A selection of the week’s best photos from across the African continent and beyond:
Models adorned in cowrie shells and batik dresses appear at the final day of Dakar Fashion Week in the Senegalese capital…
Saturday also sees creations by French-Senegalese designer Adama N’Diaye modelled…
Her collection features striking colours and rich textures.
On the same day in Lagos, models wearing the rich tones and patterns of designer Iffizi get ready for the catwalk at Africa Fashion Week Nigeria.
Also on Saturday, music lovers turn out for a good cause as the Uhuru Aids Benefit Concert comes to Kroonstad in South Africa.
Meanwhile in Nairobi that day, ballerinas wait backstage during a performance of The Nutcraker by the Dance Centre Kenya company.
On Friday in the US, Zimbabwean UFC fighter Themba Gorimbo proudly displays his African roots at a weigh-in in Las Vegas.
And the next day in South Africa, contestants warm up ahead of the IFBB Classic Fitness and Bodybuilding Show.
There is another display of physical might, this time in Cameroon on Sunday during the Nguon festival. The event is said to date back to the 14th Century and it was last year recognised by Unesco as an example of “intangible heritage”.
Saturday sees performers taking part in Kenya’s Kibera Arts Festival, which caters to the community in this neighbourhood of Nairobi.
In Kenya’s capital on Tuesday, outraged citizens protest against endemic violence against women under the banner End Femicide Kenya. Rights groups says close to 100 women have been killed in the last three months alone…
As the official results from Ghana’s presidential election roll in on Monday, supporters of John Mahama celebrate his re-election after almost eight years in opposition.
Days earlier, as news spreads about French troops being expelled from Chad, anti-French demonstrators in N’Djamena make their feelings clear by trampling on the Tricolore.
South African actress Thuso Mbedu smiles at the US premiere of Mufasa: The Lion King on Monday. She voices the character of Junia.
Acclaimed Mauritanian film director Abderrahmane Sissako makes a point at the closing ceremony of Morocco’s Marrakesh International Film Festival on Saturday.
On Saturday, Ivorian cleric and Archbishop of Abidjan Ignace Bessi Dogbo is formally made a cardinal in the Vatican.
And on Monday in the South African city of Cape Town, a little dog licks its chops while cars wait in traffic to see the Christmas lights.
From the BBC in Africa this week:
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Source link : https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c9vkegeg43zo
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Publish date : 2024-12-13 08:53:40