Revue des titres du Mercredi 06 Mai 2026
💡 Bon à savoir
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.
Revue des titres du Mercredi 06 Mai 2026
Le Sénégal, 1er pays en Afrique subsaharienne à accueillir YASSIR INC...
La composition de la nouvelle promotion de Young Leaders a été rendue publique au cours d’une cérémonie retransmise en direct sur les réseaux sociaux
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.
WITH its spotless new white-tile floors and gleaming stainless-steel ovens, the basement kitchen of Patisserie des Ambassades, a French cafe in Harlem on Frederick Douglass Boulevard, has the fit and finish of a laboratory. On a recent weekday morning, its two resident scientists — bakers in starched white coats — glazed mixed-berry tartlets and spread crème Chantilly over thin sheets of millefeuille pastry on a long steel table. But at the table’s opposite end was the kitchen’s resident artist, Ken Alice N’doye, preparing thiebu djen (cheb-oo JEN), Senegal’s national dish of rice cooked in a tomato-based fish stew. Although Ms. N’doye, 31, an owner of the cafe, also wore a crisp chef’s coat, her every move sprung from sensual, rather than technical, cues.
We know Senegal as the westernmost point of Africa, a shipping point of the old slave trade, and, lately, the Dakar Rally and as West Africa's most politically stable country where governments change democratically.Senegal should also be known as the nation that upends the West's received wisdom on Muslims. This is not Al Qaeda turf. And the 10 million people (94 per cent Muslim, 6 per cent Christian) here don't fit any cliché.There are no hijabs in sight. But women are observant. They pray at work and in the mosques, where, unlike in some Muslim lands, they are welcome.
Senegal's government is accused of blocking the lawsuit introduced before Dakar courts by victims who suffered torture under the rule of former Chadian President Hissen Habré. In an interview with the French newspaper Libération, counsel Jacqueline Moudeina, president of the Chadian Association for the Promotion and the Defense of Human rights (ATPDH), revealed that Dakar claimed about "66 million euros to the African Union (AU) and the international community as monies to be used for the construction of a new court building in Dakar and payment for the judges who would try Hissen Habré» in what is yet seen as an hypothetical lawsuit.
Idrissa Seck candidat à l’élection présidentielle de 2007 s’est longuement entretenu avec Alassane Samba Diop, dans l’émission dominicale de la Radio futurs médias (Rfm). L’ancien numéro deux du Parti démocratique sénégalais (Pds) revient sur ses relations avec Me Wade, les Chantiers de Thiès, les fonds politiques, son programme économique, l’Anoci, Karim Wade etc. Il donne aussi quelques esquisses de son programme économique. (Réalisée par la Rfm, transcrit par rewmi)
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.
NDEM (Senegal): A hot wind blows across Senegal's arid landscape as Mathioro Ndiaye bows his head before his marabout, or spiritual guide. Ndiaye is one of Serigne Babacar Mbow's most faithful followers. He is also the Sorbonne-educated public relations representative of Mbow's lucrative clothing company, Maam Samba. Ndiaye brushes his hands over his face to receive the blessings muttered by Mbow, dressed in a simple white robe with dreadlocks piled up beneath a black bonnet. The intimate exchange over, the two men discuss the day's work ahead.
Faced with an outcry over the imprisonment in 2004 of journalist Madiambal Diagne, President Abdoulaye Wade promised to reform the press law. Senegalese journalists are still waiting and the situation has not improved. Quite the contrary. Early on the morning of 17 October 2005, a police commando raided and closed Sud FM radio in Dakar and arrested everyone present in its offices and studios. The radio’s correspondents were arrested in Ziguinchor in the south and at Saint-Louis in the north. All the relay stations were taken off air. What “crime” had Sud FM committed? It had broadcast an interview it carried out with a leader of a rebel group active in Casamance.