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The new National Numbering Plan (NNP) of Niger is structured as eight digits, in the following form: ABPQMCDU In this structure, all the letters may be given values of 0 to 9. The first two digits AB identify the service or the network, while the remaining six digits PQMCDU identify the user unless some other specific meaning has been assigned.
Niger '66: A Peace Corps Diary: Judy Irola: Documentary 2011 Koukan Kourcia (Le cri de la tourterelle) Sani Elhadj Magori Documentary English title: Koukan Kourcia (The Cry of the Dove) 2013 Those Who Veil: Daliso Leslie: Documentary short 2013 Lokkol. l'école. Alwasi et Aikije vont (aussi) à l'école: Francesco Sincich: Documentary English ...
Pages in category "Films set in Niger" The following 9 pages are in this category, out of 9 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. C. Cocorico! Monsieur Poulet
Al’leessi...An African Actress. A film by Rahmatou Keita. Niger, 2004, 69 minutes. Women Make Movies .com. Al’leessi…An African Actress. Reviewed by Oksana Dykyj. Educational Media Reviews Online, 2 March 2006. (in French) "Fils à papa", l'avènement d'un feuilleton made in Niger. M.S. Abandé Moctar. 17 September 2004. Clap Noir, 2004.
Niger is a landlocked nation in West Africa located along the border between the Sahara and Sub-Saharan regions. It borders Nigeria and Benin to the south, Burkina Faso and Mali to the west, Algeria and Libya to the north and Chad to the east. Niger lies between latitudes 11° and 24°N, and longitudes 0° and 16°E. Its area is 1,267,000 ...
Cocorico! Monsieur Poulet was filmed in and around Niamey, Niger on 16 mm film in 1974. Much of the film was improvised. [5] Damouré Zika used the money he made from Petit à petit (1970) to buy the Citroën 2CV featured in the film. [6]
One local Niger Delta community's struggle against their own government and a multi-national oil corporation who has plundered their land and destroyed the environment. The film was reissued in 2012 with the title Black November, with 60% of the scenes reshot and additional scenes included to make the film "more current". [1]
After the painful ordeal of female genital mutilation, Mariama will then bear the traumatic weight of a rape and an unwanted pregnancy that will lead to her banishment from the village, then to her "exile" in Maradi, where she will be sentenced to 20 years in prison for having killed, in a reflex, certainly linked to the trauma of the rape she suffered, a man who solicited her for prostitution.