08/11/2025

FFFA - night one

 

I was at the opening night of the French-Arab Film Festival de Noisy-le-Sec (FFFA or Festival du Film Franco-Arabe en français), tonight, and they showed a beautiful and powerful film... 

Here are the main guests for this year, Costa Gavras and Hind Meddeb, on stage.




The film, THE PRESIDENT'S CAKE, directed by Hasan Hadi (Iraq, United States, Qatar • 2025) starring Baneen Ahmad Nayyef, Sajad Mohamad Qasem, Waheed Thabet Khreibat, was selected for the 2025 Filmmakers' Fortnight / Quinzaine 2025 at the Cannes Festival this year.

The pitch: In Saddam Hussein's Iraq, 9-year-old Lamia is given the daunting task of baking a cake to celebrate the president's birthday. Her quest for ingredients, accompanied by her friend Saeed, turns her life upside down....

The film is so real, and first funny, heartwarming, following the daily life of two children living under Saddam's crazy dictatorship... before facing the tragedies of an era under attack and war...

An insight, with the trailer here:



-


I love this festival and this year is full of treasure.

More in my next podcast episode, next week. 

The whole programme here: https://cinematrianon.fr/festivals/festival-du-film-franco-arabe


07/11/2025

Dakar Circle 2025

 


Zikora presents... the Dakar Circle!

A cultural event in Dakar, Senegal, scheduled for December 13, 2025.

The gathering will bring together top leaders, student representatives, artists, and cultural voices for meaningful dialogue and performances.





Event Highlights:


Organiser: Mamy Hawa Fall, a talented Dakar-based creative Venue: Kohi Artist Studio  

Themes: Art, leadership, and community connection 

Confirmed discussion topics: 1. Is Feminism African? 2. Humans and Nature 

Guests: Top leaders, student unions, artists, and cultural figures




02/11/2025

Angélique Kidjo - 'Chica de Favela'

 

Interview to com soon in my podcast!


Beyond Music & Angélique Kidjo - Chica de Favela

 (ft Pesa Bazz, Siddhartha El Primero, Shocktraderz)




31/10/2025

FFFA

 




> du 7 au 16 novembre au cinéma Le Trianon de Romainvile (93) et hors-les-murs



30/10/2025

Chocolate making in Cote d'Ivoire

 

Chocolate making in Cote d'Ivoire • RFI English


Côte d’Ivoire, one of Africa’s most dynamic economies, is best known for its coffee and cocoa production. Yet for decades, Ivorians rarely tasted chocolate made from their own crops. 

Determined to change that, entrepreneur Axel Emmanuel Gbaou founded ten years ago the brand 'Le Chocolatier Ivoirien', the ‘Ivorian chocolate maker’.

He is new selling thousands of chocolate bars per month locally, including his latest, Kimbo, the $1 bar. 

My report in video:




-


Article to come.





29/10/2025

Western celebrities and 'white saviourism'

 

I really agree...

Global Dispatch

Editor's note

The story by our reporter Aisha Down last week was a warning of a new era of “poverty porn” as leading aid agencies were found to be using AI-generated images to promote public sympathy for their causes.

Arsenii Alenichev, a researcher into the production of global health images at the Institute of Tropical Medicine in Antwerp, told the Guardian: “The images replicate the visual grammar of poverty – children with empty plates, cracked earth, stereotypical visuals.”

That delicate line between raising awareness and entrenching stereotypes popped into my inbox a few days later in the shape of an email from the Unicef media office looking for coverage of a visit by the Northern Irish actor Liam Neeson to South Sudan. That Neeson, one of a stable of Unicef goodwill ambassadors that includes David Beckham, cared enough to give up his time to meet children suffering from malnutrition in an inhospitable place is not in question. The UN agency is not alone in using the tactic of sending celebrities from the northern hemisphere to bring attention to issues in the global south, but is it really the right message?

For me it edges uncomfortably close to “white saviourism”, and shows we are far away from decolonising the humanitarian community’s approach to aid and the people who need it.

Clearly there is an argument to the contrary, but I have never seen any measure of whether this approach does more good than harm. Take the recent visit of a British royal, the Duchess of Edinburgh, to the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Media coverage of the visit of Sophie – wife of the king’s brother Edward – did cover the horrific rates of rape in the country where sexual violence continues to be very much used as a weapon of war, but also focused intently on just how brave she was.

“Secret”, “high security”, “high risk”, a “royal first”– hammered down on the stereotype of the dark frightening place that is the African continent where people must find it an honour to be visited by a great white lady.

No matter that it is the great white lady’s imperial family who helped reduce the DRC to its current state, surely an international audience can be trusted to understand the issues without the caravans of unqualified, privileged western celebrities standing in front of the camera in freshly pressed linen shirts?


Tracy McVeigh, editor, Global development




-

Also we should add: Sending high profile celebrities and even head of programme of these charities and UN agencies... It cost a small fortune!!

Money taken from donors' gifts and crucial donations for local people.

So let's stop this mascarade only feeding the stereotype that these figures are needed... They're not, really not.





28/10/2025

Newsletter: Aftermath of an election

 


Aftermath of an election

From Côte d'Ivoire to Cameroon, Argentina to the Netherlands, democracy is currently challenged... But this can also teach people to focus on long term goals and hope, like these people in Abidjan.



Link:


Aftermath of an election

From Côte d'Ivoire to Cameroon, Argentina to the Netherlands, democracy is currently challenged... But this can also teach people to focus on long term goals and hope, like these people in Abidjan.

-

27/10/2025

Côte d'Ivoire: Ouattara remains President

 


Ouattara wins landslide fourth term as Côte d'Ivoire president


Côte d'Ivoire's President Alassane Ouattara has won a fourth term, securing a crushing 89.77 percent, the electoral commission said on Monday evening, in a vote which his two greatest rivals were barred from.





Nearly nine million voters were eligible to cast their ballot Saturday in the world's top cocoa producer, which has resisted coups and jihadist attacks plaguing much of west Africa but which saw tensions soar and deadly violence in the run-up to the election.

Even before the provisional results' announcement Ouattara was already anticipated to have swept the polls, after early tallies on Sunday showed him winning upwards of 90 percent of the vote. Turnout was close to 100 percent in his northern strongholds.

The political veteran was also ahead in traditionally pro-opposition areas in the south and parts of the economic hub Abidjan, where polling stations had been almost empty on Saturday.

Entrepreneur Jean-Louis Billon came second to the veteran leader with 3.09 percent, said the commission's president Ibrahime Kuibiert Coulibaly, who announced a 50.10 percent turnout, a similar level to 2020 when Ouattara won 94 percent of the vote in an election boycotted by the main opponents.

This time around, Ouattara's leading rivals, former president Laurent Gbagbo and Credit Suisse ex-CEO Tidjane Thiam, were both barred from standing, Gbagbo for a criminal conviction and Thiam for having acquired French nationality.

"Their absence, their calls not to participate in the election, and the climate of tension that deteriorated in recent days foretold a significant demobilisation of the electorate," said William Assanvo, a researcher at the Institute for Security Studies (ISS).

In the southern city of Gagnoa, Gbagbo's former stronghold, Ouattara won 92 percent of the vote but with a turnout rate of only 20 percent.

The opposition has already denied "any legitimacy" to Ouattara and has called for new elections.   


'A calm election'

Political analyst Geoffroy Kouao believes "the turnout rate shows two things".

"First, Mr Ouattara's supporters turned out in force, as shown by the Soviet-esque results in certain regions," said Kouao.

"And second, supporters of the (Gbagbo and Thiam's parties) did not go to the polls."

Billon also expressed concern Sunday for "very low turnout in some regions", while still offering congratulations to Ouattara.

He and the other candidates on the ballot, including former first lady Simone Ehivet Gbagbo, did not have have a chance of reaching a second round due to a lack of support from a major party or significant financial resources.

Earlier calls for protests by the main opposition led to deadly unrest in the run-up to the election, with at least eight people killed this month and nearly two dozen reported injured in election-day clashes at some 200 polling stations.

The government had declared a nighttime curfew in some areas and deployed 44,000 security forces.

Presidential elections in the country are commonly rife with tension and unrest.

Ouattara first came to power following the 2010-2011 presidential clash between him and Laurent Gbagbo, which cost more than 3,000 lives among their supporters.

On Monday, Abidjan returned to near-normal activity after the capital was unusually deserted at the weekend.

"The Ivorians said NO to prophets of doom," headlined the Patriote, a pro-Ouattara newspaper, praising "a calm election".

The opposition daily Notre Voie, however, pointed to "an election reflecting a divided country".

  (AFP)


-


For more:

Côte d'Ivoire presidential election 2025: What's at stake?



25/10/2025

AKAA 2025

 

This year the contemporary African art fair Also Known as Africa (AKAA) in Paris celebrates its tenth edition, with artists blurring distinctions between craft and art, Asia and Africa, far away from the financial refuge that big art fairs have become...

Snapshots by myself:




















-

These include some of my favourite artists, like Dalila Dalleas Bouzar and Nu Barreto.

-


Read RFI's article for more details:


-