Sunday, May 10, 2026

Remains of US Soldier Who Went Missing During Military Exercises in Morocco Have Been Recovered

U.S and Moroccan military forces take part in the 20th edition of the African Lion military exercise, in Tantan, south of Agadir, Morocco, Friday, May 31, 2024. (AP Photo/Mosa’ab Elshamy, File)

By AKRAM OUBACHIR

3:53 PM EDT, May 10, 2026

CASABLANCA, Morocco (AP) — The remains of a U.S. soldier who went missing during military exercises in Morocco a week ago were recovered in the Atlantic Ocean, the army said Sunday. Military teams were still searching for a second missing soldier.

The remains were those of 1st Lt. Kendrick Lamont Key Jr., a 14A Air Defense Artillery officer who was one of two U.S. soldiers who fell off a cliff during a recreational hike in Morocco while off duty. He was 27 years old.

The two were reported missing May 2 after participating in African Lion, an annual multinational military exercise held in Morocco.

“A Moroccan military search team found the Soldier in the water along the shoreline at approximately 8:55 a.m. local time May 9, within roughly one mile of where both Soldiers reportedly entered the ocean,” U.S. Army Europe and Africa said in a statement.

The two went missing around 9 p.m. near the Cap Draa Training Area outside Tan-Tan, a terrain characterized by mountains, desert and semidesert plains, according to the Moroccan military.

Their disappearance triggered a search-and-rescue operation involving more than 600 personnel from the United States, Morocco and other military partners. The operation deployed frigates, vessels, helicopters and drones.

Search efforts will continue for the missing second soldier, a U.S. defense official told The Associated Press on condition of anonymity as they were not allowed to speak publicly on the issue.

The official said a U.S. contingent remained in Morocco after the war games ended Friday to provide command and control and to continue search and rescue operations.

Key was assigned to Charlie Battery, 5th Battalion, 4th Air Defense Artillery Regiment, 10th Army Air and Missile Defense Command, the army said. His decorations include the Army Achievement Medal and Army Service Ribbon.

He entered military service in 2023 as an officer candidate and earned his commission through Officer Candidate School in 2024 as an Air Defense Artillery officer. He later completed the Basic Officer Leader Course at Fort Sill, Oklahoma, according to the statement.

African Lion 26, is a U.S.-led exercise launched in April across four countries – Morocco, Tunisia, Ghana and Senegal – with more than 7,000 personnel from over 30 nations. Since 2004, it has been the largest U.S. joint military exercise in Africa.

In 2012, two U.S. Marines were killed and two others injured during a helicopter crash in Morocco’s southern city of Agadir while taking part in the exercises.

Changing Geopolitics Are in Focus as France’s Macron Kicks off Kenya Visit for an Africa Summit

By EVELYNE MUSAMBI

4:22 PM EDT, May 10, 2026

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — French President Emmanuel Macron kicked off a visit to Kenya on Sunday ahead of the Africa Forward Summit, a gathering meant to showcase France’s new policy for the continent — a shift from a former colonial power seen as dominating to what Paris describes as a partnership of equals.

Held for the first time in an Anglophone country, the summit is expected to draw reactions to the withdrawal of French troops from West Africa that was completed last year amid France’s waning regional influence in recent years.

Since the independence of France’s former African colonies, France had maintained a policy of economic, political and military sway dubbed Françafrique, which included keeping thousands of troops in the region. But leaders in those countries — and opposition figures — have often criticized France over what they described as a demeaning and heavy-handed approach to the continent.

Macron’s host, Kenyan President William Ruto, said both leaders expect the summit to be a “turning point” toward a better partnership.

Macron commented on the changing geopolitical landscape, saying France can “disagree” with West African governments but “never disagrees with the people.”

The two-day summit, which starts on Monday, is expected to welcome 30 heads of state. Ten have arrived so far.

Kenya’s opposition leader Kalonzo Musyoka slammed the choice of Kenya as a venue, describing it as country where democracy remains under threat, the opposition is under attack and human rights are being violated even as it prepares for the 2027 general election.

“There will be an air of pretense that we are a cohesive nation,” Musyoka said. “We know that is far from the truth.”

Ruto on Sunday said Nairobi seeks to nurture a wide array of relationships and was “neither looking East nor West” but “looking forward.”

Also Sunday, Kenya and France signed 11 agreements involving investments in various sectors, including an ambitious nuclear energy plant, modernized transport, and sustainable agriculture.

Macron said the investments were aimed at strengthening “human capital,” in line with the summit’s focus on innovation and Africa’s growing young population.

Passengers Evacuated from Hantavirus-stricken Cruise Ship Begin Flying Home from Canary Islands

By IAIN SULLIVAN and SUMAN NAISHADHAM

7:04 PM EDT, May 10, 2026

TENERIFE, Canary Islands (AP) — Passengers evacuated from the hantavirus-hit cruise ship began flying home Sunday aboard military and government planes after the vessel anchored in the Canary Islands, where travelers were escorted to shore by personnel in full-body protective gear and breathing masks.

Spanish passengers were the first to leave the MV Hondius following its arrival in Tenerife, the largest island in the Spanish archipelago off the West African coast. They were then flown to Madrid and taken to a military hospital. Hours later, a plane that evacuated French passengers landed in Paris, where it was met by emergency vehicles.

Small vessels were seen carrying people from the MV Hondius to the quayside at Granadilla port. Officials were waiting there to guide them to buses that would transfer them to a medical facility for quarantine. Spain’s health minister earlier said that Spanish nationals would be the first to leave the ship.

The planes arriving in Tenerife were to fly out passengers from more than 20 countries in an evacuation effort that was expected to last until Monday.

One of the five French passengers developed symptoms on the flight, French Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu said in a statement, and all were put into strict isolation with plans to be tested.

Earlier, officials from the Spanish Health Ministry, the World Health Organization and the cruise company Oceanwide Expeditions had said none of the more than 140 people who were then on the Hondius had shown symptoms of the virus.

Three people have died since the outbreak began, and five passengers who left the ship earlier are infected with hantavirus.

WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus reiterated that the general public should not be worried about the outbreak.

“We have been repeating the same answer many times,” he said. “This is not another COVID. And the risk to the public is low. So they shouldn’t be scared, and they shouldn’t panic.”

AP correspondent Julie Walker reports evacuations of passengers from a hantavirus-stricken cruise ship begun Sunday in Spain.

Even so, those disembarking and workers at the port of Granadilla in Tenerife wore protective gear during the evacuation process, including hazardous-materials suits, face masks and respirators. Video obtained by The Associated Press showed passengers on the tarmac donning similar suits and being sprayed down with disinfectant.

Passengers were relieved to be on their way home, another WHO official said.

“It’s been great seeing all the buses coming out and people really happy to be on land again and being repatriated,” said Diana Rojas Alvarez, the WHO health operations lead, who is on Tenerife.

Authorities have said the disembarking passengers and crew members will be checked for symptoms and will be forbidden from having any contact with the local population. They were to be taken off the ship only when evacuation flights are ready. Tedros and Spain’s health and interior ministers are supervising the operation in Tenerife.

Hantavirus usually spreads when people inhale contaminated residue of rodent droppings, and the disease is not easily transmitted between people. But the Andes virus detected in the cruise ship outbreak may be able to spread between people in rare cases. Symptoms usually show between one and eight weeks after exposure.

Passengers and disembarking crew members left behind their luggage and were allowed to take only a small bag with essentials, a cellphone, a charger and documentation.

Some crew, as well as the body of a passenger who died on board, will remain on the ship, which will sail on to Rotterdam, Netherlands, where it will undergo disinfection, Spanish authorities said.

The journey to Rotterdam takes about five days, the cruise company said.

Passengers will be monitored

The WHO is recommending that passengers’ home countries “have active monitoring and follow-up, which means daily health checks, either at home or in a specialized facility,” said Maria van Kerkhove, the organization’s top epidemiologist.

“We are leaving this up to the countries themselves to actually develop their own policies,” she added. “But our recommendations are very clear.”

Numerous countries have said their people will be quarantined or hospitalized for observation.

In the U.K., for example, authorities have said passengers will be hospitalized for 72 hours of quarantine, followed by six weeks of self-isolation.

The French had planned a similar protocol, but after Sunday’s flight, the prime minister said the five passengers would be kept in the hospital “until further orders.”

A Dutch evacuation plane touched down Sunday evening in the Netherlands city of Eindhoven, with disembarking passengers wearing masks and carrying belongings in white plastic bags. The 26 aboard included eight Dutch citizens, as well as people from India, Germany, Argentina, Belgium, Greece, Portugal, Ukraine, Guatemala, the Philippines and Montenegro, the Dutch Foreign Ministry said.

The Dutch citizens were being taken home by medical transport and will self-quarantine for six weeks. Local health services were arranging quarantine locations for others.

The acting director of the Centers for Disease Control, Dr. Jay Bhattacharya, said Americans would first be flown to the University of Nebraska, which has a federally funded quarantine facility, to assess whether they have been in close contact with any symptomatic people and their risk levels for spreading the virus.

After that, he told CNN’s “State of the Union,” they will be given the choice of staying in Nebraska or going home, where their conditions would be monitored by state and local health agencies.

He noted that seven Americans who left the cruise have been in the U.S. for roughly two weeks, and they are living across the country.

Australia is sending a plane, expected to arrive Monday, to evacuate its people and those from nearby countries, such as New Zealand, and unspecified Asian countries, said Spanish Health Minister Mónica García, who added that the evacuation flight was expected to be the last to leave Tenerife.

Norway sent an ambulance plane to the island with personnel trained to transport patients with high-risk infections, its Directorate for Civil Protection told public broadcaster NRK.

British medics parachute into remote territory

Elsewhere, British Army medics parachuted onto the remote South Atlantic territory of Tristan da Cunha, where one of the 221 residents has a suspected case of hantavirus.

The patient was a passenger on the MV Hondius and disembarked last month.

The U.K. Defense Ministry said a team of six paratroopers and two medical clinicians jumped Saturday from a Royal Air Force transport plane, which also dropped oxygen and medical equipment.

Tristan da Cunha is Britain’s most remote inhabited overseas territory, about 1,500 miles (2,400 kilometers) from the nearest inhabited island, St. Helena. The group of volcanic islands has no airstrip and is usually accessible only by a six-day boat voyage from Cape Town, South Africa.

Meanwhile, a Spanish woman in the southeastern province of Alicante suspected of being infected tested negative for hantavirus, Spanish health authorities said Saturday.

The woman was a passenger on the same flight as the Dutch woman who died in Johannesburg after traveling on the cruise ship.

___

Naishadham reported from Madrid. Associated Press writers Angela Charlton in Paris, Jill Lawless in London and Kirsten Grieshaber in Berlin contributed to this report.

Key Statements from Vladimir Putin’s Speech During the Victory Day Parade

He stressed that Russia sacredly honors the legacy and commandments of the soldiers who secured victory

Vladimir Putin Grigory Sysoyev/POOL/TASS

© Grigory Sysoyev/POOL/TASS

MOSCOW, May 9. /TASS/. Russian President Vladimir Putin congratulated participants in the Victory Day parade on Red Square, calling it a sacred and the country’s most important holiday.

He stressed that Russia sacredly honors the legacy and commandments of the soldiers who secured victory. Russia remembers the unparalleled resilience of soldiers during the Great Patriotic War, the selflessness of the people’s militias, and the enormous efforts made on the home front. Victory has always belonged and will always belong to Russia.

TASS has compiled the key statements made by the head of state.

Memory of heroes

Russia sacredly honors the memory of the events of the Great Patriotic War and its heroes: "We sacredly honor the legacy and commandments of the soldiers of Victory."

"For us, preserving the memory of the events of the Great Patriotic War, its true history and its genuine heroes is a matter of honor."

Russia bows its head before all those who gave their lives for the Motherland during the Great Patriotic War: "All of this lives on in family histories, in the hearts of our children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren. In the memory of each of us, we bow our heads before those who fell in battle, before those who were tortured in occupation and captivity, who died of hunger in besieged Leningrad, in other blockaded cities and towns, before all those who gave their lives for the Motherland, for Russia. We bow our heads in memory of sons, daughters, fathers, mothers, grandfathers, great-grandfathers, husbands, wives, brothers, sisters, relatives and friends."

Victory in the Great Patriotic War "was won, suffered through, and achieved."

Russia remembers the unparalleled resilience of soldiers during the Great Patriotic War, the selflessness of the people’s militias and the enormous efforts of the home front, where the front line and the rear stood united: "The front and the home front were united. The people’s genuine patriotism, courage and self-sacrifice elevated them above the enemy, gave them strength and reinforced their faith in Victory."

The feat of the people in the Great Patriotic War

The feat of the peoples of the Soviet Union showed that devotion to the Motherland is the highest truth capable of uniting millions of people: "Our people stood as a wall in the enemy’s path and showed that devotion to the Motherland is the highest truth capable of uniting millions."

Russia’s key to success lies in moral and spiritual strength, bravery and valor, unity and the ability to endure and overcome any challenge: "The key to success is our moral and spiritual strength, our bravery and valor. Our unity and our ability to endure everything, to overcome any trial."

It was the Soviet soldiers who bore colossal losses in order to save the freedom and dignity of the peoples of Europe: "Our soldiers suffered colossal losses, made colossal sacrifices in the name of the freedom and dignity of the peoples of Europe. They became the embodiment of courage and nobility, resilience and humanity, and crowned themselves with the great glory of a grand victory."

The Soviet people made the decisive contribution to defeating Nazism, saved both their own country and the entire world, and Russia will always remember this feat: "We will always remember the feat of the Soviet people and the fact that it was they who made the decisive contribution to the defeat of Nazism, saved their country, saved the world and put an end to total, merciless evil."

The Soviet people "restored sovereignty to those states that capitulated before Nazi Germany and became obedient accomplices in its crimes."

The Nazis planned genocide against all the nations of the Soviet Union, but failed to take into account the Russian character and strength of spirit, qualities that reveal themselves with particular force during difficult times: "It would seem that Nazi strategists meticulously calculated everything except one thing - what is called the Russian character and the strength of spirit of the Soviet people. These qualities reveal themselves with particular force during the most difficult times for the Motherland."

Technology

Russian scientists and engineers are creating advanced and unique weapons systems and launching their mass production: "Alongside Russian warriors stand workers and designers, engineers, scientists and inventors. They continue the traditions of their predecessors. Drawing on modern combat experience, they create advanced and unique weapons systems. They are launching their mass production."

The country’s destiny is shaped by people, by all Russian citizens, regardless of changes in technology and methods of warfare: "No matter how technology and methods of warfare change, the main thing remains unchanged: people shape the destiny of the country. Soldiers and factory workers, agricultural workers, weapons manufacturers and war correspondents, doctors and teachers, cultural figures and clergy, volunteers, entrepreneurs, philanthropists -- all citizens of Russia."

Special military operation

Heroes of the special military operation continue moving forward today while confronting an aggressive force supported and armed by NATO: "They [participants in the special military operation] are confronting an aggressive force that is armed and supported by the entire NATO bloc. And despite this, our heroes continue moving forward."

Victory in the special military operation is forged both on the battlefield and on the home front: "We have a common goal. Everyone is making a personal contribution to victory. It is forged both on the battlefield and on the home front."

The great feat of the victorious generation of the Great Patriotic War inspires today’s servicemen fighting in the special military operation: "The great feat of the victorious generation inspires the servicemen who are carrying out the tasks of the special military operation today.".

People’s Republic Struck Seven Times Over Past Day

DPR Head Denis Pushilin stated that an explosive device was dropped from a drone on a car along the Svetlodarsk-Debaltsevo highway killing a man

© Nikoletta Stoyanova/ Getty Images

DONETSK, May 10. /TASS/. The Ukrainian military shelled residential areas in the Donetsk People’s Republic (DPR) seven times over the past 24 hours despite an earlier announced ceasefire, the department for documenting Ukraine’s war crimes at the DPR head’s office and government said in a statement on Sunday.

"Over the past 24-hour period, seven shelling attacks by Ukraine’s armed formations were registered," the statement said. "We have information that one civilian was killed and three more sustained wounds. A residential building and several cars were damaged."

DPR Head Denis Pushilin stated that an explosive device was dropped from a drone on a car along the Svetlodarsk-Debaltsevo highway killing a man, born in 1968, and wounding a woman, born in 1950. In addition, a man born in 1978 was wounded in the settlement of Talakovka and another man, born in 1976, sustained wounds in the settlement of Selidovo following Ukrainian drone attacks.

Special Military Operation Nearing Completion, POW Exchange Stalled: Putin’s Statements

The Russian leader also said he is ready to meet with Vladimir Zelensky in any country, but only for the purpose of signing a final settlement agreement

© Gavriil Grigorov/Russian Presidential press service/TASS

MOSCOW, May 9. /TASS/. Russian President Vladimir Putin told reporters that Ukraine has not yet submitted any proposals regarding a prisoner-of-war exchange. He added that he believes the conflict in Ukraine is approaching its end.

The Russian leader also said he is ready to meet with Vladimir Zelensky in any country, but only for the purpose of signing a final settlement agreement.

TASS has compiled the key statements made by the president to reporters following the May 9 events.

Victory Day parade

The Russian Defense Ministry has not yet submitted a report on actions by the Ukrainian side during the Victory Day celebrations; this will be done shortly: "I can't say anything yet. I'm going back to my office now; the military will brief me there."

The absence of military equipment at the Victory Day parade was driven not only by security considerations, but "first and foremost by the fact that the armed forces must focus their attention on the final defeat of the enemy in the special military operation."

Foreign leaders who traveled to Moscow on May 9 demonstrated personal courage: "Those who came certainly demonstrated a certain degree of personal courage, since only here they had learned of certain agreements, including the extension of the ceasefire and prisoner exchange initiated by [US President Donald Trump]. So, they only heard about the de-escalation of the situation after they arrived."

Readiness to respond to provocations

Russia was prepared to launch a massive retaliatory strike on central Kiev in the event of attempts to disrupt the May 9 celebrations: "As you know, the [Russian] Defense Ministry issued a specific statement earlier. It is no secret that if anyone attempted to disrupt our celebrations, we would be forced to launch retaliatory strikes - massive missile attacks on central Kiev."

Russia discussed with China, India, the United States and other partners the possible consequences of attacks by Kiev on May 9 and potential Russian responses: "We simply outlined to our friends, colleagues, and partners the scenario that could unfold."

Victory Day ceasefire

The US initiative for a May 9-11 ceasefire was justified and humanitarian in nature: "An initiative has been put forward by the President of the United States, Mr. Trump, for an additional two-day ceasefire and the exchange of prisoners of war during those two days. We immediately agreed to this, as it is both a justified proposal and one dictated by considerations of respect for our common victory over Nazism, and clearly of a distinctly humanitarian nature."

Trump, during the presidents’ most recent conversation, spoke "very respectfully" about May 9.

He supported the ceasefire proposal, but there was no reaction from Kiev: "I told him [Donald Trump] that I plan to announce [the ceasefire] for May 8 and 9. <…> What’s important is that President Trump actively supported this. And we announced it literally the very next day. But as soon as we announced it, there was no reaction from anyone."

Prisoner exchange proposal

Russia had already proposed a prisoner exchange before Trump’s initiative: "Incidentally, just a few days ago, on May 5, we conveyed a proposal for an exchange to the Ukrainian side."

Moscow supported Trump’s proposal because it aligned with its own initiative: "Later, the US president also proposed an exchange, which we ourselves had offered on May 5. You can ask [FSB Director Alexander] Bortnikov - we sent a whole list of 500 people."

Ukraine has not yet responded with any proposals: "Unfortunately, we have not received any proposals so far."

Ukrainian settlement

"We need to ensure that no one threatens us. That's all. That is what we will strive for."

The US administration is genuinely seeking a settlement, but the issue concerns primarily Russia and Ukraine: "The US administration and the US president are sincerely striving for a settlement; they clearly have no need for this conflict, as they have many other priorities. But this is, first and foremost, a matter for Russia and Ukraine."

He also said the conflict is being driven by a "globalist faction of Western elites" using Ukrainians as a proxy.

He added that Western states misled Russia over NATO expansion and that this contributed to the crisis in Ukraine.

Meeting with Zelensky

The president said he is neither initiating nor refusing a meeting with Vladimir Zelensky: "I have never refused. I am not proposing this meeting, but if someone proposes it, then let them come. Whoever wants to meet should come to Moscow, and we will meet."

He added he is also ready to meet in a third country, but only to sign an agreement: "However, this must be the final step, not some negotiations."

At present, he said the conflict is moving toward its conclusion: "I think the [Ukrainian conflict] is nearing its end."

Armenia’s EU-EAEU choice

Armenia’s EU aspirations require careful consideration. Russia will not oppose any decision that serves the Armenian people’s interests: "We will certainly not oppose it."

Middle East

Iran is facing a complex and serious situation.

Moscow finds itself in a difficult position due to its relations with both Iran and other regional states.

Russia’s proposals on transferring Iran’s enriched uranium remain on the table, which it still considers a viable option for de-escalation.

Russia is prepared to assist if all sides agree, but will accept any decision taken.

The situation around Iran is currently at an impasse after positions hardened on all sides.

Putin also warned that escalation would lead to losses for all parties involved and urged agreement in the interests of regional stability.

Relations with China

Russia benefits from constructive relations and cooperation between China and the United States: "We stand to gain from this - from the stability and constructive interaction between the United States and China."

Putin to Continue International Contacts This Week, Hold Meeting on Economic Issues

Vesti reported the head of state’s plans, citing journalist Pavel Zarubin

© Gavriil Grigorov/Russian Presidential Press and Information Office/TASS

MOSCOW, May 10. /TASS/. Russian President Vladimir Putin will continue international contacts next week and hold a meeting on economic issues.

Vesti reported the head of state’s plans, citing journalist Pavel Zarubin. The Russian leader will also hold a traditional briefing with permanent members of the Russian Security Council, according to Zarubin.

Putin will also address the participants of the 10th Congress of the Russian Mechanical Engineers Union, which will be held at the Rossiya National Center on May 14. The president also has other events planned, about which the Kremlin will inform in due course.

Saturday, May 09, 2026

Abayomi Azikiwe, PANW Editor, Featured on 1+1 with Youri Smouter, Discussing the History and Contemporary Affairs of the Kingdom of Eswatini

Watch this 1+1 interview with Abayomi Azikiwe, editor of the Pan-African News Wire, discussing the history and contemporary affairs of the Kingdom of Eswatini in Southern Africa. 

To view this entire episode just go to the following link: Mali Attacked By Western Backed Proxies - YouTube

The interview was conducted by Youri Smouter and examines the 3.4 million years of historical development in the region. 

We look back on the societal structures which evolved from the 4th to the 19th centuries C.E.

Later we explore the colonial and independence process and the current period of neo-colonial rule.

Abayomi Azikiwe, PANW Editor, Featured on Black Agenda Radio Discussing the Attacks on Mali by Western-backed Rebels

Listen and watch this interview by Margaret Kimberley, Executive Editor of Black Agenda Report, with Abayomi Azikiwe, editor of the Pan-African News Wire. 

To review this news segment just go to the following URL: Mali Attacked By Western Backed Proxies

The discussion centers around the recent attacks by separatists and jihadists rebels who launched a deadly attack on various regions and cities throughout the West African state. 

Azikiwe looks at the regional dimensions of the conflict while analyzing the crisis of neo-colonialism in the 21st century. Mali is part of the Alliance of Sahel States (AES) which is opposed by France and the United States.

This interviewed aired on Fri. May8, 2026.

Niger Orders Suspension of France 24, RFI, AFP and Other French Media

By Al Mayadeen English

The reason cited by Niger’s authorities for the suspension is threatening national stability and social cohesion amid growing tensions in the Sahel.

Authorities in Niger announced on Friday the suspension of several French media organizations, accusing them of threatening public order and national stability.

In a statement broadcast on state television, Niger’s authorities said the affected outlets had repeatedly aired “content likely to gravely endanger public order, national unity, social cohesion and the stability of the institutions” of the country.

The suspension, which took effect immediately, applies to satellite packages, cable networks, digital platforms, websites, and mobile applications. The targeted organizations include France 24, Radio France Internationale, Agence France-Presse, TV5Monde, TF1 Info, Jeune Afrique, and Mediapart, among others.

Niger-France ties in free fall

The move marks a further deterioration in relations between Niger’s government and France following the July 2023 coup that brought the junta to power.

Niger’s transitional authorities have pledged to drastically reduce and eventually sever longstanding ties with France, framing the move as part of a broader effort to end what they describe as lingering French neo-colonial influence in the country.

This position reflects growing regional tensions in West Africa, where several governments have increasingly questioned military, economic, and political cooperation with Paris. The Nigerien leadership has emphasized reclaiming full sovereignty over national resources and security policy, while also seeking alternative international partnerships.

Supporters of the shift portray it as a decisive break from colonial-era structures, whereas critics warn it could deepen instability and weaken existing security cooperation in the Sahel.

Other outlets banned

Shortly after the coup brought the junta to power, both France 24 and Radio France Internationale were suspended, while Britain’s BBC was banned in December 2024.

The announcement also comes amid a broader crackdown on French media across the Sahel region. Earlier this week, Burkina Faso, an ally of Niger and Mali within the Alliance of Sahel States (AES), banned TV5Monde broadcasts. Mali has likewise imposed restrictions on several French media outlets as it grapples with escalating jihadist and rebel attacks.

Niger’s decision comes days ahead of a major summit between France and African countries set to take place in Nairobi. None of the three junta-led AES member states is expected to participate.

South Africa Debt Outlook Improves on Stronger Fiscal Position: Moody's

By Al Mayadeen English

7 May 2026 17:08

Moody's Ratings said South Africa’s improving fiscal position and reform efforts could stabilize debt in the near term and support gradual economic recovery, despite ongoing constraints from high debt levels.

Moody's Ratings signaled a more favorable trajectory for South Africa’s public finances, Reuters reported Wednesday, citing a report that said stronger fiscal management and reforms could help stabilize government debt this year before a gradual decline.

The agency pointed to a combination of higher revenues, tighter control over expenditures, and easing borrowing costs as key drivers behind the improved outlook. However, it cautioned that debt levels exceeding 80% of gross domestic product continue to restrict the government’s capacity to respond to potential economic shocks. Moody’s currently assigns South Africa a Ba2 rating with a stable outlook.

Deficit, Debt Outlook

According to the report, the country’s fiscal deficit is expected to narrow to 4.3% of GDP in 2026 and further to 3.8% in 2027, compared with 4.5% in 2025. At the same time, the primary surplus is projected to rise to 1.8% of GDP by 2027, surpassing the estimated 1.5% threshold required to stabilize debt.

Moody’s estimates that general government debt reached its peak at 86.8% of GDP in 2025 and anticipates a gradual decline to 84.9% by 2028. Still, debt servicing costs remain elevated, with interest payments accounting for 18.8% of government revenue in 2025, higher than many similarly rated economies.

The agency also noted that a shift toward a lower inflation target of 3%, with a tolerance range of one percentage point, could help reduce risk premiums and lower financing costs over time.

Economic growth is forecast to recover gradually, rising from 0.5% in 2024 to around 2% by 2028, supported by stronger investment and resilient consumer demand. Moody’s added that continued reforms in electricity supply, logistics networks, and water infrastructure could raise medium-term growth potential above 2% and encourage private sector participation.

Reform Risks

The outlook remains contingent on the durability of recent fiscal gains and the pace of structural reforms, particularly in energy and transport, where constraints tied to Eskom and Transnet have historically weighed on growth and investor confidence. Analysts also note that part of the recent revenue improvement has been supported by favorable commodity prices, raising questions about sustainability if external conditions weaken, while elevated borrowing costs and global financial volatility continue to pose risks.

Looking ahead, the report identified the 2027-2029 electoral period as a potential test for the continuity of reforms, though it assessed the likelihood of a significant policy reversal as limited. Its baseline scenario assumes the  Government of National Unity will remain intact throughout its term, with both the African National Congress and the Democratic Alliance prioritizing stability ahead of the 2029 general election.

ISIS-linked Attack on Nigerian Army Base Kills 2 Soldiers in Borno

By Al Mayadeen English

Suspected ISIS militants attacked a Nigerian army base in Borno state, killing two soldiers and injuring several others, including a commanding officer.

Suspected ISIS terrorists launched an attack on a Nigerian military position in Magumeri, leaving several soldiers dead and others injured, Reuters reported, citing security sources and the Nigerian army.

The assault targeted a Forward Operating Base in northeastern Borno State during the early hours of Thursday, marking another escalation in the prolonged insurgency that has destabilized the region for years.

A military source told Reuters that militants stormed the base amid poor visibility, resulting in multiple casualties among Nigerian troops.

“Three soldiers were killed in the attack while the commanding officer was severely injured ... and 14 other soldiers were injured,” the source said, adding that about eight militants were killed.

According to the source, troops later pushed back the attackers and seized around 20 motorcycles, several machine guns, and rocket-propelled grenades.

A member of the civilian joint task force, a vigilante network assisting the military in anti-insurgency operations, said he witnessed the aftermath of the raid, including damaged structures and fallen soldiers inside the base.

“The commanding officer sustained injury and about 20 others sustained gunshot injuries,” he said, adding that about 10 Boko Haram fighters were killed.

Nigeria’s military later confirmed the attack, saying forces from Operation Hadin Kai had repelled an infiltration attempt by ISIS fighters.

Magumeri base assault

In a statement, Lieutenant Colonel Sani Uba said troops “successfully contained” the assault and “neutralised scores” of militants during the confrontation.

“Regrettably, two gallant soldiers paid the supreme price in the course of the battle, while an officer and other wounded personnel are currently stable and receiving appropriate medical attention,” Uba stated.

The insurgency in northeastern Nigeria, driven mainly by ISIS and Boko Haram terror factions, has persisted for more than a decade despite repeated military offensives.

Tunisian Court Sentences Ex-justice Minister to 20 Years in Prison

By Al Mayadeen English

7 May 2026 13:04

Noureddine Bhiri, a senior Ennahda political figure, was sentenced to 20 years in Tunisia over passport forgery claims tied to his tenure as justice minister.

A Tunisian court has sentenced former Justice Minister Noureddine Bhiri, a senior figure in the Ennahda Movement, to 20 years in prison in a case involving allegations of facilitating forged passports and citizenship documents for foreign nationals, according to state media.

The case centers on accusations that Bhiri and others were involved in “fabricating passports and falsifying citizenship documents” allegedly issued to foreign individuals wanted in "terrorism-related cases" during his tenure as justice minister in 2012. Bhiri and his legal team have firmly denied the allegations.

Bhiri is already in detention after receiving a separate 43-year sentence in April 2025 in a case linked to “conspiracy against state security.”

Passport forgery claims

Citing a judicial source, Tunisia’s state news agency reported on Wednesday that the criminal chamber specializing in terrorism cases at the Tunis primary court issued sentences ranging from 11 to 30 years in the same case.

Bhiri and former security official Fathi al-Baladi were each sentenced to 20 years in prison.

In addition, the court issued a 30-year sentence in absentia with immediate enforcement against Moaz Kheriji, the son of Ennahda leader Rached Ghannouchi, along with three other unnamed defendants described as fugitives.

Two additional defendants were sentenced to 11 years in prison, while all those convicted were placed under five years of administrative supervision.

The court also removed former Prime Minister Hamadi Jebali from the list of defendants in the case, according to the same source.

Although the rulings can still be appealed, the court ordered their immediate enforcement, meaning the sentences will begin to be carried out before a final verdict is reached.

Identity documents

According to the state news agency, the case involves claims that forged documents enabled a Syrian national allegedly linked to international terrorism-related cases to obtain Tunisian identity papers.

The agency added that the origins of the case date back to a Syrian man and his wife, who allegedly obtained Tunisian passports through the country’s embassy in Vienna between 1982 and 1984. Bhiri has argued that the matter predates his time in office.

The indictment alleges that the couple’s nationality and identity documents were improperly regularized in 2012 during Bhiri’s tenure at the Justice Ministry. Bhiri’s defense has rejected the charges, describing the case as politically motivated and lacking legal basis.

Broader crackdown on opposition figures

Since February 2023, Tunisian authorities have detained several opposition politicians, lawyers, and civil society figures on charges including undermining public order, conspiring against state security, collusion with foreign entities, and money laundering. Defendants and their legal teams deny the accusations.

Those facing prosecution include Ennahda leader Rached Ghannouchi, National Salvation Front leader Ahmed Nejib Chebbi, former presidential office minister Ridha Belhaj, Republican Party secretary-general Issam Chebbi, and former minister Ghazi Chaouachi.

While Tunisian authorities maintain that judicial procedures are independent and conducted according to law, opposition groups argue that the arrests and trials form part of a wider political crackdown on dissent.

Egypt Inflation Eases to 14.9% Despite War-driven Pressures

By Al Mayadeen English

6 May 2026 17:47

Egypt’s annual inflation slowed to 14.9% in April, below expectations, as price pressures eased slightly despite ongoing impacts from energy costs, currency weakness, and structural economic challenges.

Egypt’s annual urban inflation eased slightly in April, defying expectations of an increase despite mounting economic pressures, according to official figures released Wednesday.

Data from the Central Agency for Public Mobilization and Statistics showed that consumer prices rose 14.9% year-on-year in April, down from 15.2% in March. The reading came below forecasts from a Reuters poll, which had projected inflation would climb to 15.9%.

On a monthly basis, prices increased by 1.1% in April. Food and beverage costs declined 0.7% compared to the previous month, although they remained 6.7% higher than a year earlier.

Inflation pressures persist

A Reuters poll of 14 analysts had forecast inflation would climb to 15.9% in April, with the analysts saying the war on Iran had triggered an increase in electricity prices at the start of the month, a weakening of the currency, and an increase in commodity prices, especially poultry.

Beyond these immediate pressures, inflation in Egypt continues to reflect deeper structural factors. The weakening of the Egyptian pound has made imports more expensive, feeding into domestic prices, while higher global energy costs, intensified by the war, have pushed up fuel and electricity prices, increasing production and transport costs across sectors. Food inflation, though easing slightly on a monthly basis, remains elevated due to sustained pressures on supply chains and import costs.

The government’s economic reform program, supported by an $8 billion financial package agreed with the International Monetary Fund in March 2024, has also played a dual role. While currency liberalization and subsidy reductions have contributed to price increases in the short term, tighter monetary policies have helped bring inflation down from its peak of around 38% in September 2023.

Debt burden grows

These dynamics are compounded by Egypt’s structural reliance on imports and external financing, leaving the economy highly sensitive to exchange rate fluctuations and global price shocks. Foreign currency inflows, particularly from the Suez Canal, tourism, and remittances, remain critical to stabilizing the pound. However, disruptions linked to regional tensions have weighed on these revenues, adding pressure on the balance of payments and the exchange rate.

At the same time, fiscal pressures and high debt levels have led authorities to raise administered prices, particularly in energy, as part of efforts to reduce budget deficits. Interest payments consume a significant share of public spending, limiting the government’s ability to cushion households from rising costs.

Looking ahead, inflationary pressures may persist. Authorities announced on May 3 an increase in natural gas prices for several energy-intensive industries, a move that could feed into higher production costs and consumer prices in the coming months. Combined with ongoing currency pressures and elevated global energy prices, this suggests that the recent easing in inflation may prove temporary rather than a sustained trend.

Putin Draws Parallels Between Ukraine War and WWII on Victory Day

By Al Mayadeen English

Russia marked the 81st anniversary of Victory Day with military parades, heightened security, and renewed emphasis by President Vladimir Putin on Russia’s historical role in defeating Nazi Germany and its continued military resilience amid the Ukraine war.

Russian President Vladimir Putin declared on Friday that Russia is developing advanced weapons systems based on battlefield experience, as the country marked the 81st anniversary of Victory Day with military parades and heightened security measures amid the ongoing war in Ukraine.

Speaking during the annual celebrations in Moscow’s Red Square, Putin linked Russia’s military modernization efforts to lessons drawn from current combat operations, while presenting the event as a symbol of national resilience and military strength.

“I congratulate you on the Victory Day, our sacred, bright and main celebration,” Putin said. “We mark it feeling pride and love for our country, feeling the common duty to protect the interests and future of our Motherland.”

The Russian president also recalled the immense sacrifices made by the Soviet people during World War II, stressing that the memory of those who fought Nazi Germany remains central to Russia’s historical identity.

“Preserving the memory of the Great Patriotic War, its true story and heroes is a matter of honour for us,” Putin stated. “We will always remember the feat of the Soviet people, that it was they who made the decisive contribution to the defeat of Nazism, saved their country, saved the world.”

Wartime victory commemorations

Victory Day, observed every year on May 9, commemorates the Soviet Union’s victory over Nazi Germany in 1945 and remains one of the most significant state ceremonies in Russia. The Soviet Union bore the brunt of the war against Nazi Germany, suffering an estimated 27 million military and civilian deaths during the Great Patriotic War.

The Eastern Front became the decisive theater of World War II, where the bulk of Nazi Germany’s military forces were destroyed through battles such as Stalingrad, Kursk, and the Siege of Leningrad.

Military parades are held annually in Moscow and other Russian cities under a law adopted in 1995 honoring the Soviet victory in World War II. For many in Russia, Victory Day serves not only as a remembrance ceremony but also as a reaffirmation of the country’s historical role in defeating fascism in Europe.

This year’s celebrations unfolded under exceptional wartime conditions. Russian authorities tightened security across Moscow amid concerns over potential Ukrainian drone attacks, reportedly introducing internet restrictions and reinforcing air defense systems around the capital.

The Red Square parade featured marching formations from Russian military academies, strategic missile forces personnel, aerospace forces units, and naval crews. Russian aerobatic teams also flew over Moscow, while Su-25 attack aircraft concluded the aerial display by trailing the colors of the Russian flag across the sky.

Putin also drew parallels between the Soviet war effort and Russia’s current military campaign in Ukraine.

“The great feat of the generation of victors inspires the soldiers who are today carrying out the tasks of the special military operation,” he said. “They are resisting an aggressive force that is armed and supported by the entire NATO bloc.”

Russian Su-30 and MiG-29 warplanes performed a saluting flight at the Victory Day military parade in Moscow. pic.twitter.com/b4oUmRjiTo

Victory Day tensions

Despite the symbolic display, this year’s parade appeared more restrained than previous editions. Reports indicated that Russia reduced the presence of heavy military hardware, with some analysts linking the decision to security concerns and the continued demands of the war in Ukraine.

The commemorations also coincided with overlapping ceasefire initiatives related to the Russia-Ukraine war. Earlier in the week, Putin announced a temporary truce tied to the Victory Day commemorations, while US President Donald Trump later announced a broader ceasefire running from May 9 to May 11. Trump said the arrangement would involve a “suspension of all kinetic activity” alongside a prisoner exchange involving 1,000 detainees from each side.

The ceasefire announcements came amid growing concerns surrounding the security of the Moscow events. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy also issued remarks interpreted by observers as an indirect reference to the parade’s security, further underscoring tensions surrounding the commemorations.

Victory Day parades have long served as both historical remembrance ceremonies and demonstrations of Russian military power. The tradition dates back to the original 1945 parade in Red Square following Nazi Germany’s surrender, when Soviet troops marched through Moscow after playing the central role in crushing the Nazi war machine in Europe.

Closing his speech, Putin praised Russia’s unity and endurance amid ongoing geopolitical confrontation.

“The key to success is our moral and ethical strength, our courage and valour, our unity and our ability to endure everything and overcome any trial,” he said. “I am firmly convinced that our cause is just, we are together, and victory has always been and will always be ours.”

Botswana Mourns Death of Festus Mogae, the Former President Who Prioritized HIV/AIDS Fight

By SELLO MOTSETA

2:00 PM EDT, May 8, 2026

GABORONE, Botswana (AP) — Festus Mogae, Botswana’s former president who made a national priority of the fight against HIV and AIDS during his tenure from 1998 to 2008, has died at the age of 86, the government said Friday. No cause of death was given.

Botswana President Duma Boko said that under Mogae’s leadership, the country earned international respect for principled, sound economic management and a commitment to democracy. He said the country would undergo three days of national mourning in honor of its former head of state.

Botswana, a sparsely populated and arid country in southern Africa, is the biggest producer of diamonds by value and the second biggest by volume behind Russia. Diamonds account for around 80% of Botswana’s exports and a quarter of its gross domestic product, according to the International Monetary Fund.

Mogae is credited with championing the fight against HIV/AIDS in Botswana, which he made a national priority, and launched free access to antiretroviral drugs at public health facilities in 2002 and extending it to noncitizens in 2019.

This led to a significant decease in the prevalence of HIV/AIDS in the country, which at the time had one of the highest infection rates in the world.

Boko said Mogae carried the name of Botswana with dignity across the world and remained a voice of reason, unity and progress throughout his life.

“Today Botswana mourns a distinguished statesman, a patriot whose life was devoted to the service of his country,” said Boko in an address to the nation.

Mogae won the Ibrahim Prize for Achievement in African Leadership — one of the most prestigious honors for African governance — recognizing his democratic leadership and peaceful transfer of power.

Botswana has unearthed all of the world’s largest rough diamonds over the last decade, including a 2,492-carat stone discovered last year that was the second-biggest diamond ever dug out of a mine and the biggest in more than a century.

Mogae, an economist by profession, was the governor of the Bank of Botswana before leading the country.

Court in Chad Jails 8 Opposition Leaders for 8 Years in Insurrection Case

2:45 PM EDT, May 8, 2026

N’DJAMENA, Chad (AP) — A Chadian court in the capital N’Djamena sentenced eight opposition leaders to eight years in prison Friday for convictions on charges including insurrection.

Leaders of the coalition opposition group Political Actors Consultation Group, or GCAP, were also found guilty by the High Court of N’Djamena for offenses including rebellion and disturbing public order. They were arrested last month.

The judge also fined them 500,000 Central African francs ($897) each. The prosecutor had requested a 10-year sentence for each of the members.

The GCAP repeatedly criticized President Mahamat Idriss Deby and called for a boycott of the 2024 election. The Chadian Supreme Court dissolved the group in April.

Other opposition leaders have been jailed since the last election. In October last year, Succes Masra, a former prime minister, was sentenced to 20 years in prison.

“We are not only surprised but disappointed by this court decision, which was based on non-existent offenses,” Adoum Moussa, the representative for the defense lawyers, said.

A Government Critic Dies in Custody in Rwanda, Drawing Calls for an Independent Probe

By RODNEY MUHUMUZA

6:42 AM EDT, May 8, 2026

KAMPALA, Uganda (AP) — A Rwandan academic and government critic died in custody as he was set to be freed from jail, immediately raising concern from a prominent rights group that urged an investigation into the death of Aimable Karasira.

Karasira died on Wednesday after he took an overdose of his own medication, according to Rwandan authorities. Human Rights Watch questioned that account, urged the international community to pay attention, and called for a “body of experts” to conduct an independent probe.

“There are many reasons to question the circumstances surrounding Aimable Karasira’s death in custody, not least the years of harassment and persecution he experienced at the hands of the authorities,” the group’s Clémentine de Montjoye said in a statement. “The government bears the burden of proving that Karasira was not unlawfully killed.”

Karasira died at the Nyarugenge District Hospital in Kigali, the Rwandan capital. Hillary Sengabo, a spokesman for the Rwandan prison system, told The New Times newspaper of Rwanda that Karasira “took chunks of medicine which he had been prescribed for a preexisting condition.”

In 2020, Karasira released a video on his YouTube channel in which he discussed losing relatives during the 1994 genocide and in its aftermath — after the rebels who stopped the genocide had taken charge of Rwanda’s government. Karasira later faced pressure from intelligence officials and threats from others he didn’t know, according to Human Rights Watch, which has documented the case.

Karasira was arrested in 2021, charged with several crimes relating to genocide denial and sowing division. He was convicted of some offenses and acquitted of others.

“The prosecution appealed his acquittal on several charges, including genocide denial and justification, and demanded a 30-year sentence, which was pending at the time of his death,” said the statement by Human Rights Watch. “But as Karasira had already served four years of his five-year term awaiting trial, his sentence was nearing its end, and he was to be released on May 6.”

Michela Wrong, a British historian who has written a book about the alleged crimes of the Rwandan government, said the death of Karasira “says so much about Rwanda.”

“He told visitors he was being beaten and tortured,” she said on social platform X. “Prison eventually proved a fatal experience, as for so many in Rwanda. Now he’s supposedly died of an overdose of his prescription medicine.”

According to Human Rights Watch, Karasira’s death is reminiscent of the 2020 death in custody of singer and government critic Kizito Mihigo. The group said both men had the “moral authority” that resonated with the public and confounded officials.

The government of President Paul Kagame, whose party has ruled Rwanda since 1994, has tried to bridge ethnic divisions using legal means and other measures. He is also praised by many for presiding over relative peace and stability.

The government imposed a tough penal code to punish genocide and outlaw the ideology behind it, and Kagame has fostered a culture of obedience among his roughly 14 million people. Rwandan ID cards no longer identify a person by ethnicity and lessons about the genocide are part of the curriculum in schools.

Hundreds of community projects, backed by the government or civic groups, focus on uniting Rwandans and every April the nation joins hands in somber commemorations of the genocide anniversary.

But critics accuse Kagame of crushing all dissent. Many see him as the architect of an authoritarian regime that has stamped out virtually all opposition in Rwanda as opponents are jailed, flee, disappear or die under mysterious circumstances.

Islamic Militants Attack DR Congo Villages Near Uganda, Killing 40 People, Local Group Says

By JEAN-YVES KAMALE

9:48 AM EDT, May 8, 2026

KINSHASA, Congo (AP) — An Islamic State-affiliated group attacked villages in Congo near the border with Uganda, killing at least 40 people and burning and looting homes, a local civil society group said Friday.

The attacks were carried out by the Allied Democratic Forces overnight from Wednesday through Thursday afternoon, according to Charité Banza, the leader of the Ituri civil society group and Kinos Katua, a member of the group who lives in the area.

The Allied Democratic Forces, which has roots in Uganda and which pledged allegiance to the Islamic State group in 2019, has long operated in the border region.

Banza told The Associated Press that 25 people were killed in border villages in the Beni territory of North Kivu while 15 others were killed in Ituri province.

The death toll may rise because several residents were still missing after the attacks, Katua said.

In a recent report this week, Amnesty International accused the Allied Democratic Forces of “war crimes and crimes against humanity.”

The ADF is one of the numerous groups operating in Congo and it routinely attacks civilians. In July 2025, the group killed 66 people in eastern Congo in what the United Nations called a “bloodbath.”

The country also faces attacks from roughly 100 other rebel groups, most prominently the Rwanda-backed M23 rebel group, which has seized key cities in the eastern region.

WHO Head Will Oversee Evacuation of Passengers, Crew from Hantavirus-stricken Cruise Ship

By IAIN SULLIVAN and ELENA BECATOROS

7:03 AM EDT, May 9, 2026

TENERIFE, Spain (AP) — The head of the World Health Organization arrived in Spain on Saturday to oversee the evacuation of more than 140 passengers and crew from a hantavirus-stricken cruise ship headed to the Canary Islands.

WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said he would be heading to the Spanish island of Tenerife off the coast of West Africa, along with senior Spanish government officials, “to oversee safe disembarkation of the passengers, crew members and health experts.”

The Dutch-flagged ship, the MV Hondius, is expected to arrive in Tenerife in the early hours of Sunday. Tedros said that at this point, nobody on board the Hondius was showing symptoms of the virus.

“WHO continues to actively monitor the situation, coordinate support and next steps and will keep Member States and the public updated accordingly. So far, the risk for the population of Canary Islands and globally remains low,” he posted on X.

Spain’s Health Minister Monica Garcia said on Friday she would be heading to Tenerife with Tedros and Interior Fernando Grande-Marlaska to coordinate the disembarkation.

Passengers will be isolated

Three people have died since the outbreak, and five passengers who left the ship are infected with hantavirus. Both the U.S. and the U.K. have agreed to send planes to evacuate their citizens from the cruise ship.

The head of Spain’s emergency services, Virginia Barcones, has said passengers will be taken to a “completely isolated, cordoned-off area” once they disembark.

Hantavirus is usually spread by the inhalation of contaminated rodent droppings and isn’t easily transmitted between people. But the Andes virus detected in the cruise ship outbreak may be able to spread between people in rare cases. Symptoms usually show between one and eight weeks after exposure.

According to a letter sent by the Dutch foreign and health ministers to parliament late Friday, Spain has activated the EU civil protection mechanism for a medical evacuation plane equipped for high-consequence infectious disease to be on standby.

In case anyone falls ill, the medics on board the ship will inform the Spanish authorities, and the evacuation plane ″will be sent to Tenerife so that the sick person can be quickly transported by air to the European mainland.″

The Dutch government will work with Spanish authorities and the ship company to arrange repatriation of Dutch passengers and crew as soon as possible after arrival in Tenerife, subject to medical conditions and advice from the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control, the letter said. Those without symptoms will go into home quarantine for six weeks and be monitored by local health services.

As the ship is Dutch-flagged, the Netherlands may also temporarily accommodate people of other nationalities and monitor them in quarantine.

Countries scramble to track passengers who disembarked

Health authorities across four continents were tracking down and monitoring more than two dozen passengers who disembarked before the deadly outbreak was detected. They were also scrambling to trace others who may have come into contact with them.

On Friday, the WHO said a flight attendant on a plane briefly boarded by an infected cruise passenger had tested negative for hantavirus. Her possible infection had raised concerns about the virus’ potential transmissibility.

The flight attendant’s negative result should ease concerns among the public, said Christian Lindmeier, a WHO spokesman. “The risk remains absolutely low,” he said. “This is not a new COVID.”

On April 24, nearly two weeks after the first passenger had died on board, more than two dozen people from at least 12 different countries left the ship without contact tracing, Dutch officials and the ship’s operator have said.

It wasn’t until May 2 that health authorities first confirmed hantavirus in a ship passenger, the WHO said.

The KLM flight attendant who tested negative for the virus was working on a plane headed from Johannesburg to Amsterdam on April 25, and had later fallen ill.

The cruise passenger briefly aboard that flight — a Dutch woman whose husband died on the ship — was too ill to stay on the international flight to Europe and was taken off in Johannesburg, where she died.

The Dutch public health service is undertaking contact tracing on passengers who had contact with the ill woman before she left the plane.

A Briton, Spaniard suspected of being infected

On Friday, U.K. health authorities said a third British national who had been a passenger on the ship is suspected of being infected with hantavirus. The U.K. Health Security Agency said the person is on the island of Tristan da Cunha, a remote British overseas territory in the South Atlantic where the ship stopped in April. There was no word on the person’s condition.

Spanish health officials said Friday a woman in the southeastern Spanish province of Alicante has symptoms consistent with ‌a hantavirus infection and is being tested.

She was a passenger on the same flight as the Dutch woman who died in Johannesburg after traveling on the cruise ship, Secretary of ⁠State for Health Javier Padilla told reporters.

Two other Britons who were on the ship have been confirmed to have the virus. One is hospitalized in the Netherlands and the other in South Africa.

Authorities in South Africa are working to trace contacts of any passengers who previously got off the ship. They have focused mainly on an April 25 flight from the remote island of St. Helena in the South Atlantic to Johannesburg, the day after some passengers disembarked on the island.

Some state officials across the U.S. said they were monitoring a small number of residents who were on the ship and already went home, as well as people who may have come into contact with ship passengers. None has symptoms.

___

Becatoros contributed from Sparta, Greece. Associated Press writer Angela Charlton in Paris contributed to this report.

ELENA BECATOROS

Becatoros oversees coverage of southeast Europe for The Associated Press, with frequent assignments to the Middle East and Afghanistan. Based in Athens, Greece, she has worked around the world, including covering war in the Balkans, Iraq, Afghanistan and Ukraine.

The Morning Star View on the 2026 Election Results

The vote count gets underway in the 2026 Senedd elections at Ysgol Bro Teifi, in Ceredigion, May 8, 2026

THE threat of the far right looms over British politics. That is the most serious takeaway from the 2026 elections.

It is not that Reform are winning everywhere. The Scottish National Party look secure in power at Holyrood, despite their vote share falling. Labour’s historic defeat in Wales is down to the advance of Plaid Cymru, which topped the polls, as well as Reform.

Green advances have been strong in some areas, with the election of their first London mayor in Hackney a milestone for the party, and the Liberal Democrats are holding their own. The parties in freefall are the big two at Westminster, something polls have indicated for a long time.

But Reform is not only by far the biggest winner in terms of council seats — its advance is most general. Nigel Farage boasted today that it was sweeping aside Tories in Conservative heartlands and Labour in places that party had dominated since World War I.

This isn’t new either — Reform showed it by taking Durham and Kent county councils last year — but it’s a big problem for the left. Various left-of-Labour forces are capable of winning in particular parts of the country but there is no progressive party or alliance that is competitive at British level in that way.

Ultimately this is due to the crisis in working-class representation — the empty space in politics where a party of the working class should be.

That’s why left-of-Labour sentiment is expressed differently depending where you are.

Zack Polanski’s Greens are a growing force — but lots of their members and many prominent supporters were previously in the Jeremy Corbyn movement, their current alignment less down to anything distinctive about the Greens than the fact that their politics has been outlawed in Labour.

The Greens remain relatively marginal in Wales, since frustration at Labour has a more obvious outlet via Plaid Cymru. In areas where independent socialists have built a presence, as in Blackburn or parts of Birmingham, they can be the beneficiaries of Labour’s betrayal of its roots.

So Labour has been rejected — but not replaced. Whether that means the party can claw back lost ground is uncertain.

Collapse in Wales — where it has reigned for 100 years — retreat in London and wipeouts at Reform’s hands in parts of north-west England show it has no strongholds left. The corporate shills and smug politicos who ignored the demolition of previous red walls in Scotland and north-east England have brought this on the party.

Certainly Keir Starmer must be shown the door. Unions demanding Labour change direction should force the parliamentary party’s hand, insisting too on a clearout of the Labour Together clique whose every act since seizing control of the party has led it to this pass.

If Labour is to stand a chance of recovery it will need to adopt radical policies that make an obvious difference to people — nationalising water and energy, cutting bills, building council houses at scale.

And if the left is to stand a chance of stopping Reform it needs to become the mass movement pushing that change.

Trade unions need to reach into the 80 per cent of workers who aren’t organised: that means putting resources into trades councils to rebuild local visibility and presence, testing new access rights to demand entry to workplaces across the country, linking with community campaigns around housing or pollution. Anti-racist work needs to be embedded in the workplace, as well as on the streets.

Our movement has all but disappeared from most working-class neighbourhoods. The far right could soon be in government as a result.

We will not stop it by flocking to whichever left-liberal outfit is currently ahead where we live, though tactical votes for these often make sense. We will only do so by rebuilding working-class power, and that starts with the unions.

Quit or Labour Will Die, MPs and Unions Tell Starmer

PM told to go after disastrous election results

Prime Minister Keir Starmer meets Labour Party members at Kingsdown Methodist Church Hall in Ealing, west London, May 8, 2026

Andrew Murray

First Minister and SNP leader John Swinney with party supporters, at the election count for the 2026 Holyrood elections, at Dewars Centre in Perth, May 8, 2026

QUIT now or Labour will die, Sir Keir Starmer was told by his own MPs today as disastrous local election results rolled in from across Britain.

Leading figures on the left called for swift change in Downing Street as Labour lost votes in all directions after two years of failed government with hundreds of council seats falling to Reform, the Greens and even the Tories.

Labour was on course to lose around 1,300 seats and control of dozens of councils, as well as being crushed in the Welsh Senedd and Scottish parliament elections. Vote-counting continues tomorrow in many areas.

Former party chair Ian Lavery said that the Prime Minister would “kill Labour” and should be replaced or “the party could cease to be in the immediate future. We cannot have stability when we’re at 16 per cent in the polls and witnessing annihilation.”

Unite general secretary Sharon Graham had the same message: “The writing is on the wall for this Labour government and it could be the beginning of the end for the party itself.

“The working class have been abandoned and have delivered their verdict. It is change or die. Now or never.”

Leading left MP Jon Trickett said Sir Keir “needs to go.

“The pride of one individual cannot be more important than the future of so many communities and councillors up and down this country,” he added.

Suspended Labour MP Diane Abbott said: “Keir Starmer is very unpopular. But it is the policies that drive that unpopularity. Simply changing the leader without changing the policies will not avert disaster in 2029.”

Poplar and Limehouse MP Apsana Begum said: “To avert the ultimate disaster of a Reform government, there needs to be a superspeed change, in both leadership and policy.”

Generally loyalist Knowsley MP Anneliese Midgley said: “Unless we see significant change very quickly it is clear that he cannot lead us into another election.”

However, Sir Keir stuck his fingers firmly in his ears and pledged to carry on as Prime Minister to the next general election, and the cabinet appeared politically paralysed.

“There’s a five-year term I was elected to do. I intend to see that through,” Sir Keir said, pledging major policy announcements imminently.

This announcement cheered the international money markets and nobody else, as voters evicted Labour from town halls it had run for decades.

The biggest winner was the hard-right Reform UK, which had gained nearly 900 seats by early evening. Leader-owner Nigel Farage said the results showed his party could win in Tory and Labour areas alike and was on course for government.

“What has happened is a truly historic shift in British politics,” he said.

However, polling expert Peter Kellner said that Reform had underperformed as against last year and that its support had “peaked.”

With around half results declared, Labour had lost 672 seats and the Tories 423, with the Greens gaining 175.

To avert the Farage menace, trade union leaders and Labour MPs were exploring ways to prise Sir Keir out of office, with Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham favoured to take over — a process that would take months at least since he is not presently an MP and thus unavailable.

Energy Secretary Ed Miliband and a number of MPs on the party’s “soft left” are pushing for the Prime Minister to set a timetable for departing.  

One such told the New Statesman: “Rejected by the public. Increasingly rejected by his own party. If Keir truly listens to these results he will set out a date for his departure. If he doesn’t, he’ll go down in history as the man whose hubris killed the Labour Party.”

Another warned that “the party has been dominated by a small clique who have brought us to the edge of extinction.”

Unison general secretary Andrea Egan pledged resistance to attacks on public service workers by Reform-led authorities and added: “Labour faces oblivion because it is not delivering for the vast majority of people.

“What must change is not just the leader but the entire approach: only a Labour government which always puts the interests of workers before the wealthy can succeed.”

Transport union TSSA general secretary Maryam Eslamdoust said that “TSSA will now seek to work with other unions to assert our political influence at all levels of the Labour Party to try to deliver” change.

“Labour urgently needs a leadership election to allow members to pick a candidate who is much more responsive to the needs of working people and who can stop the very real danger of a far-right government coming to power,” she said.

Daniel Kebede, leader of the teachers’ union NEU, warned that “a far-right party, pledging mass detention, deportation, and hyper-austerity in public services, is on course to take the keys to No.10 — with a vote share ahead of every other party.

And Fire Brigades Union general secretary Steve Wright said there was “no credible path” for a government led by Sir Keir to recover and “he should resign.”

Suspended Labour MP Karl Turner said that “Keir Starmer is more toxic on the doorstep in East Hull than Jeremy Corbyn ever was.”

Green Party leader Zack Polanski, celebrating a range of advances for his party, summed up: “My message to Keir Starmer is that he needs to go. I think that’s the country’s message.”

And Socialist Campaign Group secretary Richard Burgon said: “It is clear that Keir has fought his last election as Labour leader and, deep down, he will know it. The party should now work towards a timetable for an orderly transition to a new leader by the end of this year.”

Miss World Africa 2025 Hasset Calls for Stronger Pan-African Mindset at ASMIS 2026

ADDIS ABABA, May 8 (ENA) — Miss World Africa 2025 and Miss World first runner-up Hasset Dereje has called on Africans to embrace authenticity, strengthen pan-African values, and take greater responsibility in telling the continent’s stories through their own perspectives and cultures.

Speaking during a panel discussion at the African Social Media Influencers Summit (ASMIS) 2026 in Addis Ababa, Hasset stressed that changing global perceptions about Africa must begin with Africans believing in themselves and valuing their own identity.

“I think we need to work on our pan-African mindset first,” she said. “As Africans, we need to know that Africa comes first, and in order for us to change the narrative of Africa, it is very important that we first change our own perception of Africa because even us we don’t really believe in ourselves.”

Hasset reflected on her experiences representing Ethiopia on the global stage, noting that many Africans often compromise their own identity and cultural values in pursuit of Western standards.

“As Miss World Africa, going to the competition, I saw many representatives trying to be what they are not,” she said. “When it comes to being African, we Africans are the ones compromising our own values.”

According to her, African traditions, cultures, folklores, and moral values are too often viewed as backward, including by Africans themselves.

“I have traveled across Africa and different continents, and I have seen that our traditions, our cultures, our beautiful clothes, and our songs are often undermined,” she noted. “We are always compromising ourselves for others and other cultures.”

Drawing from her experience in the fashion industry, Hasset emphasized that Africa possesses unique cultural wealth that should be celebrated and promoted proudly.

“It is discouraging to see us worshiping the Western world while neglecting our own identity,” she stated. “We function best when we are ourselves.”

The digital creator stressed that authenticity remains central to reshaping Africa’s narrative globally.

“Knowing ourselves and not degrading our culture is what we need to do,” she said, urging African creators to intentionally incorporate African identity and values into every form of content they produce.

“We have to narrate our stories ourselves,” Hasset added. “We are the best storytellers for ourselves.”

Her remarks echoed broader discussions at ASMIS 2026, where influencers, policymakers, and digital creators repeatedly emphasized the importance of authentic African storytelling, responsible digital influence, and stronger continental collaboration in reshaping Africa’s image globally.