Sunday, June 28, 2026

Venezuelan Massive Popular Solidarity Following Earthquakes, Over 30,000 Rescuers Deployed

While maintaining the work of collection centers throughout the national territory, Jorge Rodriguez asked citizens to avoid moving to La Guaira on their own so as not to congest the spaces and allow meticulous search work. Photo: EFE.

June 27, 2026 Hour: 5:45 pm

Venezuela’s National Assembly President Jorge Rodriguez calls for national unity, urging citizens to follow official channels and support structured humanitarian efforts.

National Assembly President Jorge Rodriguez this Saturday commended the solidarity of the Venezuelan people following the devastating 7.5 magnitude earthquakes that struck the nation on June 24.

The head of the Assembly offered a comprehensive balance of the situation, emphasizing the deep humanitarian aid and mutual support emerging among citizens during this crisis. He noted that the population has shown outstanding resilience, compassion and active cooperation.

However, Rodriguez lamented that minor, malicious sectors have tried to spread fake news to cause panic. Specifically, he debunked recent rumors regarding alleged structural damage to the critical Caracas-La Guaira viaduct. Technical specialists inspect this infrastructure every 12 hours, confirming it remains in perfect condition. News

Consequently, Rodriguez urged citizens to maintain calm and national unity, emphasizing the importance of consulting only official statements released by the Bolivarian Government. Rodriguez emphasized that disinformation hurts relief operations.

To prevent traffic and logistical congestion, he asked volunteers not to travel independently to La Guaira state. This measure ensures that professional search and rescue operations can continue working against the clock without external interference.

Unified Relief Logistics

Instead of independent travel, authorities established organized channels for those wishing to help. Volunteers must register systematically at the Poliedro of Caracas. Furthermore, citizens should deliver all donations of food and essential supplies to designated collection points. This centralized strategy prevents logistical bottlenecks and specifically protects the critical cold chain of perishable goods, ensuring resources reach survivors in optimal condition.

The state has deployed a robust humanitarian network to address the emergency. Currently, over 30,000 national specialized personnel are active on the ground. This domestic deployment is reinforced by international solidarity, with 21 international delegations providing 2,242 expert rescuers and technical assistance. These combined forces are working continuously in the most affected areas to locate survivors and clear debris.

IRGC Says it Struck US Bases in Kuwait and Bahrain in Joint Operation

By Al Mayadeen English

Source: Al Mayadeen net

Iran’s IRGC says it carried out joint missile and drone strikes on US military sites in Kuwait and Bahrain, warning of a harsher response to any future attacks.

The Islamic Revolution Guard Corps (IRGC) announced in the early hours of Sunday that its naval forces and Aerospace Force carried out a joint missile and drone operation targeting eight major US military facilities.

In a statement, the IRGC said the operation took place between 2:00 and 3:00 a.m. local time and involved coordinated strikes against multiple strategic sites across the region.

The IRGC said the strikes hit Ali Al-Salem Air Base in Kuwait and the headquarters of the US Fifth Fleet at Naval Support Activity Bahrain in the port of Salman, claiming the targets were destroyed.

The group said the operation was a direct response to recent US attacks, which it said targeted Iranian coastal facilities.

Escalation over Gulf security, Strait of Hormuz

The IRGC accused the United States of violating previous understandings and said Washington had carried out strikes on five Iranian coastal sites under the pretext of responding to maritime incidents involving the Strait of Hormuz.

It stressed that responsibility for organizing navigation in the strait falls under Iranian jurisdiction, according to what it described as the Islamabad memorandum.

The statement warned that any future attacks by the United States, regardless of justification or scale, would be met with a “much harsher” response.

It also said any breach of ceasefire arrangements would be considered a violation of the first clause of the Islamabad memorandum, adding that such violations would trigger a full halt of existing commitments.

Saturday, June 27, 2026

Ebola Outbreak in DRC Surpasses 300 Deaths as Cases Surge

By Al Mayadeen English

Source: News websites

26 Jun 2026 20:34

Ebola deaths in the Democratic Republic of Congo rise above 300 as infections surpass 1,100, with the Bundibugyo strain outbreak spreading across conflict-hit eastern provinces.

The Ebola epidemic has claimed more than 300 lives in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), health authorities said on Friday, little over one month after the outbreak was officially declared.

According to the National Public Health Institute (INSP), a total of 304 people in the DRC have now died from the virus, out of 1,155 confirmed infections recorded since the outbreak was first detected on May 15.

The current figures represent a significant jump from the previous tally released on June 18 by the African Union's health agency, which reported 202 deaths from 875 confirmed infections. That earlier count had placed the mortality rate at 23 percent, but the new data push that figure to 26.3 percent.

The steep rise in both cases and deaths over a single week has alarmed regional health officials, who warn that the epidemic is still accelerating.

The Red Cross issued a stark warning last week, stating that the haemorrhagic fever outbreak has yet to reach its peak and could take up to a year to bring under full control. This forecast underscores the prolonged and resource-intensive effort required to contain the virus, especially given the complex humanitarian and security environment in the affected regions.

In a rare piece of positive news, DRC authorities announced in early June that several Ebola patients had been treated and successfully cured, offering a glimmer of hope amid the grim statistics.

Strain-specific challenges and lack of approved treatments

Responders to the epidemic face towering challenges, not least because no approved vaccines or treatments currently exist for the Bundibugyo strain of the virus responsible for this latest outbreak. This particular strain, while considered less lethal than the Zaire strain that plagued West Africa in 2014–2016, still presents a formidable public health threat due to the absence of licensed medical countermeasures.

The DRC, already one of the world's poorest countries, must now mobilise scarce resources to combat a virus for which even experimental therapies remain limited in supply and distribution.

The three affected provinces in eastern DRC, Ituri, North Kivu and South Kivu, have been plagued for three decades by conflict and mass displacement, further complicating the emergency response. Armed groups operate freely across large swathes of territory, making it dangerous for health workers to reach remote communities and track chains of transmission.

Population movements, driven by both violence and economic hardship, also favour the spread of the disease across porous borders and between densely populated displacement camps.

Healthcare facilities in the region, which often operate with limited resources, still lack basic equipment and supplies such as personal protective gear and chlorine for disinfection. Many clinics set up by the World Health Organization and other aid agencies are now close to full capacity, according to the country's public health agency.

At least 78 healthcare workers have been infected with the virus, and 18 have died, highlighting the grave occupational risks faced by frontline staff who continue to work under extreme duress.

Regional spread and international concerns

The outbreak has already spread beyond the DRC's borders into neighbouring Uganda, where containment measures have so far proven effective. Kampala has reported 20 confirmed cases nationwide, including two deaths since May 15, with most of those infected being Congolese nationals who travelled into Uganda for medical care, trade, or family visits.

Ugandan health officials have conducted aggressive contact tracing and ring vaccination campaigns where applicable, helping to limit secondary transmission within their territory.

On Wednesday, France reported the outbreak's first confirmed case of Ebola outside Africa – a Congolese doctor who had been working in the DRC for the international medical aid NGO ALIMA. The physician flew back to France while symptomatic, raising immediate concerns about international air travel and border screening protocols.

In response, Air France has suspended all flights to Kinshasa for several days, even though the World Health Organization has stated that there is minimal risk of the virus spreading widely in Europe and that no travel restrictions are currently warranted.

The WHO has reiterated that international borders do not need to be closed, emphasising that standard public health measures, including screening at airports, surveillance of incoming travellers, and rapid isolation of suspected cases, are sufficient to mitigate global spread.

However, the French case has reignited debate over the adequacy of health screening at departure points in outbreak zones, particularly given the DRC's limited infrastructure for detecting febrile travellers. Health ministers from neighbouring countries are scheduled to meet next week to coordinate cross-border surveillance strategies.

Epicentre in Ituri: conflict, displacement and under-reporting

The vast majority of cases in the DRC have been detected in Ituri province, a mineral-rich region that is plagued with unrest from a string of rival armed groups vying for control over gold and other resources.

Frequent population movements, both within the province and across its borders, favour the continued spread of the virus, making containment extraordinarily difficult. More than 91 percent of all infections have been registered in the provincial capital, Bunia, and more than 82 percent of all deaths have occurred there, according to INSP data.

Efforts to contain the virus have been ratcheted up in Ituri, with additional mobile testing units and isolation wards deployed to the area. Yet healthcare workers on the ground report that many communities remain deeply mistrustful of foreign aid teams and government officials, a legacy of decades of neglect and violent conflict.

Some families have demanded that hospitals hand over the bodies of their deceased relatives, not realising that touching an Ebola-stricken corpse puts them at severe risk of contamination, a practice that has historically fuelled secondary transmission chains.

The reluctance of some families to allow post-mortem examinations on victims is also leading to a significant underestimation of the number of cases, officials have acknowledged. Without proper testing of the deceased, many Ebola-related deaths go unrecorded, distorting the true scale of the epidemic and hampering resource allocation.

Court Orders TotalEnergies to Account for Environmental Impact of Oil and Gas Products

A Paris court has ordered French oil giant TotalEnergies to report the environmental consequences of emissions from its oil and gas products and explain how it plans to address them.

The ruling stems from a civil case brought by NGOs and French cities demanding that the company align its business with global warming targets under the 2015 Paris Agreement.

Total is facing a number of other lawsuits. A new case involves claims from NGOs and Ugandan residents over land and rights violations related to a drilling project in Tilenga.

Called a “carbon bomb” by critics, the project includes drilling more than 400 wells in Tilenga and around 30 in Kingfisher.

It’s also linked to the colossal East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP) to Tanzania’s port of Tanga, almost 1,500 kilometers away.

The Climate Accountability Institute says it will unleash 379 million tonnes of climate-heating pollution over its lifetime.

Due to start operating in 2027, it will be the world's longest heated oil pipeline. Uganda's oil is particularly viscous and must be kept at 50C to be transported through the pipeline, which will be able to transport up to 246,000 barrels per day, with a storage terminal and loading facility at Tanga.

Around 100 Tilenga wells are located in Uganda's largest and oldest national park, Murchison Falls, and there are fears of leaks from the pipeline that crosses fragile and highly biodiverse ecosystems and wildlife migration routes.

Earth Insight, an NGO, said it threatens freshwater systems, including 158 Ugandan wetlands, 11 rivers, 44 protected areas and seven key biodiversity areas.

Meanwhile, the Tanzanian storage and loading areas are located near marine protected areas.

TotalEnergies says "strict measures have been taken to avoid, mitigate and offset" the project's impact on local environments, with efforts to restore thousands of hectares of forest and wetlands and increase biodiversity in affected areas.

More than 100,000 people have reportedly been displaced, with NGOs claiming inadequate compensation and a lack of transparency. Total says most affected households have been compensated. It also claims to be bringing tens of thousands of jobs to the region.

Opponents of the project say locals have frequently gone to court over "unjust compensation" and face intimidation and arrest by Ugandan and Tanzanian authorities, known for violent repression of dissent.

The case is scheduled to be heard next year.

Burkina Faso Cuts Diplomatic Ties with France

Burkina Faso

Africa News

Burkina Faso's ruling junta on Friday severed diplomatic ties with former colonial ruler France, accusing Paris of persistently acting against its interests. The military regime led by Captain Ibrahim Traore, in power since a coup in September 2022, is pursuing a policy repressive toward critical voices and hostile to Westerners, particularly France.

"The government of Burkina Faso hereby informs the national and international community that it has decided to sever diplomatic relations with France with effect from today, June 26, 2026," it announced in a statement read out on the west African nation's national television.

The junta also accused France of harbouring "neo-colonial ambitions, made evident by its active support for subversive networks and the terrorists who are plunging our country and the Sahel into mourning".

France called it a "hostile and baseless decision" that "illustrated the troubling drift of the Burkinabe authorities", adding that "the necessary reciprocal measures are under review". Burkina Faso, like several of its neighbours, has for a decade been hit by deadly violence by jihadists affiliated with Al-Qaeda and the Islamic State group.

According to the statement, this decision "concerns exclusively the institutional framework of relations between the two states at the diplomatic level". It "in no way calls into question the historical, human, cultural and social ties that unite the Burkinabe and French peoples", the government said. Anti‑French sentiment runs high in some former African colonies as the continent becomes a renewed diplomatic battleground, with Russian and Chinese influence growing.

Once master of vast expanses of northern, central and western Africa, France has played a crucial role in the continent's post‑colonial history, repeatedly intervening militarily since the early 1960s.

France has vowed to abandon the so‑called "Francafrique" strategy, under which Paris sought to keep francophone Africa under its thumb through political collusion, exclusive access for French businesses and oblique financial deals including graft.

Top Somalian Official Deported from Kenya Over Suspected Passport Fraud

Kenya

Africa News

Somalia’s Second Deputy Prime Minister was deported from Kenya on Thursday over allegations of passport fraud, according to numerous reports.

A police report on Friday showed that Jibril Abdi-rashid Haji, Somalia’s Second Deputy Prime Minister, arrived in Nairobi on Wednesday with a Somali diplomatic passport and valid visa.

But immigration officials suspected him of also holding a Kenyan passport that he had acquired illicitly.

Haji reportedly refused to hand it over, saying it was a matter for the courts. He was then put on a flight back to Mogadishu, effectively denied entry into Kenya.

Neither government has commented on the reports.

Somali President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud was in Kenya on Sunday for talks with President William Ruto.

The two countries are key partners in regional security operations against Al-Shabaab militants. Kenya is also home to a large Somali business community.

Prominent Tunisian Rights Activist Sihem Bensedrine Sentenced to 25 Years

Rights activist Sihem Bensedrine faces 25 years in prison.

Tunisia

Africa News

Prominent Tunisian rights activist Sihem Bensedrine told AFP on Friday that she had been sentenced to 25 years in prison on charges including falsifying part of a transitional justice commission's final report.

Tunisia emerged from the Arab Spring uprisings of 2011 as a beacon of democratic hope for the region after decades of authoritarianism, but rights groups have reported backsliding under President Kais Saied. "Of course, this is a decision that has nothing to do with justice.

It has to do with a totalitarian regime that wants to erase the legacy of the IVD," Bensedrine said, referring to the Truth and Dignity Commission of which she was president. Bensedrine, 75, said she would lodge an appeal. She had been placed in pre-trial detention for over six months following her arrest in August 2024.

The now-defunct IVD, set up after the 2011 revolution ousted longtime ruler Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, heard testimony from thousands of his victims and those of his predecessor Habib Bourguiba.

Prosecutors accused Bensedrine of falsifying the commission's final report, among other charges. Bensedrine said she had been targeted by "officials who are holding the state hostage" in order to "settle scores" and "discredit our work".

Human Rights Watch said in a statement Bensedrine's sentencing "reflects the cruelty of President Kais Saied's government, which has sought to strangle human rights and social justice in Tunisia".

"Bensedrine has for decades been harassed, jailed, and pushed into exile for her human rights work," the group added. "Her sentence would keep her in prison until she's 100 years old." The Paris-headquartered International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) has said the charges against Bensedrine were "groundless".

"The message sent by Kais Saied's regime is clear: seeking the truth is forbidden, the Ben Ali dictatorship is now untouchable," said the FIDH along with the World Organisation Against Torture (OMCT) in a statement.

The commission's final report, published in 2020, called for "dismantling a system of corruption, repression and dictatorship" within state institutions.

Cape Verde Makes History, Iran Left Waiting & Senegal Shatters Records

Saudi Arabia's Nawaf Bu Washl (13) battles for the ball with Cape Verde's Dailon Livramento (19) during the World Cup Group H soccer match between Cape Verde and Saudi Arabia.

World Cup 2026

Africa News

History made. Cape Verde is through to the World Cup knockout stage in its tournament debut.

A 0-0 draw with Saudi Arabia sealed an incredible run after holding Spain national football team and Uruguay national football team earlier in the group.

The tiny island nation becomes the smallest country ever to reach the World Cup knockout rounds.

A 1-1 draw with Egypt wasn't enough to secure automatic qualification, leaving Iran third in Group G with three straight draws.

Belgium topped the group, Egypt finished second, and now Iran must wait to see if it advances as one of the tournament's best third-placed teams.

Pape Gueye's brace powered a stunning 5-0 win over Iraq, making Senegal the first African team ever to score five goals in a World Cup match and boosting their knockout hopes.

Kenya Police Sued Over Nairobi Lockdown During Gen Z Protest Anniversary

Kenyan police officers arrest protesters near parliament during a demonstration to mark two years since more than 60 people died in anti-government protest that resulted.

Kenya's police are facing legal action after shutting down central Nairobi during protests marking the second anniversary of the Gen Z uprising.

Rights group Katiba Institute has filed a contempt case against Police Inspector General Douglas Kanja, accusing authorities of ignoring a court order by setting up unannounced roadblocks across the capital before Thursday's memorial march.

The protests honored victims of the 2024 anti-government demonstrations, sparked by rising living costs and corruption, which culminated in protesters storming Parliament.

The government says the roadblocks were necessary after intelligence suggested criminal groups planned to infiltrate the demonstrations, loot businesses, and attack civilians.

But rights activists argue the blockade violated freedom of movement, blocked ambulances and emergency services, and unlawfully suppressed peaceful acts of remembrance.

The legal challenge comes as scrutiny grows over police conduct. According to Kenya's police watchdog, at least 127 people were killed during protests in 2024 and 2025, with security forces accused of using excessive force and acting with near-total impunity.

The case is now set to test whether Kenya's police can be held accountable for defying court orders while policing public protests.

Mass Protests Erupt Across Lebanon Over US-sponsored Deal with Israel

Saturday, 27 June 2026 7:01 AM

Lebanese Protesters take to the streets to denounce the government’s signing of a US-brokered agreement with Israel, Beirut, Lebanon, June 26, 2026. (Photo via social media)

Thousands of Lebanese have taken to the streets in several cities and towns to denounce a US-sponsored “framework agreement” with Israel, describing it as a threat to their country’s sovereignty.

On Friday night, protests spread across Beirut and other parts of Lebanon following the government’s announcement of a US-supported framework agreement with the Israeli regime.

Demonstrators gathered in Ramlet al-Bayda, near government headquarters, and in several neighborhoods of the capital, expressing anger over the deal and rejecting any move toward direct negotiations with the occupying entity.

Protesters blocked major roads in the Salim Salam area and burned tires, while similar demonstrations were reported in Msharafiyeh and Beirut’s southern suburbs.

Sit-ins were also organized in several locations, where participants called for the cancellation of the agreement and warned against any political or diplomatic engagement with Israel.

Hezbollah chief: Israel will have to leave Lebanon 'humiliated, defeated'

The Hezbollah leader says Israel must end its military operations by land, air and sea and fully withdraw from Lebanese territory.

The protests followed an announcement by US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who said an agreement had been reached between Lebanon and Israel.

Israel’s ambassador to Washington, Yechiel Leiter, welcomed the development, claiming that under the framework, “Hezbollah is out.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu also praised the agreement, describing it as a significant achievement for the regime.

Netanyahu further stated that Israel would not allow Lebanese residents to return to areas within the so-called security belt under Israeli control and insisted that Israeli forces would remain in southern Lebanon.

Protesters interviewed by local media rejected those statements and reaffirmed their opposition to any arrangement that legitimizes Israel’s presence on Lebanese territory.

Since March 2, when Israel launched its latest military aggression against Lebanon, the occupying regime’s forces have killed at least 3,600 people and wounded 11,000 others in the Arab country.

In response to the attacks, the Lebanese resistance movement Hezbollah has continued military operations against Israeli forces along the border.

The Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) signed by Iran and the US in June includes provisions calling for an end to Israeli attacks on Lebanon and respect for the country’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.

NHS Staff Collapsing as Workplaces Reach Shocking 43°C

UNSAFE CONDITIONS: Staff working at hospitals are having to deal with boiling hot temperatures

Berny Torre

Health and safety / 26 June 2026

NHS staff revealed their workplaces have reached 43°C as a new record temperature for June was set for the third day in a row today.

Front-line staff reported colleagues collapsing in the heat in a survey by the Doctors’ Association UK (DAUK).

Health chiefs have warned the heatwave is straining the NHS with significantly more life-threatening emergency calls.

A worrying 95 per cent of respondents described their workplace as uncomfortably warm, very hot or dangerously hot. 

Their average reported temperature was 32°C while nearly one in four submitted readings of 35°C or above.

The survey also found 94 per cent of respondents reported no or only partial working air conditioning in their main clinical area and that nearly nine in 10 medics said they or colleagues had felt unwell because of the heat.

DAUK sustainability lead Dr Matt Lee said: “Our survey confirms a worrying pattern across the NHS.

“Doctors and other NHS staff are describing wards, clinics and emergency departments that are simply too hot to work in safely.

“Staff are feeling faint, patients are dehydrated and people are being expected to deliver complex clinical care in conditions that would not be tolerated in almost all other workplaces.

“It’s shocking that colleagues and patients are having to endure these conditions, but sadly not surprising.”

The DAUK is calling for legal maximum safe working temperatures in hospitals and GP surgeries alongside urgent investment in air conditioning and cooling mechanisms in hospitals.

Yesterday the Met Office warned temperatures were still rising as a provisional temperature of 36.9°C recorded in Wattisham, Suffolk, set a new June hottest day record.

Schools and nurseries have been forced to close and several hospitals have declared critical incidents due to the extreme heat.

Keep Our NHS Public co-chair Dr John Puntis said: “The sudden additional demands placed on the NHS by the severe hot weather demonstrate its fragility when faced with any sort of stressor. 

“While there are many factors at play here, chronic under-resourcing leading to staff vacancies and lack of investment in upgrading estate are high on the list.”

The London Ambulance Service reported its highest number of life-threatening emergencies ever on Wednesday.

England fans were urged to keep hydrated during tonight’s World Cup game.

Friday, June 26, 2026

IRGC Navy Strikes US Military Targets in Retaliation for Attack on Iranian Coastal Areas

Friday, 26 June 2026 11:13 PM

File photo of Iranian missiles

The Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) Navy has struck American military targets in the region in retaliation for earlier aggression against Iranian coastal areas.

The force made the remarks in a statement issued on Friday, saying its reprisal "targeted the deployment sites of the US terrorist military in the region."

It noted that the retaliation came after American forces launched airstrikes against areas lying along the Iranian coastline as part of the United States' changeless "pattern of breaching its commitments."

US CENTCOM reports 'attacking targets in Iran'

The United States Central Command reports carrying out attacks against some targets in Iran.

Waging the aggression, Washington used "various pretexts, including the passage of a non-compliant vessel through an unauthorized route in the Strait of Hormuz," the statement added.

Earlier, the United States Central Command had reported carrying out attacks against some targets in Iran

CENTCOM that overseas the American forces deployed to the West Asia region, alleged it had staged the aggression in return for, what it described as, a Thursday drone strike against a vessel, which it named as Singapore-flagged cargo vessel MV Ever Lovely. The strike, it claimed, took place as the vessel was departing the Strait of Hormuz along the Omani coast.

The Islamic Republic has, on all occasions, categorically rejected any allegations of targeting non-military objects, while warning about attempts at trying to implicate the country in such attacks by staging "false flag" operations.

The IRGC Navy also noted that the United States sought to violate its commitments under a memorandum of understanding recently signed between the two sides "through various provocations."

Warning against further provocations

"And it has now received the necessary response," the statement went on, referring to the force's retaliation. "The same will apply to any future violations," it added.

"Should this aggression be repeated, our response will be broader than this."

The signing of the MoU was preceded by a ceasefire announced on April 7 by US President Donald Trump in the latest bout of unprovoked American-Israeli aggression against the Islamic Republic.

The massive Iranian damage to the US Fifth Fleet base in Bahrain prompts Washington to consider relocating its military assets in the Persian Gulf into the Israeli regime.

Following the announcement, the United States would repeatedly violate the ceasefire only to face determined Iranian reprisal on each occasion.

‘I Am a Living Statue’: How DR Congo’s Most Famous Soccer Fan is Keeping Patrice Lumumba’s Legacy Alive

By Emile Nuh

Jun 24, 2026

Michel Kuka Mboladinga, also known as Lumumba Vea, is a stalwart of the Democratic Republic of Congo's soccer matches.

The Democratic Republic of Congo’s opening World Cup match against Portugal was a historic occasion.

Not only was the nation making just its second-ever appearance at the tournament – and first since 1974 when it was still known as Zaire – but Yoane Wissa’s towering header on the stroke of halftime marked the DRC’s first World Cup goal and earned its first point.

Yet, as Les Léopards took to the field, it felt as though something was missing.

This is because heading into the tournament, attention had focused not only on the players who would be sporting Congo’s famous sky blue jersey, but also whether the team’s unofficial 12th man would be in the stands: Michel Kuka Mboladinga, better known by his nickname “Lumumba Vea,” or “Lumumba Lives.”

Mboladinga is the Congolese national team’s most famous fan and rose to prominence during the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations in Morocco, where he stood atop a pedestal with a steely gaze during every Congo match, remaining perfectly still with his right arm raised from beginning to end.

The pose is a tribute to Patrice Émery Lumumba, Congo’s first prime minister after it gained independence from Belgium in June 1960 – and someone to whom Mboladinga bears a striking resemblance. Lumumba was assassinated less than seven months later in January 1961 at the age of just 35.

More than six decades on, Patrice Lumumba remains one of the most revered figures in Congolese history. And through his now famous matchday ritual, Mboladinga is helping keep his legacy alive through The Beautiful Game.

Why Patrice Lumumba?

It may seem remarkable that a leader who spent less than three months in power continues to command such reverence over 65 years after his death.

But Lumumba was far more than a just politician.

He became a symbol of Congolese nationalism during its struggle against Belgian colonial rule, which began when King Leopold II established the Congo Free State in 1885.

Patrice Lumumba, seen here in 1960, was the first prime minister of Congo following its independence from Belgium.

He was the figurehead of the DRC’s brutal fight for freedom, and a man who civil rights activist Malcolm X lauded as “the greatest Black man who ever walked the African continent” in 1964.

Because of this, “he’s my inspiration,” Mboladinga told CNN Sports from Mexico on Monday night. “Patrice Lumumba is a symbol of unity – the one who taught Congolese to stand and to be proud.”

Nothing encapsulated that more than his famous Independence Day speech at the Palace of the Nation in Léopoldville (current-day Kinshasa) on June 30, 1960.

Standing before King Baudouin of Belgium – the great-great-nephew of Leopold II – from whom his nation had just gained its independence, Patrice Lumumba gave a stunning speech where he excoriated Belgian colonialism.

“Although this independence of the Congo is being proclaimed today … no Congolese will ever forget that independence was won in struggle,” he declared.

“Morning, noon and night, we were subjected to jeers, insults and blows because we were ‘Negroes.’ We shall show the world what the Black man can do when working in liberty, and we shall make the Congo the pride of Africa.”

The speech reverberated around the world and was “one of the most important speeches in the 20th century,” Dr. Reuben Loffman – a historian, author and senior lecturer in African history at Queen Mary University of London, specializing in DR Congo – told CNN Sports.

Lumumba’s scathing remarks of June 1960 were not only “fundamental to his reputation, but also marked him out in the United States’ mind,” Loffman said.

“Because, bear in mind, the Cold War was happening, so they were particularly paranoid and thinking, ‘You’re a communist.’

“But of course, he wasn’t. Lumumba just wanted Congo for Congolese.”

Within three months of that speech, the inaugural prime minister was removed from power by then-president Joseph Kasa-Vubu.

A further three months later, military forces led by Mobutu Sese Seko – who later served as president for 32 years from 1965-1997 – captured him and flew him to Katanga in southeastern Congo, where he was subjected to torture and ultimately executed by firing squad.

After the execution, his body was first thrown into a shallow grave, but later dug up, dismembered, and his remains were dissolved in acid.

The only known remnant of Lumumba was a gold-crowned tooth, which Belgian police officer Gérard Soete – who confessed that he was the one responsible for dismembering the body and dissolving his remains – kept for 39 years until his death in 2000.

Soete’s daughter then had possession of the tooth until 2016, by which point it was then seized by Belgian authorities and only eventually returned to Lumumba’s family and buried in 2022.

Today, it now rests in a specialized mausoleum in Kinshasa, where a commemorative statue of the independence hero stands with his right arm raised – the same pose Mboladinga now imitates that has brought him such widespread recognition.

A mausoleum at the Limete Tower in Kinshasa now marks the final resting place of Lumumba with a statue prominently atop the structure.

‘A living statue’

Mboladinga’s tribute has become one of African soccer’s most recognizable sights and was on full display for the first time at this World Cup when DRC took on Colombia in Zapopan, Mexico, on Tuesday.

Part of the fascination with Mboladinga’s tribute comes from the symbolism. The other part comes from the simple question on everyones minds: How does one stay still with their arm raised for so long?

“Believe it or not, but I do practice,” he told CNN Sports ahead of the game. “I can actually practice 20 days out of a month, but I’ll also take a lot of rest.”

The extreme heat and humidity in North America is another factor that could test Mboladinga’s resolve, as he attends games suited and booted regardless of the conditions.

But the superfan remains unfazed by this.

“I am a living statue,” Mboladinga said. “The climate has no impact on me. My job is not just to stand there, but rather to communicate energy, strength and power to the players. That is what I am focusing on.

“I do not foresee a time when I’m actually going to let go and lower my hand – I will get my job done.”

Mboladinga was at the World Cup match in Zapopan against Colombia and will be present at the team's next fixture in Atlanta.

However, his presence at the World Cup was almost put in jeopardy after the recent Ebola outbreak in the DRC, which led to the US placing entry restrictions on affected countries, and even forced the national team to cancel its three-day, pre-tournament training camp in Kinshasa.

But luckily for Mboladinga, the Congo squad stopped at nothing to ensure its beloved icon made it to North America, going as far as persuading DRC President Félix Tshisekedi to include him in the team’s official delegation.

He did miss Les Léopards’ opener against Portugal, but “although I was not there physically, I was able to attend the game at one of the fan zones, so I was very much connected,” he said.

“After going back to the World Cup after 52 years and then facing a giant like Portugal, to be able to draw with them was a great achievement (and) a joyful moment for the whole Congolese nation.”

That joy would have been slightly dampened after the DRC’s 1-0 loss to Colombia, but victory over Uzbekistan would very likely confirm a place in the Round of 32 and have people dancing from the war-torn streets of Goma right through to the capital of Kinshasa.

Prosper Heri Ngorora, a journalist based in Goma, saw this first-hand when the DRC first booked its place at the World Cup.

“M23 rebels themselves here in Goma jubilated, and even in Kinshasa people also jubilated,” he told CNN Sports last month. “That shows that football can be a glue that unites people together.”

On the pitch, Les Léopards are just over 90 minutes away from potentially sending over 116 million people back at home into absolute ecstasy. They will be cheered on by those back home and the thousands of adoring Congolese fans who will surely paint Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta sky blue on Saturday.

But standing tall, above all, as he always does, will be Mboladinga.

“I will be there. I will have a leopard print in the back. And the whole world will see me.”

DRC’s Ebola Outbreak Has 70 Percent Chance of Spreading to South Sudan, New Modelling Predicts

Ben Farmer

Thu, June 25, 2026 at 6:30 PM EDT

The Ebola outbreak in Congo is still growing and has a 70 per cent chance of spreading into neighbouring South Sudan, new modelling has predicted.

Preparing for the deadly haemorrhagic fever to reach a country with some of the weakest healthcare in the world should now be a priority, researchers said.

The outbreak is centred in Ituri province of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), but has already spread into Uganda and now has a 69.3 per cent chance of reaching South Sudan, according to the peer-reviewed modelling in the Lancet medical journal.

Researchers found a far smaller chance of the Ebolavirus spreading to other neighbouring countries, with just an 8.6 per cent chance of getting to Rwanda and 2 per cent chance of reaching Burundi.

The findings were published as the World Heath Organization (WHO) said the outbreak was still outpacing response efforts in the DRC.

Kinshasa on Wednesday said the number of confirmed cases of the rare Bundibugyo strain had reached 1,118, including 291 deaths.

WHO researchers modelled three scenarios of increasing severity for the Lancet paper, and said the daily tally of cases and deaths was so far most closely tracking the medium scenario.

That would see around 8,200 cases by September.

The researchers concluded: "Spillover is no longer hypothetical: as of June 22, 2026, DR Congo has 1048 confirmed cases and 267 deaths and Uganda has reported 20 confirmed cases, two confirmed deaths, and one probable death,15 and the estimated probability of importation into South Sudan remains 69·3 per cent."

France has this week seen an imported case of a doctor who returned infected from treating patients in the DRC.

French authorities said the patient had been admitted to a specialist treatment facility, and was in a stable condition, with the broader risk to the population described as low.

The virus is thought to have been spreading undetected for at least six weeks and possibly longer, before an outbreak was formally declared in mid-May.

A lack of testing kits that could detect the Bundibugyo strain meant health workers at first struggled to determine an outbreak was underway.

There have also been early indications that the telltale haemorrhaging symptoms seen in the more common Zaire strain have been less frequent in this outbreak, making it easier for medics to confuse the signs with other diseases.

Long-running conflict in north-eastern DRC has added to the difficulties of trying to stop the spread.

"Despite the good progress we have made, we still face major challenges, and the outbreak is continuing to outpace the response," WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said earlier this week.

The WHO's Abdirahman Mahamud said health workers continued to face "abduction threats, crimes and being in the wrong place at the wrong time", citing seven incidents in which they had been targeted. 

Lives at Risk in DR Congo as Ebola Outbreak Continues to Outpace Response

WHO staff and inmates establish an Ebola isolation unit inside a prison in Bunia, Democratic Republic of Congo.

© WHO Ebola protection facilities are set up at a prison in eastern DR Congo.

24 June 2026

The Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) continues to spread faster than aid efforts can keep pace, despite significant gains in treatment capacity and growing community engagement, the World Health Organization (WHO) warned on Wednesday.

At a media briefing in Geneva, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said more than a month into the outbreak, frontline responders have expanded care and testing at unprecedented speed, but conditions on the ground remain challenging. 

“It’s encouraging to see that since the outbreak was first reported five weeks ago, the response has scaled up significantly,” he said. 

In just over a month, treatment capacity has grown from fewer than 10 beds to more than 500 across 19 health centres, while laboratory testing capacity has increased from 30 daily tests in the capital Kinshasa to more than 2,000 tests each day across nine laboratories in three provinces. 

Early diagnosis 

Tedros said communities are increasingly seeking information and assistance to stay safe. 

“More communities are becoming aware of the risks of Ebola and asking for the tools and support to protect themselves,” he said. 

More than 100 people have recovered so far, offering hope that early diagnosis and supportive care can save lives. 

But the scale of need remains immense. “There are now 1,094 confirmed cases, with 277 deaths,” Tedros said. “The outbreak is continuing to move fast.” 

Meanwhile, neighbouring Uganda has reported 20 confirmed cases, with two confirmed deaths. 

New treatments 

WHO and partners are now preparing to launch a clinical trial next week in the DRC to test whether two antiviral treatments, MBP134 and remdesivir, can reduce mortality from Bundibugyo virus disease. 

“We could save many more lives with therapeutics,” Tedros said. 

Communities are being actively consulted and informed about the trial process, and plans are underway to ensure affected populations can access treatment if it proves effective. 

Improving access 

Yet beyond medicine, health officials warned that humanitarian conditions continue to undermine the response. 

Tedros stressed that political action is urgently needed to improve humanitarian access and allow health teams to reach people in affected areas. 

“Political advocacy and action are essential to create the conditions for increased humanitarian access and a scaled-up response,” he said. 

Risks facing responders 

Health workers themselves have paid a heavy price. On Wednesday, an aid worker in France with the medical NGO ALIMA tested positive for Ebola after returning from caring for patients in the DRC. 

Nearly 80 health workers have been infected during the outbreak. “This case is a reminder of the risks faced by frontline responders,” Tedros said. 

WHO is urging countries to support safe deployment measures for aid personnel, including better risk communication, infection prevention and evacuation readiness. 

Despite isolated international cases linked to the outbreak, the agency maintains that the overall risk to the rest of the world remains low. 

Obstacles persist 

Major obstacles persist inside the affected region: contact tracing remains insufficient, treatment centres are under strain, safe and dignified burials remain difficult to carry out, border closures continue to slow operations and repeated security incidents complicate access. 

The outbreak is unfolding against the backdrop of what Tedros described as a decades-long humanitarian crisis. 

Earlier this month, WHO and the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) launched a joint continental preparedness and response plan requesting $518 million to strengthen efforts across affected areas and neighbouring countries. 

With updated funding data expected next week, aid agencies hope the international response will match the urgency felt by communities still confronting one of the region’s most serious public health emergencies.

United States Hopes to Seize of DR Congo Copper Resources

Democratic Republic Of Congo

Africa News

In vast warehouses at the Kamoa copper mine in the south-eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, mountains of reddish rocks pile up as the machines grind away day and night.

The deposit, reputed to be the largest in Africa, is one of the Democratic Republic of Congo's hidden treasures - which are at the centre of a global race for critical minerals.

In the ultra-modern installations, thousands of workers churn out the red gold, coveted by international markets for its exceptionally high copper content.

“Kamoa at the moment is one of the largest copper mines in the world and growing to become the largest copper mine in Africa and probably the fourth largest in the world,” said its managing director Annebel Oosthuizen.

It is aiming to churn out half a million tonnes from 2028, she added, "right up there in terms of world capacity".

The copper produced at the mine is used in many products including electronic devices like smartphones and computers, as well as electrical wiring, motors, and generators.

The deposit is one of the Congo’s hidden treasures which are at the centre of a global race for critical minerals.

Kamoa’s ore is much sought after as it has a copper content four times higher than the global average.

The DRC is one of the biggest sources of critical metals indispensable to global industry, also producing more than half of the world’s supply of cobalt.

China has long been mining it. Now the United States is vying for a share in the Congo’s mineral wealth, seeking to challenge Beijing's hold on the strategic resources.

Copper and cobalt are essential for the manufacture of smartphones, computers, cars, and batteries. Copper conducts electricity, while cobalt allows that energy to be stored.

These minerals are also vital to aeronautics, defence, and renewable energy.

The United Nations Conference on Trade and Development said global demand for copper is expected to rise by more than 40 per cent by 2040, while demand for cobalt is set to quadruple by 2030.

Kamoa Copper S.A. is a joint venture owned in equal parts by Canada's Ivanhoe Mines, and China's Zijin Mining, with the Congolese state holding a 20 per cent minority stake.

China has invested massively in the country for nearly 20 years and is estimated to account for 70 per cent of mining activity, according to the Congolese chamber of mines.

But in December, Kinshasa accepted a strategic partnership agreement with Washington, part of a peace accord for the DRC which has been plagued by conflict for more than 30 years.

The accord has so far failed to end fighting in the east of the country but an initial list of 25 mining sites has been submitted to Washington for potential investment or exploitation licences.

In February, commodities giant Glencore signed a memorandum of understanding with the US-led Orion Critical Mineral Consortium to grant the latter a potential 40 per cent stake in the Swiss conglomerate's DRC mining assets.

"This will allow the United States to benefit from production coming out of the DRC through Glencore," Marie-Chantal Kaninda, president of Glencore DRC said.

The head of the state-owned General Cobalt Company, Eric Kalala, said the US–China rivalry in the global race for strategic minerals "is not our war".

General Cobalt holds a monopoly over the marketing of non-industrial cobalt production in the country.

Kalala said they were “working with everyone” and welcomed the fact that there was an appetite for investment in the DRC.

“We are making an effort to try to attract them,” he said, adding that the country was open to all investors “provided it is for the good of Congo and the benefit of the investors themselves".

The mining sector is the driving force behind the DRC’s economy accounting for about half of the country’s GDP estimated at $10.9 billion.

DR Congo Files Case Against Rwanda at the International Court of Justice

DRC President Félix-Antoine Tshisekedi speaks at the tribute ceremony for Reverend Jesse Jackson, 7 March 2026.

Democratic Republic Of Congo

The Democratic Republic of Congo said it has filed a case against Rwanda at the International Court of Justice over its role in the long-running conflict in the eastern Congo.

Kinshasa accuses Kigali of backing the M23 rebel movement, which controls large swathes of territory in the east after a ⁠lightning advance last year.

Rwanda, for its part, says the DRC is fighting alongside the FDLR, a Congo-based group that includes remnants of those responsible for Rwanda’s 1994 genocide.

The ‌decades-long ⁠conflict is rooted in the genocide, after remnants of the forces associated with the genocide fled across the border into Congo.

Leaders of the two countries signed a US-brokered deal in Washington last year to de-escalate fighting in the Congo’s restive eastern provinces.

But in ‌a statement on Friday, Kinshasa accused Kigali of breaching international conventions, including those on genocide, racial discrimination, and torture.

It said the alleged crimes, committed against civilians over three decades, included massacres, extrajudicial killings, torture, sexual violence, and forced displacement.

The DRC is calling on the United Nations court to order Rwanda to cease the alleged violations and award reparations to the state and victims.

There was no immediate response from the Rwandan government.

Kigali has consistently denied allegations that it backs any rebel groups ​operating in Congo.

But UN experts and Western governments have sided with the DRC in ​finding Rwanda responsible for providing support to M23 militants.

Relations between the two countries is severely strained over the conflict and the filing opens a new legal front in one of Africa’s longest-running disputes.

Chile Sends First Elite Earthquake Rescue Brigade to Assist Venezuela

Interior Minister Claudio Alvarado emphasized that Santiago is reciprocating the international solidarity it has received during past emergencies. Photo: EFE.

Telesur

June 25, 2026 Hour: 8:42 pm

Chile dispatched an elite brigade of 37 rescue specialists to Venezuela this Thursday to search for survivors of Wednesday’s devastating earthquakes that caused 188 deaths and injured 1,520 people.

The Government of Chile dispatched on June 25 a highly trained team of 37 seismic rescue professionals to Caracas on a military aircraft operated by the Chilean Air Force (FACh). These specialists possess extensive field experience in international disaster zones, having previously operated after major geological disasters in Haiti, Ecuador and their home territory.

Chilean authorities announced that an additional group of ten rescue experts will travel to Venezuela in the coming days to reinforce these critical operations.

This decision to provide immediate humanitarian aid stems from its own history as one of the most seismically active nations on the planet. Foreign Minister Francisco Pérez Mackenna stated that the nation is putting its advanced structural rescue expertise at the disposal of the Venezuelan people.

Text reads: “I have just spoken on the phone with the Acting President of Venezuela, Delcy Rodriguez, to convey Chile’s solidarity at the difficult times facing the Venezuelan people. We are managing the dispatch of urgent humanitarian aid and deployment of rescue teams to address the earthquake emergency.”

The Chilean rescue contingent travels with complete logistical self-sufficiency, enabling them to operate independently on the ground for ten days without placing additional burdens on local resources. Brigade member Christian Vera confirmed that their cargo includes drinking water, food supplies, emergency camp structures and heavy tools for concrete penetration.

The main objective of the Chilean team is to locate and extract survivors trapped inside the 250 collapsed buildings in Caracas and nearby states. These efforts are crucial as the official casualty toll from Wednesday’s magnitude 7.5 and 7.2 earthquakes stands at 188 deceased, 1,520 injured and 157 people missing.

Text reads: “In the midst of the emergency caused by the strong earthquake that affected Venezuela, the Government of Chile announced the sending of specialized brigades to collaborate in support and response efforts. The two-year Interior Minister, Claudio Alvarado, stressed that Chile knows closely the impact of natural disasters and the importance of international cooperation: “We are a seismic country, we have had many emergencies and we have received, on multiple occasions, solidarity aid from abroad; now is the time to repay that help...“

Diplomatic Relations Resume

This urgent deployment followed a direct telephone conversation on Thursday morning between Chilean President José Antonio Kast and Venezuelan Acting President Delcy Rodríguez. Kast expressed his solidarity with the Venezuelan population and detailed the immediate shipment of emergency resources.

This high-level communication represents the first direct contact between the leaders of both nations since Caracas severed bilateral diplomatic ties following the 2024 elections. Foreign Minister Pérez Mackenna noted that preliminary discussions to restore consular services between Santiago and Caracas are advancing favorably.

Switzerland Joins Global Earthquake Relief in Venezuela

Switzerland has joined the expanding international response as rescue teams continue searching for more than 200 people reported trapped beneath collapsed buildings.

International rescue teams continue operations after the earthquakes in Venezuela.

Telesur

June 26, 2026 Hour: 4:56 am

Swiss aid strengthens an expanding international response as rescue teams continue searching for survivors.

Switzerland has joined the growing international relief effort following the earthquakes in Venezuela, reinforcing rescue operations as emergency teams continue working to reach survivors.

The country joins an international response that already includes teams deployed or on their way from the United States, Spain, France, Colombia, Mexico, Argentina, Ecuador, El Salvador, the Dominican Republic, Panama and Qatar.

Rescue crews remain in a race against time, with more than 200 people still reported trapped beneath the rubble.

According to the latest official figures, the earthquakes have claimed 235 lives and injured more than 4,300 people.

The arrival of additional international teams is expected to strengthen ongoing search-and-rescue efforts in the affected areas.

Mexico Sends Aid and Rescue Teams to Venezuela

Mexico has deployed rescue personnel, medical teams and humanitarian supplies to assist Venezuela as search and relief operations continue after the earthquakes.

Mexican rescue teams and humanitarian aid depart for Venezuela to support emergency operations after the earthquakes. Photo: @SRE_mx

Telesur

June 26, 2026 Hour: 4:15 am

Mexico deployed rescue personnel, medical teams and humanitarian supplies after the earthquakes that have left 235 people dead and 4,300 injured.

Mexico on Thursday dispatched two military aircraft carrying humanitarian aid and rescue personnel to Venezuela after the magnitude 7.2 and 7.5 earthquakes that struck the Caribbean nation on Wednesday, leaving at least 235 people dead and 4,300 injured, according to Venezuelan authorities.

In a joint statement, Mexico’s Ministries of National Defense and Foreign Affairs said the mission was ordered by President Claudia Sheinbaum as a gesture of solidarity with Venezuela. The aircraft departed from the Santa Lucía Military Air Base in the State of Mexico on Thursday afternoon.

The deployment includes 261 personnel from the Mexican Army, Air Force and National Guard, including doctors, nurses, stretcher-bearers and search-and-rescue specialists assigned to support emergency operations.

The mission also includes 18 canine search-and-rescue teams trained to locate people trapped beneath collapsed structures. The aircraft transported 4.4 metric tons of rescue tools, materials and equipment, along with 2.7 metric tons of medical supplies.

Mexican authorities said a Mexican Air Force C-130 Hercules transport aircraft is expected to depart in the coming hours carrying an additional eight metric tons of medicine and four metric tons of equipment and materials for rescue operations.

The Mexican government expressed its condolences for the loss of life and material damage caused by the earthquakes and wished a speedy recovery to those who were injured.

Earlier on Thursday, President Sheinbaum announced during her daily morning press conference that Mexico would send rescue teams and military medical personnel to assist Venezuela following the twin earthquakes.

More than 24 hours after the disaster, Venezuelan authorities reported 235 deaths and 4,300 injuries as search operations continued, particularly in Caracas and the neighboring state of La Guaira.

Authorities have also reported 2,927 affected families, 157 missing people, 200 people trapped, damage to 250 buildings and eight hospitals, some of which have been evacuated.

Meanwhile, thousands of Venezuelans have joined voluntary rescue efforts while community groups continue collecting relief supplies and delivering donations to affected areas in Caracas and La Guaira.

In DR Congo, a Newly Complex Ebola Emergency

As the virus continues to spread, health authorities say containing the outbreak is complicated by misinformation and violent armed groups across the region.

By Merveille Assani 

Reprinted from Truthdig 

In Congo, a Newly Complex Ebola Emergency

KINSHASA, DRC — When people first began dying in the dusty hills of Mongbwalu, a gold-mining town in the Democratic Republic of Congo’s Ituri province, few suspected Ebola. It all started in late April, when a nurse returned to Bunia, the 1.5-million people capital of Ituri. He fell ill and died a few days later. 

As is tradition in many communities in the region, relatives, neighbors and loved ones then gathered in nearby Mungbwalu to pay their last respects. The nurse’s wife, who had cared for him and taken part in the funeral rites, became sick and died shortly after. Several other mourners came into direct contact with his and her bodies during the ceremonies. Within two weeks, 15 people from one family alone died in Mongbwalu. Still, no one suspected the Ebola virus.

“Many thought fetishes or a supernatural phenomenon were involved. No one imagined it could be Ebola,” said Bunia resident Isaiah Katavu. 

“No one imagined it could be Ebola.”

Now, over the past six weeks, the battle to contain Congo’s Ebola outbreak has only faced more obstacles — from misinformation, to limited health supplies and the impact of cuts to the U.S. Agency for International Development, to extreme poverty, with millions in the area facing severe hunger. Healthcare workers also describe the precariousness of transporting teams and equipment amidst divided territorial control, armed conflict and massacres.

But the key to fighting the epidemic is quickly finding those exposed to the virus, said professor Jean-Jacques Muyembe, a microbiologist who co-discovered the Ebola virus in 1976 as well as an antibody treatment and who now serves as director general to the National Institute of Biomedical Research in Kinshasa. But, he adds, the various economic, health and conflict challenges are making that very difficult.

Late detection

In Ituri, the attribution of the Ebola deaths to mystical practices and forces allowed the virus to spread undetected. The death toll rose as families buried loved ones without knowing what had killed them. 

Health authorities, meanwhile, struggled to identify the source of the illness. Thirteen tissue and body fluid samples were eventually sent to Kinshasa for analysis, but it wasn’t until May 15 that the results confirmed the return of Ebola to the east of the country. By then, more than 60 people had already been reported dead.

The delay exposed deeper issues in the system of surveillance in place to detect the virus. The diagnostic test, GeneXpert, detects a different Ebola strain than the one now circulating, and had come back negative. A disruption in the supply chain prevented the refrigeration of samples intended for analysis. Various officials, including healthcare professionals and politicians, did not raise the alarm. Reductions in humanitarian aid also hampered surveillance work. 

On May 18, further samples confirmed additional infections. Among those was Peter Stafford, a U.S. citizen who had been working at the Nyankunde hospital, about 40 kilometers from Bunia, since 2023. On June 6, after several weeks of care, doctors at a Berlin hospital declared him cured of the virus.

Ebola, which provokes a highly contagious hemorrhagic fever, is still spreading. As of June 21, the country’s health ministry has reported 956 cases and 247 confirmed deaths, and there are also 19 confirmed cases in Uganda. 

June 14 saw a record-breaking increase in cases, and stopping the epidemic is proving difficult for a variety of reasons. The current outbreak differs from previous ones because it is caused by the Bundibugyo strain, not by the Zaire strain responsible for several previous outbreaks. There is currently no approved vaccine or targeted treatment for the Bundibugyo strain.

Ituri province, at the center of the outbreak, is one of the most complex regions in the DRC. Rich in gold deposits, it has been scarred for years by armed conflict, mass displacement and a humanitarian crisis. Violence by armed groups has displaced a total of more than 900,000 people across the province.

Misinformation undermines a coordinated response

Containing Ebola in Ituri has also become a struggle against misinformation. Viral social media posts are claiming there is no Ebola in the region, and an estimated 1 in 3 people in Ituri don’t believe Ebola exists at all. 

Historical distrust in health authorities is augmented by the generally unsafe environment, political tensions and inequality, as well as by concerns about organ trafficking and the promotion of unvalidated treatments.

Reliable information is rare and residents depend on word of mouth for updates, which can distort the facts. Some residents see Ebola as a ploy designed to attract international funding.

“In several remote villages, many see Ebola as a business,” Katavu says. “Some say that these are microbes brought by white people to inject into Africans.”

Horrible past experiences also underlie the mistrust around this 17th Ebola outbreak in Ituri. The “Ebola business” belief dates back to the 2020 outbreak, when three ambassadors of countries providing public aid denounced corruption in Congo. Inflated payroll lists showed 4,000 staff members were reportedly assigned to the Ebola response to deal with some 120 contaminations. 

According to a report by the Groupe d’Etude sur le Congo (Congo Research Group), armed groups also monetized violence. Some were found to have been bought off by the Riposte — Congo’s political, institutional, infrastructural and financial assemblage responding to the outbreak — and to have prolonged the epidemic in order to continue to profit from the crisis.

“The biggest weakness of the response remains the lack of community support.”

Such mistrust has sometimes degenerated into violence. On May 21, at the Rwampara Treatment Center on the outskirts of Bunia, people attacked an isolation center for Ebola patients. Protesters contested the circumstances of a relative’s death and demanded the body be returned. The situation quickly escalated, with police intervening and firing warning shots. Two isolation tents were set on fire and several aid workers fled.

“The biggest weakness of the response remains the lack of community support,” Augustin Bedidjo, coordinator of the Association of Artisanal Miners for the Pacification and Reconstruction of Ituri, tells Truthdig.

“Many families still distrust health teams,” Bedidjo says. “Some even conceal sick relatives, or refuse to report suspected cases.” 

Every unreported case makes contact tracing more difficult, he explains. “When a family hides a sick person, teams cannot quickly identify those who have been exposed. Every delay increases the risk of transmission.”

Families across several villages have continued observing their funeral rituals while also living in precarious conditions due to water shortages, overcrowding in their homes and the need to work every day in order to survive. As a result, they struggle to observe basic health precautions such as hand-washing, limiting contact with the sick and ensuring safe burial practices.

“We face several obstacles,” Bedidjo adds, “A lack of community support, the economic vulnerability of the population and above all, the lack of funding for local organizations.” 

The economic vulnerability is compounded by healthcare shortfalls. Both of these factors are hallmarks of a bitter paradox in Congo, which is one of the world’s richest mineral-producing countries, yet ranks among the top 10 poorest countries. Although the country has untapped mineral resources estimated at $24 trillion, most mining companies in Congo are foreign, and much of that wealth never reaches ordinary Congolese people, who must try to survive on less than $3 per day. (Congo has one doctor on average per 5,000 people; England, by comparison, has one for every 350 people.) 

Healthcare workers treating Ebola in Congo say they lack individual isolation tents for patients as well as sufficient protective gear for workers. Currently, multiple-person isolation tents are overflowing, and there are no available beds in hospitals in the affected region.

Further, Bedidjo says U.S. President Donald Trump’s decision to cut USAID funding in early 2025 has had a significant impact on governmental and nongovernmental organizations in the country, further weakening on-the-ground capacity for awareness-raising and monitoring.

In 2024, the U.S. sent $1.4 billion in aid to Congo. By 2026, it had fallen to $146 million. As a result, programs designed to detect Ebola cases, warn communities about new infections and distribute response kits have seen their funding slashed. Humanitarian organizations — often the groups with the best access to local communities — have been forced to reduce staff while attempting to maintain operations. 

“They are the ones who can convince families, explain health measures in local languages ​​and reduce mistrust,” Bedidjo says. “But without financial or logistical support, their ability to act is limited,” he added.

Armed conflict inhibits the Ebola response

As with previous outbreaks, the threat of violence remains one of the biggest challenges for the response. Parts of Ituri near the affected areas are still plagued by bloodshed. On June 4, four people were killed in the village of Tchelo, in Djugu district, during an attack attributed to militiamen from the Cooperative for the Development of Congo (CODECO). CODECO is a rebel network of Lendu fighters. Active in the resource-rich Ituri province, the group is regularly accused of attacks against civilians and mining sites.

Members of the Allied Democratic Forces rebel group, linked to the Islamic State, have also kept up their deadly incursions in the Mambasa Territory, also in Ituri, where Ebola cases have been confirmed. Their most recent incursion took place on May 31 and reportedly killed 21 people in one night.

For healthcare professionals, these attacks significantly complicate epidemiological surveillance. 

“When there is an attack, people flee in all directions,” said Louis Mutuza, a physician based in Beni, just south of Bunia, who participated in the Ebola Riposte between 2018 and 2020. “We then lose track of people who may be carrying the virus.”

In this fraught context, identifying contacts and tracing transmission chains becomes a challenge. “This epidemic is more complex than previous ones because there are now a multitude of armed actors on the ground,” Mutuza says. 

“When there is an attack, people flee in all directions.”

“Some areas report to government authorities,” he adds, “while others are under the control of armed groups. This greatly complicates coordination.” 

In several parts of the nearby provinces of North Kivu and South Kivu, state authority remains limited. Some areas of those provinces, notably around the cities of Goma and Bukavu, are de facto controlled by armed groups. This fragmentation of territorial control and governance slows down the deployment of medical teams and disrupts logistical operations.

“Working in these areas is a very high-risk job,” Mutuza says. “Every morning, we leave without knowing if we will return in the evening. Medical teams can be attacked, kidnapped or find themselves in the middle of clashes.”

For Mutuza and his colleagues who participated in the 2018-20 Riposte, memories of that epidemic are reminders of what can go wrong. He recalls how moving around in some areas required lengthy negotiations with armed groups. Sometimes, health teams had to explain their mission for several days before being granted permission to access certain areas.

“In the most dangerous areas, operations were sometimes conducted under the escort of the United Nations Organization Stabilization Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo or the Congolese forces,” Mutuza says. However, despite these precautions, some regions remained virtually inaccessible.

“But there were places where no escort could enter,” he adds. “In those cases, you had to follow locally imposed rules to be accepted.”

The key is detecting all cases

In response to the epidemic, Rwanda and Uganda have closed their borders, and the nearby Goma airport remains paralyzed. According to Mutuza, humanitarian aid deliveries have been severely disrupted by the lack of flights and personnel in the region, now classified as a “red zone” because of security concerns.

“The main challenge of this response will be to detect all contacts and quickly isolate those who develop symptoms,” says Muyembe, the microbiologist, noting that past experience demonstrates the lengths to which some patients would go to avoid authorities.

“Some even sought refuge with armed groups to avoid healthcare teams,” he says.

“We were generally able to engage in dialogue with these groups,” Muyembe adds. “We explained to them that if they kept the sick with them, the epidemic would eventually reach them as well.”

This approach made it possible to open humanitarian corridors and to continue monitoring activities in otherwise inaccessible areas. “We will apply the same method today,” he insists.

Thursday, June 25, 2026

Why Trump Will Not Destroy Cuba

Tim Anderson

Source: Al Mayadeen English

22 Jun 2026 10:55

Despite intensifying US pressure and blockade measures, Cuba’s tradition of resistance, strong social organization, and decades of preparation against foreign intervention make regime change or military conquest unlikely.

Donald Trump has tightened the six-decade-long US blockade of Cuba (it has never been simply an “embargo”) and is threatening to take over the little island nation, but, as this article explains, he will fail.

Trump may be looking for a new conquest after his apparent success in Venezuela followed by a resounding defeat in Iran. The Venezuelan method seems his best bet but, as I will explain, conditions are not favourable for Trump using that “option” in Cuba. This is despite the conditions of the Gaza-like siege.

Conditions in Cuba are severe; I was there in May 2026 and saw the depth of the hardship. When fuel ran out from the Russian ship Anatoly Kolodkin, which arrived in Cuba in March, there was very little ordinary transport even in the capital Havana. There are some offsetting factors which I will outline below, but most bus and truck transport has stopped. Lack of fuel means great difficulty in transporting food, regular blackouts in some areas and failure of water pumps. There are shortage of most basic goods, growing malnutrition and fatal events (during blackouts) for those on hospital life support systems.

Shipments of food and medicine aid from China, Russia, Mexico and some other Latin American countries are very welcome, but the fuel blockade is the most crippling factor. Cubans have suffered various degrees of siege for decades. Current shortages are as bad as those of the 1990s, which caused several years of economic contraction and depression, after the collapse of trade with the former Soviet Union. Many predicted that Cuba would collapse back then; but the system held firm and introduced reforms such as opening to tourism, licensing various small businesses and allowing joint venture foreign investment. Today, the few tourists in Cuba are mostly Cuban-Americans visiting their families. With no refueling of long-haul jets, inward flights have been few and far between.

Nevertheless, a group of 15 US intelligence veterans have warned the Trump regime that “the same people who keep 57 Chevrolets on the road with a coat hanger will wreak havoc against a foreign imposed regime”. Like Iran, albeit in different ways, Cuba has spent decades preparing for another invasion attempt, after defeating JFK’s invasion attempt at the Bay of Pigs in April 1961.

Russian military analyst Dmitry Kornev points out that Trump has three possible military paths of attack: (1) a “limited surgical operation” along the lines of the January 2026 coup in Venezuela, (2) a “full scale air campaign” and (3) a “naval blockade and economic strangulation”. The third is already in place, the second is “unattractive” due to a likely “global backlash” and the fact that aerial bombing alone has never led to foreign controlled regime change.

Further, the Cuban people’s history of resistance will be a serious obstacle, as sociologist Anibal Garzon points out: “If there is a US invasion of Cuba, the island may not have the best army, the best technology, or the best weaponry, but it does have a people with great courage to resist the empire that has been besieging and blockading it for decades”.

From observations over recent years, Trump’s intervention “options” seem driven and constrained by four factors: first, he wants to present the image of a leader who can impose his will by threats, bluster and the idea of himself as a skillful “deal” maker; second, at the same time he is loss averse, wanting to impose his will without great risk of defeat or of losing many US lives (i.e. casualties he cannot cover up); third, he relies on a significant constituency in the US ‘deep state’ (e.g. Zionists or the Miami Mafia) to back his adventures; and fourth, he is attracted by the prospect of plunder, resources such as oil he can steal from his target country. In his typical vulgar style, Trump has made no secret of this.

In the case of the Venezuelan intervention, leading to the kidnapping of President Nicolas Maduro on January 3, 2026, the tactic of ‘decapitation’ and intimidation or coercion seemed to work, as the remaining Venezuelan leadership caved in to Trump’s demands. While we do not yet know all details of this operation (both sides present self-serving and unreliable stories) we do know that, on the Venezuelan side, there was a betrayal of principle which has led to Washington effectively controlling the country’s oil industry and financial revenues, banning commitments the Caracas had with China (oil for credit) and Cuba (payment for the Cuban health missions) and even surrendering former political prisoner Alex Saab. This presupposes a level of corruption which short circuited organised resistance.

The Cubans have so far said little about this betrayal: (1) because the current Venezuelan leadership is putting a gloss on it, (2) because of the important role Venezuela played in support of Cuba this century and (3) because they were waiting on internal Venezuelan criticism. Now that criticism has emerged e.g. in the form of an essay by leading intellectual Luis Britto Garcia, who demands an examination of all the dangerous compromises made after January 3, 2026, adding “they intend to strip us of sovereignty, independence, natural resources, autonomy, rights, past, present, and future, in favor of an aggressive power that hates and despises us”. However, my friends in the Cuban Communist Party are horrified at the collapse of political will in Venezuela and cannot accept that these compromises were necessary, despite the pressures and lethal intimidation.

Cuban commitment to resist is one thing, but from Trump’s point of view, a Venezuelan style operation against Cuba might suit him well. Indeed, he hoped to get away with a similar operation in Iran, after what he was told by the Israelis would be a short bombing campaign, followed by a popular uprising. What he did not count on was the resilience and cohesion of the Iranian people and state, and the substantial and effective investment the Islamic Republic had made in its arsenal of asymmetric warfare.

With success in Venezuela followed by failure in Iran, Trump may be looking for some sort of compensation with Cuba, but how do conditions compare? One thing is to look at the logic of domination but, in each case, that has to be tempered with the logic of resistance. In Iran, the logic of resistance is prevailing. Furthermore, the bitter defeat at the hands of Iran may actually make Trump think twice before jumping into a new aggression against Cuba.

So, given the character and conditions of Cuba, to what extent could Trump expect to repeat an intervention which relies on the assassination or kidnapping of leaders and the installation of a compliant regime, with the help of Cuban traitors and the defusing of internal resistance? Further, to what extent does Cuba, weakened by a savage siege, retain its legendary capacity to resist and survive? The little island state does not have the resources or weapons of Iran, and its geography is very different, but it does have some other assets and is less likely to have its leadership purchased.

It is worth recalling that the crippling 12-year siege of Assad’s Syria did not by itself lead to the Syrian collapse of late 2024. Soldiers of the Syrian Arab Army (SAA) fought US-backed sectarian terrorist militia for many years on tiny salaries of perhaps $5 a month. However, from this writer’s conversations with experienced Syrian analysts, the collapse of the SAA (its failure to oppose the HTS offensive) was not due to soldier exhaustion but rather to the Qatari-Turkish enemy’s purchase of a large number of senior Syrian commanders, who remained in Syria to collaborate with the triumphant HTS militia. So siege alone does not guarantee "regime change".

Cuba does not seem similarly vulnerable to the purchase of corrupt commanders, and it has a very well established intelligence system (including a civilian network) which leaves far fewer chances that Havana will be surprised by infiltration and betrayal. The more than 600 US attempts to assassinate Fidel Castro did not fail by accident.

Terms of US capitulation to Iran presage new era for the region

Throughout the long history of US attempts to overthrow the revolutionary Cuban government, Cuban counter intelligence not only detected and thwarted assassination attempts but also infiltrated groups set up by the CIA and the NED, often assuming leading positions in those groups. This was detailed in two books: The Dissidents (2003, by Luis Baez and Rosa Miriam Elizalde) and The Confessions of Fraile (2003, by Percy Alvarado Godoy).

Even more importantly, the mass organisations built by the Cuban Revolution maintain strong links between the state and popular mobilisation. Organisation within the Committees for Defence of the Revolution (CDR), the Students Federation (FEU), the Federation of Cuban Women (FMC), the trade union federation (CTC), the Communist Party, as well as schools, health and disaster management institutions, ensures lines of communication and mobilisation critical to face an invasion. This includes radio links used, in the hurricane season, to advise and help organise public safety during tropical storms. That level of emergency organisation is said to best explain why hurricanes rarely kill in Cuba, unlike in other parts of the Caribbean. When it comes to high priority matters, Cubans can organise very effectively.

The link between the government and the people through mass organisations is critical in considering to what extent Cuba as a whole would follow through on its leadership themes (“death to the invaders”) and plans (war of the entire people). Decades of planning traps for invaders could make things very costly for even the best armed invasion force. Like Iran, Cuba has been preparing defensive strategies for decades. The US could seize some land in Cuba, but would face substantial casualties from the resistance. For much the same reason, Trump avoided any attempt at an invasion of Iran.

So what about the offsetting factors that help mitigate the current siege and allow Cubans to survive?

First, there is the culture of adaptation in face of shortages. Cubans are not a spoiled population with all the latest technologies, and they have (for example) trained thousands of doctors (Cubans and others) to save lives through human ingenuity and attention, without relying on technology. That is, they know how to live with shortages.

Second, the fuel crisis is offset to some extent by: (1) new refining capacity for Cuba’s heavy oil reserves (more difficult to refine and requiring substantial diluents), including those in offshore fields on the north coast which have recently been accessed from onshore drilling; (2) assembly and integration of Chinese solar panels into the national electricity grid, a large part of the sustainable energy plan, which feeds into the increased use of electric vehicles while also linking health centres and schools with solar power; (3) US plans to build a private sector political constituency, by selling fuel to private Cuban companies and embassies; it will be hard to quarantine such fuel supply, given the many urgent social needs.

Third, while Cuba has long been dependent on fuel and food imports, the recent crisis, like that of the 1990s, is helping drive initiatives in self-sufficiency, especially when the country’s main tradable assets (human capital in health and education missions) are blocked. Agricultural projects and sustainable energy projects, which have had limited success, now assume greater urgency.

Fourth, there is still a strong reserve of international goodwill towards Cuba, which supports the shipping of aid as well as diplomatic pressure to defend an island nation which has done so much to help many other countries with their health and education needs. Several countries are already shipping aid, and the Mexican president has said she will try to renew fuel supplies.

For Trump, Cuba does not offer quite such a strong incentive for plunder as did Venezuela, which has the world’s largest oil reserves (controlled by Washington for most of the 20th century).  Nevertheless, Trump associates in Gillon Capital seem to be taking over the Canadian firm Sherritt, which until recently had a large stake in Cuba’s nickel mining and exports. The older generation of Cuban exiles, the ‘Miami Mafia’, which has always backed US annexation of the island, remains part of the US deep state, but its influence has waned in recent times, especially as the new generation of Cuban emigrants maintain better relations with the island, both personally and politically. This mafia is today less influential than the Israelis, who drove Washington’s war on Iran.

To a predator like Trump, the logic of domination might suggest Cuba as a prize, the “ripe fruit” coveted by the US for two centuries and which has not yet fallen into the hands of any previous US president. The apparent success of the Venezuelan operation does offer hope for a similar scheme against the stubbornly independent island. Trump may be looking for compensation after his failure against Iran, and in any move against Cuba there is an extreme right Latin American faction of the deep state which would support him, including for a ground invasion, which would be necessary if no traitorous puppet clique emerges.

However, that faction is not so strong these days. Further, the bitter defeat inflicted on Washington by Iran may make Trump more risk averse; he must know that any ground invasion of Cuba would lead to mass casualties. He already has a difficult task ahead to sell the US retreat from the Persian Gulf as some sort of victory.

More importantly, any calculus of the logic of domination must also take into account the logic of resistance, a factor seriously underestimated in Washington’s war against Iran. Cuba has already demonstrated its capacity to survive extended siege and adapt to constant shortages. That includes the most recent reform proposals (allowing a substantial expansion of private business), which seek to undercut any political traction Washington may make in the Cuban population, as well as to improve conditions.

The chances of corrupting or purchasing the leadership are far less than they were in Venezuela. Cuba’s doctrine of large scale popular resistance is matched by a level of mass organisation and effective communications and coordination, as used when facing repeated natural disasters. Another invasion attempt - a foreseeable risk for the past six decades – has allowed Cuba to prepare and develop its pledge to confront any invasion force. They might be forced to cede some territory, but they are capable of inflicting serious casualties.

Most Cubans know the famous quote from 19th century independence fighter Antonio Maceo:

"Whoever tries to take over Cuba will bite the dust of its soil, drenched in blood, if he does not perish in the struggle."

Cuba is able to inflict such pain on any invasion force that Trump would once again be forced to retreat. In my opinion, stung by his miscalculations in the Persian Gulf, it is more likely he will not even attempt such foolishness.

The views expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect Al Mayadeen’s editorial stance.