02/06/2026

Rwanda genocide memorial unveiled in Paris in presence of Kagame and artist Grada Kilomba

 


Rwanda's President Paul Kagame was in Paris on Tuesday to unveil a new monument dedicated to victims of the Rwanda genocide in the presence of his French counterpart Emmanuel Macron. France thus acknowledges further its role in one of the 20th century's worst atrocities.


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Melissa Chemam - 2 June 2026
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The monument is set on the banks of the Seine river, on esplanade Habib-Bourguiba, near Pont de l'Alma, in the heart of Paris and is presented a new step in France's efforts to take responsibility for its past policies and re-engage with Africa.

Named "L'Archive" in French ("The Archive"), it has been designed by the acclaimed Portuguese artist of African descent, Grada Kilomba, who is also a writer and a committed researcher in the field of African memory. 



The monument consists of two black brass steles and bears an engraved tribute to the hundreds of thousands of men, women, and children massacred between April and July 1994.

An inscription on one of the steles reads: "Here, like an archive, rest the voices and words, the memories and experiences, the feelings and hopes of the victims and the survivors."

Kagame said that "confronting historical responsibilities requires a lot of courage" and "a great sense of humanity," thanking French President Emmanuel Macron for his reconciliation efforts.

"This monument is a culmination. It now inscribes the genocide of the Tutsi in Rwanda at the heart of our capital and our history. It is the culmination of a long and patient work of truth," Macron said.

One survivor, Jeanne Uwimbabazi, was invited to speak at the ceremony, along with Kagame and French President Macron.

The Franco-Rwandan musician and writer Gaël Faye also read a poem by another Franco-Rwandan author, Beata Umubyeyi Mairesse, herself a survivor of the genocide.


Unsilencing the past

Grada Kilomba’s design was developed through close dialogue and consultation with Rwandas. The artist did go on a research trip to Rwanda in 2024, which was pivotal, she said, enabling her to meet survivors of the genocide, immerse herself in the local context, and pay her respects at memorial sites.

"By expressing the danger of unspoken violence, the monument reminds us that forgetting is the primary architecture of violence and dehumanisation," the artist wrote in a statement. "Adopting the codes of geometric abstraction, the memorial to the victims of the Tutsi genocide expresses, through its minimalism, the unspeakable and unimaginable nature of the genocide: that which neither words nor images can convey."

'The Archive' also stems both from the artist’s desire to give the project a universal scope.

The work invites to experience absence, to confront what cannot be seen.

Kilomba is best known for her subversive practice of storytelling, in which she gives body, voice, form and movement to silenced stories, especially from Africa. This latest work also affirms the place now occupied by women artists within our shared public space, long dominated by the work of male European artists.


Further acknowledgement

The genocide was triggered by Hutu extremists after the assassination of Hutu President Juvenal Habyarimana on 6 April, 1994, when his plane was shot down over Kigali.   

At the time, France had been a long-standing backer of Rwanda's Hutu-dominated government, leading to decades of tensions between the two countries including a break in diplomatic ties between 2006 and 2009.

Macron has recognised France's "responsibility", saying Paris and its Western and African allies did not have the will to halt the slaughter in 1994 of an estimated 800,000 people, mostly ethnic Tutsis, but he has stopped short of issuing a formal apology.

In a speech in Kigali in 2021, Macron acknowledged France's failure to heed warnings of the massacres.

A historical commission set up by Macron and led by historian Vincent Duclert concluded in 2021 that there had been a "failure" on the part of France under President Francois Mitterrand, while adding there was no evidence Paris was complicit in the killings. Duclert said the unveiling of the monument was a "powerful" step. "The genocide against the Tutsi is now fully part of France's public history," he added.

The president of the Ibuka France genocide survivor association, Marcel Kabanda, also praised France's efforts to remember Rwanda's dead and assume its share of responsibility. "We have been waiting for this for more than 30 years," he told news agencies.

"It is like oxygen, because civil society has long carried this struggle alone, and we finally feel understood and supported."

The French courts, acting on the principle of universal jurisdiction to try the most serious crimes committed outside French territory, have convicted several Rwandans for their part in the massacre.

And in May this year, France's judiciary ordered the resumption of an almost two-decade investigation into accusations that Habyarimana's widow who has lived in France since 1998, was involved in the genocide.


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I'm speaking to Grada Kilomba soon.

My previous interviews with the brilliant artist are here (article for BBC Culture), and there (RFI podcast).

More soon.


01/06/2026

Ethiopians vote amid conflicts

 


Ethiopians vote except Tigrayans in tense general elections, amid conflicts


Ethiopia holds parliamentary and regional elections this Monday that analysts expect Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed's party to win in a landslide, despite significant conflicts in parts of the country.


Ethiopia's Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed votes during the parliamentary and regional elections at a polling centre in Jimma, Oromia Region, Ethiopia, on 1 June, 2026. @ Reuters



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Melissa Chemam
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More than 50 million of Ethiopia's 135 million people are registered for the elections, called upon to vote for the 547 members of the House of People's Representatives, the lower house of the Federal Parliament.

Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, 49, is confident of his victory. He was appointed in 2018 following mass protests against the long-ruling EPRDF coalition. His newly formed Prosperity Party won 410 out of 484 seats in parliament in elections in 2021.

Prosperity Party (PP) candidates have campaigned on the government's economic record, citing improved food security and economic growth in Africa's second-most populous country that officials project will top 10 percent in 2026, one of the fastest rates on the continent.

"It is obvious that the PP will win these election," an expert working for ACLED on the Horn of Africa, told me, requiring to stay anonymous. "The elections were also much more open in 2021, and even more in 2005, the most democratic polls in the history of Ethiopia so far."


One region excluded, two regions under insurgency

The country is voting with an exception in the northern Tigray region, where the electoral board has cited "unfavourable conditions" following a 2020 to 2022 civil war and continuing political turmoil. More than 750,000 people are still displaced by the war.

"Organising an election remains impossible in Tigray," Muauz Gidey, a researcher at the Tigray Institute of Political Studies, told RFI's correspondent in Addis Ababa, "due to an extremely degraded security context and the collapse of the political system."

Though the peace deal known as Pretoria Agreement ended the civil war in Tigray in 2022, researchers say the conflicts caused hundreds of thousands of deaths, and a move by the main political party there to reassert control over the region’s political administration last month has led Ethiopian officials and analysts to warn of the risk of fresh unrest.

Political dialogue between Addis and Mekele, Tigray's political capital, is also at a standstill. On 8 April, the federal government reappointed General Tadesse Werede as head of the Tigray Interim Administration, angering the TPLF, which then reinstated the pre-war regional parliament, deemed illegitimate by Addis Ababa.

Kinge Hadush Belay, president of the Tigrayan opposition party Salsay Weyane Tigray (Sawet), told RFI that the population of the region is now "held hostage between a party that is fighting for its survival and the federal government, which does not create a climate conducive to elections and dialogue."

Ethiopia also faces insurgencies in the country's two biggest regions, Oromiya and Amhara, linked to grievances by different ethnic groups about alleged marginalisation within Ethiopia's federal system.

In Abiy's native Oromiya, in the south of Ethiopia, fighting between government forces and the Oromo Liberation Army separatist group has killed hundreds of people in the past few years.

In neighbouring Amhara, a militia known as Fano has seized swathes of the countryside since 2023. As a result, voting will not take place in at least eight of Amhara's 138 constituencies.

"Even the Prosparity Party wasn't able to campaign in Amhara", the ACLED expert told me. "Delays are likely to affect multiple regions in Amhara and in the Somali region," they added.

But elections are "just a multiplier of all the crises the country is going through", according to ACLED's expert.


Weak opposition  

The Prosperity Party is nevertheless expected to dominate the elections against a fragmented opposition, weakened by internal rivalries.

Ethiopia’s economy is expected to grow by 7.8 percent in 2025-26 and 8.5 in 2026-27, according to the African Development Bank, with Abiy credited for his campaign of economic liberalisation, opening the country up to foreign companies. 

But some opposition parties accuse the federal government of undermining them through arrests of their leaders and legal obstacles to their political activities, charges the government denies.

Upon taking office in 2018, Abiy moved to liberalise Ethiopia's tightly controlled economy and freed some journalists, activists and other political prisoners. He even won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2019 for ending hostilities with neighbouring Eritrea.

But his opponents and human rights activists accuse his government of reversing those gains in recent years by detaining other journalists, shutting down civil society groups and overseeing military campaigns marked by atrocities.

The government has denied systematic human rights abuses and said its actions are necessary to protect national security.


General apathy

For all these reasons and a generally difficult economic context, these general elections are generating very little interest among voters. Months of a lackluster campaign let the opposition struggling to make its voice heard.

“People aren’t paying much attention to this vote because, for them, everything is already decided, everything is already calculated. We know the result and nothing will change!” one voter told RFI's correspondent in Addis.

“Politics doesn’t interest me that much", another said. "I could have voted for an opposition candidate who, in my opinion, deserves it, but in the end, I didn’t even bother to register on the lists and get my voter card,” Yohanes added, not hiding his weariness with the political situation in the country.

Two observer missions are deployed in the country, one from the African Union and the other from IGAD, the regional organisation for the Horn of Africa. In total, around one hundred experts are present to ensure the independence of the election.

Results are not expected until 11 June.



26/05/2026

Spotlight on Africa: On Mali and jihadism's growing grip on Africa

 

PODCAST'S NEW EPISODE - Spotlight on Africa: 

Global jihadism's growing grip on Africa


As attacks from jihadist groups allied to Tuaregs continue in Mali, global jihadism threatens Africa like no other region on earth, according to ACLED’s latest report. 

With the organisation's expert on West Africa, Spotlight on Africa explores how jihadist groups are expanding across the continent, controlling territory, targeting civilians and disrupting infrastructure

https://www.rfi.fr/en/podcasts/spotlight-on-africa/20260526-spotlight-on-africa-global-jihadism-s-growing-grip-on-africa



Coordinated attacks by Tuareg separatists and jihadists dealt a major new blow to the junta in power in the capital, Bamako, in the last days of April, securing the capture of Kidal, a northern rebel stronghold.

Several strategic towns and areas around the capital Bamako were also targeted in the offensive by Tuareg rebels of the Azawad Liberation Front (FLA) coalition and the jihadist Group for the Support of Islam and Muslims (JNIM), which was launched at dawn on Saturday 25 April. 

Two days of intense fighting followed between Malian soldiers and the armed groups around Bamako and Kati, a garrison town and junta stronghold about 15 kilometres north of the capital. Mali's junta has now lost control of key northern areas and still faces a growing insurgent campaign that is tightening pressure around Bamako rather than directly attempting to seize the capital.

Analysts say this could be a turning point for the military in power since a 2020 coup.

Mali has been beset by violence from radical Islamists affiliated with Al-Qaeda and the Islamic State group since 2012, as well as local criminal gangs and pro-independence fighters. For more than a decade, around 300,000 refugees have fled to eastern Mauritania's desert Hodh Chargui region to escape the violence that has plagued Mali.

Héni Nsaibia is the senior analyst for West Africa at ACLED, the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data group. He co-wrote the organisation's latest report, released in mid-May, showing that global jihadism threatens Africa like no other region on earth. It also explores how jihadist groups are expanding across the continent, controlling territory, targeting civilians and disrupting infrastructure. Héni Nsaibia is Spotlight on Africa's guest this week.

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Listen from this link:


https://www.rfi.fr/en/podcasts/spotlight-on-africa/20260526-spotlight-on-africa-global-jihadism-s-growing-grip-on-africa



22/05/2026

A few more voices from Nairobi on cultural expectations

 


Kenyans discuss France's proposals of cultural exchanges and cooperation after Africa Forward


As France seeks to redefine its relationship with African countries beyond politics and military ties, culture, technology and creative industries were at the centre of discussions during the recent Africa Forward summit in Nairobi.


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Melissa Chemam, back from Nairobi

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Jean-Camille Sormain is a playwright, theatre director, and cultural producer based between Paris and Fort-de-France. He came to Nairobi for the 'Africa Forward' summit because he says it is important to link Africa to the Caribbean islands.

"I'm of mixed Caribbean heritage, I come from Martinique, and it's important to create links between Martinique and Africa," he told me.

"Now, since this is a summit of all the African countries, it's obviously the place to be.  And we have our own specific characteristics; people from the Caribbean aren't Africans and vice versa. And we're so small... But, at the same time, we also have things in common, and that's what brings us together. So that diversity is also present here."


Jean-Camille Sormain in Nairobi at the Africa Forward Summit in May 2026


Arts, technology and business over politics


The summit brought together artists, entrepreneurs and innovators from across Africa, and both from the French- and English-speaking world, with discussions often focused more on culture and opportunity than on diplomacy itself.

Like Sormain, hundreds of talents from across the African continent and from France attended the summit, which offered talks on technology, investment but also on young artists and business leaders. Over 450 of them were invited to Nairobi for a special session to discuss high-impact projects and to share their ideas for the future of the continent.

Aïcha Touré, from Orange Sierra Leone, was one of the panelists invited at the summit.

“It was very interesting, very enriching," she told me. Even beforehand, the preparation for the panel was excellent. And then the live discussions were fantastic, incredibly interesting as well.”

The panel titled 'Creation in Motion' was a session focused on the cultural and creative industries as a sector of economic opportunity and as a vehicle for showcasing the continent's new visions and narratives, inspired by the previous 'Creation Africa' forums. An immersive artistic experience led by African creators also took place. 

Maroua Bekkouche, a French-Algerian beauty guru entrepreneur told me that, for many participants, the summit also became a platform to reflect on identity, representation and diasporic connections.

“It's a tremendous honour for me to be invited," she said. When I was asked to participate in the panel alongside these two incredible presidents, I immediately accepted because, for me, it was the perfect opportunity to represent the youth of the North African diaspora. And I am here today to represent Algeria through my journey and my life experience.” 


Cooperation beyond the usual 'Francophonie'


Beyond the official panels, the cultural dimension of the summit also extended into literature and publishing.

Parallel to the Africa Forward summit was organised a literary festival, at the French Cultural centre in Nairobi, the Alliance Française

Dozens of authors, publishers, content creators, and other creatives from all over Africa participated in talks, book signings and other events. 

Organisers said they wanted this year’s edition to open the institution to a broader range of African voices and audiences.

Tracy Ochieng is Kenyan podcaster and is one of the moderators. “I am a journalist and podcast host at Books in Africa and I have been a moderator for a couple of sessions at the Africa Forward Festival, which was so exciting," she told me.

"I was able to sit down with Donica Merhazion to talk about her book on Eritrea. I also had a very powerful Gen Z session, and we know this phrase if you're a Kenyan, when we lose our fear, they lose their power. I was able to moderate an amazing session.” 


Podcaster Tracy Ochieng and author Donica Merhazion at Alliance Française
in a talk, part of  Africa Forward Fest, in Nairobi in May 2026


Donica Merhazion is an Eritrean lecturer and writer. Her aforementioned first book, titled ‘Born at the End of the World’, is a historical fiction novel based on her parents’ experiences in the 'Red Terror' in Ethiopia and Eritrea in the late 1970s, especially her mothers.

She said being featured in this festival was "a dream come true", "a dream I never knew I had", as she didn't know the Alliance Française of Nairobi.

"And I'm so honoured and humbled that so many people want to hear this story and share it. And I just thank all the readers.”

Alliance Française is a place where people can take French lessons.  But this year, for the summit, the organisers featured multiple languages at the festival, and especially with East African Anglophone creatives, some of whom had never come to the centre before. 

Events like Africa Forward Fest are also an opportunity for publishers to promote their work and their African ways of telling stories. 

Joan Onyando is a manager at eKitabu publishing, and was there for the three days of the festival. “Our goal is to bring quality books to the market, space for authors in East Africa, and to build a brand for these authors," she told me.  

Thanks to one of their imprints, the publishing house also organises a French Prize, the ‘Prix de l'Edition Jeunesse Africaine’, for children's books, with the support of Alliance Française. The winners were announced mid-May. 

For all these participants, such initiatives showed an attempt at redefining cultural cooperation between France and some African countries, through more equal creative exchanges.

What remains to be seen how these propositions will be viewed outside of the official circles.


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More soon. 




19/05/2026

KNEECAP - Irish Goodbye - FENIAN


KNEECAP has a new album – FENIAN (2026)

 




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Tricky's new song: 'Because I Don’t Know'

 


 - feat. Mitch Sanders




The latest single from Tricky's new album 'Different When It's Silent' is out now. The record is due for release on 17 July 2026.

'Because I Don't Know' is featuring Mitch Sanders, a Singer/Songwriter from South Bristol, UK, like Tricky. His latest EP, “Saloon”, came out in 2025.

Tricky will also return to the stage for live dates across the UK and European this May and June, including with UK festivals this summer including Green Man and Forwards Festival, and a date in Paris soon.


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Mitch Sanders and Tricky already collaborated on the track 'Mum', released last November on Mitch's new EP 'Saloon':




Mitch is featured on many of the 14 tracks of this album:


Still See Me There (feat. Mitch Sanders)
I'm Yours (feat. Mitch Sanders)
Be Still In The Pain (feat. Mitch Sanders & Run Red Rambo)
I Tried (feat. Mitch Sanders)
So Cold (feat. Mitch Sanders)
Paris Maybe (feat. Mitch Sanders)
Cannon Fodder (feat. Mitch Sanders)
Because I Don't Know (feat. Mitch Sanders)
Marinade (feat. Mitch Sanders)
Radana (feat. Mitch Sanders & Radana)
Piano (feat. Mitch Sanders)
Frontier Town
Hengrove Blues (feat. Mitch Sanders)
Out Of Place (feat. Marta)





18/05/2026

on Zineb Sedira


Zineb Sedira’s exhibition opens at Tate Britain, "intended as a manifesto as much as an aesthetically pleasing arrangement of films and sculptures," the Guardian says. 

Zineb Sedira: Dreams Have No Titles - 2024 (my visual insight):

 



17/05/2026

Newsletter - May 2026: Out of Africa?



Out of Africa?


After this Nairobi summit, doubts seem only more profound than ever on the state of relations between European powers - especially France - and a continent of 54 states and 1 billion people...




 


https://melissa.substack.com/p/out-of-africa



13/05/2026

Podcasting from Nairobi

 

Spotlight on Africa - podcast: Does the Africa Forward summit signal a fresh start for France on the continent?


This week, Spotlight on Africa takes you to the Africa Forward summit hosted by France and Kenya in Nairobi on 11 and 12 May. It marks the first time France has staged such an event in an English-speaking African country, and comes at a moment of change and challenges.


https://www.rfi.fr/en/podcasts/spotlight-on-africa/20260512-spotlight-on-africa-africa-forward-a-fresh-start-in-nairobi



https://www.rfi.fr/en/podcasts/spotlight-on-africa/20260512-spotlight-on-africa-africa-forward-a-fresh-start-in-nairobi



11/05/2026

Africa Forward - the summit in pictures

 



Presidents Emmanuel Macron and William Ruto opened the summit with a special session with African young people from all over the continent.








Artists like Blick Bassy were invited to perform.