Africa-Press – Angola. A selection of the week’s best photos from across the continent and beyond:
These women are looking at a partial solar eclipse in Egypt on Tuesday, when the Moon passes between the Sun and the Earth, casting a shadow.
There are large crowds on Monday in Cairo’s Ataba Square, which lies in the heart of the city and is one of its most famous and biggest squares.
It is olive season in Tunisia. According to Statista, olives and olive oil are a major Tunisian agricultural export.
Amid a drought in Kenya, a group of Maasai women are buying barley for their livestock in Ilbisil town. After a series of failed rainy seasons, the World Food Programme has warned that millions of people in East Africa are at risk of severe hunger.
A tea farmer is pictured at Kipkebe Tea Estate near Musereita. Kenya’s government is trying to encourage domestic tea-processing instead of exporting the herb raw, so the country can increase its profits, according to the AFP news agency.
Congolese refugees escape fighting between M23 rebels and the army on Wednesday. The Congolese government accuses neighbouring Rwanda of backing the M23, but this is denied by Kigali.
This woman is all smiles as she rides a tuk tuk taxi in Ethiopia on Sunday.
Meanwhile this group of women attends a protest to support Ethiopia’s military the same week as warring parties attempt to broker peace in the Tigray conflict.
This model poses backstage at the Reeyah Swim show during Glitz Africa Fashion Week in Accra, Ghana on Saturday. It is described as Ghana’s biggest fashion event.
There is more fashion elsewhere, as models smile backstage at South African Fashion Week…
At the same fashion week models walk the runway.
There is camaraderie among Nigeria’s Fifa Under 17s Women’s World Cup team in India, as these players smile ahead of their semi-final match against Colombia on Wednesday. They go on to lose on penalties.
In Nigeria these men made wade through the waters on Saturday after floods which have killed more than 600 people and been described as an “overwhelming” disaster.
Students take part in a ballroom class in Soweto on Sunday. Interest in the artform is growing in South Africa after the establishment of the Born to Move Dance Academy, according to AFP.
On Thursday French photographer JR attends the Art D’Égypte exhibition where his collection “Inside Out Giza” is on display.
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