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Cette interface de recherche vous permet d'explorer toutes les archives d'actualités du Sénégal, de 2006 jusqu'à aujourd'hui. Profitez de notre base de données complète pour retrouver les événements marquants de ces dernières années.
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Après avoir balayé le sud des États-Unis, l'ouragan Ida, nettement rétrogradé, a atteint la ville de New York placé sous état d'urgence
L'origine de la panne est encore inconnue, mais elle intervient au plus mauvais moment...
Donald Trump n'a pas apprécié les rumeurs sur son état de santé et s'est mis à rejouer la scène qui avait alerté certains observateurs le 13 juin.
When Baaba Maal walked onstage wearing a stunning sky-blue boubou—a classic West African garment found among the works assembled in Sahel: Art and Empires on the Shores of the Sahara—he signaled his place in a historic lineage.
Le président américain Donald Trump a averti mercredi matin la Russie de frappes imminentes contre la Syrie, peu après que Moscou eut mis en garde contre tout acte pouvant "déstabiliser la situation déjà fragile dans la région".
Une panne informatique nationale des douanes a bloqué des milliers de passagers dans des aéroports américains. Plusieurs heures ont été nécessaires avant que le problème soit résolu.
MAO SIDIBÉ - Get down on it feat PAPINO
Voilà une nouvelle affaire qui vient encore épaissir la pile déjà bien fournie de dossiers embarrassants que doit gérer Sebastian Coe, le président de la fédération internationale d’athlétisme (IAAF).
Everything I have, everything I ownAll my mistakes man you already knowI wanna be free, I wanna be freeFrom Senegal West AfricaTo St. Louis, MissouriThanks to Katherine DunhamFor giving my pops his gloryHe came down with his drumAnd a dream to change the worldIn a free upliftin worldAnd thats all he ever wantMom came a little afterGave birth to my brotherthen all of the pressureMade em fight one another
La presse et de nombreux anonymes ont rendu hommage samedi au Sénégal au Sud-Africain Lucky Dube, au lendemain de l'assassinat de cette star internationale du reggae qualifiée par certains journaux de "Bob Marley africain" et de "baobab". "Lucky Dube assassiné, la fin tragique du +Marley africain+", titre le quotidien privé Walfadjri, qui se demande: "Pourquoi nos héros noirs meurent-ils si tôt?"."Bien crapuleux, l'assassinat de Lucky Dube, ce grand panafricaniste tué par des voleurs", écrit Le Populaire (privé). La télévision publique (RTS) salue quant à elle la mémoire d'un "artiste sublime".Nous vous proposons les paroles d'1 de ses Tubes titré "Crime and Corruption"
Brush your teeth every day, dentists say. In Africa, that can mean keeping your toothbrush in your mouth all day long. Across the continent south of the Sahara, many people go about their daily business with a small stick or twig protruding from their mouth, which they chew or use to scrub their teeth. Cut from wild trees and shrubs in the bush, this is the African toothbrush. Its users swear it is much more natural, effective -- and cheaper -- than the prettily packaged but pricey dental products on sale in pharmacies and supermarkets.
She worked at the Red Lobster in Times Square and lived with her husband near Yankee Stadium. Yet one night, returning home from her job, Odine D. discovered that African custom, not American law, held sway over her marriage. A strange woman was sitting in the living room, and Ms. D.’s husband, a security guard born in Ghana, introduced her as his other wife. Devastated, Ms. D., a Guinean immigrant who insisted that her last name be withheld, said she protested: “I can’t live with the woman in my house — we have only two bedrooms.” Her husband cited Islamic precepts allowing a man to have up to four wives, and told her to get used to it. And she tried to obey.
The first Christmas I spent in the French-speaking West African country of Senegal, where 95 percent of the population is Muslim, I'd wondered whether I'd feel as festive. I needn't have worried. From the African Santa Claus that set up his grotto down the road to the Nativity crib on a former slave island, it was jingle all the way, culminating on Christmas Eve when we were deafened by fireworks from our Muslim neighbor's garden. The national motto is "one people, one goal, one faith," but the state doesn't prescribe what that faith should be — and many Senegalese see that as a license to celebrate everything.
President Jammeh on Thursday 30th November received a special envoy of President Abdoulie Wade of Senegal at State House in Banjul. The envoy, Sheikh Tidiane Gadio, who is also Senegal's Minister of Foreign Affairs, later told reporters that he had delivered a special message from the Senegalese leader. Mr. Gadio also said that it was important that two countries that are neighbors hold regular consultations. Mr. Gadio's statement was perhaps addressing the surprise he saw on the faces of reporters. The Senegalese Foreign Minister is the third special envoy to be received by President Jammeh in less than ten days. Last week, the Senegalese Justice Minister came with a "special message" just days after the Chief of Staff of the Senegalese Armed forces who also said he came carrying a special message
Time and again Western journalists ask superstar Senegalese pop singer Youssou N'Dour, arguably the most successful African musician in history, the same question: Why, despite selling hundreds of thousands of records in the West and collaborating with artists such as Peter Gabriel, Sting, Wyclef Jean and Paul Simon, do you continue to live in Africa? For an African artist, N'Dour has enjoyed unequaled international popularity over the last two decades, thanks to an inimitable tenor singing voice that flutters effortlessly across five octaves and a signature musical style that combines Afro-Caribbean sounds with the driving syncopated rhythms of traditional Senegalese drumming. Given all this, many journalists seem to have difficulty comprehending why he hasn't begun a new life in the lap of luxury in the West.
As The Gambia gears up for presidential elections in September questions are being raised about the preparations for the polls, but a clampdown on local journalists means independent scrutiny is in short supply. In an interview with IRIN, the leader of the opposition United Democratic Party (UDP), Ousainu Darboe, alleged there are problems with the way new voters are being registered. He alleged people from the Casamance region of neighbouring Senegal and from flat-broke Guinea-Bissau further south are being registered to vote. Tax breaks, the promise of smoother immigration procedures, and cash are all being used to lure people in, he said.
DAKAR, 31 May 2006 (IRIN) - As more and more young men from Senegal climb into fishing boats in the hopes of making it to Europe, efforts are growing to keep the legions of would-be migrants safe at home on dry land. “We can’t just stand here and let these people leave to drown in the Atlantic,” said Amadou Mountaga Sarr.“We must warn them about the danger and tell them what’s really out there,” added Sarr, news editor of a community radio station called Oxyjeunes that operates from a shantytown outside Dakar.
Dakar, SENEGAL - Senegal, Africa's westernmost country, has become a major new departure point for thousands of mainly young West Africans seeking a better life in Europe, an official of the International Organization for Migration said Friday. The migrants are leaving from various points along Senegal's coast, crowded into wooden fishing boats in groups of up to 60, for a perilous sea journey to Spain's Canary Islands, about 1,350 kilometers, or 840 miles, to the north, said Vijaya Souri, program officer in the organization's office here.
A small, troubled high school in East Harlem seemed an unlikely place to find students for a nationwide robot-building contest, but when a neighborhood after-school program started a team last winter, 19 students signed up. One was Amadou Ly, a senior who had been fending for himself since he was 14. The project had only one computer and no real work space. Engineering advice came from an elevator mechanic and a machinist's son without a college degree. But in an upset that astonished its sponsors, the rookie team from East Harlem won the regional competition last month, beating rivals from elite schools like Stuyvesant in Manhattan and the Bronx High School of Science for a chance to compete in the national robotics finals in Atlanta that begins tomorrow.