Friday, June 26, 2026

Chile Sends First Elite Earthquake Rescue Brigade to Assist Venezuela

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

Telesur

June 25, 2026 Hour: 8:42 pm

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Diplomatic Relations Resume

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

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

Switzerland Joins Global Earthquake Relief in Venezuela

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

International rescue teams continue operations after the earthquakes in Venezuela.

Telesur

June 26, 2026 Hour: 4:56 am

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

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

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

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

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

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

Mexico Sends Aid and Rescue Teams to Venezuela

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

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

Telesur

June 26, 2026 Hour: 4:15 am

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

In DR Congo, a Newly Complex Ebola Emergency

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

By Merveille Assani 

Reprinted from Truthdig 

In Congo, a Newly Complex Ebola Emergency

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

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

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

“No one imagined it could be Ebola.”

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

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

Late detection

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Misinformation undermines a coordinated response

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Armed conflict inhibits the Ebola response

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

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

For healthcare professionals, these attacks significantly complicate epidemiological surveillance. 

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

The key is detecting all cases

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

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

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

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

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

Thursday, June 25, 2026

Why Trump Will Not Destroy Cuba

Tim Anderson

Source: Al Mayadeen English

22 Jun 2026 10:55

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Yemen: Israeli Activities in Somaliland Threaten Regional Stability

By Al Mayadeen English

Source: News Websites

24 Jun 2026 23:06

Yemen's Deputy Foreign Minister has warned that "Israeli activities" in Somaliland threaten Somalia's unity and the stability of the Horn of Africa, accusing the leadership of transforming cities and ports into platforms for Israeli interests.

Yemen's Deputy Foreign Minister Abdulwahid Abu Ras has warned that "Israeli activities" in Somaliland pose a threat to Somalia's unity and the stability of the Horn of Africa, accusing the leadership of Somaliland of seeking to transform cities and ports into platforms serving Israeli interests at the expense of the Somali people.

In a statement to Yemen's Saba news agency, Abu Ras said that Yemeni authorities are closely monitoring "Zionist activities" linked to the president of Somaliland, Abdirahman Mohamed Abdullahi (Irro), accusing him of seeking to turn Hargeisa, Berbera and other areas into platforms serving Israeli interests at the expense of the Somali people.

He added that the greatest harm from these moves is to the Somali people, and that "Israel's" objectives are to undermine Somalia's unity and sovereignty and transform its territory into an arena for regional and international competition and conflict, with negative consequences for the security and stability of the entire Horn of Africa.

Yemen warns against regional destabilization

The Yemeni official emphasized the need to prevent what he described as "conspiracies," arguing that the sole beneficiary is "Israel," which seeks to entrench its presence in the Horn of Africa.

He considered that any Israeli presence in the region threatens not only Somalia but also extends to regional national security, warning of the possibility of the region sliding into wider conflicts.

Abu Ras called on Somali parties to remain vigilant and not be drawn into what he called "misleading promises," and urged regional countries to read the dimensions of Israeli moves and their potential implications for security and stability.

Yemen's position on Horn of Africa developments

The Yemeni official affirmed that his country is closely following developments in the Horn of Africa and reiterated Yemen's readiness to cooperate with regional countries in a manner that serves regional stability and security.

The warning comes amid reports of growing Israeli involvement in the Horn of Africa, including reports of Israeli military and intelligence activities in Somaliland.

Somaliland declared independence from Somalia in 1991 but has not been recognized internationally. The region's strategic location on the Gulf of Aden makes it of significant geopolitical interest.

Italy Confirms Release of Three Flotilla Activists Held in Libya

By Al Mayadeen English

24 Jun 2026 12:15

Italy’s foreign minister says two Italians and a Uruguayan who also holds Italian citizenship, detained in Libya for about a month, have been released.

Two Italian pro-Palestinian campaigners detained in Libya have been released after spending about a month in custody, Italian Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani said on Tuesday.

Israeli occupation forces last month abducted hundreds of activists on board dozens of ships in international waters to halt Global Sumud Flotilla volunteers trying to bring aid supplies to the Gaza Strip amid the ongoing Israeli genocide in Gaza.

In a post on social media platform X, Tajani said the two Italians had been handed over to Italy's consul in Benghazi, along with a Uruguayan national who also holds Italian citizenship.

In a press release, released on June 11, the Global Sumud Flotilla (GSF) expressed serious diplomatic and legal concerns after reports indicated that the detention of 10 humanitarian volunteers from the Global Sumud Land Convoy in Benghazi has been extended by an additional 30 days.

The volunteers were being held by the Eastern Internal Security Agency (ISA), a major security force operating under the de facto control of the Libyan Arab Armed Forces (LAAF) in eastern Libya.

Separate group of flotilla activists held in Libya

The volunteers held in Libya were part of a separate group of flotilla activists who tried to reach the Palestinian enclave by land.

According to the Global Sumud Flotilla, the activists had staged a hunger strike in protest of their detention and alleged mistreatment.

Tajani said they were due to return to Italy on Wednesday.

Previous interception in international waters

The developments come weeks after Israeli forces hijacked earlier flotilla vessels in international waters near Crete, where activists said participants were detained and boats intercepted while en route to Gaza.

The earlier incident involved ships carrying 345 participants from 39 countries, including Turkish nationals. According to the organizers, 175 activists were abducted after more than 20 vessels were hijacked in international waters while en route to Gaza.

Organizers say the initiative is part of ongoing global efforts to challenge the blockade imposed on Gaza since 2007, which they say has worsened significantly since the escalation of the Israeli war in October 2023.

International and UN agencies continue to warn of severe humanitarian conditions in Gaza, citing acute shortages of food, clean water, and medical supplies, alongside extensive destruction of infrastructure, health facilities, and shelters.

Sahel Alliance Reviews Diplomacy, Expands International Influence

By Al Mayadeen English

24 Jun 2026 21:22

Foreign ministers of Mali, Niger, and Burkina Faso met in Bamako to assess Sahel Alliance diplomacy, coordinate positions, and plan UN General Assembly preparations.

The foreign ministers of the Sahel States Alliance met in the Malian capital Bamako to assess progress in implementing the bloc’s diplomatic agenda and discuss upcoming steps to strengthen its presence and influence regionally and internationally.

The ministers stressed the importance of continuing coordination and unifying political and diplomatic positions among the three countries, enabling the bloc to speak with one voice on major African and international issues and enhancing its presence in international organizations and forums.

Burkina Faso’s Foreign Minister, Karamoko Jean Marie Traoré, said the meeting provided an opportunity to review relations with the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) and to follow up on the implementation of the joint action plan previously agreed between the two sides.

For his part, Niger’s Foreign Minister Bakary Yaou Sangaré said the alliance had made “tangible progress” in the security field through the activation of a joint military force, noting that the bloc is increasingly being recognized as an important geopolitical actor in the Sahel and West Africa.

The ministers also discussed a unified diplomatic roadmap for the bloc and instructed continued technical work to establish more integrated diplomatic representation mechanisms, as well as joint preparations for the 81st session of the United Nations General Assembly scheduled for next September.

US re-engages for minerals 

Formed in 2023 following the withdrawal of Mali, Niger, and Burkina Faso from ECOWAS, the Sahel States Alliance was created as a framework for closer regional coordination, with its members also moving to reduce and restructure Western military presence in their territories amid a broader shift toward sovereignty-driven security policies.

The region’s vast mineral wealth, particularly Mali’s lithium, Niger’s uranium, and Burkina Faso’s gold, has become a geopolitical battleground. Niger’s junta recently seized control of its main uranium mine from French company Orano and is reportedly courting Russia as a new partner. Russia has deployed over 1,000 contractors to Mali and maintains smaller forces in Burkina Faso and Niger, while continuing to develop extensive strategic partnerships with Burkina Faso.

As for the US, it is re-engaging Sahel states primarily because the region holds strategic minerals—uranium, gold, lithium, rare earths—vital to energy security, defense, and the green transition. As minerals replace oil as the core geopolitical asset, Washington is seeking to secure future supply chains amid growing competition with China and Russia, both of which have expanded their footprint in Sahel mining through security-for-resources deals.

Coups in Mali, Burkina Faso, and especially Niger exposed how quickly Western access to critical resources can unravel. Re-engagement reflects a shift away from counterterrorism toward resource and economic diplomacy, even if it means softening positions on military rule.

Niger Formally Begins ICC Withdrawal in Sahel Sovereignty Push

By Al Mayadeen English

Source: BBC

24 Jun 2026 09:11

Niger's move marks another step by Sahel states to reject Western-led institutions and pursue their own justice mechanisms.

Niger has formally submitted its request to withdraw from the International Criminal Court, turning a joint political decision by Niger, Mali, and Burkina Faso into a legal step in the Sahel bloc's wider push to reclaim sovereignty from Western-dominated institutions.

The Hague-based court said it received Niger's "instrument of withdrawal" on June 18. Under the Rome Statute, the move takes effect one year after notification, placing Niger's official exit date on June 18, 2027.

Until then, the ICC said Niger remains bound by its obligations under the court's founding treaty.

A rejection of selective justice

For Niger, Mali, and Burkina Faso, the move reflects a broader rejection of a selective and politicized international justice system.

The three Sahel states announced in September 2025 that they would no longer recognize the ICC's authority, accusing the court of acting as an "instrument of neo-colonialist repression."

Their position is rooted in the view that the ICC has disproportionately targeted African and Global South states, while major powers and their allies continue to operate outside the court's jurisdiction or avoid accountability.

Several powerful states, including the United States, Russia, and China, in addition to the Israeli entity, are not members of the ICC, even as the court claims to represent international justice.

Sahel states seek local justice mechanisms

Niger, Mali, and Burkina Faso have said their withdrawal from the ICC does not mean rejecting justice itself. Rather, they argue that justice must be rooted in national and regional realities, not imposed through institutions they view as shaped by foreign interests.

The three states said they intended to create "indigenous mechanisms for the consolidation of peace and justice," presenting this approach as better suited to the Sahel's political, security, and social conditions.

For the Confederation of Sahel States, the issue is not whether crimes should be addressed, but who has the legitimate authority to address them.

Part of a wider break with Western control

Niger's formal notice comes as the Sahel bloc deepens its break with Western-backed political and security structures.

Niger, Mali, and Burkina Faso have already withdrawn from the Economic Community of West African States, accusing the bloc of serving foreign agendas and imposing pressure on governments that chose an independent political path.

The three states have since moved forward with the Confederation of Sahel States, a framework aimed at strengthening regional cooperation, security coordination, and political independence.

Their leaderships have presented these decisions as part of a wider struggle to end external tutelage, particularly from France and Western institutions that long shaped the political and economic direction of the former French colonies.

Security campaigns and foreign pressure

The withdrawal also comes as the three Sahel states continue military campaigns against armed groups linked to al-Qaeda and the Islamic State.

Rights organizations have warned that leaving the ICC could weaken accountability in a region marked by armed violence and accusations of abuses. However, Niger, Mali, and Burkina Faso argue that foreign legal mechanisms have often been used selectively, especially against states attempting to pursue independent security policies.

From the Sahel bloc's perspective, the ICC has become another channel through which external powers pressure governments that reject Western alignment.

A sovereignty milestone for the AES

Although Mali and Burkina Faso joined Niger in announcing the decision to leave the ICC, the court's latest statement referred only to Niger's formal notification.

Niger is now on course to become the third country to leave the ICC, after Burundi and the Philippines.

For the Sahel states, the move is not merely a legal withdrawal from a court. It is part of a broader sovereignist project aimed at replacing Western-led oversight with regional institutions they say better reflect the priorities, struggles, and realities of the Sahel.

The Death Toll From Earthquakes in Venezuela Rises to 164

Acting President Delcy Rodríguez said the death toll from the June 24 earthquakes reached 164, with 971 injured, and announced an initial US$200 million reconstruction fund.

Venezuela earthquakes, Delcy Rodríguez, death toll, injured, reconstruction fund, aftershocks, La Guaira, Distrito Capital, Miranda

Telesur

June 25, 2026 Hour: 6:35 am

The acting president of Venezuela, Delcy Rodríguez, reported that the death toll from the two earthquakes that shook the South American country on Wednesday, June 24, has risen to 164, with 971 injured.

Rescue operations continued across Venezuela on Thursday after two powerful earthquakes struck the country a day earlier, leaving at least 164 people dead and 971 injured, according to Venezuelan Acting President Delcy Rodríguez, who also announced emergency recovery measures and international assistance for affected communities.

In a telephone address broadcast by Venezolana de Televisión (VTV), the acting president announced the creation of an initial US$200 million reconstruction fund, the deployment of additional rescue teams, and financial assistance for families and workers affected by the disaster.

The earthquakes, measuring 7.2 and 7.5, hit Venezuela on Wednesday, June 24, with the states of La Guaira, Distrito Capital and Miranda sustaining the most severe damage. The acting president said 101 aftershocks had occurred between the two main earthquakes.

La Guaira has been declared a natural disaster zone because of the number of collapsed buildings requiring search and rescue operations. Efforts are also focused on Greater Caracas, where 10 buildings collapsed during the earthquakes.

“We are transferring rescuers from other states of the country so that we can concentrate our efforts, first in La Guaira state and also in Greater Caracas,” the acting president said.

She also appealed to the private sector to support emergency operations by making heavy construction equipment available to remove debris and help rescuers reach people still trapped beneath collapsed structures.

“I wanted to address the country to request the support of the private sector so that yellow machinery can be rented for the rescue operations,” she said.

According to the acting president, business and commercial chambers have already begun coordinating with authorities to accelerate rescue efforts during daylight hours.

The acting president also said she had spoken with several heads of state and the United Nations Resident Coordinator in Venezuela to request specialized rescue assistance.

“I have also spoken with many heads of state and with the coordinator of the United Nations System in Venezuela, who are already sending specialized rescuers certified by the UN System. They are already on their way to our country to support these operations,” she said.

To support recovery, the acting president announced an initial US$200 million reconstruction fund using resources available through the International Monetary Fund. The financing will be used to rebuild infrastructure and hospitals, as well as construct housing for families who lost their homes.

She also instructed the vice president for the economy and the finance minister to establish an emergency fund to provide immediate assistance to victims of the disaster.

In addition, the acting president announced special credit lines through public and private banks for people whose businesses or factories were affected, along with financial assistance through the Patria System for workers who lost their jobs.

The acting president concluded by calling for a nationwide ecumenical prayer at 7:00 p.m. for people still trapped beneath collapsed buildings and urged residents whose homes remain structurally safe to remain indoors so rescue teams can continue their work.

European Nations Pledge Earthquake Aid to Venezuela

Italy will seek activation of the EU Civil Protection Mechanism as several European governments offer assistance and express solidarity with Venezuela following the earthquakes.

Venezuela earthquakes, European Union Civil Protection Mechanism, Italy, Spain, France, Belgium, Portugal, humanitarian assistance, emergency response

European governments announced humanitarian assistance and messages of solidarity with Venezuela after the two powerful earthquakes. Photo: EFE

June 25, 2026 Hour: 5:22 am

Italy will seek activation of the EU Civil Protection Mechanism as several European governments offer support following the earthquakes.

Several European governments have offered assistance to Venezuela after two powerful earthquakes measuring 7.2 and 7.5 struck parts of the country on Wednesday. Italy announced it will request the activation of the European Union Civil Protection Mechanism to coordinate and finance emergency assistance, while Spain, Portugal, France and Belgium also expressed solidarity and pledged support.

Italian Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani said Rome is closely monitoring the situation as Venezuelan authorities continue assessing the damage and casualties caused by the earthquakes.

“I am closely following the evolution of the situation following the violent earthquake that struck #Venezuela. I express my solidarity to the Interim President @delcyrodriguezv and #Italy‘s closeness to the Venezuelan people at this very difficult time.,” Tajani wrote on X, extending his condolences to the families of the confirmed victims.

He said Italy is prepared to assist Venezuela and will ask “the EU to activate the civil protection mechanism to coordinate and fund emergency interventions..”

Speaking later in a television interview, Tajani added: “Everything necessary will be done to help the Venezuelan population, which includes a very large Italian community, one of the largest in the world. There are many Italian-Venezuelans, and we are also ready to assist our compatriots.”

EU emergency response

Belgium also confirmed its readiness to provide assistance through the European Union Civil Protection Mechanism. Belgian Foreign Minister Maxime Prévot said the country remains prepared to support Venezuela after the earthquakes, which by the early hours of Thursday had left a preliminary toll of 32 dead and more than 700 injured.

“The images coming out of Venezuela are heartbreaking,” Prévot said on social media. “My thoughts are with the Venezuelan people, and with everyone waiting for news of a loved one.”

“Should the European Civil Protection Mechanism be activated, Belgium stands ready to help,” he said, adding that Belgium’s crisis center has been mobilized and that its embassy in Bogotá, which also covers Venezuela, is prepared to assist Belgian nationals if necessary.

The EU Civil Protection Mechanism has been activated more than 600 times since its creation in 2001. It pools the emergency response capacities of EU member states and nine participating countries, allowing coordinated deployments both within Europe and internationally.

Solidarity from France, Portugal and Spain

French President Emmanuel Macron also expressed support for Venezuela following the earthquakes.

“Thoughts and support for the Venezuelan people following the earthquake that struck the country. I extend all my solidarity to the victims, their loved ones, and those mobilized on the ground,” Macron said on social media.

France’s Minister Delegate for Francophonie, International Partnerships and French Nationals Abroad, Éléonore Caroit, echoed that message.

“Our full solidarity with the Venezuelan people after the violent earthquakes that struck the country. Our thoughts are with the victims, their families and all the rescue teams mobilized,” she said.

Portugal’s presidency said President António José Seguro is following developments “with concern” and has sent a message of “solidarity and hope” to the Venezuelan people, Portuguese citizens living in Venezuela and the country’s authorities.

Spain also offered assistance during a telephone conversation between Spanish Foreign Minister José Manuel Albares and Venezuelan Foreign Minister Yván Gil. Albares offered support through the Spanish Agency for International Development Cooperation (AECID) and the Military Emergency Unit (UME).

According to Spain’s Foreign Ministry, the two ministers agreed to speak again during the Spanish delegation’s stopover in the Dominican Republic to finalize the proposed assistance.

Mexico Shows Solidarity After Venezuela Twin Earthquakes

Mexico expressed solidarity with Venezuela after twin earthquakes struck the country and activated consular assistance protocols while monitoring the evolving situation.

Emergency crews and residents respond after powerful earthquakes struck Caracas and other parts of Venezuela. Photo: EFE

June 25, 2026 Hour: 12:15 am

Mexico activates consular assistance protocols after twin earthquakes strike Venezuela; no Mexican nationals have been reported affected.

Mexico has expressed solidarity with the Venezuelan people following twin earthquakes measuring 7.2 and 7.5 that struck Caracas and regions across central, northern and northwestern Venezuela on Wednesday, causing widespread damage. The tremors were felt primarily in the Venezuelan capital and were also reported in parts of Colombia.

In a statement, Mexico’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs (SRE) expressed its deep regret over the destruction caused by the seismic events. The ministry, headed by Foreign Minister Roberto Velasco, said there have been no reports so far of Mexican citizens affected by the earthquakes.

Medical teams, firefighters, security personnel and residents of Caracas took to the streets on Wednesday night to assist people trapped beneath collapsed structures and recover the bodies of those who died.

Security forces and emergency response agencies established camps in the affected areas to coordinate relief operations and assist those impacted by the disaster.

Mexico’s embassy in Venezuela remains closely monitoring the situation. The Foreign Ministry advised Mexican nationals requiring assistance or consular protection to contact the embassy’s emergency numbers or its official social media accounts.

Venezuela Deploys Emergency Rescue Teams After Earthquake, 20 Aftershocks Recorded

The physical devastation of this historic seismic doublet has severely impacted seven federal entities, including the Capital District, Carabobo, Aragua, Miranda, La Guaira, Yaracuy and Trujillo. Photo: EFE.

June 24, 2026 Hour: 10:01 pm

Venezuela’s emergency forces deployed massive rescue operations in Caracas and six states this Wednesday, responding to severe structural collapses caused by a devastating 7.5 magnitude seismic doublet.

Immediately following the severe tectonic movements at 6:05 P.M. local time, thousands of specialized first responders, including firefighters, civil defense officials, state police, and community volunteer brigades, mobilized to the most affected sectors of the country’s capital.

The emergency response teams focused their initial efforts on locating and retrieving citizens trapped under the rubble of collapsed physical structures in various parishes of Caracas.

To coordinate these complex operations, the Mayor of Caracas, Carmen Meléndez, established an emergency tactical command post in the disaster zones to oversee the deployment of resources and medical personnel.

Meanwhile, the sectorial Vice President for Citizen Security and Peace, Diosdado Cabello, made an urgent public appeal on state television, instructing the population to remain in open outdoor areas and avoid returning to high-rise residential or commercial buildings.

“People must understand that they cannot remain inside their homes or offices at this moment; they must not expose themselves to further risk“, Diosdado Cabello declared, explaining that municipal and national security agencies remain fully active across the entire national territory to evaluate structurally compromised houses and public infrastructure.

Severe Damage and Rescues

The physical devastation of this historic seismic doublet has severely impacted seven federal entities, including the Capital District, Carabobo, Aragua, Miranda, La Guaira, Yaracuy and Trujillo. In the eastern Caracas municipality of Chacao, Mayor Gustavo Duque confirmed that fatalities have occurred due to the complete collapse of at least two major building structures.

Duque confirmed that rescue teams successfully saved 16 citizens from the rubble in his jurisdiction. More than 150 municipal security officials, working in close coordination with national civil protection experts, are conducting manual debris removal and using specialized search equipment to locate missing persons.

According to technical reports from the United States Geological Survey (USGS), the incident was a rare seismic sequence in which an initial 7.2 magnitude tremor acted as a direct precursor to the massive 7.5 magnitude main shockwave that shook the coast of Venezuela.

This powerful release of tectonic energy has caused widespread alarm, prompting solidarity among local neighbors who are actively assisting emergency crews to clear blocked avenues and facilitate the transit of medical vehicles.

Venezuela Records Strongest Aftershock Since Quakes

Telesur English

Venezuela recorded its strongest aftershock since Wednesday’s earthquakes as emergency teams continued rescue efforts and damage assessments in La Guaira.

Venezuela earthquake, aftershocks, Funvisis, La Guaira, Naiguatá, 4.5 magnitude, rescue operations, Civil Protection, emergency response.

Emergency teams continue rescue operations in Venezuela after a 4.5-magnitude aftershock struck near Naiguatá early Thursday. Photo: EFE

June 25, 2026 Hour: 4:52 am

A 4.5-magnitude tremor struck near Naiguatá as rescue operations continued in areas affected by Wednesday’s earthquakes.

A series of aftershocks continued to shake Venezuela early Thursday, with the strongest so far measuring magnitude 4.5, according to the Venezuelan Seismological Research Foundation (Funvisis), as emergency crews pressed ahead with rescue operations in areas devastated by Wednesday’s earthquakes.

Funvisis reported that the earthquake struck at 1:48 a.m. local time. The epicenter was located approximately six kilometers west of Naiguatá, in La Guaira state, at a depth of 7.5 kilometers.

The proximity of the epicenter to one of the regions hardest hit by Wednesday’s seismic activity has kept residents and emergency responders on alert as search-and-rescue operations continue.

Authorities also reported several lower-magnitude aftershocks throughout the night, prompting rescue teams to strengthen safety measures while clearing debris in the search for possible survivors.

Firefighters, Civil Protection personnel and the Bolivarian National Armed Force remain deployed across the worst-affected areas, particularly in La Guaira, where emergency operations continue.

Venezuelan authorities said the state has mobilized all available resources to assist those affected and coordinate rescue efforts.

Acting President Delcy Rodríguez called for unity across all sectors of the country to confront the emergency, stressing that the immediate priority is to save lives and provide comprehensive assistance to injured people and affected families.

Funvisis urged residents to remain calm and follow official recommendations amid the possibility of additional aftershocks.

Civil protection authorities continue assessing structural damage to buildings while preparing temporary shelters for families who lost their homes.

As rescue operations continue, Venezuela is also preparing to receive international assistance to support the response to the disaster.

Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Kenyan Mass Pressure Forces Closure of United States Ebola Treatment Center

Demonstrations and legal actions overturned the controversial decision by Ruto to submit to the Trump administration’s imperialist foreign policy of using Africa as a dumping ground to guard against potential Ebola Virus Disease cases entering the U.S.

By Abayomi Azikiwe

Editor, Pan-African News Wire

Wednesday June 24, 2026

Geopolitical Analysis

After weeks of protests and court challenges to the government of Kenyan President William Ruto, the Ministry of Health in Nairobi has announced the cancellation of the plan by the White House to use the East African state as a holding ground for United States citizens suspected of being infected with the Bundibugyo strain of the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD). 

The current EVD outbreak has mainly impacted areas in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) where over 1,000 cases have been confirmed causing more than 260 deaths.

In neighboring Uganda as of June 22, there have been 20 laboratory-confirmed cases. Two deaths have occurred in the capital of Kampala and in Wakiso. 15 of these cases are said to have been imported by those who had traveled from DRC along with 5 which have been traced to local sources.

A briefing by the World Health Organization (WHO) indicated that the number of reported cases of the latest EVD outbreak has exceeded those in the first month of any previous outbreak. Health officials at the WHO in Geneva and the African Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (ACDC) based in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia are taking the current situation very seriously in light of the severity of previous outbreaks in Africa.

During the period of late 2013 to early 2016, over 28,000 cases occurred causing 11,000 deaths in three West African states. These cases occurred largely in Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea-Conakry. 

With specific reference to the present outbreak, which was detected during mid-May, it prompted the administration of President Donald Trump to request the establishment of a treatment center in Kenya. Immediately the people inside the country strongly objected to the willingness of President William Ruto to accept the request from Trump.

Ruto has been a close ally of the U.S. during his tenure in office. He attempted to justify the acceptance of the Trump proposal on the grounds that Nairobi has ostensibly benefitted from its alliance with Washington over the years. 

A series of legal challenges were filed by the Law Society of Kenya aimed at halting the project which would have been centered near a military base. Mass demonstrations erupted in the area which were suppressed by the Kenyan police resulting in at least three deaths. 

In a report on the decision to scrap the U.S. initiated project, it notes:

“After weeks of legal turmoil and deadly protests, the construction of a US-funded Ebola quarantine building near Laikipia Air Base in Kenya has officially been stopped by Kenya's Health Cabinet Secretary Aden Duale. Duale announced the cessation of the project after being found in contempt of court for allowing construction to continue despite a court order. The 50-bed facility was announced last month as a treatment site for Americans exposed to the deadly virus in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) or Uganda. Kenyans protested the construction site, saying the building would unnecessarily put the Kenyan population at risk, and add excessive strain to the country’s health system.” (https://www.cidrap.umn.edu/ebola/construction-us-backed-ebola-quarantine-unit-kenya-stopped)

During December 2025, the Kenyan government signed a health cooperation agreement with the U.S. after the elimination of other programs facilitated through the Agency for International Development (USAID). This decision was controversial since the Trump administration reversed previous deals with African states aimed at providing pharmaceuticals and other forms of assistance.

Other African states such as Zambia and Zimbabwe have rejected similar proposals claiming that it would not benefit the people of their countries. In addition, the access to health data by the U.S. would violate the sovereignty of African states.

A report on the Jurist.org website said of the new arrangements between some African governments and the Trump administration that:

“Kenya was the first African country to sign onto President Trump’s America First Global Health Strategy. The US later signed other bilateral health agreements with Rwanda, Liberia, Uganda, Lesotho, Eswatini, Mozambique, Cameroon, Nigeria, Ethiopia, Botswana, Sierra Leone, Madagascar and Ivory Coast in December. What is unique about these deals is that rather than go through health bodies such as GAVI, the World Health Organization, the African Union, and the Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the new American strategy is to enter into one-on-one agreements with individual states.” (https://www.jurist.org/commentary/2026/01/kenyas-health-data-deal-with-the-us-what-the-agreement-gets-right-and-what-it-misses-in-the-age-of-ai/)

Healthcare Deals with the U.S. Have Been Rejected by Some African States

The West African state of Ghana rejected the Trump deal along with Zambia and Zimbabwe in the southern region of the continent. Serious concerns persist about the effectiveness of the project as well as the conditions under which the State Department will provide purported assistance.

Quality healthcare in Africa has been hampered by the centuries-long systems of enslavement, colonialism and neo-colonialism. During the colonial period, the health status of Africans was not a concern of the western powers.

Since independence and the advent of the new form of colonialism, where Africa is still largely dependent upon the imperialists for exploitative and unequal terms of trade, underdevelopment remains rampant, sustaining impoverishment. The situation in Kenya is indicative of the contemporary situation where although the country is said to have the largest economy in the East Africa region, many people, particularly youth, face unemployment and very little prospect for future social advancement. 

Kenya has failed to create employment and economic opportunities for its people. In recent years mass demonstrations and strikes by the youth and workers have been met with repression by the security forces resulting in imprisonment, injuries and deaths.  

The Telegraph newspaper in the United Kingdom published an article earlier in the year, saying:

“A deal with Zambia worth $1bn (£0.7bn) has been in limbo since late last year after Washington linked the money to gaining mineral rights in the copper-rich country. Mr. Trump and his secretary of state, Marco Rubio, have rebooted America’s vast international aid spending, claiming it was wasteful, ineffective and was just keeping poor countries dependent on handouts. The overhaul has disrupted long-standing funding to HIV/Aids programs leading to worries the virus is poised to make a rebound in parts of the continent. Mr. Trump’s administration dismantled the $40bn (£30bn)-a-year United States Agency for International Development (USAID) almost overnight, throwing aid programs across Africa into turmoil.” (https://www.telegraph.co.uk/global-health/climate-and-people/ghana-is-latest-african-country-to-reject-trump-aid-deal/)

These new healthcare arrangements between the U.S. and several African Union (AU) member-states will not makeup for the cuts in assistance that have already occurred. Consequently, more people will be sickened and die from preventable and treatable diseases due to the lack of infrastructure and funding.

The same article from the Telegraph quoted above also points to these factors:

“African nations who have signed up include Angola, Botswana, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Eswatini, Ethiopia, Guinea, Kenya, Lesotho, Liberia, Madagascar, Malawi, Mozambique, Niger, Nigeria, Rwanda, Senegal, Sierra Leone and Uganda. The new agreements to provide funding for HIV/Aids, malaria, tuberculosis and polio will partly make up for steep aid cuts brought in after Mr. Trump was elected. But countries’ US funding will still be an average of 49 percent down on 2024 levels according to analysis of early deals by the Centre for Global Development.”

Undoubtedly, these changes in U.S. health foreign policy will not improve the social conditions on the African continent. An already debt-ridden African continent will be compelled to spend more of their dwindling national budgets on healthcare. 

Widespread Opposition to Kenyan Policy Reflects the Subservience to Imperialism

The Kenyan government has been classified as a Major Non-member NATO ally. This designation was bestowed on the East African state by the previous administration of President Joe Biden in 2024. Under the Biden administration, Ruto deployed hundreds of Kenyan police to the Caribbean island-nation of Haiti under the guise of restoring stability. 

This deployment of the Kenyan police was carried out despite the widespread opposition within the country. Even the Kenyan courts ruled that the deployment contravened the constitution.

Ruto was present at the recently held G7 Summit in France. Concurrently, it was announced that the Kenyan government was on the verge of signing a minerals agreement with the U.S. 

Kenya still houses British troops which is a carry over from the colonial era. During May, the Kenyan government hosted a conference with French President Emmanuel Macron aimed at reconfiguring the role of Paris in Africa in light of the discontent with their presence in West Africa and other regions of the continent. 

These contradictions will continue until there is a systematic break with the western capitalist system among the AU member-states. Self-reliance in the healthcare, military and financial sectors is a prerequisite for genuine independence, sovereignty and social emancipation across the continent. 

Zimbabwe’s Senate Approves Bill to Delay the Presidential Election and Overhaul the Vote

Zimbabwean President Emmerson Mnangagwa, center, stands next to his chief election agent and Justice Minister Ziyambi Ziyambi, left, outside the nomination court in Harare, Zimbabwe, June 21, 2023. (AP Photo/Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi, File)

By Farai Mutsaka

3:06 PM EDT, June 24, 2026

HARARE, Zimbabwe (AP) — Zimbabwe ’s Senate on Wednesday approved constitutional amendments that would remove direct presidential elections, delay the next one and extend the tenure of the country’s 83-year-old leader, whose signature is the final step for them to become law.

Seventy-five senators voted in favor of the bill that would postpone elections scheduled for 2028 to 2030 and extend President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s term by two years. Four senators opposed the measure, with some lawmakers from the fractured opposition joining ruling party colleagues in backing the changes.

The bill overhauls the way presidents are chosen, replacing direct popular elections with selection by lawmakers. It also extends the terms of the president and members of parliament to seven years from five.

Critics, including human rights lawyers, activists and some opposition figures, argue that extending presidential terms requires approval through a referendum. Mnangagwa’s supporters counter that Parliament can enact the changes because the constitutional two-term limit would remain intact, even if each term is longer.

The proposed amendments have heightened political tensions in Zimbabwe. Critics of the bill have faced arrest and detention, while others have alleged harassment and intimidation. The southern African country’s courts are yet to rule on several legal challenges to the proposal.

Mnangagwa has been in power since 2017, when the military backed the ouster of his mentor and Zimbabwe’s longtime ruler, Robert Mugabe, who died in 2019.

Although Mnangagwa, one of the world’s oldest leaders, previously said he would step down when his second term expires in 2028, his ruling ZANU-PF party has championed the amendments. Parliament at times has sat late into the night to push the legislation through. The lower house overwhelmingly voted for the bill last week.

Libyan Government Bans Sudanese Entry, Orders Deportations as Refugees Face Rising Hostility

24 June 2026

Passengers board an aircraft at Mitiga International Airport, located east of Tripoli, Libya, on December 12, 2019, AFP photo

 June 2, 2026 (TRIPOLI) – Thousands of Sudanese refugees in Libya are facing severe hardships following a government crackdown on undocumented foreigners that has restricted their movement and stoked fears of targeted hostility.

Since war broke out in Sudan in April 2023, thousands have fled to neighbouring Libya. Many now find themselves facing a new crisis, marked by unemployment, economic hardship, and mounting security threats.

Osama Hammad, the prime minister of the eastern-based government appointed by the parliament, has issued a decree banning citizens from Sudan, Eritrea, Ethiopia, and Somalia from entering Libyan territory via all land, sea, and air ports. The order also mandates the deportation of any foreign nationals currently in the country without valid residency permits.

Libyan media reported on Wednesday that the decree exempts accredited diplomatic and consular staff and their families. It also excludes individuals working in the education and healthcare sectors, provided they possess official approvals and employment contracts.

The human toll of the measures has begun to emerge, with one Sudanese refugee in Libya recounting how her unborn child died after public hospitals refused to treat her because she lacked valid legal status or entry permits.

The refugee, who spoke to the media on condition of anonymity, said she went into labour last week and was turned away by multiple government facilities demanding official documents. She was unable to afford the 7,000 Libyan dinars ($1,440) that private hospitals requested.

After suffering severe bleeding and receiving no medical assistance, she returned home, where the fetus died. She was later rushed back to a hospital with a severe fever following appeals from her husband, who offered to donate his kidney to secure her emergency treatment.

Other Sudanese refugees report that local hostility is rising as their numbers grow, amid broader economic anxieties among Libyans who view the newcomers as competitors for scarce jobs.

Refugees face verbal abuse, physical assaults, and armed threats, compounded by growing hate speech online. Some landlords have advised Sudanese tenants to remain indoors and have helped hide their valuables, laptops, and identification cards to protect them from authorities.

Movement remains highly restricted, with many Sudanese avoiding public spaces or streets except for absolute emergencies out of fear of harassment.

Reports on social media indicate that more than 70 Sudanese families tried to flee western Libya toward the eastern border to reach Egypt or return to Sudan. However, they were blocked at a checkpoint in Sirte and remain stranded in the open.

With dangerous land routes, high costs for air travel, and a tightening grip on human smuggling networks, many displaced families say they have been left with no safe options.

Human rights group Amnesty International reported on Wednesday that both the eastern-based administration and the rival, Tripoli-based Government of National Unity have intensified a coordinated crackdown. The group accused both factions of carrying out mass arbitrary arrests, detentions, and collective expulsions that specifically target Sudanese refugees and other Black Sub-Saharan migrants.

State-endorsed xenophobic rhetoric has fueled anti-migrant protests and violent vigilantism across the politically divided nation, the rights group said.

Official figures from the Directorate for Combating Illegal Migration (DCIM) show that the eastern-based branch alone detained between 7,000 and 8,000 migrants pending expulsion, including 4,500 individuals arrested since May. In western Libya, authorities carried out the summary expulsion of more than 800 people from Tripoli’s Mitiga airport during the same period without allowing them to claim asylum.

Amnesty International documented severe abuses within the detention network, noting that the DCIM explicitly refuses to recognize refugee status cards. Detainees have reported severe overcrowding, the denial of necessary medical treatment, and forced deportations directly to Port Sudan.

The escalation comes as the European Union actively seeks to expand its migration cooperation with Libyan actors, including plans to establish a Maritime Rescue Coordination Centre in the eastern city of Benghazi. Amnesty International condemned the EU containment policies, warning that expanding cooperation with these armed groups deepens European complicity in human rights abuses.