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    For the latest updates, go to bbc.com/africalive

  2. Video content

    Video caption: Stream and chill or a cinema trip?

    Africa is projected to have 15 million video streaming subscribers by 2028. But what does this mean for the cinema industry?

  3. Video content

    Video caption: South African pantsula dance ‘saved my life’ after childhood abuse

    Meet Lerato Motsepe of the Soweto Skeleton Movers. She talks about how she expresses herself through dance.

  4. Scroll down for this week's stories

    We'll be back on Monday morning

    That's all from the BBC Africa Live team for now. We'll be back on Monday morning with the latest news and views from around the continent.

    In the meantime, you can get updates on BBCAfrica.com or listen to the BBC's Africa Today podcast.

    A reminder of our wise words of the day:

    Quote Message: Growing trees will make the forest." from A Bemba proverb sent by Bupe Mpeta in Lusaka, Zambia
    A Bemba proverb sent by Bupe Mpeta in Lusaka, Zambia

    Click here to send us your African proverbs.

    We leave you with a photo of a model backstage at South Africa's Soweto Theatre from our selection of the best photos from the continent this week.

    Model smiling in yellow
  5. Highest number of bodies dug up amid Kenya cult case

    Dorcas Wangira

    BBC News, Nairobi

    Crying relatives
    Image caption: Relatives of the victims have been grieving

    Kenyan police have exhumed the highest number of bodies in a single day from a forest in Kilifi, Kenya’s coastal region, which is linked to a controversial doomsday cult.

    Twenty-nine more bodies were exhumed on Friday.

    So far, 179 people, believed to be members of the Good News International Church, are confirmed to have died either of starvation, strangulation or blunt force trauma.

    The more forensic teams dig, the more bodies they find. One shallow grave had 12 bodies huddled together.

    The Kenya Red Cross says 609 people who are reported to be members of the doomsday cult allegedly led by Paul Mackenzie are still missing.

    Pastor Mackenzie said he closed down his church four years ago after nearly two decades of operation.

    But the BBC has uncovered hundreds of his sermons still available online, some of which appear to have been recorded after this date.

    In an interview with Kenya's Daily Nation newspaper a few weeks ago, Pastor Mackenzie also denied he had forced his followers to fast.

    The number of missing cult members has tripled since the extensive rescue and exhumation operation began in late April.

    Kenya’s Attorney General has admitted that the state failed to protect the alleged victims.

    The cult leader is still in police custody. He is yet to be charged.

    Read more about Paul Mackenzie here.

  6. 'Man of 1,000 faces' wins top photographic prize

    Samuel Fosso

    Samuel Fosso, one of Africa's most eminent photographers, has won the prestigious Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation Prize for 2023, at a special ceremony in London.

    Described as "a man of 1,000 faces", the Cameroonian-born artist has specialised in self-portraiture and performative photography since starting out in the 1970s - and his works now appear in renowned galleries all over the world.

    He was awarded the £30,000 ($37,000) prize for his recent retrospective exhibition at the Maison Européenne de la Photographie gallery in Paris.

    Fosso, now 60, was raised in Nigeria, but fled during the Biafran war when his mother died and later settled with his uncle in the Central Africa Republic (CAR), where he began an apprenticeship at a local photographic studio.

    At the age of 13 in 1975, he branched out on his own opening his Studio Photo Nationale in the capital, Bangui. He started taking self-portraits using up exposures on his films to send to his grandmother in Nigeria.

    His initial aim was to show he was alive and well, but his interest in exploring the genre grew - and he experimented with new techniques and poses.

    "Winning this prestigious prize, recognised as one of the most important in the field of photography, means that my work is recognised by the artistic community," Fosso said.

    "This recognition is very important to me. I feel a lot of joy and pride."

    One of his most famous images, from his series from the 1970s, is of him sporting bell bottom trousers inspired by West African fashion and images seen in American magazines:

    Samuel Fosso
    Image caption: Samuel Fosso, Autoportrait, from the series 70s Lifestyle, 1976
    Studio photo of two men
    Image caption: Samuel Fosso, from the series 70s Lifestyle, 1975-78

    In his series African Spirits from 2008, Fosso posed as 14 iconic figures of the US Civil Rights Movement:

    Samuel Fosso as Angela Davis
    Image caption: Samuel Fosso, Self-Portrait (Angela Davis) from the series African Spirits, 2008
    Samuel Fosso as Tommie Smith
    Image caption: Samuel Fosso, Self-Portrait (Tommie Smith) from the series African Spirits, 2008

    In his Allonzenfans series from 2013, he reflected on how France conscripted men from its West African colonies to fight in World War One and World War Two:

    Samuel Fosso as WWI soldier
    Image caption: “I want to show the black man’s relationship to the power that oppresses him,” Samuel Fosso

    All the shortlisted artists for the Deutsche Börse photography prize, which included Bieke Depoorter, Arthur Jafa and Frida Orupabo, will be on show at The Photographers' Gallery in London until 11 June 2023.

  7. Sudan deal 'doesn't stop the fighting'

    A deal between the warring factions in Sudan to protect civilian lives will not "stop the fighting", Sudanese political analyst Kholood Khair has told the BBC's Focus on Africa radio programme.

    "This is just an example that the two sides can sit together" which is "significant" but does not change the fact that both sides are still fighting, she said.

    She added that in her view neither side has shown "any respect" for human life or humanitarian access.

    Earlier we reported that both sides had agreed to allow safe passage for people leaving battle zones, protect relief workers and not to use civilians as human shields, after US- and Saudi-led talks in Saudi Arabia.

    So far the fighting in Sudan, which broke out last month, has killed hundreds and led to thousands more to flee their homes.

  8. Zimbabwe rapper EXQ has big dreams for UK shows

    DJ Edu

    Presenter of This Is Africa on BBC World Service

    EXQ
    Image caption: EXQ has been in the music industry for more than two decades

    Zimbabwean rapper EXQ has told the BBC that he has big dreams of performing at the O2, after his first sold out show in the UK.

    "Shout out to everyone who came, it was beautiful. My dream is to perform for a bigger crowd, I want more, I want to be in O2 with maybe five thousand, ten thousand."

    EXQ has been in the music industry for 21 years, starting off in the early 2000s doing urban grooves, a genre which incorporated urban dancehall, urban jazz, and Zimbabwe’s urban Sungura music.

    But EXQ’s sound has evolved with time and he’s still dropping songs, like his most recent collaboration with Zimbabwean singer Takura, One More Time.

    But it’s not his ability to adapt and change that EXQ cites as the reason for his continued success in the industry, he also points to something more practical.

    “You have to invest money also. I think when you do that you really work hard so that you come up with a good product," he said.

    EXQ has also benefitted from some wise advice from Zimbabwean legend Oliver Mtukudzi. In 2007 they released a song together – Pane Rudo.

    “He told me: 'When you do have shows make sure you perform very well 'cause everybody’s watching.'”

    You can hear EXQ on This is Africa this Saturday, on BBC World Service radio and partner stations across Africa, as well as online here.