01/03/2024

New post on my Substack Newsletter

 

Resisting through arts and writing, the women's way


While the world is crumbling, I want to focus for a few minutes on creativity, womanhood and resistance, as we're about the celebrate International Women's Day.

1 March 2024


Dear readers,


If you follow me on social media, you may have noticed that I have been in Senegal since 23 February, for the first time in ten years.


Before I dedicate a post to the deep issues I explored, a follow-up on my last post, between Paris, Bristol and London, pursuing a thread with wonderful creative people offering answers and insight while conflicts take my attention way to much.


We’re now in March, and for years 8 March has been an important date for me, known as International Women’s Day, for many reasons…

Here are some recommendations and highlights.





> Read from here: https://melissa.substack.com/p/resisting-through-arts-and-writing





500 Years of Black British Music

 


Beyond the Bassline: 500 Years of Black British Music

26 April–26 August 2024 

British Library

Journey through an ever-evolving and ever-expanding history of Black music in the UK with our latest major exhibition, the first of its kind anywhere in the world.




For centuries, Black communities have created music in the UK, melding global influences into a Black British sound that has echoed through generations.

Beyond the Bassline at the British Library, the first major exhibition of its kind anywhere in the world, is about more than music. It’s about the places where these sounds were born: the clubs, the carnivals, the stages, the kerbside auditoriums. It is the voice of community, resistance, culture and joy. 

It is a celebration of the trailblazers and innovators that brought new music to the UK, and the layered Black experiences that have birthed a thriving musical culture and history.

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more soon



28/02/2024

Senegal's election crisis • RFI English

 

In Senegal, the dates of 2 June emerged again for the presidential election from the second day of the national dialogue, ended on Tuesday night. 

These were held as part of talks initiated by President Macky Sall but largely boycotted by the opposition.






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SENEGAL Update : Dakar's Cheikh Anta Diop University slowly reopens

 




Reporting from #dakar, at Cheikh Anta Diop University on 26 Feb. 2024, as it slowly reopens #senegal


Read more on our website: RFI English 



27/02/2024

Dakar: One more productive day

 

Great day (for me at least) here in Dakar, visiting art galleries, then interviewing an economist and young people receiving great training, full of hope for their future inside Senegal. 

More on all this soon.





26/02/2024

Senegal: New date? July elections?


Senegal's President Macky Sall on Monday announced his intention to set the presidential election around the month of July, during talks to set the new date for the polls he deferred ealier this month, sparking deadly turmoil. 

He also announced a general amnesty for political protests since 2021.


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More soon.

25/02/2024

Senegal: Summary of recent events, live

 

SENEGAL: Summary of the recent events, here in Dakar. This Sunday was supposed to be the first round of a key presidential election. Instead, this happen:





Senegal: More protests, no election date, no vote today



Hundreds of Senegalese demonstrated in Dakar on Saturday following the postponement of the presidential election, originally slated for 25 February. 

RFI's Melissa Chemam reports from a working-class area of the capital, where the F24 opposition grouping organised their rally:





 

24/02/2024

First insight from Senegal



Welcome to Dakar, Senegal!

On Thursday night, the president Macky Sall expressed himself. He spoke to journalists on television and online, but he didn't announce a new election date. Instead, he invited the opposition to join a dialogue on Monday and Tuesday.
Most candidates, opponents and representatives from the civil society have refused to extend the dialogue and ask for a new calendar for this election.
Groups are now protesting all over the weekend.




The main deadline is around the end of the mandate of Macky Sall.
We should know the new date for the election probably next Tuesday.

But in the meantime, a lot of organisations are calling for the government to not forget that a lot of issues remain unanswered.
Young people here that I've been able to meet in schools and universities are worried about unemployment, the difficulty to find jobs, and the slowness of the economy.
Tourism, for instance, has been at a standstill.

What are people thinking about? This slowness, these delays, these political worries?
I've asked some of the experts to share their insight with us.

More soon, on RFI English, and our YouTube channel.


 


22/02/2024

Senegal - update

 

Senegalese continue to demand presidential polls amid uncertainty


Senegalese voters should have been the first Africans to head to the polls on Sunday 25 February, for a key presidential election for West Africa. But the President plunged the country into uncertainty by deciding to postpone the vote only 22 days before the date. Now, voters eagerly await for a new date and are determined to defend their democracy.



A third of Africa will head to the polls in 2024, with at major issues on the line in at least 18 countries, from South Africa in May to Rwanda in July, but also coup-hit Mali, Chad and Burkina Faso – if the junta leaders in those countries stay true to their word, and Ghana then Algeria in December.

The first of these elections was supposed to take place in Senegal on 25 February but President Macky Sall decided otherwise.

Since 3 February, and his unilateral decision to postpone the polls, the country has been living through uncertainty.

First, the majority in Parliament voted on December as a new date, which was highly contested by the opposition and civil society.

Then the Constitutional Council invalidated the president's decision altogether.


Nineteen candidates, no date

In the latest events, the Constitutional Council on Tuesday published an amended list of candidates for the election, removing just one candidate from the initial list, Rose Wardini, after she herself withdrew her application.

No clear frontrunner has emerged yet, with an unprecedented number of candidates bidding to become Senegal's next president.

But Pastef's vice-president, Birame Souleye Diop, said that pre-election polls gave the party some 71 percent of the vote.

Yet, the new date remains undecided, and thousands of Senegalese vowed to demonstrate again and again until a new electoral process is in place.

Macky Sall's mandate ends on 2 April, and the Senegalese constitution states that the presidential election should take place before he leaves power, and that he should not stay in place after this date.

This week, opposition candidates have accused the authorities of "dragging their feet on setting a new date".

In a joint statement late on Tuesday, 16 of the 19 presidential contenders complained about an "inexplicable slowness" enacting the council's ruling.

They said the slow resumption of electoral operations showed Sall's unwillingness to launch a process that would lead to a change of power.

Members of civil society want to hold a great march on Sunday 25 February to pressure the government.

Some candidates and analysts suggested 3 March as a new date.

But time is running out.


Democracy at stake

In his New Year address, president Sall had called for peaceful elections after a year marked by violence.

He blamed the opposition for this, but NGOs like Human Rights Watch (HRW), Reporters Without Borders, and Amnesty International repeatedly showed that the Senegalese authorities had been increasingly repressing opposition leaders, media and civil society, since 2021.

Last year saw a complicated legal battle for Ziguinchor mayor Ousmane Sonko, who ended up in jail in July, and lost his right to run.

His newly chosen candidate for his former party (Pastef, dissolved by the authorities), Bassirou Diomaye Faye, is however still in prison.

Since 15 February, in a move to appease the opposition, the government has released 344 people considered as political prisoners by their parties.

The Minister of Justice Aïssata Tall Sall told RFI that "others should follow".

But she added that, even though civil society is "calling for the release of Ousmane Sonko", liberations are treated "case by case", and "without any bias, without being arbitrary".

Elected for the first time in 2012, Macky Sall had campaigned against his predecessor Abdoulaye Wade, as an outsider ready to defend democracy at any point and to always respect the constitution.

Now, he's regularly accused of trying to hang on to the presidency.

He announced on Wednesday evening he would speak to the media on Thursday at 7pm GMT. He'll be live on the national broadcaster RTS, on iTV and on Seneweb for an hour, answering questions from journalists.