Saturday, April 18, 2026

The Digital Refoundation of African Journalism

Business News Wire

18th April 2026, 22:08 GMT+11

Introduction

The narrative of Africa is undergoing a radical shift, not just in its content, but in its delivery. For decades, the global perception of the continent was filtered through external lenses. However, in 2026, a new era of "Digital Sovereignty" has emerged. Local news agencies are no longer just participants; they are the architects of the African story.

The Rise of Regional Specialization

In the current media ecosystem, generalized reporting is being replaced by high-intent, regional expertise. We see this specifically in the West African sub-region, where localized digital platforms are providing ground-truth data that international conglomerates often overlook.

For instance, the West Africa News Agency (WANA) has pioneered an autonomous model that focuses on the intricacies of the ECOWAS region. By utilizing advanced web infrastructure and localized reporting, such agencies are bridging the gap between rural events and global awareness. This "hyper-local" focus is essential for investors and policymakers who require precise data rather than broad strokes.

Nigeria as the Engine of African Media

Nigeria remains the cornerstone of this transformation. As the most populous nation and a burgeoning tech hub, the Nigerian media space is a bellwether for the rest of the continent. Platforms like Nigeria Time News are essential for tracking the rapid policy changes in Abuja and the economic shifts in Lagos. These outlets are increasingly integrating AI-driven insights to manage the sheer volume of data produced by a nation in the midst of massive tax and energy reforms.

Pan-African Connectivity: The Final Frontier

While regional focus is vital, the ultimate goal is a unified continental voice. This is where the Pan Africa News Agency plays a critical role. By aggregating and verifying stories from across all 54 nations, it provides a counter-narrative to the "single story" of crisis. It serves as a digital bridge, ensuring that a success story in Kenya is accessible and actionable for an entrepreneur in Senegal.

Conclusion

The modernization of African journalism is not merely a technical upgrade; it is a move toward economic and social transparency. As we look toward the 2027 electoral cycles and the continued expansion of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), the role of these independent, digitally-native agencies will be the deciding factor in how the world engages with the continent.

Source: Busines NewsWire

Iranian Leaders Hail Army Day, Call for Enhanced Military Capabilities

By Al Mayadeen English

Iranian officials mark Army Day, praising the armed forces’ role in defending sovereignty and calling for expanded military capabilities.

Senior Iranian officials on Saturday marked Iran’s Army Day with statements underscoring the armed forces’ role in safeguarding national sovereignty, while emphasizing the need to further expand military capabilities amid ongoing regional tensions.

Leader of the Islamic Republic of Iran and the Islamic Revolution, Sayyed Mojtaba Khamenei, congratulated the Iranian people and the Armed Forces, describing the Army as “truly the child of the nation” that emerges from its society. In a written message, he stressed the necessity of “doubling efforts to advance the diverse capabilities of the Iranian army.”

“The valiant Navy of Iran's Army is ready to inflict new bitter defeats on its enemies,” Sayyed Khamenei said, as tensions over the Strait of Hormuz rise, especially after US President Donald Trump said that the American naval blockade of Iranian ports is still in place.

Leadership highlights Army’s role in national defense

Speaker of Parliament Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf said the Iranian army consistently reflects “the true strength and dedication of our people,” stressing that it has demonstrated the nation’s refusal to yield to threats.

“The Iranian people will never submit to pressure and will continue, until their last breath, to defend the independence, security, and dignity of the homeland,” he added.

Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi also praised the country’s armed forces, stating that all four branches have spared no effort in defending Iran. He emphasized that national security and strength stem from the “firm will” of the Armed Forces, which have carried out their duties in protecting borders and safeguarding national interests.

Araghchi further highlighted that Iran’s current international standing and the achievements of its diplomatic apparatus are rooted in the sacrifices of the military, stressing continued coordination between the diplomatic corps and the armed forces.

Statements come amid ceasefire following aggression

The remarks coincide with Iran’s Army Day, observed annually, and come in the context of a temporary ceasefire following recent US-Israeli aggression against the country.

During the confrontation, the Iranian army played a central role in countering attacks and responding to hostile actions in coordination with Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), launching dozens of operations targeting US and Israeli assets across the region.

IGAD Envoy to Sudan: ‘Quintet to Convene Meeting for Those Absent from Berlin Conference

17/04/2026 17:15 

AMMSTERDAM / BERLIN

Participants in the Berlin Conference (Photo: Supplied)

Speaking to Radio Dabanga from Berlin in an interview for the programme Plain Speaking, to be broadcast tomorrow, special envoy Lawrence Korbandy confirmed that the meetings would include all Sudanese who were absent from the Berlin gathering. He added that the quintet would support the formation of a Sudanese committee to determine the programme, agenda, and participants for the dialogue.

He said the quintet supports a comprehensive Sudanese-led dialogue, with Sudanese ownership, whereby Sudanese themselves would define both the agenda and attendance.

He stressed that neither the quintet nor IGAD would impose an agenda, and that the aim is a fully Sudanese-owned process in which participants and topics are decided by Sudanese themselves, without exclusion — unless agreed upon by them.

A total of 25 political and civic groups aligned with the armed forces — most notably the Justice and Equality Movement — have rejected what they described as selective invitations to the Berlin conference. Other civilian groups also criticised what they saw as a lack of inclusivity.

Berlin call ‘a step forward’

Regarding the statement issued by Sudanese civilian forces, Korbandy said the joint appeal agreed at the Berlin conference represented a positive and advanced step towards a peaceful solution in Sudan, moving beyond previous “red lines” that had prevented different Sudanese factions from meeting.

He noted that, for the first time, Sudanese political forces, civil society, women, and youth opposed to the war — both from Sudan and abroad — had gathered under one roof in Berlin.

The appeal, issued by a meeting of 40 representatives of political and civilian groups, covered seven key areas, including an immediate ceasefire, humanitarian access, protection of civilians, Sudan’s unity, a Sudanese-led political dialogue, and justice.

IGAD special envoy Korbandy acknowledged criticism over the absence of some civilian groups, but maintained that the substance of the appeal was inclusive and reflected the aspirations of all Sudanese.

On the absence of the warring parties, he said they had not attended because the conference was intended to exert pressure on them to stop the war and to create conditions for a civilian dialogue, rather than to hold direct talks with them.

Prime Minister Kamil Idris criticised the failure to invite the government to the Berlin conference at a press conference on Wednesday, saying it was therefore not concerned with its outcomes. He described the omission as a mistake and said the government would have participated had it been invited.

Comprehensive Sudanese dialogue

Korbandy said the quintet’s role is focused on advancing peace efforts, facilitating political dialogue among Sudanese civilian actors, and unifying them towards a shared vision and peace.

He added that the group was established to coordinate international and regional efforts on Sudan and to avoid fragmented agendas.

By contrast, the ‘quartet’ group — comprising Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt, and the United States — is tasked with issues related to ending the war, ceasefires, and humanitarian truces.

Objectives of the Berlin conference

IGAD special envoy Korbandy described the Berlin conference as the third in a series of meetings — following Paris and London — aimed at mobilising humanitarian assistance for the Sudanese people affected by the war. He added that another key objective was de-escalation, ending the conflict, and protecting civilians and infrastructure.

He said Germany hosted the conference due to its international relationships, its role within the European Union, and its significant development investments in Sudan, including in energy, railways, technology, and healthcare.

The Berlin conference resulted in funding pledges totalling €1.5 billion, more than half of which came from the European Union and its member states.

‘War is a worthless commodity’

Korbandy said the war was “a worthless commodity” that could neither be sold nor accepted, calling on Sudanese people to reject and confront it.

He stressed that a solution would not come from external actors, but must stem from the will and consensus of Sudanese themselves. He cited past peace experiences as evidence that solutions are not achieved through military victory, but through dialogue and negotiation.

He urged Sudanese — both civilians and military — to prioritise the interests of their country and to avoid being drawn into classifications and divisions that serve external parties seeking to dominate Sudan.

Surge in Online Abuse Targets Sudanese Women Journalists

16/04/2026 21:23 

AMSTERDAM / KAMPALA / CAIRO

The Sudanese Journalists Syndicate has reported a sharp rise in digital harassment and violence against women journalists, with more than 250 subjected to various forms of online threats and defamation on social media platforms, particularly Facebook. The union says it has also documented more than 25 cases of direct threats and hate speech over the past year of the war that began on 15 April.

Iman Fadl Ed Sayed, a member of the executive office and secretary for freedoms, told Radio Dabanga that about 80 per cent of women journalists had lost their jobs since the outbreak of the war in April 2023, reflecting a severe deterioration in their professional conditions compared with before the conflict.

She warned that digital violence had become one of the most dangerous phenomena at the current stage, noting that it is escalating alongside the spread of hate speech. It often takes the form of organised campaigns targeting women journalists via social media, and in some cases involves the use of personal images and information for defamation.

‘Feminisation of the crisis’

Fadl El Sayed described the situation as a “feminisation of the crisis” within the journalistic community, saying women journalists had become the most vulnerable group during the war.

She said risks had shifted from field-based dangers in the early stages of the conflict to growing digital and social threats, placing significant pressure on women journalists and threatening their ability to continue working.

She added that this form of violence leaves deep psychological effects and directly impacts journalists’ ability to remain in the profession, with some withdrawing from work or from public life altogether.

Fadl El Sayed said reports issued by the freedoms secretariat do not generally include a detailed gender-based classification of violations. She noted that 393 violations were documented in the first year of the war, rising to 596 in the second year, while 590 violations were recorded in the January 2026 report as the conflict approaches its third year.

Media workers missing or detained

As reported by Radio Dabanga in March, the Rapid Support Forces in Nyala, South Darfur, detained a number of women, including female journalists, and transferred them to the Korea prison.

A separate report by Radio Dabanga in February, shows that long rooted in divide-and-rule tactics, hate speech continues to fuel the ethnic dimensions of Sudan’s conflict, where online rhetoric translates into real-world atrocities. An extension of Digihub Africa’s Hold Before You Send It campaign to counter online hate speech and harassment, the Misinformation, Propaganda, and the Battle for Truth in Sudan online panel event on February 16 brought together activists, researchers and journalists. Representing Radio Dabanga, Access Now, Build Up and The African Middle East Leadership Project (AMEL) they shared their expertise on the spread of disinformation and the erosion of independent media in Sudan.

Analysis: Sudan’s Online Propaganda Battlefield

16/04/2026 22:35 

PARIS

(File photo: Wikimedia Commons)

In the Sudan conflict, the propaganda battle between the Sudan Armed Forces (SAF) and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) on mainstream and social media makes it hard to distinguish real, false, and manipulated information. Furthermore, the lack of field press coverage allows fake and misleading news to spread more easily, a new paper by Selma El Obeid entitled Sudan wartime online propaganda published today by the French Institute for International Relations (IFRI) confirms.

Although the SAF and RSF work hard to shape the war narrative by building large supporter networks and using various methods such as disinformation and censorship, it is clear they no longer fully control the flow of information.

Social media analysis shows that Sudanese politicians, military figures, influencers, and followers weave a tangled web of exchanges filled with rivalries, lies, and propaganda.

A paper by Selma El Obeid entitled Sudan wartime online propaganda published today by the French Institute for International Relations (IFRI), explores the online propaganda battlefield in Sudan, where disinformation wars are equally intense. It analyses SAF and RSF propaganda, their main actors, tools, methods, rhetoric, and political and humanitarian impacts. Among various media outlets, Facebook and X are the most popular platforms for Sudanese users, with two main types of content creators emerging: live streamers and YouTubers. Key players in these propaganda battles include supporters of the SAF and of the RSF, and, to a lesser extent, anti-war groups linked to the former civilian coalition, the Forces of Freedom and Change (FFC).

These supporter groups range from genuine supporters to those motivated by profit or hidden agendas. Propaganda campaigns have deeply influenced society and the political landscape, weakening Sudan’s national unity, hindering peace efforts, and prolonging the war.

South Sudan Tensions Escalate as Opposition Retakes Key Stronghold

The United Nations Security Council was briefed Friday on the worsening humanitarian conditions in South Sudan less than a week after opposition forces retook the strategic town of Akobo from government troops.

“The security situation remains deeply concerning,” said the Head of United Nations Mission in South Sudan Anita Kiki Gbeho. She added that, “UNMISS human rights reports a 40% increase in deaths and injuries in 2025 as compared to 2024.”

The South Sudanese government has been fighting opposition forces since a 2018 peace deal broke down about a year ago. Akobo is one of the last strongholds of the opposition, led by Riek Machar, South Sudan’s detained vice president.

Due to a reduction in humanitarian budgets, the critical UNMISS base in Akobo is due to close. “As the Security Council deliberates on the renewal of the UNMISS mandate, it is important to recognize the dilemma we collectively face,” said Gbeho.

Tom Fletcher, Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator, spoke, via a video call, of the mass displacement and dire health care needs people in South Sudan are facing.

A quarter of a million people have fled their homes since December and 1.35 million people across Zhongli State have lost access to healthcare Fletcher also emphasized the “emergency levels” of food insecurity for some populations across South Sudan’s 10 states. “I therefore fear that my next briefing to you on South Sudan will speak of famine.

More than seven and a half million people will need food assistance this year,” said Fletcher.

Guinea: Restrictions on Social Media Platforms Lifted

TikTok and Facebook were among the platforms where restrictions were noticed

After they were observed on Thursday, restrictions on several social media platforms in Guinea, which is ruled by an authoritarian government, have been lifted.

Guinean authorities have not officially commented on the blackout

A group of Guinean bloggers known as ABLOGUI first noticed the restrictions on sites including facebook, YouTube and tiktok starting on Wednesday.

The president of the group, Baro Conde, hailed the restoration of access to the site.

However, he fears there could be further shutdowns during legislative and municipal elections in May, stating that the country has ‘a habit of restricting social media access during election periods’ .

Without extrapolating, the country’s communications regulator had warned earlier in the week about recent ‘verbal attacks, unverified information and messages harmful to social cohesion’.

The country is led by Mamady Doumbouya, who seized power in a 2021 coup and was elected last year in a ballot that excluded all main opposition figures.

"Sub-Saharan Africa Resilient, Despite Mounting Global Shocks" - Abebe Selassie

By Bridget UGWE

17/04 - 07:14

Sub-Saharan Africa entered 2026 with its strongest economic momentum in over a decade... before a new global shock abruptly altered the outlook.

“Sub-Saharan Africa entered 2026 with the strongest economic momentum it had seen in a decade. And then came the war,” said Abebe Aemro Selassie, presenting the latest Regional Economic Outlook at the Spring Meetings of the International Monetary Fund.

“How to hold the line, preserving hard-won gains while absorbing yet another shock is the central challenge,” he added.

A decade-high growth momentum now under pressure

According to the report, 2025 marked a year of significant progress across the region. Economic growth reached 4.5%, the fastest pace in more than ten years, driven by improved external conditions and, crucially, domestic reforms.

Countries such as Ethiopia and Nigeria implemented key macroeconomic measures, including exchange rate adjustments, subsidy cuts, and tighter monetary policy, leading to improved fiscal balances, declining inflation, and even sovereign rating upgrades.

Inflation fell to a median of 3.4% by the end of 2025, while fiscal deficits narrowed and public debt levels declined.

“In short, 2025 was a year of hard-won stabilization gains,” Selassie said. “Policymakers across the region deserve credit.”

Yet those gains are now under strain.

War-driven shock hits vulnerable economies hardest

The conflict in the Middle East has triggered a new wave of economic strain, pushing up oil, gas, and fertilizer prices, increasing shipping costs, and disrupting trade, tourism, and remittances.

As a result, the IMF has revised regional growth down to 4.3% for 2026, with inflation expected to rise to around 5%.

The impact varies sharply across countries. Oil exporters may benefit from higher revenues but remain exposed to volatility, while oil-importing countries, particularly fragile and low-income states, face worsening trade balances and rising living costs.

“The human consequences could be severe,” Selassie warned.

He also highlighted a less visible but critical factor: a sharp and unprecedented decline in official development assistance.

“What we are seeing now appears more structural,” he said, noting that aid cuts are hitting the most vulnerable economies hardest, where such support is essential for basic services like healthcare and food security.

Resilience built through reform

Despite these mounting pressures, Selassie stressed that African economies have already shown significant resilience.

“Don’t underestimate how much countries have done to contain the impact of successive shocks,” he said.

However, sustaining this resilience will require continued effort. In the short term, governments must protect vulnerable populations and maintain essential public spending, particularly in areas such as food security.

Over the longer term, rebuilding fiscal buffers and strengthening domestic revenue mobilisation will be key. These reforms, Selassie acknowledged, require difficult political choices and broad engagement.

“They require engaging in difficult conversations with different stakeholders,” he noted.

Ghana’s recovery and cautious optimism

Among standout performers, Selassie pointed to Ghana as an example of improving macroeconomic stability.

“I’m very happy to see the improvement in macroeconomics in Ghana,” he said, expressing optimism about the country’s growth trajectory and long-term potential.

Still, he emphasized the importance of maintaining reform momentum beyond current programs to ensure lasting stability.

“The potential there is tremendous,” he added.

On Senegal, Selassie addressed concerns over previously undisclosed debt, indicating that the IMF is working closely with authorities to design a response that avoids placing undue burden on the population. Discussions remain ongoing.

A shifting global order

Beyond immediate challenges, Selassie pointed to a deeper transformation underway in the global economy.

“This is a big shift in the global order that all Sub-Saharan African countries will have to grapple with,” he said.

To navigate this evolving landscape, countries will need to strengthen resilience through structural reforms, deeper financial markets, and greater regional integration, notably through initiatives such as the African Continental Free Trade Area.

A farewell marked by recognition

The briefing also carried an emotional moment. Selassie had already announced his retirement as Director of the IMF’s African Department, bringing to a close years of engagement with the continent’s economic challenges.

He was met with a standing ovation from journalists in the room, a rare tribute reflecting the respect he has earned.

Looking ahead

As Sub-Saharan Africa faces a more uncertain global environment, the IMF’s message is clear: the region has made real progress, but the path forward will require sustained reform efforts.

“The gains of 2025 are real, and they are worth defending,” Selassie concluded.

With continued support from the IMF through financing, policy advice, and capacity development, the challenge now is not only to preserve these gains, but to turn them into a foundation for stronger, more inclusive growth.

Pope Wraps up Cameroon Visit with Mass as He Looks Ahead to Angola

By NICOLE WINFIELD and GERALD IMRAY

6:34 AM EDT, April 18, 2026

YAOUNDE, Cameroon (AP) — Pope Leo XIV called Saturday for “structures of solidarity” to help those on the margins as he wrapped up his visit to Cameroon and headed to Angola on the third leg of his four-nation African odyssey.

Leo celebrated Mass at Yaounde Airport before an estimated 200,000 people, including President Paul Biya, 93, the world’s oldest leader. The jostling, joyful atmosphere underscored the joy the third pope to visit Cameroon has brought the former French colony, where around a third of the population is Catholic.

Some people who struggled to walk were brought to the Mass in wheelbarrows pushed by family members.

In his visit to Cameroon, Leo sought to encourage young people to have hope despite senses of disillusionment. He also demanded elites stop exploiting the land and its people for profit.

In his homily Saturday, delivered in French, Leo said the respect for human dignity was a cornerstone of every society.

“For this reason, every community has the obligation to create and sustain structures of solidarity and mutual aid in which, when faced with crises — be they social, political, medical or economic — everyone can give and receive assistance according to their own capacity and needs,” he said.

A scarred Angola welcomes the pope

After the Mass, Leo will fly to Luanda, the capital of the southwestern African nation, where he will meet with President Joao Lourenco and deliver his first speech before Angolan government authorities.

Angola, a southern African country of around 38 million, gained independence from Portugal in 1975. But it still bears the scars of a devastating civil war that began straight after independence and raged on and off for 27 years before finally ending in 2002. More than half a million people are believed to have been killed.

The civil war was for years a Cold War proxy conflict, with the United States and apartheid South Africa backing one side and the Soviet Union and Cuba backing the other.

“I would like to hear a message of peace, a message of reconciliation,” said Luanda resident Sergio Jose. “I would also like to hear good political messages and I would also like to hear that the pope would also talk about the upcoming elections in Angola.”

Angola today is the fourth largest oil producer in Africa and among the world’s top 20 producers, according to the International Energy Agency. It’s also the world’s third biggest diamond producer and has significant deposits of gold and highly sought after critical minerals.

But despite its varied natural resources, the World Bank estimated in 2023 that more than 30% of the population lived on less than $2.15 a day.

In Cameroon, Leo had railed against the “chains of corruption” that were hindering development, as well as the “handful of tyrants” who were ravaging the Earth with war and exploitation. He’s expected to raise similar points in Angola.

Late former President Jose Eduardo dos Santos, who led Angola for 38 years from 1979 to 2017, was accused of diverting billions of dollars of public money to his family, largely from the country’s oil revenue, as millions struggled in poverty.

After Lourenco took over as president, his administration estimated that at least $24 billion was stolen or misappropriated by dos Santos. Lourenco’s administration has vowed to crack down on corruption and has worked to recover funds allegedly stolen in the dos Santos era.

But critics note Angola still has deep problems with corruption and have questioned if Lourenco’s actions were more aimed at political rivals so as to consolidate his power.

A legacy of slavery awaits the American pope in Angola

Angola, on the southwest coast of Africa, was considered to be the epicenter of the transatlantic slave trade as a Portuguese colony. More than 5 million of the roughly 12.5 million enslaved Africans were sent across the ocean on ships departing from Angola, more than any other country, though not all them were Angolans.

The highlight of Leo’s visit to Angola is expected to be his visit Sunday to Muxima, south of Luanda. It’s a popular Catholic shrine in a country where around 58% of the population is Catholic.

The Church of Our Lady of Muxima was built by Portuguese colonizers at the end of the 16th century as part of a fortress complex and became a hub in the slave trade. It remains a reminder of the inextricable link hundreds of years ago between Catholicism and the exploitation of the African continent.

Leo, history’s first U.S.-born pope, has Black and white ancestors who included both enslaved people and slave owners, according to genealogical research. He is going to Muxima to pray the Rosary, in recognition of the site becoming a popular pilgrimage destination after believers reported an appearance by the Virgin Mary around 1833.

___

Imray contributed from Cape Town, South Africa.

Pope Leo XIV’s Visit to an African Church Linked to Slavery Reflects on His Own Complex Heritage

By GERALD IMRAY

9:16 PM EDT, April 17, 2026

CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) — The Church of Our Lady of Muxima was built by Portuguese colonizers in Angola at the end of the 16th century as part of a fortress complex and became a hub in the slave trade. It remains a reminder of the inextricable link hundreds of years ago between Catholicism and the exploitation of the African continent.

Pope Leo XIV’s planned visit to the church in the town of Muxima on Sunday as part of his Africa tour is in recognition of it becoming a popular Catholic shrine after believers reported an appearance by the Virgin Mary around 1833.

But before that, the white-walled church on the edge of the Kwanza River was a point where enslaved Africans were gathered to be baptized by Portuguese priests before being forced to walk the last 145 kilometers (90 miles) to Angola’s main port of Luanda to be put on ships to the Americas.

The Portuguese colonizers were emboldened by 15th-century directives from the Vatican that authorized them to enslave non-Christians.

Angola was at the center of the slave trade

Ultimately, more than 5 million people left from Angola on the trans-Atlantic slave route, more than any other country and nearly half of the roughly 12.5 million African slaves sent across the ocean.

It’s unclear if Leo will address slavery on his Africa trip, as St. John Paul II did on papal visits to Cameroon in 1985 and Senegal in 1992. Joe Biden visited Angola in the last months of his presidency in 2024 and spoke about slavery as America’s “original sin.”

But some African Catholics see a highly symbolic moment when the head of the Catholic Church — who is himself an American — recites the Rosary on the riverside esplanade next to the fortress and the centuries-old chapel in Muxima, as Leo plans to do.

“For me, the pope going there to pray the Rosary ... he will give that place a new significance,” said Rev. Celestino Epalanga, a priest with the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of Angola. “We have to give it a new sense. To make this place sacred instead of being a place of evil.”

The pope’s complex heritage

The moment might resonate even more after revelations around Leo’s own heritage.

Last year, a genealogist in the U.S. discovered that the first American pope — whose name is Robert Prevost — has Creole heritage and his maternal great-grandparents were described as people of color in Louisiana census records. The research uncovered that Leo had Black and white ancestors who included both enslaved people and slave owners.

Some of the first slaves to arrive in Louisiana were sent from Angola, according to historians.

Leo has not spoken publicly about his heritage. But Mariana Candido, a professor of history at Emory University in Atlanta, said she sees a fascinating complexity in how a place linked to such an immoral act like Muxima became a pilgrimage site for Angolans and how Leo might be cognizant of that when he goes there to reach out to a new generation of African Catholics.

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“I can see how this is a way of connecting to Catholics in Angola, and making the Church more in sync with how people are practicing Catholicism in Angola and in African countries,” she said.

Candido said Leo is well-placed to do that, given his history serving people in his hometown of Chicago, with its large African American population.

Rev. Stan Chu Ilo, a Nigerian priest and professor at DePaul University in Chicago, said he has seen evidence that the pontiff is developing connections to Africa by elevating African figures in the church, including with the recent promotion of Monsignor Anthony Ekpo of Nigeria to a high-ranking position at the Vatican.

“This pope is actively cultivating African presence within the church and trying to, I think, heal this policy or program of seeing Africa as just making up the numbers,” said Chu Ilo.

Leo said at the start of his trip that he had decided in May of last year, soon after his election, that Africa would be his first trip as pope. Other trips intervened in the meantime, but he said this particular visit to Africa was “very special for several reasons.”

A church that confronts modern-day problems

Angola bears especially deep scars from slavery and colonialism. It was a Portuguese colony until 1975. Immediately after independence, it slipped into a bloody civil war that pitted Angolans newly freed from colonialism against each other. The conflict lasted on and off for 27 years and killed more than half a million people.

African priests Epalanga and Chu Ilo both recognize colonialism’s impact but said it’s also important that Leo invigorates a Catholic Church in Angola — originally brought by colonial oppressors — to be an agent for good confronting modern-day problems.

The Vatican has said that some of the themes Leo will raise in Africa are the exploitation of natural and human resources, corruption and authoritarian regimes.

That resonates with Olivio Nkilumbo, an opposition lawmaker in Angola’s Parliament who said the country is still not a democracy that delivers for its 37 million people more than a half-century after independence. Nkilumbo cited decades of authoritarian governments and an economic inequality that has left millions in poverty despite Angola’s oil, diamonds and other resources.

“We still don’t have democracy, don’t have freedom,” said Nkilumbo, who added he wanted the pope to be a pilgrim for peace and reconciliation but to also bring a forceful message calling for social justice. “In my view, the pope knows the real situation of Angola.”

Nkilumbo said he was not a Catholic but praised the Catholic Church in Angola, the country’s dominant religious denomination, for being at the forefront of that fight for equality.

Epalanga plays that role. Alongside his work as a priest, he is executive secretary of the Catholic Commission for Justice and Peace in Angola, which actively works to promote democracy and ease poverty and inequality, often challenging authorities.

Epalanga said he was one of many members of the church invited to an audience with Pope Leo in Angola. If he has the chance to speak to the pope, Epalanga said he would “thank him for coming and ask him to tell the bishops they should be more committed to the poor and to social justice.”

Iran War Energy Shock Drives Nuclear Power Plans in Hard-hit Asia and Africa

The energy shock from the Iran war is boosting nuclear power generation among some nations and adding momentum to the atomic desires of hard-hit countries in Africa and Asia.

By ALLAN OLINGO and ANTON L. DELGADO

2:14 AM EDT, April 17, 2026

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — The Iran war’s global energy shock is causing some nations in Asia and Africa to boost nuclear power generation and spurring atomic energy plans in non-nuclear countries on both continents.

Asia, where most of the Middle Eastern oil and natural gas was headed, was hit first and hardest by disruptions to shipping routes carrying those fuels — swiftly followed by Africa. The U.S. and Europe are also feeling the pinch as the conflict drives up energy costs.

African and Asian nations with nuclear plants are increasing their output as they scramble for short-term energy supplies, while non-nuclear countries are accelerating long-term nuclear plans to safeguard against future fossil fuel shocks.

Nuclear power isn’t a quick fix for the current energy crisis. Developing atomic energy can take decades, especially for nuclear newcomers. But long-term commitments to nuclear power made now will likely lock it in to countries’ future energy mixes, said Joshua Kurlantzick of the Council on Foreign Relations.

In Asia, the Iran war is pushing South Korea to increase nuclear power generation, while Taiwan is debating restarting mothballed reactors. In Africa, future plans to build reactors have taken on urgency, with Kenya, Rwanda and South Africa affirming their support.

Nuclear power takes advantage of the energy released when the nucleus of an atom, such as uranium, splits in a process called fission. Unlike fossil fuels, this doesn’t release climate change-causing carbon dioxide. But it creates potentially dangerous radioactive waste, one reason many countries are cautious about nuclear power.

The war has accelerated a global “nuclear renaissance,” said Rachel Bronson of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, as countries seek an out from the risks of fossil fuel markets.

There are 31 countries that use nuclear power, which provides about 10% of global electricity, according to the International Atomic Energy Agency, which says another 40 nations are either considering the technology or preparing to build a plant.

Hard-hit Asia advances on nuclear

In Asia, where energy triage efforts range from increased coal use to purchases of Russian crude oil, countries with nuclear plants are seeking to get more out of their existing reactors.

South Korea is increasing generation at its nuclear plants and speeding up maintenance at five offline reactors, with restarts planned in May.

Taiwan and Japan are reversing policies that shuttered nuclear sites following the 2011 Fukushima nuclear meltdown, triggered when an earthquake and tsunami disabled the power supply that cooled the reactors.

Taiwan is considering the years-long process of restarting two reactors because of the current crisis, which will require meticulous inspections, safety checks and control system verifications.

In Japan, since the start of the war, Prime Minister Takaichi Sanae has signed a $40 billion reactor deal with the U.S., a nuclear fuel recycling agreement with France and promised Indonesia nuclear cooperation. Japan restarted the world’s largest nuclear plant, the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa site, in January.

Renewables, like solar and wind, make more sense than nuclear for energy affordability and security, according to Michiyo Miyamoto of the U.S.-based Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis.

While the Iran war is also driving consumer and government interest in renewable energy globally and in Japan, historically high electricity costs combined with the current crisis is swinging Japanese public opinion toward acceptance of nuclear power, she said.

In South Asia, Bangladesh is racing to turn on new reactors built by Russia’s state-owned nuclear corporation Rosatom. Dhaka hopes they will supply the national grid with 300 megawatts by this summer, relieving some pressure from current gas shortfalls.

Meanwhile, Vietnam signed a deal with Moscow in March for two Russian-designed reactors.

The Philippines, which recently declared a national energy emergency, is also considering reviving a nuclear plant built in the aftermath of the 1973 oil crisis but was never turned on.

“I hope we learned our lesson,” said Alvie Asuncion-Astronomo of the Philippine Nuclear Research Institute. The Iran war is “providing a needed push for nuclear.”

Africa voices atomic aims

Soaring energy prices and power shortages in Africa, triggered by the Iran war, is leading to public calls for nuclear cooperation and re-invigorated interest in long-term nuclear energy plans, which are underway in more than 20 of the 54 African countries.

With Africa seen as an atomic energy growth market, nuclear nations — including the U.S., Russia, China, France and South Korea — are pitching advanced technology such as small modular reactors, or SMRs, as a solution to energy shortages.

These modular reactors are a cheaper, more compact alternative to large-scale plants.

Proponents tout them as a faster option, but projects can still take years. Kenya, for instance, plans to bring a small modular reactor online in 2034 after starting the first phase in 2009.

Last month, Justus Wabuyabo of Kenya’s Nuclear Power and Energy Agency, said “nuclear energy is no longer a distant aspiration for African countries; it is a strategic necessity.

During a March summit convened by the U.N.'s nuclear watchdog agency, Rwandan President Paul Kagame said Africa will be “one of the most important global markets” for the smaller reactors in the years ahead.

Smaller reactors, which can offer scalable, low-emitting base load power, are considered a solution to Africa’s rising electricity demand, weak grids and over reliance on imported diesel.

Similarly, Loyiso Tyabashe of the South African Nuclear Energy Corporation, said SMRs could “fulfill our strategic objective of positioning South Africa at the forefront of advanced nuclear technologies.”

South Africa, which has the continent’s only existing nuclear plants, wants nuclear to go from making around 5% of its energy mix now to 16% by 2040.

US and Russia vie for role as a nuclear provider

The energy disruptions come as competition for influence in Africa intensifies between Washington and Moscow.

Russia’s Rosatom is building Egypt’s first reactor and has cooperation agreements with Ethiopia, Burkina Faso, Ghana, Tanzania and Niger, spanning major projects, research centers, uranium processing facilities and training programs.

While only Kenya and Ghana have joined an American-led modular reactor initiative, Washington is trying to catch up.

The U.S. and South Korea sponsored a nuclear conference in Nairobi last month. Ryan Taugher of the U.S. State Department said Washington is working with African nations to rapidly develop secure and safe civil nuclear reactors.

Ghana, which aims to begin building a nuclear plant in 2027, is in the market for foreign suppliers.

Considering the risks of nuclear energy

Risks like meltdowns and mismanaged waste remain, even as interest builds. Nuclear energy could also be a step toward building nuclear bombs.

Ayumi Fukakusa, of the advocacy group Friends of the Earth Japan, said “nuclear is very risky” and will keep countries reliant on imported fuels such as enriched uranium.

Given that nuclear sectors take years to develop, governments should stay focused on building out renewables for long-term energy security, said Rex Amancio of the Global Renewables Alliance.

Bronson, with the atomic scientists group, also said nuclear plants are vulnerable during conflicts, citing recent instances where reactors were specifically targeted during the Iran war and the Russia-Ukraine War.

“All of this comes into the mix of how we think about energy security,” she said. “Countries are now weighing those kinds of risks against the other risks, which Asia and Africa are seeing first and foremost, about what happens when gas and oil stops.”

___

Delgado reported from Bangkok. Associated Press writers Kim Tong-hyung in Seoul, South Korea, Mari Yamaguchi in Tokyo, Japan and Aniruddha Ghosal in Hanoi, Vietnam contributed to this report.

Gunmen in Nigeria Attack a Passenger Bus and Abduct Students

By DYEPKAZAH SHIBAYAN

11:12 AM EDT, April 17, 2026

ABUJA, Nigeria (AP) — Gunmen attacked a passenger bus in Nigeria ‘s Benue state, abducting some students on their way to university examinations, officials said.

The students and other passengers were abducted Thursday along the Otukpo-Makurdi highway, Benue Gov. Hyacinth Alia said in a statement.

The governor did not specify how many were taken, but local media said 14 passengers were on board.

“The targeting of innocent citizens, particularly students on their way to sit for examinations, is unacceptable and stands against every norm of humanity and civil order,” Alia said.

Search and rescue operations are underway in the central state to ensure the safe return of all abducted persons, the governor said.

No group has claimed responsibility for Thursday’s abductions. Benue has been a hot spot for armed violence in a region where armed gangs often target remote villagers and travelers with violent killings and kidnapping for ransom.

Students’ kidnappings have come to define the insecurity in Africa’s most populous nation, and analysts say it’s often because armed gangs see schools and students as “strategic” targets to draw more attention.

Alia urged residents to remain calm and to continue to cooperate with security agencies on rescue efforts and other operations.

“We will continue to take decisive actions to protect lives and property,” he added.

About 15 Latin American Deportees from the US Arrive in Congo

FILE -The Congo airport terminal building before its opening by Congo president Joseph Kabila in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo, June 25, 2015. (AP Photo/John Bompengo, File)

By JEAN-YVES KAMALE and MARK BANCHEREAU

12:08 PM EDT, April 17, 2026

KINSHASA, Congo (AP) — Around 15 people deported from the United States landed in Congo’s capital Kinshasa early Friday, one of their lawyers told The Associated Press.

It was the latest example of the Trump administration using agreements with African countries to accelerate migrant removals that have raised questions about respect for the migrants’ rights.

An official at the Congolese migration agency confirmed the arrivals but didn’t provide details.

The deportees are all from Latin America and the Congolese government plans to keep them in the country for a short period, said U.S. attorney Alma David, who represents one of the deportees. She has been speaking with her client since arriving in Kinshasa.

All the deportees are believed to have legal protection from U.S. judges shielding them against being returned to their home countries, David said. The deportees are believed to be staying at a hotel in Kinshasa.

The International Organization for Migration, a United Nations-affiliated agency, will be involved to offer “assisted voluntary return,” David told AP.

“The fact that the focus is on offering them ‘voluntary’ return to their home country when they spent months in immigration detention in the U.S. fighting hard to not have to go home is very alarming,” she said.

An IOM spokesperson said the organization was providing humanitarian assistance to the deportees at the request of the Congolese government. It said it may also offer assisted voluntary return, which is “strictly voluntary and based on free, prior and informed consent.”

Congo’s Ministry of Communications said in a statement earlier this month that it will receive some migrants as part of a new deal under the Trump administration’s third-country program.

It described the arrangement as a “temporary” one that reflects Congo’s “commitment to human dignity and international solidarity.” It would come with zero costs to the government with the U.S. covering the needed logistics, it said.

The statement said no automatic transfer of the deportees is planned, adding: “Each situation will be subject to individual review in accordance with the laws of the Republic and national security requirements.”

The U.S. has struck such third-country deportation deals with at least seven other African nations, many of them among countries hit hardest by the Trump administration’s policies restricting trade, aid and migration.

The Trump administration has spent at least $40 million to deport about 300 migrants to countries other than their own, according to a report released recently by the Democratic staff of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

Lawyers and activists have raised questions over the nature of the deals with countries in Africa and elsewhere. Several of the African nations that have signed such deals have notoriously repressive governments and poor human rights records — including Eswatini, South Sudan and Equatorial Guinea.

Friday, April 17, 2026

Mabuyane Hits Back at Malema Over Claims of Fraudulent Master's Degree

Nkosikhona Malinga-Mnisi

17 April 2026 | 0:28

In a strongly worded statement on Thursday, Eastern Cape Premier Mabuyane said he has instructed his lawyers to explore legal action against EFF leader Julius Malema.

Julius Malema in the 702 studio, 26 March 2026. Photo: Karabo Tebele, 702

Eastern Cape Premier Oscar Mabuyane has hit back at Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) leader Julius Malema after claims that he said the former must stop dictating to law enforcement.

In a strongly worded statement on Thursday, Mabuyane said he has instructed his lawyers to explore legal action against Malema.

This follows Malema’s allegations that Mabuyane obtained a fraudulent master’s degree from the University of Fort Hare (UFS) and that authorities should investigate him instead.

Malema made the remarks after the East London Magistrates Court handed Malema a five-year prison sentence for violating gun laws.

Mabuyane had enrolled for a master’s degree in public administration at the University of Fort Hare but was deregistered in 2021 after the university found proper admission procedures were not followed.

Mabuyane is challenging that decision in court, where the matter remains unresolved.

He now appears set for another legal battle, this time with Malema, whom he intends to sue for defamation.

On social media platform X, Malema responded and encouraged Mabuyane to go ahead.

Mabuyane’s spokesperson, Sonwabo Mbananga, said Malema should focus on his own legal troubles instead of making false allegations.

“South Africa is a constitutional democracy, no one is above the law, and no one should weaponise falsehoods for political gains.”

Meanwhile, the African National Congress (ANC) in the Eastern Cape has welcomed Mabuyane’s move to pursue legal action.

Political Parties Weigh in on Malema Sentencing

Cape Town

Lindsay Dentlinger

16 April 2026 | 11:15

Herron says while leaders must be held to the highest standards of conduct, the prison term meted out to Julius Malema feels harsh.

EFF leader Julius Malema has been sentenced to five years direct imprisonment for discharging a firearm. Picture: Sphamandla Dlamini/EWN

Political parties have largely welcomed the conviction of Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) leader Julius Malema, saying it sends a strong message that neither prominent figures nor politicians are above the law.

However, the Good Party said it feels the five-year sentence that Malema will now be appealing is too harsh.

Despite the state requesting a 15-year sentence, Malema has been sentenced to five years of imprisonment and R60,000 in fines.

The Democratic Alliance’s (DA) new leader, Geordin Hill-Lewis, said that with gun violence out of control in the country, it’s important to punish such crimes harshly.

"It’s important to punish illegal firearm crimes harshly. Only when people understand that there are consequences for crime will we get gun violence under control in South Africa."

While the Good Party’s Brett Herron said that when politicians are perceived to break the law without legal accountability, it destroys public trust in the State and allows for corruption and authoritarianism to take root.

But he cautioned against justice bowing to public pressure or to achieve political ends.

Herron said while leaders must be held to the highest standards of conduct, the prison term meted out to Julius Malema feels harsh.

The African Christian Democratic Party, meanwhile, said Malema’s crimes are not minor, and he put lives at risk and undermined public safety when he fired a rifle into the crowd at a party rally in 2018.

The party said this case sends a clear message that equality before the law is not just an ideal but a practice that must be upheld consistently.

At the same time, the Freedom Front Plus said it will insist Malema loses his parliamentary seat in line with Constitutional provisions if his appeal is unsuccessful.

South African Politician Julius Malema Sentenced to 5 Years for Firing Rifle Shots at Rally

By MOGOMOTSI MAGOME

2:20 PM EDT, April 16, 2026

JOHANNESBURG (AP) — South African opposition party leader Julius Malema was sentenced to five years in prison Thursday after he was convicted of breaking firearm laws by firing a rifle at a political rally in 2018.

He was released pending an appeal, which will be heard at a later date.

If the verdict and sentence are upheld, Malema will be disqualified as a lawmaker. South African law bars anyone from serving in Parliament if they have been convicted of an offense and sentenced to more than 12 months in prison without the option of a fine.

Malema was convicted in October on five counts, including unlawful possession of a firearm and ammunition, discharge of a firearm in a built-up area and reckless endangerment.

Malema addressed hundreds of his party supporters, popularly known as “fighters,” many of whom traveled from various provinces to attend the sentencing. Clad in their red party regalia, they chanted and sang before and after the sentence was delivered.

A defiant Malema criticized the magistrate, claiming she was biased against him throughout the case. “We were tried by a magistrate who doesn’t read, who uses emotions, who speaks politics. We are done with her, we are going to a higher court,” he said.

Delivering the sentence, Magistrate Twanet Olivier said she considered the magnitude of the offense when she determined his sentence. “We hear daily, or weekly, of children playing in the front yards, in the street, who are caught in crossfire, random shots fired, killing people. It’s just the first time that we hear, it’s being called celebratory shots,” Olivier said.

The fiery lawmaker, who leads the leftist Economic Freedom Fighters party, was charged alongside his bodyguard Anton Snyman, after the video of the incident went viral. Snyman was found not guilty.

During his trial and sentencing, Malema said that the charges against him were politically motivated as they were brought by Afriforum, a lobby group for the white Afrikaner minority group that has been at odds with Malema for years.

Olivier said the sentence and verdict was based solely on his actions on the day.

Malema, whose party is the fourth-biggest in the country, is a divisive figure, mainly because of his party policies, which include the expropriation of white-owned land without compensation and the nationalization of mines and banks.

He appeared in a video shown by U.S. President Donald Trump during a tense meeting with South African President Cyril Ramaphosa last year, where he was singing a controversial anti-apartheid song that has been interpreted by some as calling for violence against Afrikaners.

Chinese Man Jailed for One Year by Kenyan Court Over Ant Trafficking

7:14 AM EDT, April 16, 2026

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — A Chinese national was sentenced on Wednesday to one year in jail by a Kenyan court after being found guilty of illegally possessing wildlife for having hundreds of live ants stored in specialized tubes.

Zhang Kequn was also fined 1 million Kenyan shillings ($7,700) after pleading guilty to the charge of wildlife possession without a license.

Kenya has previously fined Belgian teenagers who were found in possession of queen ants, which are used as delicacies and kept as pets in Europe and Asia.

Kequn had been charged alongside Kenyan Charles Mwangi who pleaded not guilty to the offense and was released on cash bail.

Prosecutors say Kequn had been sourcing the ants from Mwangi, allegedly paying 60,000 Kenyan shillings ($463) for an initial batch of 600 ants, and 70,000 shillings ($540) for another batch of 700.

The suspects were arrested on March 10 after authorities found them in possession of 1,948 garden ants stored in specialized tubes, along with an additional 300 ants in tissue rolls. Prosecutors say the suspects did not have the permits required under Kenya’s wildlife conservation laws to handle or trade such species.

Last year, two Belgian teenagers were charged with wildlife piracy in what Kenyan authorities described as part of a trend involving the trafficking of smaller, lesser-known species. They were found with 5,000 ants in test tubes. The insects were said to be destined for European and Asian markets, and Kenyan authorities valued the ants at 1 million shillings ($7,700).

Former Meta Contractor Sama to Lay Off More Than 1,000 Workers in Kenya

By EVELYNE MUSAMBI

12:28 PM EDT, April 16, 2026

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — A company that was sued by Facebook content moderators in Kenya over poor working conditions said Thursday that more than 1,000 workers will be laid off after Meta, Facebook’s parent company, ended its contract.

Meta and its local contractor Sama have been in court since 2022 after former content moderators accused them of paying low wages and not offering sufficient mental health support. Sama has since changed its business model and stopped offering content moderation services to Meta, but has remained focused on services such as AI data labeling for the tech giant.

Sama said in a statement Thursday that it received formal notice from Meta to end a “major engagement at its Nairobi office.” Sama said it has issued a formal layoff notice that would affect 1,108 staffers, adding that it was “actively supporting affected employees with care and respect.”

In 2023 some 200 former content moderators sued Sama over the exploitation of workers by offering low pay, little mental health support for the grueling work they do, and long working hours.

The group was employed at the social media giant’s outsourced hub for content moderation in Nairobi, where workers screen posts, videos, messages and other content from users across Africa, removing any illegal or harmful material that breaches its community standards and terms of service.

They described watching videos of children being molested and women being killed, among many other distressing videos, which they moderated for hours on end without sufficient access to counselors.

The moderators, from several African countries, are seeking $1.6 billion in compensation. The case is ongoing.

Sama has previously defended its practices and said it was offering four times the local minimum wage and unlimited mental health support to its workers.

Facebook parent Meta said its contractors are obliged to pay their employees above the industry standard in the markets they operate and provide on-site support by trained practitioners.

Activist Kemi Seba Arrested in South Africa, Faces Extradition to Benin

Kemi Seba, right, gestures during an interview in Paris, June 28, 2006. (AP Photo/Michel Euler, File)

By MICHELLE GUMEDE

1:57 PM EDT, April 16, 2026

JOHANNESBURG (AP) — Prominent Beninese activist Kemi Seba has been arrested in South Africa for alleged conspiracy to commit a crime, police said Thursday, as he faces extradition to Benin where he is wanted for “inciting rebellion” following last year’s failed coup there.

Seba, whose birth name is Stellio Gilles Robert Capo Chichi, was arrested alongside his son during a sting operation in Pretoria, South Africa’s capital, police said.

The police, citing Interpol’s assistance, said they can confirm that Seba, 45, “is indeed a wanted fugitive in Benin in relation to crimes against the state.”

Seba and his son were charged with conspiracy to commit a crime and immigration violations for allegedly planning illegal migration to Europe via Zimbabwe. A third accomplice, also in detention, was accused of paying roughly R250,000 ($15,000) to facilitate the cross-border movements.

The trio appeared at the Brooklyn magistrates’ court on Wednesday, according to the police, where the case was rescheduled until April 20.

Seba, meanwhile, was placed in police custody as the police plan to extradite him to Benin.

Benin in December issued an international arrest warrant against Seba for “incitement to rebellion” after he posted a video on social media expressing support for the failed coup. In the video, he was seen celebrating the attempted overthrow of President Patrice Talon as successful, calling it “the day of liberation” and describing the soldiers involved as “patriotic.”

Seba has also been a vocal supporter of recent coups in West Africa and of pro-Russian sentiments expressed by the coup leaders. He has strongly criticized France, Benin’s former colonial ruler, and its economic and political interests in Benin and the West African region. His French citizenship was revoked in 2024.

What to Know About Cameroon’s Separatist Violence that the Pope Seeks to End

By NALOVA AKUA and CHINEDU ASADU

9:44 AM EDT, April 16, 2026

YAOUNDE, Cameroon (AP) — Pope Leo XIV arrived in Cameroon’s northwestern city of Bamenda on Thursday to lead a peace meeting in a region battered by separatist violence that has claimed thousands of lives since it started nearly a decade ago.

The event, which is part of the pope’s programs for his tour of four African nations, seeks to highlight the interfaith movement that has been seeking to end the conflict and care for its many traumatized victims.

Clashes have intensified in recent years between the government’s forces and separatist militias demanding secession from Cameroon, which comprises eight French-speaking regions and two English-speaking regions.

Here’s what to know:

What is the conflict about?

Cameroon’s western regions have been plagued by fighting since English-speaking separatists launched a rebellion in 2017 with the goal of breaking away from the French-speaking majority and establishing an independent state. The conflict has killed more than 6,000 people and displaced over 600,000 others.

It started in the aftermath of World War I, when Cameroon was split under British and French colonial control. At its independence in 1960-1961, the two territories reunited and formed a federal state, with the French-speaking section constituting about 80% both in territory and population.

The English-speaking population currently makes up about 20% of the roughly 30 million people and say they’re marginalized by the French-majority government under President Paul Biya, in power for over 40 years and currently the world’s oldest leader.

Tensions spiked in 2016 when the government attempted to impose French in English-speaking regions’ schools and courts, igniting protests that security forces violently repressed.

Separatist leaders based abroad

The conflict features various separatist groups whose leaders are mostly based abroad, many after being blacklisted by the Cameroonian government.

Analysts have said their cover abroad could be complicating peace effort at home because they would operate with ease to raise funds and issue instructions to their followers engaging with Cameroonian forces.

In September 2024, Norway charged Lucas Ayaba Cho, commander of the Ambazonia Defense Forces, a key actor in the conflict, with incitement to commit crimes against humanity, an accusation he contested.

Last December, a federal jury in the U.S. convicted two individuals for conspiracy to provide funds and equipment to the separatist fighters.

In March, Belgium arrested four people as part of its investigations into Belgian residents suspected of being among the separatist leaders and raising money for the movement.

Military solution?

Cameroon’s government has taken several steps to address the violence, but a permanent solution still feels far off.

A national dialogue in 2019 led to the granting of special status to the northwest and southwest regions and proposals on governance, justice and education, but many such proposals have not been implemented. A disarmament, demobilization and reintegration program has also been faulted as lacking transparency and being limited in its reach.

The government at first viewed the conflict as an agitation by “a few misguided” groups in the Anglophone region, said Colbert Gwain Fulai, a civil society leader based in Bamenda.

It still does not acknowledge the marginalization claims and mostly frames the conflict as one more in need of a military solution than a political one, said Fulai.

The separatist leaders, meanwhile, seem “determined to double down, wagering on the absence of sustained peace efforts,” the Crisis Group said last year. Some have also developed cross-border alliances with separatists across the border in Nigeria who also seek to create an independent state.

Mixed feelings over the pope’s peace meeting

The pope’s visit and the peace meeting have been received with a mixed feeling of hope and doubt among residents and local leaders. That’s because such a peace meeting between the government and the separatists is rare, the last major one held in 2022.

Lucas Asu, a spokesperson for the Ambazonia Governing Council separatist group, said they are committed to a peaceful settlement of the conflict through dialogue and accused the government of avoiding talks.

Cameroonian authorities did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Mother-of-three Morine Ngum, whose husband was shot dead as a separatist fighter in 2022, said any real progress must begin with the government.

“I see them (the government) using this crisis as an advantage. It brings them more profit. They just want to use this pope coming to cover up things,” Ngum said.

———

Asadu reported from Abuja, Nigeria.

Denis Sassou N’Guesso Sworn in for Another Term in Republic of Congo, Extending 42-year Rule

President of the Republic of Congo Denis Sassou N'Guesso casts his ballot at a polling station in Brazzaville, the Republic of Congo, on March 15, 2026. (AP Photo/Vivace Mambouana, File)

By LOUIS OKAMBA

Updated 3:59 PM EDT, April 16, 2026

BRAZZAVILLE, Republic of Congo (AP) — Denis Sassou N’Guesso was sworn in Thursday to a new five-year term as the Republic of Congo’s president in a ceremony in a packed stadium.

The inauguration took place in Kintélé, a town north of the capital city of Brazzaville.

Sassou N’Guesso was reelected in March with 94.8% of the vote, extending his 42-year rule over the oil-rich Central African country. He ran against six relatively unknown candidates.

In his inaugural speech, he said he would not “betray the people who mobilized to honor him and reaffirm their support.”

The Central African country is struggling with a sky-high debt-to-GDP ratio - which measures a country’s debt compared to its economic output - according to the World Bank, and climbing youth unemployment.

Sassou N’Guesso is the third-longest ruling African leader, after Cameroon ’s Paul Biya and Equatorial Guinea ’s Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo. A 2015 referendum removed presidential age limits and term limits, allowing Sassou N’Guesso to remain eligible for office.

Thursday, April 16, 2026

Pope Blasts ‘Tyrants’ Ravaging the Planet During His Visit to Cameroon

By NICOLE WINFIELD and NALOVA AKUA

10:53 AM EDT, April 16, 2026

BAMENDA, Cameroon (AP) — Pope Leo XIV blasted the “handful of tyrants” who are ravaging Earth with war and exploitation, as he preached a message of peace Thursday in the epicenter of a separatist conflict in central Africa considered one of the world’s most neglected crises.

Leo traveled to the western Cameroon city of Bamenda, where jubilant crowds clogged the roads, blowing horns and dancing. They were overjoyed that a pope had come so far to see them and put a global spotlight on the violence that has traumatized this region for nearly a decade.

Leo presided over a peace meeting involving a Mankon traditional chief, a Presbyterian moderator, an imam and a Catholic nun. The aim was to highlight the interfaith movement that has been seeking to end the conflict and care for its many victims.

In his remarks in the St. Joseph Cathedral, on land donated by the Mankon, Leo praised the peace movement and warned against allowing religion to enter conflicts. It’s a theme he has been echoing amid the U.S.-Israeli war in Iran and the religious justifications for it by U.S. officials.

“Blessed are the peacemakers!” he said. “But woe to those who manipulate religion and the very name of God for their own military, economic and political gain, dragging that which is sacred into darkness and filth.”

He called for a “decisive change of course” that leads away from conflict and the exploitation of the land for military or economic gain.

“The world is being ravaged by a handful of tyrants, yet it is held together by a multitude of supportive brothers and sisters!” he said.

Leo’s comments were directed at Cameroon’s separatist conflict. But Vatican officials have made clear that on this trip, he is preaching the Gospel message of peace that surpasses borders and continents, and is meant for all those responsible for the wars and exploitation ravaging Earth.

Leo said Bamenda was a model for the rest of the world. “Bamenda, today you are the city on the hill, resplendent in the eyes of all!” Leo said in English, using a phrase often understood as referring to American exceptionalism.

It wasn’t immediately clear if any of Cameroon’s separatist fighters, who announced a three-day pause in fighting to allow the pope safe passage to Bamenda, attended.

A conflict rooted in colonial history

The conflict in Cameroon’s two Anglophone regions is rooted in Cameroon’s colonial history, when the country was divided between France and Britain after World War I. English-speaking regions later joined French Cameroon in a 1961 U.N.-backed vote, but separatists say they have since been politically and economically marginalized.

In 2017, English-speaking separatists launched a rebellion with the stated goal of breaking away from the French-speaking majority and establishing an independent state. The conflict has killed more than 6,000 people and displaced over 600,000 others, according to the International Crisis Group.

Leo arrived to a raucous welcome in Bamenda, where blasting music from loudspeakers gave the event a concert-like vibe.

“We are so overjoyed, so overwhelmed,” said Felicity Cali, a Catholic student. “Say thank you, God, for this extraordinary day and for making us be alive to see this day.”

Leo kept up the theme in his homily before an estimated 20,000 people who gathered for his afternoon Mass at Bamenda’s airfield, where they went wild when he looped around the crowd in his covered popemobile. Leo pointed to the “moral, social and political corruption,” that afflicts Cameroon, stifling its development.

Added to these internal problems of conflict and corruption “is the damage caused from outside, by those who, in the name of profit, continue to lay their hands on the African continent to exploit and plunder it,” he said.

It was a cry that echoed the words of Pope Francis when he traveled to Congo in 2023. “Hands off Africa!” he exhorted the foreign interests plundering the continent.

Cameroon’s separatist movement is believed to be backed by several actors abroad. In December, a federal jury in U.S. convicted two individuals for conspiracy to provide funds and equipment to the separatist fighters. Belgian authorities in March also announced they had arrested four people as part of investigations into Belgian residents suspected of being among the separatist leaders and raising money for them there.

“Those who rob your land of its resources generally invest much of the profit in weapons, thus perpetuating an endless cycle of destabilization and death,” Leo said. “It is a world turned upside down, an exploitation of God’s creation that must be denounced and rejected by every honest conscience.”

Cameroon sits atop significant reserves of oil, natural gas, cobalt, bauxite, iron ore, gold and diamonds, making resource extraction one of the pillars of its economy.

While French and English companies have long dominated the extraction industry in Cameroon, Chinese companies have established a significant presence in recent years, particularly in the gold mining regions of the east.

Though the number of deadly attacks by separatists has decreased in recent years, the conflict shows no sign of resolution. Peace talks with international mediators have stalled, with both sides accusing each other of acting in bad faith.

Morine Ngum, a mother of three whose husband was shot dead in 2022 by Cameroonian soldiers while fighting as a separatist, expressed doubt that the pope’s visit and peace meeting would lead to meaningful change. She said any real progress must begin with those in power.

“Nothing is going to change,” said Ngum, 30. “This conflict has turned my children into orphans and me into a widow. Many families have been rendered homeless.”

Testimony to pope about the toll of the conflict

The archbishop of Bamenda, Andrew Nkea Fuanya, told Leo that the people there had suffered from “a situation they did not create,” losing their livelihoods, homes and education: Children were not allowed to go to school for years.

“Most Holy Father, today that your feet are standing on the soil of Bamenda that has drunk the blood of many of our children,” he said.

The Right Rev. Fonki Samuel Forba, emeritus moderator of the Presbyterian church in Cameroon, said the Vatican had joined other faith groups in trying to bring the separatists to the negotiating table with the government, and meeting with their supporters abroad.

Biya’s government has been accused of shunning dialogue with the separatists.

“There is a proverb in Africa that ‘When two elephants fight, it is the grass that suffers,’” Forba said.

___

Akua reported from Yaounde, Cameroon. Associated Press writer Chinedu Asadu in Abuja, Nigeria, contributed to this report.

A Dispatch from Inside the Vatican Bubble During a Remarkable Exchange Between Pope and President

By NICOLE WINFIELD

11:02 AM EDT, April 16, 2026

ABOARD THE PAPAL PLANE (AP) — There is an odd sense of isolation when you are covering Pope Leo XIV from inside the Vatican’s traveling press pool: Escorted from venue to venue with police motorcades that clear even the most congested of traffic jams, it’s a membership that has many privileges.

But during Leo’s epic four-nation trip to Africa, being inside the Vatican “bubble” has been an almost surreal experience, as an unprecedented back-and-forth plays out between U.S. President Donald Trump and history’s first American pope.

Every morning this week, waking up to developments in Washington from the evening before, the questions have abounded: Will Leo bite? How will he address the latest criticism, if at all, while focusing on the Africa program he has planned?

That was certainly the case on Wednesday, as Leo, the Vatican delegation and a pool of around 70 accredited reporters boarded the ITA Airways charter for the second leg of Leo’s 11-day odyssey — the flight from Algiers, Algeria to Yaounde, Cameroon.

Much to the reporters’ delight, Leo had responded head-on to Trump at the start of the trip when he gamely came to the back of the plane and greeted journalists traveling April 13 from Rome to Algiers. He responded to those who asked him about Trump’s Truth Social post a day earlier, in which the U.S. president had accused him of being soft on crime, cozy with the left and owed his papacy to Trump.

Trump was responding to Leo’s calls for peace, in reference to the Iran war, and comments that Trump’s threat to annihilate Iranian civilization were “truly unacceptable.”

Stopping to chat as he made his way from row to row that first day, Leo had told journalists that he was merely preaching the Gospel when he called for peace and criticized war, and that he didn’t fear the Trump administration.

A comment about peace

On Tuesday, on the short flight from Algiers to Annaba, the ancient city of Hippo, Leo stayed in the front of the plane where the Vatican delegation sits, dashing the Vatican pool’s hopes for another Trump vs. Leo news cycle.

On Wednesday, with a five-hour flight ahead of us to Cameroon, excitement grew in economy class when Vatican personnel came to the back of the plane, readied the microphone and did sound checks to make sure the whole cabin could hear.

Emerging from behind the curtain, Leo didn’t take questions from reporters and kept his remarks focused on his just-concluded visit to Algeria, where he honored the legacy of his spiritual inspiration, St. Augustine of Hippo.

In brief remarks standing at the front of the cabin, Leo didn’t refer to war or Trump. But he spoke in terms that could suggest the latest overnight lobs from Washington certainly hadn’t gone unnoticed. Perhaps tellingly, he spoke exclusively in English.

Trump had kept up the criticism on Truth Social, while U.S. Vice President JD Vance, a Catholic convert, said that Leo should “be careful” when speaking about theology.

For starters, Leo noted the sign of “goodness,” “generosity,” and “respect” that the Algerian government showed him in welcoming him on the first-ever papal visit. He said that the Algerian honors had included a full military aerial escort of the papal plane through Algerian airspace.

He also recalled his visit to the Great Mosque in Algiers, which he said was a significant way to show that “although we have different beliefs, we have different ways of worshipping, we have different ways of living, we can live together in peace.”

He said that St. Augustine’s message of searching for God, searching for truth, building bridges and seeking unity and community “is something which the world needs to hear today and that together we can continue to offer in our witness as we continue on this apostolic voyage.”

A papal press pool

Like other heads of state, the pope travels internationally with both his own media team as well as a group of external news organizations that pay, oftentimes handsomely, to have their reporters travel aboard the papal plane and have special access to cover his events. The Associated Press is always on the plane, paying for as many as four journalists per trip.

Being inside the Vatican bubble has journalistic advantages and disadvantages. You get the best access and are traveling under the Vatican’s security umbrella, meaning there’s little or no hassle from local security organizers. The Vatican facilitates visas and local SIM cards in advance, and arranges hotels and local transportation, allowing reporters to focus on the news rather than logistics.

Journalists in the bubble get the pope’s speeches ahead of time and have occasional access to delegation members, as well as other information in real time from the Vatican spokesman.

But the real reason news organizations choose to spend thousands of dollars per journalist, per trip, to be on the papal plane is to be on hand for the pope’s news conferences. The only time a pope holds such briefings with journalists is at an altitude of 35,000 feet (around 10,000 meters)

Who could forget Pope Francis’ famous line on his maiden trip as pope, in 2013 to Rio de Janeiro, when he uttered the line “Who am I to judge,” when he was asked about a purportedly gay priest.

The downside of being in the Vatican bubble is obvious for many of the same reasons it’s helpful: You are removed from local reality, whether in Algeria or Alaska, and rarely have time to do the type of on-the-ground reporting that makes a news report balanced.

Those news organizations that have the resources have teams on the ground producing such content, or journalists within the bubble break away to do their own reporting, so that the end result is a healthy combination of official Vatican information and local input.

But when the real drama involving the pope is occurring thousands of miles and time zones away, being in the Vatican bubble is a somewhat jarring experience. The news everyone wants to know isn’t necessarily what the pope has on his agenda.

But on this trip, the first by an American pope to Africa, being in the Vatican bubble certainly had its advantages. The next stop is Angola. Who knows what Leo will have to say.