Bobi Wine, said its leader was under effective house arrest. 

The 81-year-old Museveni has ruled Uganda since seizing power in 1986 and is looking for a decisive victory to assert his political strength as speculation mounts about his eventual succession.

Results announced by the electoral commission from Thursday's vote showed Museveni with 76.25% of the vote based on tallies from nearly half of polling stations. 

Wine trailed with 19.85%, with the remaining vote split among six other candidates.

 Museveni had told reporters after casting his ballot that he expected to win with 80% of the vote "if there's no cheating". 

Pop star-turned-politician Wine has alleged massive fraud during the election, which was held under an internet blackout following a campaign marred by violence. Wine, whose legal name is Robert Kyagulanyi, called on his supporters on Thursday to protest, though there has been no sign of demonstrations so far.



15/01/2026

Kampala, 15 January

 


Uganda opposition leader and National Unity Platform (NUP) presidential candidate Robert Kyagulanyi Ssentamu, popularly known as Bobi Wine, shows his ballot before casting it in Kampala on 15 January, 2026, during Uganda’s 2026 general elections. 

Rian COPE / AFP