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Film festival fosters hope in violence-torn Burkina Faso

Silja Fröhlich | Richard Tiene
March 2, 2023

As conflict and violence spread across the Sahel region, Africa's biggest film festival, hosted by Burkina Faso, promotes fellowship in times of crisis.

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Burkina Faso Ouagadougu | Filmfestspiele Fespaco | Statue Paulin Soumanou Vieyra
Image: Sophie Garcia/AP/picture alliance

In Ouagadougou, the capital of Burkina Faso, the atmosphere is vibrant. The West African nation is hosting the 28th edition of the Ouagadougou Film and Television Festival (FESPACO).

Africa's biggest film festival, which takes place every two years, honors and promotes African filmmakers and showcases hundreds of African films in various categories.

This year's edition was officially launched by the prime minister of Burkina Faso, Apollinaire Joachimson Kyelem de Tambela, and his Malian counterpart Choguel Kokalla Maiga.

According to the organizers, the decision to invite Mali as guest of honor to FESPACO was based on its geographical and socio-cultural proximity to Burkina Faso.

A Fespaco sign outside a venue in Ouagadougu
FESPACO invites movie lovers from Africa and beyondImage: Tim Brakemeier/dpa/picture-alliance

"[Mali] is a country with a cinematographic tradition," FESPACO advisor Guy Desire Yameogo told DW. "The choice of the country was not dictated by politics or external pressure. Mali has won the Etalon de Yennenga award three times."

Yameogo added that they felt a kinship within their wider struggles: "At a time when both countries are going through the same problems, it seemed necessary to turn to a brother country, a friend country."

United in conflict

This year's chosen theme — "Cinema of Africa and Culture of Peace" — also reflects the tense security context in Burkina Faso and Mali.

Burkina Faso soldiers hold portraits as they stand in front the coffins of 27 soldiers killed in an attack by Islamist militants
Burkina Faso is fighting a jihadist insurgency that has left many killed or woundedImage: Vincent Bado/REUTERS

Last month, over 70 soldiers were killed and dozens were wounded and taken hostage following an ambush on a military convoy in the north of Burkina Faso. The "Islamic State" group claimed responsibility. Over the past seven years, violence attributed to Islamist extremists in Burkina Faso has killed thousands and displaced nearly 2 million people. 

Malian Prime Minister Choguel Maiga used his visit to Ouagadougou to address the shared security threat in the region.

"We have been through this stage," he said. "At one point in Mali, every day villages were razed to the ground." 

"We knew very well why this was happening. The Malians stood their ground, and we ask you to stand your ground. We are sure that one day terrorism will be defeated in the Sahel."

Mali was plunged into a security crisis in 2012, following a separatist rebellion. According to the European Commission, over 3.9 million people now require assistance.

The Burkinabe diplomat Antoine Somdah told DW that he hoped Africans could still enjoy the cultural element of the FESPACO festival amid difficult times.

"Some people wonder why we organize this kind of meeting when we have security problems," he said. "We must not politicize this kind of thing. It is a cultural component."

A still from the film "Sira" in which a woman walks alone through a desert landscape
A still from "Sira" directed by Burkinabe filmmaker Apolline TraoreImage: Les Films Selmon

Women behind and in front of the camera

Fifteen films are in the running for the "Golden Stallion of Yennega" award for best African film and there are just as many women as men competing. The jury is chaired this year by Tunisian producer Dora Bouchoucha, who says this makes sense. 

"I'm not surprised because in this region, on this continent especially, there are many women working as filmmakers," she told DW.

"When I started, there were very few."

The importance of African stories

"Sira" from Burkinabe director Apolline Traore is one of the entries in the running for the top prize. The Sahel drama about a young woman kidnapped by jihadists was also shown at the Berlin film festival in Germany earlier this month. 

For Traore, it is important to stop painting women purely as victims in the ongoing conflict. 

"[The women] are the ones in the camps," she told DW. "And they have to take their kids and then run. And that journey can be very long and difficult. How do they cope? How do they survive? And how do they keep those kids from going and getting enrolled in the terrorist groups themselves? Those women are such a big part of fighting against terrorists that we need to talk about it."

Traore's movie conveys a deep message about resilience, and the place of women in film and society. Her other message is: Let African filmmakers tell African stories. 

"I think that other places in the world have kind of lost or used their stories," she said. "They don't have any more stories to tell. They're coming to get it from us now, and they're taking our stories and they're telling our stories on the surface, but not going deep inside."

"We have to stand up and and show the West that we are able to tell our own stories."

Edited by: Ineke Mules

DW - Silja Fröhlich
Silja Fröhlich is a German journalist and radio host.