Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Black Writers and the Emancipatory Struggles of the Antebellum Period

African American newspapers and public intellectuals played a pivotal role in ending enslavement, setting the stage for building Reconstruction and fighting the long years of legalized segregation

By Abayomi Azikiwe, Editor, Pan-African News Wire

Wednesday February 18, 2026

African American History Month Series No. 4

Writing and public speaking were key elements in the movements to end African enslavement and other forms of national oppression in the United States.

Going back to 1827, the first Black-owned English-language newspaper was published by Free Africans in New York City known as Freedom’s Journal which was founded by people such as Jamaican-born John Brown Russwurm, a graduate of Bowdoin College, the first African American to do so and only the third Black person to graduate from an United States college. 

One of the co-founders of Freedom Journal’s, Samuel Eli Cornish, was born in Sussex County, Delaware. Cornish graduated from the Free African School in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and also founded Shiloh Presbyterian Church, the first Black Presbyterian Church in Manhattan, in 1822. (https://www.wisconsinhistory.org/Records/Article/CS4415)

Prior to the publication of Freedom’s Journal, Phillis Wheatley, a young African woman born in the Senegambia region published a book of poems in 1773. Her writings did much to refute the notion that African people were inherently inferior to Europeans. (https://www.masshist.org/features/endofslavery/wheatley)

Freedom’s Journal editorial policies were reflective of the debates taking place among Africans in the U.S. The newspaper was founded in the same year that chattel slavery was legally ended in the state of New York. 

Some within the editorial staff advocated the repatriation of African people in the U.S. back to the West African state of Liberia. The American Colonization Society (ACS) was established to facilitate the removal of people of African descent whom it was believed could not live a fulfilling life in U.S. After two centuries of enslavement under the British, Dutch, French and Spanish, some Africans were compelled to migrate to the continent to build a life as an independent state. 

Others believed that the primary task of free persons of color was to advocate and organize for the abolition of slavery. A series of national conferences were held beginning in the 1830s. Tracts such as David Walker’s Appeal were released in 1829 calling for African Americans to organize for their freedom. 

Women Writers and the Struggle for Freedom and Justice: Maria Stewart

One of the key literary and political figures in the campaigns to overturn the system of slavery was Maria Stewart. She emerged from the Northeast regional state of Connecticut in the U.S. and later became a highly educated, articulate lecturer and prolific writer during the 1830s.

Her writings were published by the Liberator newspaper founded by abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison. As a printer as well as organizer, Garrison co-founded the newspaper with Isaac Knapp. He would play an important role in the founding of the New England and later American Anti-Slavery Society emanating from the Boston area which was a base for abolitionist activity.

In August 1831, a slave rebellion led by Nat Turner in Virginia created a sense of panic among the planters and their representatives within the U.S. Congress. Opponents of African enslavement became emboldened through the strengthening of the Underground Railroad and the proliferation of literature and public speaking against human bondage. Although the Atlantic Slave Trade was said to have been abolished by Britain and the U.S. during the first decade of the 19th century, the triangular marketing of Africans in exchange for money and commodities continued. The number of enslaved Africans dramatically increased between 1800 and 1860, the year of the presidential elections which precluded the Civil War (1861-65).

One historical source on the contributions of Maria Stewart notes:

“In 1832 Stewart began lecturing in Boston, doing so at a time when it was frowned upon for women to speak in public, especially in front of men. She gave her first speech to an audience of women at the African American Female Intelligence Society, discussing the benefits of African American women accepting God into their lives and standing up for their rights. Her second speech, delivered at Franklin Hall, was noteworthy for having an audience that included both men and women and both Black and white people. In that speech, she noted that free Black people were similar to enslaved Black people because of their shared lack of opportunity. Her third lecture, at the African Masonic Hall, was also before a mixed audience and addressed the issues of African American rights and liberty. Stewart gave a total of four speeches before public pressure forced her to retire from the lecture circuit in 1833; her last speech was titled “Mrs. Stewart’s Farewell Address to Her Friends in the City of Boston” and was delivered on September 21, 1833.” (https://www.britannica.com/biography/Maria-Stewart)

The degree of pioneering bravery of Stewart is quite striking for the early decades of the 19th century. Other public women speakers such as Sojourner Truth during the post 1840s period also in the northeast region of the U.S., gained considerable recognition for their oratory skills and tenacity.

Although there is no record of Stewart delivering public lectures after 1833, another source says of her activity:

“In 1834, Maria Stewart joined a “Female Literary Society” composed of Black women in New York. She became a teacher, later moving to Baltimore, MD and Washington, D.C. Stewart taught in D.C. during the Civil War, and in 1870 she remained in the District to direct housekeeping at the Freedmen’s Hospital and Asylum. This senior position was previously held by Sojourner Truth. In 1878, Stewart finally received a widow’s pension, of $8 a month, for James Stewart’s service in the War of 1812. With the pension she republished her Meditations with reflections on her experiences of the Civil War. Stewart died in the Freedmen’s Hospital on December 17, 1878.” (https://thewestendmuseum.org/history/era/west-boston/maria-stewart/)

Flight and Emigration: The Role Mary Ann Shadd Cary

Born in the slave state of Delaware in 1823, Mary Ann Shadd and her brother would leave the U.S. moving to Canada after the passage of the Fugitive Slave Act in 1850. Although she was born into a Free African family, there were numerous instances of people being kidnapped and placed back into enslavement.

By the conclusion of the Civil War in 1865, there were approximately 500,000 free Africans living in the U.S. and nearly 4 million enslaved. Whether one was considered free or enslaved the overall social conditions of people of African descent were dire. Consequently, the Free Africans played an essential role in the abolitionist and emigration tendencies within the Black movement overall.

A National Emigration Convention of Colored People was held in 1854 in Cleveland which was attended by some of the leading personalities within the U.S. and Canada. Dr. Martin R. Delaney played a prominent role in the Convention along with others such Mrs. Mary Bibbs of Canada West and William Lambert of Michigan.  The persons in attendance and the resolutions of the gathering have been preserved as a testament to the rigorous character of the movement aimed at emancipation of African people living in North America. (https://omeka.coloredconventions.org/items/show/314)

A report on the Colored Convention Movement during the antebellum period in the 1850s focused on the contributions of Shadd:

“Much like her father, who edited the Liberator alongside William Lloyd Garrison, Shadd was inspired to create her own newspaper in order to pursue her pro-emigration and abolitionist goals. She did just that, publishing the first issue of Provincial Freeman on March 25, 1854. Shadd did not place her name under the masthead of the paper, ‘thus concealing the paper’s editorship’. In addition to including her own articles (without crediting herself) in the paper, Shadd incorporated the work of other influential abolitionists and pro-emigrationists, such as Martin Delany. Although Mary Ann Shadd was not in attendance at the 1854 Emigration Convention, it can be said that her pro-emigration pieces in the Provincial Freeman were incredibly influential as associated textual pieces engaging the convention event. The following year, Shadd maneuvered her way into the 1855 Colored Convention. Although her emigration ideas clashed with some delegates, Shadd presented a speech at the convention. It proved convincing to the delegates so much so that they granted permission to extend her speaking time.” (https://coloredconventions.org/emigration-debate/women-involvement/mary-ann-shadd/)

This African American woman writer, publisher and organizer left an indelible mark of the years leading up to the Civil War and eventual legal emancipation. Shadd would later marry Thomas F. Carey in 1856 while continuing her publication and advocacy work. (https://coloredconventions.org/harper/activist-and-writing-community/mary-miles-bibb/)

After the eruption of the Civil War, she returned to the U.S. to serve as a recruiter of African American soldiers into the Union Army. In her later years she trained in law and became one of the few women and Black practicing attorneys in the U.S.

Journalism as a Platform for Resistance

These two African American women, Maria Stewart and Mary Ann Shadd Cary, represent two outstanding writers and public intellectuals committed to the objectives of Black emancipation in North America. Emigration advocates and practitioners were by no means avoiding the inevitable Civil War which ended African enslavement with the military defeat of the Confederacy and the passage of the 13th Amendment.

The majority of those who fled the U.S. seeking refuge in Canada returned to join the war to abolish African enslavement. Those who were a part of the Civil War effort were influenced by the work of Cornish and Russwurm of Freedom’s Journal and later the Liberator co-founded by Garrison as well as the North Star created by Frederick Douglass and co-edited by Delaney. (https://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/webbin/serial?id=northstar1847)

This utilization of newspapers and pamphlets would continue in the aftermath of the Civil War in efforts to build a free and independent existence. Some of the same writers would shift their focus to Reconstruction as well as a renewed focus on Emigration. 

UN Report Details Widespread Abuse of Migrants in Libya

By Al Mayadeen English

17 Feb 2026 15:24

The report highlights systematic detention, sexual violence, trafficking, and extortion within an entrenched profit-driven system of abuse.

A new investigation by the United Nations Human Rights Office and the United Nations Support Mission in Libya concludes that migrants, asylum-seekers, and refugees in Libya are enduring organized and profit-driven abuse, including killings, torture, rape, trafficking, and forced labour.

Covering the period from January 2024 through December 2025, the report is based on interviews with nearly 100 people from 16 countries across Africa, the Middle East, and South Asia. Investigators describe a pattern in which migrants are rounded up or abducted by trafficking groups, some allegedly operating with connections to state-linked actors, before being transferred to detention sites without judicial oversight.

Libya’s rape network

Inside these facilities, detainees reported systematic mistreatment, ranging from physical violence and sexual assault to ransom demands, extortion, and the confiscation and resale of identity documents and personal belongings. The report characterizes the system as an entrenched “exploitative model” targeting people already in vulnerable situations.

“I wish I died. It was a journey of hell,” said an Eritrean woman, who was detained for over six weeks at a trafficking house in Tobruk, in eastern Libya. “Different men raped me many times. Girls as young as 14 were raped daily,” she said. The perpetrators released her after her family paid a ransom.

Another Eritrean survivor described severe abuse after she and a friend were held by traffickers. Previously subjected to female genital mutilation, she said both women were forcibly cut open and then assaulted. Her friend later died due to excessive bleeding.

A third woman recounted being held in a hangar where armed men would remove women at night and assault them in front of others. “I was raped twice in that hangar before my daughters and other migrants. A Sudanese man tried to help me and stop them, but they beat him severely. My daughter was traumatised and is still asking me about that night,” she said.

The report also examines attempts by migrants to cross the central Mediterranean, noting that interceptions by Libyan actors often involved hazardous maneuvers and threats. Individuals intercepted at sea were frequently returned to Libya, where many faced renewed detention and renewed abuse.

Collective expulsion crisis

In addition, investigators raised concerns over group deportations conducted without evaluating individual protection claims, warning that such practices may violate international human rights and refugee law standards, including those set out in the African Union Refugee Convention. Expelled migrants were reportedly left along the border areas without adequate access to water, food, or medical care.

“There are no words to describe the never-ending nightmare these people are forced into, only to feed the mounting greed of traffickers and those in power profiting from a system of exploitation,” said UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk.

“This abusive ‘business model’ preys on individuals in situations of heightened vulnerability, with detention facilities serving as breeding grounds for gross violations of human rights,” said the Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Libya, Hanna Tetteh.

The United Nations is calling on Libyan authorities to free those held without legal grounds, halt unsafe maritime interceptions, and decriminalize irregular migration. It also urges accountability for trafficking networks and for officials implicated in violations.

The report appeals to the international community, including the European Union, to suspend returns to Libya until adequate safeguards are in place, and to apply strict human rights due diligence to any funding, training, or operational cooperation involving Libyan entities accused of serious violations. Assistance, it states, should be conditional on consistent adherence to international human rights standards.

Kenyan Officials Accused of Using Israeli Tech to Hack Activist Phones

By Al Mayadeen English

17 Feb 2026 14:28

A new report alleges that Kenyan authorities used Israeli-made Cellebrite technology to access pro-democracy activist Boniface Mwangi's phone while he was in police custody.

Boniface Mwangi, a leading pro-democracy campaigner who has signaled his intention to contest Kenya’s 2027 presidential race, says he felt “exposed” and unsafe after discovering that his personal phone had been accessed while he was in police custody last July.

Mwangi said one of the devices returned to him following his arrest no longer required a password to unlock. The phone contained private communications, photographs, and sensitive personal data, including family pictures with his wife and children. The discovery, he told The Guardian, left him deeply concerned about who may have viewed or copied its contents.

Report alleges phone extraction

A new report released Tuesday by Citizen Lab concludes with “high confidence” that Kenyan authorities used digital forensics technology produced by Cellebrite to gain access to the device while it was in police possession.

According to Citizen Lab, the tools available through Cellebrite “could have enabled the full extraction of all materials from Mwangi’s device, including messages, private materials, personal files, financial information, passwords, and other sensitive information."

Researchers argue that the findings reinforce growing concerns that Cellebrite’s products are being misused by state actors against activists and critics. They say the company has not done enough to curb abuse by government clients.

Cellebrite rejected the accusation that it tolerates misuse. In a statement to The Guardian, the company said it maintained a “rigorous process for reviewing allegations of technology misuse” and that it took “decisive action”, including licence termination, when credible and substantiated evidence is presented to the company.

“We do not respond to speculation and encourage any organisation with specific, evidence-based concerns to share them with us directly so we can act on them,” the company said.

Kenya’s police spokesperson and the Kenyan embassy in Washington did not respond to requests for comment.

Surveillance allegations intensify

Mwangi was arrested last July and charged with unlawful possession of ammunition in connection with his role in anti-government protests. He was later released on bond and is due back in court this week. At the time of his detention, Amnesty International described the proceedings as appearing to be “part of a broader effort to intimidate lawful dissent and those committed to upholding the rule of law."

In an interview, Mwangi acknowledged that he operates under what he believes is constant monitoring. “We know that I get spied on all the time. I know that my phone calls are monitored and my messages are read,” he said, adding that authorities had already gathered information about him from other individuals’ devices and “knew my role in the movement."

The new report follows prior findings from Citizen Lab that spyware had been planted on the phones of Kenyan filmmakers Bryan Adagala and Nicholas Wambugu while their devices were in police custody. The two were being investigated in connection with a 2024 BBC documentary alleging security force involvement in protester killings. The BBC has denied that the filmmakers were involved in producing the film.

Mwangi said the latest revelations underline how external technology providers can indirectly facilitate state surveillance. “By them giving the government the access to spy on me, they’re putting my life in jeopardy,” he said.

Global surveillance concerns

Earlier this year, Citizen Lab reported that authorities in Jordan appeared to be using Cellebrite tools to extract data from activists’ phones, particularly those critical of "Israel" and supportive of Gaza. Cellebrite responded at the time that its technology was used only to “access private data only in accordance with legal due process or with appropriate consent to aid investigations legally after an event has occurred."

Cellebrite products have also reportedly surfaced in investigations involving civil society monitoring in Myanmar, Botswana, Serbia, and Belarus.

John Scott-Railton, a senior researcher at Citizen Lab, warned of the broader implications, sayjng, “Your phone holds the keys to your life, and governments shouldn’t be able to help themselves to the contents just because they don’t like what you are saying … When Cellebrite sells their technology to a security service with a track record of abuses, journalists, activists, and people speaking their conscience are at risk.”

Disease Outbreaks Surge in Sudan’s Capital as War Ruins Health System

18 February 2026

A cholera patient lies on the ground outside Al-Nao Hospital in Omdurman, Photo Sudan Tribune

February 17, 2026 (KHARTOUM) – Epidemics and childhood diseases are surging across Sudan’s Khartoum state, local health authorities said on Tuesday, as nearly three years of conflict have devastated the nation’s healthcare system.

The war, which began in April 2023, has caused acute shortages of medicines, destroyed medical infrastructure, and suspended basic services across many states, deteriorating the country’s health situation.

A recent epidemiological report recorded 10,361 malaria cases and 467 cases of dengue fever in the sixth week of 2026 alone, the state’s Emergency Operations Centre said. Fifty-two cases of scabies were also identified in the Karari and East Nile localities.

Authorities also reported a rise in childhood diseases, including measles. The Immunization Administration said systemic militia looting and vandalism of health centres had damaged vaccine cold chains, causing critical shortages.

Mohamed Tijani, Khartoum’s director of emergencies, said the ministry would increase rapid response efforts during the upcoming Muslim holy month of Ramadan, including training staff to detect meningitis.

The ministry called for international support to secure supplies, particularly malaria medicine. It also urged residents to help break mosquito breeding cycles by draining stagnant water weekly.

Sudanese Groups, UN Condemn Deadly Drone Strikes in Kordofan

19 February 2026

A crater caused by an air strike is seen in the Abu Zabad area of West Kordofan, Sudan, July 2025.

February 18, 2026 (AL-FULA) – Political forces and rights groups on Wednesday condemned an escalation in drone strikes across the Kordofan and Blue Nile regions that have killed dozens of civilians, including women and children.

The attacks have triggered a wave of accusations against the Sudanese army, which is battling for control of these key territories.

The Emergency Lawyers group said in a statement that a drone bombed a water well on Wednesday afternoon in the Um Rasum area of Al-Sunut locality in West Kordofan.

The group described the location as entirely devoid of any military presence, labelling the strike a brutal and deliberate attack on innocent civilians.

The entire state of West Kordofan is currently under the control of the Rapid Support Forces (RSF).

Vast areas of the state have been subjected to frequent aerial attacks by Sudanese army drones.

The statement noted that the attack on Um Rasum resulted in a massacre of women and children who were fetching drinking water.

Several others sustained varying injuries in the strike, which also disabled a vital water source serving 17 villages.

The destruction of the well has exacerbated the suffering of thousands of residents, leaving their lives directly threatened.

The rights group asserted that the systematic escalation of drone attacks by the warring parties represents a flagrant violation of international humanitarian law.

It called for an immediate truce during the holy month of Ramadan to ensure civilians have access to water and basic necessities.

United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk expressed grave concern on Wednesday regarding reports that more than 50 civilians were killed across four Sudanese states this week.

Türk said the killings serve as a fresh reminder of the devastating consequences for civilians resulting from the increased use of drones in the Sudan war.

He added that the strikes follow a recurring pattern of attacks on civilian infrastructure, including markets, health facilities, and schools.

The UN official urged all parties to stop the constant attacks on civilian objects and to refrain from the military use of such facilities.

The Civil Democratic Alliance of Revolutionary Forces (Somoud) also condemned the continued attacks, particularly in the Kordofan states.

The alliance noted that the village of Um Rasum, near the town of Abu Zabad, was hit today by an army drone targeting a civilian gathering at a water source.

According to Somoud, the Al-Sunut area in West Kordofan witnessed a similar attack earlier this week targeting a shelter for displaced persons from South Kordofan.

That incident, which killed more than 28 civilians and wounded dozens, has also been blamed on the Sudanese army.

The alliance further reported that a drone strike hit a market in the Al-Safia area of Sodari locality in North Kordofan during a busy shopping day.

That attack killed more than 20 citizens and wounded over 40 others, all of whom were identified as civilians.

Shelling also reached the Adre border crossing with Chad, which is under RSF control.

Attacks there continued for two days, destroying parts of the crossing and disrupting the flow of humanitarian aid.

In a separate development, Somoud reported a drone strike on a hospital in the Al-Mazmoum area of Sennar state. The alliance noted that civilian casualties were reported in that incident, with accusations directed at the RSF.

Meanwhile, the cities and rural areas of Kadugli, Dilling, and Al-Rahad continue to face persistent attacks by the RSF, causing significant loss of life and property.

The Unionist Alliance separately accused the Sudanese army of being behind the bombing of the Um Rasum area.

The group stated that targeting a water source represents a serious crime and reflects a disturbing pattern of escalating military operations.

The alliance emphasized that protecting civilians is a legal obligation and called for the opening of safe corridors for humanitarian aid.

The Rapid Support Forces also denounced the attack, which they claimed was carried out by an army drone on a town in West Kordofan.

An RSF spokesperson said the international community should take note of the systematic nature of these “forgotten crimes.”

The spokesperson described the strikes as full-fledged war crimes and crimes against humanity under international law.

Dengue Fever Cases Rise in Six Sudanese States as Health Crisis Deepens

19 February 2026

A Sudanese girl receives an oral cholera vaccine during a campaign conducted by health ministry workers in Khartoum, Sudan. AP file photo

February 18, 2026 (KHARTOUM) – The Sudanese Ministry of Health on Wednesday announced a rise in dengue fever cases across six states, alongside persistent infections of Hepatitis E in Gezira State, amid a critical shortage of epidemic-related medicines.

The surge comes as Sudan’s fragile health sector continues to buckle under the impact of the ongoing war. Conflict has devastated infrastructure, shuttered numerous hospitals, and triggered a severe shortage of medical personnel and supplies.

A report from the federal Ministry of Health’s Emergency Operations Centre noted that while no new cholera cases were recorded, dengue fever cases were confirmed in Khartoum, Gezira, River Nile, White Nile, Kassala, and Northern states.

Gezira State continues to report cases of Hepatitis E, the ministry added.

In response, an emergency team was dispatched from Northern State to the western region after 36 cases of dengue fever were recorded. Medical supplies were sent to the area, and specialized treatment centres for Hepatitis E were designated in Gezira.

Health officials emphasized an urgent need for staff training and additional medicine. Environmental health reports indicated that preventive activities, including water chlorination monitoring and vector control, are ongoing.

A targeted campaign to combat dengue fever is scheduled to launch in Khartoum localities next week.

The ministry’s supply report acknowledged disparities in the availability of emergency medicines and a significant shortage of malaria treatments.

However, the National Public Health Laboratory announced that the Khartoum laboratory is prepared for the meningitis season. State laboratories are also equipped to diagnose viral fevers following the distribution of 20,000 dengue rapid test kits.

Health Ministry Undersecretary Ali Babiker praised the resilience of health workers despite limited resources. He noted efforts to support services in South Kordofan and progress toward recovering the health system.

Babiker directed intensified interventions ahead of the autumn season and emphasized that restoring the National Laboratory to its full capacity remains a top priority.

In Northern State, health authorities reported an increase in dengue fever rates, with 52 cases recorded in the Al-Ghurayba area of Merowe locality as of Tuesday.

The state’s emergency department has activated an emergency room to monitor cases and implement “zero reporting.” Officials stated that only two cases remain active, and no deaths have been recorded so far.

Containment measures in Merowe include intensified domestic inspections, insect surveys, and urgent spraying campaigns to target mosquito larvae.

UNHCR: $1.6 bn Needed to Support 4.3 Million Sudanese Refugees

18/02/2026 13:30 

GENEVA / KHARTOUM

Sudanese refugees in Koulbous, Chad, near the border with Sudan (File photo: UNHCR / Ala Kheir)

As the war in Sudan approaches a fourth year, the UN refugee agency (UNHCR) and 123 partners appealed on Tuesday for $1.6 billion to support millions of people forced to flee the country in pursuit of safety.

In a statement yesterday, the UNHCR says that its appeal aims to deliver lifesaving assistance this year to 5.9 million people across seven neighbouring countries: the Central African Republic, Chad, Egypt, Ethiopia, Libya, South Sudan and Uganda. The UNHCR 2026 Sudan Regional Refugee Response Plan (RRRP) will prioritise aid to roughly 470,000 new refugees who are expected to cross into these countries, as well as thousands more who remain in border areas and have received only the most basic assistance.

UNHCR Regional Director for Eastern and Southern Africa, Mamadou Dian Balde, says the need for a fourth annual appeal underscores the relentless impact of the war and a humanitarian response struggling to keep up.

“Sudan remains the world’s largest displacement and worst humanitarian crisis, unfolding in the wake of the most severe global funding crunch in decades,” he told journalists in Geneva.

‘Sudan remains the world’s largest displacement and worst humanitarian crisis, unfolding in the wake of the most severe global funding crunch in decades…’ – Mamadou Dian Balde, UNHCR Regional Director for Eastern and Southern Africa

As fighting continues in several parts of the country, essential services have collapsed while humanitarian access remains restricted in many areas.

“Thousands of people continue to flee across borders each week, often arriving in already vulnerable yet generous regions, where public services and economic opportunities were limited even before the crisis,” he said.

Host communities ‘pushed to the brink’

Some 4.3 million Sudanese refugees remain displaced within the region, most of whom are in Egypt and eastern Chad.

Balde noted that “while host governments and local communities continue to demonstrate remarkable solidarity, their capacity is being pushed to the brink.”

Egypt currently hosts 1.4 million Sudanese who have fled the war and registered refugee figures have nearly quadrupled since 2023.

“Yet severe funding cuts have forced UNHCR to close two of its three registration centres, affecting people’s access to critical protection services,” he said.  Moreover, available funding per refugee per month has dropped from $11 to $4.

In eastern Chad, more than 71,000 refugee families have not received housing assistance, meaning they do not have safe and adequate shelter. “Nearly 234,000 people are awaiting relocation, living in precarious conditions at the border,” he added.

Meanwhile in Uganda, clinic closures and the suspension of critical nutrition programmes in Kiryandongo settlement put thousands of Sudanese refugees at heightened risk of diseases.

Rising needs, shrinking resources

Balde stressed that despite these constraints, the 2026 plan “will continue to support host countries in providing critical basic services, including food, shelter, healthcare and protection services for new arrivals and the most vulnerable refugees.”

He warned, however, that “the widening gap between rising needs and shrinking resources threatens to undermine both emergency response efforts and medium-term solutions.” Balde concludes that in the interim, UNHCR continues to call for stronger international support to address the persistent underfunding of humanitarian operations in the countries hosting people fleeing Sudan.

Sudan Envoy Meets UN Refugee Agency as Rights Groups Condemn Egypt Arrests

17/02/2026 15:30 

CAIRO / AMSTERDAM

Sudanese waiting at Wadi Halfa to cross into Egypt (File photo: RD)

Sudan’s ambassador to Egypt has held talks with the UN refugee agency on supporting Sudanese displaced by war, as Amnesty International warned of a widening crackdown on refugees including arbitrary arrests and unlawful deportations.

The talks coincide with reports, as carried earlier by Radio Dabanga, that Sudanese women and chlidren have been subjuect to arbitrary arests in Egypt.

Amnesty International said Egyptian authorities in recent months had intensified arrests and removals targeting refugees and asylum seekers solely over irregular migration status, describing the practice as a serious breach of the principle of non-refoulement and of Egypt’s own asylum law.

The meeting brought together Sudan’s ambassador to Cairo and permanent representative to the Arab League, Lt Gen Imadeldin Mustafa Adawi, and UNHCR representative Dr Hanan Hamdan. Discussions focused on the conditions of Sudanese fleeing conflict and ways to expand services and protection for vulnerable groups.

Hamdan praised Sudan’s long history of hosting refugees and reaffirmed the UN agency’s solidarity with the Sudanese people and commitment to providing maximum support to Sudanese in Egypt.

Adawi expressed appreciation for the agency’s work since the outbreak of war and said he hoped coordination would continue to address refugee issues and humanitarian needs.

Egypt: Refugees in hiding amid crackdown involving arbitrary arrests and unlawful deportations

In a new Amnesty International report published yesterday, the international human rights advocacy group laments that in recent months, “the Egyptian authorities renewed their campaign of arbitrarily detaining and unlawfully deporting refugees and asylum seekers solely on the basis of their irregular immigration status in blatant violation of the principle of non-refoulement and Egypt’s own asylum law.”

Amnesty International says that refugees or asylum seekers registered with the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) are among those unlawfully deported or arbitrarily detained pending deportation.

Text of Amnesty International report:

Since late December 2025, police officers in plain clothes have been arbitrarily rounding up nationals of Syria, Sudan, South Sudan and other Sub-Saharan countries from the streets or their workplaces in cities across the country following identity checks. Those found without valid residency permits were driven away in unmarked vans, even when they were able to produce UNHCR cards.

‘The Egyptian authorities must immediately release all refugees and asylum seekers arbitrarily detained solely on immigration grounds and halt deportations of anyone entitled to protection under international law…’ – Mahmoud Shalaby, Egypt and Libya Researcher at Amnesty International

“Refugees who have fled war, persecution or humanitarian crises should not be forced to live in daily fear of being arbitrarily arrested and deported back to a place where they are at risk of grave human rights violations. By forcibly expelling refugees and asylum seekers, Egyptian authorities are not only flagrantly flouting international human rights and refugee law, but they are also breaching the protections afforded in the country’s own recently passed asylum law prohibiting refoulment of recognized refugees,” said Mahmoud Shalaby, Egypt and Libya Researcher at Amnesty International.

“Fearing arrest and deportation, families have been forced into hiding at home, living in limbo and unable to access work or education. Many are struggling to survive after the primary breadwinner of the family had been detained or deported. The Egyptian authorities must immediately release all refugees and asylum seekers arbitrarily detained solely on immigration grounds and halt deportations of anyone entitled to protection under international law.”

Amnesty International documented security forces’ arbitrary arrest of 22 refugees and asylum seekers, including one child and two women, from their homes, the streets or at security checkpoints between late December 2025 and 5 February 2026 in Cairo, Giza, Al-Qalyubia and Alexandria governorates. Those arrested and detained are refugees and asylum seekers from Sudan, Syria and South Sudan, 15 of whom are registered with UNHCR.

Of this group, security forces have deported one Syrian asylum seeker registered with UNHCR. The 21 others remain at risk of deportation as the authorities had already begun their deportation procedures even though prosecutors had ordered the release of 19 of them, while three had scheduled residency renewal appointments with the immigration department.

There are no available statistics on deportations of Syrians, but Egyptian NGOs sounded the alarm about the rise in unlawful deportations of Syrian nationals in mid-January. On 17 January, the Syrian embassy in Cairo stated that it had received information from the Egyptian authorities that they were conducting “periodic verification campaigns on residency permits.” The embassy advised Syrians to always carry a valid residency permit.

On 31 January, the Sudanese Ambassador to Cairo said in a press conference that 207 Sudanese nationals were returned from Egypt in December 2025 and another 371 in January 2026, without clarifying whether these were deportations carried out by security forces or whether individuals were compelled to return home through programmes coordinated by the Sudanese embassy and Egyptian authorities, in order to avoid indefinite detention or risk of arrest. He added that around 400 Sudanese nationals were currently detained in Egypt, without clarifying the grounds.

Since the outbreak of armed conflict in Sudan in 2023, Egyptian authorities have periodically carried out intensified identity checks targeting foreign nationals, detaining those who lack documentation and subsequently deporting them. The Egyptian government does not publish official figures on deportations.  As of January 2026, 1,099,024 refugees and asylum seekers were registered with UNHCR.

Amnesty International interviewed a former detainee, four relatives of detained refugees and asylum seekers, a friend of a released asylum seeker, a lawyer representing detainees, four refugees and asylum seekers whose families are confined at home due to the crackdown, and two community activists. The organization also spoke with two staff members at the Egyptian Commission for Rights and Freedoms and the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights, who both documented cases of arbitrary arrests and unlawful deportations of refugees and asylum seekers.

Arrest despite immigration appointments and UNHCR cards

The Egyptian government requires all foreign nationals in the country “irregularly” to regularize their status through an Egyptian sponsor and the payment of US$1,000. Refugees and asylum seekers registered with UNHCR are not subject to these requirements when renewing their residence permits.

Many of the refugees and asylum seekers arrested since late December 2025 had scheduled appointments at the Ministry of Interior’s General Department of Passports, Immigration and Nationality to renew their residency. Such appointments are routinely delayed due to government backlogs – refugees and asylum seekers reported waiting for up to three years for appointments.

The arbitrary arrests took place even in cases where refugees and asylum seekers were able to produce UNHCR cards. The mother of a 10-year-old South Sudanese boy with a valid residence permit told Amnesty International she chose to keep him at home after hearing reports of police confiscating refugees’ valid documents.

Her fears are well founded. Amnesty International documented the case of Eisa, a 20-year-old Eritrean refugee registered with UNHCR and with a valid Egyptian residence permit. His mother said that police officers confiscated his UNHCR card and residence permit and warned him: “Next time we will catch you without documents and you will be detained and deported.”

On 23 January, police arrested Ahmed, a 40-year-old Syrian asylum seeker registered with UNHCR, from the street in 6th of October City, Giza, just six days before his scheduled appointment with the General Administration of Passports, Immigration and Nationality to renew his residence permit.

The following day, prosecutors ordered his release pending investigations into charges related to irregular stay in Egypt and ordered his referral to the “relevant administrative authority,” namely the ministry of interior. Despite this, police refused to release him   and escorted him to the National Security Agency (NSA), the immigration authority and the Syrian embassy to verify his identity, as part of deportation procedures.

Forced deportations and refoulement

In early February, police informed Ahmed’s lawyer that unless his family purchased him a flight ticket to Syria, he would remain indefinitely detained. The family complied, and security officials deported Ahmed, who had lived in Egypt for 12 years after fleeing armed conflict in Syria, without an individualized assessment of the risks he might face upon return and despite the prosecutor order for his release.

In 19 cases documented by Amnesty International involving refugees or asylum seekers who are currently at risk of deportation, prosecutors had ordered their release pending investigation into immigration-related charges. However, police continue to hold them in detention despite these release orders and with no further judicial review allowing them to challenge the legality of their detention.

In the two other cases documented by Amnesty International, detainees’ families were unsure if they had ever been brought before prosecutors.

In line with the pattern documented in Ahmed’s case, the ministry of interior has already begun to escort all detainees to various authorities and their countries’ diplomatic representatives as part of the deportation procedures.

The principle of non-refoulement prohibits states from sending anyone to a place where they would be at real risk of serious human rights violations. Even Egypt’s flawed asylum law prohibits the extradition of “recognized refugees” to their country of origin or habitual residence, despite the fact that other provisions implicitly permit exceptions under the guise of overly vague “national security and public order” grounds without due process safeguards.

Amnesty International opposes forced returns of Sudanese nationals to Sudan amid an ongoing armed conflict marked by serious violations of international human rights and humanitarian law, including mass civilian casualties. Similarly, the UNHCR has maintained its position against all forced returns of Syrian nationals due to the volatile security situation and the ongoing risks posed by armed groups exercising control over towns and cities.

Devastating impact of livelihoods and right to education

The crackdown has had devastating consequences for refugee families, particularly affecting their rights to education and work. Three families, all registered with UNHCR, told Amnesty International they had stopped sending their children to school or university for fear of arrest because they currently do not have valid residence permits.

One family said they had been unable to secure any appointment to renew their expired residence permits because they could not reach the UNHCR — which books appointments on behalf of the Egyptian authorities — neither physically through its sole office in the country due to long queues nor through its hotline. Another family reported that their son’s appointment was scheduled for 2027.

Some refugees and asylum seekers have stopped or limited their work to minimize risk of arrest. Ahmed, a 26-year-old Sudanese asylum seeker registered with UNHCR, previously worked as a teacher at three schools. He resigned from two and now works at one school close to his home, in an effort to minimize journeys outside his home as his residence permit had expired, and his renewal appointment was scheduled for 2028.

Amina, a 49-year-old Sudanese single mother and refugee registered with UNHCR, told Amnesty International she resorted to begging on the streets to support her two daughters after losing the family’s breadwinner, her son Moaatz, who was detained in the recent crackdown. On 28 January, police arrested Moaatz, who is a UNHCR-registered asylum seeker, while street vending in Cairo for lacking a valid residence permit. His renewal appointment is scheduled for 2027.

“As a close partner to Egypt on migration and major donor to UNHCR, the European Union should urge the Egyptian government to adopt concrete and verifiable measures to protect the rights of refugees and migrants as well as to ensure that UNHCR has unimpeded access to all places of detention where refugees, asylum seekers and migrants are held, and allow them to make their international protection claims and have these fairly assessed,” said Mahmoud Shalaby.

“The EU and other states must also step up responsibility-sharing by expanding resettlement opportunities and creating safe and regular pathways for people in need of international protection, including humanitarian visas, labour and student mobility schemes, and community sponsorship initiatives.”Source: Amnesty International

Sudanese Women and Children Held Incommunicado After Cairo Arrests

17/02/2026 10:38 

CAIRO / AMSTERDAM

Crowds of Sudanese refugees in front of the UNHCR headquarters in Cairo - January 2026 - (Photo: Radio Dabanga correspondent)

Egyptian authorities have reportedly detained more than seven Sudanese women working in traditional beauty services in the El Hussein district of Cairo and held them for nearly two weeks without their families being able to contact them or confirm their exact place of detention, according to reliable information obtained by Radio Dabanga.

Sources also reported severe overcrowding, with around 70 detainees allegedly being kept inside a single cell.

The reports coincide with talks between Sudan’s ambassador to Egypt and the UN refugee agency, on supporting Sudanese displaced by war, as Amnesty International warns of “a widening crackdown on refugees including arbitrary arrests and unlawful deportations”.

‘Women and children detained’

In a separate development, reports indicated that two children aged eight and ten were detained during recent security campaigns, with no clear information available about their legal or health status.

An activist in Cairo told Radio Dabanga the women were arrested directly from their workplaces in the El Hussein area and relatives were unable to follow them immediately because authorities did not disclose where they had been taken.

She said such procedures prevent families from appointing lawyers or tracking the legal process from the outset, raising fears of enforced disappearance.

The activist added that holding detainees for more than three days without access to a lawyer or family members, and without presenting a legal arrest warrant, meets the definition of enforced disappearance under international standards. The continued lack of information about their whereabouts or legal status, she said, heightens concern for their safety and fundamental rights.

She noted most of the women are primary breadwinners supporting children and extended families inside and outside Sudan, and some have no relatives in Egypt able to pursue legal action on their behalf.

The activist also voiced growing concern about children whose mothers remain detained, amid uncertainty over who is caring for them. She said rumours had previously circulated within the community about two girls dying after their mother’s detention — later proven false — but fears remain that harm could occur if the situation continues unresolved.

Many of the mothers, she added, rely solely on themselves to care for their children, leaving minors especially vulnerable in the absence of family or community support networks.

She said previous arrest cases were typically referred to prosecutors the day after detention, with some detainees ordered released but kept in custody for days or weeks before the decisions were implemented.

Procedures usually include referral to prosecution authorities, then to the passport administration in the Abbasiya district, and additional steps involving the Sudanese embassy.

Medical care

The activist criticised what she described as limited embassy engagement in reassuring families or monitoring serious medical cases despite being aware of multiple detentions.

She described difficult humanitarian conditions inside detention facilities, including overcrowded cells and detainees suffering chronic illnesses such as asthma and diabetes without adequate medical care.

Reports also indicated minors were being detained or summoned pending the arrival of relatives, which she called deeply worrying and suggested the arrest campaigns may be expanding to younger age groups.

She further criticised what she characterised as shrinking avenues of support for Sudanese refugees, saying communication with international organisations — including the UN refugee agency — often resulted only in automated email replies without direct follow-up in urgent cases.

According to the activist, the detained women were working in harsh living conditions to support their families and had not posed a public order problem, but were simply trying to earn a living with dignity.

She called on human rights organisations and relevant authorities to urgently intervene, verify the detainees’ conditions, ensure access to lawyers and family members, provide necessary medical care and guarantee due legal process.

Sudan: Civilians ‘Blocked From Returning to Destroyed El Gezira Village’

17/02/2026 13:37 

EL GEZIRA / AMSTERDAM

Damage caused by attacks on Village 34, in December 2025 (File photoi: Kanabi Central Committee)

Armed groups aligned with local “popular resistance” forces and the Sudan Shield militia have been accused of preventing displaced residents from returning to their homes in Village 32 in the Rahad Agricultural Scheme in Sudan’s El Gezira state, according to community representatives.

Jaafar Mohamedin, spokesperson for the Kanabi Central Committee, told Radio Dabanga that villagers who attempted to return four days ago were confronted by gunfire and forced to withdraw. He said the residents — displaced around three years ago — found their homes completely destroyed when they tried to re-enter the area.

“Some civilians carrying heavy weapons, including RPG rocket launchers and heavy artillery — weapons no ordinary civilian should possess,” Mohamedin said.

He added that the group retreated only after another force from the Um Algura locality security committee intervened.

The Sudan Shield forces are led by Abu Aqla Keikel, who — along with a leader of the popular resistance — is under sanctions imposed by the European Union and other bodies.

Mohamedin said the southern neighbourhood had been deliberately flooded in order to prevent residents from returning, while other houses were demolished entirely. He also alleged that farmland plots belonging to villagers had been seized and cultivated by the armed groups.

“A policy of fait accompli is being imposed to prevent the original inhabitants from returning after taking over their land,” he said.

Strike on Market in Sudan’s Kordofan Region Kills at Least 28 People, Rights Group Says

This is a locator map for Sudan with its capital, Khartoum. (AP Photo)

By FATMA KHALED

1:35 PM EST, February 16, 2026

CAIRO (AP) — Strikes on a market in central Sudan ‘s Kordofan region killed at least 28 people and wounded dozens, said a rights group on Monday, as the war between the army and a paramilitary group nears its three-year mark.

Emergency Lawyers, a rights group tracking violence against civilians, said in a statement that drones bombed a market in Sudri locality in North Kordofan province on Sunday, during a time the market was bustling with civilians, “exacerbating the humanitarian tragedy.” The group said the number of casualties was likely to rise.

“The repeated use of drones to target populated areas shows a grave disregard for civilian lives and signals an escalation that threatens what remains of daily life in the province. Therefore, we demand an immediate halt to drone attacks by both sides of the conflict,” the statement said.

Emergency Lawyers said on X that drones belonging to the army targeted the market on Sunday. However, two military officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to brief the media, told The Associated Press that the army doesn’t target civilian infrastructure and denied the attack.

Over a week ago, a drone close to the city of Rahad in North Kordofan hit a vehicle carrying displaced families, killing at least 24 people, including eight children. A day before that attack, a World Food Program aid convoy was targeted.

The fighting between the Rapid Support Forces and the Sudanese military erupted into a full-blown war across the country in April 2023. So far, at least 40,000 people have been killed and 12 million displaced, according to the World Health Organization. Aid groups say the true war death toll could be many times higher, as the fighting in vast and remote areas impedes access.

The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights said recently the Kordofan region remains “volatile and a focus of hostilities” as the warring parties vie for control of strategic areas.

Both warring parties have been accused of atrocities.

The U.N. Human Rights Office issued a report on Friday saying that more than 6,000 people were killed in over three days when the RSF unleashed “a wave of intense violence … shocking in its scale and brutality” in Sudan’s Darfur region in late October.

The RSF’s offensive to capture the city of el-Fasher, that used to be a military stronghold, in late October included widespread atrocities that amounted to war crimes and possible crimes against humanity, according to the U.N.

Has Cameroon Joined the US Deportations Gravy Train?

AFRIQUE DU SUD | SOUTH AFRICA

APA-Johannesburg (South Africa)

17 February 2026 | 09:29

The United States is facing mounting scrutiny amid reports it is secretly deporting migrants Cameroon, raising questions about the secrecy involved in Washington’s deportation programme for rejected asylum seekers.

News reports from the US monitored here on Tuesday say the migrants were flown out of the US in shackles in January and deposited at a state‑run facility in Cameroon where they are reportedly allowed to leave only if they agree to return to the countries they fled.

There has been no official communication from both Cameroonian and US authorities about the deal.

According to the New York Times, several of the deportees had active court orders in the US protecting them from removal, yet were deported anyway.

The revelations shed new light on the US’ expanding use of “third‑country” deportations, a once‑rare practice now increasingly deployed under President Donald Trump’s intensified crackdown on migration.

A recent Senate oversight report found that Washington has already paid at least $32 million to countries willing to receive deported migrants – a workaround that allows the US to avoid sending asylum seekers directly back to places where they may face torture, imprisonment or death.

Rights groups say the system exploits legal grey zones: while US law prohibits returning asylum seekers to danger, it does not explicitly forbid sending them to unrelated third countries.

What remains unclear is whether those countries are honouring asylum claims or simply pressuring migrants to go back to the very places they fled.

Cameroon is not the only location being used.

Eswatini, Equatorial Guinea and Ghana have also served as stopover points for migrants being quietly redirected to their home countries despite some having legal protections in the US.

The disclosures come as Trump’s second‑term immigration enforcement escalates, with large‑scale raids and aggressive removals drawing criticism even from some of his traditional allies.

Analysts warn that the use of third‑country deportations signals a broader shift towards dismantling long‑standing asylum protections.

U.S. Deports Nine Migrants in Secret, Ignoring Legal Protections

Most had court orders protecting them from removal to their home countries, so they were sent to detention in Cameroon.

By Pranav Baskar and Hamed Aleaziz

Feb. 16, 2026

In a secret deportation arrangement, the Trump administration flew nine people, nearly all of whom had been granted U.S. court protections from being sent back to their home countries, to the African nation of Cameroon in January.

None of them are from Cameroon, according to government documents obtained by The New York Times and lawyers for the deportees, and the United States has not made any public deal with Cameroon to accept deportees who hail from other nations.

Several of the men and women deported — whose cases have not been previously reported — told The Times they did not know they were being sent to Cameroon until they were handcuffed and chained on a Department of Homeland Security flight leaving Alexandria, La., on Jan. 14.

Cameroon’s Ministry of External Affairs declined to comment when reached by phone, and the State Department said it would not comment on its “diplomatic communications with other governments” when asked about the terms of an agreement.

Most of those migrants and their lawyers say they have been detained since then at a state-owned compound in Yaoundé, Cameroon’s capital. They say they’ve been told by local authorities that they cannot leave the facility unless they agree to return to their home countries, from which they fled to escape war or persecution.

As far as is known, the deportations are the first such expulsions to Cameroon. They highlight the extraordinary secrecy that surrounds President Trump’s global deportation effort. Through murky deals forged with willing governments — often in exchange for cash — the U.S. has deported hundreds of people to foreign countries that may not respect the removal protections they have been granted in U.S. courts, returning them to the dangers they fled.

The Times pieced together an account of the secret deportations to Cameroon through phone interviews with four people on the flight and their lawyers, and verified their deportations and protection statuses through government documents that showed most had removal protections. The migrants spoke on condition of anonymity, for fear of reprisals.

A 37-year-old man originally from Zimbabwe compared the deportation to a smuggling operation and said he and the other migrants were “dropped like U.P.S. packages” in Cameroon. The man, who had been living in the United States for 15 years, said officials in Cameroon were pushing them to return to their home countries. He said he had left Zimbabwe after being arrested for refusing to join the military and feared for his life if he returned there.

The deportees described feeling traumatized and exhausted by the limbo they have found themselves tossed into. They recounted being forcibly transported by Department of Homeland Security officials from various immigration detention centers across the country — where some had been for over a year — to Alexandria, one of the Trump administration’s busiest deportations hubs, with no information about where they were being taken.

Joseph Awah Fru, a Cameroonian lawyer supporting the migrants in negotiations with the local authorities, said two of the nine who arrived in Cameroon on the flight chose to return to their home countries. Eight of the nine people on the flight, Mr. Fru added, had the removal protections afforded people who can convince a court that they are likely to face persecution if they are returned to their home countries.

Their lawyers said none of the deportees had any history of violent crime.

It was unclear if Cameroon received anything in exchange for accepting the deportees, but by some estimates, the U.S. government has paid upward of $40 million in third-country deportation deals, according to an investigation by the Senate Commitee on Foreign Relations that was released on Friday.

The Trump administration has increasingly relied on deporting migrants to countries other than their own. It is a way to not only deter people from coming to the United States but also to quickly remove people whom it might be challenging to send to their home countries for various reasons, including a lack of diplomatic relations or difficulty getting travel documents.

Critics said it amounted to a circumvention of U.S. court orders. “Sending people to a third country where they are coerced into deportation to the country that we cannot deport them to is flatly illegal,” said Scott Shuchart, a former ICE official who worked in the Biden administration.

Among those now in the Yaoundé compound are people who said they escaped imprisonment for their political beliefs, survived wars and fled countries where their sexual orientations are criminalized. When officials from the United Nations’ International Organization of Migration, which is handling their cases, visited, the deportees say the officials told them there was no support for them to receive asylum in Cameroon. They felt that their sole option was to  return to their home countries.

After this article appeared, the International Organization of Migration, which previously had not been able to be reached for comment, sent a statement to The Times on Sunday. It said that the organization had not presented returning to their home countries as the only path open to the migrants in Cameroon, and said that it had referred all those involved to the U.N. High Commission for Refugees to request asylum.

Roughly a million people seek asylum every year, but the U.N. refugee agency acknowledges that “resettlement remains available to only a tiny fraction” of those in need. In 2024, fewer than 5 percent of refugees were able to resettle through the agency’s assistance.

Many of those deported in Cameroon said going back would be life-threatening. A 32-year-old woman from Ghana who fled persecution for her sexual orientation said she came to the U.S. for protection, because she has faced murder threats from members of her family and community. She added the Cameroonian government has treated their deportation there as a matter of transit, urging them to go back to their home countries.

Another woman, a 20-year-old from Ghana who has been in immigration detention for over a year, compared returning to the country to “signing a death warrant.” She said she feels trapped, because her tribe in Ghana has told her they are going to kill her, but she is also tired of seemingly endless detention.

Some people deported by the U.S. to third countries in secretive deals have been returned to the home nations they fled. Eight of nine migrants deported to Equatorial Guinea were sent back to their home countries, including one with an asylum claim, in another unpublicized agreement. In September, Ghana deported at least three people, despite their having removal protections.

Pranav Baskar is an international reporter and a member of the 2025-26 Times Fellowship class, a program for journalists early in their careers.

Hamed Aleaziz covers the Department of Homeland Security and immigration policy for The Times.

More Third-country Nationals Have Been Deported by the US to Cameroon, Lawyers Tell AP

By GERALD IMRAY and NALOVA AKUA

3:57 PM EST, February 16, 2026

YAOUNDE, Cameroon (AP) — A new group of third-country nationals was deported by the United States to Cameroon on Monday, lawyers told The Associated Press, days after it came to light that the Trump administration sent nine people to the Central African nation last month as part of its secretive program to remove immigrants to countries they have no ties with.

Lawyer Alma David of the U.S.-based Novo Legal Group said that a group of migrants who were not Cameroonian citizens arrived on a deportation flight that landed in the capital, Yaounde, on Monday.

David and Cameroon-based lawyer Joseph Awah Fru said they believed there were eight third-country nationals on the plane but had not spoken to them yet. The two lawyers said they are giving legal advice to some of the nine migrants — five women and four men — from other African countries who were deported from the U.S. to Cameroon last month.

The lawyers also expected to offer counsel to the new group of deportees, they said.

“For now, my focus is handling their shock,” Fru said.

A White House official, who was not authorized to comment publicly about the matter and spoke on condition of anonymity, acknowledged the second deportation flight to Cameroon but gave no details.

The New York Times first reported Saturday on the group of nine sent secretly to Cameroon last month. Two of them have since been repatriated to their home countries, David said.

Most of the deportees had protection orders

Eight of those nine previously deported migrants had protection orders granted by a U.S. immigration judge that prevented them from being deported to their home countries for fear of persecution or torture, David said, some of them because of their sexual orientation and others because of political activity.

Deporting them to a third country like Cameroon, from where they could ultimately be sent home, was effectively a legal “loophole,” David said.

“That is why the United States did not send them directly to their countries,” Fru said. “Because there is cause for concern that they might be harmed, that their lives are threatened.”

David said none of the nine sent to Cameroon last month, which included migrants from Zimbabwe, Morocco and Ghana, had criminal records apart from driving-related offenses. She had no details yet on the eight who arrived on Monday.

African nations are being paid millions

Cameroon, where 93-year-old President Paul Biya has ruled since 1982, is the latest of at least seven African nations to receive deported third-country nationals in a deal with the U.S. Others that have struck deals with the Trump administration include South Sudan, Rwanda, Uganda, Eswatini, Ghana and Equatorial Guinea.

Some of them have received millions of dollars in payments to take deported migrants, according to documents released by the U.S. State Department. Details of some of the other agreements, including the one with Cameroon, have not been released by the Trump administration.

The Trump administration has spent at least $40 million to deport roughly 300 migrants to countries other than their own in Africa, Central America and elsewhere, according to a report compiled by the Democratic staff of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and released last week.

According to internal administration documents reviewed by the AP, there are 47 third-country agreements at various stages of negotiation. Of those, 15 have been concluded and 10 are at or near conclusion.

Immigration policies are a ‘top priority’

The U.S. State Department said Monday in a statement to the AP on the Cameroon deportations that it had “no comment on the details of our diplomatic communications with other governments.”

“Implementing the Trump Administration’s immigration policies is a top priority for the Department of State,” it said, adding “we remain unwavering in our commitment to end illegal and mass immigration and bolster America’s border security.”

Cameroon’s Foreign Ministry didn’t respond to a request for comment.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security confirmed there had been deportations to Cameroon in January but didn’t give specific information on third-country migrants. It did not comment on the second plane.

“We are applying the law as written. If a judge finds an illegal alien has no right to be in this country, we are going to remove them. Period,” the department said. “These third-country agreements, which ensure due process under the U.S. Constitution, are essential to the safety of our homeland and the American people.”

The Trump administration has used third-country deportation deals as a deterrent to force migrants who are in the U.S. illegally to leave on their own, saying they could end up “in any number of third countries” if deported.

It has also defended the practice as part of a crackdown to remove what it refers to as dangerous criminals and gang members.

Activists and lawyers say the U.S. should know that sending migrants to third countries with poor human rights records risks them being denied due process and exposed to abuse.

Last year, the U.S. deported five nationals from Vietnam, Jamaica, Cuba, Yemen and Laos to the southern African nation of Eswatini. The deportees had all been convicted of serious criminal offenses, including murder, attempted murder and rape. They had all served their criminal sentences in the U.S.

Four of them have been held at a maximum-security prison in Eswatini for more than six months without charges and have not been allowed to meet in person with a lawyer. Their detentions are the subject of two legal challenges in Eswatini.

Eswatini, which is ruled by a king as Africa’s last absolute monarchy, will be paid $5.1 million to take up to 160 third-country deportees, according to details of the deal released by the State Department. The Eswatini king, Mswati III, has long been accused of clamping down on pro-democracy protests in a country where political parties are banned while using public money to fund his lavish lifestyle.

___

Imray reported from Cape Town, South Africa. Associated Press writers Chinedu Asadu in Abuja, Nigeria, and Aamer Madhani in West Palm Beach, Fla., contributed to this report.

Kenya’s Main Airport Resumes Operations After 2-day Strike

8:12 AM EST, February 17, 2026

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — Operations at Kenya’s main airport are set to resume and return to normal after workers on Tuesday called off a two-day strike after reaching an agreement with the transport ministry.

Operations at Nairobi’s Jomo Kenyatta International Airport were paralyzed on Monday, with flight delays of up to six hours, as airlines urged passengers to rebook their travel.

The Kenya Civil Aviation Authority in a statement said operations would resume immediately after a return-to-work agreement was reached with the trade union Tuesday.

The union was demanding better working conditions, pay, and benefits, and discussions on how their demands would be met were held on Tuesday.

The airport is a major transport hub for regional and international travel.

Transport Minister Davies Chirchir reiterated the government’s commitment to ensure the aviation sector remains stable.

Kenya Airways, in a statement, said it was in the process of normalizing the schedule and that “normal operations will resume within the next 24 hours.”

Airport workers issued a strike notice last week after authorities failed to implement part of an agreement with the union. The agreement demanded better labor conditions as well as increased pay and benefits.

US Troops Arrive in Nigeria to Help Train its Military

By DYEPKAZAH SHIBAYAN

8:02 PM EST, February 16, 2026

ABUJA, Nigeria (AP) — About 100 U.S. troops plus equipment have arrived in Nigeria to help train soldiers in the West African country as the government fights against Islamic militants and other armed groups, the Nigerian military announced Monday.

The arrival followed a request by the Nigerian government to the U.S government for help with training, technical support and intelligence-sharing, the military said in a statement.

The deployment follows an easing of tensions that flared between the U.S. and Nigeria when U.S. President Donald Trump said the country wasn’t protecting Christians from an alleged genocide. The Nigerian government has rejected the accusation, and analysts say it simplifies a very complicated situation in which people are often targeted regardless of their faith.

Maj. Gen. Samaila Uba, spokesman for Nigeria’s Defense Headquarters, previously has said that the U.S. troops won’t engage in combat or have a direct operational role, and that Nigerian forces will have complete command authority.

In December, U.S. forces launched airstrikes on Islamic State group-affiliated militants in northwestern Nigeria. Last month, following discussions with Nigerian authorities in Abuja, the head of U.S. Africa Command confirmed a small team of U.S. military officers were in Nigeria, focused on intelligence support.

Nigeria is facing a protracted fight with dozens of local armed groups increasingly battling for turf, including Islamic sects like the homegrown Boko Haram and its breakaway faction Islamic State West Africa Province. There is also the IS-linked Lakurawa, as well as other “bandit” groups that specialize in kidnapping for ransom and illegal mining.

Recently, the crisis has worsened to include other militants from the neighboring Sahel region, including the Jama’at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin, which claimed its first attack on Nigerian soil last year. Several thousand people in Nigeria have been killed, according to data from the United Nations. Analysts say not enough is being done by the government to protect its citizens.

While Christians have been among those targeted, analysts and residents say the majority of victims of the armed groups are Muslims in Nigeria’s Muslim-dominated north, where most attacks occur.

Social Media Suspended in Gabon for 'Spreading of False Information'

BBC Africa

Gabon's media regulator has announced the suspension of social media platforms "until further notice", saying online content has fueled conflict and deepened divisions in the country.

In a televised statement on Tuesday evening, the High Authority for Communication (HAC) cited the "spread of false information", "cyberbullying" and the "unauthorised disclosure of personal data" as reasons for the decision.

Internet monitoring group NetBlocks reported that by Wednesday afternoon multiple online platforms had been restricted, including Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube and WhatsApp.

Gabon is led by Gen Brice Oligui Nguema, who won presidential elections last year after leading a coup in 2023.

The 50-year-old president is facing growing social unrest, with teachers and civil servants staging strikes over pay and working conditions.

According to Netblocks, most internet providers had blocked access to the social media platforms, though its data showed that Gabon Telecom, the country's largest telecoms firm, was allowing very limited access.

The HAC's announcement has come as a shock to the central African nation of about 2.5 million people, where social media is particular popular with younger people who use it for business as well as pleasure.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, a restaurant owner in the capital, Libreville, told the BBC the suspension would greatly affect his business, since he uses social media for promotion.

"Almost 40% of my customers decided to order or come to the restaurant after seeing our advertising on social media… I won't be able to catch new customers, because clients are attracted by what they are seeing, reviews from friends, pictures," he said.

"We are entering a phase where we don't even know if we are moving forward with global development or if we are sliding backward into total underdevelopment."

However, a taxi driver seemed unbothered about the move, telling the BBC: "There's no smoke without fire.

"For the authorities to take such a decision, something must have certainly prompted it."

Nguema won last year's poll with more than 90% of the vote, two years after his coup ended more than five decades of rule by the Bongo family.

At the time he pledged to reform Gabon, a small, oil- and timber-rich country, where digital blackouts were used by the previous governments to control information.

For the first time, foreign and independent media were allowed to film the ballot count during the election.

The media regulator spokesman, Jean-Claude Mendome, said the suspension was prompted by the recurring dissemination on social networks and digital platforms of " inappropriate, defamatory, hateful, and insulting content that undermines human dignity, social cohesion, the stability of the republic's institutions, and national security".

Such actions, he said, were likely to "generate social conflict" and "seriously jeopardise national unity, democratic progress, and achievements".

But "freedom of expression, including freedom of comment and criticism," remained "a fundamental right enshrined in Gabon", Mendome added.

School teachers in Gabon began striking in December over pay and working conditions, with protests over similar grievances spreading to other public sectors, including health and education.

Gabon Suspends Access to Social Media as Critics Accuse its Leader of Crackdown on Dissent

Gabon's President Brice Oligui Nguema waits to welcome France's President Emmanuel Macron at the Leon-Mba International Airport in Libreville, Gabon, Sunday, Nov. 23, 2025. (AP Photo/Thibault Camus, file)

By YVES-LAURENT GOMA

9:02 AM EST, February 18, 2026

LIBREVILLE, Gabon (AP) — Gabon has suspended access to social media and digital platforms throughout the central African nation until further notice, the authorities said as critics accuse the country’s leader of crackdown on dissent.

The communications agency said it had observed on social media and digital platforms what it described as inappropriate, defamatory, hateful and insulting content that undermines human dignity, the country’s institutions and national security.

The agency’s statement added that this constitutes offenses punishable under national and international laws, as well as under policies on moderation adopted by major digital platforms.

“The High Authority for Communication has decided to immediately suspend social media throughout Gabon until further notice,” Jean Claude Franck Mendome, the spokesperson for the agency, known as High Authority for Communication, said in a statement that was read out on national media on Tuesday evening.

Social media platforms — including Meta and TikTok — were severely impacted on Wednesday. The two, along with WhatsApp, the messaging service owned by Meta, are the most widely used by Gabonese citizens. WhatsApp calls were also experiencing significant disruptions on Wednesday.

The country’s leader, Gen. Brice Clotaire Oligui Nguema had toppled President Ali Bongo Ondimba, who was accused of irresponsible governance.

Last year, Oligui Nguema won the presidential election, raising hopes for a return to constitutional democracy. However, critics say he has been increasingly clamping down on critical voices, targeting independent media and trade unionists. A journalist and two trade unionists were imprisoned last year.