Amazigh New Year and vodún cheer: Africa's top shotsA selection of the week's best photos from across the African continent and beyond:OLYMPIA DE MAISMONT / AFPOn Monday, 31-year-old Ange Gnacadja rests on cotton harvested in Soclogbo, Benin.KHALED DESOUKI / AFPIt's time for the Egyptian Marathon on Saturday in Luxor.FETHI BELAID / AFPThe next day in Tunisia's capital city Tunis, dancers compete at the Juste Debout international contest.ESA ALEXANDER / REUTERSThis diver in Cape Town throws shapes on a hot Saturday in South Africa.ABDEL MAJID BZIOUAT / AFPMonday marks the start of the year 2975 for members of north Africa's Amazigh communities...JALAL MORCHIDI / EPACelebrations in the Moroccan capital of Rabat include fashion shows and musical performances.AMANUEL SILESHI / AFPEarthquakes in the north of Ethiopia leave huge cracks in the road, causing this man trouble as he transports goods on Sunday.MARCO LONGARI / AFPRenowned chef Georgiana Viou - pictured on Sunday - trades a Michelin-starred restaurant in France for her new venture in Benin, called Restaurant L'Ami.OLYMPIA DE MAISMONT / AFPAlso in Benin days earlier, Vodún worshippers approach the palace of King Kpodégbé Lanmanfan Toyi Djigla...MARCO LONGARI / AFPSwirling zangbetos in an array of colours are a familiar part of Vodún festivals...MARCO LONGARI / AFPMeanwhile this Vodún worshipper pauses for a portrait at the Mami Wata Temple in Ouidah.LEON SADIKI / GETTY IMAGESOutraged South Africans say the government has blood on its hands after waiting months to extract miners who have been trapped underground since November. Some are comparing the scandal to the Marikana mine massacre of 2012...KIM LUDBROOK/EPALeft without food and supplies for weeks on end, many of the survivors were emaciated and had to be stretchered away from the site because they were too weak to walk. JOSPIN MWISHA / AFPThis boy and the many people and families around him are among more than 100,000 people who have fled their homes in Masisi, eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, in the past week alone because of deadly violence between M23 rebels and the army. Despite the cost of human misery, minerals from here are found in smartphones sold the world over.PHILL MAGAKOE / AFPSlick choreography for the inauguration of Mozambique's new president, Daniel Chapo, includes the handing out of refreshments featuring his portrait...ESTEVAO CHAVISSO / EPAAnd on the same day, protesters against the election, who do not recognise Chapo as the rightful president, make their voices heard.From the BBC in Africa this week:The would-be African nation in love with Donald TrumpMozambique's new president sworn in despite opposition boycottThe Cameroonian lawyer risking everything to defend LGBT rightsHow a freak space junk crash baffled residents in KenyaGetty Images/BBCGo to BBCAfrica.com for more news from the African continent.Follow us on Twitter @BBCAfrica, on Facebook at BBC Africa or on Instagram at bbcafricaBBC Africa podcastsAfrica DailyFocus on AfricaPhotographyAfrica