Friday, June 19, 2026

Escalation to Capitulation: What the MoU Means for Iran, Region

By Al Mayadeen English

The Islamabad MoU marks a historic shift in Iran-US relations, reflecting the failure of decades of sanctions, military pressure, and regime-change efforts.

The Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding, signed electronically in Iran and at the margins of a G7 summit in France, is being received by Western and regional officials as a diplomatic breakthrough with substantial economic dividends. This reading purposefully misses the document entirely. Once you strip away performative European-Gulf compliance, the fourteen clauses can finally be read for what they are. They form a line-by-line record of what the world’s most formidable military and economic superpower conceded, especially after launching the most high-tech war of regime decapitation, against Iran, only to fail in every single one of its original objectives.

The document does not show a US transition from regime change to coexistence. Rather, the MoU reveals a much more profound trajectory, a rapid descent from escalation to capitulation. After a coercive military campaign, maximum economic pressure sustained over years, a full naval blockade of Iranian ports, and the targeted assassination of Iran's leaders, none of these produced regime change, nuclear dismantlement, Hormuz re-opening, or the dissolution of the Resistance Front. What it produced was a document in which Washington lifts the blockade, terminates the sanctions, releases frozen assets, and grants Iran formal governance authority over the world's most strategically sensitive maritime corridor.

Yet, two caveats must be stated at the outset.

First, this analysis assumes that both parties implement the MoU's clauses as signed and sequenced. Concessions on paper remain concessions on paper until they are concessions in practice.

Second, the 60-day window between the MoU's signing and any final binding deal is not a formality. Instead, it is the period of maximum danger.

It is worth remembering that the JCPOA was not a strategic instrument of peace. It was a mechanism for nuclear containment that gave the US a structured pathway to stabilize oil markets and manage regional pressure while preserving the option to re-escalate on more favorable terms, which a subsequent administration exercised in 2018. The same architecture of reversal is available today. As Iranian crude returns to global markets, as commodity prices stabilize, and as the immediate economic bleeding that forced Washington to the table recedes, the conditions for a US-"Israel" rearming window quietly reopens, and this is where the period of maximum danger begins.

The arc of a failed strategy

Three consecutive strategic phases of Iran-US relations, each one more coercive than the last, and each a documented failure when measured against its own stated objectives, built up to the Islamabad MoU. 

The first phase, which stretched from the JCPOA's collapse in 2018 through Trump's first term and into early 2025, operated on the logic of maximum pressure. This included total economic isolation through layered primary and secondary sanctions and localized military posturing to counter Iran's alliances. The strategy's premise was that sufficient economic pain would either force Tehran back to the negotiating table on American terms or catalyze internal collapse.

Neither happened. Iran's nuclear program advanced further under maximum pressure than it had under engagement, a detail Western officials absorbed slowly and publicly. The Resistance Front, far from being weakened, grew more capable and more operationally active. And the Strait of Hormuz, the instrument through which Iran could render the pillars of the global economy obsolete whenever the strategic calculation demanded it, remained under Tehran's effective control, impervious to any sanctions package Washington could devise.

In January 2020, General Qassem Soleimani was assassinated, but the Resistance Front did not dissolve.

The second phase opened on June 13, 2025, with joint US-Israeli aggression that abandoned deterrence entirely for what its architects calculated would be rapid, decisive kinetic action, to force regime change in Tehran. After softening the Iranian front and gaining confidence in joint US-Israeli military action, Washington and Tel Aviv deployed their final indirect leverage, as they tightened sanctions on Iran and backed rioters hoping to cut their work short and destroy the Islamic Republic from within.

After Iran defeated the plot at great cost, a wide-ranging bombing campaign began on February 28, 2026, targeting Iran and assassinating Sayyed Ali Khamenei, top Iranian officials, and military commanders. The strategic logic was regime decapitation, removing the leadership, fracturing the command structure, and forcing either surrender or internal collapse. However, Iran was well prepared and acted on its threats, escalating horizontally by targeting US-Israeli interests across the entire region, taking action unprecedented for a state confronting not one nuclear power, but two. The missile and drone strikes sent global energy markets into crisis and closed the Strait of Hormuz to international shipping. Washington escalated to a full naval blockade of Iranian ports. The war did not end Iran's government, its nuclear infrastructure, its missile capabilities, or the Resistance Front's operational cohesion. It massacred thousands of people. It triggered an energy crisis that shook the economies of every G7 member. And ultimately, it produced the Islamabad MoU.

The third phase, which is rapidly approaching, is strategic retrenchment dressed in diplomatic language and Trump's rhetoric.

Re-escalation risk zone

Iran-US engagement intensity across three strategic phases, 2018–2026. The curve's terminal floor in Phase 3 falls below Phase 1 baseline, reflecting the structural consequence of a final binding deal, not a return to managed containment.

What the three-phase arc establishes, before a single clause of the MoU is examined, is stark. The US entered a period of active, kinetic, maximally coercive military aggression against Iran and emerged from it without achieving one declared war aim. The US also emerges globally weakened, having depleted valuable, strategic munitions without san, Tehran's primary tools of deterrence.

Meanwhile, Iran's government stands. Its enrichment program stands. Its missile arsenal stands. Its allies across Lebanon, Iraq, Yemen, and Palestine are battered but structurally intact. The Islamabad MoU is the legal record of those calculations.

What Washington agreed to

Read the fourteen clauses not as diplomatic boilerplate but as a concession register. Below is what that register says.

US objective entering the war

Islamabad MoU outcome

Nuclear dismantlement

Full halt to enrichment; zero stockpile

Enrichment program intact

Down-blending on Iranian soil possible

Free, open Hormuz passage

Iranian influence removed; toll-free guaranteed

Iranian governance codified

Tehran defines future strait administration

Regime change

Decapitate leadership; force collapse

Sovereignty clause signed

Non-interference in internal affairs — clause 2

Resistance Front dissolution

End Iran's regional alliances

Absent from the text entirely

Not mentioned in any of the 14 clauses

The concession-gap register: US declared war objectives mapped against Islamabad MoU clause outcomes. The gap between the two columns is the strategic ledger of the campaign.

Clause 1 declares the immediate and permanent termination of military operations on all fronts, including Lebanon. The US entered the war with stated objectives that included neutralizing Hezbollah's military capacity and dismantling what it characterized as Iran's proxy network. The clause addresses neither. It terminates hostilities. It does not alter, in any textual sense, the strategic landscape those hostilities were launched to transform.

Clause 2 commits both parties to respecting each other's sovereignty and territorial integrity and to refraining from interference in internal affairs. In the context of a country whose democratically elected government was overthrown by a CIA-backed coup in 1953, and whose nuclear infrastructure was targeted by the joint US-Israeli Stuxnet cyber operation in the years after, this clause is crucial. It is a formal, signed renunciation of the interference doctrine that has governed US policy toward Iran since the Eisenhower administration. If honored, it is the most consequential sentence Washington has signed regarding Iran in seventy years.

Clause 4 triggers immediately upon signing. The US begins lifting its naval blockade, its most direct and punishing instrument of coercive pressure against Iranian ports, and commits to ending it entirely within 30 days. The clause does not record that the blockade achieved its objectives. It records that the blockade ends. US forces are further committed to withdrawing from the proximity of Iran within 30 days of the final deal.

Clause 5 is where Iranian strategic leverage crystallizes most visibly on paper. Iran will arrange safe passage for commercial vessels through the Strait of Hormuz, but the clause explicitly assigns Tehran the authority to conduct dialogue with the Sultanate of Oman and Gulf littoral states to define the future administration and maritime services of the strait, in line with sovereign coastal-state rights. The Hormuz closure demonstrated something the West had preferred to treat as a theoretical risk, which is that Iran could withstand direct military confrontation with the United States while maintaining effective control over the passage that supplies roughly 20% of globally traded oil. No naval or air campaign resolved that equation. Under the MoU, the Strait of Hormuz is not demilitarized or internationalized; it is recognized as an Iranian strategic asset.

Clause 6 commits the United States to working with regional partners to develop a plan with a minimum of $300 billion for the reconstruction and economic development of Iran. All required licenses, waivers, and permissions are to be granted by Washington. This reads as the economic war's final accounting and a formal acknowledgment that a decades-long sanctions architecture, the most comprehensive applied to any non-Soviet state in the post-war era, failed in its stated objective of behavior modification. Three hundred billion dollars is the price of exiting that American failure and a US-backed reconstruction mandate for the state that Washington spent four decades trying to strangle economically.

Clauses 7 and 10 dismantle the sanctions architecture entirely: clause 7 commits to terminating all US sanctions, including UNSC resolutions and IAEA Board of Governors resolutions, and clause 10 issues immediate Treasury waivers for Iranian crude oil exports, petroleum products, and all associated banking and transportation services. Clause 11 releases Iran's frozen assets in full, with the Central Bank of the Islamic Republic designated as the sole authority over their disbursement.

Clause 8 is the most telling. Iran reaffirms that it shall not procure or develop nuclear weapons, a commitment Iran has held, under the NPT, since the 1970s. The clause adds nothing new to Iran's legal obligations. Its enriched uranium stockpile will be addressed through a mutually agreed mechanism, with the stated minimum methodology being down-blending on-site under IAEA supervision. Not transferred out of Iran. Not destroyed. Not surrendered. Down-blended, on Iranian soil, under international observation, on a schedule to be agreed. Iran's enrichment capacity is not mentioned in this clause because it was not surrendered. It is reserved for future discussions under a framework to be agreed upon in the final deal.

Clause 13 reveals the architecture of Iran's negotiating logic more than any other. Iran and the US will only begin discussions on the harder remaining issues, nuclear terms, sanctions schedule, final political arrangements, after paragraphs 1, 4, 5, 10, and 11 are already in implementation. Iran extracted all military, maritime, and economic relief upfront and placed the remaining nuclear concessions, which it has not yet made, behind a sequencing gate.

Clause 14 requires the final deal to be endorsed by a binding UN Security Council resolution. Washington must now submit the outcome of this negotiation to a multilateral body on which Russia and China hold permanent seats, for binding international legitimation. The Security Council that the US weaponized against Iran and the broader region for years becomes the body that locks any final settlement into international law.

What recognition of regional power actually means

Taken together, the MoU's clauses constitute the first US instrument that implicitly recognizes Iran as a legitimate regional power with commensurate structural rights, and that recognition produces consequences that extend well beyond the 60-day negotiating window.

A state that retains governance authority over the Strait of Hormuz, codified in an agreement the world's most powerful military signed to end a war it initiated, holds a structural position in the regional order that no subsequent administration can simply legislate away. A state that receives a $300 billion reconstruction compact backed by US-issued financial licenses is no longer a "pariah economy". It is an investment destination whose re-entry into global markets Washington has formally facilitated.

The Resistance Front's position in the regional architecture is not a term of this agreement because it was never required to be. The MoU demands a cessation of direct military operations. It demands nothing of the alliances, supply relationships, or political frameworks that Iran has built across four decades of patient regional engagement. Those structures are not dissolved by US military force or the Islamabad Memorandum. They are the context that made the Islamabad Memorandum necessary.

Hezbollah Confronts Israeli Advance in Southern Lebanon

By Al Mayadeen English

Source: Islamic Resistance in Lebanon Military Media

Al Mayadeen's correspondent reports that the Islamic resistance targeted Israeli military vehicles attempting to advance toward Kfar Tibnit in southern Lebanon, setting several vehicles ablaze.

The Islamic resistance confronted an attempted advance by Israeli occupation forces toward the southern Lebanese town of Kfar Tibnit, according to Al Mayadeen's correspondent.

The correspondent reported that resistance fighters targeted Israeli military vehicles attempting to move toward the town using guided missiles and previously prepared ambushes.

Several Israeli vehicles were reportedly hit during the engagement, with flames seen rising from some of the targeted vehicles on the outskirts of Kfar Tibnit.

Kfar Tibnit to remain impervious 

The Islamic Resistance affirmed in a statement that the Kfar Tibnit–Ali al-Taher area will remain impervious to enemy incursions, and that its fighters will write Karbala-like epics in defense of their country and their people.

"Defending Lebanon and its people, and based on the legitimate right to resist occupation, liberate land, and respond to the Israeli enemy's violation of the ceasefire, and within the framework of the Ashura operations, the Islamic Resistance said its fighters monitored an Israeli force consisting of an armored unit and an infantry unit attempting to infiltrate toward the northern side of the Ali al-Taher hill," the statement said. 

According to the statement, resistance fighters lured the force into a kill zone before engaging it with various weapons, targeting three Merkava tanks with guided missiles, destroying them and setting them ablaze.

Hezbollah confronts Israeli advances

The Islamic Resistance in Lebanon - Hezbollah released a detailed statement regarding confrontations along the Kfar Tebnit-Ali al-Taher axis in South Lebanon, after four days of failed Israeli attempts to advance toward the area via multiple axes under the cover of aerial surveillance, heavy artillery, and smoke screens. 

The Operations Room stated that its fighters have consistently engaged all Israeli advance attempts by targeting troop movements and concentrations with rockets, drones, and FPVs, inflicting significant losses in personnel and equipment among Israeli officers, soldiers, and armored vehicles.

It added that, as a result of these engagements, Israeli occupation forces were compelled to withdraw and conduct nighttime helicopter evacuations under smoke cover and artillery fire to recover casualties.

According to the statement, on Wednesday, June 17, at 8:00 pm, following the detection of an Israeli infantry unit attempting to establish positions on the northeastern outskirts of Kfar Tebnit, Resistance fighters engaged the force using a swarm of drones and Ababil FPV drones, confirming casualties among its members, including killed and wounded. The operation was subsequently followed by rocket salvos and artillery fire directed at the same area.

Gunfire Erupts Near Niamey Airport Amid Renewed Security Concerns

By Al Mayadeen English

Source: Agencies

18 Jun 2026 15:19

The gunfire was still ongoing about two hours later.

Heavy gunfire broke out near the entrance of Niger's Diori Hamani International Airport in the capital, Niamey, early Thursday, according to local residents, raising fresh security concerns months after the facility was targeted in a major jihadist assault.

"I heard the first shots around 6 o'clock (0500 GMT). The shooting was coming from the airport entrance," one resident told AFP by telephone, adding that the gunfire was still ongoing about two hours later.

A second resident also told AFP that the shooting originated from the airport entrance.

The incident comes several months after an unprecedented attack on the airport in January, which was claimed by the Islamic State in the Sahel (EIS). Nigerien security forces, supported by allied Russian fighters, said they repelled that assault.

The January attack marked a significant escalation, as militant violence had previously been concentrated in other regions of the country rather than the capital.

In the aftermath of the assault, authorities demolished thousands of unauthorized homes in a densely populated neighborhood near the airport, saying militants had infiltrated the area to carry out the operation.

Niger, located in the Sahel region of West Africa, has spent the past decade confronting armed groups affiliated with Al-Qaeda and the Islamic State, with insurgent violence continuing to pose one of the country's most serious security challenges.

Tension as Gunshots Erupt Near Niger Republic Capital’s Airport

June 18, 2026

By Matthew Atungwu

There was pandemonium on Thursday morning when gunfire erupted at the airport in Niger’s capital, Niamey, several months after a major jihadist attack at the facility.

The first shooting, which reportedly took place at 6:00 am, was said to have come from the airport’s entrance and continued two hours later.

DAILY POST recalls that in January, Diori Hamani international airport in the capital was targeted in an unprecedented attack claimed by the Islamic State in the Sahel, EIS, and repelled by Nigerien armed forces and allied Russian fighters.

Before then, jihadist violence in Niger had been contained to other parts of the country.

After the attack, thousands of illegally built homes were torn down in a sprawling neighbourhood near the airport, while authorities said the district had been infiltrated by jihadists to carry out the attack.

DAILY POST reports that Niger, a country in West Africa’s Sahel region, has for a decade battled violence by armed groups linked to Al-Qaeda and the Islamic State group.

Attack on Niamey Airport: Benin Expresses its Solidarity with the Nigerien People

Benin condemned the attack that took place this Thursday, June 18, 2026, near the Diori-Hamani international airport in Niamey. According to the Nigerien Ministry of Defense, eleven soldiers, two civilians, and 22 attackers were killed in this assault repelled by Nigerien forces.

Français (Bénin)

A message in a context of rapprochement between Cotonou and Niamey

Benin condemned the attacks that occurred this Thursday, June 18, 2026, near the Diori-Hamani international airport in Niamey. According to the Nigerien Ministry of Defense, eleven soldiers, two civilians, and 22 attackers were killed during this attack attributed to presumed jihadists.

The Beninese government reacted after the attack targeting the Diori-Hamani international airport area in Niamey early Thursday morning. In a statement issued in Cotonou, Beninese authorities said they learned “with emotion” of the attacks that occurred near this strategic infrastructure of the Nigerien capital.

According to the Nigerien Ministry of Defense, the attack resulted in eleven soldiers dead, two civilians killed, and four injured. On the attacker side, 22 people were killed and 20 suspects were arrested, along with the seizure of weapons and ammunition. The assault was repelled by Nigerien forces, while a large military operation was still ongoing in the area.

The international airport, presented by the authorities as completely secure, remained open to air traffic. The National Civil Aviation Agency indicated that normal activities resumed a few hours after the attack.

An attack repelled near a sensitive site

According to initial reports from witnesses, the attackers tried to stage an incursion around 5 a.m. into the perimeter of the Diori-Hamani international airport. Gunfire and explosions were heard in the area before the defense and security forces repelled the attack.

A local resident cited by Deutsche Welle claims that the attackers arrived in a taxi, while other sources mention two taxis. This information, reported as a testimony, has yet to be officially detailed by the Nigerien authorities.

After the initial exchanges of gunfire, the area was quickly barricaded. Security forces conducted checks around the airport, where access was heavily restricted. According to several testimonies, calm returned in the morning, although the security measures remained heightened.

The attacked site is considered strategic. It houses the international airport of Niamey, a base of the Nigerien air force as well as important military installations. A similar attack had already targeted the airport and the adjacent military base at the end of January 2026, causing several injuries and material damage according to the Nigerien authorities.

Cotonou condemns “with the utmost firmness”

In its statement, the Beninese government strongly condemns the attack and emphasizes the security implications of the event. Cotonou believes that the aggression targets “a strategic civilian infrastructure” and endangers the security of the populations.

“Benin condemns this aggression with the utmost firmness, which targets a strategic civilian infrastructure and jeopardizes the security of the populations,” states the official communiqué.

The Beninese government also sends a message of solidarity to the Nigerien people and the authorities of Niger. “In this painful circumstance, the Beninese Government expresses its full solidarity with the brotherly Nigerien people, as well as with President Abdourahamane Tiani and the authorities of the Republic of Niger,” the text continues.

Cotonou also expresses its “thoughts of support” to the Nigeriens and reaffirms “its attachment to the bonds of brotherhood and friendship that unite the Beninese and Nigerien peoples.”

A message in a context of rapprochement between Cotonou and Niamey

This reaction comes during a period of gradual resumption of dialogue between Benin and Niger. After several months of tensions related to the closure of the common border and the consequences of the coup d’état in July 2023 in Niger, the two countries have initiated new diplomatic exchanges.

The visit of Beninese President Romuald Wadagni to Niamey in early June 2026 marked an important step in this dynamic. It notably paved the way for the establishment of a joint committee tasked with working on the conditions for reopening the border between the two countries.

In this context, Cotonou’s message goes beyond mere security condemnation. It also reflects an expressed desire to maintain friendly relations with Niamey as both states attempt to gradually normalize their relations.

For now, Nigerien authorities attribute the attack to presumed jihadists, but no claims of responsibility had been reported immediately by major news agencies. Security operations are ongoing to establish the exact circumstances of the assault and identify any potential complicity.

African Union Condemns Terrorists Attack On Niamey Airport In Niger Republic

June 18, 2026

“The Chairperson extends his sincere condolences to the families of the victims, as well as to the authorities and people of Niger, and wishes a speedy recovery to those injured,” the statement said.

The Chairperson of the African Union Commission, Mahmoud Ali Youssouf, has condemned the terrorist attack carried out against the International Airport of Niamey, the capital of Niger Republic, on Thursday.

In a statement issued on June 18, 2026, Youssouf described the attack as a threat to regional peace and security, expressing condolences to the families of those killed and solidarity with the people and government of Niger.

“The Chairperson extends his sincere condolences to the families of the victims, as well as to the authorities and people of Niger, and wishes a speedy recovery to those injured,” the statement said.

The African Union chief also praised the swift response of Nigerien Defence and Security Forces, noting that their intervention helped repel the attackers and secure the airport facilities.

“He commends the swift response of the Nigerien Defence and Security Forces, whose actions helped repel the attack and secure the airport facilities,” the statement added.

Youssouf reaffirmed the African Union’s support for Niger as the country continues to battle terrorism and violent extremism, which have plagued several nations across the Sahel region in recent years.

According to the statement, the continental body remains committed to supporting efforts aimed at preserving peace, security and stability across Africa.

“The Chairperson reaffirms the solidarity of the African Union with the Republic of Niger in the fight against terrorism and violent extremism, and reiterates the African Union’s commitment to supporting efforts aimed at preserving peace, security and stability across the continent,” the statement said.

The attack on Niamey’s international airport comes amid growing security concerns in the Sahel, where armed extremist groups have continued to launch attacks on military, civilian and strategic targets despite ongoing counterterrorism operations by governments in the region.

Niger Airport Attack Leaves 35 Dead, Including 22 Assailants

By Bashir Mbuthia

Thursday, June 18, 2026

The confrontation unfolded at Diori Hamani International Airport, a facility that houses a civilian terminal and military airbase within the same complex.

Security forces engaged armed assailants at Niger’s main airport in Niamey on Thursday, killing 22 of them during an assault that also left 11 soldiers and two civilians dead, officials have reported.

The confrontation unfolded at Diori Hamani International Airport, a facility that houses a civilian terminal and military airbase within the same complex.

Reports indicate that the attack, which occurred shortly after dawn, triggered gunfire and explosions that were heard in surrounding neighbourhoods. Residents described confusion in the early moments, with some initially mistaking the noise for routine disturbances before the intensity of the fighting became clear. Niger authorities later confirmed the casualties after operations at the airport were concluded.

A search operation was subsequently launched to track down assailants who may have escaped during the incident, with reports indicating that several suspects were detained as the response continued.

“The attackers mixed in with the local population, so finding them was not easy. Civilians picked up machetes and sticks to defend themselves and to strike anyone they did not recognise who came their way,” a resident told the BBC.

No group has claimed responsibility for the attack, which comes less than five months after a similar incident at the facility in January, when 20 assailants were killed and four soldiers wounded. The Islamic State later confirmed responsibility for the attack.

The General Abdourahmane Tiani-led nation continues to face sporadic attacks linked to armed groups operating across the Sahel region, where military governments, including Mali and Burkina Faso, have struggled to contain insurgent violence linked to Al-Qaeda and Islamic State-affiliated groups.

In April, for instance, armed groups attacked several locations across Mali, including in the capital, Bamako, in an apparent escalation of violence across the country. The attacks, which occurred on the morning of April 25, targeted multiple locations across the country.

As the situation unfolded, media reports highlighted the scale of the violence, particularly in Bamako, where gunfire and explosions were heard near the city’s main airport, an area that also hosts an air force base. Mali’s defence minister, Sadio Camara, was killed during the coordinated attacks.

Niger: Gunfire Reported Around Niamey Airport

Niamey international airport

18 June 2026

allAfrica.com

By Mame Maïmouna Sy

Gunfire was reported on the morning of Thursday, June 18, 2026, around Niamey International Airport in Niger. According to several corroborating sources, the shooting lasted for nearly two hours before the situation gradually returned to calm.

According to information reported by RFI, armed assailants reportedly managed to enter the airport area. By midday, security forces were still conducting sweep operations in the vicinity to secure the site and identify those responsible for the attack.

Authorities have also reinforced security measures at several strategic locations across the capital. Areas surrounding the presidential palace and the prime minister’s office were sealed off by defense and security forces.

At this stage, no official casualty or damage assessment has been released. The identity of the attackers and the motives behind the assault have yet to be determined.

A Previous Attack in January 2026

The incident comes just months after a major attack targeting Niamey Airport and the adjacent military base in late January 2026. That assault, which lasted several hours, was later claimed by the Islamic State group.

According to Nigerien authorities, the operation was repelled by the Nigerien Armed Forces (FAN), with support from their Russian partners. The official toll reported four people injured as well as significant material damage.

At the time, the head of Niger’s military regime, General Abdourahamane Tiani, had acknowledged a security breach that enabled the attackers to carry out the operation. He stated that one of the attackers’ objectives was to damage the operational air capabilities of the Nigerien military.

The events of June 18 have once again raised concerns about the security of the country’s strategic infrastructure, as Niger continues to face persistent security challenges in several regions of its territory.

Jihadists Attacked an Airport in the Capital of Niger, at Least 13 People Killed

June 18 2026 11:16 PM 

At least 11 servicemen and two civilians were killed in an attack on the airport in Niger's capital Niamey. The Islamist group JNIM, linked to the terrorist network Al-Qaeda, has claimed responsibility for the attack, reports AFP, writes UNN.

According to eyewitnesses, the attack began at dawn on June 19 and lasted several hours. During the fighting, Nigerien security forces eliminated over 20 attackers, and about two dozen militants were detained.

The JNIM group has been active in the Sahel countries in recent years and has repeatedly carried out attacks on military and civilian targets in the region. The attack on the capital's airport has become one of the most high-profile incidents in Niger in recent times.

Niger has been under the rule of a military government that came to power after a coup for three years. Against this backdrop, Islamist groups have intensified their armed activities and regularly attack government forces in various parts of the country.

Gunmen Attack Niger Airport, Killing 11 Soldiers and 2 Civilians, Officials Say

By WILSON MCMAKIN

2:51 PM EDT, June 18, 2026

DAKAR, Senegal (AP) — Gunmen attacked the main airport in Niger’s capital early Thursday, killing 11 soldiers and two civilians in an exchange of fire that also left 22 of the attackers dead, authorities said.

Niger’s Defense Ministry said in a statement that the attack in Niamey was foiled and that 20 suspects were arrested along with weapons and ammunition.

Witnesses reported gunfire and explosions during the attack, and an Associated Press journalist saw soldiers searching people on the road to the airport in the aftermath of the violence.

Hours later, the National Civil Aviation Agency said the airport was operating normally.

Niger, led by a military junta since a 2023 coup, has struggled to contain deadly jihadi violence that has battered parts of Africa’s Sahel region, including neighbors Burkina Faso and Mali that are also run by military juntas.

It was the second attack at Diori Hamani International Airport in Niamey this year, after the Islamic State group claimed responsibility for a similar attack in January that targeted Niger’s drone assets.

The airport is a strategic hub that hosts a Nigerien air force base as well as the headquarters of the Niger-Burkina Faso-Mali joint military force.

The military has beefed up the airport security following the January attack, but jihadis in Niger and the wider region continue to pose serious threats, analysts say.

“The symbolism of the airport as headquarters for AES will drive intent by militants to target it,” said Beverly Ochieng, a senior security analyst at Control Risks, referring to the regional Alliance of Sahel States.

Wednesday, June 17, 2026

National Urban League Says African Americans Are in Recession

Unemployment rates are twice that of whites as attacks on Civil Rights and DEI have worsened prospects for jobs and economic growth

By Abayomi Azikiwe

Editor, Pan-African News Wire

Wednesday June 17, 2026

Political Review

In a recently released report by the National Urban League (NUL), it illustrates that African Americans are in a deep recession attributed to government policies under the administration of President Donald Trump.

It is no secret that the administration has deliberately targeted African Americans and other oppressed communities under the guise of eliminating any form of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion.

These attacks have resulted in massive job losses particularly within the federal government which the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) facilitated under the initial leadership of Elon Musk. While the African American people have borne the brunt of these job cuts, spending for domestic repression against migrants has increased creating turmoil across the United States. 

Not only has the job losses impacted the social status of African Americans, in the southern states where the majority of them still reside, the recent Louisiana v. Callais decision by the Supreme Court has threatened to remove many members of the House of Representatives who are members of the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC). The Voting Rights Act of 1965, Section 2, has been rendered practically moot. 

The Supreme Court along with the southern state legislatures dominated by the Republican MAGA adherents have already redrawn districts to effectively disenfranchise millions of African Americans. In Memphis, the one district which encompasses a majority African American constituency has been broken up into three sections. 

Although Louisiana has an African American population which is one-third of the entire state, their representation is further threatened by the Supreme Court and the legislature. These developments are being replicated across the South.

The combination of job losses and the right to elect representatives of their choice will only result in a renewal of the national-oppressive conditions which have been in operation since the collapse of federal reconstruction during the latter decades of the 19th century. After the passage of the post-Civil War 13th, 14th and 15th Amendments to the U.S. Constitution, prospects for democratization in the U.S. brought African Americans to state legislatures, the House of Representatives and Senate. However, by the late 1870s and 1880s there was the dissolution of Black representation in government on local, state and federal levels.

It would take another 80 years to pass the Civil Rights Acts of 1957 and 1964. The Voting Rights Act of 1965 was passed as a result of profound sacrifices of African Americans and their allies throughout the U.S.

Nonetheless, during the third decade of the 21st century there have been tremendous setbacks as reflected in events of the last 17 months. Leading elements within the 6-3 majority at the Supreme Court have proven their extreme hostility towards Civil Rights for African Americans whether related to the job market, higher education and universal suffrage. Under the guise of a false sense of eliminating “racial preferences”, the oppression and exploitation of African Americans have intensified.

In a statement issued by the National Urban League during June, it says of the present situation:

“For Black America, the recession has already arrived. Even worse, the Black recession isn’t driven by natural market cycles alone. It is the predictable outcome of the deliberate policy choices of the Trump administration —choices that have aggressively dismantled the very protections meant to advance equity and stabilize communities historically shut out of opportunity. Not only did the administration take a sledgehammer to federal diversity, equity, and inclusion programs on Day One, it has spent the last year slashing agencies that have long served as engines of mobility for Black workers, including the federal civil service. More than 327,000 federal jobs have been eliminated, not through attrition or organizational modernization, but through deliberate cuts that have eroded pathways to the middle class built through generations of civil‑rights gains.” (https://nul.org/news/black-america-already-recession)

Historically African American unemployment has always been higher than that of whites. The level of household wealth has also been unequal. This was further aggravated in the first decades of the 21st century due to the predatory lending by financial institutions which robbed the African American people of the bulk of their equity in housing. 

After the collapse in the housing market between 2007-2011, conditions have only worsened for the African American people. The loss of household income and wealth is further aggravated by the disproportionate incarceration rates between African Americans and whites.

Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies Reinforces the NUL Position

A Black-led think tank, the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies (JCPES), through its monitoring of the U.S. economy and its impact on African Americans reinforces the contention of the NUL. Although they say that there has been some improvement in the job market over the last several months, it will remain unclear whether this is actually true due to the often readjustments of employment figures in the U.S.

Moreover, an escalation in racist violence against African Americans by the police and vigilantes inevitably damages economic prospects and social mobility. These racist attacks in southern states such as South Carolina, Texas and other areas, has demonstrated the hostility by the broader white society. 

As African Americans continue to be stereotyped as criminals, their prospects for economic advancement will remain bleak. In addition to the targeting of oppressed people for arrest, prosecution, imprisonment and murder, the elimination of affirmative action and DEI will only hamper their efforts to find viable employment.

In a report issued by the JCPES during June, it says that:

“May’s jobs report brought some encouraging news for Black workers. The Black unemployment rate fell from 7.3 percent in April to 6.6 percent in May, a meaningful one-month drop. The number of Black workers with jobs also increased by 101,000. Black women saw notable improvement. Their unemployment rate fell from 6.9 percent in April to 6 percent in May. Black men also saw a decline, though smaller, with their unemployment rate falling from 7.6 percent to 7.3 percent. The report also shows why one month of progress should be viewed with caution. Black unemployment is still higher than it was a year ago, when it stood at 6 percent in May 2025. In other words, May’s improvement is welcome, but it also reflects a partial recovery from recent setbacks. The picture is also more troubling for young Black workers. Their unemployment rate rose from 13.4 percent in April to 14.1 percent in May. That increase suggests that younger Black workers are not benefiting from the labor market in the same way as older workers. Those challenges are part of a larger pattern. At 6.6 percent, Black unemployment continues to be the highest among major racial groups. It is well above the unemployment rates for White and Asian workers, both at 3.8 percent, and Hispanic workers at 5 percent. It is also higher than the national unemployment rate of 4.3 percent.” (https://jointcenter.org/may-2026-jobs-day-analysis/)

Gendered Oppression Escalates

These developments give weight to the notion that the African American people are an oppressed nation within the U.S. They have and continue to be the “last hired and first fired” within the labor market. 

Moreover, African American women have been special targets of the MAGA administration through the layoffs in the public sector especially within the federal government. Trump’s opprobrium directed against African American women cannot be denied. 

The National Partnership website makes this point in an article by Jessica Mason and Katherine Gallagher, which says:

“The Trump administration’s harm to Black women continues a long history of racist policymaking that has deliberately impaired Black women’s economic security and well-being. As National Partnership President Jocelyn Frye writes, ‘Black women have a long history as workers in the United States – from the early horrors of their traumatic, involuntary arrival as forced slave laborers to their present-day reality where they must navigate persistent gender and racial norms and expectations about workplace roles and job advancement opportunities.’” (https://nationalpartnership.org/weak-job-market-leaves-black-women-behind-jobsday-feb-2026/)

A renewed campaign of resistance is therefore required to address the present conjuncture. African Americans must take the lead since they are the most impacted by the MAGA imposed austerity, discrimination and state repression. 

Despite the heightened discriminatory policies, economic and political pressure can still be effective tools in fighting oppression. If African Americans withdrew a fraction of their purchasing power, it would further negatively impact the profit margins of the ruling class corporations which have gone along enthusiastically with the Trump program.

Also, mass demonstrations and other forms of resistance could shift the balance of political forces since it could easily attract other elements within the working class into a broader struggle aimed at moving away from monopoly capitalism towards a socialist program of renewal. Labor must be activated in a mobilization effort to reverse the economic decline while enhancing the power of the working class in an anti-capitalist movement, encompassing millions throughout the U.S.

Memorandum of Understanding Between Iran and United States Already Violated by Tel Aviv in South Lebanon

Reports indicate that more than 80 times the occupation forces have attacked the people of Lebanon while the killing of Palestinians continue

By Abayomi Azikiwe

Editor, Pan-African News Wire

Wednesday June 17, 2026

Political Review

On June 15, an agreement between the Islamic Republic of Iran and the United States was announced.

Nonetheless, the leadership within the State of Israel stated openly that it was not bound by this Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) which had been negotiated indirectly between Washington and Tehran. 

Pakistan and Oman facilitated the terms of the MoU after both Washington and Tel Aviv launched unprovoked targeted assassinations and bombings against Iran on February 28. During the war which lasted more than 100 days, U.S. President Donald Trump threatened and carried out numerous war crimes against the people of Iran. 

On April 7, Trump declared the Pentagon would destroy the nearly 3,000-year-old civilization of the people of Iran. He went on to say that the civilization which emanated from ancient Persia would be eviscerated, never to return. Just hours after making these statements, the White House said it would halt hostilities against Tehran. 

Such a proclamation evoked the potential of nuclear strikes along with the bombing of bridges, hospitals and other infrastructure. The U.S. and Israel had already destroyed research centers, universities, government buildings as well as a synagogue located in the center of the capital of Iran. 

All the while Iran along with the Hezbollah resistance movement based in Lebanon refused to back down in the face of imperialist and zionist aggression. The Islamic Revolution Guard Corps (IRGC) rapidly moved to take control of the strategic Strait of Hormuz prompting sharp rises in fuel and other commodity prices throughout the world. Hezbollah and the IRGC launched thousands of drones and ballistic missiles into the Occupied Territories. In addition, the Pentagon bases throughout West Asia located in the United Arab Emirates, the Kingdom of Bahrain, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Jordan were struck by Iranian weapons doing massive damage.

Concurrently, the closest North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) allies of Washington refused to be dragged into the bombing campaign against Iran. British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer made his position clear in early March that the Labor Party government would not join the aggression against Iran. 

The war has proven to be extremely unpopular in the U.S. even among the Republican MAGA adherents. The high price of gasoline is an important factor in the unfavorable ratings among the electorate related to the performance of the Trump administration. Unemployment is rising as small and medium-sized businesses have been negatively impacted. Large corporations within the manufacturing and tech industries have been eliminating jobs in the hundreds of thousands. 

The recent utterances of the U.S. administration are designed, at least in part, to lower prices and drive up the stock markets internationally. Yet, it will take more than dubious statements to stabilize the world capitalist system. 

Iran, Hezbollah in Lebanon and the Yemen resistance forces of the Ansar Allah have proven their capacity to destabilize the regional order in West Asia. The actions of the resistance forces have illustrated the geostrategic limitations of the imperialists and their zionists surrogates. Despite the aircraft carriers and warships deployed to the Persian Gulf, they failed in their attempts to intimidate the revolutionary forces throughout the region.

The “Good Cop, Bad Cop” Games of Washington and Tel Aviv

In a report published by Al Mayadeen on the recent MoU, it said that:

“Iran's Khatam al-Anbiya Headquarters warned Tuesday that the Israeli army should expect a ‘harsh response’ from Iran's mighty armed forces if it does not halt its aggression in South Lebanon. ‘If the Zionist entity's army does not cease its aggression in south Lebanon, it should expect a harsh response from Iran's mighty armed forces,’ the statement read. The headquarters said the IOF had violated the ceasefire in south Lebanon 84 times over the past two days, despite US President Donald Trump's announcement of an end to the war, [Israel] continues to ‘commit crimes and massacres against the oppressed Lebanese people.’" (https://english.almayadeen.net/news/politics/iran-vows-harsh-response-if--israel--does-not-halt-lebanon-a)

Iranian government officials stressed again that the situation in Lebanon is covered in the MoU and that the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) must halt its aggression. Although Trump has attempted to make it appear as if he is opposed to what the Israelis are doing in Lebanon, there has been no halt to weapons supplies to Tel Aviv.

Trump did say that Israel would not exist without U.S. imperialism, nonetheless, the White House and Congress have failed to reign in its junior partners in occupied Palestine. If the U.S. would halt all military and material assistance to Tel Aviv these comments would make more sense. However, as long as the weapons and bombs continue to flow into the Israeli state, these purported disagreements between Tel Aviv and Washington are nothing more than political theater aimed at saving face in light of the failures of the Pentagon to secure the overthrow of the Iranian government. 

The taxpayer dollars of working people in the U.S. are propping up the zionist state. Washington provides intelligence to the occupation forces while they intensify the displacement and genocide against the Palestinians. 

Thousands of Palestinians remain detained in Israeli prisons subjected to dehumanizing torture while more than 73,000 people in Gaza have been slaughtered since October 2023. The supply of missiles for the so-called “iron dome” over the occupied territories has failed to fully intercept incoming ordnance from Iran, Lebanon and Yemen. Consequently, the billions spent on purportedly securing the continuation of the apartheid state occupying Palestine have proven ineffective.

In the West Bank, Palestinians are still being driven from their homes and farms. Violent settler-colonialists act with impunity as they illegally evict Arabs and turned over their homes and remaining land to zionists from as far away as the U.S.

In the same above-mentioned article from Al Mayadeen, it reports on the ongoing situation in Lebanon and the commitment of Tehran to defend its allies in the region, noting:

“The warning comes after Israeli occupation forces killed four people and wounded several others in a series of attacks on the town of Mayfadoun in south Lebanon on Tuesday afternoon, including a deliberate second strike on residents who had gathered at the scene of an earlier attack. According to Al Mayadeen's correspondent in South Lebanon, IOF first bombed a car in Mayfadoun before attacking the same area again after residents had gathered. A second car in the town was then bombed, followed by a third car in the nearby town of Shoukin, bringing the total to three vehicles struck and one gathering of civilians hit.”

There cannot be any sustainable peace in West Asia as long as the occupation of Palestine and Lebanon continue. The MoU is theoretically a two-stage process of first securing a viable ceasefire and later the convening of talks on broader strategic issues such as the lifting of sanctions against Iran and the IDF withdrawal from southern Lebanon. 

The principal foreign policy objective of the Islamic Republic of Iran is the liberation of Palestine from settler-colonial occupation. This is why both Tel Aviv and Washington are attempting to overthrow the government in Tehran. 

The Existence of Imperialism Cannot Continue Without Unprovoked Wars of Aggression

Even though Trump claimed during his two presidential campaigns that he was opposed to “never ending wars” in West Asia and other geo-political regions, the reality of his administration is quite the opposite. Since taking office for the second time in January 2025, the overall security situation in the world has severely worsened.

In Venezuela, the administration invaded the country and kidnapped President Nicolas Maduro and First Lady Cicilia Flores who both remain in detention in New York. The Republic of Cuba has seen an intensified blockade resulting in food deficits, vast power outages and threats of a military invasion. The former President Raul Castro has been indicted by a Florida court for defending the socialist state from a destabilization attempt over thirty years ago.

Efforts aimed at the destabilization of South Africa is reflected in the false accusations of genocide against the white population during 2025 and the current attempts through violence by mobs against Africans from other states on the continent. International sports are utilized as mechanisms to foster racism and white supremacy by denying visas to World Cup soccer players and a Somalian referee. 

Antiwar and social justice organizations in the U.S. must view all of these actions by imperialism and zionism as coordinated attempts to strengthen these oppressive and exploitative systems of dominance. The people within the industrialized capitalist states must join forces with the progressive and revolutionary elements in the Global South to guarantee genuine peace and stability throughout the world.

A 16-month-old and His Mother Recover from Ebola in Rare Good News from Outbreak in DR Congo

By JUSTIN KABUMBA

10:05 AM EDT, June 17, 2026

BUNIA, Congo (AP) — A 16-month-old baby and his mother have recovered from Ebola in eastern Congo, a rare positive development as Africa’s top health body warned the outbreak of the deadly virus could become the worst on record if it continues to spread.

The two left the Rwampara Treatment Center on Tuesday, near Bunia, in Ituri province, the epicenter of the outbreak, along with five other people who also recovered from Ebola.

“The joy is immense given the state he was in at first,” Kahindo Mireille Pierrette said of her infant. “If you had seen him before, you wouldn’t believe he could have this strength now,” she added.

Pierrette said she brought her child to the treatment center at the end of May, after he started bleeding from the mouth and nose and could barely move.

Modet Camara, a doctor at the center, said the baby was treated with antibiotics after a PCR test came back positive for Ebola on his second day at the hospital.

Congo’s Ministry of Health said Tuesday that 837 cases of the virus have been confirmed so far, including 196 confirmed deaths. However, the number of cases is believed to be higher because the outbreak was confirmed on May 15, weeks after it is suspected to have begun.

Since the outbreak was declared in mid-May, 49 have recovered, the ministry said.

The outbreak is caused by the rare Bundibugyo virus, which has no approved treatment or vaccine. The more common Zaire virus, which now has a vaccine, was responsible for most of Congo’s past 16 outbreaks of the disease.

More than 90% of the cases in the current outbreak are concentrated in Congo’s eastern province of Ituri. Cases have also been recorded in the North Kivu and South Kivu provinces and have spread across the border to Uganda.

The head of Africa’s Centres for Disease Control and Prevention warned Tuesday that the outbreak could become the worst on record, noting that tens of thousands of contacts of infected patients have yet to be traced.

“If we don’t stop the outbreak very soon it will be worse than what we had in West Africa and eastern ‌DRC,” ⁠Africa CDC Director-General Jean Kaseya said during a virtual meeting of African heads of state.

An outbreak a decade ago across several countries in West Africa was the worst on record, with more than 28,000 cases and more than 11,000 deaths.

Nearly a million people have been displaced by years of conflict in Ituri, according to the U.N. humanitarian office, making contact tracing difficult as people flee attacks or move frequently in the vast province with dense forests, poor roads and remote villages that can take days to reach.

Tracing is also difficult among the thousands of miners who regularly move among remote sites in the mineral-rich region.

Uganda Court Charges Lawyer for Jailed Ugandan Opposition Leader with Concealing Treason

By RODNEY MUHUMUZA

11:03 AM EDT, June 17, 2026

KAMPALA, Uganda (AP) — A court in Uganda on Wednesday charged an attorney for a jailed opposition leader with concealing treason, escalating a dispute with the country’s army chief whom the lawyer sought to hold accountable for alleged abuses.

Erias Lukwago was charged before a magistrate’s court in Kampala, the Ugandan capital, days after he was seized and taken into custody on the orders of army chief Gen. Muhoozi Kainerugaba.

Lukwago was charged with “misprision of treason,” a crime that the presiding magistrate said stems from his alleged failure to report acts of treason by others. He has denied the charges.

Lukwago, the president of the People’s Front for Freedom opposition group, is an attorney for Kizza Besigye, a four-time presidential candidate who is jailed over treason charges in a separate case that his supporters see as politically motivated. Lukwago, a former mayor of Kampala, is an outspoken critic of President Yoweri Museveni and his son Kainerugaba.

The manner of Lukwago’s arrest, by soldiers who scaled the perimeter wall protecting his house, shocked many and raised concerns about the expanding powers of Kainerugaba, who wrote on social platform X that Lukwago would suffer “hurt and pain” and could spend 10 years in jail. Kainerugaba is active on X, where he frequently attacks his perceived opponents.

Although Museveni was sworn in for a seventh consecutive term last month, Kainerugaba has since emerged as Uganda’s de facto leader. He asserts that he will succeed his father in the presidency, an increasingly likely possibility as his 81-year-old father relies heavily on his son’s military authority.

Kainerugaba appears to have retaliated against Lukwago, who told reporters before his arrest that he intended to hold the army chief accountable for his alleged role in the violation of Besigye’s rights — including his abduction in Nairobi, the Kenyan capital, in November 2024 and his subsequent jailing without bail in Uganda. Kainerugaba has threatened to hang Besigye, accusing him of plotting to kill Museveni.

“This fool will learn the lesson he has been begging for,” Kainerugaba said on Monday, expressing anger on X over Lukwago’s attempt to present him with court papers. He later posted photos of a blindfolded Lukwago appearing to beg for mercy.

The Uganda Law Society demanded Lukwago’s immediate release, saying his arrest was contemptuous of court processes.

Museveni, who has ruled Uganda since 1986, has not said when he will retire. He has no rivals within the ruling party, the reason many believe the military will have a say in choosing his successor.

Kainerugaba’s associates describe him as a dedicated military officer who often eschews ostentatious displays of wealth. He attended military schools in the U.S. and Britain before taking charge of a presidential guard unit that has since been expanded into an elite group of special forces. His father named him the top military commander in 2024.

In addition to his military duties, he is the founder of a political activist group known as the Patriotic League of Uganda. Its members and well-wishers range from government ministers to businesspeople.

Kainerugaba said this week that even the parliamentary speaker and his deputy work for him as his group’s envoys to the legislature.

Migrants Clash with Police at a Deportation Site in South Africa Where Thousands Have Gathered

2:14 PM EDT, June 17, 2026

JOHANNESBURG (AP) — Police fired rubber bullets and used stun grenades against migrants protesting Wednesday near a community hall in South Africa where thousands are being processed for deportation by authorities.

The clashes came as tensions over immigration surge in Africa’s richest country following a series of anti-migrant marches and reports of attacks on some foreign nationals.

The migrants who gathered near the hall in the eastern city of Durban are mainly Malawians who initially turned up there more than a week ago to be voluntarily repatriated to their home country on buses provided by their government, authorities said.

The premier of KwaZulu-Natal Province, where Durban is, has said nearly 10,000 Malawians have been camping in a park near the hall waiting to go home.

But delays in that process have led South African authorities to establish an immigration court at the hall and implement “formal deportation processes,” according to the Ministry of Home Affairs.

Video broadcast by South African television stations showed groups of protesters throwing rocks, sticks and logs at police in the streets near the hall, and police officers responding with stun grenades and rubber bullets.

Local media reported the clashes involving small groups of migrants erupted because of frustrations at the delays in them returning home.

The Home Affairs Ministry said at least 1,876 people among those gathered have been identified as being in South Africa without proper documents and would be deported. Efforts to verify the immigration status of others were ongoing, and the mayor of Durban said more than 6,000 Malawians could ultimately be deported.

Malawi is one of at least five African countries to repatriate some of their citizens from South Africa, citing threats and violent attacks on them. Malawi has already repatriated hundreds of people on buses.

Nigeria, Ghana, Mozambique and Zimbabwe have also provided flights or buses for some of their citizens to leave South Africa.

South Africa’s government has condemned a spate of attacks on foreigners sparked by a recent rise in anti-migrant sentiment from some groups.

South Africa, the most developed economy in Africa, is in the midst of a crackdown on immigration and has in the last two years deported more than 100,000 people who were living in the country illegally, according to the Home Affairs Ministry.

During that time, more than 500,000 others were sent back to their countries of origin after being stopped at a border trying to enter South Africa illegally, according to the ministry.

South Africa Secures $1bn from BRICS Bank for Urban Infrastructure

Government representatives from BRICS countries and partner countries pose for a photo at the BRICS foreign ministers' meeting in New Delhi, India, Thursday, May 14, 2026

Brics Summit

The New Development Bank (NDB) has approved $1 billion for South Africa's infrastructure upgrades.

The funds will support investment in the provision of essential ​urban services, including water supply and sanitation, electricity and solid waste management in eight South African municipalities, Reuters reported citing a statement from the the bank.

The benefiting municipalities are Johannesburg, Cape Town, Buffalo City, Ekurhuleni, eThekwini, Mangaung, Nelson ​Mandela Bay ​and Tshwane.

NDB was set up in 2015 by BRICS countries Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa.

It mainly lends to infrastructure projects such as energy, roads and ports.

South Africa's infrastructure gap was estimated at between $254-329 billion for 2022-2030, according to the bank.

South Africa's DA Drops Ex-leader Steenhuisen from Cabinet

South Africa's Democratic Alliance, the second-largest party in the fragile coalition government, on Wednesday demoted former leader John Steenhuisen from the cabinet months before local elections.

The reshuffle comes ahead of November's local government elections, a key test for the party following the formation of the 10-party coalition government in 2024.

Geordin Hill-Lewis, the Cape Town mayor who took over as party leader in April, had asked President Cyril Ramaphosa to remove Steenhuisen as agriculture minister, the DA said in a statement.

Steenhuisen will be replaced by Willie Aucamp, the current environment minister, and will take up a role as deputy minister of trade, industry and competition.

The changes follow a "careful assessment" of the party's representation in government, the DA said, adding that the renewed team would strengthen its contribution to the coalition.

"We believe in accountability in public office, high standards of performance, and responsiveness to the needs of South Africans," the party said.

The centre-right joined government after the African National Congress (ANC) lost its 30-year majority in the 2024 national elections amid voter disillusionment with corruption and mismanagement.

The DA holds six cabinet positions compared to 20 for the ANC.

Formed in 2000 as a merger of three mostly white parties, the DA, which runs on a liberal, free-market agenda, has struggled to stave off its white, middle-class identity and win over black voters.

Africa Urgently Needs More Fish Farms, UN Tells Ocean Conference

GRACE EKPU

By AFP

Kenya

Africa needs to urgently expand its fish-farming sector to meet its food needs, the head of the UN's fisheries division said Tuesday, even as its latest report found record production levels globally.

Fish and seafood is now a $184-billion trade, according to the State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture report by the United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), launched at the Our Ocean Conference in Kenya.

Fish-farming, or "aquaculture", overtook traditional "capture" fishing as a source of food production in 2021 and has continued to grow -- surpassing 100 million tonnes for the first time in 2024, the latest year for data.

But Africa is lagging behind the rest of the world, with only 18 percent of its fish coming from farms, compared to around half elsewhere.

Sub-Saharan Africa's fish production will need to grow by 68 percent between now and 2050 to keep up with its rapidly growing population, the FAO said.

"It's an opportunity waiting to be exploited... but it's whether the timing is sufficiently fast to catch up with that demand," Manuel Barange, director of the FAO's fisheries division, told AFP.

"Aquaculture can actually be a game-changer," he said. "If we manage to develop aquaculture in Africa, there's a lot of opportunities."

But governments urgently need to create regulations and incentives to attract investors, Barange added.

More than 700 different species of fish are raised for consumption on aquaculture farms around the world and the FAO argues it is a more predictable and sustainable approach than traditional fishing at sea.

It is also more manageable in the face of climate change, which is causing rapid changes in the volumes and locations of ocean fish.

Climate change is "a disruptor of everything that we do," said Barange.

More work is also needed to reduce over-fishing: the report found that only 62 percent of global fisheries were sustainably fished.

The 11th edition of the Our Ocean Conference began in the Kenyan port city of Mombasa on Tuesday -- its first time in Africa -- bringing together politicians, NGOs, investors and innovators.

Since its first edition in 2014, organisers boast that it has led to more than 2,900 commitments valued at over $169 billion, covering marine conservation, sustainable fisheries, climate adaptation, security and pollution reduction.

Ex-OPEC President Diezani Alison-Madueke Cleared of Bribery in UK Trial

The first woman president of OPEC and Nigeria's former oil minister, Diezani Alison-Madueke, was cleared of bribery charges in a UK trial Wednesday, her defence lawyers said in a statement.

"Diezani Alison-Madueke was cleared of six charges of bribery at Southwark Crown Court on 17 June 2026, after a five-month trial," defence lawyer Jonathan Laidlaw said in a press release.

The trial was brought by the UK's National Crime Agency (NCA), which targets serious organised and international crime, after a years-long investigation concerning alleged offences between 2011 and 2015.

Laidlaw told the jury at the London court in January that there was a "gross delay" in the charges being brought, resulting in "a great deal of material which would have established her innocence" being denied.

She had been accused of accepting "financial or other advantages" from individuals linked to two energy companies that had secured contracts with Nigeria's state-owned petroleum corporation when she was the country's oil minister.

Alison-Madueke had also been accused by prosecutors of enjoying a "life of luxury" funded by those interested in the lucrative oil and gas contracts.

Her lifestyle was described as involving chauffeur-driven cars, a private jet flight to Nigeria and refurbishment work and staff costs at several London properties.

Her defence maintained that records proving her innocence had "disappeared" and that she could no longer access papers at home in Nigeria as her passport had been retained by British police since her first arrest 11 years ago.

President of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) between 2014 and 2015, Alison-Madueke has been involved in numerous legal cases around the world, including in the United States.

She has been on bail in Britain since she was first arrested in October 2015. In 2023, she was formally charged with accepting bribes, which she denied.

She had a British address at the time of the alleged offences, according to the prosecution.

Jacqueline Mosley, First African American and Woman Mayor in Yeadon’s History, Dies at 91

Tribune Staff Report

Jacqueline Bogle Mosley

Jacqueline Delores Bogle Mosley, the first African American and first female mayor in Yeadon’s 105-year history, died Thursday, June 11. She was 91.

Affectionately called “Jacque” by family and friends, Mosley was born in Lynchburg, Virginia, the second-born and eldest daughter of John D. Bogle Sr., vice president and advertising director for The Philadelphia Tribune, and Roslyn Woods Bogle, a homemaker and columnist.

Mosley grew up in a house on North 10th Street in Darby, Pennsylvania, later moving with her family to Lincoln Avenue in Yeadon in her late teens. She was a gentle and obedient child who had a great deal of respect for both of her parents. Some say Mosley’s even-tempered personality was a trait she picked up from her mother — no one ever really heard Jacque yell — yet she knew how to stand up for what she believed.

Mosley attended Darby public schools and was known as an excellent student and competitive field hockey player. Both of Mosley’s parents stressed the importance of education, and she often noted that she and all nine of her siblings attended college despite coming from a large family.

Mosley earned her bachelor’s degree from Cheyney University and her master’s degree from Temple University. Her studies in education led her to a career as an elementary school teacher and reading specialist at James Rhoads Elementary School for 21 years and John Reynolds Elementary School for 18 years.

In her early 20s, Jacque married Walter Mosley, and from that marriage came her two beloved children, Mark Mosley and Méchelle Palmer. They moved to Providence Road in 1957, and Mosley lived on that block for the rest of her life, long after her divorce, befriending neighbors who became family along the way — the Fosters, the Paynes and the Scotts, who took care of one another over the decades they made Providence Road home.

Another home for Mosley was Union Memorial United Methodist Church in Darby. It was here that she met a group of friends she called “The Magnificent 7.” This close-knit group included her best friend and “bonus sister,” Thelma Whittington. Whittington said the group worked “like beavers” to do anything that needed to be done for the church. Mosley was the superintendent of Sunday school, part of the Inspirational Choir, a member of the pastor-parish relations committee, and a chair for Women’s Day, Vacation Bible School and the trustee board.

While she would later climb the political ladder in Yeadon Borough Hall, her seat on borough council was especially meaningful. Her father ran for borough council in 1955. In a speech she gave after joining the council in 1994, Mosley said, “What sticks with me was not that he lost, but his belief that Yeadon, one day, could and would change to reflect (all of its people).” While on borough council, she realized the impact she could have if she ran for mayor, stating, “I saw, and see daily, a whole new opportunity to make a difference.”

In her 1997 history-making run for mayor, Jacque ran against 16-year incumbent Republican Mayor James Mollan Jr. In November, she won by a 2-1 margin. “My dear father planted that seed in me way back then — a seed that blossomed on the day when I was sworn in not only as the first African American mayor but also the first woman mayor in the borough’s 105-year history,” she said proudly.

Mosley was sworn in with her brother Robert by her side, holding their father’s Bible under her hand. It was a sweet victory.

When Mosley stepped down from her position as mayor in 2009, she was 75. She continued to push for change in her community, even as a resident of the borough she called home. She also continued to serve as a member of the Yeadon Public Library Board of Trustees, a leader at Union Memorial, a member of the Mercy Fitzgerald board of directors and a mentor to many.

While her public achievements and work in the community were groundbreaking and admirable, Mosley seemed equally proud of being a mother and grandmother. As busy as she was, her children never knew it. She always made the time to be a mother, and the same could be said for her four grandchildren — Mark and Pamela Mosley’s daughters, Sherea and Janelle, and Méchelle and Hermond “Scoot” Palmer’s daughter and son, Jacqueline and Jordan — who affectionately called Mosley “MumMum.”

Every summer, she invited all four grandchildren to stay with her. In later years, they held a “Grands Weekend” together at least twice a year to keep the tradition going.

Although Jacque was in her late 70s and early 80s, she maintained her zest for life and adventurous spirit. She continued to travel, even taking her grandchildren on a trip to Mexico in 2017. There, even the guides leading the ATV excursion were surprised to learn Mosley was 83 when she joined her grandchildren for the ride.

Throughout her life, Jacque loved teddy bears and bridge — a card game she learned from her mother and at which she reached “master” level. All who knew her also knew she loved the Philadelphia Eagles. Mosley went to her brother Robert’s home each Sunday, and if he was not showing the game during football season, she would tell him, “I’m going home.”

Mosley’s daily dinner prayer always ended with “and make us always mindful of the needs of others,” a constant reminder and call to service for herself and those around her. As her children point out, Mosley not only spoke this civic-minded belief — she lived it.

Mosley was preceded in death by her parents, brother John Bogle and sister Roslynn Bogle. She leaves to cherish her memory and carry on her legacy: her beloved children, Mark (Sylvia) and Méchelle (Hermond); her treasured grandchildren, Sherea, Janelle, Jacqueline and Jordan; her siblings, Robert Bogle, Donald Bogle, Jeanne Charleston, Janet (Jerry) Schenck, Roger Bogle, Gerald Bogle and Jay Bogle; her dear friends in “The Magnificent 7,” Thelma Whittington, Marguerite Lockley and Mary James; devoted friend and neighbor Kenneth “Ken” Scott; a host of nieces, nephews, cousins, neighbors, colleagues and friends; and the citizens of the borough of Yeadon, whom she spent much of her life serving.

Iran’s Space Program Moving Ahead with Launch of Pars-2 Satellite, Shahid Soleimani Constellation Deployment: Minister

Wednesday, 17 June 2026 9:34 AM

Iran successfully launched the homegrown imaging satellite Noor 3 into orbit on September 27, 2023.

Iran's space industry is pressing forward with renewed momentum, as the minister of information and communications technology announces the underway plans for the imminent launch of the “Pars 2” satellite and deployment of the “Shahid Soleimani” constellation by year-end.

Speaking on Wednesday at a meeting with experts and managers of the Iranian Space Research Institute, including Hassan Salarieh, head of the Iranian Space Agency (ISA), Sattar Hashemi praised the achievements of the space sector under the current administration, attributing progress to the efforts of specialists and experts in the field.

“The approach of the Ministry of Communications and the fourteenth administration toward the space industry is a strategic one, and this field has extensive capacities for the development of smart agriculture, water resource management, land management, and improving the quality of data-driven governance in the country,” Hashemi stressed.

The minister also highlighted the resilience of Iran’s space infrastructure during wartime conditions, describing continued operations as a significant achievement.

“The continuation of the country's space activities under difficult conditions is the result of the commitment, expertise, and round-the-clock efforts of colleagues in this field,” Hashemi added.

Referring to ongoing projects, he added that “the necessary planning is underway to place the ‘Pars 2’ satellite into orbit.”

Pars-2 is an advanced, domestically-developed highly-accurate and imaging satellite manufactured by ISA with the primary mission of Earth observation, remote sensing, and environmental monitoring.

Hashemi further stressed the importance of strengthening international and technological cooperation while rebuilding and restructuring the sector after recent challenges caused by the US-Israeli war of aggression against Iran.

“With the country moving beyond the conditions arising from the Ramadan War and the emergence of new opportunities, precise planning must be carried out for restructuring the space industry and making use of new capacities for international cooperation,” he said.

The minister also underlined the need to expand satellite applications, stressing, “The development of satellite constellations, especially in the field of communications satellites, is among the country's priorities, and the Shahid Soleimani constellation will be ready for launch by the end of the year.”

The head of the Iranian Space Agency (ISA) says the domestically-manufactured remote-sensing Pars-2 satellite will be unveiled early next month.

In his remarks, Salarieh, the ISA’s chief, reaffirmed that space projects are continuing at high speed and rejected claims that the industry had been disrupted by war time conditions.

“The projects in the space industry are being carried out at high speed. The damage inflicted during the Ramadan War does not mean that our space industry has stopped; the country's space industry is still operating,” he stressed.

Salarieh further emphasized the distributed nature of Iran’s space infrastructure, explaining that the system is not centralized in a way that would allow it to be halted by targeting a single site.

He also stressed that services such as satellite communication, data reception, and imagery remain fully operational even during wartime conditions.

Salarieh concluded by reaffirming continued progress on major national space programs.

“The projects are progressing well; the Shahid Soleimani constellation is advancing properly and its launch will take place soon. We had previously said that the work would be ready by [the Persian calendar year] 1405, and God willing it will be done in 1405 [which ends on March 20, 2027,” he stressed.

The chief of ISA added that, given several months of wartime conditions, some processes may have slowed slightly, but activities were still being pursued and no paralyzing or halting damage had been inflicted on the space industry.