Saturday, April 25, 2026

Trump Evacuated from White House Correspondents’ Dinner After Shots Fired

The US president was escorted out from the event at a Washington DC hotel by his secret service agents.

Agents draw their guns after loud bangs were heard during the White House Correspondents' dinner at the Washington Hilton in Washington, DC, on April 25, 2026 [Mandel Ngan/AFP]

By Al Jazeera Staff

26 Apr 2026

United States President Donald Trump has been evacuated from the White House correspondents’ dinner in Washington, DC, after shots were fired outside the event.

Trump was rushed out of Washington Hilton hotel on Saturday evening after gun shots were heard outside the ballroom where the US president and the First Lady had been seated before the start of the annual media event.

Trump said in a post on Truth Social that he and his Cabinet were safe, and that he would give a press conference from the White House shortly.

“The First Lady, plus the Vice President, and all Cabinet members, are in perfect condition,” Trump said.

“We will be speaking to you in a half an hour. I have spoken with all the representatives in charge of the event, and we will be rescheduling within 30 days.”

Trump also hailed the US Secret Service and local law enforcement.

“They acted quickly and bravely,” Trump said.

“The shooter has been apprehended, and I have recommended that we “LET THE SHOW GO ON” but, will entirely be guided by Law Enforcement. They will make a decision shortly.”

Footage from the scene showed Trump and attendees taking cover behind their table after shots rang out, as people yelled “Get down!” and “Stay down!”

Trump was then rushed away from the scene by Secret Service agents, after which heavily armed agents surrounded the table.

Al Jazeera producer Chris Sheridan said he heard what he believed to be five gun shots outside the ballroom.

“We could smell the powder. We immediately dove to the ground. It was directly behind me,” Sheridan said.

“I couldn’t tell how many feet away, but it was definitely behind the doors to the entrance to the ballroom.”

Gunfire and Blasts Rock Mali as Attackers Hit Capital and Other Cities, Residents Say

By MARK BANCHEREAU

9:08 AM EDT, April 25, 2026

DAKAR, Senegal (AP) — Gunmen attacked several locations in Mali’s capital and other cities early Saturday in a possible coordinated assault, residents and authorities said.

Mali’s army said in a statement that “unidentified armed terrorist groups targeted certain locations and barracks” in Bamako and that soldiers were “engaged in eliminating the attackers.” It said in another statement later the situation was under control.

Mali has been plagued by insurgencies fought by affiliates of al-Qaida and the Islamic State group, as well as a separatist rebellion in the north.

An Associated Press journalist in Bamako heard sustained heavy weapons and automatic rifle gunfire coming from Modibo Keïta International Airport, around 15 kilometers (9 miles) from the city center, and saw a helicopter over nearby neighborhoods. The airport is adjacent to an air base used by Mali’s air force. A resident living near the airport also reported gunfire and three helicopters patrolling overhead.

Residents in other cities in Mali reported gunfire and blasts on Saturday morning, suggesting a possible coordinated attack by armed groups.

A resident of Kati, a town near Bamako that is home to Mali’s main military base, also said he was woken up early in the morning by the sounds of gunfire and explosions. Gen. Assimi Goita, the leader of Mali’s military junta, resides in Kati.

Videos on social media showed militant convoys in trucks and motorcycles moving through the town’s deserted streets, while residents looked on fearfully. Other videos in the northern towns of Kidal and Gao showed gunfire exchanges in the streets, with dead bodies lying on the ground.

Gunmen entered Kidal, taking control of some neighborhoods and leading to exchanges of fire with the army, a former mayor of the town told AP over the phone. He spoke on condition of anonymity out of fear for his safety.

Mohamed Elmaouloud Ramadane, a spokesperson for the Tuareg-led Azawad separatist movement, said on Facebook its forces had taken control of Kidal as well as some areas in Gao, another northeastern city. The AP could not independently verify his claim.

The separatists have been fighting for years to create the state of Azawad in northern Mali. They once drove security forces from the region, before a 2015 peace deal that has since collapsed paved the way for some ex-rebels to be integrated into the Malian military.

A resident of Gao said gunfire and explosions started in the early hours of Saturday and could still be heard in the late morning.

“The force of the explosions is making the doors and windows of my house shake. I’m scared out of my wits,” the resident told AP by phone. He spoke on condition of anonymity because of concerns for his safety. The resident said the gunfire came from the army camp and the airport, which are right next to each other.

The U.S. Embassy in Bamako issued a security alert, saying “there have been reports of explosions and gunfire near Kati and the Modibo Keita International Airport in Bamako” and that “U.S. citizens should shelter in place and avoid travel to these destinations until further information becomes available.”

Largest coordinated attack in years

Ulf Laessing, head of the Sahel program at the Konrad Adenauer Foundation, said the assault seems to be the largest coordinated attack in years in Mali.

“It’s especially concerning that JNIM (al-Qaida affiliated group) apparently has been coordinating today’s attacks with Tuareg rebels: Jihadists and Tuareg rebels teamed up in 2012 when they overrran northern Mali, sparking the region’s security crisis.” Laessing said.

Mali, alongside neighboring Niger and Burkina Faso, has long been battling armed groups affiliated with al-Qaida and the Islamic State group, a fight that has escalated over the past decade.

Following military coups, the juntas in the three countries have turned from Western allies to Russia for help combating Islamic militants.

But the security situation in Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso has worsened in recent times, analysts say, with a record number of attacks by militants. Government forces have also been accused of killing civilians they suspect of collaborating with militants.

In 2024, an al-Qaida-linked group claimed an attack on Bamako’s airport and a military training camp in the capital, killing scores of people.

Mali: Explosions, Gunfire Rock Main Military Camp

Dmytro Hubenko with AFP, Reuters, AP

Mali's army said unidentified "terrorist" groups had attacked several positions in the capital and elsewhere in the country.

Two loud explosions and sustained gunfire rocked the area near Mali's main military base in Kati, outside the capital city of Bamako, early Saturday morning, according to the AFP and Reuters news agencies.

A Reuters witness reported that soldiers had been deployed to block off roads in the area. Kati is the home of military ruler General Assimi Goita.

Meanwhile, AFP reported fighting in Gao, the largest city in northern Mali, as well as in Sevare, in central Mali.

Gunfire was also heard near Mali's international airport, AP reported.

No group has claimed responsibility for the attacks. In a statement, Mali's army said unidentified "terrorist" groups had attacked several positions in the capital and elsewhere in the country without specifying the locations.

Later on Saturday, the ‌army ⁠said ​that the ​situation ​was ‌under control following ‌attacks by ‌armed groups ​in Bamako and other towns.

Mali's security crisis

Mali has been grappling with a jihadi insurgency for over a decade, battling West African affiliates of al-Qaeda and the Islamic State. It also has a much longer history of Tuareg-led rebellion in the north.

Military leaders took power in Mali after coups in 2020 and 2021, vowing to restore security in the Sahel country where militants control large areas in the north and center and frequently attack the army and civilians.

Led by Goita, the military government has relied on Russian mercenaries for security support while initially pursuing defense cooperation with Western countries. Recently, however, it has pursued closer ties with the United States.

The military rulers have cracked down on critics and dissolved political parties. Although the junta had pledged to hand over power to civilians by March 2024, in July 2025, it granted Goita a five-year presidential term that could be renewed "as many times as necessary" without holding elections.

Edited by: Sean Sinico

Explosions and Gunfire as Armed Groups Launch Coordinated Attacks Across Mali

Explosions and sustained gunfire have been reported in Mali's capital Bamako as armed groups launch apparently coordinated attacks across the country.

In a statement on Saturday the military said "fighting is ongoing", adding "our defence and security forces are currently engaged in repelling the attackers".

Witnesses have told the Reuters news agency of explosions and gunfire around the Kati military base, a major installation outside the capital. Soldiers have been deployed to block off roads in the area.

There are also reports of attacks in Gao and Kidal in the north and Sevare in central Mali, in what an analyst describes as the largest jihadist attack in years.

One resident, who was travelling back to Bamako from Ethiopia, told the BBC that all flights into the city were cancelled early on Saturday. It is not yet clear whether the reported attacks have affected the airport.

The UK's foreign office has advised against all travel to Mali following the attacks, adding that Bamako International Airport is temporarily closed. Meanwhile, the US Embassy there has told citizens to shelter in place and avoid travel, citing explosions and gunfire around the airport and near Kati.

While some residents describe calm in most parts of Bamako, there are ongoing reports of gunfire in some areas. Checkpoints have been established on roads leading to the airport and vehicles are being searched, reports say.

Ulf Laessing, head of the Sahel Programme at the Konrad Adenauer Foundation in Mali, told the BBC the incident appears to be the "largest coordinated jihadist attack on Mali for years".

Mali's military said it is fighting unidentified "terrorist groups" and the situation was under control, but unconfirmed reports suggest fighting continues. Videos circulating on social media suggest involvement of the jihadist group Jama'at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin (JNIM) and Tuareg Azawad Liberation Front (FLA) rebels.

Mohamed Elmaouloud Ramadane, a spokesperson for the FLA, said on social media that its forces had taken control of several positions in Gao and Kidal. He also urged neighbouring countries Burkina Faso and Niger not to intervene. The BBC has not been able to verify these claims.

Armed members pictured in Kidal

Mali is currently ruled by a military junta led by Gen Assimi Goïta, who first seized power in a coup in 2020, promising to restore security and push back armed groups.

The junta had popular support when it took power, promising to deal with the long-running security crisis prompted by a separatist rebellion in the north by ethnic Tuaregs, which was then hijacked by Islamist militants.

The UN peacekeeping mission and French forces had been deployed in 2013 to deal with the escalating insurgency.

Both have left since the junta took over, and the military government has hired Russian mercenaries to tackle the insecurity.

However, the jihadist insurgency has continued and large parts of the north and east of the country remain outside government control.

Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso recently left the West African bloc Ecowas to form the Alliance of Sahel States. The bloc aims to share resources, build infrastructure, create a common market and currency and allow free movement of people, with the long-term goal of deeper integration.

All three countries are currently led by military governments following a series of coups.

Abayomi Azikiwe, PANW Editor, Speaks to Youri Smouter of 1+1 on the History and Current Affairs of Zimbabwe

Watch this interview with Abayomi Azikiwe, editor of the Pan-African News Wire, discussing the history and contemporary affairs of the Republic of Zimbabwe. 

The entire program can be viewed by clicking on the following URL: 1+1E385 Youri speaks to Abayomi Azikiwe of Pan-African Newswire & Black Agenda Report on Zimbabewe

Special thanks to Youri Smouter, host of 1+1, for the featured programs on Africa. 

We look back on the historical research related to the origins of human settlements more than 100, 000 years ago; the character of the various societies; kingdoms and nation-states from 4th century CE to the 21st century. 

We examine the character of the Great Wall of Zimbabwe and its concomitant civilizations along with the successors. 

These civilizations were spread over huge areas which transcend today's geographical boundaries. 

Finally, we look at the anti-colonial struggle and the period since 1980 when national independence was won.

Benin Confirms Wadagni's Presidential Vote Win

Presidential candidate Romuald Wadagni greets supporters at a campaign rally in Cotonou, Benin, Friday, April 10, 2026.

Africa News

Benin's finance minister Romuald Wadagni was officially confirmed to have won the west African country's presidential election, according to final results on Thursday.

The Constitutional Court confirmed the provisional tally announced last week, which gave outgoing president Patrice Talon's hand-picked successor a landslide win.

Many observers believe that the outcome of the 12 April vote was a foregone conclusion.

Teacher and former minister Paul Hounkpè was the only opposition candidate, while the main opposition party, The Democrats, was unable to take part due to an insufficient number of sponsorships.

"The court hereby definitively declares Mr. Kossi Mbueke Romuald Wadagni elected president of the Republic, and Ms. Mariam Chabi Talata vice president," the president of the Constitutional Court, Cossi Dorothe Sossa, announced at the institution's headquarters.

Wadagni will take office on Sunday, 24 May, Sossa added.

According to him, the court "has not identified on its own any irregularity of a nature to warrant the annulment of the electoral process" and has recorded no challenges to the provisional results.

He did not give Wadagni's final tally or voter turnout figures, which the provisional results had reported at 94% and 58.8% respectively.

Hounkpe, who took just under 6%, conceded defeat before the results were out.

Under Wadagni's 10-year stint as finance minister, Benin's public finances have been cleaned up and the deficit cut by a third to reach three percent of GDP.

He embodies continuity with the Talon era, which has seen the country enjoy rapid economic growth, an expansion in tourism and the completion of numerous infrastructure projects.

He nonetheless faces major challenges, including a huge wealth gap and insecurity in the north due to attacks blamed on jihadist groups.

Refugee Crisis Fuels Measles and Meningitis Outbreaks in Eastern Chad

Africa News

By Dominic Wabwireh with Agencies

Chad

A dual outbreak of measles and meningitis is sweeping eastern Chad, driven by the continued influx of refugees fleeing Sudan's civil war, Doctors Without Borders (MSF) warned Thursday, as overcrowded camps and limited healthcare accelerate transmission.

In Adre, a town close to the Sudanese border, measles cases surged from 16 in January to 371 in March, with 161 recorded in the first two weeks of April.

Meningitis cases rose from 18 in January to 109 in March and 101 by mid-April.

"Every day, we see children arriving with severe measles, often complicated by pneumonia, requiring urgent hospitalisation," said MSF's Isabelle Kavira.

Bed occupancy for meningitis is nearing 100%, saturating capacity.

Refugee flow and overcrowding

Since the Sudan war erupted in April 2023, nearly one million people have fled to Chad, according to the United Nations.

Chad closed its border with Sudan in February following incursions from the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), but the border remains porous.

MSF said the continued arrival of refugee families from Sudan — where measles and meningitis outbreaks are ongoing — is fueling the surge.

Overcrowding, limited water and healthcare access, and malnutrition heighten risks, especially for children under five.

Vaccination efforts fall Short

Chad's health ministry, with MSF support, has vaccinated over 95,500 children against measles and 337,800 people against meningitis in emergency campaigns.

However, disruptions in vaccine refrigeration and gaps in routine immunisation "leave entire populations exposed," MSF warned, adding that reactive campaigns alone are insufficient.

Friday, April 24, 2026

South Africa Vows Crackdown on Xenophobic Attacks After Ghana Protest

Africa News

By Dominic Wabwireh with other agencies

South Africa has pledged decisive action against perpetrators of xenophobic violence targeting foreign nationals, after Ghana formally protested over incidents involving its citizens.

Ghana’s Foreign Affairs Minister, Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, summoned South Africa’s envoy on Thursday, urging immediate intervention to prevent further escalation.

His concerns followed the circulation of videos on social media showing attacks and intimidation against foreign nationals.

The minister also highlighted a specific incident in KwaZulu-Natal, where a Ghanaian man was reportedly confronted, asked to prove his legal status, and told to leave the country.

Government condemns violence

South Africa’s authorities strongly condemned the attacks, describing them as unlawful and unacceptable.

Acting Police Minister Firoz Cachalia said the violence, including looting and intimidation, threatens both the rule of law and the country’s constitutional principles.

Foreign Minister Ronald Lamola echoed the stance, warning that such acts have no place in a constitutional democracy and pose a risk to national stability.

Police crackdown underway

Law enforcement agencies have been placed on high alert, with clear instructions to identify and arrest anyone involved in xenophobic acts.

Police spokesperson Kamogelo Mogotsi stated that those participating in or inciting violence will be apprehended and brought before the courts.

Authorities emphasized that no individual or group has the right to take the law into their own hands, regardless of grievances.

Calls for calm and dialogue

Officials have urged communities to remain calm and cooperate with law enforcement to prevent further unrest.

Community leaders and civil society organizations are being called upon to promote dialogue and social cohesion.

Advocates for migrant rights say foreigners are often scapegoated for economic challenges in South Africa, a factor that continues to fuel tensions.

Nigeria Sets Up Court Martial Over Alleged 2025 Coup Plot

Olamikan Gbemiga/AP

By Dominic Wabwireh with other agencies

Nigeria has inaugurated a military court to try officers accused of involvement in a failed coup attempt, the country's Defence Headquarters said on Friday.

The move marks a significant step in the government’s response to a plot that authorities say could have ended decades of democratic rule.

The Defence Headquarters "inaugurated a General Court Martial to try 36 serving military personnel over alleged mutiny, aimed at overthrowing the government of the day," spokesman Major General Samaila Uba said in a statement.

The statement did not specify a timeline for the trials, but said that "proceedings of the court will be conducted with the highest standards of fairness."

Judges were sworn in on Friday, the Defence Headquarters said. Proceedings are being conducted behind closed doors.

State media reported that more than 30 accused officers were transported to a military facility in Abuja on Friday morning.

The identities of those facing trial have not yet been disclosed.

From denial to confirmation

Authorities initially denied any knowledge of a coup attempt late last year.

However, in January, the military announced it had thwarted a plot to overthrow the government and would prosecute those involved.

If successful, the coup would have ended a 25-year stretch of democratic governance in Africa’s most populous nation.

Separate civilian trial

In a related case, six civilians appeared before the Federal High Court earlier this week, pleading not guilty to charges linked to the alleged conspiracy.

Among them is retired major general Mohammed Ibrahim Gana.

Prosecutors allege the group conspired to wage war against the state and intimidate the president, Bola Tinubu.

They are also accused of failing to alert authorities about plans by Colonel Mohammed Alhassan Ma'aji, identified in local media as the plot’s mastermind.

A country with a coup history

Nigeria has a long history of military takeovers, having spent much of the post-independence period under army rule after gaining independence from United Kingdom in 1960.

Civilian governance was restored in 1999 and has continued since.

Following the initial denial of the coup plot, President Tinubu moved to reshuffle the country’s top military leadership, a decision widely seen as part of efforts to stabilise the armed forces.

DR Congolese Refugees Return from Burundi to Take Advantage of Improved Security

By RENOVAT NDABASHINZE and RODNEY MUHUMUZA

6:31 AM EDT, April 24, 2026

RUYIGI, Burundi (AP) — Thousands of Congolese refugees in Burundi have returned to their homes across the border in eastern Congo following the withdrawal of Rwandan-backed rebels from a key town.

Some 470 people were in the latest batch to cross the border after fleeing violence in and around Uvira nearly four months ago. They sought shelter in the Busuma refugee camp in Burundi’s Buhumuza province, and were among at least 33,000 Congolese who have returned home as of March, according to the U.N.

The M23 rebels, who last year seized wide areas of North and South Kivu on the border with Rwanda, later withdrew from Uvira farther south under international pressure.

U.S. President Donald Trump has emerged as a key peace facilitator as Washington tries to rally both countries to commit to a permanent ceasefire, while at the same time possibly paving way for American companies to gain access to Congo’s minerals, which are critical for much of the world’s technology from jets to mobile phones.

Thursday’s repatriation event was overseen by a representative of the Congolese Embassy in Burundi. The event marked a happy moment for the refugees, who faced shortages of food and other items in the Busuma camp.

The U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees said the operation would continue for weeks, with at least two bus convoys each week.

“I am happy, very joyful,” said Hassan Masemo, who was among the returnees, adding he was also grateful to Burundian authorities for “reopening the border for us.”

According to UNHCR, Burundi currently hosts more than 200,000 Congolese refugees, including 66,000 in the Busuma camp.

The camp was established in December 2025 to accommodate the Congolese fleeing the rebel advance on Uvira, which prompted Burundi to close the Gatumba border crossing. It reopened after M23 withdrew.

“This is being done only for those who are going straight to their homes, because for areas which are not yet safe for return, we are not going to organize the return,” Brigitte Mukanga-Eno, the UNHCR representative in Burundi, said.

With the local government restored in Uvira, some refugees started returning voluntarily in March, which boosted the confidence of others who followed suit, she said.

Congo’s mineral-rich east has been scourged by decades of unrest as government forces fight more than 100 armed groups, the most potent of which is M23.

Although neither Rwanda nor M23 have publicly acknowledged the presence of Rwandan troops fighting alongside the rebels, U.N. experts have reported evidence of their involvement. Rwanda frames its role as defensive measures to protect its territory from Hutu rebels responsible for the 1994 genocide in Rwanda.

___

Muhumuza contributed from Kampala, Uganda.

Morocco Opens $700M Skyscraper as it Boosts Global Ambitions

By AKRAM OUBACHIR

1:24 PM EDT, April 24, 2026

CASABLANCA, Morocco (AP) — Towering over the Moroccan capital’s historic cityscape, a $700 million, 55-story skyscraper opened this week in a move that underscores the country’s expanding global ambitions.

Named for King Mohammed VI and inspired by a rocket on its launchpad, the 820-foot Mohammed VI Tower will feature a luxury Waldorf Astoria hotel, offices, shops, restaurants and upscale apartments.

Among Africa’s tallest skyscrapers, the tower is expected to generate 450 direct jobs and 3,500 indirect ones, Leila Haddaoui, director of development company O Tower, told reporters.

It stands in Salé, the twin city of the capital, Rabat, and was built over eight years with the involvement of more than 2,500 workers from over a dozen countries. It has already appeared on Morocco’s 200-dirham (about $20) banknote.

It stands near the Grand Theatre of Rabat, designed by the late Iraqi-British architect Zaha Hadid, and offers views of the Atlantic Ocean and the twin cities.

With the project, Morocco is positioning Rabat and Salé — often overlooked by tourists — on the international stage, as part of a broader tourism push, Haddaoui added.

Already Africa’s most visited country, Morocco relies on tourism economically and is seeking to attract more visitors, as regional conflicts are believed to steer travelers toward perceived safer destinations. The effort comes as it prepares to co-host the 2030 FIFA World Cup.

For its founders, the newly inaugurated tower is a symbol of Morocco’s growing soft power in Africa and the Middle East. It reflects the country’s ambition to position itself as a leading regional player through high-profile development projects aimed at expanding its influence.

Critics say development is concentrated along Morocco’s Atlantic corridor, while other areas remain underdeveloped. Gen Z-led protests last year highlighted grievances over high unemployment and struggling public services.

The tower, with a total area of more than 102,800 square meters (about 1.1 million square feet), was conceived by Othmane Benjelloun, a 93-year-old billionaire who owns Bank of Africa, a Moroccan bank once state-owned and now highly influential across the continent.

The magnate was invited by NASA in 1969 to a spaceflight simulation ahead of the Apollo 12 mission to the moon, and the idea for the skyscraper was born from that visit, according to a statement by tower management.

Kenyan Appeal Court Overturns Ruling that Affirmed the Right to Abortion

By EVELYNE MUSAMBI

12:36 PM EDT, April 24, 2026

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — A court of appeal in Kenya Friday overturned a ruling that affirmed the right to access abortion, setting up a legal clash that is likely to be appealed again to the Kenyan Supreme Court.

The appeal was based on the 2022 case of a teenager who went to the hospital with pregnancy complications. A doctor who examined her determined she had lost the pregnancy, and provided emergency post-abortion care. They were acquitted by the high court.

The high court in 2022 had ruled that access to abortion was a fundamental right under the constitution, declaring the arrest and prosecution of women and health care providers unconstitutional.

The court of appeal on Friday reiterated that abortion denies a child the right to life as guaranteed in the constitution and is prohibited except in circumstances such as when the life of the mother is at risk.

“In effect, abortion is not a fundamental right guaranteed under the Constitution. On the contrary, the constitution expressly prohibits it but provides exceptions in limited circumstances where it may be permissible,” the ruling read in part.

Kenya’s penal code criminalizes abortion, imposing a sentence of up to 14 years in prison for attempting or procuring an abortion. The Kenyan constitution, however, permits abortion if a trained health care worker recommends it as emergency treatment to save the life or health of the mother.

A global human rights group, the Center for Reproductive Rights, on Friday termed the ruling a “setback” and said it would “move to the Supreme Court of Kenya to correct this anomaly.”

A local faith-based organization, the Kenya Christian Professionals’ Forum, and the attorney general had appealed the 2022 high court decision that ruled that abortion was a fundamental right under the constitution.

The forum’s lawyer and former chairperson, Charles Kanjama, said the decision of the court of appeal had “restored constitutional balance which had been distorted by the high court ruling.”

“That means if somebody is accused of an offense under Sections 158, 159, or 160 of the penal code, as happened in this case, they have to provide evidence to show that they were not engaged in the crime of abortion on demand,” Kanjama told The Associated Press.

Abortion is a leading cause of maternal deaths, and an estimated 792,000 induced abortions occurred in Kenya between April 2023 and May 2024, according to a report jointly published in 2025 by the Ministry of Health, the African Population and Health Research Center, and the Guttmacher Institute.

Thursday, April 23, 2026

Trump Extends “Ceasefire” in Unprovoked War on Iran

Government in Tehran says that the IRGC remains prepared to defend the country in light of the United States maritime blockade, the seizure of an Iranian commercial vessel in the Sea of Oman and the ongoing threats of military aggression from Washington and Tel Aviv

By Abayomi Azikiwe, Editor, Pan-African News Wire

Wednesday April 22, 2026

Geostrategic Analysis

After two weeks of the United States announced ceasefire in their illegal and unprovoked war against the Islamic Republic of Iran, President Donald Trump announced an extension of the cessation of hostilities indefinitely. 

Trump said that the ceasefire would last until Iran developed a “unified position on the war with the U.S.”

Over the period of the recent phase of the war, Washington and Tel Aviv carried out over 20,000 air strikes against the Islamic Republic. Offensive operations were also escalated by Tel Aviv against neighboring Lebanon where more than 300 people were killed while thousands of residential, commercial and institutional targets were struck. 

Nonetheless, the Islamic Revolution Guard Corps (IRGC) has said that it will remain prepared for additional aggression from the Pentagon and the Israeli Occupation Forces (IOF) which launched a bombing and targeted assassinations campaign on February 28. Over the course of the nearly 40-day war, Iran launched thousands of missiles and drones against the apartheid regime in the Occupied Territories along with outposts for Pentagon military bases in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states.

During a national commemoration of the anniversary of the founding of the IRGC, military spokesmen said that the organization is prepared for any eventuality. Iran also articulated that it has additional military tactics which it will employ in the case of a resumption of aggression by U.S. and Zionist forces. 

Iran did tremendous damage to the business and military operations in the GCC as well as striking deep inside the apartheid Zionist-controlled territories. In addition, a blockade of hostile commercial and naval interests from the Strait of Hormuz has prompted an international energy crisis. In response to these actions by Tehran, Trump deployed an estimated 10,000 soldiers and sailors to the West Asia region. 

A U.S. blockade by naval forces was said to be directed against Iranian ports resulting in the seizure of a commercial vessel in the Sea of Oman. On April 22, the Iranian state media announced that the IRGC naval forces had taken control of two unauthorized vessels traveling near the Strait of Hormuz.

In a report published by Press TV on April 22, it comments on the current situation in the Strait of Hormuz noting:

“The Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) Navy says it has intercepted and transferred to Iranian territorial waters two vessels for having committed violations in the Strait of Hormuz.

In a statement released on Wednesday, the IRGC identified the vessels as the MSC-Francesca, which it said belongs to the Israeli regime, and the Epaminodes. The vessels, it said, were operating without authorization, committing repeated violations, tampering with navigation aid systems, and endangering maritime security in an attempt to exit the strait covertly. ‘With the intelligence dominance of the forces, these vessels were identified and stopped in order to uphold the rights of the noble Iranian nation in the Strait of Hormuz,’ the IRGC Navy said. It added that the vessels have now been transferred to Iranian territorial waters for inspection of their cargo and documents.” (https://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2026/04/22/767348/IRGC-seizes-Israeli-ship,-second-vessel-in-Strait-of-Hormuz)

Despite the claims by the White House and the Secretary of War that the IRGC had been destroyed and its leadership completely obliterated, the Iranian armed forces has waged a tremendous military campaign against the U.S. and its allies in the West Asia region. It will be unlikely that the region can return to the status quo which was in operation prior to the launching of True Promise 4 by the IRGC.

Nearly 100 waves of drones and missiles were launched against the Occupied Territories. Tel Aviv and Washington have concealed the actual casualties and property damage inflicted by the IRGC along with the Hezbollah resistance movement in Lebanon. 

The IOF did reach a ceasefire agreement with the Lebanese government, yet violations continue as was the case since October 2024. Tel Aviv has attempted once again to occupy areas in southern Lebanon. Reports from the resistance allied media suggest that there were numerous tanks destroyed by Hezbollah as well as casualties inflicted on the Israeli armed forces. 

Global Impact of the Imperialist War Against Iran

Since February 28, the world economy has suffered serious instability due to the rise in petroleum and other energy costs. In the U.S. gasoline prices have skyrocketed over the last eight weeks.

The rise in price per barrel of oil has broader implications. Other products are derived from petroleum including gasoline, diesel, jet fuel, plastics, synthetic rubber, pharmaceuticals, etc. Consequently, inflationary pressures are very much in evidence in the U.S. and internationally. 

Hundreds of cargo vessels remain stalled in and around the Strait of Hormuz. Supply chains have been choked due to the U.S. blockade and the responses of Tehran. The cost of transported goods and insurance charged for the ships have escalated.

A report published by the London-based Financial Times says of the economic crisis that:

“Donald Trump’s war in Iran has unleashed a torrent of inflation in the US that economists warn will linger long after the conflict ends, squeezing Americans ahead of November’s midterm elections. The impact of the conflict has reverberated across the world’s biggest economy since its outbreak in late February and experts say the inflationary shock will take time to recede…. Iran’s closure of the Strait of Hormuz in response to the US and Israel’s bombing campaign has triggered global fuel shortages and sent prices soaring. Brent crude, the global benchmark, jumped from about $70 a barrel when the conflict began to more than $110 a barrel at its height.” (https://www.ft.com/content/80436d72-25e1-4a97-be09-3327c2d0af9a?syn-25a6b1a6=1)

In Europe, the shortage of jet fuel has triggered the cancellation of thousands of flights over the next few months. The price of airline tickets will rise above the capacity of many working people to travel.

These cancellations will impact several industries including commerce, hotels, tourism and aviation cargo transport. Billions of dollars have already been lost due to the impact of the genocidal war of choice ignited by Washington and Tel Aviv. 

Trump’s discredited illegal imposition of tariffs during 2025 has already had a profound negative impact on the world economy. In the U.S., there is uncertainty over the price of goods produced outside its continental boundaries. 

Even the U.S. Supreme Court of which several were appointed by Trump, struck down the tariffs for their illegality and the by-passing of the House of Representatives and the Senate. Trump’s claims that he would bring down inflation and “Make America Great Again” (MAGA) has resulted in just the opposite outcomes. 

Unemployment has risen in the U.S. and other western capitalist states. In the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) countries, the Trump administration demanded during 2025 that they increase military expenditures to at least 5% of their national budgets. The White House requested assistance in the bombing of Iran and the blockade against Iranian ports. The UK and other NATO states refused to join Washington in the illegal war. 

The Business Insider reported on the damage being done to the airline industry, emphasizing:

“All but one of the world's 20 largest airlines are reducing capacity in the coming months, according to aviation analytics firm Cirium. Its analysis found the planned global capacity for May has dropped three percentage points since early March. Cirium revised its initial prediction of 4%-6% growth this year, saying it could decline by up to 3% under some potential scenarios. The war has disrupted supply chains, trapping oil in storage facilities across the Middle East. That saw the price of Brent crude oil rocket past $100 a barrel in early March, before dipping back below that benchmark once ceasefire talks began this month. Jet fuel prices have risen even faster, doubling in price to almost $200 a barrel. And as the war drags on, jet fuel is getting harder to come by for countries that don't produce it or have limited supplies.” (https://www.businessinsider.com/airlines-cancel-flights-rising-jet-fuel-prices-shortage-iran-2026-4)

Therefore, the Trump administration has damaged the standing of U.S. imperialism on a global scale. Its failure to prevail against the Islamic Republic of Iran and its allies in West Asia has drawn scorn and mockery even among other western capitalist states.

These developments since February 28 will undoubtedly enhance the already widespread animosity towards U.S. imperialism and its Zionist proxies in Tel Aviv. Inside the U.S. the approval ratings for the Trump administration have fallen to as low as 36%.

Nonetheless, the existing alternative to the Trump administration and its Republican base within the House and Senate does not represent a radical shift in domestic and foreign policy. The electorate in the U.S. must focus more on policy as opposed to the platitudes being advanced by the leading elements within the Democratic Party who are also pro-imperialist and Zionists.

The majority of politicians now in office in Washington must be challenged over their failure to present a viable alternative to the present course. Independent and critical challenges to the leaderships of the Republican and Democratic parties will be more forthcoming as the domestic and international crises deepen.

Big Defeat to Big Lies: Trump Peddles Iran 'Discord' Fiction to Mask US Military, Strategic Failures

Thursday, 23 April 2026 1:02 PM

By Press TV Strategic Analysis

After 40 days of failed military adventure against the Islamic Republic of Iran, followed by the diplomatic debacle in Islamabad with Iran calling the shots, a new reality is settling over the region, one that Washington is desperately trying to obscure.

The US war machine not only failed to achieve its stated objectives – a widely acknowledged reality – but it also suffered its most significant military and strategic defeat in decades.

And now, unable to accept that reality, it has fallen back on its oldest weapon: the "big lie."

A defeat on two fronts

The first battlefield was military, as Americans were eager to reveal their much-hyped “military card,” bragging about being the “most powerful military in the world.”

For over a month, the United States – backed by its most advanced naval assets, air power, and the full weight of its global and regional alliances – attempted to pressure the Iranian nation into submission or retreat.

The result: A humiliating defeat that quickly revealed the limits of much-hyped American power. From the strategic waters of the Persian Gulf to the skies over Yemen and Lebanon, Iran and its allies in the Axis of Resistance not only held their ground but dictated the terms of engagement, forcing the aggressors to plead for a ceasefire.

By the time the guns fell silent, it was Washington, not Tehran, that was begging for a ceasefire – not once, but twice. The first request came immediately after the imposed war had completed 40 days, when Washington agreed to Iran’s ten-point proposal.

The second came as a unilateral extension earlier this week, wrapped in the language of magnanimity but born of necessity. It was not a sign of goodwill. It was a strategic retreat.

The negotiating table has proven no kinder to the United States. Time and again, American officials have sought to frame the post-war dynamic as one requiring Iranian concessions: excessive limits on the missile program, the removal of enriched uranium, and the dismantling of ties with the resistance front.

Yet every single one of these demands has been met with Iranian steadfastness – backed overwhelmingly by public opinion. A latest poll conducted by Iran's IRIB Research Center found an overwhelming majority of Iranians reject each of these core American conditions.

The survey, conducted during and after the war, revealed that 85.7 percent of respondents said Iran should not accept restrictions on its missile industry, while 82.6 percent opposed the removal of 400 kilograms of enriched uranium from the country.

Also, 79.4 percent of people rejected shutting down uranium enrichment as a US condition.

Public opposition extends to core issues of sovereignty and regional strategy as well. The poll showed that 73.7 percent of Iranians said the country should not accept unrestricted passage of ships through the strategic Strait of Hormuz, and 68.1 percent opposed severing cooperation with the Resistance Front.

With this level of popular support, the Iranian side – which clearly holds the upper hand – has no reason to offer any concessions. The opposing side has won nothing: not on land, not at sea, not at the table. And in the end, it is always the winner who takes it all.

The manufactured "internal disagreement"

Having lost all military and strategic leverage, Washington has now – quite unsurprisingly and predictably – resorted to its trademark practice: the fabrication of lies. In this context, that means peddling the so-called "internal discord" within Iran's leadership.

The narrative being pushed by American policy wonks suggests that senior Iranian figures are divided over the future of negotiations and the continuation of the imposed war.

But this is not intelligence. It is not journalism. It is propaganda straight from the Goebbels playbook: repeat a lie loudly enough, and public opinion will eventually accept it as truth.

The claim is demonstrably false. Iran's silence in the face of repeated enemy overtures is not a sign of weakness or infighting. On the contrary, it is a calculated strategic posture.

For decades, the United States operated on a comfortable assumption: that Iran's reactions were predictable – a known diplomatic rhythm that could be anticipated and exploited.

That era is now over. Iran has entered a new phase of asymmetrical engagement with the enemy, one defined by unpredictability, strategic patience, and an absolute refusal to be read before entering the room. This very element of unpredictability has left the enemy bewildered, and it’s no longer a secret.

And that bewilderment is palpable. When the US Secretary of the Navy resigns in the midst of a naval confrontation – the most expensive and strategically vital branch of the entire American military – it signals something far deeper than routine political turnover.

It signals a deep and irreparable fracture at the very heart of the US decision-making apparatus. More than that, it points to a rotten system that is imploding from within.

Strategic silence as a weapon

Perhaps nothing has unnerved Washington more than Iran's "silence" regarding reports of the next round of negotiations in Islamabad. By refusing to engage with the enemy's narrative, Iran has denied the US the very thing it needs most: a predictable opponent.

Every American strategy – whether war plan or diplomatic overture – was built on decades of familiarity with Iranian behavior. That familiarity is now worthless.

The silence is not an absence of strategy. It is the strategy and Iran has mastered it.

If there remains any doubt about Iran's position, the Iranian people have settled it. The IRIB poll is not merely a dataset; it is a political document and a telling statement.

When 66 percent of Iranians believe their country is the decisive victor of the war, when 87.2 percent rate the performance of Iran's armed forces as strong or very strong, and – most crucially – when 57.7 percent believe the US needs a ceasefire more than Iran does, something profound has shifted.

These figures mark a staggering reversal of the familiar power dynamic. They spell out, in unmistakable terms, that a new dynamic is at work. The old rules no longer apply.

These numbers are not abstract. They come from a population that endured 40 days of airstrikes and bombings, which gave over 3,000 martyrs, and saw its homes destroyed.

And that same population has delivered a clear message to its leaders: do not compromise our dignity. Do not concede our rights. We prefer war over humiliation.

The biggest defeat in a generation

The United States has not lost a battle here or there. It has lost a major war. It has lost its strategic footing. It has lost the initiative. And now, stripped of all credible leverage, it has lost whatever was left of its standing at the global stage.

The fake news about internal Iranian disagreements is not a sign of American confidence. It is a symptom of American desperation after suffering significant losses.

For 40 days, the world watched as the most powerful military in history was held to a standstill. In the aftermath, that stalemate has hardened into a new strategic reality: Iran and the Axis of Resistance are more united than ever, Iran's hand is stronger than ever, and the US has nothing to show for its aggression except a string of resignations and recycled lies.

The big lie will not change the big defeat. And history will record everything.

Iranian Leaders Reject Trump Claims, Affirm National Unity

By Al Mayadeen English

23 Apr 2026 22:40

Iranian officials dismiss US President Donald Trump’s claims of internal divisions, stressing unity, institutional cohesion, and coordinated response.

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian and Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf rejected claims of internal political divisions in Iran, affirming that the country stands unified in the face of external pressure.

Their statements came in response to remarks by US President Donald Trump, who alleged the existence of internal conflict within Iran’s political system.

In separate posts on the platform X, both officials stressed that political labels such as “hardliners” and “moderates” do not reflect the reality in Iran.

“In our Iran, there are no hardliners or moderates. We are all Iranians and revolutionaries,” the statements read. "And with the iron unity of the nation and the state, with complete obedience to the Supreme Leader of the Revolution, we will make the criminal aggressor regret it."

They added that national unity, alongside adherence to the leadership of the country, would ensure a decisive response to any aggression. “One God, one nation, one leader, one path; and this path toward Iran’s victory is more precious than life,” they said.

Araghchi highlights institutional cohesion

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi also emphasized the cohesion of state institutions, linking this unity to broader regional developments.

In a statement, he said, “The failure of Israeli terrorist assassinations is evident in the continued functioning of Iran’s state institutions with unity, purpose, and discipline.”

He added that “the field and diplomatic fronts are fully coordinated in the same war,” stressing that Iranians are “more united than ever.”

Response to Trump’s allegations

The remarks were issued in direct response to Trump’s earlier claims that Iran was struggling to identify its leadership and was experiencing internal divisions.

He alleged that "The infighting is between the 'Hardliners,' who have been losing BADLY on the battlefield, and the 'Moderates,' who are not very moderate at all (but gaining respect!), is CRAZY!" Iran outrightly rejects these characterizations of its politicians.

Tehran’s response reflects a broader effort to counter external narratives portraying internal fragmentation, instead emphasizing institutional stability and national cohesion.

This comes after the Iranian judiciary strongly rejected Trump's comments alleging that Tehran canceled the execution of eight women protesters following his requests, adding that the report was entirely baseless and false. 

Trump Officials Consider Sending 1,100 Afghans Who Aided US to DR Congo

By Al Mayadeen English

Source: The Guardian

22 Apr 2026 08:20

The Trump administration is reportedly discussing plans to send up to 1,100 Afghans who assisted US military operations during the Afghanistan war to the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The Trump administration is discussing plans to send up to 1,100 Afghans who assisted the US during its occupation of Afghanistan to the Democratic Republic of Congo, a country already suffering from one of the world's largest displacement crises, according to a report by Victoria Bekiempis for The Guardian.

The resettlement discussions, first reported by the New York Times, come after President Donald Trump halted an initiative that would have allowed Afghans who supported US war efforts to apply for resettlement in the United States, a non-profit confirmed on Tuesday.

The group of more than 1,000 Afghans has been stranded in Qatar for an entire year. According to the Times, the group includes interpreters, relatives of US military personnel, and more than 400 children. The United States evacuated these Afghans to Qatar for their protection because they had supported the US during its occupation of Afghanistan, which is now once again under Taliban control following American military withdrawal.

The Democratic Republic of Congo is currently reeling from decades of conflict and instability, according to the report. The UN Refugee Agency estimates that 8.2 million people were displaced in Congo as of September 2025, with that number expected to reach 9 million by the end of the year.

Shawn VanDiver, president of the non-profit AfghanEvac, told The Guardian that he had learned of these discussions from people at and around the US State Department.

Advocate says Afghans should be brought to US

VanDiver stated that 900 of the 1,100 Afghans in Qatar are eligible for resettlement in the United States. For the remaining 200 who are not eligible, he suggested that Washington could explore options with countries other than Congo, which is struggling with widespread violence.

"The others should just come here," VanDiver told The Guardian. "This is an easy solve: 'Hey, welcome to America.'"

VanDiver said that between 100 and 150 of these Afghans are family members of active duty service members, while more than 700 are women and children.

"It's insane – this could all be fixed just by a policy change," VanDiver said, noting that the Department of Homeland Security could allow entry to Afghans who have already qualified for the program. "They can come here – there's no law that is preventing them."

VanDiver also warned that returning to Afghanistan would likely result in death for these individuals, given their collaboration with US forces.

State Department calls third-country resettlement 'positive resolution'

A State Department spokesperson told The Guardian that officials are continuing to identify options for voluntary resettlement of the Afghans currently living at Camp As-Sayliyah in Qatar. The spokesperson claimed that moving this group "to a third country is a positive resolution" for their safety and that of Americans.

The spokesperson added that "the Afghan nationals at CAS do not currently have a viable pathway to the United States."

The State Department says it remains in routine, direct communication with camp residents regarding resettlement initiatives, but would not disclose details surrounding the negotiations due to sensitivity.

It remains possible that the Congo talks will not materialize into actual resettlement, leaving this group of Afghans in further limbo, the report notes.

The Trump administration's willingness to abandon Afghan allies to a country already collapsing under its own humanitarian crisis reveals a fundamental truth about US foreign policy: those who serve the empire, whether interpreters, soldiers, or local collaborators, are ultimately disposable. 

Russia Says Its Africa Corps Has Freed Russian and Ukrainian Citizens Abducted in Niger

8:00 AM EDT, April 22, 2026

LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) — Russia’s Africa Corps freed one Russian citizen and one Ukrainian who had been abducted by an al-Qaida affiliate in Niger in July 2024, the Russian Defense Ministry said Tuesday.

The ministry identified the freed captives as Russian citizen Oleg Gret and Ukrainian citizen Yuri Yurov. They both appeared in a video posted on a media platform affiliated with Jamaat Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin (JNIM), an armed group which controls large swathes of territory in the Sahel region.

“As a result of a special operation conducted by the Africa Corps in the Republic of Mali, employees of a Russian geological exploration company captured in July 2024 in Niger by the terrorist group Jamaat Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin were freed,” the statement said.

The abduction was a hit to Russia in the region, where it has since displaced previous Western partners. In recent years, Russia has capitalized on the growing dissatisfaction with France, the former colonial power in the region, and escalating attacks from armed groups.

The Russian state-controlled paramilitary proxy group, the Africa Corps, replaced the mercenary Wagner Group for Moscow’s military operations on the continent.

“The hostages freed by the Russian Africa Corps servicemen will be transported by Russian military transport aircraft to Moscow for treatment and rehabilitation,” the ministry said.

Pope Urges US and Iran to Return to Peace Talks, Condemns Capital Punishment

By NICOLE WINFIELD

1:53 PM EDT, April 23, 2026

ABOARD THE PAPAL PLANE (AP) — Pope Leo XIV urged the United States and Iran to return to talks to end the war Thursday and condemned capital punishment, in a wide-ranging press conference en route home from his trip to Africa.

Leo also asserted that countries have the right to control their borders but mustn’t treat migrants worse than “animals,” and lamented that the church’s morality teaching is often reduced to sexual issues.

On Iran, capital punishment and peace

After a trip that was dominated by the very public back and forth between Leo and U.S. President Donald Trump over the war, Leo urged the United States and Iran to return to negotiations.

He called for a new “culture of peace” to replace the recourse to violence whenever conflicts arise.

He said the question wasn’t whether the Iran regime should change or not. “The question should be about how to promote the values we believe in without the deaths of so many innocents.”

He revealed that he carries with him the photo of a Muslim Lebanese boy who had been killed in Israel’s recent war with Hezbollah. The boy had been photographed holding a sign welcoming the pope when he visited Lebanon last year.

“As a pastor I cannot be in favor of war,” he told reporters aboard his plane. “I would like to encourage everyone to find responses that come from a culture of peace and not hatred and division.”

Asked if he condemned Iran’s recent executions, Leo said he condemned “all actions that are unjust” and included capital punishment in the list.

“I condemn the taking of people’s lives. I condemn capital punishment. I believe human life is to be respected and that all people from conception to natural (death), their lives should be respected and protected.

“So when a regime, when a country takes decisions which take away the lives of other people unjustly, then obviously that is something that should be condemned,” he said.

Pope Francis changed the church’s social teaching to declare capital punishment immoral in all cases.

On migration and the rights of states

Leo affirmed the right of countries to impose immigration controls on their borders and acknowledged that uncontrolled migration had created situations “that are sometimes more unjust in the place where they arrive than from where they left.”

“I personally believe that a state has the right to impose rules for its frontiers,” he said. “But saying this, I ask: ‘What are we doing in the wealthier countries to change the situation in poorer countries’ to provide opportunities so that people aren’t compelled to leave?”

Regardless, he said migrants are human beings and deserve to be respected in their human dignity and not be treated “worse than house pets, animals.”

On LGBTQ+ blessings and morality

Leo was asked about the recent invitation by Cardinal Reinhard Marx, archbishop of Munich, for the priests and pastoral workers in his archdioceses to adopt a set of guidelines formalizing and ritualizing blessings of same-sex couples.

The guidelines were approved last year by a controversial German church governing body made up of the German bishops’ conference and a Catholic lay group that has been working to have a greater say in church decision-making.

The Vatican in 2023 allowed for such blessings, but it made clear that they were not to be formalized or ritualized. The Vatican allowed them to be offered spontaneously and informally, as a priest gives a final blessing to all people at the end of Mass.

Leo said the Holy See had made clear to German bishops that “we do not agree with the formalized blessing” of gay couples or couples in other “irregular situations.”

The Vatican’s 2023 declaration allowing an informal blessing, promulgated with virtually no consultation outside the Vatican, sharply divided the church, with African bishops delivering a continent-wide dissent and refusing to implement it. Homosexual activity is criminalized in several African countries.

Asked how he would handle keeping the church unified over such a divisive issue, Leo spoke broadly about how culture war questions of sexual morality had dominated church discourse, particularly in the West, far too much.

“I think it’s very important to understand that the unity or division of the church should not revolve around sexual matters,” he said. “We tend to think that when the church is talking about morality, that the only issue of morality is sexual.

“And in reality, I believe that there are much greater and more important issues such as justice, equality, freedom of men and women, freedom of religion that would all take priority before that particular issue.”

The comment was significant because it suggested that even though he is American, Leo believes the church in the U.S. and the West has excessively reduced its moral teachings to revolve only around sex at the expense of other pressing issues.

A pope who keeps on eye on how he’s being covered

History’s first U.S. pope showed himself keenly aware of how his Africa trip had been reported and interpreted, including about his sometimes tame public addresses to African leaders who are accused of corruption or authoritarianism.

With a few notable exceptions, Leo kept his political remarks to the leaders largely diplomatic, using a language of encouragement and subtle messaging rather than headline-grabbing condemnations.

He also allowed some of the circumstances of his visit to speak louder than his words: a choreographed song and dance routine by prisoners in a country known for gross human rights abuses, or the extravagant luxury of a president’s hometown in a country where more than half the population lives in poverty.

Leo insisted that his primary reason for visiting Algeria, Cameroon, Angola and Equatorial Guinea was as a pastor, to accompany his flock in their faith.

He added that the Holy See can sometimes achieve more behind the scenes via its diplomatic work, including through the release of political prisoners, than with “great proclamations criticizing, judging or condemning.”

——-

Associated Press writer Monika Pronczuk contributed to this report.

New Bridge Helps Cement Lesotho as Water Lifeline for South Africa’s Economic Hub

By MOGOMOTSI MAGOME

10:52 AM EDT, April 23, 2026

JOHANNESBURG (AP) — For every glass of water or a shower taken in Gauteng, South Africa’s most populous province that includes Johannesburg, there is a 60% chance the water came from its small neighbor, the mountain kingdom of Lesotho.

A newly built bridge launched this week is part of a network of constructions that will help the landlocked nation, cited by the World Bank as one of the poorest in the world, nearly double its water exports to South Africa to power one of Africa’s biggest industrial and economic hubs. It will also boost the water royalties and revenue for a country where half the population lives under the national poverty line.

The Senqu Bridge, 825 meters (2,700 feet) long and 90 meters (295 feet) high, is part of the Lesotho Highlands Water Project that will increase water exports to South Africa from 780 million cubic meters a year currently to more 1,270 billion cubic meters.

The bridge goes over the reservoir behind the Polihali Dam, ensuring continuous movement once the water levels have risen. The construction of the dam is not yet complete.

The Lesotho Highlands Water Project is one of the biggest transboundary water projects in the world and it is the largest investment South Africa has ever made outside its borders. It also boosts Lesotho’s hydropower output, advancing energy security and reducing the country’s reliance on electricity imports.

The total cost of the project is currently estimated at over 53 billion rands ($3.2 billion), with over 120 kilometers (75 miles) of tunnels that channel water from Lesotho’s mountainous regions into South Africa’s river systems. Its first phase began in 1990, as a result of a 1986 treaty between the two countries, and it is currently in its second phase that is estimated to be completed between 2028 and 2029.

The 2.4 billion-rand ($144-million) bridge, the largest of the three bridges that support water infrastructure in the northeastern part of the country, has been lauded as an engineering achievement for Lesotho, rising more than 2,500 meters (8,200 feet) above sea level.

“South Africa is a water-scarce country and the waters of Lesotho’s highlands are vital to our country’s development. We remain forever grateful to the great Basotho nation for making water resources available to us,” South Africa President Cyril Ramaphosa said during the launch of the bridge.

The construction of the bridge created about 1,200 jobs, mostly for Lesotho residents. The government last year declared a state of economic emergency after the unemployment rate hit about 30%.

“The royalties and infrastructure that flow from this project are not incidental benefits. They are central to our development finance strategy,” said Lesotho Prime Minister Sam Matekane.

Some of the construction still pending includes a 38-kilometer (23-mile) tunnel connecting the Polihali and Katse reservoirs.

“The project must deepen impact on the people, strengthen accountability in delivery and ensure that its benefits are not abstract but are felt in the daily lives of the people affected,” Matekane said.

The country’s economic woes have been worsened by trade tariffs of up to 50% imposed by the United States, the biggest importer of Lesotho’s textile and mining products. It has also been at the receiving end of massive U.S. foreign aid cuts which were funding most of its health programs.

At Least 17 Somalian Migrants Die After Boat Capsizes off Algeria

By OMAR FARUK

3:38 PM EDT, April 23, 2026

MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP) — A boat capsized in waters between Algeria and Spain, leaving at least 17 Somali migrants dead, Somalia’s ambassador to Algeria said Thursday.

Ambassador Yusuf Ahmed Hassan told Somali state media that he was contacted by distressed parents searching for information about their missing relatives. The victims include 12 men and five women who drowned when their boat capsized while attempting the often-dangerous journey to Europe.

“I was reached by parents who were looking for their children and wanted to know their whereabouts,” he said.

Hassan said that he then contacted the Algerian Foreign Ministry, which informed him that a group of African migrants had died in a coastal province about 100 kilometers (60 miles) west of the capital, Algiers.

The ambassador said that he traveled to the Algerian city of Bou Ismail early Thursday, arriving at around 6 a.m.

“I visited two hospitals in the province and saw the bodies,” he said.

The route between North Africa and Spain is one of several commonly used by migrants seeking to reach Europe, often involving overcrowded and unseaworthy boats.

Shipwrecks are frequent along these routes, particularly in the western Mediterranean and Atlantic corridors, where thousands of migrants risk their lives each year fleeing conflict, poverty and climate-related hardships.

Somali migrants are among those increasingly undertaking such journeys, driven by insecurity, limited economic opportunities and prolonged drought conditions at home.

Algerian authorities haven’t yet released full details about the latest tragedy, including the total number of passengers on board or how the boat capsized.

Political Divorce Looms as the ANC Threatens to Purge Dual Members Who Campaign for SACP

Cape Town

Lindsay Dentlinger

23 April 2026 | 11:31

The ANC is warning that those in leadership positions who fail to respond to its letter can face being stripped of their jobs. 

Political divorce looms as the ANC threatens to purge dual members who campaign for SACP

ANC Secretary General Fikile Mbalula. Picture: @MYANC/X.

The battle lines between the African National Congress (ANC) and its alliance partner, the South African Communist Party (SACP), have been drawn.

While the ANC on Thursday issued letters to dual members requiring them to declare their allegiance ahead of the local government polls, the SACP says it won’t be acceding to the demand.

Both parties have held separate briefings to clarify their positions following the SACP’s decision to contest elections independently.

The ANC is warning that those in leadership positions who fail to respond to its letter can face being stripped of their jobs.

ANC Secretary General Fikile Mbalula on Thursday read dual members the riot act if they don’t respond to his missive within the next ten days.

"Should you decide to ignore this communication, and you are found to be campaigning for any other political party outside the ANC, we will take steps."

The directive puts the SACP in a difficult position, given it also has two ministers in government - Mineral Resources and Petroleum minister Gwede Mantashe and Higher Education minister Buti Manamela.

"If you are in the executive, at local government or service in any position of influence, including deployment, we will take steps, including removal from those positions with immediate effect."

While the ANC insists the stance it’s adopted towards the SACP is not antagonistic, it’s not being received that way.

SACP General Secretary Solly Mapaila says the ANC’s directive is akin to demanding subordination from the SACP.

South Africa’s Police Chief Suspended Over Corruption Allegations

South Africa’s national police commissioner Fannie Masemola appears in the Pretoria Magistrates Court in Pretoria, South Africa, Tuesday, April 21, 2026. (AP Photo/ Mogomotsi Magome)

12:18 PM EDT, April 23, 2026

JOHANNESBURG (AP) — South Africa’s top police official was suspended by the president on Thursday after he was charged with breaking finance laws related to an allegedly corrupt police contract.

Fannie Masemola appeared in court on Tuesday and was set to return alongside 12 other senior police officers suspected of fraud, corruption and money laundering in connection with the contract, which was allegedly awarded unlawfully to a local company. Charges against Masemola relate to his responsibilities as the accounting officer for the police service.

President Cyril Ramaphosa said in a press briefing on Thursday that he had appointed Puleng Dimpane, the commissioner for financial management services in the police service, as acting police commissioner while Masemola is on trial.

“I have agreed with General Masemola that he be deemed to be on precautionary suspension pending the conclusion of the case,” Ramaphosa said.

His suspension follows wide-ranging allegations of corruption in the country’s criminal justice system that were revealed at a commission of inquiry appointed by Ramaphosa last year.

Masemola faces four counts of violating the Public Finance Management Act, a law that regulates the government’s awarding of contracts, over a 360 million-rand ($21 million) deal to provide health and well-being services to police officers. It is alleged that some of the police officers received bribes from the winning bidders.

‘Sovereignty’ Bill Seeking to Deter Foreign Influence Has Drawn Widespread Concern in Uganda

By RODNEY MUHUMUZA

7:51 AM EDT, April 23, 2026

KAMPALA, Uganda (AP) — A bill by Ugandan authorities whose stated purpose is to deter foreign interference has drawn widespread criticism as concern grows over its all-encompassing definition of a foreign agent and its potential to hurt the work of civic groups.

The “Protection of Sovereignty” bill is being examined by lawmakers who could pass it within days despite criticism by banks, traders, the political opposition, civic groups and others who depend on remittances in foreign currency from abroad.

Many critics say the sovereignty bill really seeks to weaken opposition parties and civic groups, which usually depend on generous grants to do their work in governance and human rights, in a sign of what they see as increasing government repression.

Charles Onyango-Obbo, a prominent Ugandan political commentator, said the bill’s clauses were “unprecedented” in their reach and consequences. “They redefine who is foreign,” he said. “They extend control from politics into everyday economic and social life.”

The bill’s definition of a foreigner includes “a non-Ugandan citizen” as well as “a Ugandan citizen residing outside Uganda,” in addition to other categories of individuals and companies not domiciled in the East African country. That includes students, businesspeople, migrant workers, diplomats and others who live abroad.

If the bill is passed in its current version, Ugandans abroad would have to register as foreign agents to avoid delays in the processing of transactions through the banks, which would be punished for non-compliance.

Authorities are backing the bill, citing a need for social cohesion and protection from meddlers who would interfere in Uganda’s internal affairs. Opponents say the law, if enacted, would directly or indirectly affect almost every Ugandan at home or abroad.

“It does not protect sovereignty,” Isaac Ssemakadde, president of the Uganda Law Society, said in a statement. “It destroys the sovereignty — the people’s right to self-determination — that belongs to Ugandans.”

The legislation forbids foreign agents from obtaining grants or other monetary support from external sources in excess of 400 million Ugandan shillings — roughly $110,000 today — within a 12-month period without the approval of the interior minister.

In a letter to the office of the attorney general, the Uganda Bankers’ Association warned of a range of consequences for banking operations — notably by introducing other regulators other than the central bank, undermining foreign investment, and creating an unpredictable environment for commercial banks.

As most commercial banks have foreign shareholders and borrow offshore, “compliance and reputational risk rise overnight” when routine banking triggers the foreign agent’s label, the group said.

Civic leaders have voiced strong criticism of the bill, which comes months after President Yoweri Museveni won his seventh term. Museveni has repeatedly accused his most prominent rival, Bobi Wine, of being an unpatriotic agent of foreigners. The authoritarian Museveni, 81, has held power since 1986.

“If you want to regulate and close civil society, go in the NGO Act and put that,” Sarah Bireete, the leader of the Center for Constitutional Governance group, told reporters. “If you want to deregister civil society in Uganda, go to the constitution, amend it and say there will be no civil society in Uganda. But to hide behind protection of sovereignty, that you want to control civil society, why don’t you go to the law managing civil society and amend it?”

Wine, who went into hiding after January’s election and is now in temporary exile in the U.S., denies the charges and asserts that Museveni must be held accountable for his excesses during his long rule. Wine, who has wide support among young people in urban areas, officially took 24.7% of the vote, a result he rejected as fake.

Why a Bitter Political Feud Has Left a Former Zambian President Unburied 10 Months After His Death

By MICHELLE GUMEDE

2:57 PM EDT, April 23, 2026

JOHANNESBURG (AP) — A feud over his funeral has meant the body of former Zambian President Edgar Lungu still hasn’t been buried nearly a year after he died in a South African hospital.

Lungu’s family wanted to bury him in South Africa because of his bitter political rivalry with current Zambian leader Hakainde Hichilema. But the Zambian government has gone to court to win custody of Lungu’s remains so that it can repatriate them for a state funeral.

A new twist in the monthslong drama came Wednesday when the Zambian government said it took custody of the body with the assistance of South African authorities, only for a court to order the remains returned to a funeral home where the family had kept them.

Here’s what to know about the bizarre row that’s been a source of morbid fascination for people in both countries:

10 months on, still not buried

Lungu died on June 5 last year of an undisclosed illness at the age of 68, having traveled to South Africa for medical treatment. His family made plans to bury him in South Africa, refusing to return the body to Zambia for a state funeral to be attended by Hichilema.

The family, through a spokesperson, said it was because one of Lungu’s last wishes was that Hichilema should not go “anywhere near his body” when he is buried. The Zambian government launched a court case to win custody of the remains, arguing a state funeral was in the national interest.

Zambian authorities also prepared a space for Lungu months ago in a cemetery where some of the country’s ex-leaders are buried. The grave remains empty.

Bitter political rivals

Lungu and successor Hichilema were bitter political rivals in the southern African nation for years.

Lungu beat Hichilema in a 2016 election. A year later, Hichilema was imprisoned for four months on a charge of treason after failing to give way to the presidential motorcade on a road. The charge was dropped and Hichilema was released as advocacy groups condemned the arrest.

After Hichilema became president in 2021, Lungu claimed he was harassed by police and effectively placed under house arrest. His family said he was for a time prevented from leaving the country for medical treatment. Hichilema’s government denied those allegations.

Lungu reportedly traveled to South Africa by slipping away to an airport unnoticed and buying a ticket at the counter.

Legal battle over the remains

The Zambian government’s court case seeking custody of Lungu’s body halted a planned funeral service for him in South Africa last June. The move forced members of Lungu’s family — dressed in black funeral attire — to stop the service and travel to a courthouse for the urgent case.

A South African court later ruled in favor of the Zambian government and said the body should be repatriated. A date of May 12 was set for the body to be handed over.

Unlawful seizure of the body

The Zambian government announced late Wednesday that it had taken custody of Lungu’s body and moved it from a mortuary at a private funeral home in the South African capital, Pretoria, to another facility in preparation for repatriation.

Soon after, a court ordered the government to return the body to the family immediately, accusing it of contempt of court because it attempted to take Lungu’s remains before the agreed-upon date.

A new legal drama could now unfold after the court ordered the Zambian government — and South African authorities who apparently helped facilitate the moving of the body — to show why they shouldn’t be charged with contempt of court.