-
Messi still highest-paid player in MLS
-
Paramount defends Warner bid amid California probe
-
Blister worry hits McIlroy as PGA start looms at Aronimink
-
Tens of thousands demonstrate in Argentina over Milei university cuts
-
Ex-NBA player Jason Collins dies after brain cancer battle
-
Foot blister forces McIlroy to cut short PGA practice round
-
Man City boss Guardiola urges players to make VAR irrelevant
-
Favourites Finland, Israel through at Eurovision semis
-
Revitalized Rose sets aside Masters loss for top PGA form
-
Musk 'wanted 90%' of OpenAI, Altman tells tech titan trial
-
Former Honduras mayor arrested over murder of environmental activist
-
Conan O'Brien to host 2027 Oscars: organisers
-
Oil prices advance, stocks mostly fall on US-Iran deadlock
-
'Bittersweet' runner-up run has Scheffler inspired at PGA
-
Lakers would welcome return of LeBron James
-
Musk 'wanted 90%' of OpenAI, Altman says in high-stakes trial
-
US appeals court halts order declaring Trump's global 10% tariff illegal
-
Rubio, with new Chinese name, heads to Beijing despite sanctions
-
Showtime as boycotted Eurovision kicks off
-
Stars descend as Cannes Film Festival opens without Hollywood backing
-
No.1 Scheffler to start PGA with Rose and Matt Fitzpatrick
-
Trump heads to China for superpower summit
-
Referees' chief says disallowing Hammers goal against Arsenal 'categorically' right
-
Brazil's Lula launches plan to fight organized crime ahead of elections
year
-
Grizzlies forward Brandon Clarke dies at 29: team
-
No.5 Morikawa still battles back issues as PGA start looms
-
Stadium changes just part of Houston's World Cup transformation
-
Trump announces departure of food and drug regulation chief
-
Russia demands closure of high representative post in Bosnia
-
Rabada stars as Gujarat hammer Hyderabad to move top of IPL
-
Kevin Warsh returns to Federal Reserve with 'regime change' agenda
-
Former Georgia rugby captain Sharikadze banned over urine-swap scheme
-
Fabled Argentine city Ushuaia tries to shrug off virus suspicions
-
Pentagon says US cost of Iran war nearing $29 billion
-
Wild peacocks bring delight, despair to Italian village
-
Murray to coach British star Draper in run-up to Wimbledon
-
Dick Advocaat returns as Curacao coach for World Cup
-
Real Madrid president Perez calls club elections, will stand again
-
Prosecutors granted access to Woods's prescription records in DUI crash case
-
US Senate confirms Trump-nominee Warsh to Federal Reserve board
-
Former Ecuadoran top diplomat enters race for UN chief
-
Wine consumption slides in 2025
-
Trump due in China for superpower summit with Xi
-
Narvaez wins Giro stage four as Ciccone takes leader's pink jersey
-
Russia tests long-range missile after US nuclear treaty expires
-
Sinner dismisses Pellegrino to reach Italian Open quarters, Zverev out
-
UK PM Starmer resists calls to quit as Labour divided
-
'Shame on Hollywood': Cannes-winning writer rails at stance on Gaza
-
Singaporean, Indian firms face criminal charges over Maryland bridge crash
-
Arsenal's White out for rest of the season with knee injury
S.African journalist, 90, delivers news in the desert
Armed with a flask of coffee, some boiled eggs and a towel to shield his bare legs from the scorching sun, 90-year-old Frans Hugo sets off every Thursday to deliver newspapers in the South African desert.
Week in, week out, the elderly editor has made the 1,200-kilometre (750-mile) round trip across the semi-arid Karoo region in the country's south.
He has been doing it for some four decades.
Born Charl Francois Hugo in Cape Town in 1932 -- but known to everyone simply as Frans -- he is arguably the last bastion of a dying business.
The energetic nonagenarian edits and hand-delivers three local papers -- The Messenger, Die Noordwester and Die Oewernuus.
Driving an orange Fiat Multipla stacked with copies of the eight-page weeklies and with an old portable radio to keep him company, Hugo brings news to towns and villages dotting this vast, parched back-country.
- 1,200 km every week -
He leaves at 1:30 am from Calvinia, a small town of less than 3,000 souls about 500 kilometres north of Africa's southernmost tip, and comes back in the early evening.
"I am like a pompdonkie," he told AFP on a recent tour, using the local moniker for the nodding donkey pumps used to extract groundwater from boreholes.
"I keep doing this every Thursday without fail. I will probably stop when I am physically not capable of doing it anymore."
Hugo worked as a journalist in Cape Town and then in Namibia for almost 30 years before retiring to this remote region.
"I couldn't handle the pressure anymore, so I moved to the Karoo," he said.
"Just as I was able to take a breath and relax, the man who owned the printers and the newspaper here in Calvinia came to ask me if I was interested in the business."
His daughter and her husband got involved but tired and quit after a few months. "I've been sitting with this thing ever since," he quipped.
- Cellphones and printers -
Helped by his wife and three assistants, he has kept alive some historic small-town titles at a time where many printed newspapers around the world are struggling to survive the digital age.
The Messenger, previously known as the Victoria West Messenger, was founded in 1875, while Die Noordwester and Die Oewernuus started printing in the 1900s.
All three are written in Afrikaans, a language descended from Dutch settlers and one of South Africa's 11 official tongues, but sometimes carry stories in English.
Hugo scoffs at people wanting "to read the news on their cellphones."
The rise of internet has hit readership but is seemingly yet to reach his newsroom, which looks like a museum.
The office is adorned by an old Heidelberg printing press and paper cutting machines. Staff use computers and software from the early 90s.
Still, Hugo's team prints about 1,300 copies a week, something he says shows an undying appetite for community news.
The papers sell for eight rand (about 50 US cents) and are dropped off at shops, convenience stores and the correspondents' homes.
The readers are mainly farmers, living in a remote, semi-arid landscape.
Writing in Afrikaans, which actor Charlize Theron recently controversially said was still spoken only by "about 44 people", keeps the language alive and ties together small communities separated by hundreds of kilometres (miles) of desert, said Hugo.
As long as he's around and has the required strength, they will receive their paper every Thursday.
What will happen later does not concern him, he said.
"I don't have a clue what will happen... in five years or 10 years," he said. "I am not worried."
L.E.Campos--PC