A selection of the best photos from across Africa and of Africans elsewhere in the world this week.

A parade is held at the Popo carnival in Ivory Coast's south-eastern Bonoua town on Saturday to celebrate the heritage of the Aboure people...

It is an annual celebration of Aboure culture, with dances, pageantries, gastronomic competitions...

And an opportunity to cause shock and horror at what is one of Ivory Coast's most well-attended events.

On Sunday, this young boy competes in a team dance battle in Goma, the main city in troubled eastern Democratic Republic of Congo...

It was the first time the Goma Dance Festival was held. The idea is to encourage youths to express themselves through dance and forget about the fighting.

These teenagers engage in therapeutic activities on Wednesday at a refugee camp in South Sudan's Maban county to overcome trauma caused by violence.

On Sunday in the capital, Juba, a football fan draped in the national colours was on the winning side as South Sudan beat Somalia 2-0 to qualify for the next round of the 2018 African Nations Championship - only for players based in their own countries.

In neighbouring Uganda, dancers from the Acholi ethnic group perform in northern Gulu town...

Their guest was Hollywood actor Forest Whitaker, who visited the area to expand the Youth Peacemaker Network.

Nigerian musician Asa performs at a concert in Nigeria's main city, Lagos, on Saturday. Some of her fans described her as "pure magic" and the "goddess of good music".

The mood is very different at a May Day rally in Lagos on Monday, as workers highlight the problems facing oil-rich Nigeria.

On Friday, Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe hosts his Namibian counterpart Hage Geingob at a trade fair in the second city, Bulawayo. Mr Mugabe made the controversial claim this week that Zimbabwe is the most highly developed African country after South Africa.

A sheep's head is cooked at a butchers in a residential neighbourhood in South Africa's Cape Town. A barbecued head is known as a Smiley in South Africa, and regarded by some as a delicacy.

On Sunday, an African sacred ibis flies at sunset over Cape Town. It breeds in sub-Saharan Africa, south-eastern Iraq, and formerly in Egypt, where it was venerated and often mummified as a symbol of the god Thoth.
Images courtesy of AFP, EPA, Getty Images and Reuters