Friday, December 12, 2025

Coup Plot: Communist Party Of Benin Condemns Nigeria, France's Military Intervention, Blames Talon's Administration

December 8, 2025

The party, in a strongly worded statement issued on Monday, said the failed coup and the events that followed raise serious questions about the sovereignty of the country. 

The Communist Party of Benin (PCB) has condemned what it described as foreign military intervention in Benin following the reported aborted coup d'état of Sunday, December 7, 2025. 

The party, in a strongly worded statement issued on Monday, said the failed coup and the events that followed raise serious questions about the sovereignty of the country. 

According to the PCB, the attempt to overthrow the government of President Patrice Talon was thwarted largely due to the intervention of French forces stationed in Benin and air strikes conducted by Nigerian fighter jets deployed from Lagos State. 

While reiterating its longstanding opposition to military takeovers, the Party insisted that the political climate created by the current administration has fuelled widespread discontent. 

“The Communist Party of Benin, in all its political stances, has always opposed putschism as a mode of accession to power,” the statement read. 

“However, the December 7 coup attempt is the logical consequence of the disastrous management of the ‘Rupture’ government, characterised by predation, fascist dictatorship, exclusion, and repeated institutional coups d’état since 2016.”

The PCB blamed the alleged democratic decline under the Talon administration, including what it described as the “monarchical Constitution” that restricts political participation and public expression.

“As long as the current governance is maintained, it is foreseeable that such events will not fail to occur in the future,” the Party warned.

The PCB sharply criticised the reported involvement of French forces and Nigerian military assets in neutralising the coup attempt. 

Citing unverified information, the party claimed that French President, Emmanuel Macron, requested Nigerian President Bola Tinubu to intervene under the banner of ECOWAS, with Nigerian fighter jets supporting French troops on the ground.

The party alleged that additional Nigerian ground forces entered through the Sèmè border to reinforce the operation.

“This event is extremely serious. It is an insult and humiliation to the political and military institutions of our country,” the PCB said. “It represents the placement of our country under supervision; a pure and simple transformation of Benin into a French colony.”

The PCB reiterated its longstanding stance that Benin’s internal issues should be resolved domestically without foreign interference.

“The PCB condemns this Franco-Nigerian intervention in our country and demands the immediate departure of the foreign forces of aggression,” the Party declared.

The statement, dated December 8, 2025, was signed by the leadership of the Communist Party of Benin and circulated through social platforms. 

AU, IGAD Indefinitely Postpone Sudanese Political Consultations

December 11, 2025 (DJIBOUTI) – The African Union and the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD) have indefinitely postponed consultations between Sudanese political factions scheduled for next week in Djibouti, organizers said on Thursday.

It marks the second such delay in recent months; talks planned for October were abandoned after Sudanese groups failed to agree on the participant list.

The AU and IGAD aim to bridge gaps between rival factions to launch a political process regarding the country’s future governance. However, preconditions set by the various blocs continue to derail these efforts.

Officials involved in the planning told Sudan Tribune the meetings, set for Dec. 16-18, were shelved after the Democratic Bloc coalition refused to participate alongside the Sudan Founding Coalition (Tasis), a bloc dominated by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF).

A senior member of the Civil Democratic Alliance of Revolutionary Forces (Somoud) confirmed the indefinite postponement but declined to provide further details.

Four previous AU-led attempts to organize a dialogue have failed due to disputes over selection criteria and management.

Deep divisions persist across the political landscape. The Somoud alliance rejects any dialogue involving figures from the ousted regime and demands the inclusion of independent civil forces.

Conversely, pro-army factions refuse to engage with Somoud, accusing it of serving as a political front for the RSF, despite the paramilitary group having formed its own separate political coalition, Tasis.

Report Finds 40% of Sudanese Women Journalists Face Multiple Forms of Violence

11 December 2025

Journalists protest in defence of the press freedom in Khartoum (file photo)

December 11, 2025 (KHARTOUM) – Forty per cent of female journalists in Sudan have suffered multiple forms of violence since the war began, the Media Women Network said on Thursday.

Since the conflict erupted, 17 journalists have been killed. Female reporters face heightened risks, including physical abuse, sexual assault, harassment, and digital threats.

In a report marking the 16 Days of Activism against Gender-Based Violence, the network said two female journalists had been killed, and 54% had faced digital violence. It documented cases of physical abuse, sexual assault, and personal threats against dozens of others.

Journalists have also reported displacement, travel bans, and the denial of identity papers, alongside organized smear campaigns and cyberbullying.

The report found that while 52% of female journalists remain in Sudan, nearly a third are internally displaced. The remaining 48% have fled the country as refugees.

War conditions have devastated the media labour market, with 56% of female journalists reporting job losses or reduced income as outlets cut wages.

The group highlighted a critical lack of support, noting that 72% of women in the sector had received no training on safety or conflict coverage.

“Sudanese female journalists today are struggling not only to convey the truth but also for their personal and professional survival,” the network said.

Guided by Renewal: ANC Plans New Charter With Performance Targets Post-NGC

Thabiso Goba

11 December 2025 | 12:10

The four-day NGC is drawing to a close on Thursday, with ANC Secretary General, Fikile Mbalula, reading out the adopted declarations.

Guided by renewal: ANC plans new charter with performance targets post-NGC

ANC Secretary General, Fikile Mbalula. Picture: @MbalulaFikile/X.

The ANC's 5th National General Council (NGC) has declared that the party must draw up a 'Renewal Charter' to serve as a guiding framework in its quest for renewal.

The four-day NGC is drawing to a close on Thursday, with ANC Secretary General, Fikile Mbalula, reading out the adopted declarations.

Among other things, Mbalula stated that the NGC deliberated on how the National Democratic Revolution is at a crossroads due to corruption, the weakening of state institutions, and factionalism within the party.

Mbalula said the NGC declared the party must continue to renew itself if it is to advance the agenda of building a non-racist, non-sexist, equal South Africa. He further elaborated:

"Renewal of the ANC as the leading agent of change, to rebuild the leadership; organisational and ideological capacity to drive transformation. This renewal must be all-encompassing and will require strict organisational management of the ANC. The adoption of a renewal charter towards 2032 with performance targets and indicators across a range of issues."

SA’s Poverty Profile: Govt Says Drop in Almost Two Decades Marks Vital Step Forward

Nokukhanya Mntambo

11 December 2025 | 22:44

At least 23 million people in South Africa are considered poor, making this a 20-percentage point drop in the headcount since 2006.

The government said the drop in poverty levels in almost two decades marks an important step forward in the country’s ongoing efforts to reduce poverty and improve living conditions.

At least 23 million people in South Africa are considered poor, making this a 20-percentage point drop in the headcount since 2006.

This is according to the lower-bound poverty threshold by Statistics South Africa (Stats SA).

Statistician General Risenga Maluleke released the poverty trends report on Thursday.

“While for your black Africans and coloureds, poverty continues to decline. For the Indian Asians, we see that it rose slightly between 2015 and 2023. The white population grew right far at the bottom, far below the national poverty line, sitting at 1.4%.”

Deputy government spokesperson William Baloyi said that the progress in reducing poverty among black African and coloured populations is an indication of the positive impact of targeted social and economic interventions.

“While the government acknowledges that this progress is encouraging, it is not enough. Through coordinated policies and targeted programmes, the country will continue striving toward a more equitable and inclusive South Africa.”

Thursday, December 11, 2025

Rwanda-backed M23 Rebels Say They Have Captured Key City in Eastern DRC

Rebel spokesperson claims Uvira ‘fully liberated’ as offensive continues despite Trump-brokered peace deal

Eromo Egbejule in Abidjan and agencies

Thu 11 Dec 2025 05.58 EST

Rwanda-backed M23 rebels claimed to have captured a key eastern city in Democratic Republic of the Congo as they continued their march to control more of Africa’s second largest country.

In statements in English and French on Wednesday evening, a rebel spokesperson, Lawrence Kanyuka, claimed the city of Uvira had been “fully liberated, secured and under the control of the liberation forces”.

He said on X that the rebels were committed to “protecting civilian populations and defending their rights against any aggression, regardless of its source”, urging soldiers and the Wazalendo militia allied to the Congolese military to surrender immediately. However, speaking to Reuters, Burundi’s foreign minister, Edouard Bizimana, said Uvira “has not yet fallen”.

Since Bukavu, the capital of South Kivu province, fell to M23 in February, the lakeside city of Uvira, strategically located between DRC and Burundi, has served as the temporary headquarters of the Kinshasa-appointed government. Its capture could give rebels a clear path to expand further into other parts of the DRC, observers say.

In recent days, the Congolese army and allied militias have reportedly evacuated heavy weapons from Uvira toward Burundi, suggesting they are bracing for the rebel takeover.

The rebel sweep has already claimed other major eastern cities this year, including Goma and Bukavu, as analysts accuse Rwanda of wanting to annex Congolese territory for itself particularly because of the abundance of minerals such as coltan and gold.

Reports from Reuters say the advance by M23 displaced about 200,000 civilians, and at least 74 people were killed, as clashes intensified around Uvira and other flashpoints. In total, more than 6 million people across North and South Kivu provinces have been displaced at various points since M23’s renewed offensive in 2021. Some of the camps for displaced people have been dismantled in a “forcible transfer” that Human Rights Watch has said is “a war crime under the Geneva conventions”.

M23, formally known as the March 23 Movement, is a rebel group formed in 2012 by former members of the National Congress for the Defence of the People (CNDP), a Rwanda-backed militia in eastern DRC. Its name was a reference to a 23 March 2009 peace agreement, which the rebels claim Kinshasa violated.

Congolese authorities and UN experts accuse Rwanda of backing M23, citing evidence of Rwandan troop presence, supplies, and logistical support. Rwanda continues to deny these claims, framing the allegations as politically motivated. It instead accuses the DRC of collaborating with hostile militias including the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR), which it claims is planning a regime change in Kigali.

M23, which has become notorious for human rights abuses, initially disbanded in 2013 after a major defeat by the Congolese army and the UN peacekeeping mission (Monusco). Around that time, Barack Obama, the then US president, had told Kagame that backing the rebels was “inconsistent with desire for stability and peace”.

M23 re-emerged in 2021 and has begun taking territory at a faster pace, with fighting continuing despite peace deals signed in Doha and Washington DC this year. The advance into Uvira comes less than a week after Trump brokered a peace deal between the Congolese president, Felix Tshisekedi, and his Rwandan counterpart, Paul Kagame, to ease regional tensions.

“Signing an agreement and not implementing it is a humiliation for everyone, and first and foremost for President Trump,” said Bizimana, calling for sanctions against Rwanda. “It’s truly a slap in the face to the United States, a middle finger.”

On Tuesday, the Congolese foreign minister, Thérèse Kayikwamba Wagner, told Reuters that the US should impose sanctions on Rwanda. “Washington has to restore the credibility of its process through accountability,” she said. “It is not enough to condemn. It is not enough to be preoccupied or to be concerned.”

However, her Rwandan counterpart, Olivier Nduhungirehe, has claimed Kinshasa has failed to implement peace deals or honour the ceasefire deal. Speaking to Reuters on Wednesday, he said Burundian and Congolese forces had been attacking towns near the border between both countries before the latest escalation.

“The international community has not demanded an end to these attacks prepared for months by the DRC and instigated in the past week,” he said.

Bodies Collected from Streets After M23's Advance into Eastern DRC's Uvira City

M23 rebels have captured large swathes of territory in eastern DRC in recent months. 

At least 10 bodies have been collected from the streets of Uvira in eastern DRC after M23 rebels advanced into the city early this week, security and local sources said.

Businesses have been closed for several days and only a few motorcycles were out in the streets, while sporadic shots still rang out, local civil society representatives said.

The bodies were found between Wednesday and Thursday, according to local sources and witnesses.

"Yesterday we collected at least nine bodies and today two on the avenue leading to Saint Paul's Cathedral," a civil society representative told AFP, but gave no other details.

US peace deal on verge of faltering

As it did in two provincial capitals, Goma and Bukavu, seized in January and February after a lightning offensive, the M23 is seeking to take control of neighbourhoods in Uvira.

The city hall, provincial governor's office and the border post to Burundi already fell to the M23 on Wednesday after most Congolese forces fled in the previous days.

On Thursday, almost all parts of the city suffered power cuts, with many residents reliant on battery powered phones for contact with the outside world.

The M23 offensive, launched at the beginning of December just before Kinshasa and Kigali signed a peace deal in Washington, was described by Burundi's foreign minister on Wednesday as a "humiliation" for the United States.

Burundian support for DRC

The latest offensive by the rebel group aims initially to deprive the Democratic Republic of Congo of military support from Burundi, according to experts and security sources.

Some of the 18,000 Burundian forces present in South Kivu province in eastern DRC have already crossed the border back to the Burundian economic capital Bujumbura, sources within the Burundi army said.

However, around 2,500 are still in the hills overlooking Uvira and the Ruzizi border plain, they said.

Rwanda faces repeated accusations by both DRC and UN of backing M23 rebels, allegations that Kigali deny.

SOURCE: AFP

What M23's Capture of Uvira Means for the DRC, Wider Region, and Peace Talks: Africa File Special Edition

Yale Ford

Key Takeaways:

Uvira Offensive. M23 rebels captured Uvira town in South Kivu province with significant Rwandan army support in the group’s most consequential offensive since March. The Rwandan army reportedly aided M23's advance, violating its commitments under the recently signed Washington Accords peace framework. 

The DRC. The fall of Uvira is the defeat of the DRC coalition in South Kivu, which is a strategic setback for the Congolese government that will likely erode its domestic credibility and further weaken its military strategy against M23 in the eastern DRC.

M23. M23’s control of Uvira augments its military and political leverage. M23 could use Uvira to as a launchpad for an offensive toward southern and south-central DRC, although this is unlikely in the short term due to capacity and political constraints.

Burundi and the Wider Region. M23 launched its Uvira offensive after relations with Burundi collapsed, heightening the risks of a regional war. Burundi and Rwanda both view their competition in the eastern DRC as potentially existential, and M23’s capture of Uvira is Burundi’s gravest national security threat in years.

Peace Talks. M23's offensive on Uvira undermines an already-struggling peace effort between rebels and the Congolese government. Progress has been made in the separate US-mediated process between the DRC and Rwanda, but that track does not deal directly with M23 and other proxy forces. 

Uvira Offensive

M23 rebels captured Uvira town in South Kivu province with Rwandan army support in the group’s most consequential offensive since March. M23 launched a large-scale offensive on pro-Congolese government forces—the Congolese army (FARDC), Wazalendo militia fighters, and the Burundian army (FDNB)—on the frontlines south of Bukavu, the South Kivu provincial capital, in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) on December 2.[i] M23 and Rwanda had reportedly mobilized reinforcements and equipment in the days before attacking enemy positions on the RN5 and in the Kaziba chiefdom in southern Walungu district.[ii] M23 had been waging several smaller offensives south of Bukavu in southern Walungu, Mwenga, and Shabunda districts to extend its territorial control and supply lines since late April. The front line on the RN5—the main route from Bukavu to Uvira on the Ruzizi Plain—had largely been frozen between M23-controlled Kamanyola and Katagota towns since March.

Figure 1. Bukavu-Uvira Corridor on the RN5

Source: Yale Ford.

M23 faced initial resistance in its offensive but successfully broke through key enemy positions on the RN5 and in Kaziba, opening lines of advance on Uvira town. Pro-Congolese government forces had counterattacked and deployed thousands of reinforcements to the front line when M23 launched the offensive.[iii] M23 heavily shelled and overpowered pro-Congolese government forces, capturing key positions in Kaziba and the adjacent Bafuliru chiefdom in the highlands, roughly 13 miles west of the frontline on the RN5, between December 4 and 6.[iv] These gains on the high ground allowed M23 to reposition its artillery and support a ground assault on Katagota, Lubarika, Luvungi villages on the RN5—the latter a crucial FDNB-FARDC forward position—on December 5, triggering a sudden FDNB withdrawal from Ruzizi on December 6.[v] FARDC-Wazalendo coordination crumbled as M23 advanced, with FARDC special forces clashing directly with Wazalendos.[vi]

M23 ground forces advanced about 40 miles to Uvira in four days after it took Luvungi. The group captured at least eight main villages on the RN5 with some resistance from lingering FARDC and Wazalendo units as fighting also occurred in the western highlands.[vii] Thousands of FDNB and FARDC soldiers—and even local Wazalendo generals—fled Uvira on December 9.[viii] CTP reported that M23 entered Uvira as early as December 9 and took control of key positions in the city by December 10, possibly waiting for FARDC-Wazalendo elements to withdraw.[ix] The UN reported on December 8 that over 200,000 people had been displaced since the fighting intensified on December 2.[x]

Figure 2. M23 and Allies Activity in South Kivu.

Source: Yale Ford; Liam Karr; Anping Zhu.

The Rwandan army (RDF) reportedly aided M23’s advance, violating its commitments under the recently signed Washington Accords peace framework. Security sources told French media that Rwanda began deploying reinforcements to support the offensive in late November.[xi] The United States and several European countries condemned Rwandan support for M23’s offensive and called on the RDF to halt offensive operations on December 9.[xii] The UN has reported on the RDF’s deployment of thousands of military troops and long-range artillery, armed drones, and anti-aircraft defense systems to support M23 offensives on multiple occasions since early 2024.[xiii] The group’s latest offensive reportedly involved this kind of advanced weaponry that exceeds M23 capabilities, such as signal jammers, artillery and GPS-guided mortars, multiple rocket launcher systems, suicide and multirole drones, and anti-drone weaponry.[xiv] The international community specifically expressed concern about the increased use of attack and suicide drones in their statements on the offensive.[xv] Rwanda committed to not “engage in, support, or condone any military incursions or other acts” in the eastern DRC as part of the Washington Accords.[xvi]

The DRC

The fall of Uvira is the defeat of the DRC coalition in South Kivu, which is a strategic setback for the Congolese government that will likely erode its domestic credibility and further weaken its military strategy against M23 in the eastern DRC. Uvira was the last major government foothold and FARDC military hub in South Kivu. M23’s control of Uvira cuts off the FARDC’s supply route for troops and military equipment in the region. M23’s advance also severely constrains if not completely cuts Burundian support, which had been the FARDC’s most important ally and main deterrent force against M23 and M23-aligned rebel militias in South Kivu. The FDNB initiated a full withdrawal and extraction of its roughly 18,000 troops from South Kivu and closed its two main border posts with the DRC due to M23’s Uvira assault.[xvii] The Congolese government had used Bujumbura—Burundi’s economic capital about 16 miles to the east of Uvira—and its airport as a rear base for FDNB-FARDC ground and air operations against M23 in South Kivu for months. Bombing runs launched from Bujumbura had aimed to degrade M23’s supply lines on several axes in South Kivu since fighting had escalated in South Kivu in September.

The Congolese government could face political pressure from its domestic base and the political opposition after the fall of Uvira. The DRC had relocated official institutions and the seat of government in South Kivu to Uvira after M23 captured Bukavu in mid-February. CTP assessed in late October that a successful M23 offensive on Uvira could cause a legitimacy crisis for the Congolese president and further expose his inability to roll back M23’s and Rwanda’s gains or resolve the conflict through various military or diplomatic solutions.[xviii]The political opposition had increased calls for Tshisekedi to convene a national dialogue to address the driving causes of armed conflict and underdevelopment across the DRC after M23 staged its early 2025 offensive. CTP has assessed that Tshisekedi is managing the risk of a coup linked to the M23 conflict and likely views any effort to reorganize power structures in the DRC as a threat to his control.[xix]

The Congolese government still does not face an immediate military threat from M23, however. M23 still only controls two remote provinces in the east of the DRC’s 26 provinces. The group would have to travel roughly 500 miles to reach the DRC’s economic engine in the mineral-rich former Katanga region and nearly 1,000 miles to Kinshasa, the Congolese capital, across poor roads to pose an existential threat. CTP assessed that the Congolese government would likely remain in a maximalist negotiating stance in peace talks even if M23 captured Uvira.[xx]

M23

M23’s control of Uvira augments its military and political leverage. M23 will be hard to dislodge from Uvira given the surrounding geography. Uvira is situated on a lakeside plain pinched between the highlands and Lake Tanganyika, with the only viable land routes being through Burundi and south on the RN5. M23 took control of and sealed off the DRC-Burundi border on December 9, and the group and Rwanda will likely deploy air defenses and close the airspace above Uvira to prevent cross-border attacks.[xxi] An FARDC official had told Reuters in mid-September that M23 would be “impossible to dislodge” if it pushed south along the ridgelines and gains control of key positions above Uvira, which are key due to the lack of land corridors.[xxii]

M23 will likely establish a parallel administration in Uvira—a town of 700,000 residents—and use its control of the town and surrounding areas as a bargaining chip in peace talks.[xxiii] Uvira is a major economic and commercial hub for the area, the interior DRC, and Rwanda, Burundi, Tanzania, and Zambia, with a port, access to several roads, and a customs post with Burundi. The group could expand its revenue streams by taxing and regulating regional trade, transportation, and commerce in the Lake Tanganyika area. The group said that it would launch a “vast” state-building effort after taking control of the Kalundu port on the south side of Uvira on December 10.[xxiv] CTP continues to assess that M23’s state-building efforts strengthens its leverage in peace efforts, making the group more intractable and able to push for a greater role in any future deal that sees M23 gradually enter a power-sharing system with the Congolese government.

M23 will likely use its control of Uvira to bolster its military strength for future offensives. M23 had demobilized and then trained and redeployed thousands of ex-FARDC and militia fighters to the group’s police and military forces after it captured Goma and Bukavu. The group has been conducting a mass recruitment and forced conscription campaign in urban and rural areas throughout 2025, at least tripling its force deployment since earlier this year.[xxv] CTP estimates that the group has at least 25,000 combatants in its security services. New M23 recruits reportedly participated in the Uvira offensive.[xxvi] M23 reportedly captured weaponry and military equipment and many Burundian and FARDC-Wazalendo fighters during its advance on the RN5.[xxvii]

Figure 3. Rwandan-Backed Rebellion Force Deployments in the Eastern DRC

Note: The estimate for RCD-Goma is from Gérard Prunier, Africa’s World War: Congo, the Rwandan Genocide, and the Making of a Continental Catastrophe (Oxford University Press, 2009). The estimate for M23 in 2025 is based on UN reporting and the group’s recent claims.

Source: Yale Ford.

M23 will likely focus on securing and consolidating control over Uvira in the short-to-medium term. The UN and Burundi said that more than 30,000 Congolese civilians fled Uvira to Burundi in the past week.[xxviii] Civilians have also fled on the RN5 toward Baraka town in Fizi district.[xxix] The absence of urban combat in Uvira means that many civilians will likely return to the M23-controlled city, similar to what occurred in Bukavu in mid-February. M23 began asking civilians to return to their homes and resume their normal activities on December 10.[xxx]

The group could face challenges securing the town. M23 had progressively strengthened its grip on Goma but had to deal with urban insecurity fomented by defeated FARDC-Wazalendo militants who embedded themselves in the town in early 2025. Uvira had been a Wazalendo stronghold with more than 80 distinct militia groups claiming the town as its base.[xxxi] Wazalendo militias operating in the highlands above Uvira had sporadically clashed with FARDC throughout 2025. Many Wazalendo generals retreated from Uvira in the face of the group’s advance, but some “leaderless” Wazalendo and FARDC troops reportedly remained in the city and the surrounding highlands.[xxxii] M23 called on Wazalendo elements to submit to M23 authorities after it had effectively taken control of the city on December 10.[xxxiii] M23 claimed that some FDNB troops did not withdraw and “entrenched themselves” in the highlands on December 11.[xxxiv]

M23 could use Uvira to as a launchpad for an offensive toward southern and south-central DRC, although this is unlikely in the short term due to capacity and political constraints. The Burundian foreign minister accused M23 on December 8 of intending to march on Fizi district in South Kivu and reach Kalemie town—the Tanganyika provincial capital about 285 miles further south on the RN5—before December 25.[xxxv] Uvira was the last major defensive FARDC position before Kalemie, which is a key logistic hub that connects the eastern DRC to the former Katanga region in the south. Some pro-Congolese government forces in Uvira reportedly fled south on the RN5 to Fizi district while others redeployed to Kalemie, where Burundian troops are also stationed.[xxxvi] The group could use its control of Uvira and Lake Tanganyika as a staging area for a Kalemie offensive and would likely face little resistance aside from Wazalendo counterattacks if it advanced on the RN5.

Figure 4. M23 Expands from the Kivu Provinces

Source: Yale Ford.

M23’s control of Uvira could also strengthen its ability to conduct an offensive toward south-central DRC. The group could use Uvira as a logistic hub to support ongoing offensives in Mwenga and Shabunda districts on the RN5. M23’s advance in these areas could enable it to degrade FARDC air capabilities, which has been a major vulnerability for the group. Kindu in Maniema province lies roughly 135 miles west of M23’s current position on the RP503 via Shabunda town. Kindu is the administrative and commercial capital of Maniema province and an important FARDC command center that houses FARDC air assets and the FARDC’s 31st Rapid Intervention Brigade.[xxxvii] Kindu is one of the two main airports and staging grounds in central DRC for the FARDC’s air and ground operations against M23 in the east. M23 regularly accuses the Congolese government of using Kindu to deploy foreign mercenaries in the conflict and conduct drone strikes on its positions and civilians. Burundi will reportedly extract its forces deployed in Shabunda soon.[xxxviii]

M23 faces political and capacity constraints, however, especially in the immediate term. The group is still trying to fully secure Uvira and protect areas under its control in the eastern DRC from FARDC-backed Wazalendo insurgents. Further advance would also stretch M23’s supply lines hundreds of miles and extend them further from its rear support zones along the Rwandan border. The group and Rwanda are also facing international backlash, which has previously contributed to de-escalation and deterred M23 from advancing further, as happened when Rwanda directed M23’s withdrawal from Walikale town in North Kivu in early April. The United States reportedly has a sanctions package prepared on Congolese and Rwandan officials.[xxxix]

Burundi and the Wider Region

M23 launched its Uvira offensive after relations with Burundi collapsed, heightening the risks of a regional war. Burundian President Évariste Ndayishimiye had received an M23 delegation to discuss a non-aggression pact in early October.[xl] CTP had assessed that the meeting signaled that the two sides were open to deconflict as M23 was setting conditions to attack Uvira.[xli] M23 had halted their first southward advance along the Burundian border in South Kivu in February, which CTP assessed was the result of Burundi and Rwanda likely reaching a deal to deconflict in the eastern DRC.[xlii] These efforts decreased the risk of a wider regional war between the two countries in the short term, as Burundi scaled back its force deployment in the eastern DRC in the immediate aftermath.[xliii] Burundi appeared to reject a second détente during the October meeting, however, and continued its military support for Congolese forces in South Kivu, including air attacks on M23 positions across South Kivu.

M23 likely launched the offensive in part to protect ethnic Banyamulenge populations and allied militias from an FDNB-Wazalendo siege. The UN reported on November 24 that “armed actors”—FDNB troops and Wazalendo militia fighters—have denied humanitarian access and enforced a blockade around Minembwe town in Fizi district, where many ethnic Banyamulenge civilians live, since May.[xliv] The report said that close to 172,000 were trapped in the Minembwe area with no access to basic goods and humanitarian assistance in October.[xlv] M23 and Rwanda have allied with and provided support to Banyamulenge militia groups in the area, such as the Twirwaneho, and M23 has repeatedly said for at least three months that it would “eradicate the treat” on the Banyamulenge from Uvira and Bujumbura. The Belgian media outlet La Libre Afrique reported that M23 launched its offensive shortly after a senior M23 leader met with Ndayishimiye in a failed “last-ditch effort” to ask that he withdraw Burundian troops from the DRC and open a humanitarian corridor around Minembwe town in late November.[xlvi]

M23’s capture of Uvira is Burundi’s gravest national security threat in years. Burundi and Rwanda are rivals in the eastern DRC, and both view their competition as potentially existential. The Burundian foreign ministry denounced attacks on Burundian territory during the fighting and Rwanda’s “belligerent attitude” on December 8.[xlvii] Rwanda has accused Burundi of “sabotaging the peace process” and condemned it for the “systematic bombing” of villages on the Rwandan side of the border.[xlviii] Senior M23 officials said that the group does not have territorial claims on Burundi on December 9.[xlix] The Burundian foreign minister still said that “what threatens Uvira also threatens Bujumbura” and that “all options are on the table” for a response on December 10.[l]

M23’s control of Uvira and key areas along the Burundi-DRC border cuts off Burundi from DRC territory and poses a major security and economic risk to the Burundian government without a détente.[li] The closure of the border and the eviction of its forces from South Kivu will likely significantly hinder Burundi’s ability to fend off cross-border attacks on its western provinces from Burundian rebel groups who have bases in the highlands—the original stated goal for its intervention in the DRC. M23’s control of the border also has dire economic implications for Burundi, as it relies heavily on the Bujumbura–Uvira corridor to transport the 90 percent of its total exports to the DRC.[lii] The spillover and refugee influx from the large-scale fighting will additionally further strain the struggling Burundi economy, which has slid even further in 2025 due to chronic fuel shortages and the war in the eastern DRC.[liii]

Peace Talks

M23's offensive undermines an already-struggling peace effort between the rebels and the Congolese government. Peace efforts had halted large-scale M23 advances since late March. The US and Qatar brokered M23’s withdrawal from Walikale under Rwanda’s command in early April, and the Congolese government conceded to direct talks with M23, resulting in a commitment to a truce and their first joint statement in late April. RDF activity along the frontlines decreased, and M23 turned inward and began consolidating control over territory in the following months as peace talks progressed and direct clashes between M23 and FARDC forces declined, despite the continuation of fighting with Wazalendo groups.

Figure 5. Peace Processes Multiply in the African Great Lakes Region

Source: Yale Ford

Mutual distrust widened and security conditions deteriorated on the ground despite progress in peace efforts, however. M23 and the Congolese government reportedly began reinforcing their ranks and positions across the frontlines and traded accusations that each side was planning an imminent offensive in early July.[liv] The two sides signed a declaration of principles agreement in late July, followed by a ceasefire-verification mechanism in mid-October and roadmap framework agreement on November 15. CTP assessed that the roadmap agreement was nonbinding and left several key areas unaddressed.[lv] The ceasefire mechanism was not solidified, and tensions have simmered since September, when the FARDC escalated an air interdiction campaign in violation of the ceasefire and trust between the two sides eroded as they used belligerent rhetoric to accuse each other of ceasefire violations and bad-faith negotiations. Qatar has reportedly sent invitations to the two sides for a new round of talks.[lvi]

Progress was made in the separate DRC-Rwanda process, but that track does not deal directly with M23 and other proxy forces. The DRC and Rwanda finalized and ratified the US-brokered peace framework in November and December. The US-mediated peace track focuses on the nation-to-nation issues but is closely coordinated with the Doha process. M23 has said repeatedly, however, that that it has nothing to do with the DRC-Rwanda agreement of which it is not a participant. The Congolese government has called for sanctions on Rwanda and said that it has violated its commitments under the US accord.[lvii] Rwanda has traded mutual accusations and accused the Congolese government of not honoring an airstrike moratorium that was agreed to in US-led talks in November.[lviii]

Africa File Data Cutoff: December 11, 2025, at 10 a.m.

The Critical Threats Project’s Africa File provides regular analysis and assessments of major developments regarding state and nonstate actors’ activities in Africa that undermine regional stability and threaten US personnel and interests.

Rwanda-backed M23 Offensive in Congo’s South Kivu Kills Over 400 Civilians

M23 rebels escort government soldiers and police who surrendered to an undisclosed location in Goma, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Jan. 30, 2025. (AP Photo/Moses Sawasawa, File)

By JUSTIN KABUMBA and MONIKA PRONCZUK

4:30 PM EST, December 11, 2025

GOMA, Congo (AP) — More than 400 civilians have been killed since the Rwanda-backed M23 armed group escalated its offensive in the South Kivu province in eastern Congo, regional officials said, adding that Rwandan special forces were in the strategic city of Uvira.

“More than 413 civilians (have been) killed by bullets, grenades and bombs, including many women, children and young people” in localities between Uvira and Bukavu, the regional capital, the South Kivu government spokesperson said in a statement late Wednesday.

M23’s latest offensive comes despite a U.S.-mediated peace agreement signed last week by the Congolese and Rwandan presidents in Washington. The accord didn’t include the rebel group, which is negotiating separately with Congo and agreed earlier this year to a ceasefire that both sides accuse the other of violating. However, it obliges Rwanda to halt support for armed groups and work to end hostilities.

“According to the information gathered, the forces present in the city are composed of Rwandan special forces and some of their foreign mercenaries, operating in clear violation of the ceasefire as well as the Washington and Doha agreements, in total disregard of the commitments made,” the South Kivu government statement added.

U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres called for the “immediate and unconditional cessation of hostilities.”

Guterres “is deeply alarmed by the escalation in violence in South Kivu and its humanitarian consequences,” said Farhan Haq, deputy spokesperson for the secretary-general.

Conflict spreads

M23 said it had taken control of the strategic city of Uvira in eastern Congo on Wednesday afternoon, following a rapid offensive since the start of the month. Uvira is an important port city on the northern tip of Lake Tanganyika and is directly across from neighboring Burundi’s largest city, Bujumbura.

The announcement by M23 spokesperson Lawrence Kanyuka, posted on social platform X, encouraged citizens who fled to return to their homes.

Congo, the U.S. and U.N. experts accuse Rwanda of backing M23, which had hundreds of members in 2021. Now, according to the U.N., the group has around 6,500 fighters.

While Rwanda denies that claim, it acknowledged last year that it has troops and missile systems in eastern Congo, allegedly to safeguard its security. U.N. experts estimate there are up to 4,000 Rwandan forces in Congo.

Burundian Foreign Minister Edouard Bizimana, in an interview with French state media RFI on Wednesday, urged the U.S. to pressure Rwandan President Paul Kagame to ensure the implementation of the agreement signed in the U.S.

“M23 without Kagame, without Rwanda, is nothing,” he said.

Bizimana said the capture of Uvira poses a threat to the economic capital, Bujumbura.

“We have registered more than 30,000 refugees and asylum-seekers in the last three days … Uvira and Bujumbura are coastal cities. What threatens Uvira also threatens Bujumbura.”


On Thursday, M23’s Kanyuka said on X that some Burundian forces were in Uvira and Minembwe in South Kivu to attack the rebel group.

“Since early Thursday morning, Dec. 11, 2025, these elements entrenched in the highlands have resumed, with unacceptable brutality, their campaign of extermination against our Tutsi Banyamulenge compatriots in Minembwe, indiscriminately launching bombs and using heavy artillery that is killing innocent civilians, including women and children,” he wrote.

The chairperson of the African Union, Mahmoud Ali Youssouf, on Thursday said he “deeply regrets these clashes and the violence perpetrated against civilian populations, which run counter to the momentum generated by the Doha Framework Agreement” between Congo and AFC/M23, “as well as the Washington D.C. Agreement between the DRC and Rwanda.” He also called on all parties “to exercise restraint and to prioritize a political solution.”

Struggle for mineral-rich territory

In a statement Wednesday, the U.S. Embassy in Kinshasa urged M23 and Rwandan troops to cease all offensive operations and for the Rwandan Defense Forces to withdraw to Rwanda.

The Rwandan Ministry of Foreign Affairs blamed the Congolese armed forces for the recent ceasefire violations in a statement on X on Wednesday.

“The DRC has openly stated that it would not observe any ceasefire, and was fighting to recapture territories lost to AFC/M23, even as the peace process unfolded,” it said.

“This problem we are facing as a country originates from our neighbors. It is a problem with history, with politics behind it, and with many unclear elements,” Kagame of Rwanda said on X on Thursday. “We desire peace, and we know very well what the absence of peace means, because we have lived through long periods without it.”


Patrick Muyaya, the spokesperson for the Congolese government on Thursday accused Rwanda of violating the agreement made in D.C.

“The armed forces are maintaining the level of alert required by this aggression and will continue to defend the territorial integrity of the country,” he said.

More than 100 armed groups are vying for a foothold in mineral-rich eastern Congo near the border with Rwanda, most prominently M23. The conflict has created one of the world’s most significant humanitarian crises, with more than 7 million people displaced, according to the U.N. agency for refugees.

Local U.N. partners report that more than 200,000 people have been displaced across the province since Dec. 2, with more than 70 killed. Civilians also have crossed into Burundi, and there have been reports of shells falling in the town of Rugombo, on the Burundian side of the border, raising concerns about the conflict spilling over into Burundian territory.

Pronczuk reported from Dakar, Senegal. Associated Press writer Renovat Ndabashinze in Bujumbura, Burundi, contributed to this report.

A Free Childbirth Program Ends in Eastern Congo at the Worst of Times

At the Rehema Health Center in Goma, Ernestine Baleke says she is three months from giving birth but does not know how she will afford the delivery. Her face overcome with worry, she wonders how she will bring her ninth child into the world. (AP video by Justin Kabumba)

By RUTH ALONGA and CAITLIN KELLY

6:35 AM EST, December 11, 2025

GOMA, Congo (AP) — In a maternity ward in eastern Congo, Irene Nabudeba rested her hands on her bulging midsection, worried about giving birth in a city under rebel control.

The conflict that flared this year has left many medical supplies stranded beyond the front line. Infrastructure like running water has collapsed, along with the economy in Goma, the region’s humanitarian and commercial hub.

And now the one glimmer of hope for mothers — a free maternity care program offered by Congo’s government — has ended after it was not renewed in June. It was not clear why, and Congolese officials did not respond to questions.

Nabudeba has five children and wonders whether the sixth will survive.

“At the hospital, they ask us for money that we don’t have. I’m pushing myself to come to the consultations, but for the delivery ... I don’t know where I’ll find the money,” she said at the Afia Himbi health center.

Women are losing access to maternal care

Several women told The Associated Press they cannot afford maternal care after Congo’s program that was aimed at reducing some of the world’s highest maternal and neonatal death rates ended earlier this year. The program launched in 2023 offered free consultations and treatment for illnesses and at-risk pregnancies at selected health facilities across the country.

Congo ranked second in maternal deaths globally with 19,000 in 2023, behind Nigeria’s 75,000 deaths, according to U.N. statistics.

Health workers said more women in Goma are now giving birth at home without skilled help, sometimes in unsanitary conditions, leaving them vulnerable to hemorrhage, infection or death.

Clinics and hospitals were already struggling after the M23 rebels, backed by neighboring Rwanda, seized Goma in an escalation of fighting in January.

Essential services are cut off as fighting continues

Although clashes subsided amid U.S.- and Qatar-led peace efforts, fighting escalated again in recent days and the conflict has collapsed public institutions, disrupted essential services and displaced more than 700,000 people, according to the U.N. humanitarian office.

In Goma, the armed rebels are seen everywhere, making a pregnant woman’s walk to clinics another source of anxiety.

Freddy Kaniki, deputy coordinator of M23, asserted to the AP that the free maternal care “was not renewed because it was a failure,” without elaborating. Congolese officials did not respond to questions.

Rwanda denies supporting the M23 despite U.N. experts saying they have evidence of it. Rwanda prides itself on health care and recently signed a five-year deal with the U.S. for investment of up to $158 million in its own health care sector.

The collapse of essential services in rebel-held areas, combined with mass displacement and insecurity, has left civilians struggling to access even basic care.

An International Committee of the Red Cross assessment in September found that at least 85% of health facilities were experiencing medicine shortages, and nearly 40% have seen an exodus of staff after the conflict surged in the provinces of North Kivu and South Kivu.

The ICRC in October said 200 health facilities in eastern Congo had run out of medicines because of looting and supply disruptions. Doctors Without Borders, or MSF, has reported hospitals attacked, ambulances blocked and medical staff threatened or killed.

Few can afford to pay even $5 for medical assistance

Childbirth at a clinic in Goma now costs $5 to $10, out of reach for many families in a region where over 70% of the population lives on less than $2.15 a day, according to the World Bank.

Franck Ndachetere Kandonyi, chief nurse at the Afia Himbi health center, said the number of births there under the free program had jumped from around five a month to more than 20. But the program ended in June.

Facing a table of statistics in his office, Kandonyi said the number of births per month is now down to nine.

“When a parent cannot even pay 10,000 Congolese francs ($4.50) for their wife’s or child’s care, it’s a real problem,” the nurse said.

Meanwhile, banks have closed in Goma, prices have soared and the franc has depreciated.

Nabudeba’s husband, a driver, has been unemployed since January. She said her family is barely surviving.

“When the war broke out, we lost all our resources,” she said. “Lately, the situation has not been favorable, and we are suffering greatly.”

Across town at the Rehema Health Center, Ernestine Baleke waited for help with her ninth pregnancy, with concern on her face. She said she doesn’t know where she will get money for the delivery.

Her husband lost a factory job when the place was looted earlier in the conflict, she said. Then their house burned.

“I don’t even have 100 francs (45 cents) in my pocket,” Baleke said.

She walks more than half a mile to the hospital because she cannot afford transportation. Three months remain before her delivery.

“The authorities must restore free health care,” Baleke said. “We risk dying in our homes while giving birth.”

Venezuela Condemns US Seizure of Oil Tanker as 'International Piracy'

By Al Mayadeen English

Venezuela condemned the US seizure of its oil tanker as an act of "international piracy," vowing to defend its sovereignty and urging the global community to reject Washington’s aggression.

Venezuela has denounced the United States for what it called an act of "international piracy," after Washington seized a Venezuelan oil tanker near the country’s territorial waters. Caracas is now calling on the international community to reject what it described as a blatant act of aggression and theft.

In a strongly worded statement issued by the Venezuelan Foreign Ministry on Wednesday, Caracas condemned the US seizure of its vessel, labeling it a "vandalistic, illegal, and unprecedented aggression" designed to normalize looting under the guise of sanctions enforcement.

"The Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela strongly denounces and condemns what constitutes a blatant theft and an act of international piracy,” the statement read. “Venezuela calls on all Venezuelans to stand firm in defense of the homeland and urges the international community to reject this aggression that seeks to normalize itself as a tool of pressure and plunder."

Trump boasts of tanker seizure; Bondi cites sanctions

US President Donald Trump confirmed the seizure of the vessel off Venezuela’s coast, claiming it to be the “largest" tanker ever captured, and hinted at further undisclosed developments. US Attorney General Pam Bondi later stated that the operation targeted a vessel allegedly transporting sanctioned oil from Venezuela and Iran.

The mission was carried out by the FBI, Homeland Security Investigations, and the US Coast Guard, with backing from the Department of War.

Venezuela vows to defend sovereignty on global stage

Caracas criticized Washington’s move as part of a wider campaign to plunder Venezuela’s natural resources and destabilize its economy through force. It also underscored that Trump had publicly admitted to attacking a Venezuelan tanker in the Caribbean Sea, further validating Venezuela's claims of targeted aggression.

The government pledged to bring the matter before international legal bodies.

"Venezuela will appeal to all existing international institutions to denounce this serious international crime and will defend its sovereignty, natural resources, and national dignity with absolute determination," the Foreign Ministry stated.

Piracy, military buildup at sea

The operation comes as Trump has ordered a significant military build-up in the region, deploying an aircraft carrier, fighter jets, and tens of thousands of troops. Analysts say the tanker seizure could mark a shift toward more aggressive efforts to target Venezuela’s oil sector, the country’s main source of revenue.

Three US officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, told Reuters that the operation was conducted by the US Coast Guard. They did not identify the vessel, its flag, or the exact location of the interdiction.

Vanguard, a British maritime risk consultancy, said it believed the tanker Skipper was the vessel seized early Wednesday. Washington previously sanctioned the ship, then known as the Adisa, for allegedly participating in Iranian oil trading.

Oil futures rose on news of the seizure. Brent crude finished up 27 cents, or 0.4%, at $62.21 a barrel, while US West Texas Intermediate rose 21 cents to $58.46.

Ethiopia Embraces Big Projects But Risks Another War by Seeking Access to the Sea

By FRED HARTER

10:45 PM EST, December 9, 2025

Ethiopia ‘s prime minister loves big projects. With a mega-dam completed on the Nile, Abiy Ahmed now plans Africa’s largest airport and a nuclear power plant. But the threat of war is back as the landlocked nation seeks its most audacious feat yet: access to the sea.

The prime minister hailed the country’s transformation in a parliamentary address in late October. The capital, Addis Ababa, has seen a development boom. The Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam was inaugurated in July. Abiy has called it a “harbinger of tomorrow’s dawn” that will end the reliance on foreign aid for Africa’s second most populous nation. The country has been one of the world’s biggest aid recipients.

But multiple challenges lie ahead that could badly damage the economy, which has seen some of the strongest growth on the continent.

Eritrea

Abiy’s government is determined to regain access to the Red Sea, which Ethiopia lost when Eritrea seceded in 1993 after decades of guerrilla warfare.

The countries made peace in recent years, bringing Abiy a Nobel Peace Prize, then teamed up for a devastating war against Ethiopia’s Tigray region. Now tensions have returned.

In June, Eritrea accused Ethiopia of having a “long-brewing war agenda” aimed at seizing its Red Sea ports. Ethiopia insists it wants to gain sea access peacefully.

Ethiopia recently claimed Eritrea was “actively preparing to wage war against it.” It has also accused Eritrea of supporting Ethiopian rebel groups.

Magus Taylor, deputy Horn of Africa director at the International Crisis Group, described the tensions as concerning.

“There’s a possibility of mistakes or miscalculation,” he said. “And the situation could deteriorate further in the coming months.”

Egypt

Egypt relies on the Nile for nearly all its drinking water and fiercely opposed the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam, asserting that it would threaten the supply. Egypt and Ethiopia have held several rounds of inconclusive talks to regulate the use of the dam, especially in times of drought.

Since the dam’s inauguration, Cairo has toughened its rhetoric against Ethiopia. In September, it said it reserved “the right to take all necessary measures … to defend the existential interests of its people.”

Ethiopia says the dam is critical for its development as it seeks to lift millions of people out of poverty.

Egypt has also sought to exploit tensions between Ethiopia and its neighbors. It has bolstered security ties with Eritrea and signed a security pact with Somalia, which last year reacted furiously when Ethiopia signed a port deal with the breakaway region of Somaliland, over which Somalia claims sovereignty.

Ethnic conflicts

The war in Ethiopia’s Tigray region ended with a peace deal in late 2022, but the country’s two largest regions — Amhara and Oromia — are wracked by ethnic-based insurgencies that threaten internal security.

Both the group of loosely organized militias called Fano in Amhara, and the Oromo Liberation Army Oromia, claim to represent those oppressed by the federal government.

Witnesses have reported massacres and other extrajudicial killings by all sides. Kidnapping for ransom has become commonplace, and humanitarian aid groups struggle to deliver supplies.

Amnesty International has described the cycle of violence as a “revolving door of injustices.”

Meanwhile, the peace deal for Tigray risks unraveling. Southern areas of Tigray have seen clashes between regional forces and local militias aligned with the federal government. Tigray’s rulers accused the federal government of “openly breaching” the agreement after a drone strike hit its forces.

Abiy’s government now accuses Tigray’s rulers of colluding with Eritrea.

Economic inequality

The insecurity contrasts starkly with the mood in Addis Ababa, where Abiy has spent billions of dollars on a face lift that has included creating bike lanes, a conference center, parks and museums.

The prime minister wants to turn the capital, already home to the African Union continental body and one of Africa’s busiest airports, into a hub for international tourists and investors.

He has floated Ethiopia’s currency, opened the banking sector and launched a stock exchange — all dramatic steps for a country where the economy has long been state-owned and state-managed.

The reforms helped Ethiopia secure a $3.4 billion bailout from the International Monetary Fund last year. But investors are wary about Ethiopia’s internal insecurity and tensions with its neighbors.

Poverty, meanwhile, has risen alarmingly. About 43% of Ethiopians now live under the poverty line, up from 33% in 2016, two years before Abiy took power, according to the World Bank. That’s due in part to rising food and fuel prices as well as defense spending taking up more of Ethiopia’s budget.

The sense of prosperity prevailing in Addis Ababa is not shared by Ethiopia’s regions, said Taylor with the International Crisis Group.

“Abiy has a firm grip on the country at the center, but then you have these periphery conflicts partly based on feelings of injustice – that they are poor and the center is rich,” he said. “So we expect this kind of instability to continue in these areas.”

West Africa is in a State of Emergency After Several Coups, Bloc Leader Says

By DYEPKAZAH SHIBAYAN and WILSON MCMAKIN

7:33 PM EST, December 9, 2025

ABUJA, Nigeria (AP) — Coups and attempted coups in West Africa, along with escalating security challenges, have left the region in a state of emergency, a leader of the regional bloc said Tuesday.

Omar Touray, president of the Economic Community of West African States Commission, spoke to the bloc’s mediation and security council two days after a failed coup attempt in Benin, the latest in a string of military takeovers and attempted takeovers. Last month, a military coup in Guinea-Bissau removed former President Umaro Embalo.

Also on Tuesday, Nigeria’s Senate approved a request from President Bola Tinubu to deploy troops in Benin at its government’s request. Nigeria had carried out airstrikes on armored vehicles during the attempted takeover there, also at the government’s request.

“Events of the last few weeks have shown the imperative of serious introspection on the future of our democracy and the urgent need to invest in the security of our community,” Touray said. “Faced with this situation, Excellencies, it is safe to declare that our community is in a state of emergency.”

It was not immediately clear whether his declaration was a formal one and what it might entail.

The bloc has faced criticism over its uneven response to the coups in recent years.

Touray’s declaration may be an attempt to restore credibility for the bloc following a threatened but never acted-on intervention following a coup in Niger in 2023, said Ulf Laessing, head of the Sahel program at the Konrad Adenauer Foundation.

“ECOWAS is concerned that coups will become the new mainstream in West Africa,” Laessing said. “Now they try to show they mean business.”

Nigerian Army Denies Alleged Extrajudicial Killing Of Female Protesters in Adamawa

The Nigerian Army denies claims it killed female protesters in Adamawa, blaming misinformation and local militia activity for the confusion.

The Nigerian Army has strongly refuted claims that its personnel were responsible for the extrajudicial killing of female protesters in Adamawa State during a recent communal conflict.

According to the Army, the allegations—circulated by several online media platforms—were deliberately twisted to malign the institution and undermine the efforts of troops working to restore calm between the warring communities.

A statement by Acting Assistant Director of Army Public Relations for Sector 4, Operation Hadin Kai, Captain Olusegun Abidoye, said the report was “baseless, unfounded and intended solely to smear the Brigade, its Commander, and by extension the Nigerian Army”.

He said: “The attention of Headquarters 23 Brigade has been drawn to a baseless report, published on Monday, 8 December 2025, which levelled false and misleading allegations against the Brigade and its Commander.”

To clarify the situation, the Army explained that the Brigade Commander was nowhere near the scene of the alleged shooting, clarifying that at the time of the incident, he was participating virtually in the Chief of Army Staff’s weekly operational briefing.

The Army further detailed that the crisis erupted in the early hours of Monday, 8 December, following renewed tensions over unresolved land disputes and long-standing ethnic grievances between the Bachama and Chobo communities in Lamurde Local Government Area.

“Upon receiving reports of the violence, a combined team of 23 Brigade Garrison troops, the Nigeria Police Force, NSCDC and DSS personnel swiftly deployed to the affected areas of Tingno, Rigange, Tito, Waduku and Lamurde to restore order.

However, as the security forces advanced, they came under attack from a militia group believed to be aligned with one of the communities. The troops who are professional and combat ready responded decisively, neutralising three gunmen and forcing the remainder to retreat.

Subsequent operations along the militia’s withdrawal route led to the discovery of five additional dead fighters and a motorcycle.

The situation escalated further when troops received intelligence that a faction planned to attack the Lamurde Local Government Secretariat. While moving to secure the facility, soldiers encountered a blockade created by women who attempted to prevent their passage. At the same time, suspected Bachama fighters were said to be firing sporadically within the community.

Despite the obstruction, the troops managed to create a safe path and proceeded to secure the Secretariat,” the statement said. 

Captain Abidoye stressed that no troops fired at the women, adding that the ability of the soldiers to pass through the crowd safely was clear evidence that no such shooting took place.

He revealed that while stationed at the Local Government Lodge, two corpses of women were later brought by community members, who claimed the women had been killed by soldiers.

According to the Army, however, the deaths were caused by the “unprofessional handling of automatic weapons” by local militias without proper firearms training.

The Brigade expressed its condolences to the families of the deceased and called on the rival communities to embrace peace to prevent further loss of life and property.

Reaffirming its commitment to its constitutional responsibilities, the Army said it would continue to conduct its operations with diligence to ensure lasting peace and stability in its area of responsibility.

Headquarters 23 Brigade urges the public to kindly disregard the malicious report.

Linus Aleke

8 Unarmed Protesters Dead, 16 Injured in Nigeria’s Adamawa State

Though the Nigerian army denied shooting at unarmed protesters yesterday in Adamawa, northeastern Nigeria, HumAngle counted eight bodies and spoke to injured survivors who insist it was the military who shot at them.

A large crowd gathers near trucks and a billboard on a busy street with an arch in the background.

Summary

The Nigerian military has, on Monday morning, allegedly opened fire on unarmed protesters in Adamawa State, North East Nigeria, killing eight people, seven of them women. 

According to the locals who spoke to HumAngle, the tragedy happened after a 24-hour curfew was imposed by the police in Lamurde to stop a communal clash in the community. Not satisfied with the decision, some women from Lamurde stood on the route to BaShaka, a community around the Lamurde axis, waving their leaves and chanting songs in protest. Hours later, HumAngle learned, members of the Nigerian military deployed to secure the area allegedly opened fire on them.

“When the soldiers came, they met the women standing on the highway, blocking the access road. The soldiers didn’t say anything to the women. They just opened fire. These women had nothing on them but leaves, and who attacks women during battle?” Morison, an eyewitness who also lost his son in a previous episode of the clash, said. 

After the gunshots broke out shortly after the soldiers arrived at the scene, seven women and one man were found dead at the spot. The rest fled with bullet wounds. One of the survivors, who is currently receiving treatment at the Numan General Hospital, recounted the harrowing incident to HumAngle. 

“When the soldiers arrived in their vehicle, they first fired gunshots in the air, and while we began to disperse, one particular officer knelt with a gun in hand and aimed at us, then he opened fire at us. He killed them all,” she said. 

She escaped with a gunshot wound in the hand. The other women are receiving treatment at the female surgical ward in Numan General Hospital, while some have been referred to the Moddibo Adama Teaching Hospital in Yola. A total of 16 people, mostly women, are currently receiving treatment at the Numan General Hospital. 

The soldiers left the scene after the incident, and later that day, locals crept out and carried the bodies, transporting them to the morgue in Numan Local General Hospital. HumAngle saw the bodies at the morgue today. The seven women and one man were wrapped in white clothes and placed on a local mat. They were later placed in a vehicle and conveyed back to their hometown in Lamurde for a mass burial. 

HumAngle gathered that the clash began Sunday night and by Monday morning had intensified. Homes were razed, properties destroyed, and many died, while several others were injured that morning. So far, the cause of the fresh clash is yet to be determined, but locals blame it on past grievances over land.

On Tuesday at dawn, a group of protesters consisting of men and women dressed in black from the Numan community stormed the Numan–Lamurde highway to protest in solidarity over the killing of the women. 

What the military is saying

In a statement issued via X and its other social media handles, the Nigerian Military denied killing the women. 

“While moving to secure the Secretariat, some women blocked the road to deny troops passage to the Secretariat, while armed men suspected to be fighting for Bachama extraction fired indiscriminately within the community. Troops then created a passage and proceeded to the Local Government Secretariat ( LGS) to secure the area. At this point, no woman was shot or injured. Otherwise, troops would not have been allowed to find any passage through the crowd,” a part of the statement read. 

The military further blamed the death of the women on the unprofessional handling of automatic weapons by the local militias, whom they described as ‘not proficiently trained  to handle such automatic weapons.’

Eyewitnesses like Morisson allege the military is shielding itself from accountability, and while the Bachama community in Lamurde and Numan is aggrieved over the killing of the women, Hyginus, the Tshobo community leader, says his people are in a dire situation as the security forces that have been deployed to the local government have camped in Lamurde town, leaving villages vulnerable. 

“We are just here. We don’t know what will happen next,” he said. 

The deceased have been laid to rest in a mass burial in Lamurde amidst hushed discussions of retaliation from their kinsmen. 

In September, HumAngle reported how a land dispute tore apart both communities, who are just a kilometre apart despite sharing the same resources.  In the clash, walls were torn, homes were burnt, valuables like motorcycles were set ablaze, and animals were slaughtered and left to bleed in the compounds where they were found. 

Speaking about the current incident, Hyginus Mangu, the leader of the Tshobo community, says he doesn’t know what caused the incident. 

“We just saw houses being set ablaze in Wammi 2 from Sunday night, and by Monday, it intensified,” he told HumAngle. 

The community leader explained that by Monday, three villages inhabited by Tshobo locals in Lamurde were completely burnt after being looted. The villages are Wammi 2, Bashaka, and Sabon Layi.

In Rigange, a Bachama-dominated community, Morrison Napwatemi, a resident of the area, explained that the clash resulted in the deaths of many natives, including his son.

He explained that despite the intervention of the Adamawa State Governor in the past month, the fresh clash hints that the dispute is far from over. Even though the community is still under curfew, Morrison said there is a lot of tension in the land as locals are aggrieved. 

“It’s a terrible situation. It’s not something one would want to talk about,” he said. 

In Tshobo communities, the community leader explained that locals have currently rallied under a shade for safety, while some have climbed the mountains bordering Gombe. 

“Right now, we have no food, water, or security. We don’t know what will become of us later,” he said. 

While he doesn’t know the exact number of casualties so far, Hyginus said they have recorded many deaths. He fears his tribe might be wiped out as the clash is getting more deadly. 

Saduwo Banyawa

Saduwo Banyawa is a conflict reporter with HumAngle media with a focus on accountability-driven journalism on communal conflicts around Adamawa and Taraba state. Her work focuses on the human cost of ethnic, religious, and land disputes. She is a literature enthusiast and a graduate of Mass Communication from the University of Maiduguri.

Nigerian Soldiers Open Fire on Protesters in the Northeast, Killing 9, Witnesses Say

People help an injured woman that was caught in an army crossfire after a communal clash in Lamurde, northeastern Nigeria, Monday, Dec. 8, 2025. (AP Photo)

By DYEPKAZAH SHIBAYAN

5:21 PM EST, December 9, 2025

ABUJA, Nigeria (AP) — Nigerian Army soldiers opened fire and killed nine women protesting the army’s handling of communal clashes in the northeastern Adamawa state, witnesses and Amnesty International told The Associated Press on Tuesday.

The women were protesting on Monday along a major road in Adamawa’s local government Lamurde when the soldiers shot at them after being blocked from passing, witnesses and victims’ relatives told the AP in details first reported on Tuesday. Ten others were injured in the shooting, witnesses said.

The Nigerian Army in a statement denied killing anyone and blamed the deaths on a local militia it said opened fire in the area.

Amnesty International’s Nigeria office said the agency confirmed soldiers killed the nine protesters, citing accounts from witnesses and families of victims.

“It shows that Nigerian military has not changed much because of its past record of human rights violations and disregard for rule of law,” according to Isa Sanusi, director of Amnesty International in Nigeria.

The Associated Press could not independently verify what happened.

Such killings are common across Nigeria where soldiers often deployed in response to protests and clashes are usually accused of excessive use of force. Protests against police brutality in Nigeria’s economic hub of Lagos in 2020 ended up in what a government-commissioned inquiry described as a massacre after soldiers opened fire at the protest venue.

The latest incident happened amid a curfew that authorities imposed in Lamurde following frequent clashes between Adamawa’s Bachama and Chobo ethnic groups over a prolonged land dispute.

The protesters were aggrieved that security forces, including the soldiers, were not enforcing the curfew in affected areas, thereby allowing the clashes to continue, according to Lawson Ignatius, the councilor representing Lamurde in the local government parliament.

Gyele Kennedy, who said his daughter was among the protesters shot dead, lamented in anguish that “we don’t know what came over them.”

“These soldiers were leaving where the conflict happened and they came to pass through this place. They came and met the women protesting when one of the soldiers shot his gun in the air. After that, they opened fire on the women,” said Kennedy.

The Nigerian Army, however, denied the claims, saying its soldiers only engaged a local militia in a different part of the town.

“Without equivocation, the casualties were caused by the unprofessional handling of automatic weapons by the local militias who are not proficiently trained to handle such automatic weapons,” an army spokesman said.

The reported killings come as the Nigerian military is under scrutiny from U.S. President Donald Trump, who has alleged that Christians are being targeted in Nigeria’s security crises and that the security forces are not doing enough to prevent the killings. Residents have told the AP that both Christians and Muslims are affected in the widespread violence plaguing Nigerian villages.

Amnesty International’s Nigeria office called for the reported killings to be investigated and the perpetrators held accountable.

Military Drone Attack on Sudan Oil Field Kills Dozens and Threatens South Sudan’s Economic Lifeline

This is a locator map for Sudan with its capital, Khartoum. (AP Photo)

By JOSEPH FALZETTA

5:51 AM EST, December 10, 2025

JUBA, South Sudan (AP) — Dozens of people were killed Tuesday evening in a drone strike near Sudan’s largest oil processing facility carried out by the Sudanese Armed Forces, according to the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces.

The RSF, which has been fighting Sudan’s military since 2023, said the oil field in Heglig was attacked a day after the RSF seized the facility near the border with South Sudan.

Both sides told The Associated Press that the exact number of dead and wounded could not immediately be confirmed. Local news outlets reported seven tribal leaders and “dozens” of RSF troopers were killed.

South Sudanese soldiers were among the dead in the attack by a Turkish-made Akinci drone, according to the RSF, which condemned the attack as a violation of international law.

Two Sudanese military officials confirmed the drone strike, which they said targeted RSF fighters.

The government of South Sudan’s Unity State confirmed three South Sudanese soldiers were killed. A South Sudanese solider, who witnessed the strike and spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak, estimated 25 people were killed.

South Sudanese commander Johnson Olony said in a statement that South Sudanese forces may have been sent to secure Heglig after its capture. South Sudan’s military spokesperson declined to comment.

South Sudan relies entirely on Sudanese pipelines to export its oil and has seen production repeatedly disrupted by the conflict, worsening its economic crisis.

Sudanese soldiers and oil workers began evacuating Heglig on Monday and the RSF took control of the facility without resistance. By Tuesday, about 3,900 Sudanese soldiers had surrendered their weapons to South Sudanese forces after crossing into Rubkona County, according to Unity State’s information ministry.

Video from South Sudan’s state broadcaster showed tanks, armored personnel carriers and artillery among the weapons handed over.

Thousands of civilians from Sudan began crossing the border into South Sudan on Sunday and were still arriving Wednesday, the South Sudan government said, adding that the exact number was not yet known. South Sudan insists it remains neutral in the conflict despite accusations of siding with the RSF.

Heglig’s capture is the latest in a string of RSF territorial gains, including the October fall of el-Fasher, the capital of North Darfur and the Sudanese army’s last stronghold in Darfur. The war, which began in April 2023, has killed an estimated 150,000 people, displaced millions and triggered multiple famines. Both sides face allegations of atrocities.

The capture of Heglig, a vital state asset, could be a significant bargaining chip for the RSF, analysts said. But the opaque nature of oil finances makes it difficult to determine how much the SAF, RSF or South Sudan will be impacted economically over the short term.

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Sam Magdy contributed from Cairo, Egypt.

Wednesday, December 10, 2025

Sudanese Military Plane Crashes and Kills All Crew Members in Port Sudan

This is a locator map for Sudan with its capital, Khartoum. (AP Photo)

By SAMY MAGDY

7:37 AM EST, December 10, 2025

CAIRO (AP) — A Sudanese military aircraft crashed while attempting to land in the east of the country and killed all the crew members on board in the latest plane crash in the war-torn African nation, military officials said.

The Ilyushin Il-76 cargo plane experienced technical failure while attempting to land Tuesday in the Osman Digna Air Base in the coastal city of Port Sudan, two officials said Wednesday.

The officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to brief the media, did not disclose how many personnel were on board.

Among the dead was military pilot Omran Mirghani, according to his uncle, prominent Sudanese journalist Osman Mirghani, who mourned his nephew’s death on social media.

The military didn’t comment on the crash.

Plane crashes are not uncommon in Sudan, which has a poor aviation safety record. In February, at least 46 people, including women and children, were killed when a military aircraft crashed in a densely populated area in Omdurman, the sister city of the capital, Khartoum.

The crash came as the miliary has suffered multiple setbacks in its war against a notorious paramilitary Rapid Support Forces. The miliary lost el-Fasher, its last stronghold in the sprawling region of Darfur in October, and earlier this week was forced to pull out from the country’s largest oil processing facility in the central region of Kordofan.

The RSF has been accused of committing atrocities in el-Fasher including summary executions, rape and other crimes, according to the United Nations and international rights groups.

U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk said Wednesday that war crimes and “potentially” crimes against humanity were committed in the city, which the RSF seized in late October.

“We are talking about very serious atrocity crimes … war crimes for sure (and) potentially also crimes against humanity,” he told journalists in Geneva. “We have an extremely serious situation.”

Türk warned atrocities also could happen in the central region of Kordofan where the RSF has intensified its attacks in recent months.

“We cannot allow a repeat of this absolutely horrific situation in Kordofan,” he said, calling for a ceasefire in the country.

The war in Sudan began in April 2023 over a power struggle between the miliary and the RSF. The conflict has killed over 40,000 people, a figure rights groups consider a significant undercount.

The fighting has wrecked urban areas and has been marked by atrocities, including mass rape and ethnically motivated killings, that amount to war crimes and crimes against humanity, especially in the western region of Darfur, according to the United Nations and international rights groups.

The war has also created the world’s worst humanitarian crisis and pushed parts of the country into famine.

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Jamey Keaten contributed from Geneva.

Rwanda-backed M23 Rebels Say They’ve Seized the Strategic City of Uvira in Eastern DR Congo

By WILSON MCMAKIN

4:25 PM EST, December 10, 2025

DAKAR, Senegal (AP) — Rwanda-backed rebel group M23 said that it had taken control of the strategic city of Uvira in eastern Congo on Wednesday afternoon, following a rapid offensive since the start of the month and on the heels of a U.S. attempt to quell violence from the conflict.

The announcement, made on social platform X by M23 spokesperson Lawrence Kanyuka, encouraged citizens who fled to return to their homes. Uvira is an important port city on the northern tip of Lake Tanganyika and is directly across from neighboring Burundi’s largest city, Bujumbura.

M23’s latest offensive comes despite a U.S.-mediated peace agreement signed last week by the Congolese and Rwandan presidents in Washington. The accord didn’t include the rebel group, which is negotiating separately with Congo and agreed earlier this year to a ceasefire that both sides accuse the other of violating. However, it obliges Rwanda to halt support for armed groups and work to end hostilities.

Latest offensive

Residents of Uvira reported a chaotic night where Congolese army troops fled, and gunfire was reported throughout the city.

Rumors circulated that the governor of South Kivu, the province where Uvira is located, had fled in the night, which the governor denied.

Congo Communications Minister Patrick Muyaya said in a speech that over one hundred people had died in the latest offensive, while not explicitly acknowledging the rebel takeover of the city.

Congo, the United States and U.N. experts accuse Rwanda of backing the M23, which had hundreds of members in 2021. Now, according to the U.N., the group has around 6,500 fighters.

While Rwanda denies that claim, it acknowledged last year that it has troops and missile systems in eastern Congo, allegedly to safeguard its security. U.N. experts estimate there are up to 4,000 Rwandan forces in Congo.

In a statement Wednesday, the U.S. Embassy in Kinshasa urged M23 and Rwandan troops to cease all offensive operations and for the Rwandan Defense Forces to withdraw to Rwanda.

On Wednesday morning, the Rwandan Ministry of Foreign Affairs blamed the Congolese armed forces for the recent ceasefire violations in a statement on X.

“The DRC has openly stated that it would not observe any ceasefire, and was fighting to recapture territories lost to AFC/M23, even as the peace process unfolded,” the statement said.

Conflict intensifies

More than 100 armed groups are vying for a foothold in mineral-rich eastern Congo near the border with Rwanda, most prominently the M23 group. The conflict has created one of the world’s most significant humanitarian crises, with more than 7 million people displaced, officials say.

Last week, residents said that the fighting had intensified in South Kivu, despite the deal signed in Washington with U.S. President Donald Trump in attendance.

Local U.N. partners report that more than 200,000 people have been displaced across the province since Dec. 2, with more than 70 killed. Civilians also have crossed into Burundi, and there have been reports of shells falling in the town of Rugombo, on the Burundian side of the border, raising concerns about the conflict spilling over into Burundian territory.

Earlier this year, M23 seized Goma and Bukavu, two key cities in eastern Congo, in a major escalation of the yearslong conflict.

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Ruth Alonga contributed from Goma, Congo.