African cinemas are foreclosed

When was the last time you enjoyed a breath-taking movie with your family at the movie theatre? How much fun did you have? If you are currently outside Africa, you probably had a nice time. Unfortunately, when you visit home soon, you will be unlikely to find a movie cinema in your country – yes, the whole country, not your city.
Cinemas across the African continent are pulling down screens and converting them into convenience stores, night clubs or warehouses.
The average rate of foreclosure is estimated at one a month – an endemic trend blamed on ticket prices too high for the average African as well as on the proliferation of cheap pirated DVDs at any street corner.
About 50 cinemas remain in business – most in South Africa and Kenya with a few in Nigeria – thanks to mushrooming city shopping malls.
In Ivory Coast, West Africa's cultural crossroads, "cinema is dying, if it is not dead already", said award-winning producer Roger Gnoan M'Bala.
In Senegal, home to some of the continent's most renowned early filmmakers such as the late Ousmane Sembene, cinemas have all but shut down. "Senegal is one big black screen," said local weekly La Gazette.
Haven been “Westernized” due to travels, I wonder how boring a tiring evening will be without Movie theatres when I visit Africa. In your opinion, what is the remedy for Africa’s cinemas foreclosure?
(The independent, UK)
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I Escaped a Living Hell

The Paarl teen still has nightmares. Photo: Patrick Louw

This 19-year-old has survived a living hell after her own father was sentenced to 50 years for raping her.

The soft-spoken Paarl woman still has nightmares of her 37-year-old father who was sentenced in the Paarl Regional Court two weeks ago.

She says the attacks began when she was only 13.

Today, she feels victorious although she was not present to see her father being sentenced.

“Ek voel verlig (I feel relieved),” she said.

“I feel that I escaped a living hell.”

Nervously, she recalls how her nightmare began.

“He would lay in the middle and my mother and me on either side on the bed,” she said.

“He would rape me… and my mother would be sleeping but she would never wake up.

“I don’t know if she ever heard anything and why she didn’t say anything if she did… I will never know.”

50 years imprisonment is fair justice. Thumbs up for this teenager for letting the cat out of the bag. This is a recurrent problem in Africa. Young girls are constantly abused by family members, yet, they have to deal with it for the fear of losing their family to the police. In her case, I suppose she endured this nightmare for 6 years for the fear of disrupting her parent’s marriage. The most intriguing part of this story is the fact that the father laid in the middle of mother and daughter, raped this poor girl without her mother noticing.

Do you think her mother was oblivious of this incident?

(source IOZ)

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