Saturday, June 20, 2026

Top Iranian Officials Warn of Breaching MoU, Vow Harsh Response

By Al Mayadeen English

Source: Al Mayadeen

19 Jun 2026 23:51

Iranian officials warn the US of a “smart and deterrent response” over failures to implement the memorandum of understanding between Tehran and Washington.

Senior Iranian political and military figures have issued stark warnings to the United States over its implementation of a bilateral memorandum of understanding (MoU), threatening a "smart and deterrent" response if Washington continues to fail in meeting its commitments.

Ebrahim Azizi, in a post on X, directly accused the United States of failing to implement the first article of the MoU, asserting that this failure demonstrates a lack of will on Washington’s part to earn the trust of the Iranian people.

“Let it be clear: we remain steadfast,” Azizi wrote, adding that if the current situation continues, “the price will be high, beginning with our smart and deterrent response.” 

Article 1 of the MoU stipulates the end of hostilities across all fronts, including Lebanon

'Israel' main enemy of peace in MidEast: Tabatabaei

Separately, Mehdi Tabatabaei, the Iranian president’s aide for Public Relations, classified "Israel" as the "main enemy of security and peace in the Middle East."

In a post on X, Tabatabaei emphasized that "Iran remains committed to all its obligations until they are violated by others, but America must take great care to ensure that peace does not become a victim of the inherent malice of a third party."

He noted that the occupation will "strive to prevent the understanding between the Islamic Republic of Iran and America from leading to an agreement."

US, 'Israel' realized they lost control on 15th day of war on Iran

Major General Mohsen Rezaei, a member of Iran’s Expediency Discernment Council and a military advisor to the Leader, offered a more comprehensive assessment of the strategic landscape. He argued that a combination of factors has driven the US-Israeli alliance into a dead end during the current conflict.

Rezaei cited several reasons for the enemy’s stalemate:

Internal political turmoil within the United States;

Exhaustion and a lack of readiness among US military personnel;

The absence of a military solution for the Strait of Hormuz, a vital global oil shipping lane;

Obstruction faced by the US administration within Congress;

A lack of support from Washington’s allies and mounting international pressure.

“The US-Israeli enemy realized from the fifteenth day of the third imposed war that control of the situation had slipped from their hands,” Rezaei stated, referencing Iran’s perspective on the ongoing conflict.

Rezaei additionally stressed that “war and defense are not over yet” and called on the Iranian people to remain engaged and vigilant, while emphasizing that Iran’s armed forces had delivered a “blow to the most advanced and modern US technologies."

He asserted that Iran’s international standing had been elevated as a result of the conflict.

Addressing the ongoing negotiations, Rezaei laid out clear conditions for any final agreement. He insisted that any text being prepared must “secure the rights of the Iranian people and the resistance front,” adding that the draft must be “precise from both technical and legal perspectives” and fully aligned with Iran’s demands.

Our Decision to Confront is Karbala-like with No Limits: Sheikh Qassem

By Al Mayadeen English

Source: Al Mayadeen

19 Jun 2026 20:18

Hezbollah's Secretary-General says steadfastness defines victory, calling for endurance amid Israeli aggression, US-led pressure, and Lebanon's most critical phase.

Hezbollah will not surrender, as the "death the enemy threatens us with as a weapon is not something we dread," Hezbollah Secretary-General Sheikh Naim Qassem declared on Friday. Emphasizing the group's resolve, he asserted that "according to our principles, victory is defined by prevailing steadfastness," adding that "losses, no matter how massive, are better than capitulation."

In a speech delivered at the central Ashura council, Sheikh Qassem questioned, "As long as we are capable of steadfastness, why should we surrender?" and, "When there is clearly ongoing Israeli aggression, why is it not being fought against?"

He asserted that Lebanon is currently passing through the most dangerous phase in its history, amid the challenges and assaults it is facing.

"The campaign led against us today aims to end the Resistance and its people and to completely eliminate its existence from Lebanon," Sheikh Qassem asserted.

In this context, he explained that plotters "want to implement their scheme through the criminal Israeli war on Lebanon, which observes no restraints in killing," adding that "the retreat of Israel and the US from the November 27 agreement came after the fall of Syria because they considered that the balance of power had shifted.

The Secretary-General of Hezbollah further asserted that "their scheme stipulated making the political echelon the façade that carries out all actions leading to confronting the Resistance."

Closing crossings, preventing the arrival of weapons, technologies

Sheikh Qassem said they "wanted to close the aerial, maritime, and land crossings to prevent any access to weapons, technologies, and everything that could strengthen the Resistance."

He added that "the scheme was also aimed at preventing reconstruction so that people would remain displaced and uprooted," resulting in the support base turning against the Resistance. This, he indicated, was carried out alongside "an implacable financial siege so that we cannot manage [the situation] and so that we can never recover."

Hezbollah's Secretary-General also pointed out that they tried to "incite strife between the army and the Resistance," yet "the awareness of the Army and its officials nipped this sedition in the bud."

Another attempt, according to Sheikh Qassem, was inciting a "Sunni-Shia strife under the pretext of protecting the position of the prime minister through the decisions he would take against the Resistance," noting the existence of "an Arab-international cover, from some countries, pressuring in all directions in Israel's interest against the Resistance, under different titles and forms."

In a concluding remark, he stressed that "America is the maestro that leads this scheme with all its details and in all directions, using all available capabilities at its disposal."

Inherent 'right to defend, liberate the land'

Outlining the movement’s strategic outlook, military evolution, and political position, Hezbollah's Secretary-General delivered remarks emphasizing continued resistance and rejecting any prospect of withdrawal or defeat.

"Our strong goal and project is our right to defend and liberate the land," he stated, pointing out that the Resistance "adjusted its combat methods and combat doctrine in line with its experience and existing circumstances."

Sheikh Qassem affirmed that the Resistance "developed appropriate arms capabilities and drones, achieved thanks to the ingenuity of our fighters," which helped the Resistance "take a Karbala-inspired decision, where there are no limits" in fighting, a fact that remains in effect and is evident on the battlefield.

In conclusion, he asserted that "the project to end Hezbollah and consolidate occupation has collapsed," vowing that "the Israelis will be forced out of every last inch of our land."

Ebola Outbreak in DR Congo Hits Health Workers, Infects 75, Kills 17: WHO

By Al Mayadeen English

Source: Agencies

19 Jun 2026 21:29

Health workers are considered especially vulnerable during Ebola outbreaks due to their close contact with infected patients and exposure to bodily fluids.

The World Health Organization (WHO) said on Friday that 75 health workers have contracted Ebola in the Democratic Republic of the Congo since the start of the current outbreak, with 17 fatalities recorded among them.

Speaking via video link from eastern Congo during a press briefing, WHO emergency director Marie Roseline Belizaire described the situation as deeply distressing and emphasized the risks faced by frontline medical personnel responding to the outbreak, according to Reuters.

“When they are explaining to you how they live it, how they were infected, it can break your heart,” Belizaire said, referring to accounts shared by infected health workers.

Health workers are considered especially vulnerable during Ebola outbreaks due to their close contact with infected patients and exposure to bodily fluids.

What is Ebola?

Ebola is a severe and often deadly viral disease transmitted between animals and humans. It was first identified in 1976 in what are now Sudan and the Democratic Republic of Congo. Although the virus has been known for decades, its largest outbreak occurred in West Africa in March 2014.

The disease is considered highly dangerous, with symptoms that typically include sudden fever, extreme weakness, muscle pain, headaches, sore throat, and loss of appetite.

Ongoing outbreak in Congo

The Democratic Republic of the Congo has faced repeated Ebola outbreaks over the past decade, making it one of the countries most frequently affected by the virus.

According to the latest government data, the total number of confirmed Ebola cases in the country has reached 896, including 232 deaths.

Health authorities and the WHO continue efforts to trace contacts, strengthen treatment capacity, and protect frontline healthcare workers.

Officials say rapid detection, vaccination campaigns, and public awareness measures are key to containing the outbreak and preventing further loss of life.

Nigeria Targets Zero Ebola Cases, Leads Africa Preparedness

By Temitope Mustapha, Abuja

June 19, 2026

The Nigerian Government says it is committed to maintaining its current zero-case status for Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) while positioning the country to play a leading role among African nations in epidemic preparedness and response.

Speaking after the inauguration of the Presidential Task Force on Ebola Virus Disease Preparedness, the Chairman of the Committee and Chief of Staff to the President, Femi Gbajabiamila, assured Nigerians at the State House, Abuja, that there is currently no reported case of Ebola in the country.

He said the government was intensifying preventive measures to ensure the situation remains unchanged.

Gbajabiamila stressed that Nigeria’s strategy is focused on prevention rather than cure, noting that lessons learnt from previous outbreaks, particularly the 2014 Ebola episode, have informed the development of stronger surveillance and response mechanisms.

“We inaugurated the committee today on Nigeria’s preparedness for the Ebola Virus Disease. We have covered a lot of ground, and presently there is no reported case in the country, which is good news. That is why all hands must be on deck to ensure that preventive measures are prioritised rather than curative measures.

“We do not want a repeat of what happened during the last outbreak when a carrier entered the country and everyone was scrambling to respond. Today, we have covered a lot of ground and established structures to address any potential threat.

“We have set up sub-committees to address key areas of concern, and hopefully Nigeria will take the lead among African nations. We will not follow; we will lead,” he said.

Stronger Collaboration

Expressing confidence in Nigeria’s capacity to spearhead Africa’s efforts in tackling Ebola and other emerging public health threats, Gbajabiamila said there is now stronger collaboration between the Nigerian Government and states with international airports, including Lagos, Rivers and Enugu States, to ensure effective monitoring and rapid response.

“This time around, there is strong collaboration between the states and the Federal Government. At the meeting, we had representatives from Rivers, Enugu, Lagos and virtually all states with international airports.

“There is also significant emphasis on land borders because of the high volume of cross-border movements. The Border Management Agency, Immigration Service and border communities are all involved. We have learnt valuable lessons from the 2014 outbreak and are building on those gains by putting structures in place to eliminate any gaps in our preparedness,” Gbajabiamila explained.

Government’s Objective

The Chief of Staff said the government’s objective is to sustain the country’s current zero-case status while ensuring the capacity for rapid response in the event of any outbreak.

“What we want is to maintain the zero-case status we currently enjoy. However, if we are unfortunate enough to record one or two cases, we must be able to move quickly because the necessary structures and systems are already in place,” he said.

Gbajabiamila further highlighted the importance of securing Nigeria’s land borders due to significant cross-border movements.

He noted that relevant agencies, including immigration authorities, border management institutions and border communities, are actively involved in the preparedness framework.

He explained that the government is establishing permanent structures to prevent future outbreaks from catching the country unprepared.

According to him, “We want to put in place permanent arrangements and structures so that in two or three years, if another outbreak occurs, we will not be running from pillar to post trying to establish response mechanisms.

“Those structures should already be in place, and all we would need at that point would be additional support where necessary. That is exactly what we are doing.”

Gbajabiamila said the objective of the Presidential Task Force is to institutionalise preparedness systems that will remain functional beyond the current threat, ensuring Nigeria remains ready to respond effectively to any future public health emergency.

He added that the task force comprises committees on border management, immigration control and disease surveillance, with the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (NCDC) providing overall technical leadership and coordination.

Also speaking, Director-General of the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (NCDC), Dr. Jide Idris, said the centre had strengthened surveillance systems at major points of entry across the country, particularly airports.

Zero Record

He confirmed that Nigeria currently has no recorded case of Ebola but stressed that preparedness remained critical given recent developments in parts of Africa.

“The focus is to be prepared. We don’t have any Ebola case here now, but we need to be prepared. We need to ensure that we don’t get that Ebola virus here.

“However, just in case one slips in, we want to be prepared nationally to identify and deal with the case,” Idris said.

Present at the inauguration were the Minister of Information and National Orientation, Mohammed Idris; Minister of Interior, Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo; Director General, Nigeria Centre for Disease Control and Prevention, Dr Jide Idris; Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer of the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN), Olubunmi Kuku; and WHO Representative/ Head of Mission in Nigeria, Dr Pavel Ursu.

Others include Chairman, Medical Advisory Committee (CMAC), State House Medical Centre, Dr Victoria Ogala; Lagos State Commissioner for Health, Professor Akin Abayomi; Mandate Secretary, Health Services & Environment Secretariat, FCT, Dr Adedolapo Fasawe; Permanent Secretary, Rivers State Ministry of Health, Dr Vincent Wachukwu; Enugu State Commissioner for Health, Prof. George Ugwu; the Director of Public Health, Federal Ministry of Health, Dr Charles Nzelu; and Deputy Director, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Gwendy Omije.

Also in attendance were the Managing Director of Ameyo Stella Adadevoh (DRASA) Health Trust, Niniola Williams and Dr Ismail Abdulsalam, a renowned epidemiologist.

Friday, June 19, 2026

Kenya Intensifies Screening and Awareness for Truck Drivers over Ebola Fears

Health workers sit at a health screening station at the Mpondwe border crossing between Uganda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo in Mpondwe, Uganda, June 4, 2026

Kenya

Kenya's health authorities have intensified health screening for truck drivers whose movements span thousands of kilometres across multiple countries, as East Africa remains on heightened alert following the latest outbreak of Ebola in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

Everyday, hundreds of trucks leave Kenya’s capital Nairobi carrying goods to Uganda, Rwanda, the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and South Sudan. But with East Africa on high alert over the Ebola outbreak in the DRC, they know they need to be careful.

"We no longer shake hands," says driver Stephen Kihima. "We do fist bumps or just wave, but we don't fear crossing borders because this is our job.”

The number of confirmed Ebola cases continues to rise but, so far, the outbreak has been largely contained in eastern Congo. That’s in part thanks to enhanced health screenings, temperature checks, and awareness campaigns at border points. For truck drivers, taking precautions is now part of their routine.

"Most of us drivers have stopped eating food in those countries, we move with our own stoves and cook our food, most of us don't go to the hotels to eat," Kihima says. "We fear that the hotels might have the disease.”

Truck drivers are a critical link in regional trade, but they’re also on the frontline of the outbreak. Their extensive movement creates opportunities for infectious diseases to spread. if proper measures are not followed. Protecting the drivers also helps protect their communities.

Samuel Njenga is an expert in infectious diseases:

"When truck drivers are well informed about how the disease is spread when they now go to those areas where maybe the disease, where there are cases of that disease of the Ebola virus disease they would also know how to stay safe; how to interact with the population there; they will know what preventive measures to take.”

Kenyan authorities have strengthened monitoring systems at key entry points and are working with regional partners to prevent cross-border transmission. The Ministry of Health says it’s going to start weekly briefings for drivers at the border and continue to provide health trainings.

Ebola Bundibugyo Virus Disease Outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and Uganda

APO, Headlines

June 19, 2026

The Virtual HLPM of African Heads of State and Government and Partners dedicated to the Ebola Bundibugyo virus disease (BVD) outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and Uganda was held on 16 June 2026 under the chairmanship of H.E. Evariste Ndayishimiye, President of the Republic of Burundi and Chair of the African Union. The HLPM brought together African Union Heads of State and Government, the African Union Commission, Africa CDC (https://AfricaCDC.org), partner countries, the United Nations, the World Health Organization (WHO), Regional Economic Communities, international financial institutions, the private sector, philanthropies, technical agencies and partners. 

Convened in a spirit of African unity and international solidarity, the HLPM aimed to contain the outbreak at source, protect communities and frontline workers, prevent regional spread, safeguard essential health services and strengthen preparedness in countries at risk through aligned political leadership, rapid financing, coordinated technical assistance and accountable field delivery. 

The HLPM noted with grave concern the rapidly evolving epidemiological situation. As of 15 June 2026, 827 confirmed cases and 194 confirmed deaths had been reported across the two affected countries: 808 confirmed cases and 192 confirmed deaths in the DRC, across Ituri, North Kivu and South Kivu; and 19 confirmed cases and 2 confirmed deaths in Uganda. Ituri remains the epicentre, while North Kivu has become a major concern, with daily increases in confirmed cases and the highest case fatality ratio, estimated at 64%. 

The HLPM recognized that the outbreak has reached a critical operational tipping point, driven by continued community transmission, suboptimal contact tracing, rapid geographic expansion, high mobility linked to mining, insecurity and population displacement, community mistrust, reluctance to post-mortem testing in some areas, infection prevention and control gaps, insufficient safe and dignified burial capacity, inadequate isolation and treatment capacity, and the absence of licensed BDBV-specific vaccines or therapeutics. 

The HLPM requested the urgent establishment of humanitarian access and response corridors, including corridors of peace where required, to enable national authorities, Africa CDC, WHO, UN OCHA and partners to safely reach affected and high-risk areas, including North Kivu and South Kivu; assess transmission and needs; deliver supplies; investigate alerts; support treatment; and maintain essential health services. It also called for an immediate seven-day operational surge to strengthen case investigation, daily data management, 21-day contact follow-up, treatment and isolation capacity, IPC, triage and PPE, safe and dignified burials, laboratory clearance, point-of-care diagnostics, and risk communication and community engagement led by trusted local leaders. 

The HLPM commended the Governments of the DRC and Uganda for their leadership and initial financing of national response plans, including announced contributions of USD 50 million by the DRC and USD 5 million by Uganda. It paid tribute to frontline health workers, community actors and local responders, and welcomed the activation of Africa CDC, WHO and partner support, including the Incident Management Support Team, cross-border coordination, laboratory and field deployments, logistics support, community engagement and preparation of the six-month joint response and preparedness plan. 

The HLPM endorsed the June-December 2026 joint response and preparedness plan, with an estimated envelope of USD 518 million, and called for urgent, flexible and front-loaded financing. It welcomed pledges totalling USD 910 million, including USD 80 million from African Member States toward the USD 100 million African Member State target, and urged Member States, financial institutions, donors and partners to convert pledges into rapidly disbursable resources and priority in-kind support, including vehicles, ambulances, laboratories, data managers, community workers, treatment and isolation capacity, personal protective equipment, IPC/WASH materials, safe burial teams, logistics, security-sensitive access and health workforce surge capacity. 

The HLPM emphasized strengthened cross-border coordination among affected and at-risk Member States under the leadership of national authorities, with Africa CDC and WHO technical support and UN OCHA humanitarian coordination. It welcomed the Uganda-DRC operational mission to finalize surveillance, laboratory and case-management arrangements, and called for similar risk-based preparedness support for high-risk neighbouring countries. 

The HLPM reaffirmed that blanket travel or trade bans are not supported by public health evidence and may undermine response operations by discouraging reporting, diverting movement to informal crossings and delaying the movement of responders, samples, supplies and humanitarian assistance. It requested all countries to follow the Africa CDC guidance released on 9 June on entry and exit screening; share timely data with Africa CDC for centralized situational awareness; and adopt evidence-based, risk-based measures, including exit screening, rapid information-sharing, coordinated points-of-entry surveillance and safe passage for essential travel, trade and response operations. 

The HLPM underscored that Africa must move from recurrent emergency appeals to predictable preparedness investment. It endorsed voluntary financing by African Member States and the African private sector of USD 100 million per year, to be complemented by external partners, to strengthen epidemic preparedness, sustain readiness between outbreaks and accelerate investments in local manufacturing of medical countermeasures, including vaccines, medicines, diagnostics and other essential commodities. 

The HLPM noted that, 19 years after Bundibugyo ebolavirus was first identified, no licensed BDBV-specific vaccine or therapeutic is available. It called for accelerated, ethical and protocolized access to candidate vaccines, therapeutics and diagnostics; adaptive clinical trials; firm post-trial access commitments; benefit-sharing; technology transfer; and African manufacturing pathways. It further encouraged countries to enrol in and effectively use the African Pooled Procurement Mechanism as the continental platform for joint procurement of health commodities, and to sign and ratify, where applicable, the Treaty for the African Medicines Agency as a pillar of African health security and sovereignty. 

The HLPM endorsed the continued leadership of Africa CDC, in close collaboration with WHO and all partners, in support of affected Member States. It welcomed the establishment of a weekly commitment tracker to monitor pledges, disbursements, deliveries and remaining gaps against the six-month plan, and resolved to maintain high-level political engagement until the outbreak is contained and regional health security risks are mitigated. The HLPM concluded with a call to all stakeholders to act with urgency, unity, solidarity and accountability: contain Ebola at source; keep borders open for science and solidarity; protect frontline workers and communities; and ensure that this emergency leaves Africa with stronger preparedness, stronger manufacturing capacity and stronger health security. 

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC).

Ebola: Health Workers Battle Virus and Stigma

Health workers tend to an Ebola patient at the Rwampara Treatment Center in Ituri, Congo, Thursday, June 18, 2026

Ebola virus

On the front lines of the Ebola outbreak, healthcare workers are exposed not only to Ebola in health centers but also to rejection by their communities.

Since Ebola broke out in her community, Dr. Jemima Mugisa, 40, has been working at the Ebola treatment center, which is run by the government and the the humanitarian organization Alliance for International Medical Action (ALIMA).

At the beginning of the outbreak in May, it wasn't easy for her. Her children were afraid of her when she returned from the hospital.

“When they (the children) heard how many people were dying from this epidemic, they were afraid of me, and I myself was afraid to go back to my family (for fear of infecting them), but for now, everything is going well," Mugisa said.

There is no official tally of healthcare workers who have contracted or died from Ebola, but at the beginning of the outbreak, several healthcare workers got infected; four of them recovered, and at least one died.

The Ebola outbreak in Congo and Uganda has claimed more than 200 lives in its first month and is the worst known outbreak at this stage, with up to 35,000 suspected potential contacts, Africa’s Centres for Disease Control and Prevention said on Thursday.

With 894 confirmed cases so far, the current outbreak is three times worse than the previous outbreak in Uganda in 2000, which had 281 active cases.

Ivory Coast Police Arrest Man Over Murky Abidjan Homes Demolition

By Africa News

Ivory Coast

Ivory Coast police said Friday they had arrested a man accused of using a fake court document to order the demolition of a large area of an Abidjan neighbourhood.

The case has sparked outrage in the west African country since 3 June, when part of Koumassi Camp was razed by bulldozers.

For years, Ivorian authorities have waged an urban clean-up campaign in the sprawling economic capital, pulling down illegal settlements in the name of public safety.

But they say this demolition was ordered by an individual who had no legal authority, not the government.

The suspect, Jacques Alloui Brou, later appeared in a video posted on Facebook to say he was behind the demolitions and possessed a court ruling ordering them.

However, Abidjan public prosecutor Oumar Braman Kone said the document brandished by Brou "did not authorise the demolition of any building".

Kone opened an investigation and issued an order for Brou's arrest.

Brou, a 76-year-old businessman, was arrested Thursday in the Abidjan district of Port-Bouet, according to a police spokesman, who gave no further details.

According to the prosecutor, the demolitions could amount to "disturbing public order, assault and wilful destruction of property", offences punishable by up to five years in jail.

Several thousand people lost their homes in Koumassi Camp, near the city centre, and have not been offered rehousing.

Looking Backward: New Wave of Anti-LGBTQ Laws Sweeps Africa

By Africa News

A string of west African countries have outlawed same-sex relations in recent months, further eroding LGBTQ rights on a continent where they were already under attack.

Of Africa's 54 countries, only about 20 do not currently criminalise same-sex relations.

Here is a look at the wave of anti-LGBTQ sentiment sweeping the continent and some of the forces driving it, from politicians playing to their homophobic base to the geopolitics of rejecting supposedly "Western values".

What are the laws?

Uganda set the tone in 2023, adopting one of the world's harshest anti-LGBTQ laws, including the death penalty for "aggravated homosexuality".

Various countries have recently followed suit.

In September 2025, Burkina Faso criminalised same-sex relations with prison terms of up to five years.

In February, neighbouring Niger did the same, adopting a new penal code with harsh sentences including jail terms of up to 20 years for same-sex marriage.

In March, Senegal adopted a law doubling sentences for same-sex relations, to five to 10 years.

And in May, Ghana's parliament passed a bill imposing prison terms of up to three years for same-sex relations, or up to five years for "promoting" them.

Why?

"Politicians in this country know that their society is very highly homophobic, so they want something that is going to put them in their good books," Ugandan rights activist Agather Atuhaire told AFP.

"LGBT+ people are scapegoats" who get used by politicians to "deflect attention from thorny subjects", said French-Senegalese expert Marame Kane.

Senegal's new law came two years into the term of President Bassirou Diomaye Faye and ex-prime minister Ousmane Sonko, a moment when they were called upon "to deliver at least some results" in the debt-saddled country, where discontent is rising, said writer and sociologist El Hadj Souleymane Gassama.

In a region where homophobia runs deep, "they fell back on the one subject that draws broad unanimity, regardless of political divisions," he said.

Religion also plays a role, in countries with large Muslim or Christian majorities where conservative values hold sway.

And funding from US conservative movements may have helped "precipitate" Senegal's law, added Kane.

Why now?

The issue is also geopolitical.

"LGBT+ people are a symbol of Western dominance in Africa", where they are often brandished as an example of supposedly foreign values being imposed on local culture, said Ivorian anthropologist Stephane Ballet Djedje.

He linked the laws to mounting anti-Western sentiment -- seen, for example, in France's strained ties with its former west African colonies, particularly the military juntas that have seized power in recent years in Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger.

More broadly, he cited a recent rise of conservatism worldwide that seeks to "restore the traditional order".

International reaction to the new laws has largely been muted -- although in Ghana, President John Dramani Mahama faces pressure to "reconcile the very powerful domestic forces" behind the bill and international institutions such as the World Bank, said international relations expert Ishmael Hlovor.

Israel Massacres Sleeping Families After Heavy Losses in South Lebanon

Friday, 19 June 2026 9:37 AM

At least four helicopters were seen landing to evacuate Israeli casualties in southern Lebanon after intense clashes with Hezbollah, according to local media.

After suffering heavy ground losses including five soldiers killed and three tanks destroyed by Hezbollah, Israel has massacred sleeping civilians in southern Lebanon, prompting Iran to cancel scheduled US talks in Switzerland.

The Iranian negotiating team will not travel to Switzerland for talks set to begin on Friday, according to Lebanon's al-Mayadeen broadcaster.

Switzerland's foreign ministry confirmed the talks at the Bürgenstock resort had been cancelled, while the White House said Vice President JD Vance, who was to lead the US delegation, had postponed travel.

The cancellation came as Israeli warplanes bombed residential areas in southern Lebanon before dawn Friday, killing at least 20 civilians and wounding 30 others in what Lebanese officials termed a massacre.

Lebanon's National News Agency reported that strikes targeted inhabited homes in the towns of al-Sharqiyah, Harouf and Kfar Sir in the Nabatieh district.

A separate strike on the al-Ashamiya area destroyed a house, killing four more, while an Israeli drone struck a motorcycle near the Doueir municipality building, killing one person and wounding another.

Earlier strikes on Thursday had already killed at least three people, including two in Kfar Tibnit and one in Zebdine, according to Lebanese state media.

The attacks, which began at approximately 2:10 a.m. local time, targeted sleeping families and marked one of the deadliest single nights since the conflict began on February 28.

The cumulative death toll from Israel's campaign against Lebanon has now reached 3,912 killed and 11,873 wounded, with more than 1 million Lebanese displaced, according to official figures.

Hezbollah inflicts heavy losses in ground clashes

Hezbollah fighters engaged Israeli forces in fierce ground clashes, destroying at least three Merkava tanks with guided missiles in the Kfar Tebnit and Ali al-Taher hills area. The resistance group said it repelled a four-day Israeli offensive toward the strategic heights overlooking Nabatieh.

"The Kfar Tebnit-Ali al-Taher region will remain impregnable to enemy advances," Hezbollah said in a statement, vowing its fighters would create "Karbala epics" in defense of Lebanon — a reference to the seventh-century Battle of Karbala, which for Shia Muslims symbolizes sacrificial resistance against oppression.

Hezbollah field sources reported intense clashes early Friday involving heavy exchanges of fire, artillery shelling and rocket fire.

Hezbollah fighters engaged in direct combat around the Ali al-Taher hill, simultaneously targeting several Israeli positions and troop concentrations with rockets and heavy missiles.

The group confirmed it struck an Israeli military vehicle near Kfar Tebnit, causing it to catch fire.

Israeli forces attempting to advance under cover of smoke and flares to evacuate casualties came under heavy rocket and mortar fire. Israeli sources reported at least five soldiers killed and 17 others injured in the clashes.

The military officially acknowledged the deaths of four soldiers, including a battalion commander, with Israeli media reporting that the 52nd Battalion of the 401st Armored Brigade was ambushed overnight with guided missiles.

"With profound sorrow, we awoke to the bitter news of the falling of four of our sons in battle in Lebanon, including Lieutenant Colonel Dor Ben Simhon, commander of Battalion 52 in the 401st Brigade," Israeli president Isaac Herzog wrote on social media.

Local media reported that at least four helicopters were seen landing to evacuate wounded soldiers, with Israeli media describing the incident as "very hard" in south Lebanon. Israeli artillery shelling also targeted the Kfar Jouz and Jabal al-Rafie areas.

Israel’s Channel 14 calls on the occupying regime to maintain its attacks on Lebanon to sabotage the peace agreement between Iran and the United States.

Israel defies US-Iran agreement

The Israeli violence came just days after the US and Iran signed a 14-point memorandum of understanding in Islamabad on June 17, which explicitly requires the "immediate and permanent cessation of military operations on all fronts, including Lebanon" and commits to "guaranteeing the territorial integrity and sovereignty of Lebanon."

Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei warned that continued Israeli attacks on Lebanon would constitute a violation of US commitments under the agreement.

A diplomat familiar with the negotiations, cited by Tasnim news agency, said Iran has demanded guarantees about an end to the hostilities in Lebanon before returning to talks with the United States in Switzerland.

According to the source, Tehran has stressed that the cessation of hostilities in Lebanon must be implemented in accordance with the signed agreement. The source added that mediators are currently working to resolve the issue and bridge existing differences.

The diplomat also said the talks that were scheduled between Iran and the United States were "temporarily postponed" following Israel's recent attacks on Lebanon, but did not specify a date for their resumption.

Despite the agreement, the Israeli military said it would continue to occupy southern Lebanon indefinitely. It published a map of its so-called "Forward Defense Line," a security zone extending approximately 10 kilometers inside Lebanese territory.

War crimes allegations mount

Amnesty International condemned Israel's continued attacks, warning that the US-Iran agreement "risks becoming a shield behind which impunity, occupation and repression continue indefinitely."

Lebanese officials reported that Israeli forces have systematically targeted ambulances, medical personnel and civilian infrastructure in southern Lebanon — actions that constitute war crimes under international law.

UN peacekeepers reported that of 143 projectile trajectories observed on Thursday, 119 were attributed to Israeli forces.

Lebanese political sources in Beirut condemned the attacks and called on the international community to act swiftly to stop Israeli crimes and ensure full implementation of the ceasefire agreement.

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

By Al Mayadeen English

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

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

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

Yet, two caveats must be stated at the outset.

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

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

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

The arc of a failed strategy

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Re-escalation risk zone

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

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

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

What Washington agreed to

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

US objective entering the war

Islamabad MoU outcome

Nuclear dismantlement

Full halt to enrichment; zero stockpile

Enrichment program intact

Down-blending on Iranian soil possible

Free, open Hormuz passage

Iranian influence removed; toll-free guaranteed

Iranian governance codified

Tehran defines future strait administration

Regime change

Decapitate leadership; force collapse

Sovereignty clause signed

Non-interference in internal affairs — clause 2

Resistance Front dissolution

End Iran's regional alliances

Absent from the text entirely

Not mentioned in any of the 14 clauses

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

What recognition of regional power actually means

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

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

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

Hezbollah Confronts Israeli Advance in Southern Lebanon

By Al Mayadeen English

Source: Islamic Resistance in Lebanon Military Media

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

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

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

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

Kfar Tibnit to remain impervious 

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

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

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

Hezbollah confronts Israeli advances

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

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

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

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

Gunfire Erupts Near Niamey Airport Amid Renewed Security Concerns

By Al Mayadeen English

Source: Agencies

18 Jun 2026 15:19

The gunfire was still ongoing about two hours later.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Tension as Gunshots Erupt Near Niger Republic Capital’s Airport

June 18, 2026

By Matthew Atungwu

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Français (Bénin)

A message in a context of rapprochement between Cotonou and Niamey

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

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

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

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

An attack repelled near a sensitive site

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

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

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

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

Cotonou condemns “with the utmost firmness”

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

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

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

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

A message in a context of rapprochement between Cotonou and Niamey

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

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

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

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

African Union Condemns Terrorists Attack On Niamey Airport In Niger Republic

June 18, 2026

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Niger Airport Attack Leaves 35 Dead, Including 22 Assailants

By Bashir Mbuthia

Thursday, June 18, 2026

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Niger: Gunfire Reported Around Niamey Airport

Niamey international airport

18 June 2026

allAfrica.com

By Mame Maïmouna Sy

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

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

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

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

A Previous Attack in January 2026

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

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

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

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

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

June 18 2026 11:16 PM 

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

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

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

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

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

By WILSON MCMAKIN

2:51 PM EDT, June 18, 2026

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Wednesday, June 17, 2026

National Urban League Says African Americans Are in Recession

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

By Abayomi Azikiwe

Editor, Pan-African News Wire

Wednesday June 17, 2026

Political Review

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies Reinforces the NUL Position

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

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

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

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

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

Gendered Oppression Escalates

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

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

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

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

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

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

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