Wednesday, June 17, 2026

National Urban League Says African Americans Are in Recession

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

By Abayomi Azikiwe

Editor, Pan-African News Wire

Wednesday June 17, 2026

Political Review

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies Reinforces the NUL Position

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

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

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

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

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

Gendered Oppression Escalates

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

By Abayomi Azikiwe

Editor, Pan-African News Wire

Wednesday June 17, 2026

Political Review

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

The Existence of Imperialism Cannot Continue Without Unprovoked Wars of Aggression

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

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

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

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

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

By JUSTIN KABUMBA

10:05 AM EDT, June 17, 2026

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

By RODNEY MUHUMUZA

11:03 AM EDT, June 17, 2026

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

2:14 PM EDT, June 17, 2026

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Brics Summit

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Africa Urgently Needs More Fish Farms, UN Tells Ocean Conference

GRACE EKPU

By AFP

Kenya

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Tribune Staff Report

Jacqueline Bogle Mosley

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Wednesday, 17 June 2026 9:34 AM

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Netanyahu-Trump Relations Reach Breaking Point: Israeli Media

Wednesday, 17 June 2026 9:39 AM

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel (L) and US President Donald J. Trump at the White House in 2020. (Photo by New York Times)

Relations between Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and US President Donald Trump have entered a critical phase and may soon escalate into open political confrontation after the announcement of the Iran-US MoU to end the war, according to Israeli media.

A report by Israeli newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth cited growing frustration on Trump’s part regarding Netanyahu’s performance and approach, stemming from disagreements over war management and regional affairs.

The US administration has reportedly concluded that assessments provided by Israel regarding the course of the war have not aligned with realities on the ground.

According to the report, the tension between Trump and Netanyahu intensified following certain Israeli assaults on Lebanon.

The US president has come to believe that Netanyahu shows little inclination toward reaching a political compromise or bringing an end to the confrontations.

The US reportedly rejected an official Israeli request to review the MoU, leaving Israeli officials unaware of the agreement's full details.

Channel 12 correspondent Yaron Avraham reported that the request was formally submitted and denied. Netanyahu himself acknowledged during a Monday press conference that he was "not sure about the details" of the MoU.

White House rejects Israeli request to 'review' Iran-US MoU: Reports

The US has rejected an "official Israeli request to review" the newly announced MoU between Washington and Tehran, according to reports.

Israel has reportedly informed the US that it does not consider itself bound by the agreement with Iran.

“The agreement with Iran was made by Trump, and this is his decision; we have our own interests,” Netanyahu said in a statement on Monday, vowing that Israeli troops would not withdraw from Lebanon and that the fight against Iran is “not over.”

Since the MoU was announced two days ago, the Israeli regime has violated the ceasefire in southern Lebanon 84 times, continuing its “crimes and massacres” against the Lebanese people, according to Iranian military sources.

At least four Israeli drone strikes targeted the southern Lebanese town of Mayfadoun on Tuesday afternoon, following heavy artillery bombardments in other areas.

Trump has publicly criticized Netanyahu's judgment, particularly regarding Israeli strikes on Lebanon. Speaking at the G7 summit, Trump stated: "Without the United States, there would be no Israel. Without me, there would be no Israel". He warned that "Bibi has to be more responsible with respect to Lebanon".

According to Axios, Trump expressed fury over an Israeli strike on Beirut conducted shortly before the US-Iran deal was to be signed, reportedly telling advisers: "Why did Bibi have to do a fcking attack? I was so pssed off. He has no f*cking judgement."

The US president has also suggested Syria under former Daesh and al-Qaeda deputy Abu Muhammad al-Jolani could handle Lebanon "if Israel can't do the job without killing everyone else".

Israeli analysts have characterized the situation as a strategic failure for Netanyahu. Haaretz columnist Yossi Verter described Netanyahu as standing at the "height of what any objective expert would define as a colossal strategic failure" for Israel.

Maariv columnist Ben Caspit wrote that Trump "threw him under the bus". Walla news commentator Barak Seri called it Netanyahu's "greatest humiliation".

Sudan’s Young Women Return to International Soccer as War and Taboos Linger

Sudan's U-17 women's national team players, in red, defend the ball during a soccer

By Africa News

Sudan

Their red jerseys stood out against the green pitch. Most were teenage girls. Some had fled war. Others had never played in an organized soccer league or set foot in a major stadium before.

Yet when they took the field at Larbi Zaouli Stadium in Casablanca, Morocco, they marked Sudan’s first appearance in international women’s soccer since a civil war erupted in a country where women’s participation in sports has long been controversial.

“My goal is to lift up soccer in my country,” Nura Mohamed, the 17-year-old team captain, told The Associated Press.

“It’s a beautiful, unique feeling because, at the end of the day, I just love playing.”

Sudan’s under-17 women’s national team traveled to Morocco last week for qualifying matches on the road to the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics. The inexperienced squad suffered heavy defeats against Comoros, conceding 30 goals in two matches.

Many of the players broke down in tears after the final whistle in front of a dozen cheering fans.

They faced an older, fitter, and more experienced opponent. Unable to assemble a senior women’s squad in time, Sudan’s soccer federation entered a younger team to avoid forfeiting its place in the qualifiers. They only started training weeks ago.

“The difference between us and the others is huge. We cannot yet compete at the highest level," Burhan Tia, a veteran Sudanese soccer coach who oversees all of Sudan’s women’s national teams, said after the first match, a 17–0 defeat.

“Comoros has many players competing in Europe, our team is mainly made up of schoolgirls."

This team represents hope for Sudan's future

Sudan’s women’s soccer collapsed when civil war erupted in 2023. For federation officials, debuting this young squad in Casablanca after years of conflict marks an important step in keeping women's soccer alive in Sudan.

“Some traveled long distances just to attend training. Many are separated from their families, yet they continue to work hard and pursue their dream," Manal Ali Bushra, a businesswoman who heads the women’s soccer committee, told the AP.

To support that vision, Ali Bushra said the federation is working on infrastructure projects, including a planned sports city and the renovation of key stadiums in safer parts of the country. She declined to answer questions about the women’s program budget and funds.

Tia knew the magnitude of the challenge when he accepted the job of rebuilding a shattered team.

“First, I had to find girls who played soccer. Then, once I found girls who played, I had to make sure they were the right age,” he said. “Then I needed to convince their parents to let them miss classes for training.”

With the league suspended, his scouting trips took him to schools across Sudan and to neighboring Egypt, where many families had fled the war. He recruited 10 players from teams and academies in Cairo, with the rest drawn from Sudanese cities.

Tia would have liked to recruit from conflict-hit areas like Darfur or Kordofan, a region known for producing Sudan’s top athletes. But many girls had lost their identification documents, making it impossible to verify their ages under international regulations.

The war has also shattered transportation, turning journeys between cities that once took hours into perilous trips lasting days.

On the field, the players’ lack of experience was evident. Several struggled with basic positioning, failing to hold the offside line or maintain tactical discipline. Throughout the matches, they repeatedly looked to the sidelines for instructions from the coach and his assistant.

Facing war, fatwas and conservatism

The United Nations has described the war in Sudan as the world’s worst humanitarian crisis. It began in 2023 when a power struggle between the military and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces erupted into fighting marked by mass killings, rape and ethnic violence. More than 40,000 people have been killed, according to U.N. figures, and over 14 million have been displaced, with famine and disease spreading across parts of the country.

The war halted every sports activity, including the women’s soccer league, which was officially established after the 2019 progressive revolution that ousted President Omar al-Bashir. His three-decade Islamist rule was marked by Public Order Laws that rights groups said restricted women’s freedoms. Even after the revolution, prominent Sudanese preacher Abdulhay Yousif said the establishment of a women’s football league was aimed at undermining religion.

“The idea of women running, jumping, sweating, and even something as simple as their bodies being visible in motion, was seen by Bashir’s Islamist regime as producing fitna, which in a Sudanese context was understood as sexual or moral chaos,” Liv Tønnessen, a political scientist researching gender politics in Sudan, told the AP.

“So when women step onto a soccer pitch, they are directly confronting that entire logic. They are not just present in a male-dominated sports arena, they are moving freely in it, on their own terms,” Tønnessen, a former guest researcher in a women-only university in Sudan, added.

Beyond institutional hurdles, players also faced a wave of sexist abuse online. On the national team’s social media accounts, many commenters mocked them for big defeats. Others posted the phrase “go back to the kitchen,” in multiple languages.

Ghana's Thomas Partey Loses Bid to Enter Canada for World Cup

Ex-Arsenal footballer Thomas Partey arrives at Westminster Magistrates' Court where he is charged with five counts of rape and one count of sexual assault, Aug. 5, 2025

By Africa News

Canada

Ghana midfielder Thomas Partey has lost a court challenge to allow him to enter Canada for his team's World Cup opener in Toronto.

Ottawa denied Partey's visa over seven charges of rape and one count of sexual assault brought against him in Britain.

Accra requested an injunction to set aside the decision but it was denied by a federal judge on Tuesday.

Ghana's foreign minister called the ruling "high-handed and extremely unfair." Accra has sent an official "note of protest" to Ottawa, formally asking for the decision to be reviewed.

Canada's foreign ministry told AFP that it "maintains regular diplomatic engagement with Ghana, including on consular and migration-related issues when they arise."

But the ministry declined comment on discussions with Ghana about Partey's exclusion and said decisions on entering the country are made by Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC).

IRCC said "Canada has been consistent that hosting major events does not change Canada's immigration laws."

"Every person seeking to come to Canada is assessed individually, based on the facts available and the law that applies," it added in a statement.

The Black Stars will play Panama on Thursday.

Shortly before the decision was handed down, Ghana's veteran coach Carlos Queiroz told reporters in Toronto that his side would be ready, regardless of the court outcome.

"My business is to play with the cards that I have in front of me," Queiroz said."When the decision comes, we are ready."

Panama head coach Thomas Christiansen, also asked about Partey's possible exclusion, said he believed Ghana would pose strong competition even if the former Arsenal player was not on the pitch.

"They have a lot of other footballers who can take on his role," he said in Spanish.Ghana would not be "weaker" because Partey was absent, he added.

"They have a lot more experience than we have," Christiansen said of the Black Stars.

The charges against Partey relate to allegations by four different women between 2020 and 2022. He has pleaded not guilty to all the charges.

Tunisia Repatriates Nearly 100 Sub-Saharan Migrants in 'Voluntary Return'

Some 91 migrants line up to leave Tunisia as authorities repatriate nearly 100 people from sub-Saharan Africa under a voluntary return programme.

By Africa News

Tunisia

Tunisian authorities repatriated nearly a hundred migrants from sub-Saharan Africa on Tuesday under a so-called "voluntary return" initiative that has involved almost 5,000 people over the past year, Tunisia's national guard said.

With their backpacks and suitcases, dozens of individuals -- mostly young men, their faces covered in black masks, alongside a number of women and children -- were photographed by AFP at the Tunis-Carthage airport.

A total of 91 irregular migrants left Tuesday, headed to multiple sub-Saharan countries, national guard spokesman Houcem Eddine Jebabli told AFP, lauding the strength of a programme launched last July.

He said the government initiative "takes into account humanitarian and social aspects alongside judicial and security constraints", adding that "so far close to 5,000 people" have participated in the programme.

The rate of returns has intensified recently, with flights increasing in frequency from once a month to "near-daily dedicated flights", Jebabli added. The initiative is separate from the International Organization for Migration's own voluntary return scheme, which Jebabli said "secured the return of 27,000 people in three years".

Under the government initiative, a campaign has been launched to encourage migrants to come forward "via a toll-free number or the numbers of officials at the voluntary return camp", Jebabli said. AFP was not able to speak with the departing migrants on Tuesday, but humanitarian sources have recently denounced a campaign of arbitrary arrests of migrants who have been taken into buses to unknown locations.

According to Jebabli, the voluntary return camp in question, where the migrants' identities are verified, is situated north of Tunisia's second city of Sfax. Rights groups had in 2023 reported that an estimated 25,000 migrants had gathered in camps in that region under poor, unsanitary conditions after they were driven out of major cities.

In February of that year, President Kais Saied said "hordes of illegal sub-Saharan migrants" posed a demographic threat to the Arab-majority country. Saied's speech triggered a series of racially motivated attacks as thousands of sub-Saharan African migrants in Tunisia were pushed out of their homes and jobs.

Alongside neighbouring Libya, Tunisia had been a key departure point for migrants seeking to make the perilous journey across the Mediterranean in search of better lives in Europe. Amid efforts to curb arrivals to its southern shores, the European Union signed a 255-million-euro ($300 million) deal with Tunis in the summer of 2023.

Temporary Shelter Becomes Home for Migrants Fleeing Unrest in South Africa

Jaco Marais

By Africa News

Immigration

Displaced Malawians are being moved from a temporary shelter in Durban following a recent wave of anti-immigrant unrest in South Africa, with some migrants choosing to return home amid growing fears for their safety.

In recent weeks, groups carrying sticks, whips and shields have marched through communities demanding that undocumented foreigners leave the country by June 30. The demonstrations have heightened concerns among migrant communities, many of whom say they no longer feel secure.

"Because of xenophobia, I am going back to my country," said Malawian migrant Martha Kennedy as she prepared to leave South Africa.

President Cyril Ramaphosa has appealed to South Africans not to blame migrants for the country's economic and social challenges, warning against hostility toward foreign nationals.

However, conditions at temporary shelters have become increasingly difficult. "There is some frustration as you see they have been here for so many days," said Lazarus Soda, another Malawian migrant. "Life is too hard out here. In terms of sanitation it's hard. There are some toilets, but it's not enough."

One of Africa's largest economies, South Africa has long attracted migrants from across the continent seeking work and better opportunities. According to the national statistics agency, more than three million foreign nationals live in the country, representing just over five percent of the population.

Rwanda Stepping Up Precautions Against Ebola, Health Minister Says

Sabin Nsanzimana, Rwandan Minister of Health

By Africa News and CGTN

One month into the latest Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, neighbouring Rwanda says it's taking "public health precautions," even though no cases have been detected within its borders.

The country's health minister says vigilance is key.

"The spread of this current outbreak came as a surprise when it was announced in mid-May. What worried most people was how such a large number of cases could have built up so quickly, when it should have been detected earlier."

Since the outbreak was declared , 808 cases have been confirmed in the DRC, including 192 deaths, according to the latest World Health Organization figures.

Neighbouring Uganda has seen 19 confirmed cases, including two deaths.

"At the moment, we can see things are moving in the right direction, even though it will still take some time in countries like Uganda, for example," Nsanzimana says.

"They’ve gone 10 days without a new case, which is reassuring, and in other parts of the DRC as well, we’re starting to see good results. But in Ituri, which is still the epicentre, there are still new cases every day."

Despite urgent efforts to limit the spread of the virus, officials from the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies on Tuesday joined a growing chorus of warnings over the swelling scale of the crisis in DR Congo especially.

"The peak is, I think, not beyond us, but in front of us," Bruno Michon, the IFRC's operations manager for the outbreak, told reporters in Geneva.

"We are afraid that this could last one year" before the epidemic is over, he said, speaking from Bunia, capital of the DRC's northeastern Ituri province, which is the outbreak's epicentre.

Rwanda can't afford to let down its guard, Nsanzimana says:

"The longer it takes with the virus present at our borders, the more it weighs on our economies and on our daily activities. Even if there is no Ebola in Rwanda, there are still cross-border activities. There are planes that land in Kigali and go on to Entebbe, with stopovers."

Aid workers say cuts to US funding have led to insufficient contact tracing and a shortage of protective equipment. The World Health Organization on Tuesday stressed that community engagement, access and trust are also essential to stop transmission.

Fear of Ebola Keeps Pregnant Women Away from Hospitals in DR Congo

By Agencies

Democratic Republic Of Congo

In the Democratic Republic of Congo, the Ebola outbreak is triggering a secondary health crisis as growing numbers of pregnant women avoid hospitals for fear of infection or being placed under observation.

At Bénédicte Clinic in Bunia, prenatal consultations have dropped dramatically. According to the clinic’s medical director, Dr. Sonny Mwembo, attendance has fallen from around 60 expectant mothers per month to just 10 since the outbreak began.

Among those staying away is 26-year-old Esther Lutula, who is expecting her second child. She says concerns about Ebola screening procedures have led her to suspend her prenatal care.

"I stopped going to prenatal consultations. I prefer to wait until the Ebola outbreak is under control. When someone arrives at the hospital with a temperature of 38 degrees Celsius or higher, they are placed under observation. That worries me, so I am waiting until the risk of infection decreases before resuming my medical visits."

Lutula's fears intensified after a relative died from the virus.

"My sister’s sister-in-law died on Sunday. She worked in a bakery, and we learned that she had died from Ebola. I was afraid to attend the funeral. My husband advised me to stay at home because pregnant women are particularly vulnerable to the disease."

One month after the outbreak was officially declared, health authorities have reported 782 confirmed cases and 181 deaths across the three affected provinces. The virus continues to spread rapidly in remote areas, where population movements make contact tracing more difficult.

Health professionals warn that avoiding medical care could have serious consequences for mothers and their babies. Dr. Sonny Mwembo, Medical Director, Bénédicte Clinic: "This recent decline in attendance at prenatal consultations is worrying. It could lead to more obstetric complications and, ultimately, an increase in maternal deaths as well as fetal and neonatal deaths."

Health authorities and humanitarian organizations are now working to reassure communities that preventive measures are in place at healthcare facilities, hoping to prevent the Ebola outbreak from causing a parallel maternal health crisis.

Equatorial Guinea Government Resigns After Failing to Meet Targets

Basillioh Rukanga

BBC

AFP via Getty Images Equatorial Guinea's Prime Minister Manuel Osa Nsue Nsua in a black suit and white shirt and tie.

Prime Minister Manuel Osa Nsue Nsua was appointed in 2024

Equatorial Guinea's government has resigned after failing to meet its objectives, Vice-President Teodoro Nguema Obiang Mangue said.

Obiang, who is also the son of President Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, said the prime minister had presented the resignation of all members of the government because it had barely reached 10% of its targets.

He did not specify the targets but a statement by the ruling party said the president had observed that the government fostered corruption and failed to diversify the economy.

President Obiang is the world's longest-serving leader who has ruled the oil-rich West African country since 1979 with a strong grip, while naming family members to key government roles.

The president appointed the outgoing government in 2024, with Manuel Osa Nsue Nsua as prime minister.

On Tuesday, the vice-president said the resignation was in line with "the principle that responsibility in public management must be accompanied by results".

"The degree of execution achieved is clearly insufficient in relation to the expectations and commitments undertaken," he posted on X.

In a statement on Facebook, the ruling Democratic ‌Party ⁠of Equatorial Guinea (PDGE) said the president was dissatisfied with the management of the outgoing government. A new government is expected to be appointed.

The statement further cited the misuse of state resources for personal interests and stagnation in the implementation of development projects.

The president also noted that the government had not implemented policies to diversify the economy especially in the agricultural sector, which would cut reliance on imported goods that can be produced locally.

Equatorial Guinea's economy is heavily reliant on petroleum, with oil and gas accounting for most of its exports and revenues.

In spite of its oil wealth, much of its 1.8m population has not benefitted, as poverty remains rampant. In recent years, the economy has been on a decline amid reduced production and demand for oil.

Ebola Outbreak Could Become Worst on Record, Africa C.D.C. Chief Warns

Health workers have warned that the outbreak, already one of the worst in decades, could take as long as a year to contain if infection rates do not flatten.

Treating a patient suspected of having Ebola at a hospital in Mongbwalu, Democratic Republic of Congo, last month.

By Zane Irwin, New York Times

June 16, 2026

Health officials on Tuesday warned that the Ebola outbreak in East Africa could significantly worsen, saying it could last as long as a year and infect thousands of people if current transmission rates go on unabated.

The outbreak is already one of the largest on record, and has spread most in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where distrust of the authorities and violence in eastern regions have hampered health workers’ ability to help people.

“If we don’t stop the outbreak very soon it will be worse than what we had in West Africa and eastern D.R.C.,” said Jean Kaseya, the director general of the Africa C.D.C., said on Tuesday at an emergency conference on Ebola for African leaders.

There have been more than 800 confirmed cases in this outbreak, according to the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, and nearly 200 people killed. The worst recorded Ebola outbreak took place between 2014 and 2016 in West Africa and killed more than 11,000 people, according to the World Health Organization.

Dr. Kaseya’s remarks were echoed by other health officials and experts, who warned that health workers were already facing steep obstacles.

“We are running after the disease,” said Bruno Michon, who is managing the Ebola response in Congo for the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.

Mr. Michon said in a phone interview Tuesday that the outbreak would take months to contain, and potentially as long as a year if infection rates continue to rise. The disease has spread across the border from Congo into Uganda.

Officials said they were particularly concerned about this outbreak because it was spreading in an area where stigma and misinformation have pushed people away from treatment centers, and where public health measures have clashed with traditional burial practices.

African leaders have appealed for sustained help in combating the outbreak, including at the conference on Tuesday. “Delayed action can transform a localized outbreak into a regional and a global crisis,” President Cyril Ramaphosa told other leaders. “That is why our response must focus on breaking the transmission and stopping Ebola at its source.”

At the Group of 7 summit in France on Tuesday, leaders of the world’s wealthiest nations issued a joint statement calling for a “coordinated response” to contain the outbreak and provide humanitarian assistance.

Officials warn that current estimates of cases may significantly undercount the true toll.

Bundibugyo, the type of Ebola virus behind this outbreak, has no targeted vaccine or treatment available yet. Early surveillance and testing failed to identify it, delaying the response, experts say. Fighting among armed groups and military forces in eastern Congo has displaced millions of people, making it even harder to trace.

Ebola can cause organ failure and internal bleeding, according to the W.H.O. It spreads when people come into contact with the blood or other bodily fluids of infected individuals.

“The situation is further complicated by rumors,” said Alex Lock, a communications coordinator with I.F.R.C. based in Bunia, a city where the virus has spread. He said the organization has mobilized hundreds of volunteers to speak with community members door-to-door, urging people to seek medical help if they develop symptoms.

“People don’t want to go to the hospital,” Mr. Lock said, because many believe the disease is “injected” into patients in treatment wards set up by foreign aid organizations.

Funeral practices, health workers said, have also become a major point of friction between residents, who are accustomed to seeing and touching the bodies of loved ones before burial, and officials, who warn that contact with infected bodies can transmit the disease.

Following outrage from residents in affected communities seeking to carry out traditional burial practices, Mr. Michon said, his aid group has started using body bags with windows, “so that families can see the face of the deceased and begin the process of grieving.”

Despite efforts to build community trust, Mr. Michon said affected communities are experiencing “a mix of fear and pain.”

Still, he said, the group’s volunteers have faced fewer attacks in recent weeks from residents who are suspicious of their activities, and he is hopeful that the organization’s messaging will spread awareness.

Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Iran Held to Draw by New Zealand in World Cup Opener

Tuesday, 16 June 2026 4:21 AM

Iranian national team players celebrate after Ramin Rezaeian scores against New Zealand during their Group G match at the 2026 World Cup on June 16, 2026, at Los Angeles Stadium in Los Angeles, USA.

Iran's national football team began their 2026 World Cup campaign with a hard-fought 2-2 draw against New Zealand in their Group G opener on Tuesday.

The match, played at the Los Angeles Stadium, saw both sides share the spoils in a thrilling contest that kept fans on the edge of their seats until the final whistle.

New Zealand shocked Iran early, taking the lead in the 7th minute through Elijah Just. Iran responded in the 32nd minute when Ramin Rezaeian fired home to level the score.

Just struck again for New Zealand in the 55th minute to restore the All Whites' lead, but Iran equalized once more in the 64th minute, with Mohammad Mohebbi finishing from a Rezaeian assist.

Iran also had a goal disallowed for offside during the contest.

FIFA named Ramin Rezaeian the Man of the Match, recognizing his pivotal role not only in scoring but also in setting up Mohebi's goal with a precise assist.

Mexican referee Cesar Ramos, a seasoned official with prior World Cup experience, took charge of the match, which was played in front of a staggering crowd of 70,108 spectators. Over 90 percent of the attendees were Iranian supporters, creating an electric atmosphere in the stands.

In the other Group G fixture, Egypt and Belgium played out a 1-1 draw, leaving all four teams level on points heading into the next round of matches.

Vandals Damage Work by Black Artist at Houston Museum, Officials Say

Two men scraped and punctured a $23,000 painting at the Houston Museum of African American Culture last month, the museum said. It decided to display the damaged artwork.

A large painting of a Black man with green skin and an American flag draped over his head. There is a hole in the right side of the painting.

By Derrick Bryson Taylor

Published June 13, 2026

June 14, 2026

A painting of a Black man with an American flag draped over his head at the Houston Museum of African American Culture was intentionally damaged last month, museum officials announced this week.

The painting, “Man in the Garden,” was part of a 10-week exhibition called “Eden” by the artist Clarence Heyward. The show, which depicted Black figures with green skin, explored themes of identity, environment and self-definition through “striking portraiture and layered symbolism.” It closed on June 6.

According to John Guess Jr., the museum’s chief executive emeritus and exhibition curator, the episode occurred on May 21 when two young white men dressed in black and carrying a bag entered the museum.

“They took something like a screwdriver or some scissors, and they scraped across part of the painting, and put a hole” in it, Guess said in a phone interview, estimating the damage at about $4,500.

The piece, which measures 4 feet by 4 feet, is valued at $23,000.

Heyward said in a statement to The New York Times that he was disappointed to learn the work had been damaged but was more interested in what that act revealed.

“Art has long been a space where social tensions become visible, and moments like this raise important questions about why certain images, narratives and perspectives provoke strong reactions,” he said. “The physical object was harmed, but the ideas at the center of the work remain intact.”

Before damaging Heyward’s painting, Guess said, the men had visited another exhibition at the museum, of work by the artist Kandy G. Lopez, who is also Black. There, they asked someone to take a picture of them giving the middle finger to one of Lopez’s works.

“These guys came in to do damage to a place that recognizes Black achievement and accomplishment but that also serves as a place of dialogue for people,” Guess said. “I think that they didn’t want any part of dialogue.”

A spokeswoman for the Houston Police Department said a museum official had filed a report the day after the episode. The matter is being investigated, she said, and no arrests have been made.

Security cameras were not operating properly the day of the incident, Guess said, and the museum had put in a work order the day before to have them repaired.

Each year, more than 50,000 people visit the Houston Museum of African American Culture, where admission is free. The museum’s mission is to collect the material and intellectual culture of Africans and African Americans both in Houston and across the African diaspora.

During a news conference on Tuesday, Guess linked the vandalism to bigotry in Houston.

“If we’re honest about it, this is a very racist town,” he said. “This town itself has some serious issues. We’re demographically diverse, but we remain segregated.”

The museum initially removed the painting to have it repaired but later decided to display it — with the damage — on the last day of the exhibition.

“I was just reminded of Emmett Till’s mother saying, I want an open casket,” Guess said, referring to the 14-year-old boy whose murder became a rallying point for the civil rights movement. “We want people to know that this happens here.”

Derrick Bryson Taylor is a Times reporter covering breaking news in culture and the arts.