In Troubled Sahel, Memories of a Cinematic Golden Age

A photograph of Rouch is kept in the late French ethnographer and film-maker's former editing room at the Institute for Research in Human Sciences (IRSH) in Niamey - AFP
A photograph of Rouch is kept in the late French ethnographer and film-maker's former editing room at the Institute for Research in Human Sciences (IRSH) in Niamey - AFP
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In Troubled Sahel, Memories of a Cinematic Golden Age

A photograph of Rouch is kept in the late French ethnographer and film-maker's former editing room at the Institute for Research in Human Sciences (IRSH) in Niamey - AFP
A photograph of Rouch is kept in the late French ethnographer and film-maker's former editing room at the Institute for Research in Human Sciences (IRSH) in Niamey - AFP

The wall of a house in Torokorobougou, a district in the Malian capital Bamako, suddenly lights up as a black-and-white film starts to roll.

The audience falls silent as the title of the documentary, "Sigui", flashes up on the screen.

It's one of French director Jean Rouch's seminal films, charting a secret ceremony of central Mali's Dogon ethnic group which is held once every 60 years.

Rouch, who died aged 86 in a road accident in Niger, is the only person to have ever recorded it, AFP reported.

He shot around 140 films over his long career, including many in West Africa and particularly the Sahel state of Niger.

While his work has faced criticism for reflecting the condescending colonial attitudes of the time, the film-maker-cum-ethnographer was a prime mover in the Sahel's cinematic tradition and a champion of local directors.

But memories of Rouch's work are fading, while the once-flourishing movie scene in the semi-arid African region has been battered by a lack of funding.

"He is the grandfather of cinema in Niger," said Moussa Hamidou, the country's first sound producer, who worked on all of Rouch's films.

The Frenchman gave many of Niger's prominent cultural figures their start such as director Oumarou Ganda who in 1969 became the first African to present a film at the Cannes festival.

Hamidou talks cheerfully in his home in Niger's capital Niamey about the artistic milieu that once thrived in the city.

"It was a good time for West Africa," he said, explaining that directors had access to funding.

But the Sahel's cinematic heyday of the 60s and 70s is a now distant memory, with funding having mostly dried up.

Governments across the Sahel are more focused on combating the brutal extremist insurgency, which first emerged in 2012, than cultural pursuits.

In Niamey, film enthusiasts have to rummage through the archives of the Institute for Human Sciences Research (IRSH) to find traces of this cultural golden age.

Rouch himself directed the institute between 1959 and 1969, where many of his old film reels are stored.

One, for example, is his famed "Cock-a-Doodle-Doo! Mr. Chicken," a comedy about a chicken salesman travelling Niger in his Citroen 2 CV.

Seyni Moumouni, current director of the IRSH, said few are interested in the reels.

"They're gathering dust because young people now prefer cassettes and DVDs," he told AFP.

Despite his successes, Rouch also came in for fierce criticism for his depictions of African traditions, which many saw as exoticising and patronizing.

"You look at us like insects," Senegalese film-maker Ousmane Sembene told him in 1965.

Rouch responded that he was "trapped between two colliding worlds", referring to his native France, and the Sahel countries it colonized.

A film expert in Mali's capital Bamako, who declined to be named, recognized that Rouch helped local film-makers, but said he was still a "product of his time".

However, Malian director Cheick Oumar Sissoko argued Rouch had made an important contribution simply by capturing what he did on film.

"The image itself is an extraordinary language which constitutes memory," Sissoko said.

At the film screening in Bamako, ethnic Dogons in attendance watched in awe.

The Sigui ceremony celebrates the regeneration of the life cycle and is one of the most important events in the Dogon calendar.

Festivities involving elaborate masks last for years. But the 60-year span between each Sigui meant that few in the audience had seen the ceremony themselves.

None said they had seen Rouch's film before either, a sign of his dwindling cachet.

Ali Dolo, a mayor from central Mali who fled to Bamako because of the conflict, cried out in recognition during one scene.

"That's my home," he said, telling AFP later that not much had changed since Rouch filmed it.

But for many, what has changed is the conflict, and a sudden lack of cultural funding.

"It's impossible to make films without help," said Djingarey Maiga, a Malian-Nigerien director.

He reflected on a time when Sahel directors would gather in a studio in the Musee de l'Homme, in Paris, which Rouch and other ethnographers had set aside for them.

"We film-makers from Niger and Africa used to go there to edit and mix our films," he said.



Swiss Author Erich von Daeniken Dies at 90

Erich von Daeniken, co-founder and co-owner of Mystery Park, poses in front of the Panorama Tower at Mystery Park in Interlaken, Wednesday, April 23, 2003. (Gaetan Ball)/Keystone via AP, File)
Erich von Daeniken, co-founder and co-owner of Mystery Park, poses in front of the Panorama Tower at Mystery Park in Interlaken, Wednesday, April 23, 2003. (Gaetan Ball)/Keystone via AP, File)
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Swiss Author Erich von Daeniken Dies at 90

Erich von Daeniken, co-founder and co-owner of Mystery Park, poses in front of the Panorama Tower at Mystery Park in Interlaken, Wednesday, April 23, 2003. (Gaetan Ball)/Keystone via AP, File)
Erich von Daeniken, co-founder and co-owner of Mystery Park, poses in front of the Panorama Tower at Mystery Park in Interlaken, Wednesday, April 23, 2003. (Gaetan Ball)/Keystone via AP, File)

Swiss author Erich von Daeniken, who helped popularize the idea that astronauts from outer space visited Earth ​to help lay the foundations for human civilization, has died aged 90.

Swiss media including national broadcaster SRF reported his death, and a note on his website said it occurred on Saturday, The AP news reported.

Von Daeniken rose to ‌prominence with ‌his 1968 book "Chariots of ‌the ⁠Gods?" ​which posited ‌that structures such as the pyramids of Ancient Egypt, Britain's Stonehenge and Peru's Nazca lines were too advanced for their time, and needed outside help.

"In my opinion, ancient structures were made ⁠by humans, not by the extraterrestrials, but it was ‌the extraterrestrials who guided them, ‍who them, ‍who gave them the knowledge how to ‍do it," von Daeniken says in a video on his YouTube channel.

His theories were controversial with historians, scientists and fellow ​writers. But they were popular, and his books, which included "The Gods were ⁠Astronauts", sold nearly 70 million copies worldwide, appearing in more than 30 languages, SRF said.

Von Daeniken argued that ancient religions, myths and art contained evidence that millennia ago, the ancestors of modern humans had made contact with advanced extraterrestrial beings who appeared godlike to them and enabled them to progress.

One ‌day, von Daeniken said, those beings would return.


Massive Iconic Iceberg 'on Verge of Complete Disintegration'

Iceberg A23a has turned blue and is “on the verge of complete disintegration,” NASA said. This photo was taken on December 26, 2025 (NASA)
Iceberg A23a has turned blue and is “on the verge of complete disintegration,” NASA said. This photo was taken on December 26, 2025 (NASA)
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Massive Iconic Iceberg 'on Verge of Complete Disintegration'

Iceberg A23a has turned blue and is “on the verge of complete disintegration,” NASA said. This photo was taken on December 26, 2025 (NASA)
Iceberg A23a has turned blue and is “on the verge of complete disintegration,” NASA said. This photo was taken on December 26, 2025 (NASA)

One of the largest and oldest icebergs ever tracked by scientists has turned blue and is “on the verge of complete disintegration,” NASA said on Thursday.

A23a, a massive wall of ice that was once twice the size of Rhode Island, is drenched in blue meltwater as it drifts in the South Atlantic off the eastern tip of South America, NASA said in a new release, according to CBS News.

A NASA satellite captured an image of the fading berg the day after Christmas, showing pools of blue meltwater on its surface. A day later, an astronaut aboard the International Space Station captured a photograph showing a closer view of the iceberg, with an even larger melt pool.

The satellite image suggests that the A23a has also “sprung a leak,” NASA said, as the weight of the water pooling at the top of the berg punched through the ice.

Scientists say all signs indicate the so-called “megaberg” could be just days or weeks from totally disintegrating as it rides currents that are pushing it toward even warmer waters.

Warmer air temperatures during this season could also speed up A23a's demise in an area that ice experts have dubbed a “graveyard” for icebergs.

“I certainly don't expect A-23A to last through the austral summer,” retired University of Maryland, Baltimore County scientist Chris Shuman said in a statement.

Blue and white linear patterns visible on A23a are likely related to striations, which are ridges that were scoured hundreds of years ago when the iceberg was part of the Antarctic bedrock, NASA said.

“The striations formed parallel to the direction of flow, which ultimately created subtle ridges and valleys on the top of the iceberg that now direct the flow of meltwater,” said Walt Meier, a senior research scientist at the National Snow & Ice Data Center.

The berg detached from Antarctica in 1986. It remained stuck for over 30 years before finally breaking free in 2020.

According to current estimates from the US National Ice Center, in early January 2026, the berg's area is 1,182 square kilometers -- still larger than New York City but a fraction of its initial size.


Scores of Homes Razed, One Dead in Australian Bushfires

Smoke rises from a burning forest on a hillside behind a home near Longwood as bushfires continue to burn under severe fire weather conditions in Longwood, Victoria, Australia, January 9, 2026. AAP/Michael Currie via REUTERS
Smoke rises from a burning forest on a hillside behind a home near Longwood as bushfires continue to burn under severe fire weather conditions in Longwood, Victoria, Australia, January 9, 2026. AAP/Michael Currie via REUTERS
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Scores of Homes Razed, One Dead in Australian Bushfires

Smoke rises from a burning forest on a hillside behind a home near Longwood as bushfires continue to burn under severe fire weather conditions in Longwood, Victoria, Australia, January 9, 2026. AAP/Michael Currie via REUTERS
Smoke rises from a burning forest on a hillside behind a home near Longwood as bushfires continue to burn under severe fire weather conditions in Longwood, Victoria, Australia, January 9, 2026. AAP/Michael Currie via REUTERS

Bushfires have razed hundreds of buildings across southeast Australia, authorities said Sunday, as they confirmed the first death from the disaster.

Temperatures soared past 40C as a heatwave blanketed the state of Victoria, sparking dozens of blazes that ripped through more than 300,000 hectares (740,000 acres) combined.

Fire crews tallied the damage as conditions eased on Sunday. A day earlier, authorities had declared a state of disaster.

Emergency Management Commissioner Tim Wiebusch said over 300 buildings had burned to the ground, a figure that includes sheds and other structures on rural properties, AFP reported.

More than 70 houses had been destroyed, he said, alongside huge swathes of farming land and native forest.

"We're starting to see some of our conditions ease," he told reporters.

"And that means firefighters are able to start getting on top of some of the fires that we still have in our landscape."

Police said one person had died in a bushfire near the town of Longwood, about two hours' drive north of state capital Melbourne.

"This really takes all the wind out of our sails," said Chris Hardman from Forest Fire Management Victoria.

"We really feel for the local community there and the family, friends and loved ones of the person that is deceased," he told national broadcaster ABC.

Photos taken this week showed the night sky glowing orange as the fire near Longwood tore through bushland.

"There were embers falling everywhere. It was terrifying," cattle farmer Scott Purcell told ABC.

Another bushfire near the small town of Walwa crackled with lightning as it radiated enough heat to form a localized thunderstorm.

Hundreds of firefighters from across Australia have been called in to help.

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said he was talking with Canada and the United States for possible extra assistance.

Millions have this week sweltered through a heatwave blanketing much of Australia.

High temperatures and dry winds combined to form some of the most dangerous bushfire conditions since the "Black Summer" blazes.

The Black Summer bushfires raged across Australia's eastern seaboard from late 2019 to early 2020, razing millions of hectares, destroying thousands of homes and blanketing cities in noxious smoke.

Australia's climate has warmed by an average of 1.51C since 1910, researchers have found, fueling increasingly frequent extreme weather patterns over both land and sea.

Australia remains one of the world's largest producers and exporters of gas and coal, two key fossil fuels blamed for global heating.